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Reincarnation and Transmigration
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Published:
2016-08-17
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2024-06-29
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70/?
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Go ask Alice

Summary:

She hadn't expected it; hadn't expected anything like it, really. Of course, dying wasn't something that people generally expected when they were her age; and then, there was the matter of being reborn in a place she barely knew about.

Still, whatever else came, her new life was bound to be a bizarre adventure...

Notes:

Chapter 1: I’m Alive

Chapter Text

Disclaimer: I do not own JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure; the copyrights for such belong to Hirohiko Araki and, Lucky Land Communications. The character of Sarah does, however, belong to me. This story is inspired in concept by Silver Queen’s “Dreaming of Sunshine”.

 

Go ask Alice

 

Her last, concrete memory was of the crash itself: the screech of grinding plastic as her bike had skidded across the road, and the brief sight of asphalt through the polarized visor of her helmet. After that, there’d been nothing; nothing for a long time. But now, now that she was starting to become aware of her surroundings again, the first thing she was aware of was the dark.

Deep, fathomless dark, permeated by warmth; it was almost like being in her bed back at home, but at the same time she was aware of another presence; not at all like being back at home.

The next few moments – hell, the next day, practically – was filled with confounding stimuli: extremes of light and dark, and the nonsensical babbling of a language she couldn’t quite manage to grasp. She thought, for a moment, that she’d managed to pick out some of what the people around her were saying – there seemed to be two of them for the most part, so that made things easier – but she also found herself getting more and more hungry during the short stretches of time when she actually conscious to feel anything.

She was also becoming far more conscious of the place where she was: it was a bare room where she, and the other small form she’d become more and more aware of during the times she’d been able to stay awake, were left alone for large stretches of time during what seemed to be the day.

She hadn’t had much of a chance to see the outside of the building she and the other person – what seemed to be a baby; a baby the same size as she was, so that was one more thing that she’d managed to realize about where she was now – were staying in, so she still didn’t know where she was in any real sense. She knew where she wasn’t, of course: she wasn’t anywhere near her old house, in a hospital, and she was starting to suspect that she wasn’t even in California anymore. It was all of the distinct accents surrounding her whenever she’d been awake.

It sounded like she was somewhere in England, or at least in a place that had a lot of people with that accent living there.

She didn’t know just which she would have preferred, since it really didn’t matter considering the fact that – as she was now fully aware at this point – she’d died in the motorcycle crash she’d only been able to remember in bits and pieces during the times she’d been sleeping, and was now living some other life as an infant in this strange, new place. The woman came back into the room, just as she’d been starting to feel both hungry and more than a bit tired, so that was something.

Closing her eyes as the woman picked her and the other baby up, she relaxed into the woman’s hold as she felt warm breath on her face for only the second time that day.

 

=PB=

 

The days blurred into weeks, and the weeks into months as she became more aware of her surroundings; she also became aware of something just a bit more… problematic about where she currently was. Her new name was Alice, and while that was all fine and good on its own, the name of the kid who was apparently her new brother was Dio. She didn’t know if the family’s last name was Brando, but it was much more of an uncomfortable possibility than she’d ever considered previously. Being related to Dio fucking Brando wasn’t really something that she was prepared to deal with, but if that was what she was going to be forced to deal with then she’d deal.

Relaxing into her new mother’s arms as the woman came back, Sarah – she’d had fifteen years of being Sarah Williams, as opposed to the few months she’d spent as Alice, so that was naturally the first name she thought of when she thought of herself – smiled up at her. She was really the only one that seemed to have any kind of interest in their welfare; she didn’t know if she and Dio were being raised by a single parent or if her and Dio’s father was the type to always be away on business, but as she adjusted to using her hearing over her still-adjusting sight to determine things about her new world, Sarah began to notice that her new mother seemed sad about something. Her voice also seemed… fragile, somehow.

It wasn’t the best sign in the world, that there was something her new mother feared enough that she was attempting to make herself small and unobtrusive in a clear effort to avoid it.

 

=PB=

 

Over the next few months or so, Sarah found that her new family’s last name was indeed Brando; one more thing not to like about waking up after dying in a motorcycle crash and finding herself in a new family, in a new body, and a new world to go with it. To say nothing of the fact that she was pretty obviously in the Phantom Blood portion of JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, and hence somewhere in England during the 1800s. Being a young girl – to say nothing of growing into a woman – in 1800s London was going to be… an interesting experience, if nothing else.

Still, even if this wasn’t the life she’d life she’d have chosen – if she’d been given the choice at all – this was the one she’d been given; so best adapt and survive.

Her first impression of Dario Brando would have been – if she hadn’t already known what an abject shit stain of an excuse for a human being, to say nothing of a father he truly was – that he was a fairly unobtrusive man. He wasn’t around long enough for her to form any other opinions about, so all she really had to go on were the Wiki articles she’d read, internet memes, and the occasional forum thread she’d read. The Stardust Crusaders OVA certainly hadn’t talked much about Dario, and she hadn’t actually read the manga itself. Her younger-older brother had suggested it to her as the kind of thing she’d be interested in, considering her general taste, and she’d been considering at least giving it a chance since she’d liked some of what she’d seen of Stardust Crusaders. Mostly the parts with Dio, since he was one of those villains you really loved to hate.

Here and now, however… well, if fate was an actual entity in this world, she was going to find it and punch it in the face.

She continued to catch only brief glimpses of Dario Brando as she grew back into toddler hood, but there always seemed to be a certain hunger in his eyes when he would look at her. He seemed fairly indifferent to Dio, not that that was a much better prospect than having his interest, but the hungry look in Dario’s eyes whenever he looked at her… Yeah, Sarah didn’t see their relationship ending remotely well.

Of course, considering that her brother from Before had told her that Dio had poisoned his father… yeah, Dario wasn’t long for the world in any case.

Growing up once more into a girl of six, Sarah found Dario taking a… rather more personal interest in her. The man would try to get her to come with him to the hotel where he seemed to spend most of his time at. She didn’t know just what he’d been planning, just what he had in mind, but the chances of it being anything good were pretty much nil. Her suspicions, such as they were, were only reinforced by the man that Dario had brought her to meet.

She didn’t think much of either of them, and given how quickly the man seemed to lose interest in her as she watched him with careful, shrewd eyes, Sarah had the distinct feeling she’d managed to upset more than a few of his plans. She could take some solace in that, since she’d known full well what Dario had been planning by the time the pair of them had left the hotel. Dario didn’t seem particularly happy, but she didn’t care much for the man’s opinion, since she already knew that she was going to have to deal with him.

Eventually, the two of them made it back to the small house where their family all lived, Sarah was forced to dodge a punch – not just an annoyed swat, but a punch – from Dario as the pair of them stepped back inside. Glaring back up at him as he saw the dull, impotent rage on Dario’s face as he stared down at her, she scoffed. When he tried punching her again, Sarah quickly dodged and stood back from the older man, flicking her eyes quickly over him to determine if he might do anything else. Like most bullies of his type, however, he didn’t seem to relish the thought of getting into a struggle.

And a struggle was what he was going to get if he tried that kind of shit again.

With a last, hateful look in her direction – she was sorely tempted to sneer right back at him, but that would have just caused trouble she didn’t need at the moment – Dario stomped into the back of their humble little house. Sighing in supreme annoyance once Dario had passed out of earshot, Sarah made her way to the room that she and Dio shared with each other. Her twin’s eyes snapped to her, and she smiled; Dio might have been the “bad guy” of JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure, but here and now he was her brother and it was easy for her to love him.

Even considering the little she knew about Dio’s role in the story, living with him for six years over the course of their six years of life had given her a distinct protective streak. She supposed it fit, since the two of them were family; anyone would come to love the little guy after spending six years of their life with him.

The sound of someone large coming toward the room they both shared drew Sarah’s attention, and the sound of large, heavy, slightly clumsy footsteps let her know that Dario wasn’t going to be satisfied with just glaring at her for a bit.

“Dio, I want you to get under the bed,” she said, glancing briefly at the door before turning her full attention to her brother; he had snapped to attention at the same time as she had, hearing those footsteps and knowing what they meant just as well as she did.

“No,” Dio said, a stubborn look on his face. “You keep protecting me all the time, Lissy,” Dio said, his lips turning down stubbornly. “I’m staying here.”

She sighed, knowing that she didn’t have time for an argument; Dario was almost there. “You know I have a higher pain-tolerance than you do,” she said, giving him a sidelong look before she was forced to turn her attention back to the door.

Folding her arms and narrowing her eyes as Dario stormed into their room, Sarah scoffed as the man reached back to slap her. It was fairly simple to duck his first, flailing attempt – the back-handed blow that seemed to be his favored tactic for dealing with her and Dio – and she smirked in response to the anger twisting his features. He really was pathetic; she fully understood why Dio had killed him back in the story-that-was. Ducking and weaving out of the way of Dario’s further attempts, each of them seeming more pathetically clumsy than the last. There was really nothing she could respect about Dario Brando at all.

Sinking her teeth into the drunken idiot’s right wrist when he had the misfortune to stumble too close to her, Sarah ground her jaw to inflict as much pain as she could manage in spite of her comparatively small stature; she’d long since gotten over the fact that she was no longer just over six feet tall, but she’d have been lying if she said she didn’t miss it. When Dario reflexively dropped her to the floor, she climbed right back up the man, grabbing fistfulls of his clothes to anchor herself as she made her way up.

She’d officially had enough; enough of Dario’s constant bullshit, enough of living with the constant uncertainty as to what kind of hair-brained, half-baked idea he was going to pull out of his ass next, and more than enough of trying to protect herself, Dio, and Charlena from his drunken rampages.

Slamming her right fist into Dario’s throat, Sarah drew back and punched again. She didn’t know just how much her six-year-old body weighed – she’d never had the chance to find out, and that kind of thing had been unimportant in the grand scheme of things – but Sarah focused on putting all of her weight behind her blows, nonetheless. She knew that, if she just kept pounding, even with her smaller body and comparative lack of strength, she could collapse Dario’s trachea and kill the fucker.

She noticed, after Dario had fallen to his back on the floor, Dio’s small fists joining in with hers as she continued to pummel Dario. It took some time for Dario to stop thrashing, at least enough that Sarah was able to climb on top of him and slap her hands over his over his mouth and nose to stop him getting any of the air he was going to so desperately need after having his throat ruthlessly pummeled for so long. Kneeling atop Dario’s chest, holding her hands over Dario’s nose and mouth, Sarah saw Dio’s hands settling over her own.

Smiling faintly as she felt the warmth of her twin brother’s hands, Sarah felt the smile slide off of her face as she caught sight of Dario’s eyes; he finally seemed to have realized that she wasn’t playing around.

His eyes, already filled with fear, began to widen, and then to roll back into his head as he lost consciousness. Sarah knew that she wasn’t going to be rid of him so easily; she knew that it took at least ten minutes to kill someone by depriving them of oxygen, but she also knew that what she was seeing now was an important step in realizing her current goal. Continuing to press down on Dario’s mouth and nose, cutting him off from the life-giving oxygen that might just have been enough to save him even at this late stage, Sarah caught sight of Dio’s increasingly wild grin.

She wasn’t remotely surprised that he was enjoying this, since she knew full well what kind of man Dario Brando had been, and more than that, what kind of man Dio had been Before; looked like he still had some of those traits.

Once their work was done, Sarah smiled at Dio as her brother asked what they were going to do with the body. Figuring that no one would really miss the greedy old drunkard, Sarah suggested that they dump him in one of the alleys he’d probably ended up sleeping off more than a few hangovers during his time. Dio agreed quickly, and seemed almost happy about the prospect of leaving Dario Brando to rot in an alley somewhere. Sarah didn’t have to think long on why.

“Oi, where’re you little bits goin’?”

“We’re taking Daddy to get some air,” she said, offering the strange man who’d come to stare at them after they’d made it a fair distance from their small house. “He drank up the bottles, and then he fell down, but if he gets some air he should be all right.”

“Right, then,” the man said, chuckling. “Off you go.”

“Lissy,” Dio said, once the man had passed out of sight. “Why did you say that? You know what we did.”

“Best to avoid complications at this stage, Dio,” she said, as the two of them made their way into a darker, more deserted part of the small town where they lived.

Dio didn’t seem to have a response for that, so Sarah turned her attention back to the new plans that she was making. It was all well and good that they were rid of Dario now, but even with all of his many, many faults, he’d still been the main breadwinner for their small family. Still, she’d done more than her share of odd-jobs Before, and it wasn’t like this place lacked for things to be done.

She and Dio quickly returned home, and Charlena didn’t ask where they’d been; one didn’t ask many questions in the Brando household, though that was just one of many things that was bound to change with Dario out of the picture.

 

=PB=

Sure enough, over the next few weeks – after she’d sold most of her long, blonde hair to a rather surprised wig-maker, and acquired more masculine clothing – Sarah was able to steadily build a reputation as a reliable go-fer-about-town. It wasn’t the most high-paying work, most of the jobs she could take at her current age were delivering letters, ferrying tools about, and on a few memorable occasions tallying up inventory for one merchant or another, but it paid enough for her purposes. And, in the end, it helped to ease at least some of the burden on Charlena without Dario around.

When she had some spare money from her various jobs, Sarah would use it to buy charcoal and paper for herself so that she would have at least something to do during those few moments when she had the time to sit down and sketch. She drew some of what she could remember from Before, but only enough that she wouldn’t be called on to explain things that people here wouldn’t have any concept of. And, the only place Sarah would take the chance to sketch certain things that she remembered from Before was in the room that she shared with Dio.

Her brother knew that she didn’t want anyone else to know about what she was drawing, and she compensated him by telling him some of the things in her drawings that he had context for.

Naturally, people took notice of her when she was drawing, and it only took a few days before some of those people started asking for sketches of their own. A lot of them simply wanted sketches of themselves, but there were a select few who wanted her to recreate a place they had seen before; she made it a point to negotiate for extra money with those.

“Alice,” Charlena said, one night when the last of the crowds had left the restaurant where she worked and Alice helped out around. “Do you think… well, might you be able to stay here now?”

“Depends on how much money I can get from these, as opposed to the odd-jobs I get around town,” she said, briefly looking up at her mother before returning her attention to cleaning up for the night.

Much as she would have enjoyed the extra downtime, there were still things that needed to be done; cleaning was a job that never really ended.

“Would you,” Charlena paused for a moment, and Sarah looked back to see her mother gathering herself as though to say something difficult. “Alice, do you think you would be interested in taking art classes?”

“I don’t know if I’d have the time,” she said, not seeing any reason to lie. “With all the things that need doing around here.”

That was the trouble with living without all of the labor-saving devices she’d grown so used to having during the course of her life Before: all of those things had been invented for a reason, and the more she was forced to live without them the more Sarah found herself wishing that she could have somehow replicated them in some fashion.

“You really don’t have to do so much around this place, if you don’t want to,” Charlena said. “That is to say, I truly do appreciate everything you’ve been doing for the family, Alice, but a young girl like you should have the opportunity to live her own life,” Charlena looked down slightly, muttering something that Sarah didn’t quite catch.

“You sure, mum?” she asked, tilting her head slightly, curious. “It’s no trouble working, here and outside.”

“Yes; that’s fine. I’m your mother Alice,” Charlena said, reaching out to grip Sarah’s shoulders, a saddened expression on her face, though she was obviously still trying to smile. “You shouldn’t have to work to take care of me, I should be the one taking care of you.”

She smiled softly. “All right, Mum. If that’s what would make you happy.”

Without another word, Charlena hugged her tightly, and Sarah embraced the woman in turn.

Without Dario around, causing trouble and conflict for their little family, Dio and Charlena both seemed to be much happier people. Dio was still an unrepentant troll, however; the pair of them had bonded all the more closely over two things: her and Dio’s love of trolling, and her own interest in cooking. Dio had been a bit surprised when she asked him to taste the beef stew that she’d made when the winter snows started settling in around them, but he’d ended up loving it when she’d shared it with him.

He’d fallen eagerly into the role of taste-tester for those dishes that she remembered from Before, or at least those that she could recreate using the ingredients that she could actually obtain in late 1800s London; so, mostly stews and soups, really. Not that she wasn’t craving so many of the dishes she’d eaten Before, but Sarah had had ten years to resign herself to the fact that it would be a long time – if ever – before she had a chance to eat anything like those dishes again.

Sitting at her easel, putting the finishing touches on a sunset-seascape she’d been working on for the past handful of days, Sarah heard the sounds of two people having a quiet discussion somewhere near the front of the room. Since she already had something to do, and since she knew that one of those people – being her mother, Charlena – would have come over to get her if there was something she needed to hear about, Sarah tabled her curiosity and turned her attention back to her work. She could always ask Charlena what she’d been talking about later.

The sight of a shadow falling across her canvas, for only a brief time before the one casting it stepped out of the way, let Sarah know that there was someone else – besides Charlena, who didn’t tend to stand so close to her while she was trying to work in the first place – who was standing in the room with her.

“Young lady,” the man said, once she’d finished painting and turned to see that it was in fact a man. “My name is George Joestar. I met your father when he saved me from a terrible fate, and I made him a promise on that day: that I would see to the care of his family if he were unable to do so, for any reason at all. When I found out that Dario was no longer with us, I knew that it was my duty as a gentleman to see to the care of his remaining family.”

“That’s very kind of you, Mr. Joestar,” she said, turning away from her completed painting and smiling at the mustachioed man; she might not have known him from Before, but at the very least she knew the name Joestar.

“Come, we’ll gather your brother, and I’ll have some people along to bring these fantastic paintings of yours,” George said, smiling brightly at her before turning to take in the studio where she had been working.

 

=PB=

Jonathan was waiting with Father for the new family that had come to live with them, a family with the surname Brando; apparently Dario Brando had done a kindness for his father, and now that Dario was no longer with them, Father had offered to let his remaining family stay at the estate. According to what Father had said, the family consisted of only the mother and her two children, now. Jonathan was glad to have some others his age around the house; the servants could be fine company, but they didn’t often have the time to spend with him that he would have preferred.

It would be a nice thing, to have some others his own age to spend time with.

When the carriage that was to bring the Brando family to the Joestar estate came rolling to a neat stop just up the path from their mansion, Jonathan smiled brightly as the carriage doors swung open. When a blond boy jumped out of the near door, carrying a blonde girl in his arms, Jonathan didn’t quite know what to think. He was even more startled when the girl reached up and bopped the boy on the head.

“Dio, you oversized ham, put me down!”

It didn’t sound like the girl was actually angry with Dio, but when he set her back down on the ground she did chase him around a bit. The pair of them circled around the taller woman who was clearly the mother of the two siblings, right up until Father came up and told the both of them to settle down and show some decorum. Father always seemed to be saying that, but until today Jonathan had always been the one getting that kind of lecture.

It was almost refreshing, but when he remembered how rotten he himself had always felt when he had been the one on the receiving end of Father’s lectures, Jonathan immediately felt guilty about even thinking such a thing.

“Good afternoon,” he said, making his way over to where Dio, his twin sister Alice, and their mother Charlena had all gathered together.

He hoped that making a good first impression on the small family who was soon to become a part of their own would help to erase the shame he could still feel, given his unseemly joy at the prospect of not being the focus of Father’s ire for once. As it turned out, neither Dio nor Alice had been as affected by Father’s ire as Jonathan himself could remember being, but for all that the pair of them were rather well-mannered. There was a hint of mischief in both of their sparkling, almost copper-colored eyes, and hence Jonathan began to think that perhaps Father’s lecture hadn’t been nearly so trying to either of them as it had been when he had been subjected to such.

Chapter 2: Hey Brother

Chapter Text

Chapter note : this chapter contains the text of Shane Koyczan’s poem “Instructions for a bad day”, which can easily be found on YouTube with a bit of searching.

They had been living with Jojo and his father for seven years now, and if there was one thing that he and his dear sister both agreed upon, it was this: Jonathan Joestar was a hopeless fool. An amusing fool, to be sure, but nonetheless a fool boy who wouldn’t be able to survive in the world as it was even when his life came to depend on it. Still, as far as family went, he was a better choice than most.

At the very least, he and his dear Alice would not be required to kill him.

While there were still times when he and dear Alice could make some of their own amusements, such as the time his sweet sister had pursued him through the kitchen and into the dining room wielding a ham as an impromptu bludgeon, Dio had come to resent the stifling restrictions that had been placed upon them by their new lives in the Joestar estate. Yes, he truly did enjoy the privileges and prestige that came with their new social position, but he couldn’t deny that the pair of them had had a great deal more freedom of action and movement when they had been living in their London flat and Alice had been acting as a jack-of-all-trades around town.

Doing so under the same Threnody Cain for some odd reason; a reason that seemed to involve her own amusement, but one that she’d not deigned to share with him.

Still, here and now when the two of them had some time to themselves following their respective lessons, he was glad to have the chance for it.

However, he’d been becoming aware of a rather interesting development with regards to Jojo: it seemed that their dear brother had become enamored with the daughter of their local doctor, Erina Pendelton. It was rather amusing, hearing from his underlings at school just how taken Jojo was with the girl. He and dear Alice had made some observations of their own, as well, tracking Jojo and his lady love – Dio paused a moment, snickering as he reminisced on the overly-dramatic way his sweet sister had fluttered her eyelashes and mimed a swoon the first time she had said those words – as they sought to meet with one another.

It had also been rather interesting to see just how adept his dear Alice was at tracking people, and also remaining out of sight while she was doing so; it clearly must have been something she had learned while making her varied excursions around London.

However, at the moment his sweet sister wasn’t present, leaving him as the only one to see if this Erina Pendelton might truly be worthy to join their illustrious family. Or, at the very least, to see if she would prove worthy of their adorable fool of a brother. Making his way over to where the young lady was sitting, looking rather fetching in her blue and white dress, Dio allowed himself to admit.

“So, this is the woman dear Jojo has become so enamored with,” he said, announcing his presence as he came out from behind the row of trees where he had been standing, in order that he might observe Erina Pendelton without being observed in turn. “I must admit, the two of you do make a rather smart couple,” he said, smiling as he began to circle around the woman, making a show of observing her from all angles. Erina looked rather uneasy, so Dio smiled wider to put the young lady at ease. “Very well, I suppose you do have some merits.” Pulling the woman into his arms, Dio laid a firm kiss on the curve of her cheek. “Do see that you take care of him; Jojo isn’t what anyone would call particularly bright.”

Smirking at the expression of confusion writ large on her soft face – so unlike the sly, cunning smiles that his sweet sister would share with him when they would make their secret plans – Dio turned his path toward where he knew Alice would be, like as not working on her knitting, since such was a far more easily transportable hobby than the beautiful paintings that she would produce when she worked in the large studio that Lord Joestar had provided her with.

He found her seated atop one of the dullards that had attached themselves to him at only the most perfunctory of urging on his part, cheerfully continuing to knit.

He’d always found it amusing, the way that nothing ever seemed to affect her unless she wished it to, or unless she found some modicum of amusement in reacting to it. Making his way over to where she was seated, needles clicking neatly against one another as she kept at her work, Dio grinned.

“How have you been managing, dear Alice?” he asked, grinning as he glanced down at the buffoon she was using as a cushion.

“Well enough for my part, brother dear,” his sweet sister said, eyes glittering with her usual amusement. “And you?”

He laughed lightly. “No complaints; no more than usual, at least.” Crouching so that he would be able to see the project she was working on, Dio reached out to touch it. “Ah, lamb’s wool. Wonderful thing for a pair of socks,” he said, smirking at the amusement that spread over his sweet sister’s face.

“Wonderful indeed,” Alice returned, eyelids lowering slightly; her way of silently laughing at the world in a way that few others would understand. “Save for the part where I’m making a scarf.”

The pair of them shared an amused laugh, before Dio settled himself on the ground to relax once more.

 

=PB=

When he was finally able to make his way home, Jonathan found himself wondering just what it was Dio had been at. Erina had been thoroughly flummoxed when they had occasioned to meet again, telling tales of the way Dio had kissed her cheek while he was giving his blessing for the two of them to continue courting as they were. He was pleased to have Dio’s approval for his courtship, yes, but he still aimed to speak with his adopted brother. Familial affection or not, it was simply unseemly to go around kissing people when he wasn’t invited.

And Erina had been quite plain about the fact that she hadn’t invited him to do anything like that.

Finally standing in the salon again, looking down at Dio and Alice as the former read and the latter continued with her knitting, Jonathan stepped over to the chair Dio was seated in.

“Dio, I would have words with you,” he said, not shouting, but certain that his words had been heard all the same, given the way Dio lifted his head so that the pair of them were looking into one another’s eyes.

“Oh? How many words, dear brother? That was seven, right there,” the amused smirk slowly spreading across the faces of both his adopted siblings made Jonathan purse his lips in disapproval; this was hardly a laughing matter! “Do you have more for me, perhaps?”

“I don’t want you playing your games with Erina, do you hear me?” he asked, knowing that it would be improper in the extreme to take Dio by the shoulders and shake some decorum into him, but he almost wished that he could.

“Ah, I see the problem now,” Dio said smoothly, rising to his feet with the same smooth, easy grace that Jonathan had tried and failed on many occasions to adapt for himself. “You’re feeling left out, aren’t you, Jojo? Well,” the grin spreading across Dio’s face widened all the more. “Let it never be said that I, Dio, am not generous with my favors.”

Dio clapped his large, strong right hand on Jonathan’s own right shoulder… and the next thing he knew- Dio’s arms- Dio’s lips…!

 

=PB=

Oh, to see the look on dear Jojo’s face when he, Dio, kissed him unto the rest of eternity… Perhaps he would even ask dear Alice to paint it for him, though even such a masterpiece as his sweet sister would create could only ever be a shadow of the real event. Still, even a shadow could provide ample amusement under the right conditions…

He would speak to his sweet sister later; for now, there was still more amusement to be had with Jojo.

“Dio, you… I…”

Their adorably foolish brother spluttered for a few moments more, his cheeks steadily pinking as Dio continued to smile in that blandly pleasant way that his sweet sister had perfected for when she spoke to those whose opinion meant little more than a passing amusement to her. Granted, such a category encompassed nearly every person the pair of them were forced to meet by Lord Joestar, save for those who would make the effort to come to know Alice on her own terms. It was another thing he’d come to admire about his sweet sister: she only gave of herself on her own will.

“Well, my lothario brother, you certainly showed him.”

Turning to grin in response to his sweet sister’s dulcet tone, Dio saw that she was still knitting with the same facility she had demonstrated every time she’d had the chance to settle down and take some time for herself. Provided she hadn’t chosen to paint, sew, or cook, of course.

“Well, you know how it is, sister dear: one should always give the people what they want,” he grinned.

“Within reason, of course.”

“Of course,” he replied.

Jojo was bound to provide at least some further amusement to them, once he’d managed to regain his composure at least. Smiling to himself as he settled back into the chair he’d recently vacated, Dio picked up his book and calmly began to read once again. Time would tell just how much amusement Jojo could truly provide for them, but all the same Dio did so look forward to it.

 

=PB=

Time passed, as time did, and Sarah found herself in need of ever more creative means of relieving the boredom that seemed to be part and parcel of life as a woman in the Victorian Era. Re-teaching herself Parkour, and teaching it to Dio at the same time, provided something more for her to do than attend her various lessons and think up new and interesting ways of complicating George stuffed-shirt Joestar’s life since he’d started insisting on her finding a husband. She hadn’t even lived fifteen years of this new life of hers, and already the old fogey was bringing in marriage prospects.

She and Dio both agreed that that was bullshit, and had both resolved to handle the situations in the ways that were opened to them. For her, that mostly involved long excursions spent roof-hopping above the seedier parts of London, learning the lay of the land, and staying out of sight long enough for Dio to handle the problem in his own special way; she’d made sure to extract a promise that he wouldn’t kill anyone.

That was how Fleetwood Mac had ended up meeting a man named Robert Edward O. Speedwagon; she’d nearly burst out laughing right in his face when he’d said that, which considering she’d just gotten out of a scrap with some of his lackeys, wouldn’t have been the best idea in either of her lives. Even with as uncoordinated as pack of jackals he’d been ostensibly leading was, there had been a lot of them. Enough brute force could wear down even the fastest and most cunning of fighters, which she could hardly call herself even with the experience of two lives backing her up.

Still, Rob had said he’d liked the cut of her jib, and even though he’d been under the mistaken impression that Sarah was a man under her close-fitted trousers, rough-spun cotton shirt, bulky, dun-colored overcoat, and jauntily tilted fedora, she’d still taken the compliment in the spirit it was offered; it wasn’t like she’d gone out of her way to correct that misconception, since it was still useful to her in this day and age.

Still, at the moment she wasn’t thinking about Mr. Speedwagon or any of his many and varied eccentricities – or his possible role in her family’s future – Dio had looked a bit more stressed than usual, so she’d decided to show him the view from the fancy tower she’d discovered standing sentinel over the better part of London. It was hardly Big Ben, but since she wasn’t playing Assassin’s Creed, or remotely superhuman, she wasn’t going to go trying to climb up the side of that particular building anytime soon.

“Quite a workout, sister dear,” Dio said, from behind and a bit below her; he sounded a bit breathless.

“Getting tired already?” she called down, smiling as an answering grin spread across her brother’s face.

The pair of them shared a laugh, as they continued on their way up the side of the tower to the slightly peaked rooftop.

Hauling herself up and over the edge of the roof with a last surge of muscle power, Sarah scooted across the rooftop to make room for her brother as he made his own way up to settle down beside her. Once the pair of them had managed to make themselves as comfortable as they could manage while they reclined atop the shingled rooftop.

“Quite the view, sister dear.”

She hummed softly in response, but only half of her attention was focused on her brother’s words; this was the best place that she had found, in all of Victorian London, to reflect on her thoughts and try to sort out this strange new life that she was living. It still felt strange to think about, but she’d lived almost as long as Alice Brando as she had as Sarah Williams; the name itself was even starting to settle more comfortably on her, like a coat she’d been wearing for some time; no longer ill-fitting and unfamiliar, but soft and worn smooth from all the time she’d spent in it.

There will be bad days. Be calm. Loosen your grip, opening each palm slowly now. Let go. Be confident. Know that now is only a moment, and that if today is as bad as it gets, understand that by tomorrow, today will have ended.

Be gracious. Accept each extended hand offered, to pull you back from the somewhere you cannot escape. Be diligent. Scrape the gray sky clean. Realize every dark cloud is a smoke screen meant to blind us from the truth, and the truth is whether we see them or not - the sun and moon are still there and always there is light.

Be forthright. Despite your instinct to say “It’s alright, I'm okay” - be honest. Say how you feel without fear or guilt, without remorse or complexity. Be lucid in your explanation, be sterling in your oppose. If you think for one second no one knows what you've been going through; be accepting of the fact that you are wrong, that the long drawn and heavy breaths of despair have at times been felt by everyone - that pain is part of the human condition and that alone makes you a legion.

We hungry underdogs, we risers with dawn, we dissmissers of odds, we pressers of on – we will station ourselves to the calm. We will hold ourselves to the steady, be ready player one. Life is going to come at you armed with hard times and tough choices, your voice is your weapon, your thoughts ammunition – there are no free extra men, be aware that as the instant now passes, it exists now as then.

So be a mirror reflecting yourself back, and remembering the times when you thought all of this was too hard and you'd never make it through. Remember the times you could have pressed quit – but you hit continue.

Be forgiving. Living with the burden of anger, is not living. Giving your focus to wrath will leave your entire self absent of what you need. Love and hate are beasts and the one that grows is the one you feed.

Be persistent. Be the weed growing through the cracks in the cement, beautiful - because it doesn't know it's not supposed to grow there. Be resolute. Declare what you accept as true in a way that envisions the resolve with which you accept it.

If you are having a good day, be considerate. A simple smile could be the first-aid kit that someone has been looking for. If you believe with absolute honesty that you are doing everything you can - do more.

There will be bad days, Times when the world weighs on you for so long it leaves you looking for an easy way out. There will be moments when the drought of joy seems unending. Instances spent pretending that everything is all right when it clearly is not, check your blind spot. See that love is still there, be patient.

Every nightmare has a beginning, but every bad day has an end. Ignore what others have called you. I am calling you friend.

Make us comprehend the urgency of your crisis. Silence left to its own devices, breeds silence. So speak and be heard. One word after the next, express yourself and put your life in the context – if you find that no one is listening, be loud. Make noise. Stand in poise and be open. Hope in these situations is not enough and you will need someone to lean on.

In the unlikely event that you have no one, look again. Everyone is blessed with the ability to listen. The deaf will hear you with their eyes. The blind will see you with their hands. Let your heart fill their news-stands, Let them read all about it.

Admit to the bad days, the impossible nights. Listen to the insights of those who have been there, but come back. They will tell you; you can stack misery, you can pack despair, you can even wear your sorrow – but come tomorrow you must change your clothes. Everyone knows pain. We are not meant to carry it forever.

We were never meant to hold it so closely, so be certain in the belief that what pain belongs to now will belong soon to then. That when someone asks you how was your day, realize that for some of us – it's the only way we know how to say, be calm. Loosen your grip, opening each palm, slowly now – let go.”

Sarah only realized that she’d been speaking aloud when she heard Dio chuckle softly, his head tucked neatly under her collarbone.

“How long have you been composing that, sister dear?” he asked, his tone not sounding particularly interested; she knew he was, of course, since if there was any thing that she and Dio shared it was their curiosity about this world and everything in it, but even without Dario’s toxic influence to warp him, her brother still gave a lot of weight to what people thought of him.

She hadn’t seen much point in that during either of her lives, but she made every effort to respect her brother’s boundaries, even if she did think they were silly.

“Just something I’ve had in mind,” she said, leaning back on her right arm as she looked into the darkening sky.

There was really no conceivable way she’d be able to explain the concept of reincarnation, alternate universes, future technology, the internet, and how all of those related to the free-form poem she would recite whenever she found a moment to herself, to reflect on her old life, and to help get her thoughts in order. Those moments weren’t nearly as frequent as she’d have preferred them to be, not even as frequent as they had been during her life as Sarah, but at the very least she’d managed to take some time for herself. She could be content with that, at least.

Dio chuckled softly, as the pair of them continued staring up into the endless blue sky.

 

=PB=

He’d seen Jojo spending more and more time with that odd stone mask that had once hung so proudly in the salon of the Joestar estate, and as it was clearly fascinating in all manner of ways, Dio could hardly let such a tantalizing mystery go uninvestigated.

Making his way down into the estate’s grand library, Dio paused for a moment to see if he could spot Jojo himself in the small study set just off from the rows upon rows of shelving. If there was one thing he knew about his and dear Alice’s adorable fool of a brother, it was that he was well and truly eager to share his passion with anyone who would be willing to spare the time to listen to his ramblings. And he would inevitably ramble on; Jojo did tend to forget himself when he was expositing about a subject that truly spoke to him.

It was one of his more amusingly endearing qualities.

Still, when he finally did make his way into the study, Dio was only able to find scattered signs of Jojo’s presence, rather than Jojo himself: the large table was piled high with heavy tomes, as well as notes with Jojo’s distinctive scrawl upon them. The stone mask itself was also present, and as this was the first time that he, Dio had had a chance to do so, he made his way over to examine the artifact.

It seemed a perfectly ordinary thing, though clearly made with a rather exquisite attention to detail. It was rather amusing to note the stone fangs carved out so neatly, and to realize that the mask itself was clearly meant to resemble a vampire’s face. He felt a smirk stretching his lips as he realized what kind of amusement he, Dio could create for himself with the circumstances that Jojo had so generously gifted him.

Slipping the stone mask onto his face, Dio crouched under the table that Jojo had set his study materials out upon, and proceeded to wait – silent and patient as he had ever been – for his and Alice’s adorable fool of a brother to return. The sound of footsteps upon the elegant, polished wooden floors drew his attention back towards the rows upon rows of heavy shelving units that Jojo had apparently been hidden by. Grinning under the stone mask, Dio shifted so that he would more easily be able to leap out and startle Jojo.

Just as his and Alice’s adorable fool of a brother came close enough to the table to reach out for the chair, he, Dio leaped out from under the table, shouting to startle Jojo.

He’d expected Jojo to jump backwards, perhaps even falling on his arse in a particularly amusing fashion, or perhaps to yelp loudly, after which he, Dio would have removed the stone mask and tweaked Jojo’s nose with a laugh. Instead, he felt Jojo’s right fist slam into his face, driving the rough stone of the mask into his nose with the full force of Jojo’s boxer’s strength. Feeling his own nose shatter against the interior of the mask’s own shaped nose, Dio laughed softly… then, the pain…

 

=PB=

When he heard Dio’s scream, that terrible, pained sound that his brother hadn’t made even during those few times that he had ended up on the ground bleeding after one of their boxing matches. It was a sound of equal parts pain and terror; which only made it all the more chilling, as he had never before thought to hear the sound of terror from either Dio or Alice. The pair of them had always seemed so fearless, so collected, that to see Dio writhing on the ground screaming in agony… it was all the more horrible since he knew how Dio truly acted.

Grabbing his brother’s flailing hands before he could clutch at the stone mask and attempt to pry it off, an act that was all too likely to cause him even more grievous harm than the stone spikes that had buried themselves in his brother’s head, Jonathan restrained his brother with desperate strength. Jonathan had only seen those spines once before, when he had inadvertently splashed some of his own blood on the mask and hence triggered the expulsion of the spines. He’d no way of knowing just what the mask would have done to a living person, and this was not the way he would have wished to find out!

In fact given the location of the spines, and the fact that it had taken his own blood to activate them, Jonathan would have been perfectly happy to go his entire life without knowing!

“Dio, stay still!” he said, kneeling beside his brother’s head. “I’ll go get help! Stay here!”

Forcing himself back to his feet, already beginning to weep for what might happen to his dear brother, Jonathan hurried off to find Father and tell him of what had happened. He’d not blame Dio for this, what had clearly been one of his harmless japes gone so grievously, horribly wrong… He would explain to Father that Dio had suffered a terrible accident, and… he would also ask what he was to tell Alice.

Hurrying off with only a single, tearful look over his right shoulder, Jonathan went to find Father so that he could solve this terrible problem.

However, when he and Father returned to the library, he found it empty, save for the stacks of books that he had previously set out. Dio and the stone mask were both gone, but in their place was a loosely-folded sheet of paper, lying innocuously atop the table. Moving forward to pick it up, not quite having heard Father’s words and knowing that he would be due for a lecture on decorum later, Jonathan unfolded the page.

Dio’s flowing, elegant script greeted him:

 

Jonathan:

You’ve done me a great service this day, brother.

I, Dio, did so wonder how I would be able to help my sweet sister deal with these foolish obligations your father insisted upon forcing onto her. Though I feel that the two of us might be separated for some time, I, Dio,  will make every effort to reestablish contact when circumstances permit.

Fondest regards;

Dio

 

Chapter 3: London Town

Chapter Text

She hadn’t seen Dio since the two of them had gone to bed last night, and she was honestly starting to worry. Yeah, she was perfectly aware that Dio could take care of himself, but she also knew that he enjoyed the meals that she and Charlena prepared, and so wasn’t likely to miss out on them for as long as he was. Charlena was trying to keep a brave face on, but it was becoming more and more obvious that nothing was going to be solved if she didn’t do something, so Sarah knew she was going to have to blow off some of the extraneous “responsibilities” that old George Joestar kept trying to foist off on her.

Even if she had to deal with the man’s puffed-up grousing, some things needed doing; still, there was one more lead she could pursue, before she headed out to do some recon.

“Jonathan,” she said, catching the attention of her and Dio’s brother.

She could already tell that Jonathan was hiding something by the way he cringed away from her as she headed over to him, so that was one mystery out of the way. What Jonathan knew, however, was another matter entirely. He might have been bad at keeping secrets, but he’d clam right up if someone asked him not to talk.

“Alice,” Jonathan said, seeming to try to shrink in on himself as she closed with him; it was a funny sight on someone his size, but that kind of thing wasn’t why she was here. “Good morning, sister.”

“Yes, good morning, Jojo,” she said, calmly folding her arms over her chest. “Now then, mind telling me what you’re hiding?”

“Hiding?” Jonathan echoed, his voice developing the signature squeak that it always did when he tried to lie. “Why would I be hiding something?”

“Jonathan, you couldn’t lie to save your life, so do please stop trying,” she said, narrowing her eyes slightly and leaning in a bit closer. “Now, where’s Dio gotten himself off to?”

“Alice, I…” Jonathan squirmed a bit as she continued to stare him down, but in the end it did look like someone had told him not to say anything.

“Dio’s gotten himself into something interesting again, hasn’t he?” she asked, smirking slightly; it wasn’t that far-fetched, really, Dio wasn’t really the greatest for considering his actions before he took them.

“That is… well, I…”

“All right, all right,” she said, waving Jonathan off. “I’ll take care of this, myself.”

Turning away from her and Dio’s brother, Sarah made her way out to the carriage house. She was going to meet with Appice, so she could get out of the house for awhile. She needed Speedwagon’s contacts for this; Dio had gotten kind of attached to a place called Ogre Street, and often went back there for… well, basically for shits and giggles, really. Ducking out of the way, before George could spot her and try to push something else on her, Sarah continued on her way.

Making her way into the carriage house, she spoke briefly with Appice, picked up the reversible bag that she’d stored atop one of the shelves, and climbed into one of the carriages on the far side of the large room. While Appice himself whipped up the horses, Sarah quickly changed into the outfit that she had adopted for use in her Fleetwood Mac persona. Taking out her black umbrella, she retied the laces of her bag and tucked it into the far corner of the carriage.

“Meet me back here in a couple hours, all right?” she asked, passing over a handful of bills; she and Appice had an understanding: she supplemented his income when she needed him to get her somewhere, and he didn’t ask questions.

“Yes, mum.”

“Thanks,” she said, nodding to Appice, then making her way up the side of a nearby building.

Searching for the distinctive, bowler-hatted form of one Robert E.O. Speedwagon as she hopped from rooftop to rooftop, Sarah eventually managed to track the man and his gang down to one of the many narrow streets that made up the neighborhood known colloquially as Ogre Street. Crouching lessen the shadow she would otherwise be casting on the ground, Sarah carefully stepped over the peak of the roofline and continued down onto the downward slope. Not a one of Speedwagon’s gang looked up, and with an amused shake of her head, Sarah slid down and off the edge of the rooftop to land – lightly and safely out of earshot – behind the gang.

Announcing her presence by swiping Robert’s bowler hat right off the top of his head as she closed with him from behind, she grinned at him when he turned to look at her with an expression of frank incredulity on his face.

“Rob, now what’ve I told you?” she asked, lazily spinning the man’s bowler hat on her right pointer finger.

“Fleetwood,” Robert greeted, smirking as he snatched his hat back, setting it neatly back on his head. “So nice to see ya again. This a social call, or do you need us to rough someone up for ya?”

“What I need from you now is some information, Rob,” she said, as the pair of them continued on their way down the narrow street.

“What kind of information ya need, Fleetwood?”

“Have you ever heard of a man named Dio Brando?” she asked, looking back over at him as the pair of them continued on their way down the narrow street.

“Him?” Robert echoed, his expression shifting to one of disapproval. “I’ve seen his like before, Fleetwood. He might put on a good act, but I’ve seen more than my share of his type. Men like him, no matter what airs they put on, are evil to the core.”

Disguising a scoff as a soft sneeze, Sarah made a show of wiping her hands, and tucked them into her pockets. “You mind putting out feelers anyway? He might not be your kind, but I’d really prefer to know where he is.”

“Friends close and enemies closer, eh?” Robert asked, the smile on his face coming right back. “All right, Fleetwood; you’ve convinced me. You’ll have all the feelers ya need, once I get done.”

Oh, the many ways that could be taken out of context, she mused, amusedly thanking Robert for his assistance, just before a commotion from somewhere up ahead drew his attention.

“Looks like you came just in time for some action, Fleetwood!” Robert called, turning to grin back over his right shoulder at her. “We’ve got us a plump little pigeon, just waiting to be plucked!”

“I suppose I could spare some time,” she said, smiling slightly at the eager expression on Robert’s face.

Sure, she wasn’t generally in favor of fighting when there wasn’t something to be gained from it, but Robert had never really seemed the type to go around killing people, or harming them excessively for that matter. Sure, he liked to give the nobles a hard time, but considering the kind of spectacular jackasses most of them could be, she didn’t really see anything wrong with having some fun at their expense. So long as no one uninvolved got caught up in it, of course.

Still, given everything she’d learned about him, Robert – she still had to stifle a chuckle when she remembered what his initials spelled out – didn’t seem the kind to let that happen.

The man they were accosting was, no bones about it, built like a brick shithouse. That was sure to cause no end of problems for the more wiry members of Rob’s gang, which only made Sarah all the more pleased that she wasn’t going to be getting into a dust-up with ol’ Shithouse there. Still, there was something kind of familiar about the big lug…

 

=PB=

When he was attacked out of nowhere by a gang of toughs who seemed intent on severely roughing him up for whatever reason, Jonathan found himself realizing that Ogre Street was far more aptly named than he had been led to believe. But he had a duty to search every place that Dio might have gone, and as this place was where he and Alice had been born, it was all the more important that he search it. It might very well be the one place he could hope to find a clue as to Dio’s current whereabouts.

So, he would brave the dangers that had given Ogre Street its fearsome reputation, and if these men sought to stop him, they were in for quite a rude awakening.

Those in front charged in heedlessly, and he wasted no time laying them out using the skills that he had learned in the boxing ring facing Dio. Such a memory made Jonathan all the more determined to seek out his wayward brother and bring him back home; together, the pair of them might be able to determine just what it was that that ominous stone mask had done to him. And, if needs must, how they might reverse what had been done.

The sight of the pair who seemed to have instigated this mêlée that Jonathan currently found himself having to contend with filled him with a new resolve. He would have done with this absurd distraction as soon as he ever could manage, and then he would find Dio, so that the pair of them might find a way to cope with this horrid new situation they found themselves in.

Right away, he noticed that the thinner man in pale, rough-spun clothes was hiding the lower half of his face behind a rather slender hand; even the gloves the man wore did little to disguise the slimness of his hands, or… the laughter lurking in his… copper… colored… eyes…

When- when Alice removed her right hand from her face, Jonathan was at first relived to see the amused smile on his and Dio’s sister’s face, then he was given a harsh reminder of just why allowing himself to be distracted at this of all moments was not conductive to his continued health. Turning his attention back to the ruffians who were presently accosting him, he wasn’t particularly surprised when Alice grabbed the man by the collar of his ragged jacket and hauled him back as though he were nothing more than a disobedient puppy.

She’d often done that when he and Dio had become overly boisterous for her taste, if the pair of them didn’t end up provoking her into knocking their heads together.

“What’s the idea, Fleetwood?” asked the large, wiry, wild-haired man who had been standing at the back of the group, as he came to walk beside Alice while she scruffed the ruffian who’d threatened and dragged him back among the crowd of assorted ruffians.

“I know this one, Robert,” Alice said, turning to flash a rather amused-looking smile at the man she was closing so swiftly with. “He’s a good sort, though a bit of a lunkhead.”

He was truly tempted to call out to his and Dio’s sister; he’d known she’d chafed under the expectations and all of the limits pressed down upon her by Father and the society they all lived in, but he’d had no idea that she was willing to go so far as to adopt both a false name and face to escape from them. Yes, he knew that Alice and Dio both had very little care for any boundaries, but this… He’d seen men dressed up as women in the theatre, but Jonathan Joestar had never truly thought to see the reverse.

“Well, this is quite the thing, Fleetwood,” Robert said, making his way through the crowd.

Given the way the whole lot of them swiftly moved back and away from him at only a single glance from Robert, that let Jonathan know that, in spite of their clear desire to do him bodily harm, those men were at least honorable enough to listen when someone they respected gave them an order.

“So, how d’ya know this one, Fleetwood?” Robert asked; then a small smile, akin to the sly smirks he’d seen Alice and Dio wear when something had happened, appeared on his face. “Or, do we have to catch you ta find out?”

“Well, if you insist,” Alice said, tilting her fedora jauntily, smirking in that challenging way that he’d seen so often on his siblings’ faces…

It was yet another reminder of Dio; Jonathan tried not to let it hurt so much. He would find Dio and return him home, where he belonged.

 

=PB=

Grinning as she heard Jonathan shouting for her to come back, and then Rob’s laughter at her cheesehead of an adopted brother, Sarah dashed into a nearby alleyway and climbed straight up the nearest wall. Pausing for only a moment to catch her breath, then almost losing it at the sight of Jonathan and Rob running around at ground-level trying to look for her, she smirked and began making her way across the rooftops. It was just about time that she got back to Appice and headed for home.

She didn’t have all the time in the world, after all.

 

=PB=

He had all the time in the world, now.

Grinning with his newly granted fangs, Dio continued on his way through the back streets of London. The only troublesome thing about his new… condition, was the fact that he was forced to completely avoid sunlight or else suffer terrible burns that urgently needed blood to repair them. He’d pickpocketed enough money that he was able to buy himself a pint of blood at a nearby butcher shop, and that had healed him up well enough. In addition, such an action had left him with no troublesome corpses that needed to be disposed of; he knew dear Alice would appreciate his caution in such matters.

His dear sister did so hate to be distracted by unnecessary trivialities.

Speaking of my dear Alice… Grinning as he caught sight of his sweet sister’s blonde queue, glimmering as it caught the rays of the early afternoon sun, Dio followed along just behind and below for a few moments, seeing if he could determine where she was heading, before dashing swiftly up the side of a building that his dear Alice had just leaped onto the roof of. Dio quickly swept her up in his arms.

He hoped she would find this new life he had been granted by that fascinating stone mask to her liking, as well. They would be free from all the constraints of not only those fools who considered themselves above them for the mere circumstances of their birth, or the fact that they had been raised solely by their mother, but free of humanity itself. Of course, if any of those worthless creatures found out precisely what a wastrel their late, unlamented father was… Well, it would simply give the cretins all the more reason to look down upon them.

He knew that his sweet sister had little care for the opinions of those she met only in passing, and there were times that he rather envied her for it, but the more he was forced to listen to those chattering imbeciles, the stronger his urge to deal with them in the same manner that the pair of them hand dealt with their worthless father became.

Holding his sweet sister close, his new sense of smell picking out scents that he had never been able to discern as a mere human, Dio could not help the momentary urge to sink his newfound fangs into Alice’s neck. Still, the pair of them – already far more worthy than any of the witless fools surrounding them – were the only ones truly fit to inherit the world. The pair of them stood far above the common rabble; both because Alice had introduced him to the fascinating sport of roof-running, and because the two of them were simply better than all of the petty, bleating cretins that surrounded them.

Even Jojo, for all his endearing qualities, was really more on the level of a pet than anything.

Making his way back to the empty mansion that he had prepared for the pair of them, once he had fully determined the extent of the changes that the stone mask had made to his once-human body, Dio grinned as he scaled the nearest wall and let himself in through one of the large windows. Pushing aside the heavy, light-blocking curtains as he continued on his way deeper into the halls of what would soon be their home, Dio tossed off the cloak he’d been wearing.

He’d taken the precaution of knocking Alice unconscious, and could only hope that his sweet sister would not be too cross with him for using a tactic that she herself had demonstrated before him so many times to render her so for ease of transport.

Perhaps she’ll forgive me after she realizes just how powerful this stone mask will make us, he grinned. As immortal, powerful, unstoppable vampires, we’ll be the twin rulers of humanity! he mused with pleasure, continuing on his way to the large bedroom that he had cleared out for his sweet sister’s use. It was directly across the hall from his own, rather than in an entirely separate wing as had been the case when the pair of them had stayed in the Joestar estate. He was far more pleased with this particular arrangement, of course.

Gently laying his sweet sister down upon the bed, Dio gathered the stone mask from the nightstand and made his way back over to where his dear Alice slept.

“Good night my angel, time to close your eyes,” he sang softly, the strains of the lullaby coming easily to him; the very one she’d first sang to him on that dark night, only a scant three days before she had finally had enough of their wastrel father and his foolishness. “And save these questions for another day. I think I know what you’ve been asking me.” Turning the stone mask so that it lay neatly upon his sweet sister’s face, Dio settled himself down next to her head. “I think you know what I’ve been trying to say. I promised I would never leave you, and you should always know: wherever you may go, no matter where you are, I never will be far away.”

Her voice, never truly soft unless there was a particular need for it, had drowned out their horrid father’s for the first and last time in his memory; a memory he would treasure, as there had been no other but his dear Alice to watch over him that lonely night.

“Good night my angel, now it’s time to sleep. And still so many things I want to say.” She’d helped him to barricade the door with their old bed frame and threadbare mattress, keeping Dario from one of his all-too-frequent drunken rampages against the pair of them while they slept. “Remember all the songs you sang for me, when we went sailing on an emerald bay. And like a boat out on the ocean, I’m rocking you to sleep. The water’s dark and deep, inside this ancient heart. You’ll always be a part of me.” Sinking his newly-granted fangs into his lower lip, Dio tasted his own blood for the first time since he’d become a vampire.

Since he’d utterly transcended the limits of feeble humanity.

Leaning down, acting quickly before one of the droplets gathering on his lips could spoil this perfect moment that he’d spent so long crafting, Dio kissed the stone mask’s forehead with his bloodied lips and watched in wonderful anticipation as the eyes of the stone mask lit up with brilliant crimson radiance.

 

=PB=

The first thing Sarah became aware of was a shooting pain in her head; pain that spread quickly to the rest of her body seemingly between the space of one breath and the next. She flailed almost instinctively, but just as quickly found that there was someone restraining her. Her arms, at least; but when she tried to kick her way free, that same someone’s feet came down heavily on her calves.

“Rest easy now, sister,” Dio’s familiar voice said, echoing slightly inside what sounded like an empty room. “Easy. You’ll feel so much better when this is over.”

That wasn’t the strange part; sure, Jonathan had said that Dio’d gone off somewhere, and it wasn’t that surprising that the first person he’d end up making contact with when he’d finally decided to make his way back. No, what Sarah couldn’t quite explain were the scents and sounds surrounding her. She could hear the creaking of wood; the sound of a large house settling, and something about the quality of the sound told her that the place was empty except for the two of them.

The smells… the smells were the strangest part. She’d never had what anyone would call a strong sense of smell, not unless they were being uncommonly charitable, but now… The room she was currently in was musty, even smelling disused to the point where she could tell that she and Dio were the only ones who’d set foot in here for who knew how long.

“Dio, you’ve got some explaining to do.”

Chapter 4: Young And Proud

Chapter Text

With no word nor sight of Mistress Alice during the two hours she had requested him to wait, Appice returned to his carriage and set off for the Joestar estate; he would return for the young lady of the house later, since he knew that Alice Brando was resourceful and intelligent enough to make her own way back to their appointed meeting place without undue fuss.

 

=PB=

He’d told Robert about Alice and her proclivities – the eccentricity that made his adopted sister so vibrant, and at the same time such a trial when she set her mind on being so – and the man had seemed to take it in stride. Robert seemed rather amused by the concept than anything, really.

“I’d thought your girl had something odd about her when the two of us met,” the man, one Robert E.O. Speedwagon, said as the pair of them continued searching for Alice throughout the bustling streets of London. “Never would’ve suspected she was a girl.”

“Alice has always been… willful,” he said.

She and Dio had both been something of a concern to Father, the way they were prone to carry on at times. And, though Jonathan loved the pair of them dearly, even he found himself wishing – at times – that Dio and their sister had been more content with their lives and less inclined to cause trouble in pursuit of their own amusement.

 

=PB=

Stroking his dear, sweet sister’s long, blonde hair as he held the pint of blood he’d purchased for her some time earlier – she’d said that such a thing hadn’t been necessary in the slightest, but as he’d insisted she’d been willing to humor him – Dio smiled widely. There would be time enough for them to discuss all of the lovely ideas he’d dreamed up since gaining this new power, power that he had naturally shared with his sweet sister, but for the moment he was content to relax. Alice’s head bumped against his chest, just enough to draw his attention, and Dio looked over his sister’s back at the now-empty container of blood that he had been holding for her.

Smiling slightly as he set the freshly-emptied container down upon the bedside table, Dio nuzzled his sweet sister’s head as she leaned back against him.

“So, I take it you have a plan for all this,” his dear Alice said, and he smiled.

“I thought that the pair of us would plot our rise to the top of the world,” he said, grinning in the darkness; he could see through it like daylight, nothing would be able to escape his gaze.

Nothing more would be able to escape his grasp.

“Of course,” his sweet sister murmured, amusement coloring her tone.

“You can’t truly deny that we deserve it,” he said, knowing that his dear sister was merely teasing him as she did everyone, but still wishing to be heard on this matter.

“Well, let’s call that an extreme long-term goal, then. What do you intend to do, here and now?”

“Ah, yes,” he mused, wrapping his arms more securely around his dear Alice’s waist. “Everything rests on a foundation of preparation.”

He chuckled softly, even as Alice hummed in thought; it was a more elegant phrasing of something his sweet sister was rather fond of saying. For all that he sometimes acted without thinking, he’d never found the statement to be entirely without merit.

“I suppose we should at least pay a visit to Jonathan,” he sweet sister said, her tone sounding rather reflective. “He’ll worry his head off if he doesn’t see us again.”

“Knowing Jojo, there’s no doubting it,” he said, grinning softly in the darkness.

“Well, if you know that much, you should remember that once Jonathan worries his head all the way off, he’s inevitably going to lose track of it,” she said, and he could almost hear the sly smile on her face.

He laughed, cuddling her more tightly as he nuzzled the side of her head. “Yes; I suppose Jojo would have trouble without us.” He hummed softly. “We’ll have to wait until nightfall; vampires like us won’t do so well in the sunlight.”

Smiling slightly as Alice laughed softly, Dio relaxed into the soft bedding he laid upon. Darkness would come soon enough; truly, they had all the time in the world.

 

=PB=

The sun was falling steadily, and Jonathan was forced to admit that he would not be able to find Alice and Dio before night fell entirely. Robert had offered him some comfort, and promised that he would give any kind of aid that Jonathan asked of him. He’d thanked the man for his kindness, and returned home. Home, to tell Father that not only had Dio vanished after coming into close contact with that horrible stone mask, but he’d lost sight of Alice almost as quickly as he had found her out and about in the lower parts of London.

He’d known, of course, that she was willful and clever… but, seeing how far she was willing to go when those she loved were out of her sight… In a way it was something of a comfort, to know that Alice cared for all of them so much, but in another it was rather terrifying, knowing that his and Dio’s sister accepted no limits save for those she had set upon herself; particularly since he’d little idea what those limits even were.

He’d been unsure of whether or not to tell Father about what he had deduced, since he didn’t know just what the man’s reaction would ultimately be; if Alice truly accepted no limits but her own, and then Father attempted to impose some… he did not relish the thought of what could happen.

After having made his explanations and apologies to Father, Jonathan made his way slowly back to his room. He hadn’t been confined there, though Father had seemed rather disappointed in him all the same, so that was one small thing he no longer had to worry about. Still, the walk back to his room was a rather long and depressing one, all the same.

Closing the door behind him, Jonathan leaned against it for a long, long moment.

The soft sounds of someone muttering drew his attention to his bed, and Jonathan hurried over to it once he realized that the curtains had been drawn. For a moment, Jonathan was fair certain that he’d heard snickering, but… then…

“Dio? Alice?”

For indeed, his dear brother and sister were standing right there before him. Throwing himself into the welcoming circle of his dear siblings’ arms, Jonathan wept openly for the safe return of the remaining members of his family.

 

=PB=

Once they’d managed to pry Jonathan loose – Dio’d suggested a crowbar, but he’d clearly spoken too softly for anyone but another vampire to hear him – their brother insisted on showing them off to that stuffed-shirt adopted father of theirs. She and Dio shared a Look behind Jonathan’s back; it was a good thing that they’d been forced to return under the cover of darkness, since George would have otherwise had the curtains open, and Dio’d told her in fairly vivid detail about just what happened to a vampire unlucky enough to find themselves exposed to sunlight. She’d wondered, for a long few moments, just how he’d managed to find something like that out; but in the end she hadn’t been curious enough to ask.

She was almost tempted to laugh at the kicked-puppy look on Jonathan’s face as George lectured him, but considering how much of an ass George was currently being, the temptation was a rather easy one to ignore. Stepping in just as Jonathan had started attempting to stammer out some sort of explanation for the happenings of the previous day, she sighed.

“Right, that’s enough,” she said, rising back to her feet and folding her arms; she thought for a moment that she might have actually been taller than her previous life’s 6’1”, but that was entirely beside the point.

“Alice, this is hardly your business,” George said, turning to her with that same, stuffy expression that never seemed to really leave his face.

“I’m making it my business,” she said, narrowing her eyes slightly. “It’s hardly Jonathan’s fault that he lost track of me. He may be a boxer, but that hardly makes him suited for roof-running.”

She’d almost called it Parkour, but the word itself was both French and she didn’t know if it had been invented yet, she didn’t want to confuse the issue by bringing in words that may or may not have been invented. Still, she wasn’t about to let George go blaming Jonathan for not being able to do something he’d never trained for in the first place.

“Roof-running is not a suitable activity for a young girl, Alice,” George said, seeming to latch onto that for whatever reason; like hell was she going to waste valuable brainspace trying to comprehend the motives of someone whose opinion meant less than nothing to her.

“Of course not,” she said, smiling blandly. “Why else do you think I enjoy it so much?”

George sighed, Jonathan gawped, and Dio… well, Dio burst out laughing.

She and her brother were dismissed back to their respective rooms not soon after that, but Dio – just as she’d been expecting him to, really – insisted on coming with her to her room. The pair of them settled themselves down on her bed, with Dio lifting her up onto his lap with what seemed to be the barest of effort.

“Well, Jojo’s back to himself,” Dio said, chuckling deep in his throat as he curled his arms around her waist. “I don’t suppose you’d want to start making plans for our glorious rise to power now?”

She laughed softly, though it came out sounding a bit like a sigh. “Dio, do you even have the slightest idea where we should start?”

Her twin’s only response was a laugh, as he nuzzled the right side of her head, kissing her temple before settling back onto her bed.

 

=PB=

The next several days represented pretty much a complete break from their normal routine, which made sense once you considered just how much the pair of them being vampires altered their whole family dynamic. Charlena fussed over the pair of them even more than she had when they were kids, which was both kind of funny and a bit sad at the same time. Jonathan seemed even more determined to do everything he could for them; tagging along with them when he wasn’t going out for lessons – she’d managed to convince George that she and Dio could find pretty much anything they would need to learn about in the Joestar Estate’s vast library – and hurrying to check up on them when he came home.

“Alice! Dio! You’ll never believe what I managed to find!” he shouted, bursting into the kitchen with them.

“Jojo, I’m shocked at you,” Dio said, clearly forcing himself not to smile. “You’re agitating the strawberries.”

“What?” their brother asked, looking like someone had taken the wind out of his sails while juggling freshly-shined bowling balls.

“Jonathan,” she admonished, taking up the thread of the conversation. “You should know by now that you can’t make good jam with agitated strawberries. Now, I really think you should apologize.”

“Right,” Jonathan said, looking a tad confused, though still gamely resolute. “I’m terribly sorry for agitating your strawberries.”

“Jojo,” Dio said, tutting as he made his way over to where their brother was still standing, holding out the bowl of strawberries. “You can do better than that.”

Jonathan looked from Dio’s small, supremely amused grin, to the deep bowl of fruit their brother was holding out to him.

Jonathan sighed, though she could see that he was struggling not to laugh, and reached up to gently pat the large, plump berries. “You’ve found delicious-looking berries, and I’m certain they’ll make wonderful jam. Now, can you leave your work for a few moments? Or, should I bring the man I’ve met to meet you here?”

“You’ve met someone you think we’d be interested in meeting?” she asked, raising an eyebrow as she turned to look back at her and Dio’s brother from her place at the stove, stirring the boiling mixture as it slowly thickened. “Is he involved with your archeology studies?”

“Well, no,” Jonathan said, a slightly uncertain expression passing over his face; it seemed like he hadn’t been thinking of anything like that before, but she’d given him something more to consider. “His name is William Zeppeli. He says that he can cure you!”

“I’d hardly call us ill, Jojo,” Dio scoffed good-naturedly.

 

=PB=

 

“You know what I mean, Dio,” he said plaintively, wishing for a long moment that he could have properly explained his position to his and Alice’s brother.

However, Dio seemed to be oddly content with his new state of being; always seeming to have to stop himself from boasting of his new abilities and the strengths he had discovered over the five weeks he had spent in this unnatural condition. And Alice… while their sister was not at all the type to boast, she still seemed to be as oddly content as Dio. He didn’t know how to respond to such strange developments, but he hoped that Mr. Zeppeli would be able to convince them to allow him to cure them the way he’d all but said that he could.

“I suppose it wouldn’t do any real harm just to hear the man out,” Alice said; she’d always been the more sensible one, easily balancing Dio’s brash impulsivity. “Though I do reserve the right to mock him if he says something foolish.”

“I suppose that would be fair,” he said, watching as Alice turned her attention back to the boiling pot of strawberries. “Do you think it would be best if I brought Mr. Zeppeli in here to meet you, or would you be able to speak with him in the salon?”

“At this stage, the jam needs to be stirred almost constantly, so it thickens properly and doesn’t burn,” Alice said. “If you’re sure this Zeppeli of yours can’t wait, you should bring him in.” A slyly amused smile slowly overtook her expression of concentration. “Just make sure he doesn’t agitate the strawberries, either.”

He laughed softly; Alice was such a wit. “Have no fear; I’ll ensure he understands the gravity of the situation.”

Still smiling softly, Jonathan made his way back out to the salon. He’d soon spotted the tall, white-suited form of William A. Zeppeli. Breathing more easily as he caught sight of the calm expression on the man’s face, Jonathan took the last few steps over to the man’s side.

“How did they react?” Mr. Zeppeli asked.

“They both seem willing to listen, though they’re making jam at the moment, so I think the both of them would prefer to have a civil discussion,” he said, gesturing for Mr. Zeppeli to follow his lead as he made his way back to the kitchen.

Mr. Zeppeli scoffed. “Why would vampires even bother making jam in the first place?”

“Well, we were beginning to run out, and the pair of them do rather enjoy the activity,” he said, confused as to just why Mr. Zeppeli would be so surprised about such a thing; surly there were other vampires he had cured who had maintained their passions from when they were human.

Mr. Zeppeli didn’t say anything else, so Jonathan was left to wonder about his strange words as he finally made it back to the kitchen. The smell of fresh strawberry jam wafted out to greet him, and Jonathan smiled as he pushed open the door and stepped inside again.

“I’ve brought Mr. Zeppeli,” he said, pausing for a moment to watch as Dio put the second pot of strawberries on to boil, and Alice scooped out the cooling jam into a bowl.

“All right,” Alice said, turning to briefly sweep her bloody crimson eyes – yet another reminder of just what the stone mask had done to his dear siblings – over the pair of them where they stood; he smiled to reassure her. “Well, I suppose, since this batch needs to cool off and the next batch needs to boil before anything can be done with it, we can at least hear what this acquaintance of yours has to say. Right, Dio?”

Dio scoffed, folding his arms and making a petulant expression as he looked Mr. Zeppeli up and down. “I suppose. Though I, Dio, still don’t see any reason for your foolish talk of cures, Jojo.”

“Thank you; both of you,” he said, as the pair of them fell into step with him, and the three of them made their way back into the salon to sit down.

Dio and Alice settled themselves down together on the same divan where he was sitting, but Dio naturally chose to settle himself far closer to their sister, wrapping his arms around her shoulders as he leaned his head against hers. Father had never truly approved of such a thing when he chanced to see it, but Jonathan thought it rather pleasant to see. It was only natural, after all, that as twins Dio and Alice would be rather close.

“Mr. Zeppeli, would you tell them about your cure?” he asked, turning to smile encouragingly at the Italian.

“Jonathan Joestar,” Mr. Zeppeli said, rising back to his feet in a way that Jonathan couldn’t help but find distinctly menacing. “I said that I would end their existence as vampires,” Jonathan shuddered slightly, as Mr. Zeppeli breathed in deeply-

Then he blinked as one of the pillows from the divan flew at him, exploding into a rain of falling feathers as Mr. Zeppeli’s right fist slammed into it. Feeling himself sliding down to the floor, Jonathan felt his jaw drop as Alice quite literally picked up the very divan they had all been sitting on and swung it at Mr. Zeppeli! More surprising than that, however, was the fact that even that seemed to be merely a distraction from whatever it was that she intended to do next.

“Jojo!”

Finding himself suddenly hoisted off his feet, facing the solidly enraged face of his adopted brother, Jonathan felt horrible. For all the hope he’d had, it had nearly been the end of his dear siblings.

 

=PB=

“Dio, think,” his sweet sister’s voice broke through the haze of crimson rage that had settled over his vision when that… that human had dared to attack him and his dear Alice in their very home. “You and I both know that Jonathan is congenitally incapable of malice. You really think he’d be able to recognize it when he saw it?”

Sighing deeply, Dio conceded the point; truly, it was hardly Jojo’s fault that he was such an adorable fool. Though it was still entirely too troublesome at times. “Jojo, when are you going to realize that, honest-to-a-fault though you are, most people don’t tend to say what they truly mean?” Jojo didn’t seem to be in any fit state to speak, with fat tears gathering in his eyes and spilling down his cheeks; Dio sighed again, chuckling softly as he swiped them away with his left thumb. “Ah, Jojo. You truly are a hopeless case.” Smirking as he used his extendable veins to snatch an intact pillow from the floor, Dio gripped the cushion firmly by a corner. “Still, don’t think you’re going to escape without punishment.” Firmly swatting Jojo across the face with the pillow, Dio composed himself, biting back his grin at the expression on Jojo’s face. “That was for not finding out what your Mr. Zeppeli meant before all of this nonsense,” another firm swat. “That was for nearly getting us killed,” a third, just to finish things off. “And that was for generally being – oh, what was my sister’s elegant phrasing? Ah, yes – a porridge-head.”

“If you’re quite finished,” his sweet sister prompted, drawing his attention firmly back to the worthless creature who had so brazenly attacked them in their own home.

“Of course,” he said, gently tossing Jojo so that he landed neatly on one of the cushions that had fallen from the divan when his dear Alice had slammed it into the worthless man who had dared to invade their home. “Do you think we’d be well served letting him up?”

“Well, given how he always took a deep breath just before punchsploding something, I really don’t think letting him breathe properly is in any way a good idea,” his sweet sister said, continuing to restrain the worthless human; arms wrapped tightly about his neck as she kept him still and docile.

“Yes, I remember that,” he said, narrowing his eyes and glaring at the bastard struggling in his sweet sister’s grip. “I’d wanted to question him, perhaps find out if there were any others of his ilk who would dare show their faces in our city, but now-”

“Dio, wait!”

“Jojo, I certainly hope you’re not sincerely going to suggest I allow this bastard to go free. Not after everything he did,” he turned a stern glare on their foolish brother, even as he glimpsed his dear Alice slamming her right heel into the gut of that insufferable human to drive what remaining breath he had right out of him again.

“Please, Dio,” Jojo implored, face falling into an expression that was almost painfully contrite. “I was the one who brought this man into our home, not suspecting how dangerous he would prove to the pair of you,” the fat tears that had been gathering in Jojo’s blue eyes once again spilled over; Dio didn’t bother wiping them away this time.

Truly, such would only prove to be a useless effort at a time like this.

“Jojo, even you can’t be unaware of just what kind of a risk we’d be taking if we allowed this man to go free,” he said, setting their adorable fool of a brother back on his feet.

“I know, but please, just let me speak to him.”

He sighed, rolling his eyes briefly, before turning his attention to his sweet sister. “Well, Alice? You’re the one who’ll be in the most danger if… that man is to be allowed free.”

“Oh, I’m always in favor of second chances,” his sweet sister said lightly, then her expression shifted, becoming the half-lidded, almost lazy-looking expression that had even deceived him Dio, once upon a time. No question: his sweet sister would be more than ready to fight if such a situation was in the offing. “Still, that is something to remember about second chances: you only get one.”

 

=PB=

When Alice unwrapped her arms from Mr. Zeppeli’s neck, Jonathan gathered himself and stepped closer to the man, even as his and Dio’s sister dashed back with the unnatural speed that the stone mask had granted to her and Dio both.

“Jonathan Joestar,” Mr. Zeppeli said, gathering himself in a manner that Jonathan would have found almost admirable, if the man had not been such a clear and present danger to his dear siblings. “I had originally come here to dispose of a pair of dangerous vampires, and to see that you were trained in using Hamon. Now, I see that I will have to undo this mind-control of theirs before we will be able to move any farther.”

Jonathan was just about to ask what in the world Mr. Zeppeli meant by that, when he felt the man’s right fist driven into his gut with all the force of a sledgehammer. Even the sound of Dio and Alice both shouting the names that they most commonly used for him could not distract him from such a feeling. It was not as though the sensation was at all painful, but having all the breath smashed out of his lungs was not in any way a pleasant one.

Chapter 5: Here We Go

Chapter Text

However, when he was finally able to raise himself back upright once more, Jonathan found himself glowing with some kind of strange energy. Looking up as he heard the troubling sound of someone gagging and choking on water, he caught sight of Alice holding what seemed to be a ball of slush. He’d only a moment to wonder just where in the world she had gotten such a thing, before she threw the slush-ball at Mr. Zeppeli’s face.

The slush melted quickly back into water, and when Mr. Zeppeli tried to breathe in again, he only spluttered and coughed as the water on his face was drawn inside.

“Jojo!” Turning at the sound of his brother’s voice, Jonathan found Dio staring at him with a clear expression of perplexity. “What in hell did that bastard do to you?”

Lifting his hand, the appendage still crackling with otherworldly energies, Jonathan watched in horror as Dio merely brushing the tips of his fingers against Jonathan’s own hand caused his brother to leap backwards with a brief scream, clutching at his hand. Able only to stare in mute, helpless terror as the three fingers that Dio had touched his flesh with disintegrated into delicate ashes, Jonathan felt warm tears begin to slide down his cheeks. Dio’s expression of shock as he stared at his maimed hand was burned into his memory, and Jonathan looked in despair at his hands.

The otherworldly energies had faded, but that was hardly a comfort considering what had happened when he’d been offered the merest of touches by his brother. He felt awful; the knowledge that he would never again be able to embrace his siblings at the end of a long day, nor offer them the comfort of a shoulder to lean on. Composing himself as swiftly as he could manage, Jonathan made for the tall, white-suited form of William Zeppeli.

Alice had once more wrestled him into submission, this time with her legs firmly wrapped around the man’s midsection, clearly crushing the air from his lungs whenever he chanced to breathe out.

The feeling of a heavy coat being tossed over him drew Jonathan’s attention back to Dio. There was an expression of determined indifference on his and Alice’s brother’s face, but Jonathan could still clearly see the lines of tension and pain not-so-well-hidden by such a thing. It only made him all the more determined, here and now, to find out just what Mr. Zeppeli had done to him.

And, if such a thing could be reversed; he’d no wish to be deprived of the comforting touch of his siblings’ hands forever.

“Mr. Zeppeli,” he said sadly, making his way to a point just beyond the reach of the man’s arms if he were to somehow escape the hold that Alice had him entrapped in. “I suspect that I was not nearly so diligent in finding out why you wished to meet my siblings. Still, I cannot forgive your attempts to murder members of my family. If I ask my sister to release you, will you swear to leave our home, and never return?” Yelping as something small and fast knocked against the back of his head, Jonathan turned to see Dio making his way back into the salon after having left so quickly.

 

=PB=


“Jojo, are you determined to see this man kill us?” he demanded; truly, anyone with eyes could see that this Zeppeli would only continue to attack them if he was given the chance to worm his way free from his sweet sister’s grasp.

“Dio, you’ve recovered. Thank God,” Jojo said, all but sobbing in relief as he wrapped the coat Dio had lent him tighter around his shoulders.

“You haven’t answered my question, Jojo,” he said, wishing for a moment that he could have given their adorable fool of a brother a thump upside the head; truly, there were times when his foolishness could be far more troublesome than adorable.

“I’ve no wish to see anyone die today,” Jojo said, his firm tone not quite matching the lingering uncertainty in his eyes.

“Well then, you should probably close your eyes,” his dear Alice said in a flatly amused tone, before he, Dio, could have expressed that selfsame sentiment.

“That was not what I meant, Alice,” Jojo said, turning his imploring gaze upon his sweet sister; Dio shook his head, exasperated.

Before any of them could say anything more, however, Zeppeli threw himself to the floor. His sweet sister, who had braced herself against most of the directions that the human might have attempted to dodge, was thrown to the floor as the pair of them toppled over. His dear Alice wrapped her legs more tightly around Zeppeli’s chest, but somehow – from some reserve of strength that he, Dio, hadn’t thought humans besides Jojo possessed – the man flipped the pair of them over. His sweet sister was able to brace her hands against the floor before Zeppeli could slam her head into it, but somehow or other that aggravating human managed to thrash and squirm his way free.

The man breathed deeply, aiming to drive his now-glowing fist into her body, but the sight of his sweet sister flicking her ears in a distinctly catlike manner brought a grin of sheer satisfaction to his face. Dashing over to Jojo’s side, he leaned in just enough so that his voice would only carry to Jojo.

“Cover your ears, Jojo.”

“Dio, what-”

Urrrrrrrrrrryyyyy!”

Watching in supreme satisfaction as Zeppeli stumbled and staggered under the sheer force of sound his sweet sister had unleashed upon him, Dio leaped to her side. Taking only a moment to savor the sight of that bastard Zeppeli with blood streaming from his eyes and ears, Dio firmed his throat and breathed deeply.

Wrrrrrrryyyyy!

 

=PB=

With his hands pressed flat over his ears, Jonathan clenched his teeth as he struggled to move back from the section of the salon that was swiftly becoming a battleground. His brain seemed to rattle inside his skull from the terrible noise; in some ways it was a relief, knowing that his siblings had developed ways to protect themselves from anyone who might seek to harm them, but Jonathan still wished – if only for a moment – that the pair of them had not been forced to resort to such a thing. Foremost in his mind, of course, was the simple fact that someone – either one of the many servants who worked inside their home, or possibly even Father or Dio and Alice’s mother themselves – was bound to hear the sounds of combat even at such a distance, and Jonathan had no clear way of knowing just what Mr. Zeppeli would be willing to do to them in order to get at his dear siblings.

However, as though in response to his very thoughts, Dio and Alice turned and fled through the large window set in the rightmost corner of the salon.

He wished that the pair of them had not been forced into such a drastic course of action, but even as he wept for the loss of his siblings, Jonathan Joestar levered himself back to his feet so that he could face Mr. Zeppeli head-on. The man was just raising himself back to his own feet, and Jonathan found himself pleased by that, since he’d had no desire to assault the man when he was down; no true gentleman would do such a thing, he knew. Tying Dio’s coat around his shoulders – the closest he could still have to an embrace from either of his dear, lost siblings – Jonathan drove himself forward, right fist extended for a knock-out blow.

Finding himself blocked by the man’s outstretched right hand, Jonathan reacted slightly too slowly to keep himself from being caught by the man’s strong, unyielding grasp. Feeling the crackle of that same, otherworldly power into his head and down through the rest of his body, Jonathan tried to leap backwards but found himself still harshly restrained by Mr. Zeppeli’s grasp. The energies that crackled through his body were not painful in the slightest, but Jonathan clenched his teeth against the knowledge of what they were doing to him.

Clutching the sleeves of Dio’s coat like a talisman, Jonathan could only pray that his dear siblings would be able to find somewhere safe to stay.

 

=PB=

Dashing up the side of a nearby tree, she paused for a moment to let Dio catch up. He wasn’t quite as prepared to switch from the comparatively simple rooftop-style of Parkour to one that was more suited to running through the small forest that bordered the large estate, but he was getting better, all the same.

“Good thing you still have people taking care of that house you bought,” she mused aloud for both their benefits, as Dio perched on a branch just to her left.

“I hadn’t thought to be forced out of our home,” Dio said, fangs showing as he ground his teeth, but he only sighed, running his tongue over them in what she recognized as her own habitual gesture of annoyance. “Still, Jojo would hardly have approved of our plans, if he’d been given the chance to find out about them.”

She chuckled softly. “Who knows; we’ve got all the time in the world, brother mine. We can figure something out.”

Dio’s own chuckle echoed behind her as she moved out through the trees, the both of them on their way to the empty mansion that Dio had secured for them.

She’d asked him jokingly if he’d eaten the people who’d lived there before them, but the only scents of living humans she’d been able to detect were old and nearly covered by the scents of musty wood, dust, and the various kinds of crap left behind by every small animal that seemed entirely too eager to move into any abandoned building they could find. Still, the rats and mice had at least attracted a family of barn owls.

She and Dio, though mostly her since she had the patience for those kinds of things, had tamed them and then begun training them to respond to commands. She’d never been one for falconry before, but a lot of that had been due to a lack of time on her part, and the fact that even a pedigreed Siberian Husky like her old Sub-Zero had been easier to have as a pet than any kind of bird of prey back in California.

Dio, for his part, had been fascinated by the sheer silence of their owls as they swooped down on their prey. Even to vampire senses those things were quiet; there were times she found herself wondering just what a human would have been able to hear in the recently-renovated mansion she and Dio had been in and out of before they were forced to move in by some jerkass Italian with a severe hate-boner for vampires. It hadn’t been something she’d expected, but in hindsight it was pretty obvious that if vampires were a thing in this world as they seemed to be, then it stood to reason that vampire hunters would arise, too.

“Simon,” she called, holding out her right wrist for the owl to land on.

She’d originally suggested the names Simon and Garfunkel for the breeding pair of owls living in their attic as something of a joke; something that was both part and parcel of her old life, and also something that would fit with the “everything must be music references” setup that seemed to be going on. Dio, however, had been entirely in favor of the names, which given the fact that one of the vampires he’d sired to take care of their house was named Cobain, was pretty much to be expected.

“Come on, Simon,” she called, smiling as the male owl of the pair swooped over to alight on her right wrist. “There’s a good boy.”

“Welcome back, Mistress,” Cobain said, coming over to take her coat.

“Evening, Cobain,” she said, smiling at her fellow vampire – still a weird thought, even after a couple weeks spent with the other woman – as Simon hopped and fluttered up to her left shoulder. “How are things?”

“Well enough, Mistress,” Cobain said, smiling in that amused way she had; it really seemed like being a vampire had been good for her, since she hadn’t seemed particularly happy as a human. Of course, considering both the country and the era… Well, she could hardly blame Cobain for the sentiment. “It’s a nice, quiet place you’ve picked out. Still, it’s a long way to market from here.”

“Don’t I know it,” she said, leaning over to one of the heavily-curtained windows so she could get a look at the sky; her circadian rhythms had been thrown all to shit by the fact that she no longer actually needed to sleep, so she couldn’t rely on it anymore to tell her what time it was.

She’d had a pocket watch, of course, but what with needing to haul ass out of the Joestar estate as quickly as they had, it was still merrily ticking away in the top drawer of her nightstand back in her old room. Sighing in annoyance, both for the loss of her property and for the fact that she could see the first hints of dawn just beginning to creep over the horizon, she turned back to Cobain.

“It’ll be dawn soon,” she said, reaching up to gently stroke Simon’s head. “Best find somewhere to spend the day.”

“Of course, Mistress,” Cobain said, smiling softly as she bowed.

Turning to make her way to her room, she heard Cobain’s fading footfalls as the other woman made her way to wherever she was going to be staying for the night. If the other woman were going to stay anywhere, as opposed to rambling through the house the way she’d sometimes do if there was a particular thought on her mind that she wanted to chase down. Gently stroking the soft feathers on Simon’s chest as she headed up the stairs to her room, she heard the distinct pattern of Dio’s footfalls and chuckled softly.

“Morning, brother dear,” she said, feeling her twin’s arms sliding around her neck; Simon having hopped back down to her right wrist when the pair of them had heard Dio coming.

“Good morning, my sweet sister,” Dio said, and she could feel his cool breath on the back of her neck as he leaned in for a kiss.

Opening the door to her room, she released Simon and watched the owl swoop over to the perch she’d set up for him and Garfunkel when one of their two full-grown owls stayed in her room. Dio, as was his usual habit by now, followed her into her room. She took a moment to be grateful for the fact that, not needing to actually sleep anymore and all, she was no longer a chronic shifter the way she’d been in both of her lifetimes. Otherwise, she’d have ended up having to remove her clothes so as not to risk getting tangled up in all the layers of fabric that the people in this era still wore.

And, with Dio wanting to be so much more close, lately… yeah, no.

As she and Dio curled up together on the bed, her closing her eyes just as Dio had begun to arrange their heads to his liking, her thoughts turned inward again. She’d lived nineteen years of her current life, as opposed to the fifteen she’d had of her former one, and it had long since become obvious that she wasn’t remotely likely to find a way back; really, it was past time she’d stopped living “caught between” like this. With that thought firmly in mind, Alice Brando relaxed herself into a state of vampiric torpor, and drifted off.

 

=PB=

When he’d awakened, tucked neatly in his bed, Jonathan’s first hopeful thought was that the events of the previous evening had just been a horrible dream. Even Dio’s coat, folded neatly atop his nightstand, didn’t deter him from dressing up so that he could make his way down the corridor to his brother’s room. Holding Dio’s coat close, intending to return the garment to his brother when the two of them were able to speak once more. Pausing before his brother’s door, Jonathan took a moment to gather himself before making his way in; he would, of course, apologize to his brother for being so brazen after they had had the chance to speak.

“Jojo.”

“Father,” he paused, seeing the troubled expression on the man’s face. “What is it?”

“Come down to the salon,” Father said gently, the troubled expression on his face transforming into something more kindly. “We will discus things further there.”

“I truly should return Dio’s coat,” he said, looking again toward his brother’s now-open door.

Father sighed, bringing Jonathan’s attention right back to the man. “Jojo, please do not make this any more difficult than it must be.”

Shuddering as he held Dio’s coat close – he’d wanted so much for what had occurred last night to have to have been merely a terrible dream – Jonathan gathered himself and wordlessly fell into step with Father as the pair of them made their way down to the salon in the eastern wing; the western one likely still being set to rights, after… Jonathan bit his lower lip, tears welling in his eyes as he was forced to confront the truth of what had happened the previous night. If only it had been a dream…

When he found Mrs. Charlena Brando sitting down on a large divan, wringing her hands on a handkerchief that she was also using to dab tears from her eyes, Jonathan was quick to make his way over to her. Before he could even say a single word, however, he noticed the man sitting on a smaller chair…

“Mr. Zeppeli!” he exclaimed, narrowing his eyes in fury at the man he’d mistakenly placed such trust in only yesterday.

Charlena’s hitching breath drew his attention before Jonathan could give the man a proper dressing-down, and Jonathan turned his attention to Dio and Alice’s mother.

“Don’t cry,” he said gently, reaching out to place his left hand on her right shoulder. “I promise you, I’ll do everything I can to bring Dio and Alice back home, where they belong. And a gentleman keeps his promises.”

“That is indeed true, Jojo,” Father said, making his way into the salon with them, then settling himself down on a chair directly across from Mr. Zeppeli. “However, before we may begin our search for wherever it was that Dio and Alice ran off to, there are clearly matters that must be addressed first.”

“Clearly,” Mr. Zeppeli said, the tension in his frame and tone clearly evident. “I have done everything in my power to free you and yours from the mind-control I thought those vampires had placed you under-”

“Stop talking about my children that way!” Miss Charlena exclaimed, tears gathering in her eyes; Jonathan wrapped his left arm around her shoulders as she struggled not to weep.

“I am terribly sorry to have to inform you of this, madam, but your children died the very moment that stone mask was allowed to do its wicked work,” Mr. Zeppeli said, apparently trying to make his voice sound gentle, even as his words seemed calculated to cut them to their very hearts. “Vampires are nothing more than animals, driven by their basest desires, and an endless hunger that compels them to consume-”

“That is quite enough!” Father all but shouted, seeming almost to need to physically restrain himself from leaping out of his seat. “Jonathan invites you into our home, and you proceed to not only assault his siblings, but remain brazen enough to slander their very names even when neither of them remains to defend themselves! I will ask that you kindly remember that you are a guest in my home, Sir Zeppeli, and adjust your behavior accordingly.”

“Have you all been so thoroughly deceived by soft words that you’re completely unwilling to see the truth?!” Mr. Zeppeli demanded, all but throwing himself to his feet with the force of his misguided fury.

Jonathan wondered what Alice would have been able to make of Mr. Zeppeli, if she’d been able to stay in the same room with him long enough to observe him without setting herself against the power of Hamon that had proved to be so dangerous to her and Dio; the very Hamon that Mr. Zeppeli seemed so intent on teaching him. Alice always had seemed to know the hearts of those she met, even better than himself or even Dio. He only wished that his siblings could have still been present, but since it was swiftly becoming clear that Mr. Zeppeli would never allow such a thing, he could only wish them well in whatever place they had managed to find to stay.

 

=PB=

Another day, another employment drive, Alice mused whimsically, continuing on her way down through the streets of Whitechapel. Most of the women she met here were more than willing – and quite often eager – to hear her out about the new opportunities for employment she was offering them in her and Dio’s hotel in London’s “middle-class” district.

“So, this is not a brothel?” the woman she was speaking to; Annie Lennox, which fit pretty much all of the patterns that she’d seen established in this new world of hers.

“Of course not; it’s a hotel with an attached restaurant,” she said, smiling at Annie as the pair of them continued on their way through the streets. “Of course, if anyone does hassle you about your former occupation, you’ll be able to speak to one of the bouncers about it.”

“Bouncers?” Annie repeated, a look of curiosity overtaking her expression.

Alice smiled calmly, as though sharing a private joke; though really, it was more of an open secret at this point. “That’s what I call them; it’s their job to make sure that no troublemakers disturb the atmosphere,” she grinned slightly, though not enough to show her fangs; people seemed to get the wrong impression when she did that. “If they do, my people are authorized to throw them out so hard they bounce.”

“Oh,” Annie said, laughing softly. “How clever.”

The sound of footsteps, not as common in this part of the city after dusk as she thought they might be at other times, drew her attention for a moment. Putting the thought of just who it might be that had decided to follow the pair of them, Alice returned her gaze to Annie.

“So, what do you think? Does my proposal sound interesting to you?”

“I think I would rather enjoy it,” Annie said, looking down as she continued speaking. “However, considering my sordid past, I-”

“Don’t worry about it,” she said, gently setting her right hand on Annie’s shoulder. “If you don’t feel up to interacting with customers yet, there are plenty of other jobs that need doing around a hotel. I can set you up with one of them, if that would make you feel better. At least until you find your feet again.”

“Thank you, sir,” Annie said; Alice didn’t bother correcting the misconception, it was a common enough one when someone here encountered someone in pants, and it was useful enough in areas like this.

“I cannot allow this to proceed any farther.”

Alice chuckled deep in her throat, lazily turning to meet the gaze of the large man that had been following them. “I was wondering when you were going to show your face,” she flicked her eyes up and down his form, giving him and the large knife in his hands a flatly unimpressed look. “You get lost on your way to the butcher shop?”

Chapter 6: She’s Always A Woman

Chapter Text

“You are endangering your immortal soul by continuing to consort with this filthy harlot!” the wide-framed, bearded man that had been stalking the pair of them for the latter half of their conversation shouted, brandishing the large, bread-slicer looking blade he’d pulled out.

Tracking the motions of his eyes, Alice slapped the knife with a backhand blow; freezing the entire structure of the blade solid and causing it to shatter into irreparable pieces in the space of a human blink.

“And, I suppose you’re here to teach me the error of my ways,” she snarked, folding her arms and narrowing her eyes in amusement.

“That I am, sir!” he said, brandishing the knife handle with clearly unsavory intent.

“Not with that broken old thing, you’re not,” she said, smirking as the expression on his transformed from one of self-righteous confidence to one of uncertainty as he caught sight of the pitiful remains of his blade. Just as she’d been expecting, the man ran away not soon after. “Some people just have no manners,” she said, turning back to Annie. The other woman had an expression of terrified awe on her face, first looking down at the shattered, still frozen remains of the blade that a certain bearded road apple had so unwisely attempted to threaten them with, and then back up to Alice’s face; she smiled gently. “Come on; it’ll be some time before we make it back to Caritas at this pace.”

 

=PB=

As he’d taken to making rounds of the city by rooftop he, Dio, had been in nearly the perfect position to observe his sweet sister’s confrontation with the fool man who had been so brazen as to accost one of the twin lords of London; those who would soon take their place at the peak of the world. Those who would soon be able to raise themselves to Heaven. Perhaps it’s time that I, Dio, made my presence known.

Leaping lightly down from the rooftop he’d alighted on, Dio landed just a step behind the man, startling him into whip-turning around at a speed that looked almost painfully slow to his vampire senses; yet another reason that he and his sweet sister were the only ones truly fit to reign over the world.

“What-?!”

“What an odd time for a human to be out and about,” he said, smiling almost cordially; humans, dull creatures that they were, did not often look deep enough behind the façade he projected to see to his true heart.

“What are you?!”

He laughed, reveling in the fear that he could see lurking at the edges of the foolish man’s expression. “I am one of those who will reign over Heaven.”

“Those eyes!” the man yelped, the handle of the knife his sweet sister had so elegantly shattered falling to the ground from his suddenly nerveless grip. “You’re the Devil himself!”

Laughing openly now, Dio allowed his eyes to glow, as though in preparation to fire his Space Ripper Stingy Eyes. “The Devil? If I, Dio, am the Devil, then I graciously welcome you to hell.”

Exerting his will, he bound the mind of the arrogant man who had been so foolish as to set himself against those who would stand in Heaven, tasting the man’s blood to further secure his hold. He knew that Jojo would hardly approve, but since their puppy of an adopted brother wasn’t present, Dio didn’t allow himself to be overly concerned. Jojo was many things, but anyone could see that the Joestar heir lacked the ruthlessness to survive outside of his tiny, sunlit world.

Still, even a puppy could become a fierce and loyal guard dog with time and proper training.

 

=PB=

Making his way through the city, carrying a photo of himself, Dio, and Alice, the three of them all seated together on an elegant settee before the photographer, Jonathan sighed softly. True, it had been taken before this dreadful business with the stone mask and Mr. Zeppeli had driven them out of their very home, but truly very little about his dear siblings had changed since the day the photograph was taken. Asking the people he met if any of them had seen either of his dear siblings eventually yielded the word “caritas”, and further inquiries along that line had revealed that the name belonged to a hotel and a restaurant – both of them housed within the same building, which Jonathan found slightly odd – which had in turn led him to the realization that Dio and Alice’s flight from their family’s estate was not as unplanned as it had previously seemed.

Knowing that, that his dear siblings had been making excursions into London many and varied enough that they had not only become well-known in such a place but also had an actual secondary place of residence… Jonathan had resolved to speak to the pair of them about such a thing, before coming to any sort of conclusions. When he finally made his way into the town of Anderson Squire, the first thing he saw was the large, two-story building that Dio and Alice were said to be staying within.

Breathing deeply to steady himself, Jonathan made his way into the main lobby of the building.

There were quite a few people standing and sitting and walking around in what was clearly the lobby of the hotel,  and as Jonathan moved around to question the people present about his dear siblings’ possible whereabouts, Jonathan found his attention drawn abruptly away from the general bustling of the lobby by a cheerful call.

“Jojo!”

Snapping his head around to take in the cheerfully-smiling form of his brother, Jonathan smiled widely as he hurried over to meet the blond as he gracefully descended the staircase.

“You’re all right!”

“Of course, Jojo,” Dio said, the grin on his face nearly stretching wide enough to reveal his fangs; Jonathan could only be grateful that such had not been the case, as he rather doubted anyone else but himself and Alice would have been willing to look past such an oddity of appearance; truly, there was no way to know just how many of those here would react like Mr. Zeppeli. “Really, did you think that such a fool would be able to defeat us?”

“I was worried for you, Dio,” he said earnestly, watching as his and Alice’s brother descended the last of the steps into the hotel’s lobby.

“You truly are adorable, Jojo,” Dio laughed softly, enveloping him with strong arms that were no longer as warm as he could remember them being; yet another reminder of the changes the stone mask had wrought in his siblings.

However, given the sole alternative, Jonathan resolved to be grateful for what he still had.

 

=PB=

Knowing that there was very little chance of him truly being able to convince Jonathan Joestar to allow him to properly dispose of those wicked vampires that had once been his siblings – a state that reminded him all too much of when he himself had been forced to confront the monster that terrible stone mask had made of his own father – William Zeppeli resolved himself to his new course of action. He would endeavor to reconnect with Jonathan Joestar, to at least teach the boy Hamon, so that he would be able to protect himself when the beasts that wore the faces of his clearly beloved siblings inevitably revealed their true nature. The rest could be attended to by his fellow Hamon monks.

Straizo and his partner Dire would be more than willing to come to London, he was certain.

After having taken the time to gather himself for the difficulties he was clearly still to face on this journey of his, William turned his path toward the nearest post office. He would need to be quick, as the sooner he contacted his fellows, the sooner they would be able to make their way to London. And the sooner those wicked vampires could be properly laid to rest.

 

=PB=

The thick, rich stew filled him up, warming Jonathan from the inside as he sat at the staff table just off from the Caritas hotel’s attached restaurant.

“I’d no idea the two of you had managed to establish yourselves so well in the city,” he said, not quite certain how he was feeling, but having no wish to distress his siblings, either.

“Well, we could hardly continue to rely on your family for charity, Jojo,” Dio said, taking a sip from his glass; Jonathan wondered for a moment if it contained blood from the nearby butcher shop, then quickly decided that he did not wish to know. “While it was very kind of your father to allow us a place in his home, it would hardly be a worthy repayment for such kindness to give that oaf Zeppeli any more reasons to destroy your family’s property.”

“I suppose that’s true,” he said, wishing more than anything that such were not, in fact, the case.

“We’ll probably end up staying around here until this whole thing is resolved,” Alice said, her gaze turning inward for a moment.

“Or, until we resolve the situation ourselves,” Dio said, grinning over at their sister.

“Yes, or until that,” Alice returned, a small smile pulling at her own lips.

Jonathan bit back a sigh, forcing his thoughts down more pleasant avenues. “Speedwagon, you’ve been rather quiet of late.”

“Just enjoying the ambiance,” the scarred man who had offered him such kindness when the pair of them had met for that first time. “It’s not often I get the privilege of eating such rich food.”

“Could be more often, if you wanted,” Alice said, in the tone of someone who’d been making such offers rather lot.

“I know,” Speedwagon said, his tone nearly the same as Alice’s own. “You’ve offered plenty of times.”

Looking between his siblings and Speedwagon, Jonathan wonders just what the true meaning of this half-heard conversation could have been. It was clear that Alice had made an offer that Speedwagon had refused, but the specifics of the offer, as well as Speedwagon’s reason for turning away such kindness, was presently lost on him. Making up his mind to speak to Speedwagon later, Jonathan returned his attention to the time he could still spend with his dear siblings; limited though it may very well have been by circumstances beyond their control.

When the meal had finished, with the four of them all wishing each other well, Jonathan trailed Speedwagon as the other man made his way out of and then away from the hotel.

“Something you wanted to say to me, Jonathan?” the other man asked, the kindly smile on his face growing slightly as he turned to wait for Jonathan to catch up.

“Sir Speedwagon, what was it that my siblings offered you?” he asked. “And, why does it sound as though you kept refusing them?”

Speedwagon chuckled softly, shaking his head in what seemed to be a fond sort of nostalgia. “It’s nothing against your sister, Jonathan,” the other man said, then his smile slipped away. “Your brother, on the other hand… I’ve met his type before. Living on the streets, you learn to spot lowlifes right away, if you want to live to see tomorrow. I’m sorry to have to be the one ta tell you this, but your brother stinks of brimstone and blood worse than anyone I’ve ever met.”

“That’s a horrible thing to say,” Jonathan couldn’t help the outburst; the need to defend his siblings from another person who seemed determined to tear them down.

“Doesn’t make it less true, though I am sorry ta have to be the one to mention it,” Speedwagon said, the expression on his face too genuine for Jonathan to dismiss out of hand.

“What of my sister, then?”

Speedwagon’s smile returned, though it was slightly enigmatic when it did so. “As soft a touch as she’s got, that girl of yours has a heart of steel,” the other man said, chuckling softly. “Out of everyone in your family, I think she might be the one best-suited to handling him.”

“Well, they are twins,” he said, feeling rather more uncertain than he had at the beginning of their conversation.

Speedwagon laughed softly. “What else could they be?”

It didn’t seem a question in need of answering, and in any case Jonathan wasn’t sure what he could have said in response to such a thing, so he stayed silent.

 

=PB=

It had been a week of quiet – if not entirely peaceful, considering their need to be on the lookout for Zeppeli – days. Jonathan and his father had paid sporadic visits to their hotel, and while it was clear that old George approved of the initiative they had taken, Alice still kind of wondered what he would make of the employees she had hired. Even with the sheer indifference she held towards the concept of class and social standing, she was still thoroughly aware that it was pretty much a thing in this era.

And, even with what kind of a stand-up guy George tried to be, he was still clearly a man of his era.

With the lack of any more need to sleep for anything but keeping up appearances, Alice found herself with twelve more usable hours in each day, more than enough to carry out the dual tasks of Head Chef and CFO of the company – small though it currently was – that she and Dio were in the process of constructing.

“Draw me with a picture of a higher place I know,” she sang softly, moving around the stove as she prepared the nightly pots of beef stew; it was a popular dish, what with the weather chilling steadily as fall passed inevitably into winter. “When the color fades to white again, it’s where I’ll go.”

The sound of the door – the one that had a large, red and white painted sign on it to deter just this sort of thing – slamming open from the outside drew only an annoyed sigh.

“You know, generally when a door has a sign on it that says “staff only” it does actually mean that only staff members are supposed to use it,” she drawled, turning to see just who it was she was going to have to throw out on their ear this time.

She might not have had any hot bacon grease this time, but not every situation needed to be resolved by something so drastic.

The first impression she was given of the man who’d so unceremoniously barged into her kitchen was that he was fairly young, with a fair face and long, dark hair. His shoulders were too wide, and his hips too narrow for her to mistake him for a woman, but with a face like that… Well, she couldn’t quite call him a bishie, given the maturity of his facial features, but he was definitely pretty.

“You know, if you wanted some of my famous stew, you could’ve just come to the restaurant like a normal customer,” she said, wanting to make completely sure of the pretty-boy’s intentions before she acted; one way or the other.

“That was not what I came here for, vampire,” he snapped, raising his fists.

Alice sighed, annoyed. “Let me guess; you’re working with that jackass, Zeppeli, right?”

“I, Straizo, will show no mercy!”

Shifting out of the way of his punch, Alice grabbed the back of his loose, billowy robes and hauled him backwards off his feet. “And if you damage my kitchen I, Alice, will hand you your ass on a platter.”

Swinging the man around by his clothes, Alice hurled him from the room. Hurrying over to the spice rack, knowing that it was only a matter of time before Straizo – she idly wondered just which of the myriad musical references that this world seemed to live and breathe on his name referred to – picked himself up and tried attacking her again, Alice grabbed a jar of dried, fine-ground garlic. And, as if on cue, Straizo burst right back in through the still-open door.

Loosening the top of the jar, Alice dashed forward and unloaded a face-full of ground garlic at Straizo just as he began breathing deeply in preparation for his own version of Mr. Punchsplode’s Wild Ride. Dodging out of the way as Straizo fell to the ground sneezing and coughing, Alice grabbed him by back of his robes and dragged him back out, pulling the door closed behind her as she went.

Real smart attacking me in a kitchen, moron,” she muttered, just loud enough for Straizo to hear every word she was saying.

Hauling him up the side of the nearby warehouse one-handed was something of an interesting challenge, given that she had to manually shift her center of gravity several times just to keep the struggling form of Straizo from being able to pull himself loose. Not something too out of the ordinary, but the fact that she’d actually managed that kind of thing one-handed was still something to take note of.

Being a vampire had opened up quite a few new opportunities, that was for sure.

Tying Straizo up with the loose folds of his robes, after another face-full of garlic power to make sure he wouldn’t be able to punchsplode anything while she was dealing with him, Alice finished binding him up and swung him onto her back so she would be able to move faster. Crossing back out of the city, always careful to keep an eye out for the position of the moon, Alice wound up and launched Straizo into the distance like one of those old, Greek discus-throwers.

Turning quickly to make her way back to her kitchen, Alice allowed herself to settle down a bit; she’d bought herself some time, but there was no question that she’d have to warn Dio that Zeppeli had brought at least some reinforcements of his own.

 

=PB=

Pleased to see that the brazen human he, Dio, had taken the precaution of enthralling when he had been so foolish to attempt to attack his sweet sister had come to fully realize his place under the feet of the twin lords of London, Dio allowed himself to relax into the plush chair that his dear Alice had created for him. He’d seen her dissatisfaction with every other piece of furniture that the pair of them had come across during their efforts to furnish their respective rooms in the mansion that now sheltered them, and so had almost been expecting such a thing when she had merely commissioned a frame from the furniture maker, and then set about creating her own padding from fine leather and goose-down cushions.

Even he, Dio, had been rather surprised at how wonderfully soft such a thing had turned out; he’d eagerly accepted her offer to make him one of his own.

The distinct sound of hurried footfalls outside his door drew his attention then, and Dio gestured for his new servant Jack to greet their guest while he lounged in his throne, sipping from a glass of red wine. His sweet sister had never developed a taste for such things, much preferring sweeter drinks that suited her nature far better, and such thoughts always brought a fond smile to his face as he, Dio, sat and mused on what came next. What grand next steps that he and his sweet sister would take on their road to Heaven.

“What’s this jackass doing here?”

At the sound of his sweet sister’s voice, annoyed though it naturally was to see the one who had so foolishly attempted to deny her the prize she had sought on that dark, lonely night some weeks ago; young Annie was settling in well, though naturally she was unaware as yet that her employers were so far beyond humanity as a whole.

“Well, sister dear, you know that even a jackass can be useful when properly trained,” he said, arriving at his door with a single burst of vampiric speed, shoving Jack lightly aside as he did so.

Sweet Alice’s sharp, crimson eyes flickered over Jack’s stocky form, taking in every detail as was her way; Dio smiled, pleased all over again. “Thrall?”

“Of course,” he said, stepping aside to allow her inside, and then following with a sip of his wine. “What brings you here in such a hurry?”

As he spoke, Dio guided their path back to the throne where he spent a great many hours of the day going over the maps of their slowly, steadily expanding territory, he saw his sweet sister turn her gaze inward for a moment. He knew that such an expression meant that she was thinking deeply upon one complication or another – plotting how best to dismantle them and use what remained to lift the pair of them to greater heights – and so he gently guided her to his throne and settled himself upon it while gently pulling her into his lap.

“It seems our old friend Zeppeli’s brought over some friends of his own,” his sweet sister said, her tone dry as a dusty road.

Of every possible thing that could have passed his sweet sister’s lips, that was not at all what he, Dio, had been given to expect. “What?”

“One of them, guy by the name of Straizo – pretty; you’d like him if he wasn’t determined to kill us – attacked me in our hotel’s kitchen.”

He laughed softly; no one who attacked his sweet sister in a domain she had made so thoroughly her own would not easily escape unscathed. “And, what lesson did he learn from the experience, sister dear?”

“That trying to breathe garlic powder is extremely bad for his health,” his sweet sister said, an amused expression flitting briefly across her face, before vanishing into her habitually contemplative mood. “Still, if Zeppeli is bound and determined to escalate this conflict he seems so dead-set on instigating, we’re going to need a more defensible base of operations.”

“Yes,” he muttered, supremely annoyed at having their lives overturned by the foolishness of that particular man for a second time. “I have some ideas; give me time to finalize them, and I shall have a place where we can stand.”

“All right,” his sweet sister said, and he let her draw herself up and away from his loose embrace; all plans and a businesslike air once again. It was a no less fascinating transformation to watch than it had been the first time he, Dio, had watched it happen. “I’ll go see about the arrangements for our prolonged departure. You going to need any longer than a couple hours?”

“I shouldn’t,” he said, smiling for the concern his sweet sister had always shown to him; it was one of the few ways in which his dear Alice reminded him of their mother.

In all other ways, of course, his sweet sister was refreshingly different.

 

=PB=

He’d hardly believed it possible, but Mr. Zeppeli had returned to the Joestar estate once more. As such a presence was more than certain to delay the return of his dear siblings to their proper home, Jonathan had been rather put out to find the man haunting their halls once more. More than that, however, the offer to actually learn the art that had caused Dio such pain from a mere touch – something Mr. Zeppeli called Hamon – was not something that he had been at all prepared for.

Still, the fact that he would actually be able to control such power rather than letting off inadvertent bursts that would do nothing more than hurt his dear siblings with the slightest touch had been enough to sway him; Jonathan could only hope that he would be able to learn enough to no longer fear offering the touch of his own skin to Dio or Alice when they needed it.

Chapter 7: Take On Me

Chapter Text

“Remember, Jonathan Joestar: the true power of Hamon comes from the breath,” Mr. Zeppeli said, the ripples of his own Hamon energy spreading out evenly about him. “If your breath is strong, your Hamon shall be, as well.”

He knew that Mr. Zeppeli was hoping for him to take to the training that he offered, but there was only one thing that Jonathan could find mattering to him at the present moment. “So, in order to stop channeling Hamon, all I must do is disrupt my breathing?”

Mr. Zeppeli sighed, the expression on his face falling to one of resignation, as well as what looked like some kind of saddened regret; Jonathan almost found himself wanting to offer comfort to the man, even in spite of the fact that he knew just how dangerous Mr. Zeppeli was and continued to be to his dear siblings. “Yes; it’s true that any disruption of your breathing will in turn make it impossible for you to channel Hamon. I would ask, however, that you consider the outcome carefully before you put such knowledge to use.”

“I will.”

That was another reason that Jonathan had allowed himself to soften in his regard for Mr. Zeppeli: while it was clear that he was still wary of vampires in general, the man had seemed willing to give Dio and Alice the benefit of all possible doubt. Jonathan was glad for it, and had offered in return to allow himself to be taught the ways of Hamon. Because, even if he knew his dear siblings better than nearly anyone else in the world, it wasn’t as though such a thing gave him any insight into the minds of vampires as a whole.

It might very well be that other vampires would not be so apt to retain their human kindness as Dio and Alice had been. And so, Jonathan allowed himself to be trained in the martial art of Hamon, if only so that he would be able to safely interact with his dear siblings once more.

 

=PB=

Dipping her hands into the water as she continued to scrub one of her larger stew pots, Alice heard the sound of heavy footfalls outside her door. She’d trained the staff well enough to knock if they truly needed something from her, or else to ask a senior staff-member or refer to their employee manuals. Those things had been a big hit with the people she hired, since they detailed what work needed to be completed for their particular jobs and were also small enough to be carried in a pocket or a satchel. Given all of that, Alice knew that this couldn’t have been one of her people coming in now.

There were others it could be, but very few of those options were good; she already knew the sound of Dio’s footsteps well enough to know that it wasn’t him she was hearing.

The tall, long-haired form of Straizo barging into her workroom drew a long-suffering sigh, as Alice rolled her eyes.

“Yay,” she deadpanned. “It’s my stalker.”

“I do not merely intend to stalk you, vampire,” the man said, eyes narrowing as he fully stepped into the room behind her. “I intend to rid this world of your filth!”

Ducking under his sudden but all-too predictable charge, Alice slammed her head into Straizo’s gut hard enough to lift the man off his feet and send him rolling backwards. Standing quickly, Alice grabbed the large stew pot that she hadn’t yet started washing, snagged the heavy stirring spoon she’d purchased for just this sort of occasion with her elastic veins, slammed the pot down over Straizo’s head while the man was still disoriented, and then battered the outside of the stew pot with the wooden spoon like she was aiming to wake the dead.

Having earlier detached her eardrums as a precaution against just this sort of thing, Alice was still able to feel the sonorous vibrations through her hands and wrist. Of course, for Straizo it must have been like sticking his head into a church bell when the clock struck noon, and as she crouched to keep pace with his staggering, faltering steps, Alice smirked slightly.

“You don’t learn quickly, do you?” she asked; the question was basically rhetorical at this point, since even though she’d reattached her eardrums, his would still be ringing from the sheer barrage of sound he’d just been subjected to.

“Anything troubling you, sister dear?”

“Just throwing out some trash,” she said, smiling up at Dio as he strode over to her.

Her brother looked down, eyes clearly taking in the crumpled form of Straizo at their feet, and grinned as their eyes met once again. A wink of his right eye told her that their impending conversation, truthful as it very well was, was also meant for Straizo’s recovering ears.

“I think it’s time we departed from this little hotel, sister dear.”

“Oh?” she asked, tilting her head to the right so he’d know she’d gotten the message. “Where did you have in mind, brother?”

“A small town called Wind Knights Lot should be quite suited to us,” he said, smiling in that “I’m planning something devious” way he had. “Such a small town, with such a large graveyard.”

“Zombies, Dio? How scandalous,” she said, smirking as she hammed it up for Straizo’s benefit; Dio laughed. “Will I get to make them dance?” she asked, the thought of reenacting the “Thriller” music bringing a somewhat wider smile to her face; she couldn’t really share the joke itself without a lot of background that her brother didn’t have, but the general idea of such was clearly amusing enough in itself.

“Anything you wish, my sweet sister.”

The pair of them had a laugh at Straizo’s expense as they left, both knowing that a certain someone would be far more interested in reporting to Zeppeli and his ilk than in continuing to harass the pair of them, and since he didn’t seem the type to destroy things out of spite – not anything that belonged to humans, at least – Alice turned her attention to what still needed to be done. She’d already informed the staff of her plans to depart, but until this present moment she hadn’t had a concrete time and date of departure to tell them.

Such was, of course, no longer a problem.

 

=PB=

Once they had said their farewells, temporary as they were to be, to those who served under them, he and his sweet sister made their way swiftly to Wind Knights Lot. Capable of running many times faster than even the swiftest of horses, he and his dear Alice were soon safely ensconced within the tiny burg. They did indeed pay a visit to the graveyard, but unlike those Hamon-using fools would have been led to think, he and his sweet sister would not be bringing the lot of them back to glorious unlife.

The town itself was to become their weapon, not the flesh-hungering servants they could raise from the grave.

In the end, however, they did end up summoning the knights Bruford the Black and Tarkus, simply to aid dear Alice with her work in the blacksmith’s forge. She employed them in collecting iron scraps from around the town when the sun had vanished from the sky, and in aiding her to manipulate the wrought-iron bars that she had forged when they had been properly cooled.

They were a rather ingenious creation: three five-centimeter spines formed the points of an equilateral triangle, all of them balanced by smaller, stabilizing struts that were perhaps a quarter of the length of the spines. The blackened iron would prove invisible in the darkness to feeble human eyesight, and the danger would be all the greater for it, for no matter if they were kicked aside, they would be a deadly danger wherever they landed. His sweet sister had also created long coils of fire-blackened wire, currently lying idle on the table, but soon to be strung at neck-height across the narrower alleyways within this little town.

As the two pairs of them had been preparing their tools for the battle that Zeppeli and his fellow fools were soon to bring to them, Dio couldn’t help but smile as he watched his sweet sister ingratiate herself with the people of the small town. Humans were so easily manipulated: just feed them dainties, speak softly to them, and they would all but eat out of one’s hands. She had employed some of the local children as spies, sending them to the edges of the town with orders to report any sightings of men fitting the descriptions the townspeople had been given.

Or else, of those traveling in the company of the men described to them.

Of course, during those times when she was not engaged in preparing their arsenal for facing those fools who would dare to challenge their dominion, his dear Alice made deeper forays into the castle. That was what had led the pair of them to a rather interesting discovery.

“I’d have never believed that something like this would be present here,” he said, watching as the mere throw of a lever opened a secret passageway into the very mountain itself.

“Well, fortifications like these tend to be built with an eye to escaping from sieges,” his sweet sister said, right hand cupping her chin as she looked down the winding tunnel that descended out of even their sight. “This tunnel probably ends down at the base of the cliffs. Once we make it back to the castle, we’ll be able to escape through this before Zeppeli and his people – provided there are any left – can corner us here.”

“Good thinking, sister dear,” he said, grinning as he continued to look deeply into the tunnel, then returning his attention to his sweet sister as she re-engaged the lever that caused the tunnel to be hidden away again.

Looking back at the wall, Dio grinned as he saw the almost-perfectly concealed seams in the stonework that had clearly led his dear Alice to investigate this place in particular. No one but another vampire would have been able to spot them; which meant that any of those fools who survived the death-trap he and his sweet sister were going to make of Wind Knights Lot, they would be stymied by the last of the castle’s defenses.

 

=PB=

Hearing Mr. Zeppeli as he spoke with a man named Straizo, Jonathan wondered if the man had truly given up his animosity towards Alice and Dio, or if such had merely been a façade; all a part of his efforts to pass on his teachings. It was clear from the way Straizo was speaking that he and Alice had met, and just as clear as that was the fact that their meeting had not been a happy one.

“The pair of them spoke of taking the town of Wind Knights Lot?” Mr. Zeppeli repeated, his eyes narrowing in clear contemplation.

“You must have heard wrong!” he exclaimed, no longer able to hold himself back. “They probably wish to avoid any damage to their hotel after Straizo attacked them,” he folded his arms, turning a disapproving frown upon the man in question. “You had attacked Alice twice, and all she did was to throw you out.”

“Even if your siblings have been able to maintain their human kindness, as you insist upon believing so steadfastly, it’s merely a matter of time before the mask’s evil eats away at them,” Mr. Zeppeli said, his expression not changing one bit; he still didn’t look one whit less determined. “They must be destroyed before that is allowed to happen.”

“Mr. Zeppeli…”

Looking away from the cold stares of the men all around him – those who would see Dio and Alice die for circumstances entirely beyond their control – Jonathan could only hope that he would be able to get to them in time to warn his siblings about how many more of Mr. Zeppeli’s fellow Hamon users had made the journey into England. Gathering himself as best as he could manage, Jonathan boarded the carriage with Mr. Zeppeli, Straizo, and his partner Dire. They would soon be making for the town of Wind Knights Lot.

And, with any luck, he would soon be able to speak face-to-face with his dear siblings once more.

Their journey was filled with muttered conversations between Mr. Zeppeli and his fellow Hamon users, but Jonathan didn’t have the heart to keep arguing his case when it seemed like every one of them was against him. He knew that he was right – that Dio and Alice were not the kind of dangerous, near-mindless vampires that Mr. Zeppeli had said he had encountered before – but having everyone else undercutting every argument he made in favor of his siblings, particularly in the gentle way that even Straizo spoke, had quickly become exhausting. Truly, it would have almost felt better if they had been more argumentative.

At the very least, he would have felt better about defending them more vigorously.

The tunnel that stood as the entrance to Wind Knights Lot soon loomed before them, and Jonathan could not help but feel time closing in like a noose around his neck. Traveling with Mr. Zeppeli and his fellows, it was more than clear at this point, would not be at all conducive to his desire to meet up with Dio and Alice again. He would, therefore, have to separate from them at some point.

It was the matter of when that would provide the difficulty at present.

When they departed from the carriage, Jonathan found that it was not because the four of them had arrived in the town itself, but because there had been a young lad following them from the side of the road. However, before Mr. Zeppeli could say even two words to him, he turned and ran for a rope tied up at the top of a small rise. Using a rather ingenious rope-system, the lad flung himself almost completely across the river. He landed only a short distance from the opposite bank, but seemed to have dropped the small, white-wrapped bundle he’d been carrying into the river, if the way he attempted to grab at something in the water was any indication.

“Come Dire, Straizo,” Mr. Zeppeli said, bending down over the river. “That boy seems to have been waiting for us.”

“Yes,” Dire muttered, moving to stand beside Mr. Zeppeli on his right, as Straizo did the same on his left. “We should follow him. He might be able to lead us to those vampires before it begins getting dark.”

While the three of them made to cross the river with their Hamon, Jonathan found himself staying well back from them. He’d little doubt that they meant to launch as direct an assault on Dio and Alice as they could manage, and he’d no desire to be a party to that. Just before he could turn his path to intersect with what looked to be the main road of the town, however, Jonathan caught sight of a strange, while-cloaked figure beckoning to him.

“Young sir, would I be correct in surmising that you are the man by the name of Jonathan Joestar?” the figure’s voice, when he was given the opportunity to hear it, had qualities of both youth and nobility; Jonathan wondered just who in such a small town would have had reason to know his name.

Only for a moment, however, since there was a rather simple explanation for that kind of knowledge.

“Yes,” he said, turning eagerly to meet the gaze of whomever it was that had come to his aid in this moment of trial. “May I ask, sir, did my siblings mention me to you?”

A gentle smile spread across the man’s noble face. “My liege Lord and Lady do indeed go by those names, young sir. Come; they desire your presence at the castle.”

“Of course,” he nodded, eager to be able to speak to the pair of them again. “It’s been so long.”

“Of course,” the man said, his smile not having left his face once since the pair of them had met up. “They two seem quite eager to speak with you once more, young sir.”

A feeling of warmth spread through him, but was chilled slightly when Jonathan recalled that the only interactions Dio and Alice had had with Mr. Zeppeli was the Italian Hamon user attempting to murder the pair of them. What would they think, once they learned that he was studying the very thing that had hurt them so much, under the very man who was so hell-bent on murdering the pair of them. What would Dio think?

Steeling himself as he was led to the castle upon the high cliffs that bordered the small town, Jonathan sighed softly; he could only hope that Alice would be able to make Dio understand his reasons.

 

=PB=

In the end, they were not able to find the young lad who had seemed to be waiting for them. However, finding the very vampires they had been pursuing for so long was a much greater boon.

“So, you finally show your faces again,” he said, glaring up at the cloaked forms of the vampires standing upon a high spire of rock just in front of them; hoods thrown back, and inhuman crimson eyes staring down with arrogant amusement. “To the stone mask that consumed your souls, I will say only this: tonight, I break you!” the female vampire turned to face the male, and after a moment, the pair of them began laughing.

“Yes,” the female said, bright white cloak seeming to glow from the reflected moonlight; a stark contrast to the male’s dark-blue, feather embellished cloak. “Well, best of luck with that.”

“Indeed,” the male said. “However if you wish to survive this night, charlatan, I, Dio, would suggest that you leave.”

“The only way the three of us are going to be leaving, is when the pair of you have been reduced to drifting ash!” he shouted up at them.

The feel of his own hat being knocked free from his head drew William’s attention, and he looked back to see a small rock – naught more than a pebble, truly – rolling just on the brim of his hat, only a moment before falling to rest inside the garment itself. Narrowing his eyes, William gathered his Hamon.

“Come down here and fight, cowards!” Dire challenged.

“Why don’t you come up here and make us, fools?!” the male vampire – the pair of them had no more right to human names; as he had told their mother, Dio and Alice Brando had died the very moment that the stone mask had done its hideous work – sneered, raising his chin haughtily.

Leaping to the top of the spire, William was hardly surprised to see the pair of them leap in opposite directions to escape. For all their infernal abilities, vampires lacked the courage of even the least of humanity. Truly, they were nothing more than beasts.

 

=PB=

When she gave the signal, Alice had been more than ready to make for the town; really, if she’d had to listen to much more of Zeppeli’s idiotic grandstanding, she’d have jumped down to personally give the man a good, hard kick in the balls. Which would have just led to all kinds of problems, so it was just as well that she didn’t. Waving and winking at Dio as the pair of them parted to make their way inward from opposite sides of the small town, Alice leaped easily up to the rooftops so that she would be better able to see the lay of the land.

And also, so that if any of the Three Stooges were in the area, she’d be in a much better position to bait them.

In the end, it ended up being the blond Vegeta-looking guy who spotted her and took chase. Dropping into a narrow alleyway – strung with decapitating wires at neck-height – Alice turned around just in time to catch the rather interesting sight of the man falling slowly through the air after what seemed to have been a fairly high jump.

“You seem taken aback, vampire,” the blond said, his tone sounding about as arrogantly pig-headed as Zeppeli’s; really, the pair of them must’ve gotten along like a house on fire. “My extensive training in Hamon allows me to float on even the slightest of air-currents.”

“That’s not floating, it’s falling with style,” she deadpanned, watching with a detached sort of curiosity as Mr. Flattop shaped himself into a human-projectile and fell back to the earth with the sheer speed of a drifting feather.

Dodging swiftly out of the way, she positioned herself just beneath the man as he was about to pass over her head, then kicked suddenly upward. Flattop managed to land on his feet after she’d tagged him, but it was a near thing. Besides, watching him scramble to get back upright was worth the price of admission.

“No vampire has ever managed to defeat my Thunder-Split attack!” Flattop exclaimed, seeming shocked at the mere concept of dodging.

“You seriously called it that?” she asked, raising an eyebrow.

“I have been perfecting that technique of mine for decades!” Flattop shouted, clearly becoming incensed.

Well, there was only one real way to respond to that. “I just made mine up three seconds ago,” she said, cheerfully holding up the indicated number of fingers. “But really, you’re leaving yourself a really big vulnerability when you use that technique of yours.”

“What is that supposed to mean, vampire?!”

“It means flying-uppercut to the dick, genius,” she deadpanned, giving Flattop a look that would have withered grass. “Anyway, this is your last chance: if you leave town, I won’t pursue. You’ll have the chance to go home, wherever home happens to be for you.”

“You think I would so easily allow you to go on spreading your evil, vampire?!”

“Do you see any evil spreading, you pig-headed jackass?” she demanded, left hand going almost reflexively to her hip on the same side.

It was pretty damn obvious that Flattop was going to insist on killing himself for some arbitrary grudge he had against either her and Dio, or more likely vampires in general, so Alice wasn’t going to let herself feel bad about that. Turning and dashing off down the alleyway, she ducked under the line of matte-black wire, listening for the tell-tale squelch of Flattop’s head coming off. Twisting around as she heard that very sound, she watched Flattop’s head separate from the remains of his severed neck.

Sighing in annoyance, Alice gathered up the two pieces and hopped back up onto the rooftops; she just had to find a place to stash Flattop where the kids wouldn’t end up getting an eyeful of him before someone could bury him properly, and then she could meet up with Dio again. Or deal with Straizo; whichever came first.

 

=PB=

The infuriating sight of one of the brazen vampires that had lured him and his into this almost-impassible labyrinth of a town drove William almost to distraction from sheer fury, but he was more than aware by this time that such was exactly what the vampires who had drawn him and his into this death-trap of a town wanted. Cunning beasts that they were, they had not resorted to the use of easily dispatched zombies, but had instead turned the very environs of the town itself into a maze of deadly traps. The spines had been the first danger he had been forced to brave, and while he had been able to use his Hamon-senses to detect them, the fact that he had been made to do such merely in order to survive the journey through the town itself was rather troublesome.

It seemed that, while their human hearts and souls had been consumed by the stone mask, their minds had not.

Chapter 8: Living In Danger

Chapter Text

Mores the pity, William reflected, continuing on his way through the town. It was clear, now, how the pair of them had been able to so calculatedly deceive Jonathan Joestar and even the woman who had given life to the children who had died under the wicked influence of the stone mask. Dio and Alice Brando; both of them merely nineteen years of age, he mused, using his Hamon-senses to detect and then slam aside a field of those same, fiendish spines that he had been encountering all throughout the night.

It was becoming clear that this pair of vampires were more dangerous than any others he had ever been forced to face. Still, the reason for such a danger was almost a thing to be celebrated: the pair of them had maintained some core of their humanity, even if it was only the least. It was enough to make him wonder if these particular vampires had been created with a greater purpose in mind.

It was not a thought that he’d ever entertained, but this pair were nothing like any of the other, more bestial vampires he had encountered before.

Perhaps there is something more to this, then. These vampires, after all, still possessed the foresight not to involve zombies in a battle against those who could wield the power of Hamon. It also appeared that none of the folk within the town had been harmed; the vampires he was facing must have, therefore, been used to striking with precision. They must have been made to understand that select humans were off-limits to them.

He did not relish the thought that there might have been a human willing to make use of the wicked power of the stone mask, yet there seemed to be little else that would explain all that he had seen during the time he had spent training Jonathan Joestar in the ways of Hamon.

It even made a terrible sort of sense: the Brando woman had clearly been mourning her lost children, but the Joestar man had not been nearly so demonstrative. And, while he knew that these British were not quite so open as his own people, the names were plain enough: Dio and Alice Brando, as opposed to Jonathan Joestar. Perhaps, much as he despised the merest consideration, the elder Joestar had even taken them in for just such a purpose.

In fact, the further he thought upon the matter, gruesome as it was, the more it began to assemble into a horrible whole: even a small family would struggle to make ends meet with only a mother to head them, and the Brando family was clearly not the exception to that rule. With the gratitude that they would naturally have felt for their benefactor, it would have been all too simple for the elder Joestar to separate them from their mother and then to raise them as he saw fit. The man had clearly encouraged their natural tenacity and inventiveness, since even as beasts the pair of them had managed to outwit him and his fellow monks.

The elder Joestar must have raised them to have no close bonds to humanity; a cold, cruel upbringing that had shaped them pair of them into the creatures he had glimpsed those times when they had clashed. For a moment he wondered about Jonathan’s part in it, but it was more than clear that the younger Joestar was genuine in his feelings for the creatures he still thought of as his siblings; truly, the boy was far too pure for that kind of deception in any case. It was plain now: just as the young Brando twins had about come of age – as Alice was flowering into womanhood, and Dio had nearly become a man – the elder Joestar had masked them, transforming them into his undead hounds!

There’s clearly nothing more for me to find here, William mused; merely the wires and spikes that had bedeviled him, and the pair of vampires that had acted to lure him in. And they, in the end, were not the true problem. No, though the souls of Dio and Alice Brando had been sacrificed to the stone mask, it was far more important to deal with their master – the man who was cruel enough to shape children into beasts for his own gain – than to end the last embers of the Brando twins.

The pair of them would doubtless come to the aid of their master; he could lay those unfortunate children to rest once he had dealt with George Joestar.

 

=PB=

Looking down upon the behatted charlatan who had been so foolish as to challenge the twin lords of London, Dio wondered just what the fool was at. He’d gone up to the rooftops, meaning to find either of those two remaining annoyances – he still grinned at the memory of his sweet sister carrying the headless corpse of one of them – or else to throw their remains into the nearby lake for the fish to gnaw on, but that fool’s means of dealing with the tools his dear Alice had created was more than troublesome. Hopping from one rooftop to the next, following the path that the fool Zeppeli was making use of to leave Wind Knights Lot, Dio narrowed his eyes as he attempted to guess which path the annoying man would take next.

“Dio Brando.”

Hmm? He turned, looking down at the man who was even then staring up at him. “Oh my, now whatever could you want with me, charlatan?”

“I know your secret now,” the annoying man said, his face taking on an actual expression of pity; grinding his teeth behind his lips, Dio licked a fang to calm himself.

“Oh, do tell,” he sneered; truly, Alice would tell him off for losing his temper before a lowly human such as this.

“There would be no point,” the charlatan said, shaking his head in what was clearly meant to be some kind of conciliatory gesture. “However, know this: I will be dealing with your master soon. You may rest assured of that.”

A snarl of pure fury escaped from him before he could tamp down the rage building in him. That bastard dares to suggest that I, Dio Brando, would answer to anyone?! By the time he’d managed to tame the crimson fury raging through him, the charlatan had long since vanished. Grinding his teeth, Dio set off in the last direction he’d seen his sweet sister heading in. Doubtless, he would need her clever brain if he was going to be able to devise how to properly exact his revenge for the insult he had just been offered.

 

=PB=

Straizo didn’t quite seem to know how to react to having someone French-kiss him during battle, and while it was really funny feeling him squirm in her grip, Alice was fully aware that – once he regained his composure – he was inevitably going to attack her with those punchsplosions he and Zeppeli seemed to favor. So, shoving the two of them apart, Alice leaped lightly to the opposite side of the square. This was one of the places that she and Dio hadn’t actually been able to fully lay with traps; her head-hunter wires were too short to be strung across the wide gaps, and those same gaps let in too much light for even the caltrops’ matte-black to hide them.

That only left their respective powers and abilities to clash against each other, and thus far her own vampiric speed and agility were telling over him; not to mention the things that she, personally, could bring to a fight.

“Has anyone ever told you that you have a lovely arse?” she teased, grabbing a firm left buttock as she closed with Straizo again.

He’d probably claim he’d squeaked in a very manly fashion, if he ever proved willing to talk about the whole thing in the first place.

“Straizo!”

The sound of Zeppeli’s voice drew her attention, and Alice turned to catch sight of the man as he made his own way into the square.

“Well, good evenin’, Zep,” she said, waving laconically at him.

“Alice Brando,” he said, turning to look at her with what seemed to be pity. “I am terribly sorry about what happened to you. Mi dispiace veramente, sfortunato signorina.

Va bene, tagliagole,” she deadpanned, turning to head back up onto the rooftops.

It would have been a bit too much trouble to deal with two of them, particularly when she couldn’t use any of the tools she had purpose-built for just this situation. However, Alice could still feel his eyes on her back until she passed out of sight. Another set of footsteps, these ones far swifter and more silent than any of the ones she’d heard before, let her know just who it was coming up behind her. The feeling of Dio landing on her back caused her to raise an eyebrow, knowing that the only reason her brother would do something like that was if he felt the needed the extra support.

“You’re tense as a whipcord, Dio. What happened?” she muttered, loudly enough that she could be certain her brother would hear her; whether he was in a mood to answer was another story, of course.

In the end, all he actually did was bury his nose in her hair and inhale deeply through it. Sighing softly, knowing she wasn’t going to get any real answers out of him until they could have a real talk back at the castle, Alice continued on her way. The sight of Bruford, standing up on the parapet with his right arm raised in salute, let her know that there was something of note inside the castle itself. Wondering for a moment what it could be, since neither Tarkus nor Bruford would have allowed anything in there if it could pose any kind of a danger to the pair of them, Alice put the thought out of her mind.

She could find out what was waiting for them later.

“It pleases me greatly to see your safe return, my Lord and Lady,” the resurrected knight said, stepping quickly aside as she jumped up onto the parapet.

Dio had jumped off just before the pair of them came within range of even a zombie’s eyesight, but as she hadn’t been given a reason to think he wouldn’t, Alice didn’t pay much attention to it.

“So, what news while we were away, Sir Bruford?”

“Aye, milady, there is news,” he smiled calmly. “And good, at that: your brother, Jonathan Joestar, has been found. I brought him to this castle as per your instructions, my good Lord and Lady.”

“I thank you for your services, good sir,” she said, since Dio still seemed to be composing himself after whatever had happened to rile him up.

“Of course, milady.”

The three of them made their way back into the castle, and she watched out of the corner of her right eye as Dio visibly composed himself. Clearly, this was something he wanted to keep between the pair of them. Still, not like that wasn’t usually the case.

 

=PB=

“Good morning, Jojo,” he said, smiling widely for their puppy of an adopted brother.

He would have words with his sweet sister, and the pair of them would be able to plot a proper revenge on that behatted charlatan, but it was a simple fact that all puppies needed proper care and attention if they were to accept their training.

“Dio, Alice,” Jojo called happily, running up to embrace them. “I’m so glad the two of you are well!”

“Of course, Jojo,” he said, reaching out to gently stroke Jojo’s head; puppies enjoyed a bit of coddling, after all. “No matter if we must run to the very ends of the Earth, we shall always find our way back to you, Jojo.”

“I’m glad,” Jojo said, smiling happily as he closed his eyes amid the circle of their arms. “I’d never wish for any harm to come upon you.”

Chuckling deep in his throat, even as he stood alongside his sweet sister and their puppy of an adopted brother, Dio allowed himself to revel in this victory. He’d never doubted his sweet sister’s words, of course, but to see that Jojo was willingly giving himself to them was one of the sweetest of the many victories he’d thus tasted. It was almost enough to let him forget the bitter taste of that charlatan’s pity.

However, he was not about to let such a thing be forgotten so easily.

“How have you been lately, Jonathan?” his dear Alice asked, once the three of them had separated from their embrace.

“Well enough,” Jojo said, his earlier cheer and enthusiasm seeming to ebb a bit too swiftly. “However, while I hope that you will not take it amiss, I feel that I should tell you both of something.”

He laughed gently; doubtless, Jojo would tell them some simple thing that he’d managed to blow completely out of proportion. “What would that be, Jojo?” he grinned, just wide enough to show the very edges of his fangs. “Are you and Erina perhaps planning to elope?”

Jojo’s cheeks flamed adorably. “No! Nothing like that,” he exclaimed, clearly trying not to splutter in that way he did when either he or his dear Alice had managed to fluster him; such a common occurrence, and yet it had not lost one whit of its novelty. “The truth is, I have been learning the art of Hamon, under the tutelage of… Of Mr. Zeppeli.”

“Well, I suppose knowing about that kind of thing could prove to be useful,” his sweet sister said before he, Dio, could say a single word on the matter. “Still, I don’t know if I quite approve of you training with him.” The slight bulge of the folding fan his sweet sister habitually carried drew his attention to her pocket on that side. “I think I might just have to punish you,” his dear Alice said, waving the neatly-folded fan now in her right hand. “Naught, naughty, Jonathan.”

The light rap his sweet sister gave Jojo’s nose was just the right strength to gently correct their little puppy; Jojo laughed, and he joined in, tapping Jojo’s nose with the same force he’d seen his dear Alice using.

“Naughty, naughty, Jojo.”

“Wait,” their adorable adopted brother tried to speak through his laughter; it was such an amusing sight. “Stop. Have mercy!” Nearly doubled over with laughter as he backed away from the pair of them, Jojo managed to land himself sprawled in the throne that he, Dio, had earlier claimed for his own.

“Oh dear, it seems you’ve landed in a rather unfortunate location, Jojo,” he said, raising his hands and wiggling his fingers menacingly. “I’m afraid you’ve just called down further punishment upon yourself.”

“Dio, don’t!” Jojo exclaimed, bursting anew into helpless laughter as he, Dio, went to work on him; he knew that Jojo’s sides were the most sensitive part of their adopted brother’s body, and so that was where he focused his attack. Grinning down at Jojo as their puppy writhed, laughing, in the throne that he, Dio, had claimed for his own, he reflected with some amusement upon what his sweet sister had shared with him when they were merely children.

Apparently, it was actually possible to kill someone by such an innocuous method as this one; a death by suffocation that would appear merely to be a child’s game carried a bit too far. It was a rather intriguing thought, that something so seemingly harmless could be so utterly deadly if done to excess, but when he’d observed the effects on Jojo – both now and during those other times when he’d used the technique – he’d no reason to doubt that such would have indeed proved to be the case were he to carry such an assault to its ultimate conclusion.

“Beg for mercy, Jojo,” he said, grinning down at their adorable puppy as he his inarticulate flailing dragged his head inevitably towards the floor.

“Have mercy, Dio!” Jojo finally managed, through gales of helpless laughter.

“There’s a good boy,” he said, grinning down at their adorable puppy.

He’d slid all the way down to the floor by the time that he, Dio, had seen fit to end his chastisement, and tears were streaming from his eyes. Jojo lay there for a few moments more, wiping the tears of laughter from his eyes, before their puppy got back to his feet. He was still laughing, though for obvious reasons it was more of a subdued chuckle than the sustained explosion of mirth it had previously been.

“Thank you for your forbearance and understanding,” Jojo said, once he’d managed to regain his composure and get back to his feet. “Both of you.”

“Of course, Jojo,” he said, smiling. “Since you look to be here for a rather long time, I would suggest that you avail yourself of the comforts of this castle. You’ll find that the bedrooms are quite comfortable. You’ll know which one is ours, of course.”

“Of course,” Jojo said, smiling softly. “I don’t suppose I would be welcome in Mr. Zeppeli’s company right at the moment.”

 

=PB=

Bidding his dear, strange siblings good night, Jonathan made his way up to the higher levels of the castle. Pausing for a moment as he saw Dio following Alice into what seemed to be her room within the castle, he wondered for a moment just what their brother could have been at. Perhaps he simply intends to bid her a more personal good-night, Jonathan mused, trying in vain to stifle a yawn that had crept up on him all unawares. Finding a bedroom that seemed to be in rather good condition – not even a speck of dust, in spite of the signs of clear disuse over the castle as a whole – Jonathan let himself in.

Even the bed had been made up; it brought a smile to his face, seeing the consideration that his siblings still showed for him, even after all that the pair of them had been through.

Settling himself down atop the bed, Jonathan just managed to stifle another yawn as he climbed under the covers. He’d have all the time he needed to catch up with Dio and Alice, and to persuade them to return home.

 

=PB=

“Dio, I swear, you’ve got knots from here to next Tuesday,” his sweet sister said, kneading his shoulders with her lovely, strong hands; hands that were already beginning to vibrate in that way that served to relax him so well. “I’ve waited this long, so tell: what’s got you so riled?”

“It might help me to relax if you sang a bit, sister dear,” he said, leaning his head back and resting his left cheek against her knee on that side.

When she chuckled softly, a sound like a gentle sigh seeming to force itself out alongside, Dio smiled.

“You stripped your love down to the wire; fires shinin’ cold alone outside. You stripped it right down to the wire; but I see you behind those tired eyes…

Allowing himself to relax under the ministrations of his sweet sister’s hands, Dio closed his eyes and allowed her song to wash over him. He did not think that she would have quite understood his true reason for wanting revenge on that behatted charlatan, since his sweet sister was a thoroughly practical person and gave little enough thought to how others saw her so long as they weren’t important to what she wished to get out of life. However, it was a simple fact that that charlatan was a danger to the pair of them the longer he remained at large.

If nothing else, his dear Alice would understand the need to properly redress a threat.

 

=PB=

“You think it was their father who did this to them?”

“Adopted, but yes,” he said, reading the horrified disbelief in every line of Straizo’s youthful-seeming face. “Everything I have seen, thus far, supports my supposition that Dio and Alice Brando had been taken in by George Joestar for the sole purpose of becoming his vampire servants.”

“I’d not have thought anyone human capable of such a thing,” Straizo said, fists clenched with the strength of his fury. “No one who would do something such as that could possibly deserve mercy.”

“Yes,” he said, narrowing his eyes. “Jonathan Joestar must have been their sole companion, during the years that his father was shaping them.”

He hated the fact of it, both that he’d chanced across a man more monstrous than many vampires, and also that he’d been too late to save the Brando twins from their cruel fate. All that was left now was to release them from it. And also, to see that George Joestar was punished for his transgressions; though it would need to be the laws of humanity that did so, as he and Straizo were forbidden by the oaths they’d taken to Master Tonpetty from directly interceding in human affairs.

Still, a man such as George Joestar was not likely to have much concern for human laws in any case.

 

=PB=

Waking with a sense of displacement, almost as though he were a child again and Dio had contrived to carry him down to the salon while he slept, Jonathan sat up with a start. The events of the previous day came back to him then, bringing a reflective smile to his face as he climbed up and out of the luxurious bed he’d been given for the night. The sound of someone knocking at his door drew his attention before Jonathan could gather up the clothes that he’d shed for the night – not thinking that he would be away overnight, he hadn’t thought to bring any change of clothes or toiletries with him – and thus make some kind of effort at being presentable.

“Good morning, Jojo,” Dio said, grinning widely as he swanned in.

“Dio! I’m hardly decent!” he exclaimed, eyes snapping to his brother; Dio was completely bereft of any clothing above the waist, and Jonathan felt his cheeks flaming. “And neither are you!”

“I’d say you’re a fair sight more than decent, Jojo.”

Yelping as he leapt away from the grinning form of his brother that was suddenly right beside him, Jonathan felt his cheeks heating all the stronger as he saw the look on Dio’s face. “You’re a shameless man, Dio Brando.”

Naturally, Dio’s only response to such a statement was laughter.

“All right, that’s enough out of you, brother dear,” Alice said, chivvying Dio out of the room with a gentle smile. “Let’s not keep Jonathan from breakfast all day, shall we?”

Calling his thanks to Alice as she left with Dio, both for her assistance in helping to handle their odd brother, and for her discretion in doing so, Jonathan went to clean himself up and get ready for breakfast as well as he could manage under such odd circumstances. Once he’d managed to freshen himself up as best he could, Jonathan made his way back down into the main rooms of the castle.

The scent of fresh-cooked bacon was an enticing one, and Jonathan followed it down to what turned out to be a well-appointed dining room. The sight of Alice, calmly dishing out food for the three of them, brought the smile he’d previously been wearing right back to his face. There was no chance that Mr. Zeppeli could be right about them: Dio and Alice still had human hearts beating inside their vampire bodies.

When he occasioned to speak with Mr. Zeppeli again, he would tell the man just that.

“How were the pair of you planning to return home?” he asked, after a sip of wonderfully chilled apple juice. “Father and your mother have been quite worried about you both,” he continued, glancing away from their interested gazes. “And, so have I, I must confess.”

Chapter 9: Only The Good Die Young

Chapter Text

“Even you, Jojo?” he echoed, smirking at their puppy as he attempted to compose himself, still blushing slightly.

“We actually ran all the way out here, so Zeppeli and those two guys with him wouldn’t be able to track any kind of vehicle,” his sweet sister said, pausing for a moment to nibble delicately at a sausage-link. “I suppose we could take a carriage back, since we’d be traveling with you.”

She’d always eaten with gusto before, but once the stone mask had granted them their new, eternal bodies, eating human food had become more of an amusement than anything else. His dear Alice had described it as something like a human eating nothing but chocolate: a lovely treat if one enjoyed it, but with little to no true value as a food. Their nourishment now consisted of the blood of beasts, and the more unsavory types of humans.

Though that second part wasn’t for Jojo to know, of course.

“It would probably be best if we begun our return journey today, as soon as possible,” Jojo said, once he’d finished his meal. “Father and your mother will be so pleased to see the pair of you again.”

“I suppose we could be persuaded to leave this little castle of ours,” he said, smiling languidly at the way Jojo’s entire face lit up with pleasure; their puppy was so easily pleased.

“We’d best acquire that carriage quickly, then,” his sweet sister said, rising from her seat at the table. “Try not to have too much fun while I’m away, brother dear.”

Laughing softly as his sweet sister left to fetch them a carriage so that they could return to the home they shared with Jojo – as well as his blinkered father, and their own rather foolish mother – he turned to smile at their adorable puppy of a brother.

“Well, Jojo, what ever shall we do with the time we have alone together?”

Jojo flushed deeply; Dio laughed in warm triumph, truly this was the greatest victory he’d ever had the chance to attain. Even the death of his and his dear Alice’s worthless father was not such a coup as knowing that Jojo was – willingly and completely – theirs for the asking. Even Erina, love her though Jojo truly might, did not hold nearly the kind of power over him that they two did.

It was a truly delectable thing.

 

=PB=

Explaining the particulars of their situation to Tarkus and Bruford took some time, though that was mostly due to Tarkus’ reluctance to part with her – he’d developed something of an obsessive respect for her after she’d yanked him up off the ground and held him aloft on his back to end the fight he’d insisted on before he’d obey her dictates to be discreet in their operations in and around the town; but seriously, if he was going to fight like a tank, it really was best that he was made fully aware of any tank’s most glaring weakness – than to anything that Bruford said. The smaller of their resurrected knights actually seemed pleased that she and Dio had managed to accomplish their goal in such a speedy manner. It was a nice thing to notice, but then Bruford had seemed to be the kinder of their knights.

Particularly when one compared him to Tarkus’ bluntness and near-obsession with fighting in pretty much all of its forms.

“Miss Alice!”

“Good morning, Poco,” she said, smiling down at the boy that had done such good work for them for the small price of a tray’s worth of apple tarts. “How have you been?”

“I’ve been doing really well, Miss Alice,” the little boy said, continuing to smile as he tagged along with her en route to their ultimate destination. “But sis wasn’t very happy when I brought home all of those apple tarts you gave me,” Poco continued, his smile turning conspiratorial as he took out a napkin-wrapped tart from his pouch.

“Well then, she’s probably going to be happy to see the back of me, then,” she said, laughing softly, even though she knew that Poco wasn’t going to be pleased to hear this particular bit of news.

“What?! You mean you’re leaving, Miss Alice?” the stricken expression on the little boy’s face was about what she had expected, and she turned a gentle smile on him to be as reassuring as she could under the circumstances.

“Dio and I are actually heading back home,” she said, turning to look back down the path that she and Poco were following; they were making fairly good time.

If she and her brothers were lucky, they might just make it back to the Joestar estate in time for a late, late lunch, or at least an early dinner. Of course, that would be after at least a few days on the open road, she mused; it’d gotten a bit harder, what with her newfound powers and abilities, to remember just how damned slow every mode of travel currently available to her and hers was. She could have outraced cars on the freeway, Alice was certain, if either of those had been invented yet.

Sighing softly, amused and annoyed in roughly equal measures, Alice continued on her way to the carriage house she’d made brief note of when she and Dio had first taken up temporary residence in Wind Knights Lot.

“You mean, you didn’t come here to live with us, Miss Alice?” Poco asked, wearing that same, sad-eyed puppy look that couldn’t help but remind her of Jonathan.

“We actually came here, my brother and I, to escape from those men that I told you to be on the lookout for,” she said, glancing down at Poco as he slowed down slightly. “We didn’t really plan on staying after we’d driven them off, and now that they’re gone, we have the chance to go home. Really, think of how worried your family would be if you were chased away from home by dangerous people.”

It was a half-truth, really: if they’d wanted to risk the property-damage – which would have been a pretty sure thing, considering the destructive capabilities of their respective powers and abilities – she and Dio could have easily proven themselves to be just as dangerous as the three idiots who’d been pursuing them. Or rather, the two idiots that’d actually survived their meeting the previous night.

“I guess,” Poco said, looking down at the ground as the pair of them continued on their way. “I’m still gonna miss you, though,” he continued, hugging her left arm and looking back up at her as the carriage house began to come into view.

For her, at least; a human would have probably needed to come a lot closer before they began seeing anything besides the basic shape of the building in question. Really, she was starting to feel like Tobias: slowly but steadily forgetting basic human things after becoming something else. Still, while being trapped as a red-tailed hawk was about the farthest thing from becoming a vampire via the stone mask, the basic ideas were about the same.

She was steadily forgetting little things about being human.

“I think I might be able to convince my brothers to come back here, once we’ve all had a chance to settle in back home,” she said, not wanting to make any kind of promises, since there was ultimately no way of knowing whether something might come up to keep her away from this place. “Still, there’s a fair few things my brothers and I have to take care of, so it might be some time before you see us again,” she continued, since it was only right to give someone fair warning when you were going to be away for an indeterminate amount of time.

Particularly to young kids like Poco, since time seemed to weigh particularly heavily on them; she still remembered that much, at least.

Negotiating for the use of a carriage to travel back to the Joestar mansion was fairly easy, and the fee was reasonable for the time they would be needing it and the distance they would be traveling. After all, it wasn’t like they could just call home and ask for a ride, much as she would have preferred that kind of thing. But, either phones just hadn’t been invented yet, or they were still in the very early stages of development and were hence extremely uncommon.

Either way, it was simply one more convenience that she had had to do without.

Of course, now I’ll probably live to see them come into use, she mused, settling more comfortably into her seat next to Dio, listening with half an ear as he and Jonathan chatted about something or other. She couldn’t quite say that phones were going to come back into use, considering the fact that they probably hadn’t been invented in this day and age, but somehow it didn’t quite feel right to say phones would be coming into use, either.

Clearly, tenses got a bit wonky when you had memories of a previous future.

 

=PB=

Once they had all returned home, Jonathan didn’t bother to even attempt holding back the wide smile on his face. Father and Dio and Alice’s mother would be so pleased to see them again; even though he’d not been able to find a way of returning their human bodies, Jonathan knew beyond any possible doubt that his dear siblings had maintained their humanity. Truly, that was all that mattered.

Looking over at the hooded, cloaked forms of Dio and Alice, Jonathan smiled at the way even their means of shielding themselves from the sun reflected the differences in their character: Alice’s white cloak showed her lightheartedness, while Dio’s royal-blue, feather embellished cloak showed that, while he had a darker sensibility, he also enjoyed the finer things in life.

Announcing himself, Jonathan continued to smile as he watched Father and Mrs. Charlena Brando both smiled at them as Dio and Alice removed their hooded cloaks. Mrs. Brando was quick to embrace the pair of them, and Jonathan smiled as he caught the expression of pleased surprise on his brother’s face. It shamed him as a gentleman to admit it, but Dio had caught him flat-footed so many times that he rather enjoyed seeing his brother in the same position.

 

=PB=

When their dear mother had finished clucking over them, he and his sweet sister were left to the not entirely tender mercies of George Joestar. As the man began yet another one of his interminable lectures, this one on the importance of keeping their condition – the grand, immortal bodies that they had been granted by that marvelous stone mask – a secret from those who might seek to exploit them, or as in the case of that behatted charlatan to harm them, he, Dio rolled his eyes in the same manner that he’d seen his sweet sister do when she was exasperated with a person or a situation. The feel of his sweet sister’s slender fingers gently squeezing his own brought a small, contented smile to his face. Yes, the pair of them had been cornered by the senior Joestar and all but forced to hear him prattle on, but no one was forcing them to listen.

And, as his dear Alice had demonstrated on many an occasion, there was a distinction between the two.

“Quite a lot of hot air for a single human,” he said, once George Joestar had passed beyond the range of his feeble, human senses.

“Yes; well, he probably stores it up for occasions just like this,” his sweet sister said, an amused smirk stretching her lips. “Still, he has a heart warm as the sun,” she continued, still smiling amusedly at the world as a whole and George Joestar in particular.

“Yes; and a brain as soft as cheese,” he said, completing their usual joke.

He and his sweet sister shared a laugh, before the pair of them made their way to the separate rooms they had been given to use while they stayed within the confines of the Joestar estate. It was simply for appearance’s sake that they did such a thing, of course; not being limited by the paltry mores and limitations of humanity, they were also not required to pay them any attention. Still, his sweet sister had long ago taught him the utility of appearances.

And also, how appearances needn’t be at all similar to reality.

 

=PB=

After seeing the way that those two vampires had interacted with George Joestar, it had become clear that his first instinct – that these particular vampires had retained the least of their humanity, and hence were all the more dangerous for it – had been correct. And yet, he’d still made an error in his assumptions: George Joestar was very unlikely to have had anything to do with their transformation into the monstrous, clever beasts that they had become. Clearly, William would need to find out more about the pair of them if he was to eradicate them at last.

And he would; he would wipe every last trace of the stone mask’s evil from the world, including the creatures born of it.

I’d best speak to Jonathan Joestar; he’d know those beasts better than anyone, William reflected. No matter that he still insists upon thinking of them as his siblings. That was what made this new hunt of his so difficult: he could fully understand Jonathan Joestar’s desire to see only the good side of the vampires that had once been his beloved siblings. He himself had been almost mindless with betrayed horror when he had beheld the face of his father as the man had dissolved into ash under the sunlight.

He hadn’t wanted to believe what kind of a monster his own father had become under the influence of the stone mask, so he could perfectly understand Jonathan’s desire not to give up on those two vampires. It was yet another reason that the wickedness of the stone mask needed to be erased from the world: even the most pure of love could be corrupted by it. Leaving the grounds of the Joestar estate behind once more, William Zeppeli vowed that he would find out everything about who those two vampires had once been.

Once he had destroyed them, he could at last allow their family to properly mourn Dio and Alice Brando.

 

=PB=

The next morning, Jonathan woke up with a bright smile as he recalled the events of the past several days: Dio and Alice were both back where they belonged, and Father and their mother no longer needed to worry about how they were doing or what might be happening to them. Even though he would miss them while he was away at university, it was simply a pleasure knowing that the pair of them were safe at home.

Knowing that he’d helped them to return safely, even if there truly wasn’t a way to return them to being human, was still a comfort.

 

=PB=

Returning to their usual routine, in absence of any further attacks by either Straizo or Zeppeli, was a bit more complicated than it had previously been. Owing to the fact that the pair of them now jointly owned and managed a hotel, as well as having partnerships with several of the stores in that general vicinity, they were out of the house a fair bit more often than they’d been previously. Sure, George did offer to have a few of his people keep an eye on Caritas for them, but she and Dio had both agreed that they preferred to handle as much of their business affairs as they could personally.

George had actually seemed pleased to hear that, something the pair of them found rather interesting.

Now, however, having finished their studies for the day, she and Dio were free to make their trip into London’s Anderson Squire to see to the running of their hotel. And also to put in a personal appearance, which was about as important for conducting business in this day and age as the more practical aspects that they attended to. It was one of the more potentially annoying aspects of living in the age before telecommunications.

Comfortably ensconced behind her desk as she went over the current figures and those from the week they’d had to take off for Wind Knights Lot – it really had only been a week, despite feeling a fair bit longer – Alice sighed softly. It was good to be back.

 

=PB=

When he found himself facing Mr. Zeppeli once more, Jonathan didn’t know just what to do. He’d not been expecting to see the man again, after the pair of them had parted ways at Wind Knights Lot.

“Hello again, Jonathan Joestar,” the man said, making his way over to him once the courtyard he had been traversing was free of anyone else who might see the pair of them together.

“Mr. Zeppeli,” he said, wondering just what in the world the strange man could want with him.

He’d already made clear that he’d not betray his dear siblings, simply because Mr. Zeppeli thought that vampires in general were evil and needed to be removed from the world. He wondered, therefore, just what the man was at to seek him out in this manner.

“I was wondering if you would be willing to speak to me about your siblings,” the man said, all but coming before him with hat in hand.

Jonathan could not help but to be moved by the gesture. “Of course. I’d be glad to tell you about them. They truly are such kind people,” he felt his smile became more reflective as the mood stole over him. “Though they can be rather a trial, at times.”

 

=PB=

Listening to Jonathan Joestar as he spoke about the siblings he had lost to the stone mask, William found himself steadily coming to understand why the young man was so steadfast in his insistence that the vampires born from their corpses were one and the same. Dio sounded almost the same as he had been during the short encounter he had had with the vampire: self-assured, confidant, and rather boastful. He’d not expected the boy to have something of a trickster’s nature, but it seemed as though such a thing had been the cause of a great deal of heartache for both the Joestar and Brando families.

“You mean to tell me that you were the cause of your brother’s encounter with the mask?”

“It was an accident,” the young Joestar said in a small, miserable-sounding voice. “If I had only jumped backwards, or shouted- done anything besides attacking heedlessly like that… Dio was simply attempting to play a simple trick, and I…”

Wrapping his right arm around the young man’s shoulders as Jonathan Joestar’s composure failed him at last, William offered him a handkerchief and waited as the young man gathered himself and wiped the last of his tears.

“I’m sorry for what you were forced to endure, Jonathan,” he said, suspecting that the young man’s research into the stone mask that he had previously spoken about was the cause of such a reaction; he was not nearly so callous as to say such a thing, of course. “How did your brother react, after he had been transformed?”

“He seemed oddly pleased by it, after… After he’d returned home,” Jonathan said, looking away for a moment.

Clearly, the death of his brother weighed heavily on him; just as clearly, the presence of the vampire wearing Dio’s face was of no help in allowing him to properly move on with his life after such a tragedy. For the sake of the Joestar family, and what little remained of the Brando line, he would see those vampires destroyed. After all, if they were allowed to continue existing as vampires, it would only be a matter of time before the evil of the stone mask ate away at what remaining humanity they could claim.

Alice Brando had clearly been a clever and inventive young woman; he’d no doubt in his mind that the vampire now wearing her face had been the one ultimately responsible for the fiendish devices that he, Straizo, and the dearly departed Dire had encountered within the small town of Wind Knights Lot. He’d no desire to see what such a vampire could make if it were given years to its unnatural existence. Truly, inventiveness without the constraint of human morality would produce only the worst sorts of abominations.

“Might you know how your sister came to her own unfortunate encounter?” he asked gently, once Jonathan had managed to compose himself once more.

“I… I’m afraid I hadn’t thought to ask,” Jonathan said, his bearing and demeanor seemingly overcome by hesitance.

“Could you? The next time you see them?” he requested.

Waiting for a handful of moments as Jonathan agreed, William bid the young man farewell and turned to leave the campus where he had met with him. He’d not lightly say that the female vampire was more dangerous than her male counterpart, but there was no question which of them he would rather be facing. A prideful opponent could be easily drawn into making dangerous assumptions and errors, but an inventive, clever opponent would not be so easily countered.

Clearly, he would need to be better informed if he wished to come out the victor in any of their future confrontations.

 

=PB=

When he had the chance to return home, Jonathan found that he could not quite manage to forget about the question that Mr. Zeppeli had asked of him. He’d not thought anything about it – not wishing to reflect overmuch on such a painful thing as Dio’s transformation for any longer than he was forced by grim necessity to do – but now he recalled that Alice had merely departed to search for Dio. She had, in fact, been making a foray into London in order to make contact with Robert E. O. Speedwagon in an effort to get his help in conducting her search.

She had appeared beside Dio as a vampire, true, but that was only after he and Robert had lost sight of her amid the turns and twists of Ogre Street.

I truly don’t know what might have happened to result in Alice becoming a vampire in the same manner as Dio, and on the same day, as well, he mused, knowing that there were indeed possible explanations for such a happening. And also knowing that few of them were pleasant. Sighing deeply, Jonathan settled himself back into the seat of the carriage as it continued to roll on.

When he finally arrived back at his large, well-appointed home, Jonathan thanked the driver and made his way inside. After greeting Father in the proper and expected manner, he turned his path toward the library. Dio and Alice could always be counted upon to be present there; even if they were not studying the many and varied subjects that Father insisted upon having them learn for the sake of their lives in the future – whatever future a pair of vampires such as they could truly have – Alice had made it more than clear that their library was one of her favorite places to spend time.

Jonathan smiled fleetingly as he recalled his sister stating her personal vow that she would read every book in the Joestar library at least once.

Continuing on his way down through the vast halls of the home he shared with his small family and the servants who made all of their lives so much easier, Jonathan steeled himself for what he might learn. He knew that Dio could be rather impulsive at times – truly, Alice was the one who grounded his wild schemes in at least some form of reality – but Mr. Zeppeli’s words had brought a question he’d not even considered before to the forefront of his mind. How did their sister become a vampire?

Chapter 10: Go West

Chapter Text

Turning to watch his sweet sister as she continued with her work, Dio smiled. It was so fascinating, watching his dear Alice when she was truly in her element; whether it was altering the clothes she had purchased – adding those clever little hidden pockets that he’d developed something of a liking for, himself – painting one of her beautiful masterpieces, or even simply reading a book that she truly enjoyed. Reaching out in an effort to gently run his fingers through her long queue, Dio found his attention drawn suddenly to the sound of determined footfalls making their way through the large library.

“Dio,” their sweet puppy of an adopted brother called softly, once he too had determined that he would not be causing too much of a disturbance to Alice when he did. “Might I speak to you for a moment?”

“Of course, Jojo,” he, Dio, said as the pair of them made their way to another section of the library. “Now, what could you possibly be so interested in that it couldn’t wait until Alice and I had left the library on our own?”

“I apologize if this brings up any memories you would rather not think about, but I feel it is a question that needs to be asked,” Jojo said, clearly steeling himself for some confrontation or other; Dio wondered, for just a moment, what their puppy of an adopted brother thought he was going to end up facing. “Just how was it that Alice came to be a vampire?”

He paused, internally surprised to find Jojo asking him such a question. “I granted her the power myself, Jojo,” he answered, seeing no reason to lie in such a situation as this. “I would have offered it to you, Jojo, but you seem so content with the sunlight that I could scarcely even consider such a thing.”

It seemed that Jojo hadn’t been at all prepared to hear a thing like that.

“Why would you do such a thing?” their puppy asked.

“Alice and I are quite a bit different than you, Jojo,” he said; he’d not have bothered stating such obvious facts to his sweet sister, but as he’d stated previously, Jojo and his dear Alice were not remotely the same sort of people.

“Yes, I know,” Jojo said, his eyes briefly darting towards where his dear Alice sat comfortably with her book.

For a moment, Dio wondered what their puppy was intending to do, before Jojo seemed to resolve himself to a new course of action. Raising an eyebrow as Jojo made his way over to where Alice was sitting with her book, Dio followed in his footsteps, curious to know just what it was that their puppy had planned.

 

=PB=

Gathering his resolve, Jonathan gently touched Alice’s right shoulder, then waited for his and Dio’s sister to turn her attention to him of her own accord. He’d no desire to be subjected to another lecture, and so he allowed time for his and Dio’s sister to take note of his presence and put away her book.

“What is it, Jonathan?” she asked, turning her chair around so that she would be able to face him more squarely.

“Dio told me about what… happened to you,” he said, not quite able to bring himself to speak the words to her at this point.

Truly, he didn’t know if he ever would.

“Good to see he’s not holding out again,” their sister muttered, her expression slightly distant, before she seemed to turn the main focus of her attention to him. “What’s on your mind, then, Jonathan?”

“I just wished to know how it happened, that’s all,” Jonathan said, and she almost wanted to laugh at the sheer incongruity of his current posture.

Really, attempting to make oneself look small just did not work on a man his size; Jonathan was too tall, and too thickly-muscled, to make such a posture look anything but ridiculous.

“You’d really have to ask Dio about that,” she said, both for the fact that it was true, and because – petty as it might very well have been – Alice relished the chance to set Jonathan on her sometimes-thickheaded twin, at least under these kinds of circumstances. “I was unconscious for the first part.”

What?”

“Oh yeah,” she continued, swallowing a smirk. “All I remember is waking up with the great-granddaddy of all headaches. And then, well, this.”

“Trust me, sister dear, you wouldn’t have wished to be conscious for such a process,” Dio said, making his way over to the table where she and Jonathan had congregated around. “I was, and even Jojo could tell you that it wasn’t what anyone would call a pleasant experience.”

“It was horrible,” Jonathan muttered, hunching his shoulders briefly, before standing up straight and turning his disapproving gaze on Dio. “Which is why I don’t understand why you would ever do such a thing to our sister, Dio!”

Leaning back in her seat, Alice wondered for a moment if she was going to have to intervene if it came down to a fight between the pair of them, or if Dio was going to be able to keep a lid on things without her help this time. Not like he has the best record with that kind of thing, she mused with a resigned sort of annoyance. True, Dio had learned to be more discreet about his craving for power and domination, but that hadn’t stopped him from being pretty open with his cravings for them around her.

Still, she’d at least managed to convince him of the merits of making people want to give you power, rather than attempting to take it; really, only a moron would ever think that the latter was anything but a stopgap for the desperate, the stupid, and the desperately stupid.

 

=PB=

Chuckling at the adorable expression of protective fury on Jojo’s sweet face he, Dio, stepped forward to explain himself.

“Jojo, you know very well that I, Dio, would never do anything to endanger the members of my dear family,” he said, making his smile more gentle so that he would be better able to appeal to their puppy’s protective instincts. “Aside from the initial pain, which even I will admit was rather terrible, this transformation that your Mr. Zeppeli so decries has provided nothing but benefits to Alice and I. We’ll be eternal, Jojo. We won’t have a mere human lifetime on this world, but an infinity of them.”

“You’ll never be able to stand in the sunlight again,” Jojo said, his face taking on an earnest, pleading expression.

Dio laughed softly; truly, their puppy concerned himself with the most absurd things. “We still have our memories, Jojo. And, with the proper preparations, we can enjoy a day in the sun.”

Jojo sighed, shaking his head. “I suppose, if you truly are happy…”

Smiling as his sweet sister embraced Jojo from his right, causing their adorable puppy to trail off into silence, Dio embraced their adorable puppy’s opposite side. For a handful of moments, he could all but feel the hesitation in Jojo’s entire body, but soon enough their adorable puppy was embracing the pair of them in turn.

 

=PB=

The three of them separated again, and Jonathan found that he felt slightly at odds with himself; on the one hand, Dio and Alice still seemed so perfectly happy with what they were, but the memory of Dio’s screams as the spines hidden within the stone mask pierced his skull and the knowledge that Alice had suffered in the same thing… No, he could not quite bring himself to be so blasé as they continued to be. Perhaps Mr. Zeppeli cannot cure them of such a condition as this vampirism of theirs, but he seems to have far more experience in these matters than I.

Bidding his dear siblings good night, Jonathan turned and made his way to his room. He didn’t know just when he would have the chance to speak with Mr. Zeppeli again, but this seemed just the kind of thing that he would wish to know. Still, Jonathan was perfectly aware that he would need to broach the subject carefully.

All other considerations aside, he’d no wish to cause further strife for his siblings.

Rising the next morning, Jonathan made himself ready for his return journey to the university dorm once more. Bidding the members of his dear family a fond farewell for the new semester he would be spending away from them, Jonathan boarded the carriage that would return him to the grounds of the university where he now spent a great deal of his time. During the journey, however, Jonathan found that he could not quite manage to banish the thoughts of how his dear siblings were ultimately going to fare.

For all Dio’s talk of eternity, it had become clear that his dear brother – even for all his obvious intelligence – did not truly understand the concept.

 

=PB=

As she continued to watch her children – her dear Dio and sweet Alice – continuing about their lives after that odd stone mask had changed them, Charlena Brando was forced to admit that, while her children had indeed been changed by the strange artifact, their souls had remained intact. Dio was still the same kind, charismatic boy he had been, and Alice remained the cheerful, gentle girl that she had been since the two of them were born.

Even the fact that they now subsisted in the main on the blood of beasts was well and good; humans, after all, ate of their flesh and their souls weren’t harmed by the act.

Still, it must be very difficult for them; they’ll never be able to go to Heaven with those immortal bodies of theirs, she reflected sadly. However, Charlena knew that it was her duty as their mother to support them during such a difficult time. She would strive to comfort and succor them during this trying time, and all the moreso since it appeared that – while their relationship with Mr. Joestar was reasonably cordial – the only Joestar in the house they had truly connected with in any lasting way was young Jonathan.

And, while Jonathan Joestar would surely go to Heaven for his kindness, well… Charlena could not help but see a reflection of the girl she had once been in the purity of his heart. My own purity didn’t seem to be able to protect me from Dario…

Shoving away that horrible thought only served to bring another – more subtle, and all the more terrible for it – to the forefront of her mind: she’d seen what her precious children had done; seen them willingly sacrifice their own innocence, staining their own beautiful souls so that she, fool that she had been, could live free of Dario. None of them had spoken of such things to George Joestar; let him hold to the illusion of Dario as a good man; the same illusion that she herself had wished more than anything else to believe in. Though the both of them would be safer now than she had been then.

However, the reason for their safety had and would remain a Brando family secret.

 

=PB=

When he had next been able to speak to Jonathan Joestar, William found his remaining suspicions about the vampire who had once been Dio Brando confirmed: whatever protectiveness the young man had once felt for his twin, the stone mask’s evil had poisoned it. It had clearly been twisted into the kind of possessiveness that had lead the vampire to murder young Alice Brando with the same wicked artifact that had stolen the life of her twin. It was a horrible situation, and more than that it was one that he could not allow to continue.

He would lay those wicked, cunning vampires to rest, so that the remains of their families could grieve their lost children properly; even if they hated him for it, William Zeppeli was willing to bear that for the sake of his duty.

“What troubles you so much?”

Smiling gently at the concern his last remaining friend and fellow student under Master Tonpetty was showing him, William allowed himself to relax from the tension that had crept up on him all unknown.

“Just considering what we might do next, old friend. Those vampires have proven to be far more clever than I would have ever given the beasts credit for when we began this hunt,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he settled down into his chair.

“I suppose not every vampire can be as dull-witted as those we have faced in the past,” Straizo said, his tone sounding rather more wistful than William would have expected.

It seemed that their task was fated to take a great deal longer than either of them had been expecting when they had first followed rumors of the stone mask to this place.

 

=PB=

She’d been getting increasingly frequent reports of Zeppeli and Straizo skulking around their various holdings, and so she had pulled Dio aside to plan their response to what seemed to be an inevitable escalation in the conflict that those two seemed intent on bringing down upon themselves. Dio was, of course, completely in favor of launching an all-out assault using every zombie they had at their disposal. Which, in the end, would amount to what corpses they could gather from the local graveyards.

While she didn’t disapprove of the plan in general, there were still some refinements that needed to be made…

“Why do you want to use humans for this?” she asked, raising an eyebrow as Dio finished detailing just how he’d intended to deal with the pair of stubborn idiots who seemed bound and determined to make a nuisance of themselves.

“I don’t want humans to be our main force, sister dear,” Dio said, clearly having misunderstood the intent behind her question. “While it’s clear that those fools have a pronounced distaste for attacking the humans we have in our employ, the fact remains that mere humans are still not a match for anything those troublesome Hamon users can bring to bear against us. Even Jojo could only manage to turn their own tricks against them, those few times they actually deigned to fight him.”

“Yes, I know all of that,” she said, making brief note of the pair of heavy footfalls her almost newly-developed tremor-sense had picked up; they felt more deliberate than any of the others that she’d become aware of since she’d started developing this particular refinement of her enhanced tactile senses. “What I want to know is why you’re so interested in human zombies. Zeppeli and Straizo seem perfectly capable of fighting through any number of those kinds of zombies.”

Alice was starting to get the feeling that this particular pair – she’d known that there were two of them once they’d obligingly held still long enough for her to map them out with the echoes of a couple particularly vigorous taps of her right foot – was familiar, both from their light stance and how heavy they seemed to be. Well, if there was ever any doubt that we needed to get some breathing room, this pretty much puts paid to it; what a mess, she sighed, annoyed all over again.

“Of course, if you truly want to insist upon bringing more zombies into our happy little family, I can think of a much better place than this tiny burg.” On the scrap of paper she’d fetched with her extendable veins, Alice wrote Play along with the piece of charcoal in her right hand.

“Oh?” Dio asked, his eyebrows raised, and a smirk growing on his face as he read her note. “Wherever would you suggest, sister dear?”

“New York has a rather large population; crowds enough to get lost in, so I’d imagine they’d have quite the choice of potential zombies.” We need to head to Montana. If there’s anywhere I’d be able to find what we need to handle these peons, it’ll be in Montana.

“New York,” Dio said, grinning as he read the real message she was trying to communicate to him. “Yes; it does sound as though we would be better suited to our purposes than this tiny burg we’ve stationed ourselves in.”

Grinning as she folded up the paper she’d been using, tucking it neatly into an inside pocket of her vest as the pair of them fell into step with each other on their way out, Alice turned her attention to the next phase of her plan.

“We’ll need to book ourselves passage, if we’re to begin properly establishing ourselves in the city,” Dio said cheerfully, slinging his right arm around her shoulders as the pair of them made their way out of their boarding house’s office.

There were quite a few other things they’d have to take care of before the pair of them could start making their way to Montana, but all of that could start right at this very moment.

 

=PB=

Finding that Mr. Zeppeli was still pursuing his siblings, even after the pair of them had been shown to be even less of a threat to the people who lived in their city than some of the humans living there had been bad enough, but to hear that Mr. Zeppeli and his partner wanted him to come with them… Jonathan couldn’t approve of their methods at all, but he had volunteered to come with them, if only to make certain that the pair of them would not continue along the rash course of action that they had clearly been on even after Dio and Alice had displayed prudence and good sense both.

It was infuriating, and Jonathan was determined to put a stop to it, but in order to have even the slightest chance of that he would first have to follow them to the city of New York, in North America. There was, naturally, a part of Jonathan that relished the chance to make a foray into the Americas, even if the reason for such a thing was not what he would have wished. He tried not to dwell on that part, of course.

Even if he did not share his true thoughts with anyone, such selfish motives were completely unsuited for a gentleman.

 

=PB=

He, Dio, hadn’t known entirely what to expect, once his sweet sister had duped those fool Hamon users into chasing a false trail all about New York. Yes, he was fully aware that his dear Alice was a thoroughly brilliant woman, but watching her as she effortlessly arranged for those fools who would be following in their footsteps to be delayed, misled, and steered astray… it was a thing of beauty.

Yes, her method was rather costly – as a proper bribe was, she had explained – but considering the greed of the great mass of humanity, such a thing had indeed been necessary.

“So, we’ve arrived in Montana, sister dear,” he said, as the pair of them stepped down from the loading platform and began to make their way out of the station. “Where do we go from here?”

“We’ll need to start heading north-east,” his dear Alice said, her tone thoughtful and her gaze clearly focused upon the future; it was such a fascinating thing to witness. “To a place called Hell Creek.”

He chuckled. “What an amusing name.”

Pacing his sweet sister as she arranged transportation for the pair of them, Dio wondered once more just what his sweet sister could have planned; just how, in the end, she would upend the world and create something new and fascinating from what she found in the rubble.

 

=PB=

As it turned out, the small town of Jordan hadn’t truly been established yet – hell, Montana itself wasn’t even a real state – so Alice couldn’t just tell someone to take her and Dio to Jordan and expect them to know what she meant. However, Hell Creek was at least reasonably known even now, and there was in fact a settlement close to it. It just didn’t have a name at present, but that didn’t matter so much, considering she could just say that she wanted to be taken to “the settlement near Hell Creek”, and people knew what she was talking about.

And so, she and Dio were able to make their way to Hell Creek.

Half-closing her eyes, Alice directed her tremor-sense into the ground so that she would be able to find a reasonably intact skeleton to work with. Dio had been rather quiet while she was searching, which had been all to the good as far as her efforts at finding what she’d come to this place for, but was still just a tad bit out of character for her boisterous, flamboyant brother. She’d have to ask him about it, once she’d found what she was looking for.

If he didn’t end up telling her on his own, anyway.

Opening her eyes as her tremor-senses mapped out a large, near completely intact skeleton, Alice smiled as she knelt down to place her hands on the ground, humming deeply to transmit more powerful sound-waves through her body in an effort to loosen the rock and soil surrounding the skeleton. Tapping the ground to better determine just where she should begin her excavation, Alice could almost feel Dio fidgeting away behind her. Chuckling softly at the impatience – really, they had all the time they would need for this kind of thing, what with Zeppeli and his fellow idiot chasing their tails back in New York – Alice turned her attention back to her excavation.

That old fossil was hardly going to dig itself up, after all.

 

=PB=

Shifting his stance as his sweet sister continued peeling away the layers of rock, soil, and rocky soil that lay between her and whatever strange prize she was seeking, Dio decided that he had to say something.

“Sister dear, if you merely-”

The remaining words stuck fast in his throat, however, when the immense skull of what could have easily been the inspiration for every story featuring dragons that he and Jojo had ever read began to become plainly visible at the bottom of the pit his dear Alice had hollowed out. Licking his lips at the sheer size of the skull being slowly revealed – if a mere skull was nearly a match for his own height when standing, the creature in its entirety must have been immense – he, Dio, stepped forward to look down into the pit that his sweet sister continued to carve out of the landscape around them.

As his dear Alice lifted up the skull of the great beast whose remains she had at last exposed to the light of the moon and stars they were currently standing under, tipping it up so that the palate was exposed once more, Dio marveled at the sheer size of the teeth. Slipping down the side of the hole, Dio grinned as his sweet sister lowered the skull – merely the top half of the skull, he realized – back down to the ground, he was able to get close enough to measure the teeth. They were nearly larger than his hand.

The sharp, earthy smell of the soil all around them might not have been the most well-appointed of places, but he, Dio, wrapped his arms around his sweet sister’s waist and moved with her as she continued excavating the skeleton of the magnificent beast she had unearthed. They had done such a thing before, when the pair of them were younger, and his dear Alice would assist their mother in the kitchen. Truly, it was as though they were dancing together.

“Dio, you have more experience with this kind of thing than I do,” his sweet sister said, her tone becoming thoughtful as she looked upon the work she had done thus far. “Are zombie skeletons generally capable of reassembling themselves?”

“Sister dear,” he paused for a moment, savoring the taste of this new victory that his dear, lovely Alice had granted to him. “I, Dio, am more than willing to find out.

Slashing open his palms, he dug his nails into them and forced out as much of his vampiric essence as he could; truly, a beast so mighty deserved all that he could spare.

Chapter 11: Only Human

Chapter Text

Leaping back up and out of the hole as ten-point-two tons of Late Cretaceous carnivore surged upward and forward, Alice laughed, feeling almost giddy as she watched the massive tyrannosaur take its first, surprisingly nimble steps up onto terra firma.

 

“My dear brother, I present to you Tyrannosaurus Rex,” she said, flourishing her right hand in the general direction of the gigantic theropod that towered over them where they stood.

 

She barely had time to get the last word out, before Dio grabbed her around the waist, swung her around, and kissed her deeply on the mouth. Behind them, a sound that the world hadn’t heard for sixty-five million years boomed across the plains; it really did sound a lot like the one she remembered from Jurassic Park. After he’d had his fill of kissing her, Dio swept her up in his arms and leapt onto the back of their revived T-Rex, and together the pair of them rode off.

 

“We’re going to have to find somewhere to shelter this find of ours when morning comes,” she said, narrowing her eyes as she watched the ground pass by underneath them.

 

“Yes,” Dio said, and she could all but hear her brother grinning. “While I, Dio, can hardly deny that the results were more than worth the time, we did indeed spend a great long while out here in the open.”

 

And so, the pair of them searched for a place to bunker down for the day. As it turned out, the vast majority of terrain around this part of what would later become the state of Montana was large, open plains. And, while there were extremely large rocks scattered about in places, none of them would serve as anything but a temporary shelter for something as large as the Rex they were riding. So, in the end they were forced to dig a large, long shelter out of the ground for their Rex to wait in, while the pair of them made their way back to the small, unnamed settlement near Hell Creek.

 

She’d taken the precaution of adding hoods to all of their travel clothing while she and Dio had been on the train, both because it was something to do, and because it’d been something that needed doing.

 

So, the pair of them pulled up their hoods and made their way back towards the small settlement where they had been staying. The people there were still waiting for what passed for a town council to settle on a name for the settlement before it could become a proper town, but they’d been welcoming enough. Particularly the pair she’d taken to calling her two Johns.

 

And, as if her thoughts had called them – which might not have been as far-fetched a thought as it would have been, considering everything that was true in this world – Jon Bonjovi and John Mellencamp came out from the rustic townhouse that she’d rented for herself and Dio to stay in while they operated in this area.

 

“Good morning, gentlemen,” she greeted cordially, as the four of them all came within earshot of each other; well, human earshot, anyway.

 

“It’s good to see you two back again,” Jon said, smiling as he and John came to a stop just a few paces from where she and Dio stood. “Did you find what you were looking for?”

 

“That and a bit more,” she said, smiling with profound satisfaction as she and Dio fell into step with Jon and John.

 

“Really?” John asked. “Well, I’m glad you managed to find… whatever it was that you came here looking for.”

 

“I could have sworn I told you that Dio and I were fossil hunters,” she said, thinking back on her previous conversations with the man in an effort to recall just what she’d said to him when renting the townhouse that he and his business partner maintained.

 

“Well, you know Melonhead here can barely remember what he’s had for breakfast, much less anything you actually tell him needs remembering,” Jon said, sounding rather amused.

 

That’s a shameless exaggeration and you know it,” John said, sounding more amused than annoyed; everything she’d seen of the pair’s interactions gave the impression that they’d been friends for a long time, and what she was seeing now only served to reinforce it. “I just… Couldn’t remember straight-away, that’s all.”

 

“Of course it is,” Jon said, turning a grin back on his partner. “I believe you.”

 

The sounds of an argument-in-the-making faded steadily into the distance, as Jon and John split off from her and Dio when the four of them entered the townhouse.

 

“Fossil hunters, sister dear?” Dio asked, looking amusedly at her as he sat himself down on his bed.

 

“Really, you’d be surprised how much even a trilobite will net you,” she said, plopping herself down in a nicely padded chair just opposite her brother’s position on his bed. “To say nothing of the fully-intact skeletons I was sensing down there when we pulled ours up.”

 

“Trilobites,” Dio muttered, as though he was testing how the word sounded. “How interesting. Something that came up in your studies?”

 

“I’m sure they mentioned it somewhere in all those books I read,” she volleyed back, smirking at the amusement she could see plainly on her twin’s face.

 

“And you say these fossils of yours are worth quite a large sum of money?”

 

=PB=

 

When he’d come to America with Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo, Jonathan had attempted on every spare moment he was given to sway the man’s opinion of Dio and Alice, to make him understand that – whatever other encounters the pair of them had had with other vampires – his siblings were nothing like those terrible creatures. Unfortunately, it seemed as though the more carefully he worded his arguments, the simpler Mr. Zeppeli found it to turn them against him.

 

He wasn’t going to allow himself to give up, of course; he simply had to find the correct way of explaining his position to Mr. Zeppeli.

 

Looking back down at the newspaper in his hands, Jonathan paused as his eyes glanced over a familiar name. He did not believe what he saw at first, but reading the words again did not change them…

 

“The newly-minted team of fossil hunters, Dio and Alice Brando,” he muttered, scanning the small, not terribly detailed article that had caught his eye.

 

His smile slowly grew, even as he finished the article and quickly tucked the paper safely inside his vest so that he would be able to take it with him when he left the hotel’s dining room. It was a comforting thing, in spite of his own personal misgivings, to know that his siblings had managed to escape from New York under the very noses of Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo. I wonder if I might send them something, he mused.

 

True, there would be the perhaps-difficult matter of finding out just where the new state of Montana actually was in relation to New York, and also the matter of keeping the fact of his interest – or just the reason for it, if he could not manage the former – from becoming known by Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo. Still, even just knowing that his siblings were all right was a comfort to him in such a time as this. For the moment, such would have to be enough.

 

=PB=

 

Adjusting his wide-brimmed hat to keep the lethal rays of the sun from his flesh he, Dio, smiled as he continued to oversee the excavation of the many and varied skeletons that had lain buried beneath the plains of this new American state that he and his sweet sister had born witness to the founding of. It was a struggle not to cackle with sheer, unbridled glee as he beheld the forms of the great beasts being removed from the ground, but if he’d only learned one thing from his life with dear Alice, it would have to be the value of discretion.

 

Still, watching such magnificent specimens be revealed once more – and knowing that they were his for the asking if he so desired – was a heady thing indeed.

 

Turning away from the junior archeologists continuing about their work he, Dio, made his way back to the house that he and his dear Alice had caused to be built. Or rather, that the people who lived in this new American state had built for them, once that man who was so very interested in the dinosaur skeletons that those who had gathered about them continued to excavate even as he made his way back to his and his sweet sister’s new home. True, it was not yet so large as the Joestar estate, where the pair of them had grown to adulthood and been granted such wondrous power by the stone mask Jojo had been so kind to discover for them, but their own Montana holdings – built just before the instatement of the Montana Territory – were comfortable enough for the moment.

 

“Sister dear,” he greeted, once he had made his way through the more public rooms of their ever-growing home and into their personal sanctum within the building.

 

As expected, dear Alice was hard at work, this time mapping out the various dig sites that the humans now working in this area had established. There was also a folded newspaper to the left of the space she had cleared for herself, so it was clear that mapping dig sites was hardly the only thing that occupied his sweet sister’s attention. Pausing for a moment, knowing that Alice would acknowledge him when she had finished with her work, he waited.

 

“Good morning, brother,” she greeted cordially, once she had finished noting down all of the locations where their cadre of hired humans were working. “Seems we’re getting a bit famous.”

 

“Oh?” Catching the paper as she tossed it lightly to him, the large, front-page photo caught his eye. Just as it was meant to. “Renowned, eh?” he echoed, savoring the taste of the word in his mouth. “You don’t seem happy, sister dear,” he said, watching as a small crease formed between his lovely sister’s elegant eyebrows.

 

“It’s a complication,” dear Alice said, calmly as ever. “Once these stories about us begin circulating outside of the state, which they inevitably will, considering what we’re doing here, we’re inevitably going to end up facing a certain pair of idiots again.”

 

He hummed softly, then chuckled. “True, but I would hardly say we’re unprepared for that, sister dear.”

 

“I know,” his dear Alice said, smiling languidly up at him like the cat she so resembled when she was contented. “Still, it’s rather troublesome to have to deal with in the first place.”

 

“Well, I suppose I can’t argue with that,” he said, smiling amusedly at her phrasing.

 

Truly, his sweet sister had the most interesting way of putting things into perspective.

 

=PB=

 

They had, of course, been given the opportunity to keep some of the fossil skeletons that their people had been digging up with such fascinating regularity; whether by dint of being the first to find them after they’d been buried all those millions of years ago, or by the simple expedient of their vampire physiology allowing the both of them to go without sleep. Either way, when she’d spotted a certain, nearly-intact skeleton, Alice had immediately taken possession of it. Sure, it might not have impressed Dio as much as the Rex that he was still so enamored by, but even he wouldn’t be able to deny its utility once he saw it in action.

 

She’d wondered briefly just how in the hell a Quetzalcoatlus had ended up in a fossil bed in Montana, then remembered that she was a vampire created by some kind of weird brain acupuncture and that she planned to raise this particular Quetzalcoatlus as an undead zombie, and gave the whole thing up as a bad job.

 

Slashing open her palms the same way she’d seen Dio do that first time, Alice watched the transformation with interest. It was fascinating, watching flesh growing over the fossilized bones that she and some of the archeologists working around the expanding dig site had excavated; seeing the wing-membranes filling in, to watch the re-growth of muscle-tissue and scales, and the sprouting of what seemed to be feathers, of all things. She hadn’t known that Quetzalcoatluses – Quetzalcoatli? – had even had feathers in the first place.

 

Of course, the closest she’d come to seeing an actual Quetzalcoatlus in her life as Sarah Williams had been a CGI model on a television program that she could only remember in the broadest of strokes at present; even then, she didn’t think anything like that could even come close to what she was seeing taking shape and form before her in this moment of moments.

 

=PB=

 

It was the sound of Mr. Zeppeli’s footsteps – hurried, harsh, rushing inevitably toward the room Jonathan had been staying in while the pair of Hamon users had attempted to hunt down his siblings while he strove to convince them otherwise – that prompted him to hide the article he’d clipped from the New York Times. Hiding it away within the small wooden box that he had surreptitiously purchased with some of the funds he had brought with him, Jonathan quickly tucked the box itself away just as he saw the knob of his door beginning to turn.

 

“It seems we were deceived,” Mr. Zeppeli said, his tone as grim and serious as the expression that Jonathan could see on his face. “Come; we’ll need to make plans quickly if we’re to get back on their trail.”

 

“I thought you were already searching,” he said, feeling a stab of apprehension; he didn’t think the either of them would have searched his room for anything other than the most dire of circumstances, but for a heart-freezing moment all he could think of was that Mr. Zeppeli had discovered the collection of newspaper clippings that he used to keep track of his dear siblings.

 

It was all he could truly manage, considering that – even with every well-reasoned, passionate argument that he had mustered – both Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo seemed utterly determined to force a confrontation even when Dio and Alice were continuing to demonstrate their devotion to humanity with every action they took.

 

“There’s no need for you to fret, Jojo,” Mr. Zeppeli said kindly; Jonathan still found it odd to have the man call him by his nickname, to be so kind to him while at the same time seeking to hunt his dear siblings as though they were nothing more than beasts. “You had no way of knowing; we’ll simply have to adjust our plans while we travel.”

 

Jonathan was just about to ask what it was that Mr. Zeppeli intended to prepare for and where he intended to go, though he was beginning to suspect that he knew, when the pair of them arrived in the salon. Straizo was just settling down on the old, scuffed settee that had been placed by the side of the low table in the center of the room, and Jonathan noted that he also had a newspaper with him.

 

“So, you saw it too, Straizo?”

 

“Yes,” the other man said, eyes narrowing as he stared down the large picture that took up fully half of the front page.

 

Dio was there, frozen in a pose of triumph before a truly immense bone: arms folded, and grinning out at the world with that same, confidant grin he’d always worn when something was going his way; there was even the hint of gentle teasing that lurked in the shadow of every smile Jonathan had seen on his brother’s face. It was a nice thing, to be able to see his siblings again, even if it was just in still-frames and photographs. He could still remember Alice’s photo from the continuation of the article several pages in: the way his sister had been posed with a pickaxe over her right shoulder, standing at ease and relaxed in a sensible outfit and the kind of wide-brimmed had that allowed his dear siblings to go outside when the sun was high in the sky.

 

Alice had been wearing nearly the same kind of smile that Dio had worn on the large, front-page photograph that had brought the attention of Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo back to them, even with all of the ways the pair of them had tried to escape it.

 

“You know what we need to do,” Mr. Zeppeli said, the stern expression on his face drawing a soft sigh from Jonathan; he’d been hoping that the pair of them, deprived of their targets for so long, would return to England, or else turn their attention to some other matter that needed attending to.

 

Still, Straizo answered in the affirmative, and he and Mr. Zeppeli began to make plans for traveling to Montana. Excusing himself to take a walk, Jonathan found his feet almost instinctively bringing him towards the post office. Pausing outside the building for a long moment, torn between the thought of Mr. Zeppeli’s disapproval and the need to warn his dear siblings about what was soon to be coming for them, Jonathan gathered himself and made his way into the building. Family, after all, came first; every true gentleman knew that.

 

=PB=

 

Looking down upon the very clouds themselves as they drifted lazily by he, Dio, laughed aloud in the thin, chill air so high above the small town of Jordan in the state of Montana where he and his sweet sister had found so many wondrous things. The human fools who had first excavated the bones of these magnificent beasts they had chosen to call dinosaurs knew nothing of their true majesty. Even he, Dio, had thought them to be insipid, lumbering beasts, and if his sweet sister had told him just what it was that she had been seeking in Montana… well, there was entirely too much of a chance that he would have foolishly refused.

 

And truly, that would have been a terrible shame.

 

“Well, you’re certainly happy,” his sweet sister said, a smile plain in her voice.

 

“You can hardly blame me, sister dear,” he laughed, nuzzling the back of her head as the pair of them flew on.

 

And truly, this had been the dream of those pitiful, ground-bound humans, likely since the first of them had looked to the birds with impotent envy in their eyes. Truly, he and his sweet sister had accomplished in a day what every one of those credulous humans so far below them had hoped in vain for over the entirety of their pitiful lives. It was a wonderfully heady experience.

 

So, it was with some reluctance that he obeyed his sweet sister’s direction to brace himself as their majestic flying beast – so fittingly named for the feathered serpent of Aztec myth – circled lower, diving beneath the clouds as his dear Alice directed it back to their shared home. Said home had, of course, inevitably expanded into a compound that was nearly half the size of the Joestar estate back in England. Smiling as he saw the open deck of the landing pad his sweet sister had designed to allow them to depart from and return to their holdings with ease he, Dio, allowed himself to relax against his sweet sister’s back as she guided them to a steady landing inside the tower built to accommodate their takeoffs and landings.

 

He could see the way his sweet sister’s extendable veins snapped out, releasing the latch and letting the open door of the tower snap shut, and smiled as he heard the spring-latches lock back into place.

 

Sliding down and landing neatly upon the smooth-polished floor, Dio smiled slightly as he heard his dear Alice speaking softly to the flying beast she had raised not so long ago. His sweet sister had a habit of speaking gently to all of their pets, drawing them in close and binding their loyalty to her with soft words and touches upon the shoulder or arm. It was a rather interesting sight, watching all of their pets flock to her as she presided over the dig sites and the day-to-day running of their expanding estate.

 

Not quite as interesting as the pets he, Dio, was gathering to himself, but suitable for the kind of work they were doing.

 

=PB=

 

Boarding the train that would take them to the new state of Montana, Jonathan found himself wishing that those articles that he had found in the New York Times had never been printed. Yes, it would have meant he might not have been able to reconnect with his beloved siblings so swiftly as he had, but it also meant that they would not be in Mr. Zeppeli’s sights once more. All through the week, he’d attempted to reason with the older man, citing the fact that Dio and Alice – vampires or not – had been working to uncover more about the world they all lived in.

 

That the pair of them had, in fact, contributed more to humanity’s knowledge of the past as vampires than Jonathan himself had; though he did still intend to go into the field himself, someday. Still, the thought of having Dio and Alice working alongside him, if in a subtly different field than the one he himself intended to go into, gave him a warm feeling of comfort when he thought about it. However, Mr. Zeppeli had remained unbending in his convictions; he still insisted that, as vampires, Dio and Alice needed to be destroyed.

 

And he would always say destroyed, never seeming to understand the fact that – if Jonathan allowed him to carry through with his plans – it would be nothing short of murder, killing Dio and Alice when they had done no harm to anyone; they drank the blood of beasts, and they bought it from the butcher shop.

 

More and more, it was beginning to seem as though his only ally in the matter was Straizo. Straizo, who had begun to take some interest in his recounting of his siblings’ exploits when they had first become vampires. In particular, he seemed to be interested in the way they shielded themselves from the sun, and the defenses they had developed against Hamon. To hear Straizo tell it, he himself had encountered some of those defenses; Alice’s own, in fact.

 

Listening to the man speak, it seemed as though he had developed some sort of respect for Alice; or, at the very least, for the tactics that his and Dio’s sister had brought to bear against him.

 

The sound of the train’s whistle forced his thoughts back to the present; back to the battle that awaited them. Back to his fading hopes for reconciliation between Mr. Zeppeli and his dear siblings. Steeling himself for what seemed to be inevitably coming, Jonathan Joestar stepped down from the loading platform and into the train station in Billings, Montana.

 

=PB=

 

He could see the anguish on the young Joestar’s face, and while William knew that he could wipe it all away with but a handful of words, he was not about to lie to spare the young man’s feelings. Such could only lead to more problems in the future. In any case, dealing with the vampires that wore his siblings’ faces would – while causing him great grief and anguish in the short term – do only good for humanity as a whole.

 

The longer those creatures were allowed to exist, the more blind each and every one of the Joestars would become to their growing evil; he could not allow such a situation to continue, hate him though the Joestars might for what he was duty bound to do.

Chapter 12: Dance With The Devil

Chapter Text

While William had arranged transport to the growing settlement of Jordan, where that pair of vampires they were hunting had settled themselves, Straizo found himself reflecting upon the tales that Jonathan Joestar had been telling him. Of his siblings, Dio and Alice Brando, and their reaction to being transformed into vampires by the stone mask that he, William, Dire, and all of their fellow Hamon-users had been attempting to destroy for so long as any of them had known about the cursed object. And, he’d found himself interested in just how those two had managed to maintain the logic and reason that were seemingly lost to most when the spines of the stone mask pierced their brains and transformed them.

 

Jonathan Joestar, however, had seemed to be more acutely focused on reassuring any and all who would hear him that his siblings had retained the kindness that he thought marked humanity as a whole; Straizo was far less interested in such a thing.

 

The very reason he had undertaken the study of Hamon in the first place had been so that he could refine his body, purging the flaws and weakness that led inevitably to aging. However, even with his finely-developed skill in the practice, he could still feel the slow decay of his mortal form. He would have to speak with those vampires, somehow; perhaps to Alice, since she seemed to be the more sensible of the pair.

 

Either way, he would need to find a way to work under the very sight of William Zeppeli, a man who had come to know him well over the course of the twenty years that the pair of them had trained together under Master Tonpetty. It would not be a simple thing, but for all that, Straizo was determined to seek out what information he could on the subject of vampirism and its potential benefits.

 

Turning his attention toward Jonathan Joestar, as the young man gathered himself for what was clearly to be yet another of his ultimately futile attempts to convince William to rethink his position on the vampires Dio and Alice Brando – an impossible task, given the tale Straizo had heard his fellow Hamon-user tell of his own first encounter with vampire-kind – Straizo wondered just what kind of perverse sentimentality drove the young Joestar to keep so resolutely at a task that any sensible person would have given up as hopeless long ago. It was not a thing that he himself would have done, and even if he had been so stubborn as to try, he would have dismissed all such notions after having been rebuffed so many times.

 

To say nothing of how thoroughly William chose to rebuff the young Joestar’s attempts to persuade him.

 

=PB=

 

As it turned out, finding where Dio and Alice were staying was more simple than he would have wished it to be, under the circumstances. Theirs was, in fact, the largest and most well-known estate within the borders of the new state they lived in. Steeling himself against what Mr. Zeppeli might very well do to him, Jonathan broke off from Mr. Zeppeli and Straizo, dashing through the gates and onto the main grounds of Dio and Alice’s growing estate.

 

Whoever it was that had been opening the gates for the morning – little more than a colorful blur out of the left edge of his left eye – called out to him with some surprise, but Jonathan couldn’t find it in himself to stop for what was ultimately such a minor thing. He needed to find his siblings, so that the three of them could stand united against Mr. Zeppeli. And also, so that they might be able to persuade Straizo to side with them when they were forced into a confrontation with the man.

 

Breathing slowly and evenly, in the way that was almost reflexive to him after having spent so many months training under the watchful eyes of Mr. Zeppeli, Jonathan forced himself to hold his breath for a handful of moments; to break his rhythm and remind himself not to channel any more Hamon.

 

“Jojo!”

 

Spinning at the sound of his brother’s cheerful voice, Jonathan sighed in contentment and relief. “It’s good to see you again, Dio.”

 

His and Alice’s brother was carrying a white umbrella, and Jonathan was pleased to note that his dear siblings were indeed searching out new and different ways of protecting themselves from the sunlight that would otherwise harm them.

 

“Welcome to our estate,” his and Alice’s brother said cordially, making his way over to where Jonathan was standing. “I’d offer you a tour of our new holdings, but you seem rather flustered. Is something wrong, Jojo?”

 

“Mr. Zeppeli is at the gates of your home,” he said, having to make a conscious effort not to restart the deep, rhythmic breathing that would lead inevitably to him channeling Hamon when he’d no wish to do such.

 

Dio sighed, an expression of annoyance settling firmly upon his features. “Well, I suppose I, Dio, can at least thank you for bringing this new information to us, Jojo.”

 

“Whatever help you want of me, Dio, you have my word I will give it,” he said.

 

Dio grinned brightly. “Always a pleasure to hear, Jojo. I’ll just see to fetching my sister, and then the three of us will deal with these troublesome monks that continue to plague us.”

 

“Of course, Dio,” he said, nodding as his and Alice’s brother went to fetch their sister.

 

Calling over one of the servants attending to the upkeep of the house, Jonathan swiftly informed her of the danger swiftly approaching the place where she lived and worked. After making sure that she truly understood the severity of their developing situation, Jonathan turned his attention back to the front of the room. Between the space of one blink and the next, Jonathan found Dio and Alice standing to either side of him, but as he’d long since become accustomed to their preternatural speed, such only brought a smile to his face.

 

He’d glimpsed something long and dark hanging from both of their waists, but it was only when they had come to a complete stop that Jonathan was able to discern the fact that both of his dear siblings had swords strapped to their waists. He was pleased to note that Dio and Alice would have a way of defending themselves from Mr. Zeppeli without putting themselves in danger of being harmed by the Hamon Mr. Zeppeli was so adept at using. Taking his accustomed battle stance, Jonathan smiled as he saw his dear siblings taking their own stances just beside him.

 

Truly, they were as prepared as they could be for what might come upon them.

 

=PB=

 

When that oaf Zeppeli and his partner – truly, the other man was rather fetching; time would tell if he, Dio, was given the chance to come to know him more personally – burst in through the front-entrance of their large room that functioned at times as a salon and at others as a studio or a planning room, Dio grinned as Zeppeli seemed to almost physically restrain himself from faltering back a step when he beheld the three of them standing against his mere two.

 

“So, I suppose you’ve made your choice, Jojo,” the oaf said, and Dio reveled in the undertone of defeat he could hear in the troublesome monk’s voice.

 

“No matter what you say to me, I will not betray my family!”

 

Grinning wide enough to show his fangs he, Dio, gently caressed Jojo’s right arm with his left, softening his grin into a smile when Jojo’s adorable face turned to meet his own. The two of them nodded to one another, Jojo’s adorable resolve bringing a wider smile to his face as the pair of them turned their attention back to that oaf Zeppeli and his rather fetching partner.

 

Jojo’s Hamon-filled punches – launched from fists that could extend nearly as far as he and his sweet sister had been able to since they had truly begun exploring the many and varied abilities that their glorious vampire bodies granted them – did not seem to do very much good against the behatted charlatan attacking them, but the swords his sweet sister had designed and commissioned from a local blacksmith that had then been taken into her employ some weeks ago did perform quite a good deal more admirably in that regard.

 

And, all to the better, when that behatted charlatan struck the blade, the ingenious layer of rubber, combined with heat-resistant ceramics and reinforced air vents, neatly dispersed the heat and energy imparted.

 

“Was that a shock to you, charlatan?” he mocked, grinning wide enough to reveal his fangs once more. “These swords of ours are far from-” yelping as something small and white clipped his left ear he, Dio, spun to face his sweet sister; it seemed as though she had just hurled their low, hardwood table at that nameless partner of the charlatan. “Truly, Alice, a coffee cup?”

 

“You’re lucky I couldn’t find a full one,” his sweet sister riposted, an expression of deadpanned amusement on her face. “And, what have I told you about revealing proprietary technology to our competitors, brother dear?”

 

Laughing at the sheer incongruity of the statement – as though the charlatan and his troublesome compatriots would ever be able to build anything even approaching the magnificent ingenuity of his dear Alice’s swords – Dio grinned. “Very well, sister dear. My lips are sealed.”

 

With a short, sharp nod – seemingly to dismiss the matter from her agile mind – his dear Alice returned her attention to the long-haired fool accosting her. And he, Dio, returned his own attention to the behatted charlatan who had made such of a nuisance of himself before this day.

 

=PB=

 

Watching the way the vampire Alice Brando conducted herself in combat provided a greater insight into the female vampire’s character than any one week of conversations on matters esoteric and mundane could have been: all of this vampire’s moves were, while calculated in the extreme, fluid enough to take advantage of any openings that he might leave in his defenses. However, while the vampire was swift to capitalize on any opening he showed her, she was also far too canny to over-commit. It seemed that she, too, was fully aware of the dangers inherent in underestimating one’s enemies.

 

It was fascinating; she was fascinating, and the fact that she was willing to use anything in the large room she could lay her hands to as a projectile weapon only made her all the more interesting. Such resolve and cleverness was not something he’d seen in many humans, to say nothing of those changed by the stone mask. Such resolve only added fuel to his own; truly, this was what he had striven for when he had first endeavored to learn Hamon.

 

To possess a glorious, immortal body, such as the pair of vampires that stood against him and William possessed… yes, that was worth any number of things; anything, truly.

 

The feel of his solar plexus all but collapsing under the crushing force of Alice Brando’s powerful uppercut drove painfully home just how much Straizo had allowed his attention to wander from the battle still taking place. Still, such a thing could easily be turned to his own advantage; no one but a fool would expect a user of Hamon to fight without breath. Letting himself fall to the floor, Straizo spread his arms wide in a gesture of submission, just as the vampire Alice Brando’s elegant, ingeniously designed sword bore down upon him.

 

That sword was a marvel in itself: able to withstand Hamon by some unknown process, and without being destroyed or even damaged by the energies.

 

Smiling in response to the subdued expression of curiosity he could see on the vampire’s fair face, Straizo nodded in respect and gratitude as she pulled back from the downward lunge that would have otherwise imbedded her sword in his face. He could see that William, too, was being driven back by the combined efforts of Jonathan Joestar and the vampire Dio Brando. Soon enough, he would be able to leave alongside the man without arousing suspicion.

 

Soon enough, he would be able to return to this place on his own terms.

 

=PB=

 

Once Straizo and Zeppeli had been driven out – though Alice suspected Straizo hadn’t quite been so eager as the man himself – Alice quickly joined Jonathan and Dio in setting their huge living room back to rights. Hearing the subtle chime that signaled someone hitting the staff-recall button, she looked up to see Dio making his way back over to where she and Jonathan were manhandling the coffee table back into place.

 

“Good thing neither of us had to fling the Davenport at them,” she said, smirking amusedly at her brother as he made his way back over to where she and Jonathan had just finished setting the coffee table back upright and were just getting all of the books and papers settled down just so.

 

“Indeed,” Dio said, laughing. “That would have been a terrible waste of perfectly good furniture.”

 

“I’m glad to see the pair of you are doing so well for yourselves,” Jonathan said, his soft voice precluding any further discussion of the merits of projectile furniture.

 

“That’s kind of you to say, Jonathan,” she said, turning her attention back to her and Dio’s brother; he was wearing his habitual expression of gentleness, prompting Alice to smile gently in return.

 

“Come, Jojo,” Dio said, grinning as the three of them made their way over to the couch to sit down. “We can discus this over tea and cocoa.”

 

Smiling a bit wider – it’d been fairly interesting, personally meeting the founder of the Hershey Company, when she and Dio had started to become more capital “F” Famous rather than just locally famous; she’d had a brief, not-particularly-charitable thought about mentioning that she’d enjoyed proportionally more Nestlé's  products than Hershey’s, but in the end she’d just had a chuckle over the thought itself – Alice settled down neatly beside Jonathan, thanking their butler David Gray for his services as he bowed in return.

 

It seemed that Jonathan, while nowhere near as busy as the pair of them had been during the course of their stay in Montana, had still been kept busy by his attempts to pry Zeppeli’s underused head out of his overused ass. And sure, their latest confrontation with the man indicated that that idea had ultimately been about as useful as a chocolate fire poker, it’d at least been a useful learning experience. It seemed like William A. Zeppeli, whatever his mental malfunction, wasn’t going to stop coming after them until they killed him.

 

It was kind of annoying, but that was the way things clearly were; no use crying over spilt milk, or blood, as the case may be.

 

“I… Don’t mistake me, I have greatly enjoyed your hospitality, but I really should return home,” Jonathan said. “All other considerations aside, I truly should tell Father of the name you’re both making for yourselves,” their sweet, sometimes-muttonheaded brother continued, smiling brightly at them.

 

“Of course, Jojo,” Dio said, as the three of them stood in order to bid Jonathan farewell.

 

“You will come visit Father and your mother back home sometime, won’t you?” their brother asked, an adorable expression of hope settling on his face.

 

Alice smiled, speaking before her twin could think up something else to say. “Once things here have settled down a bit, we’ll start making preparations.”

 

She couldn’t say anything definitive, since with Zeppeli and Straizo skulking around things were bound to be getting a bit more interesting, if only in the Chinese sense of the word.

 

The three of them said their farewells, standing up so that they could hug each other – she shot an unimpressed look at Dio when he sensually caressed the curve of her right hip – and she sent for their coachman, Brian Setzer, to take Jonathan back to the train station so he could start making his way back to New York. David, after insisting on being the one to pack the provisions she had suggested that Jonathan carry with him, had made up a pack for him to take on the carriage ride back to the station. After saying a final farewell to their visiting brother, she and Dio made their way back into the large main house of their steadily-expanding estate.

 

Dio yelped as she flicked him directly on the nose, and Alice continued on her way toward the back of the house – her laboratory in particular – with a smirk.

 

“Sister dear, whatever would drive you to do such a thing?”

 

Shooting him a half-lidded “we both know you’re not that stupid” look, Alice turned on her heel, continuing on her way to the laboratory she’d established once the plans for their estate had begun to be laid down. Since they were going to have to deal with Zeppeli, though possibly not Straizo considering the way he’d acted when the five of them had been fighting, she’d have to start expanding their arsenal. Because, while Dio might have been perfectly satisfied with zombie dinosaurs, she knew that the most potent weapon she had against those Hamon-using nuisances was something they hadn’t ever dealt with.

 

It was a simple truth that people who operated under such rigid worldviews – like “all vampires are evil” for example – did not deal remotely well with out of context problems.

 

Having a phone installed in the outbuilding that housed her laboratory – even if it was one of the original, bulky wall-mounted boxes rather than the Smartphone that she’d still had occasion to miss in this new life of hers – had been a great help in the past, and continued to be so at present.

 

“Operator, would you kindly connect me to the Green Day Industrial Works?” she paused for a moment, returning the usual pleasantries that she, as one of the most famous people in Montana, was accorded pretty much every time she called out for something she couldn’t have easily manufactured in one of the industrial offshoots that’d sprung up around their estate to service the needs of both the dig sites and the day-to-day running of the estate itself; really, the place was starting to seem more like a small city within the larger city of Jordan rather than just a house where she and Dio were staying. “Hello? Yes, I’d like to place an order for two one-gallon canisters of wet-stored nitrocellulose rope,” she paused a moment. “Yes, that. Delivered as quickly as you can safely manage; I can pay extra if you’d prefer,” she paused again, nodding reflexively. “Thank you. Pleasure doing business with you, as always.”

 

Hanging up the phone, Alice turned her attention to another matter that would soon need attending to; after all, if they were going to have to deal with Zeppeli, and it was looking more and more like the man wasn’t going to be stopped until he was either stone dead or incinerated, the pair of them were going to need more than just swords and spark-nets to protect themselves. And for that, she’d need something far better than iron or steel. Time to see just how I can manage to make titanium alloy back in this day and age, she mused.

 

It was, of course, entirely possible that she would need to use the tools she had to create the tools she would need, or some recursion thereof.

 

=PB=

 

Smiling as he returned to his richly-appointed room, after seeing Jojo to the train station and watching their adorable puppy depart down the Great Northern Railway so that he could find his way back to New York, he, Dio, turned his thoughts to just what his sweet sister was about. It was utterly fascinating, watching the way she managed their pets in this area; even becoming quite the budding businesswoman in this burgeoning little town of theirs.

 

Their pets comprised far more than simply the humans who had been drawn to this place for the promise of becoming famous by way of uncovering some previously undiscovered fossil beast or creature, but the zombies that he and his sweet sister had created – his own Tyrannosaurus Rex, and her Quetzalcoatlus and the small flock of Deinonychus that his dear Alice had raised later – and the foxes and bobcats that had been attracted once they had begun storing grain in large quantities to make the breads and other sundry foodstuffs that their human pets required to remain healthy. The domestication of those useful little beasts was proceeding apace. Grinning as he recalled another, smaller group of beasts that were steadily undergoing domestication, Dio turned his path to one of the outbuildings that had been solely designated for his and his dear Alice’s personal use.

 

Stepping inside he, Dio, found himself greeted by the sharp, earthy scent wafting out of the mouth of the tunnel network that his sweet sister was steadily expanding. The soft sounds of awakening mountain lion cubs greeted him next, and he grinned widely. He, Dio, hadn’t seen the point of such a thing when his dear Alice had first brought the cubs – thin and clearly undernourished as they were; their mother like as not having been shot for some offence or other against one of the many cattle ranchers endemic to the state – but when one of the adults of the species had accosted them during a nightly exploration of their expanding territory, he’d truly seen the merits of raising the small litter his sweet sister had taken in.

 

Even as the five of them scampered over to where he, Dio, was standing, he could see that they had grown all the larger and stronger since the last time he’d laid eyes upon them; soon enough, they would possess jaws strong enough to crush human skulls, and claws to rend the very flesh from their bones. Truly a thing to anticipate. Grinning as he opened the icebox and took out one of the pre-prepared tubs of raw beef he, Dio sat back, tossing the scraps to the five growing cubs and watching in amusement as they leaped up to catch them in their mouths.

 

Truly, of all their pets, the humans – while even he, Dio, could hardly deny their utility – remained the most unremarkable.

 

=PB=

 

While she waited for her order to arrive, Alice Brando was far from idle. She’d gone back down into the tunnel-system she’d begun working on once their network of dig sites had been definitively established aboveground. Knowing where their people were going to be working on the surface made it much simpler to avoid the places where there might be a risk of people breaking through the roof of a tunnel when they were looking for fossils, skeletons, and fossil skeletons.

 

As she laid down the tracks for the miniature, steam-powered train she had built to service this network of tunnels she was digging out, Alice also turned over the preparations that she was going to need to make in the coming days – and, perhaps weeks – to deal with the threat Zeppeli and Straizo still posed to her and Dio at present.

 

Yes, the spark-nets she was going to be creating once the shipment of nitrocellulose ropes she’d put in an order for arrived would most likely prove to be a better than average deterrent for either of the two Hamon-users in their area – provided Straizo still wanted to fight, given the way she’d seen him acting in combat that last time he and Zeppeli had forced a confrontation between their two groups – but Alice wasn’t about to rely on a single means of defense that, while powerful, could still be circumvented under the proper circumstances.

 

After all, while some people said the best defense was a good offense, and others said that the reverse was true, Alice herself preferred to have a healthy balance of both.

Chapter 13: Snare And Deadfall

Chapter Text

He’d not expected the young Joestar to wish to stay with him, given the clear longing in his face and voice when he’d spoken of the siblings he’d lost to the stone mask, but William was not about to deceive himself by denying that he’d hoped to make the boy fully understand the futility of his longing before the pair of them had been forced to confront the vampires that wore their faces. It was a tragedy, losing such a promising student, and all the moreso for the heartbreak young Jonathan was bound to face when those two beasts he was so blindly determined to defend showed their true nature.

 

William hardly wished for the boy to have to suffer in such a way, but it truly seemed to be the way the world worked; such a lesson, while undoubtedly harsh and hence a thing that William had been hoping to spare the boy, would indeed be all the more potent for that fact.

 

Wishing the world different will do me no good, William mused, gathering himself for what he knew he would need to do next.

 

=PB=

 

Knowing beyond any doubt that William would not allow this latest defeat by Jonathan Joestar’s vampire siblings to go unanswered, and that his fellow Hamon-user would doubtless begin planning his next offensive against them, Straizo knew that it would be both simpler and more difficult for him to attempt to make peaceful contact with the vampire Alice Brando. Simpler because William would inevitably devote a great deal of his attention to those plans that he would be formulating; more difficult, because his fellow Hamon-user would eventually desire his input on those selfsame plans. In light of that, Straizo knew that he would need to look carefully for an opportunity to enact his own plan.

 

Preferably, without needing to obviously cut his remaining ties with William until the time was right.

 

=PB=

 

The sight of a carriage outside the Joestar estate was hardly an odd one, but Jonathan had truly not been expecting to hear from anyone who lived in Wind Knights Lot again. Still, they had come to the estate: the resurrected knight Bruford, and the children Poco and his sister Donna. It was still a strange thing to think on, that Alice and Dio were capable of raising someone who had been dead so long as the knight Bruford – and his brother in arms Tarkus, if what the man had said was indeed true – back to some semblance of life.

 

They two that had been raised by Dio, to work beside Alice on some project of hers, apparently had the same constitution as his siblings even retaining the same… reaction to sunlight if they were exposed to it.

 

It was for that reason, among others, that Jonathan had been pleased to see the black-lined white cloak with what looked to be a hand-fashioned clasp upon Bruford’s shoulders when the resurrected knight had approached him to speak about Dio and Alice. It was the same type of protection that Alice had crafted for herself and Dio, and he’d felt a bit closer to them for seeing it. Beyond even those considerations, however, just having the opportunity to speak to someone who had personally witnessed even a small part of the history he had learned of in school as a boy held a certain fascination about it.

 

“It gladdens my heart, knowing that my liege Lord and Lady are well,” Bruford said, smiling gently down at the neatly-sliced steak upon his plate. “Though, knowing that they were forced to shelter themselves in a distant land is rather troubling.”

 

“America isn’t quite so distant,” he said, attempting to be reassuring, but not certain how his words would be taken. “It’s quite a manageable journey by ship, and the area they’ve settled in is rather beautiful.”

 

“Indeed?”

 

He could recognize the signs of interest on Bruford’s fair face, and so Jonathan settled back into his seat. Thinking over what he had seen during that all-too-brief time when he had been a guest of Dio and Alice’s Montana estate, Jonathan organized his thoughts so that he would better be able to describe what he had seen in the short time he had been present within their holdings. As well as the somewhat longer time that he had spent within the state of Montana.

 

=PB=

 

Sitting down on the bed that Miss Alice had slept in, Poco kicked his feet as he looked down at the photograph of Miss Alice, her brother, and that kindly Jonathan guy who’d come out to meet with them just before Miss Alice and Mr. Dio had left. Still, if this was the place they’d gone back to, Poco couldn’t really blame them; their big house was really pretty, and their mother and father were so nice. He didn’t quite have the nerve to ask why it was that Mr. Joestar and Mrs. Brando didn’t seem to be married, or why Miss Alice and Mr. Dio looked so different than Jonathan when all of them said they were siblings, but Poco had his suspicions.

 

He wasn’t rude enough to actually say anything, of course.

 

When Mr. Joestar called them all down to dinner, Poco smiled as he left Miss Alice’s room to go get cleaned up. Mr. Joestar might not have been Miss Alice and Mr. Dio’s real father, but he was nice enough, and Mrs. Brando was- well, she wasn’t a lot like Miss Alice, but she was nice, all the same.

 

The meal was wonderful, and when Poco tried to thank Mrs. Brando for her wonderful cooking, he found out that the Joestars were really rich: they were so rich, they had someone whose entire job was just to cook for them. Her name was Eileen Robinson, and when Mr. Joestar had told him that, Poco had insisted on thanking her for it. Mr. Joestar had even been nice enough to take him to meet her when he’d said he wanted to do that.

 

Really, he could see how Miss Alice and Mr. Dio had become such kind people, being raised by Mr. Joestar and Mrs. Brando; not to mention having Jonathan for a brother, too.

 

=PB=

 

When she’d gotten her shipment from Green Day, the last thing Alice had expected was to meet up with Straizo again. She’d had at least some idea of what the man might’ve wanted, however, so she wasn’t all that surprised when he requested a meeting.

 

“So, you want to become a vampire, too?” she asked, taking a sip of Chai and settling back into the plush cushions of the sofa she’d moved into her personal office.

 

“I first began studying the art of Hamon so that I could refine my body,” Straizo said, clearly working himself up to some sort of long, involved lecture or other. “I’ve no desire to wither away as some old man. And, now that I know that you and your brother have retained the logic and reason that you seemed to possess as humans, I would request that you turn me, as well. Even with the mastery of Hamon that I have presently attained, I can still feel the inevitable breakdown of my body. In fact, I suspect that such mastery as I have attained has only made it easier to sense such a thing.”

 

“Well, this will certainly solve a problem I was going to be facing in the future,” she said, smiling slightly as she finished off the last of her tea and made her way over to the personal ice box that she’d had installed in her office for just these sorts of occasions.

 

“What do you mean?” Straizo asked, eyes tracking her as she grabbed a container of preserved blood and settled back down on her sofa.

 

Smiling slightly, Alice detailed her plans for the battle armor she was aiming to create. Without mentioning that she aimed to create an entirely new type of metal, or just anything having to do with the spark-nets she was going to be making. No sense in laying all her cards on the table when she didn’t really know the man she was speaking to. Sure, he’d said that all he really wanted was for her to turn him into a vampire, but given he was still working with Zeppeli…

 

Best not to risk any particularly sensitive information.

 

“That hardly sounds possible,” Straizo said, but his tone was far more interested than dismissive, so Alice smiled and settled back in her seat as she drank her daily shot of blood.

 

“I’m certain you’ll find, Straizo, that there are very few truly impossible things in this world.”

 

Quite a bit fewer than her own, certainly; even considering the fact she’d been dropped about a century and change in the past, Jojo Earth had a lot more going on than her vanilla Earth way back when.

 

He chuckled, rubbing the mug she’d given him with his long, elegant fingers. “Yes,” he said, locking eyes with her across the expanse between his chair and her sofa. “I’ve come to realize that rather well.”

 

“Good,” she said, offering him a nod and a smile of her own. “Now, as to your request, I expect that vampires are incapable of utilizing Hamon?”

 

“You would be correct, Alice Brando.”

 

“Well, that complicates things a bit,” she said, finishing her blood and tossing the container into the chute that would carry it to the kitchen for washing. “I’m going to need to test any armor I assemble against Hamon, to say nothing of the components themselves, and I’d rather do them in controlled conditions as opposed to being forced to resort to combat-testing everything,” she paused, locking eyes with Straizo for a long moment.

 

“I see,” Straizo said. “If I were in the same position as you, I suppose I would wish for the same. If I give you my aid in this project of yours, will you grant me the use of the stone mask?”

 

She sighed. “The stone mask is in a box under my bed, back in my room in the Joestar estate,” she offered a lopsided, conciliatory smirk. “Which is in England, by the by,” gathering herself, Alice straightened back up. “Still, I think I could manage with my blood,” she continued; she might have to ask Dio about that, since he seemed more interested in exploring in that direction than she herself was.

 

Watching as a contemplative expression spread across Straizo’s face, Alice sat back and let the man consider his options. With people like Straizo, their mind was both their greatest asset as well as their most glaring weakness, and sometimes it was both of those things at once. When Straizo seemed to come to a decision, Alice nodded and signaled for him to carry on.

 

“It sounds like a workable solution,” he said, nodding. “Very well, I accept.”

 

“I look forward to working with you, then,” she said, reaching out so that the pair of them could shake hands, sealing their agreement. “Now, there’s only the matter of how you want to handle breaking ties with Zeppeli.”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

“Well, it’s a question of if you want to make an open declaration of your new allegiance, or just fake your death and break off that way,” Alice said, crossing her legs at the knee and leaning her chin on her left fist. “Myself, I’d want to avoid as much hassle as I can, but well… You’re not me.”

 

“How would you even begin to conceive such an idea?” Straizo asked, looking startled, but not shocked or scandalized the way she knew Jonathan would have been if she’d suggested the idea to him for some reason or other.

 

“Well, it’s simply a fact that Zeppeli’s unlikely to start a search for you if he thinks you’re already dead,” she said.

 

“Yes,” Straizo said, keen gaze shifting to the middle-distance before he turned it back to her face. “I suppose I can’t argue with your logic in that matter. What would you suggest?”

 

“Well, that depends,” she said, sitting back up and settling herself for a likely-involved conversation. “How much does Zeppeli expect you to survive?”

 

=PB=

 

His meeting with the vampire Alice Brando had not been precisely what he had been given to expect, and yet Straizo found himself all the more pleased by that. The female vampire was the diametric opposite of the few bestial creatures he had encountered on his travels; and also, he suspected, the newborn vampire that had once been William’s father. The same one, Straizo knew, that had caused his fellow Hamon-user to develop such a pronounced antipathy for the creatures as he had demonstrated on so many occasions.

 

It was also, he suspected, the same experience that led him to so distrust the good sense that Alice Brando had demonstrated on every occasion that they had clashed with the vampire woman.

 

Still, such musings would not serve him in his present task, so Straizo set them aside. What he needed at present was to know what William aimed to do next, both so that he could make proper plans to escape from the man’s side in the most expedient fashion, and so that he could steer William’s plans along lines that would make such actions on his part reasonably simpler.

 

=PB=

 

Settled down in her lab, seated at a long table that she’d used for crafting a far few things in the past, Alice worked carefully to create a net from the nitrocellulose ropes she had ordered. She’d already poured some of the alcohol used to stabilize the ropes and keep them from exploding in transit into a smaller container that she could carry around more easily, and had closed them both tight to keep said alcohol from evaporating. The spare ropes had been stored neatly on the bottom of the shelf that held the other explosives that a dig site like the ones they were running on their own land sometimes needed.

 

Steadily tying off the net that was taking shape beneath her hands, Alice heard the distinct footfalls of her twin brother making his way into her lab.

 

Sighing, Alice rolled her eyes as she heard the door being opened. Love Dio though she might, he wasn’t exactly the most careful of people, and when dealing with high-explosives… well, Dio’d already seared his eyebrows off awhile ago, and still hadn’t quite seemed to learn his lesson about not fucking around with dangerous chemicals.

 

“Ugh, this room of yours smells horrible,” her brother said, and she could practically hear him grinning. “What kind of explosive concoctions are you creating now?”

 

“Something to deal with Zeppeli,” she said, rolling her eyes as Dio slipped his arms around her shoulders, nuzzling the back of her head. Narrowing her eyes, Alice flexed her ponytail, swatting her twin firmly on the nose with the end of it. “Not while I’m working, peacock.”

 

Dio laughed. “Of course, my owl. I suppose that I, Dio, will leave you to your good work.”

 

Sighing, Alice rolled her eyes as Dio finally left her laboratory. Rinsing off her gloved hands in the alcohol solution, renewing the protection that she had first applied, Alice returned her full attention to her work. The first of her spark-nets was coming along well, and soon all that would remain was the final field-test. Drawing Zeppeli into a fight would likely be simple in the extreme, considering the man’s pronounced antipathy for vampires in general and her and Dio in particular.

 

Then, she’d get to see just how well the man dealt with a spark-net to the face.

 

=PB=

 

Making his way down the darkened streets, knowing that it was only a matter of time before he encountered one of the vampires that had so unjustly laid claim to the land surrounding them, William Zeppeli controlled his breathing. Constantly channeling Hamon was the only way he could avoid being taken by surprise when one of those damnable vampires finally showed their faces.

 

“You know, I was wondering when I’d see you again.”

 

Turning quickly at the sound of the female vampire’s arrogant voice, William found her standing at the end of a cul de sac, arms folded neatly behind her back. The bright white of her clothes was a stark contrast to the darkness they both stood in, and William found the sight all the more horrid for that fact. Still, such a thing was only to be expected: this vampire did indeed attempt to conceal her true, evil nature behind a façade of kindness and charity.

 

Such a thing only made destroying her all the more urgent, William knew.

 

=PB=

 

When Zeppeli charged at her, after spouting some of the usual bullshit that Alice had long since learned to ignore, she carefully loosened the cap on the container holding her prototype spark-net. Grasping the middle with the rubber gloves she’d taken the precaution of wearing to this first field-test of her new weapon, Alice deployed it and threw the net so that it would open out over him.

 

“Are you truly so arrogant as to think that a mere net will save you, vampire?!”

 

Grinning as she dashed backwards, out of range of the impending explosion, Alice looked up just in time to watch as Zeppeli’s right fist – already crackling with Hamon – slammed into the center of her spark-net. The nitrocellulose, volatile as it already was, detonated rather spectacularly, erupting in a fireball large enough that Alice found her hair and the loose parts of her clothes blown back solidly by the overpressure wave. And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why we do not punch a net made of guncotton with a fist full of Hamon, she mused, chuckling softly.

 

It was a heady feeling, knowing that one of her own inventions – devised more as a curiosity than anything else – had been able to do such a substantial amount of damage. Still, she knew that it was only a matter of time before Zeppeli managed to heal himself from even that much damage, and as she’d had no desire to go carrying around more potentially unstable explosives than she’d needed, that single spark-net had been the only one in her possession. Not only would she need to make another one, but she would also need to develop a better way of storing and deploying them.

 

Preferably without the need to wear rubber gloves to keep herself from getting her other gloves covered in alcohol when deploying the refined version of her spark-net.

 

Well, back to the lab, I suppose, Alice mused, returning to the rooftops so that she could more easily cover the remaining distance out of the swiftly-growing town of Jordan.

 

Once she’d made it back to the isolated outbuilding that housed her laboratory – placed far enough away from the other buildings that any kind of uncontrolled reaction would be more easily dealt with before it could spread farther than the confines of the single building she was working out of – Alice settled down at her drafting table and took out a piece of paper from the fireproof, ceramic storage case she’d devised to hold what few flammable writing supplies she kept in her lab for when she needed them. She knew what she wanted out of the deployment canister she aimed to create, but bringing it into reality would take some work.

 

It was some time later, when she’d just finished working out a preliminary plan for constructing a throwable canister that would deploy on its own, that Alice found herself interrupted by the presence of someone else in her lab. Someone who wasn’t Dio, so that was pleasant.

 

“What is it, Phil?” she asked, turning to look up at Phil Collins as the full-time archeologist came into her lab.

 

“Glad I caught you at a good time, Miss,” he said, looking a bit uncertain, but clearly having resolved himself to some course of action or other. “And, I’m sorry to be the bearer of such news, but…”

 

He trailed off, simply handing over what looked like some kind of hand-written note. The handwriting itself wasn’t familiar, but the location… Adema? That’s near the old train yard, she mused, considering what she’d read and the likely implications of such. Seems we’re moving tonight.

 

“Give my regards to the staff, and make sure they know I’m going to be both out late and returning with a guest,” she said, rising from her seat after tucking the paper she’d been working on into a fireproof holder, separate from the remaining blank sheets that she still possessed.

 

“All right, ma’am,” Phil said, and Alice could just about see the expression of confusion on his face through the back of her own head.

 

“Don’t worry about it,” she advised, smiling as she turned to leave her lab.

 

Once she’d made it back to her room, taking a shortcut up the outer wall the way she did when she didn’t want to bother with the hassle of greeting anyone and everyone who might cross her path when she was in a hurry to get somewhere, Alice grabbed the first-generation armor she’d been working on. It was basically rubber-backed motorcycle leathers: thick enough to diffuse most impacts, but her best defense would still be evading a hit rather than trying to tank it.

 

The extra flexibility that she’d developed over the time that she and Dio had had to explore the limits of their abilities – really, a Stone Mask Vampire started as double-jointed and could easily go up from there – allowed her to don the armor more easily than she’d ever been able to do in her last life. And, the fine control over her body-temperature made wearing what would otherwise have been an uncomfortable necessity at best feel as light and breathable as the clothes she usually wore.

 

Her trip to the deserted train yard just a few miles outside the small settlement of Adema – she’d long since gotten used to all of the music references, but every now and then they still got a chuckle out of her – was made on foot, and even in armor she was still faster than any other means of travel she’d have been able to access in this day and age. Any normal ones, at least, Alice reflected with a smirk.

 

Let’s see… Coal train, coal train… Ah, coal train! Grinning as she found her prize amid the darkened yard and all of its idle locomotives, Alice climbed inside. She’d already knocked out what guards had been present, tying them up and stashing them in the main guard house so they’d be found more easily once she’d gotten what she needed from this little excursion. After all, the note she’d gotten had said to come alone.

 

It was, however, quite a bit more lenient on the subject of trains.

 

Standing before the immense, imposing form of the coal train she’d picked out, Alice lifted the thing quickly, carefully, steadily offsetting it from the rails before climbing up into the cabin. Stoking the fire, Alice smirked as she felt the powerful rumbling of the floor beneath her feet. Once she was well underway, the sheer momentum of the train she was riding driving it inevitably forward through the empty, untamed grassland that bordered the small settlement of Adema.

 

Chilling her hands, Alice coated them in a thin, flexible layer of ice, then quickly grabbed four chunks of flaming coal out of the furnace. Dashing up the side of the train, Alice swept her gaze over the four, fully-loaded coal cars trundling along behind the engine. Bracing herself against the tearing wind caused by the train’s racing speed, Alice tossed each flaming chunk into the bed of coal contained in the car housing it.

 

Then, once she had seen the fires spreading through the stored coal, Alice turned to face front on the train she was riding. About then was the moment Alice realized that she was essentially dressed in biker-ninja gear, surfing a flaming train into battle with monks who could punch with the power of the sun. She laughed. Ah, that awkward moment when you realize you’re doing something metal as fuck, and you’re the only one who’s ever going to know about it.

Chapter 14: It's My Life

Chapter Text

His first hint that something had gone far beyond the plans of those fools who had dared to lay their filthy hands on Dio Brando was a crash that seemed fit to shake the very world. The next, interestingly enough, was the furtive, skittering, midnight-clad form of his sweet sister upon the very ceiling. Grinning up at her, even as she turned to look down at him with one lovely crimson eye, he settled back on his haunches and clasped his hands neatly behind his back.

 

The Hamon-filled shackles which had so effectively stymied his own efforts to escape their grasp would be as nothing before his sweet sister’s multitude of talents.

 

“My binds are filled with Hamon,” he said, grinning wider as his dear Alice settled into a crouch behind him.

 

“That a fact?” his sweet sister muttered, removing her elegant lock picks from a concealed holder within her right sleeve.

 

“Oh, yes,” he, Dio, said, grinning with supreme satisfaction as he watched his sweet sister work. “I truly doubt that any of our vampiric abilities will be able to defeat such binds.”

 

“Really, now?”

 

He, Dio, could tell by his sweet sister’s tone that she was far more focused upon the lock under her elegant, clever hands than upon a conversation that was – if he were to be completely honest – simply for the sake of his own amusement. The soft, subtle clicking and clinking of metal on metal as his dear Alice worked prompted him to chuckle deeply within his throat. Knowing that the pair of them would soon be free to properly redress the threat posed to them by those arrogant fools and their pitiful Hamon he, Dio, allowed himself to relax just enough that he would not disturb his sweet sister at her present task.

 

Once the Hamon-filled shackles had fallen to the floor he, Dio, stood up and turned around. He’d seen that his sweet sister was wearing the armor that she had designed and created once it had become clear that they would be forced to confront that fool Zeppeli and his compatriot, and so he knew that he would not be able to give his dear Alice the kiss she had so thoroughly earned, but that only meant that he could savor the anticipation. That he, Dio, could plan just where, how, and when he would give his sweet sister the proper repayment for everything she had given him.

 

The sound of footfalls just outside the door brought his attention firmly back to the present, and Dio tensed himself for the fight that was soon to begin; he would personally ensure that neither of those fools who had so brazenly dared to challenge the twin Vampire Lords of the world would survive the night.

 

“The entire compound is on fire,” the long-haired Hamon-user said, a confused expression on his rather fetching face as he stepped into the room.

 

“Yes; four loads of burning coal dropped into this much dry wood would have that kind of effect,” his sweet sister said, her tone calm enough to suggest that she had expected this fool of a Hamon-user to arrive when he did. “Straizo, you’ve met my brother Dio. Dio, this is Straizo. Try not to kill each other before we get away from Zeppeli, all right?”

 

His sweet sister pinned them both with her lovely, crimson eyes, and for a moment he, Dio, could all but look through her armored, slit-visored mask to see the sternly-amused expression on his dear Alice’s face.

 

The pair of them were able to agree to that one stipulation, at least long enough that they were able to make their escape from the spreading flames eating their way through the deserted compound where he had been held ever since that mongrel Zeppeli had somehow managed to contrive a method to capture him, Dio. Still, he was not about to allow one of that man’s fellow Hamon-users to escape his proper punishment. However, considering the man’s clear desire to ally himself with the pair of them he, Dio, would make all reasonable efforts to restrain himself.

 

Besides, his sweet sister had often said that most people just needed a good kick in the arse to realize the error of their ways.

 

=PB=

 

Once the three of them had passed the old train yard – keeping well out of the range of the search teams swarming over the place – Alice allowed herself to relax just a bit. Yes, there was still a chance that someone could track where they were going from their footprints in what dirt there was between their ever-growing compound, but that chance grew steadily smaller with every step the three of them took. And, when they finally did arrive back at the compound, what chance there still was became almost astronomically small.

 

“Well, sister dear, that was certainly an exhilarating experience,” Dio said, grinning widely as he elegantly flung himself down into the plush chair bordering their huge main living room’s left-corner couch.

 

“Well, it’s like I’ve said before: if fire doesn’t solve your problems, you’re clearly not using enough of it.”

 

“I thought you said that about explosives, sister dear,” Dio said, a teasing smile spreading languidly across his face.

 

“The principle holds true in either case, brother dear,” she said, smirking right back.

 

Straizo didn’t quite seem to know what to make of the pair of them, but as it was something he’d have to get used to if the pair of them were going to work together on any kind of long-term basis, he’d just have to learn to deal. Still, she hoped the pair of them would be able to work together, since the opportunity to study the mechanics of Hamon with someone who didn’t want to kill her and Dio would be fascinating in and of itself. To say nothing of the boost in effectiveness it would provide to the creation and refinement of her armor.

 

“Come on, Straizo,” she said, rising from the couch she’d perched on when the three of them had come back home. “I need to make a stop at the blacksmith, and then I’ll show you my lab.”

 

“Yes, it’s rather fascinating, my sister’s laboratory,” Dio said, grinning at her and Straizo as the pair of them made their way out of the living room. “However, you will want to keep your wits about you. Dear Alice has little patience for fools.”

 

“You should take your own advice,” she snarked back. “How many times have you set yourself on fire by now?”

 

“Only twice,” Dio said, still grinning in that insufferable way he had.

 

“Good; let’s keep it that way, shall we?” she said, shooting him a semi-amused look as she left the living room behind.

 

Dio’s laughter followed her out.

 

=PB=

 

He was not entirely certain what to make of the vampire twins Dio and Alice Brando, though the fact that Alice had been willing to invite him into the home that she shared with her brother did speak just as well of her sensibility and composure as her initial acceptance of his desire to speak with her about the fantastic, ageless body that she and her brother had been granted by the stone mask. Under the circumstances, he was more than a little pleased to be able to work with her.

 

He still had his doubts about what the vampire was actually planning, but in light of the resources she plainly had access to, he was at least curious to see what would come of the vampire Alice Brando’s tinkering.

 

=PB=

 

It had been some weeks since he’d last been in close contact with Dio and Alice, and as he and Erina were beginning to finalize their plans to be wed, the pair of them were composing letters. The letters would serve as both a way of keeping his siblings abreast of new developments within the Joestar household, as well as an invitation to the festivities that were soon to come. Jonathan was also planning to ask Dio to be his Best Man when he finally married Erina, and he knew that Erina herself had some plan or other that involved Alice.

 

He didn’t precisely know what it was as of yet, but Jonathan suspected he could hazard a guess.

 

Once the pair of them had finished composing their letters, Jonathan handed them off to his governess so that she could take them to be posted, then he and Erina left Father’s office. Jonathan paused to thank Father, when the pair of them passed by one another in the halls, and then he and Erina continued on their way to one of the smaller sitting rooms. He’d been making a point of paying daily visits to Mrs. Brando, carrying what news he could of Dio and Alice to her when he could, and simply keeping the woman company when he’d nothing new to report.

 

However, no matter what news he brought her, it seemed as though Mrs. Brando was steadily slipping away from them. It was yet another reason that Jonathan hoped to bring Dio and Alice back to the Joestar estate as fast as he ever could: he doubted that Mrs. Brando had many years left in her, and he’d no wish to deprive his adopted siblings of the little time they might still have with their mother. Truly, even if Mrs. Brando had still been at the peak of health for a woman her age, Jonathan still would have sought to have Dio and Alice return to the estate.

 

Truly, there was no more joyous an occasion for them to return than for his and Erina’s wedding.

 

Making his way inside the room that Mrs. Brando made use of when she wasn’t strolling through the well-maintained gardens of the Joestar estate or secluding herself in the library that Alice had enjoyed so much during the time that she and Dio had spent living with him, their mother, and Father, Jonathan gathered his composure.

 

“Mrs. Brando?” he called softly, stepping into the room.

 

He wouldn’t wish to disturb her if she was in the midst of one of the contemplative moods that seemed apt to steal over her more and more often of late, and as he’d little news to offer in recompense, Jonathan would not seek to make a nuisance of himself if he were not wanted.

 

“How have they been managing?” Mrs. Brando asked, an expression of such hope spreading across her weathered face that Jonathan could not quite bring himself to disappoint her in even a small way.

 

“The pair of them are doing rather well, given what Erina and I have been able to gather from their letters,” he gathered himself, offering her a gentler sort of smile. “You will have the opportunity to speak with them again, however. Erina and I have invited them to our impending wedding.”

 

“Thank you,” Mrs. Brando said, reaching out to cup both of his hands in her own. “I’d hoped to be able to see them again, at least one more time.”

 

“You shouldn’t say such things,” he said, taking Mrs. Brando by the shoulders in lieu of the embrace that he wished to give her; such a thing would have been rather inappropriate, considering their lack of immediate familial ties.

 

As well, he’d no wish to force his presence upon Mrs. Brando when it had become more than clear that Dio and Alice were the ones that she truly longed for the company of.

 

=PB=

 

Straizo was more than prepared to admit his sheer fascination at watching the vampire Alice Brando at her chosen task; any of them, truly. Any task that the woman put her mind to, she would complete with all due diligence. Not only that, but Alice was also possessed of an inquisitive, inventive mind such as he’d rarely seen even in fellow humans.

 

To say nothing of the vampire sub-species at large; truly, Dio Brando was far more the norm so far as vampires were concerned.

 

Watching as Alice Brando worked side-by-side with the man named Matthew Albert Hunter to refine titanium ore into a type of silver-colored metal that he’d not seen before, Straizo wondered at just what her intentions for this new metal of hers would ultimately be. There were few enough metals that could resist the effects of Hamon… but, perhaps that was the purpose of the new metal that the female vampire aimed to create. Either way, bearing witness to the creation of the metal was rather fascinating in and of itself.

 

No other type of metal, so far as he knew, required such an elaborate method of refining.

 

Still, once she had created four sheets of the metal – each of them with a slightly differing composition – she called him to follow her and the pair of them made their way into another part of the female vampire’s laboratory; this one in an entirely separate building from the one she and her brother had spoken about. This particular building had clearly been dedicated to metalworking and other things of that nature, and even as he watched, Straizo saw Alice make her way to a closet set into the far wall.

 

He’d only a moment to wonder just what in the world she was at, before the vampire woman took out what seemed to be the torso of a life-sized doll mounted atop a stand.

 

“What?” she asked, looking over at him with an expression that, Straizo was fair certain, would have easily matched his own for sheer curiosity.

 

“I have simply never seen that kind of item before,” he said, knowing that Alice Brando was enough of a teacher at heart that she would not mock him for such a question.

 

“It’s a dress-form,” she said, placing the first of the shaped titanium plates upon what seemed to be a leather harness, which she then proceeded to fasten to the torso of the headless “dress form” she had set up. “It’s quite a bit more durable than the ones I use for sewing, of course,” the vampire woman said, the majority of her attention clearly taken up by the task she’d taken upon herself. “Well then, let’s begin, shall we?”

 

The smile upon the vampire woman’s face held both amusement and eagerness, and Straizo was left to wonder – for just a moment – what the vampire Alice Brando would manage to create, now that she had his aid. If nothing else, the process was certain to be of interest…

 

=PB=

 

Having healed the last of his burns – the terror of the flames, however, still lingered – William had hidden himself from any of those who might have been searching for him. Staying in a place where those vampires were so highly regarded as they were among the general population as they were within the borders of Garfield County – to say nothing of the state of Montana at large – was not a thing that William would have ever expected to be necessary. Still, knowing just how well those vampires had managed to deceive every living human within the state where they had hidden themselves was not a hopeful thought.

 

It was certain to make any future efforts at dealing with them far more difficult than they had been previously.

 

To say nothing of the fate of Straizo, he mused, narrowing his eyes as the memory of what had become of the last of the two friends and comrades-in-arms that he had brought with him in his continuing efforts to finally put an end to the unnatural existence of the vampires that had once been Dio and Alice Brando. After finding Dire’s beheaded corpse at the bottom of the lake within the borders of Wind Knights Lot, he’d of course become all the more concerned about Straizo’s continued welfare.

 

He’d not have insulted his fellow monk’s skill by attempting to do anything so brazen as protecting him, but William had done what he could to aid his fellow in their continuing battle.

 

However, it had all come to naught; Straizo had perished in the conflagration caused when the female vampire – in blatant defiance of every form of logic and reason – had rammed a train filled with coal, coal that she herself had more than likely set afire beforehand, into the compound that he and Straizo had been using to hold the vampire’s twin in an effort to rid the world of the pair of them in a single swoop. He’d not been prepared for such an outcome, and while it had cost him dearly, it had also served to harden William’s resolve. The vampires that had once been Dio and Alice Brando needed to be destroyed, no matter the cost.

 

He was the only one who could accomplish such a thing; the task, then, fell to him.

 

The sound of a terribly familiar voice singing focused William’s attention upon the white-cloaked form of the female vampire before him. She was leaning brazenly against the wall of a building across the street from where he stood, strumming a guitar, with merely the white hood of her cloak shielding the vampire’s unnatural form from the sunlight that would have properly destroyed her. So, the arrogance of all her kind has finally overwhelmed what reason the creature could still lay claim to, William reflected, with a certain sense of grim satisfaction.

 

Truly, he’d not relished the prospect of attempting to outwit a vampire who had the capability to create such things as the explosive net that he had found himself facing some time ago; still, he mourned the brilliance that had been taken from the world when Alice Brando had died under the cruel spines of the stone mask.

 

Standing across from the vampire at last, William saw the small, arrogantly amused smile spreading across the creature’s face as she continued to sing. Gathering himself as he began summoning the Hamon necessary to finally end the unnatural existence of one of the most dangerous vampires he had encountered during his lifetime- William found himself forced to dodge as the vampire abruptly hurled the guitar she had been playing directly at his head. Narrowing his eyes, even as he quickly shielded himself from the shrapnel of the shattered instrument that had nearly slammed into his face, William swept the remaining pieces aside and turned his gaze back to… The place where the vampire he had previously been standing.

 

Looking up, after a moment spent studying the cracked outline of the vampire’s feet that had been driven into the ground, William saw that the vampire had indeed alighted atop the roof of the building that the pair of them had been standing before.

 

=PB=

 

Alice only had a few moments to wonder just what Zeppeli’d gotten into his head to do, before she was forced to dive off of the building that he’d just attempted to bring down on top of her. Reaching into her white hood, Alice grabbed hold of the front-piece of her helmet and pulled the thing up and over her head. The helmet – ribbed and hinged like one of Apophis’ Serpent Guard – clicked softly as its two halves locked firmly into place. Catching herself breathing, almost by reflex, Alice rolled her eyes briefly, pulling the white cloak she’d worn back into place over her new titanium armor.

 

The rubber webbing underneath the plates seemed to be flexing as well as she could ask for, and the heat-dissipating ceramic plates were holding up well, thus far; still, the proof was in the pudding, so to speak.

 

Tucking her white cloak in more securely around and over her armor – she still had more than a few tricks up her sleeve to spring on that stubborn old goat – Alice jumped back up to what remained of the building whose roof she’d been standing on before Zeppeli’d brought the thing down almost on top of her head. Surveying the lay of their current battlefield – she’d made a point of hunting down this particular ghost town for just the same sort of reason that, she suspected, Zeppeli was willing to meet her in battle – Alice quickly slapped down the energized piece of wood that Zeppeli had just tried to impale her head with. It was a fairly good use of available materials, she could give the man that.

 

Still, under the circumstances, she wasn’t about to let what admiration she had for the man interfere with what she was going to have to do; the man was obviously a fanatic, and those kind couldn’t be reasoned with.

 

Leaping lightly back down to the ground, Alice needed only a moment to balance herself again. Fortunately for her, considering how quickly Zeppeli leaped at her, his right fist charged with Hamon that he drove into her armored torso in the space between one of his blinks and the next. Considering everything else her vampire body was capable of, training herself not to blink had been one of the more difficult feats she’d undertaken. Of course, it had involved bringing an unconscious reflex under conscious control, so that’d probably accounted for most of the difficulty right there.

 

Smirking under her helmet as Zeppeli grabbed the trailing left edge of her cloak, Alice twisted out of it, exposing the polished-to-a-mirror-sheen of her titanium armor to the high-noon sun.

 

“Do I dazzle you, Zeppeli?” she snarked, grinning as the man staggered back from a face-full of reflected sunlight.

 

Capitalizing on her advantage, Alice hammered the man in the solar-plexus with a driving-punch calculated to knock the wind out of him without making his torso burst like an abused piñata. Grabbing the man by his belt, Alice hefted him up until his feet left the dusty ground, then leaped up to the rooftops again. She knew the train schedules well enough to know that there would be a cargo train traveling down the Northern Pacific Railway – delivering ores, grains, lumber and such – and this was an opportune time to catch it on its way out of the state. Body-slamming Zeppeli into a nearby intact rooftop as he began regaining the breath she’d knocked out of him, Alice pushed her vampire body for as much speed as she could wring out of it considering her present need not to damage her armor.

 

Yes, she’d designed the suit to have quite a bit of extra flexibility, but nothing she had or could design with the tools she had access to in her present era could match the flexibility of a vampire’s body.

 

Pacing the cargo train as it sped along beside her, Alice gave Zeppeli a last punch to the solar-plexus, then hurled him onto a flatbed car carrying a load of neatly-cut lumber. Dashing down the side of the small, tightly-packed row of buildings she’d made her way up to start Zeppeli on his out-of-state journey, Alice quickly made her way back to the rendezvous point that she and Straizo had agreed upon before she’d set out to field-test this prototype armor set of hers. She didn’t even bother trying to conceal the wide, cat-that-ate-the-canary grin on her face, as she leaped and ran and leaped again, into the empty two-story building she’d pre-arranged to meet Straizo in.

 

“Well, I’d definitely call this a successful field-test,” she said, grinning over at the long-haired man who’d been watching over the progress of her brief fight with Zeppeli.

 

“Yes,” he said, left hand briefly at his chin as he turned to look her way.

 

“Come on, let’s head back home,” she said lightly, clapping his right shoulder in passing as she threw her white cloak back over her own.

 

“Home,” she heard Straizo mutter from behind her, as though he were testing the word; Alice chuckled softly.

Chapter 15: The Moments Of Happiness

Chapter Text

Having faith in his sweet sister’s work was simple he, Dio, reflected; it was the waiting that he found troubling. He’d never mention it to his dear Alice, of course; she was a thoroughly practical woman, his sweet sister, and would hardly appreciate his fussing over things that could not, in the end, be helped. And so he, Dio, awaited the triumphant return of his sweet sister with as much patience as he could.

 

He knew that she would return in triumph; she’d certainly poured enough time into that fantastic armor of hers to make it proof against any of that fool Zeppeli’s Hamon.

 

So, when he, Dio, heard the sounds of purposeful strides making their way back into the laboratory he’d stationed himself within, he rose from his seat with a smile. He, Dio, could hardly wait to hear of the ultimate end of his sweet sister’s battle against that behatted charlatan that had been causing the pair of them so much trouble; not only during the course of their lives at the Joestar estate, but also having the sheer temerity to follow them to their new lives in Montana. Yes, it was true that the pair of them had departed for the state in an effort to draw the fool away from their holdings in London, but soon enough he, Dio, found that he’d come to enjoy the life that he and his dear Alice had built for themselves.

 

The sound of the door to his sweet sister’s laboratory opening pulled his attention away from those useless thoughts, and he, Dio, quickly hurried to meet his dear Alice at that very door. The sheen of her polished armor, mostly covered by the sunlight-reflecting white cloak she’d worn over it, tantalized him as she strode with serene, prideful grace into the very heart of her domain. She was radiant, wrapped in metal named for the very Titans of Greek myth, and he, Dio, thought it only fitting.

 

The Titans, after all, had bestrode the world before even the Gods themselves; and, if not for the impulsive foolishness of Kronos, they would have done so even after the arrival of the Gods. After all, as his dear Alice had demonstrated to him on so many occasions, the best defense against anyone rising up against you was to make them not wish to do any such thing in the first place. To turn their own hearts against them, and so weaken their blows before they could even think to raise their fists.

 

Truly, his sweet sister had taught him so very many lessons over the course of both their lives; not all of them so interesting as he would have wished, but each and every one of them useful in their own way.

 

Wrapping his arms around his sweet sister’s waist as she stepped into the comforting shadows of her laboratory he, Dio, gently guided his dear Alice over to the armor stand that she had requisitioned once she had completed the cuirass of her marvelous armor. Reaching up to cup the point of his sweet sister’s armored chin he, Dio, gently pressed his thumbs down upon the ingeniously designed latches at the midpoint of her armored facemask. Grasping the connections on either side of the seam – nearly invisible if one was not a vampire, or at the very least standing particularly close – he, Dio, squeezed them tightly together so that the latches would unhook from one another.

 

Once he’d finished with that necessary task, menial as it was, he gently peeled back the ribbed form of the helmet from his sweet sister’s lovely head. Sparing only a moment to watch as the ribs folded neatly in on themselves – the folding helmet truly was an inspired design – he, Dio, smoothed the metal back down and away from his dear Alice’s wonderfully soft lips, before he claimed those selfsame lips in a kiss that had been long overdue. Tempted to hungrily devour the precious offering before him he, Dio, was able to restrain himself before his sweet sister would have been compelled to push him away so that she could attend to the removal of her fantastic armor.

 

Giving her what aid he could – quickly edging aside Straizo before the man, useful as he’d been in his limited capacity, could lay even a single finger upon her – he, Dio, had no sooner helped his dear Alice to remove the last of her armor and display it upon the stand, before he found Straizo making his way back over to the pair of them. He and Alice spoke upon a small matter that was clearly of some import to the pair of them, and not long after that his sweet sister was cutting through the flesh of her right palm. After that, there was little enough that he, Dio, needed to reflect upon to realize just what price his sweet sister’s pet Hamon user had asked in return for his cooperation.

 

It was rather amusing, however, to see the expression of tolerant exasperation that spread over his sweet sister’s face when their pet Hamon user took her right palm in both of his hands and bent to drink from it; truly, the kind of adulation the pair of them were due had only ever seemed to draw a resigned sort of amusement from her. It was yet another reason that he, Dio, had determined to keep the gaze of the world from falling upon his dear Alice more than she wished it to do so. An owl, after all, did not hunt so freely in the daylight.

 

=PB=

 

She wasn’t surprised when Dio requested an armor-set of his own, but she could tell from the expression on her brother’s face that he hadn’t been quite prepared for what the process of custom-fitting was going to entail…

 

“Unless you want to be scrubbing dried plaster out of crevasses you didn’t know you had, you will,” she said, in response to her sometimes-dope of a twin’s smirking demands as to just why he should put on what amounted to a skin-tight pair of boxer-shorts after she’d told him to get the rest of his clothes off…

 

“Just how long will I be forced to stand here while this plaster of yours sets?” Dio, now fully immobilized by the plaster of Paris wrappings she’d been encasing him in to form the initial cast for the mold she was making, gave her his best kicked-puppy look as she stood back up from her work.

 

“About forty-five minutes for the initial setting; I’ll be able to remove it safely then, but it’ll be a good three days before I can actually use it,” she said, eyes narrowed slightly as she remembered the times she’d worked with plaster of Paris back on that other Earth.

 

She’d once tried to speed up the setting process with a hairdryer, but she couldn’t quite remember if that had worked or not; regardless, it was a moot point in any case.

 

Sister, that’s the better part of an hour,” Dio moped, the kicked-puppy look on his face becoming all the more pronounced.

 

“Shall I fetch you a book, then, brother dear?” she snarked, remembering the way she’d had to talk Straizo through applying the wrappings to her

 

“Well, I suppose I should be grateful I can actually sit through this,” Dio pouted, arms folded across his chest the way her twin did when he was being particularly childish.

 

“What, you’re telling me that the mighty vampire Dio Brando can’t handle a chair?” she snarked back, smirking.

 

Really, you’d think she’d asked him to give up a kidney or something…

 

=PB=

 

After he’d become a vampire, immortal and ageless as the twins Dio and Alice Brando, Straizo had expected that his life would have been at least somewhat changed by his new status. However, there was clearly an ordered sort of routine to the workings of the Brando manor; something to be learned from observation. It also seemed that the estate itself was a center of learning and industry, not only for the surrounding county, but also for the state of Montana as a whole.

 

He’d not expected that a pair of vampires would have been capable of creating any kind of positive change in the world around them, though he suspected that such a thing was mostly the work of Alice Brando rather than her twin.

 

Even now, the family that had raised the pair of them as humans – those who had continued to allow them shelter even after the Stone Mask had irrevocably changed them – were inviting the two of them to return for the wedding of the human they still claimed as their brother.

 

“Would you mind looking after the manor while we’re away, Straizo?”

 

“Of course not,” he said, bowing his head to the vampire Alice Brando; though it was not in her nature to seek out gestures of supplication, she would accept them with the same grace as that which she had when she attended to her chosen duties. “I will see to it that everything proceeds smoothly in your absence.”

 

“Good to hear,” she said, nodding to him as she handed over the list she had finished making to one of the manor’s servants. “I’m glad to know I’ll be able to count on you, Straizo.”

 

“Of course,” he said, watching as Alice Brando turned to attend to her transportation.

 

True, it would be strange, finding himself in nearly sole control of the affairs of the Brando manor. And yet, if Alice herself was willing to trust him with such a responsibility after such a short, fraught acquaintance as theirs had been, then Straizo was going to do everything in his now-considerable power to see that such faith was rewarded. As would be only proper, after the boons that Alice Brando had granted him.

 

=PB=

 

Once the pair of them had said their farewells to the staff and Straizo, she and Dio turned and climbed up into the carriage that would take them to the train station. Their luggage had already been packed away for them – something she still made a point of thanking her people for, since she still remembered having to do that kind of thing herself – and now Alice was simply relaxing beside her brother as their driver took them to the train station.

 

“So, you are going to begin investing in those horseless carriages?” Dio asked, continuing the conversation they’d been having before they’d left the house.

 

“I’ve got a good feeling about them,” she said, offering her brother an easy smile as their carriage continued rolling onward toward the train station.

 

Dio didn’t quite seem to know what to say in response to that, so the pair of them settled into a comfortable, anticipatory silence.

 

=PB=

 

Jonathan could fair believe he could hear his own heart hammering, when he and Erina had arrived at the large station where Dio and Alice’s last train would ultimately drop his dear siblings off from their long journey. Of course, when he heard the sharp whistle of an in-bound train, Jonathan was swift to hurry toward the station platform so that he could be among the first to meet with Dio and Alice when they departed from the train. He wondered, for a moment, if they would be able to hear his heart pounding.

 

Perhaps they would, at that; Dio was certain to make mention of it, if such were indeed the case.

 

His heart swelled fit to burst, when he saw the tall, elegant forms of his siblings – umbrellas open to shield them from the sunlight that would have otherwise caused them grievous harm – making their way through the crowds that seemed to naturally part around the pair of them. Calling back to his dearest siblings as they both called out their own variants of his name, Jonathan hastened his stride to meet them.

 

“So good to see you again, Jojo,” Dio said, grinning in that irrepressible way he always had; save for those times when his brother had been truly furious.

 

“I’m glad to see the both of you again, as well,” he said, smiling warmly at the pair of them. “Please, do tell me what the two of you have been doing of late.”

 

The pair of them shared one of those secret expressions of theirs – communicating without words in the way that Jonathan had wished on so many occasions to be capable of interpreting – and then they smiled almost as one.

 

“Well, that’s quite the story to tell,” Alice said, as she and Dio took position on either side of him, draping their closest arm over his shoulders as the three of them fell into step with one another for the first time in entirely too long.

 

Hearing the pair of them talking about what had been happening lately – in particular, Alice’s most recent confrontation with Mr. Zeppeli, and their peaceful contact with the other Hamon user, a man named Straizo – Jonathan had found himself with mixed feelings. On the one hand, he was pleased that Alice had been able to resolve the situation with Straizo peacefully, but he could not avoid the thought that her method of warding off Mr. Zeppeli had only delayed their inevitable confrontation.

 

Jonathan hoped that such would not be the case, but he’d seen first-hand how devoted Mr. Zeppeli was to his own ideals; it was a quality he would have admired, save for the fact that he knew just Mr. Zeppeli’s ideals were.

 

It was something of a trial to refrain from sighing, but as he’d no desire to worry his dear siblings, Jonathan restrained himself as well as he was able. The three of them spoke of matters of little import while they boarded the ship that would carry them back to England, and Jonathan felt a distinct warmth growing in his chest as he realized just how well Dio and Alice had managed to establish themselves in the burgeoning state of Montana, as well as the fact that – discounting Mr. Zeppeli’s determination to harm them for what amounted to no good reason at all – his siblings had managed to create a peaceful life for themselves in America.

 

I was planning to suggest that we travel to the States for our honeymoon, Jonathan reflected, smiling gently as he watched Dio and Alice settling themselves into the suite he had purchased for the three of them to stay in. Perhaps they would be amenable to hosting us. Making up his mind to ask the pair of them about such a thing once all of them had managed to get properly settled in, Jonathan answered the door and swiftly took charge of the porters as they brought in his luggage, alongside that of Dio and Alice.

 

He was pleased; even considering everything that had happened to them, his dear siblings were going as well as he could hope.

 

=PB=

 

The wedding was nice enough; not like she’d much of a basis for comparison, but everyone in attendance seemed happy, so that was something. The ceremony itself had been fairly elaborate, but again she didn’t have much in the way of a basis for comparison. Acting as Erina’s Maid of Honor had been rather an interesting experience, and watching Dio strutting around in his capacity as Jonathan’s Best Man was good for a laugh, at least.

 

The four of them had made arrangements to stay at the Brando estate in Montana, after the requisite journey by boat to New York so that they could catch a train, and Alice could readily admit that she was looking forward to just such a thing.

 

“Come on, Miss Alice, they’re getting ready to throw the bouquet!”

 

“Poco,” old George called, before Alice herself could have said anything. “I don’t think that would be advisable.”

 

“What? But, why not?”

 

“Unfortunately, Poco, I happen to be married to my work,” she said, smiling as she gently disentangled Poco’s hand from her own.

 

The pair of them shared a laugh, and even old George Joestar seemed to lighten up a bit, at least once he knew that she wasn’t going to be heading out to catch any bouquets.

 

After all of the festivities were over and done with, Alice met up with Dio again, and the pair of them boarded the carriage just behind the heavily-decorated – she was almost ready to say over decorated – one that Jonathan and Erina had boarded, and the pair of carriages rumbled off toward the docks.

 

=PB=

 

When he, his sweet sister, and their adorable newlywed fool of a brother had all boarded the ship that would carry them back to New York once more he, Dio, grinned contently at the prospect. Straizo might have been fully willing to give himself over to his dear Alice’s gentle guidance, but the pair of them were in complete agreement as to their preference: the pair of them would be a great deal more settled once they were returned to their own estate. And, even after everything, the thought of that was still enough to bring a smile to his face.

 

True, establishing themselves – even so well as they had, back in their Montana holdings – was, in and of itself, just one small step to their ultimate goal of reining over Heaven and Earth alike, but it was a step that he, Dio, thoroughly relished.

 

“Mind your head, Jojo,” he said, ducking smoothly underneath the threshold of the door that served as both an entrance and exit to the forward deck.

 

“What? Ouch!”

 

Sighing in good-natured exasperation he, Dio, turned back around. “Honestly, Jojo, what am I going to do with you?” he asked, stepping back over to his and Alice’s adorable little puppy. “And look, you’ve managed to do yourself terrible harm with that blow,” he grinned, just wide enough to show the edges of his fangs. “Shall I kiss it better?”

 

“Dio!” Erina exclaimed, making her own presence known in a way that even he, Dio, could hardly ignore. “If anyone is going to be kissing Jonathan’s wounds, it shall be me.”

 

Grinning at the admonishing expression on Erina’s rather adorable face – truly, she and Jojo suited each other rather well – he, Dio chuckled at the color spreading across Jojo’s cheeks. “You still blush like a peach, Jojo.”

 

“You aren’t going planning to lick me again, are you?” Jojo asked, seeming as adorably flustered by the thought as he had been that time after their first boxing match.

 

“Would you enjoy that, Jojo?” he asked, grinning widely enough to show his fangs.

 

“Dio Brando, you are a terribly brazen man,” Erina admonished, stepping slightly in front of Jojo so that she could chastise him with her right pointer finger in his face.

 

Grinning fit to show all of his fangs he, Dio, kissed the tip of that finger.

 

“Well, since it seems that I’m not wanted here, I shall be taking my leave,” and thus, with another grin full of fangs he, Dio, turned to leave.

 

Perhaps he would pay a visit to his dear Alice; he’d heard she was working in the kitchen…

 

“If all you’re going to do is hang around and try to eat bits of frosting when you think I’m not looking, could you at least try to restrict yourself to the colors I’ve already used?”

 

“Oh, but I so rarely get to have chocolate buttercream frosting,” though he knew the gesture was useless he, Dio, attempted to wheedle just a touch of his sweet sister’s luscious frosting.

 

“You’re a big boy, Dio,” his dear Alice said, her tone tolerantly amused. “You can wait to have your dessert with the rest of us.”

 

Sighing deeply as he turned to leave the kitchen where his sweet sister was doing her good work he, Dio, made his way out. Apparently, he would have to find something else to occupy his time…

 

Grinning as he peered through the grate, into the engine room below he, Dio, fixed his gaze upon the long, slender crate that seemed to have been presented solely for his personal amusement. The crate itself looked enough like a casket for his purposes, and his vampiric abilities would serve to allow him to disguise himself as a corpse well enough to fool anyone who wasn’t a member of his family.

 

He didn’t have to wait long, after twisting himself through the gaps in the grate, before he heard the sound of muffled footsteps making their way over to the crate. Grinning in the darkness he, Dio, quickly arranged his features into a serene mask and waited. Soon enough, the human who’d been scuffling around in the engine room had opened the crate. Interestingly enough, it seemed to be a priest, if the recitation of the Last Rites he was hearing was any indication.

 

“That was quite kind of you to say,” he said, allowing himself to grin as he sat up during the space of one of the human’s blinks. “Thank you.”

 

=PB=

 

The sound of Dio’s laughter was what caught his attention at first, but the sound of another person shouting in panic was what ultimately decided his next course of action. Jonathan knew that, for all of his brother’s fine qualities, if the opportunity for a bit of mischief were presented to him, he was not of a kind to refuse such a thing. Catching a glimpse of his brother through a grate in the deck, Jonathan turned his path toward the engine room.

 

He’d seen Dio there, sprawled elegantly across a long crate that looked enough like a coffin that Jonathan hardly had to guess at what he’d just been about.

 

When he arrived in the engine room at last, Dio had stopped laughing, but was still sprawled across the crate with a self-amused grin on his face. And, when Jonathan stepped into the engine room itself, he found that Dio was still chuckling.

 

“Hello, Jojo,” Dio greeted, a grin like the Cheshire Cat firmly in place; even upside-down, it was plain to see.

 

“Dio, what’ve you gotten up to now?”

 

Before his brother could have thought up anything to say, however, the sound of shattering wood drew their attention. He wondered, even as the pair of them dashed off to find the source of the sounds, just what it was that Dio was hearing. His brother seemed far more tense than usual, but before Jonathan could say anything, the pair of them had arrived at the dining hall. It was a battlefield: the shattered remains of tables and chairs littered the floor, and ranging around the middle of the room were-

 

Bastard! I’ll kill you!” Dio snarled, launching himself heedlessly toward Mr. Zeppeli, even as Alice hurled yet another table at the man’s head.

 

Pausing for only a moment to gather Hamon into his fists, Jonathan threw himself into the fray a few paces behind his brother.

 

Jonathan was able to block most of the Hamon-filled wood shrapnel that Mr. Zeppeli threw at his siblings, but one particularly large chunk – clearly broken from one of the tables that Alice had thrown at him – exploded in his face. Temporarily blinded, his breathing too erratic to produce Hamon, Jonathan found himself knocked to the thickly-carpeted floor. He heard a grunt of pain from Alice, followed by a nearly feral scream of rage from Dio, and so he forced himself back to his feet.

 

Blinking away the spots from his eyes as he worked to regain control of his breathing, Jonathan abruptly found that such a thing was no longer necessary. Mr. Zeppeli was quite thoroughly dead, having long since bled out from the sword-wounds Dio was continuing to inflict even as he watched.

 

“Dio!” he called, after having gathered the slumbering form of Alice in his arms. “You’ve won! Please, we should attend to Alice now.”

 

He eventually managed to convince his and Alice’s brother not to raise Mr. Zeppeli as a zombie, and together they were able to bring Alice back to the room that he shared with Erina. It was no burden, offering Alice the blood she needed to revive and heal, and when Dio embraced him from behind it only strengthened his resolve all the more. They were his family; he could hardly do less.

 

~Phantom Blood: End~

Chapter 16: I Heard A Rumor

Chapter Text

~Battle Tendency: begin~

 

Looking out to the horizon, Robert smiled widely as he caught sight of the approaching planes. He and his own people had arrived some time ago, and considering what his Foundation had discovered… Well, there couldn’t be any harm in having more than one way of dealing with the… creature resting inside that pillar. Breathing a bit more easily when he could hear the engines of the planes drawing ever closer, he gave the signal to his own pilot to keep the engine running.

 

He wasn’t going to waste time once they arrived; at least, not for anything so trivial as waiting for the plane’s engines to warm up again.

 

When the planes finally landed, Robert sighed in relief. Here, now, was his chance to be rid of that terrible creature at last. One might have asked, since three of his close friends were vampires, why he did not have more charitable feelings toward the creature within the pillar. And yes, he’d once thought it possible to awaken the creature peaceably, and perhaps to speak with it about… whatever matters such a being would have considered of import.

 

But that had been before he’d been forced to watch in helpless horror as Marty Balin – a good man, and all the more tragically, one of the youngest members of the expedition that had discovered the creature within the pillar – had been pulled, screaming, into the very stone of the pillar.

 

It had become more than clear, at that moment, that the creature within the pillar – whoever or whatever it had been prior to ending up as he was – had long since succumbed to the maddening hunger that any starving creature would have been prey to. Truly, it could even be said that he was offering that poor creature mercy, destroying it before it could unite the world against itself and so end up drawing the attention of those who would not nearly be so kind about destroying it as Robert and those who he had called to his side.

 

Making his way over to the pair of planes that had just settled to the ground, even as he felt the wind from the propellers buffeting him, Robert smiled with a sense of fond nostalgia as he saw the doors of both planes opening wide to allow his long-absent – though not so long, in the case of dear Alice – friends to exit their respective transports at last.

 

“Speedwagon!”

 

“Jojo,” he said, smiling all the wider as his old friend rushed forward to embrace him. “It’s been fifty years since we last saw each other, but you look as young as ever.”

 

“I certainly hope you remembered to bring along enough water this time,” Alice said, before either he or Jojo could say another word to one another.

 

He laughed, nostalgic and rueful at once. “You’re going to hold that over me for the rest of my life, aren’t you?”

 

“I offer to supply your expedition into the Texan desert, and you refuse even after I offer to make it a loan rather than a gift. And, after you go haring off like some desperate madman, I find you half-dead of heat exhaustion not three weeks later,” Jojo’s sister said, spearing him with a thoroughly unimpressed expression. “So yes, Robert, nearly getting yourself killed is something I fully intend to hold over your head, you stubborn old goat.”

 

She might have the face of an angel, but Alice Brando is not a woman to cross lightly, he reflected, smiling gently as Jojo stepped back and the pair of them were able to face one another again. “All that aside, I called the pair of you here so that you might see something that I’m sure will be of great interest.”

 

“Oh?” Alice asked, as Straizo stepped out of the plane and took up position behind her; he was wearing what looked like a sword, strapped to his back.

 

A thing that Robert found more than a little odd, since he and Alice were both carrying the sword-concealing umbrellas that Alice had designed as both a means of defense from the sun and also as a means of protecting their persons without resorting to the use of their vampiric abilities.

 

“Come,” he said, deciding that he would speak to Alice about the other sword that she had given to Straizo while the three of them flew to Mexico. “We should get underway as quickly as possible.”

 

Jojo laughed softly, as the four of them boarded the plane that he had had transported to this place so that they would be able to undertake this last leg of their journey. “I find that, no matter how many times I step aboard one of these fascinating contraptions, I’ve never become tired of it.”

 

“They are fascinating devices,” he said, smiling as he followed Jojo, Alice, and Straizo into the cabin of his plane.

 

“Indeed,” Jojo said, smiling brightly as he looked up at the ceiling of the cabin above them. “Still, it’s not quite so exciting as flying upon the back of Alice’s Quetzalcoatlus.”

 

“Yes, I suppose it could hardly compete with that,” he said, laughing softly in amused reflection.

 

And it was true: being confined on all sides by the steel skin of an airplane could hardly compete with riding upon the back of a reborn ancient beast; feeling the wind in one’s hair as the creature raced through the skies. Of course, considering the beast’s nature as a zombie, they could hardly have relied upon it to carry them all to Mexico in anything resembling a timely manner. Still, Robert could hardly have denied his own exhilaration when Alice had offered him the chance to ride upon the creature’s back.

 

Still, at present they all had more pressing concerns than far-distant memories, exciting as they may very well have been.

 

“Alice, if you wouldn’t think me too forward, why does Straizo have another sword strapped to his back?” he asked, once their small group had gotten fully underway.

 

“That isn’t a sword, Robert,” she said calmly, reaching back and giving a signal to Straizo. “It’s my steel-bow.”

 

He was about to ask just why in the world anyone would want a steel bow, when he remembered just what kind of inhuman strength Alice and Dio were capable of summoning by their very nature. Truly, while a bow made of steel would be impossible for a human to wield in any but the most diminished of capacities, a vampire such as Dio or Alice would be able to use such a weapon to devastating effect. The thought would have been rather terrifying, if he’d not known Alice so well as he did.

 

“Speedwagon, you said that you were going to tell us about what your people found?” Jojo prompted, turning toward him with an expression of interest.

 

“Yes,” he said, nodding and drawing himself up. “First, however, I feel that I should inform you of the particulars of our present circumstances. It’s been quite some time since you succeeded Tonpetty, after all.”

 

“Yes,” Jojo said, a wistful expression spreading over his still-youthful face. “I spend so much time away in Tibet that I’ve barely had the chance to speak with Joseph. And now, with Elizabeth in Venice to guard the Red Stone,” Jojo sighed, turning an expression of such touching concern upon him that Robert felt his heart go out to the man. “How has Joseph been doing? Is he getting on well?”

 

“He and Erina are both doing well,” he said, smiling for Jojo’s sake as well as his own. “If nothing else, her friendship with Grace and Darby has helped the both of them to cope with your frequent absences,” he continued, smile beginning to slip a bit. “Still, however much he might resemble you in other areas, Joseph is hardly a gentleman.”

 

“What do you mean?” Jojo asked, turning to him with a look of frank apprehension on his face.

 

“It’s nothing too serious,” Robert rushed to reassure his old friend, knowing that Jojo – without the benefit of knowing Joseph so well as he did – would, all wishes to the contrary aside, easily come to fear the worst. “He just has a tendency to be… Rather a bit overzealous when provoked.”

 

“What do you mean, Speedwagon?”

 

With a rueful sigh, Robert leaned back in his seat as he began to tell Jojo about the various incidents that his grandson had been involved with. Truly, it had become quite the list…

 

=BT=

 

Sitting back in her seat, light-shrugging white hood pulled over her head to block out the sunlight coming in through the cockpit of the plane, Alice closed her eyes and tried to concentrate. She might not have known much about JJBA Part 2, as opposed to what she knew about Dio in particular and Stardust Crusaders in general, but she might know just enough to help her and hers dodge the worst of the pitfalls that were inevitably going to be coming their way.

 

Too bad it hadn’t been made into an anime before… Well, Before, she mused, smiling with the blackest sort of humor. Still, I guess it wouldn’t be quite so fun if I could skate on everything, now would it? Really, there wasn’t much point in wishing for things you knew you couldn’t have, so Alice put those thoughts out of her mind.

 

Of course, without her faded memories of a past-future that only she remembered to occupy her mind, Alice naturally found herself wondering just what Rob thought he needed two vampires – though Straizo had insisted on coming, rather than being invited the way she’d been, herself – and a Hamon Master to deal with. And in Mexico, of all places. The only thing she could think of were some kind of dinosaur zombies, and since vampires were the only ones who could create zombies in the first place…

 

A Mexican vampire cult, maybe? But then, that still wouldn’t explain what Rob had wanted her along for, since Jonathan could have handled pretty much any vampire he came across. Well, any vampire who didn’t have prep-time and a good set of tools, she mused, crossing her legs at the ankles as she continued to mull over the odd circumstances that she’d found herself facing on this little sojourn to Mexico with her adopted brother, a man who’d all but openly declared himself her retainer, and an old friend from London she’d met while cross-dressing.

 

“Alice, we’ve arrived,” Rob said, and she felt a light hand on her right shoulder, pressing down just hard enough to draw her attention without being unpleasant.

 

“All right,” she said, rising from her seat and making for the plane’s exit hatch. “Thanks for letting me know, Rob.”

 

As the four of them fell into step, making their way through a jungle that looked like it would have fit perfectly into the terrain of South America; though she’d be the first to admit that she didn’t know much about Mexican geography as it compared to South America’s. Still, considering what the four of them were approaching…

 

“So, two vampires, an oil tycoon, and a Hamon Master walk into a cave,” she turned a sidelong look on Rob as they all continued on their way up to the gaping mouth of the cavern. “Should I be glad this isn’t a pub?”

 

“Alice, this is hardly the time for levity,” Rob said, just loud enough to cover Jonathan’s sudden attack of the giggles. “Even you might find this place overwhelming; what we found here… It’s enough to make me glad that you and Dio, and even Straizo, were all able to retain your essential humanity. I can hardly say the same for this creature.”

 

“Creature?” she echoed, raising an eyebrow. “There’s something alive in here?” she sniffed the air again; it was just as stagnant as it had been the first time she sampled it; and growing steadily worse, the deeper they continued into the cavern.

 

“I’d hardly say it’s alive, Alice,” Rob said, beginning to sound distinctly jittery; and sure, while the man did tend to over-exaggerate, he had a good head on his shoulders and had been reliable enough to offset his more bone-headed moments. “Still, you’ll see what I mean when we arrive in the main chamber.”

 

She hummed softly, still curious about what might’ve been hidden away in this strange cavern, but also wondering if Rob’s habitual paranoia was getting the better of him in this case.

 

=BT=

 

There was a terrible, blackened aura that clung to this place; one that he and Speedwagon seemed particularly aware of, while Alice and Straizo seemed perfectly immune to it. And yes, he was fully aware that his and Dio’s sister’s most common response to danger was to attempt to poke it with a stick – sometimes entirely too literally for his peace of mind – but Jonathan could not help the thought that such a thing would not serve her at all in the situation they were about to find themselves in.

 

“Well, someone’s been busy,” Alice’s voice broke the quickly-becoming-oppressive silence, and Jonathan was not entirely certain if he should be grateful to her or not.

 

“What do you mean, Alice?” he asked, feeling almost as though he were forcing himself to speak into the silence; a thing he rather doubted his and Dio’s sister had been afflicted by.

 

It seemed to be against her very nature, to respond to fear with anything but a determined sort of curiosity; Jonathan could only hope that such a thing would not cause either her or Dio any undue grief.

 

“The walls of this place are covered in Stone Masks, and unless these ones were drop-forged – which I kind of doubt, given the detail-work on each of them – someone had to spend a lot of time hand-carving these.”

 

One of Speedwagon’s people, carrying a light for the benefit of those of them who needed light in such a place, shined it upon the wall near where Alice had been standing. Just as she’d stated, the wall was indeed covered with Stone Masks of varying designs. Such a sight left Jonathan with profoundly mixed feelings; yes, as a Hamon Master he was bound by the oaths he had given to Master Tonpetty to destroy the Stone Masks and those creatures born of it, and yet… Looking to Alice, even as she stepped out of the light cast by the lamp, continuing to study the walls and those Stone Masks that were within the range of her eyes, Jonathan felt his resolve renewed once more.

 

If those who had been touched by the Stone Mask were indeed wicked, then Jonathan would dispose of them swiftly and without hesitation; but, if they were of the same temperament as Dio and Alice – though, truly he would much prefer that any other vampires were more akin to his level-headed sister rather than his irrepressible rapscallion of a brother – then he would let them alone, though he would advise that they sought out his sister in such a case.

 

This is what I brought you all here to see,” Speedwagon said, and Jonathan turned, catching sight of… the more-than-life-sized carving of what was clearly a man, within the very stone of the pillar itself.

 

He was just about to ask just why in the world Speedwagon would be so concerned about a carving, ominous as it so clearly felt, when Alice broke the silence; what she said was one of the most unexpected things that he had ever heard.

 

“You found another one of those things?”

 

“You’ve seen something like this?” Speedwagon asked, before Jonathan could articulate that selfsame question.

 

“I have; back in Rome, Caesar and I ended up chasing after a man that turned out to be his father, Mario Zeppeli,” a far-away expression passed briefly over Alice’s face, before she shook her head slightly, bloody crimson eyes becoming clear and focused once more. “The three of us ended up in front of a wall with three carvings; they didn’t look too much like the one we’re standing in front of, but they weren’t too far off, either. Anyway, there was clearly a bit of a scuffle before I got there, but Caesar was on the ground, and Mario was actually being pulled into the stone itself,” Alice narrowed her eyes, her gaze taking in the form of the man within the pillar. “I lost a sword to the one on the right,” she turned back to them, clearly realizing that she had just spoken of something neither one of them could have had any way of knowing about. “There were three of them, in the wall; each of them posed a different way. I wouldn’t have thought much of it, Roman art being what it is. But, considering what happened to Mario… Well, I couldn’t exactly overlook something like that.”

 

“I should say not,” Speedwagon exclaimed, turning a glance back on Alice, before returning his attention to the man in the pillar.

 

As Jonathan turned his own attention back to the man in the pillar, he heard Alice call to Straizo, and out of the corner of his right eye he watched his sister be handed her steel-bow. He watched as Straizo bent the straightened metal shaft – it almost looked like a pipe, but with the back third cut out; or perhaps just never forged in the first place – and Alice strung it with what looked like a braided coil of wire. This was only the second time he had gotten a glimpse of it, but the first that he’d seen his and Dio’s sister preparing to use it.

 

This was, conversely, the first time he’d had the opportunity to see that, far from just holding the unstrung form of the bow, what he’d at first taken for the sheath of a sword was in fact a combined quiver and a method of holding Alice’s steel bow. Just as his and Dio’s sister looked about to draw back the string of her bow, she paused, shifting her weight slightly, as though something had just caught her attention.

 

“Did you order a convoy out here?” Alice asked, indirectly answering his question before Jonathan could manage to articulate it.

 

“A convoy? No, of course not,” Speedwagon said, looking surprised at the suggestion.

 

Alice narrowed her eyes, a thoughtful expression spreading over her face, even as she unstrung her steel-bow and tucked it away within the combined quiver and holder. The three of them, he, Speedwagon, and Straizo, all turned to watch as she stepped to the back of their group.

 

=BT=

 

Robert was just about to call out to Alice, wanting to know just what in the world she was doing – he’d thought that her plan was to fire one of the arrows from her steel-bow into that creature in the pillar, which would then allow Jojo to channel Hamon into it without risking himself by getting dangerously close, the way that poor Marty Balin had – before she raised the two locks of blonde hair he’d seen but not taken much note of.

 

“There are eight of them; heavy transport trucks, given the sound of the engines I’m hearing,” Alice said, her eyes half-closed and unfocused.

 

“You can hear them from in here?” he asked, startled once more at having underestimated just what vampire senses were capable of.

 

“This is something Alice showed me,” Jojo said, turning away from the creature in the pillar. “See those long hairs she has? Those act like a cat’s whiskers, allowing Alice to hear sounds much fainter and farther away than even an ordinary vampire would be able to detect.”

 

“They can even pick up changes in air-currents, so I might even be able to tell you if a storm is coming, with some refinement of the technique,” Alice said, her tone sounding rather amused. “Anyway, those transports I heard earlier are definitely coming this way.”

 

“Speedwagon, if you weren’t the one to bring these newcomers in, then I rather doubt they could mean us well,” Jojo said, his tone concerned.

 

“Yes, I fear you’re right, Jojo,” he said, swallowing harshly.

 

=BT=

 

Grumbling words that would have had both Granny Erina and Aunty Grace wanting to wash his mouth out with really bad-tasting soap, Joseph Joestar hurried after the pick-pocket who’d just stolen his wallet. It might’ve been filled with just the few pounds he’d taken with him on this particular excursion into the more interesting parts of New York, but those were his pounds and that was his wallet, thank you very much. When he finally came to the alley where the pickpocket he’d been tailing had turned off, Joseph found something he very much hadn’t been expecting.

 

Really, he’d figured that Aunty Alice would have dealt with this kind of trash already. Still, the New York branch of Brando International was only a few years old at this point, so maybe she just didn’t have the leverage to implement any proper reforms. It looked like he was going to have to handle things, just until she returned from her expedition with Speedwagon, Straizo, and Gramps.

 

“Hullo!”

 

“Hey, it’s the pigeon what got his wallet lifted,” the fat man – really, Aunty Alice would have had the man running laps before he could have even thought of joining the police force in Montana – called back to him, holding up the very wallet that had been taken from him not a few minutes ago. “This is evidence, so I’m gonna be keepin’ it!”

 

“Well now, how shall I put this?” he mused aloud, more for his own benefit than for either of the oafs he was faced with. “Here’s what happened: there actually is no crime, since that wallet was a gift, Constable.”

 

The pair of oafs looked in askance at him, but Joseph’s eyes drifted back towards the bloodied form of the pickpocket, still pinned against the wall of the alley. It seemed that even he was surprised by the action. Still, if there was one thing that Gramps and Granny both agreed on, besides keeping his Hamon skills sharp through constant training, it was that one should always show kindness to the less fortunate.

 

“So, then, sir. Would you please return both wallet and boy?”

 

“What’d you just say?” the fat one – clearly, his partner wasn’t much for speaking – demanded.

 

“As I told you: it was a gift,” he reiterated, which seemed to shock the pickpocket and annoy the oafs in roughly equal measure. “He and I are good friends. Let him go, please.”

 

Narrowing his eyes as he saw the fat oaf hurl the pickpocket roughly to the ground, Joseph curled his lip in almost instinctive disgust as the man began picking his nose as he came closer.

 

“A good friend, huh? Why don’t you tell me what your good friend’s name is?” the fat oaf demanded, holding out a bogey-covered finger before his face; Joseph stuck his hands in his pockets, searching for the tissues he’d brought with him; if that oaf was actually going to do what it seemed he was going to do… Well, he’d much prefer to be prepared for it, rather than not. “What’s the matter, limey? You want to see what a New York pokey is like? Here’s a present for ya!”

 

The feeling of the fat oaf pressing his finger into Joseph’s right cheek was disgusting enough, but it was all the moreso since he knew what was on that finger. Still, might as well give the oafs a chance to dig their own graves.

 

“That’s curious,” he said, not bothering to suppress the thread of annoyance in his tone. “Help me understand: why would you do something like that? It’s just such an unsavory thing to do.”

 

“There ain’t no reason!” the fat oaf shouted, finger going right back up his nose; it would be the last time, Joseph decided. “I do what I like whenever I feel like it, ya fool!”

Chapter 17: Wanted Dead Or Alive

Chapter Text

“That’s just what I thought you’d say, you stupid pig!”

 

His punch, even without Hamon enhancing the power behind it, struck hard enough to drive the fat oaf’s finger right through the top of his nose. A pair of bloody teeth flew out of his mouth as he slammed into the ground, wriggling pathetically for a few moments before going still.

 

“You were shot resisting arrest!”

 

So, the silent oaf has a tongue, after all, Joseph mused, not feeling particularly charitable. “Please,” he snapped, spitting to the side in contempt. “Try to shoot me. But I’m warning you right now: before you can pull the trigger, I will have broken your finger like a rotten matchstick!”

 

“Not from over there! I’ll blow your damned brains out!”

 

Lips pulling back from his teeth in something that the other oaf might have been foolish enough to think was a grin, Joseph gathered his Hamon. Channeling it into the bottle, Joseph grinned all the wider as he felt the pop inside the bottle resonating with the energy. The bottlecap blew clean off, slamming into the oaf’s finger and snapping the thing in just the way he’d promised to do.

 

He’d a sense of satisfaction about his actions, for all of half a minute before he remembered just what he’d actually done. Gramps had told him time and time again that Hamon was to be used for the protection of humanity from monsters like wicked vampires, or zombies; well, not vampires like Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio, and certainly not zombies like Bruford and Tarkus. Still, if there was one thing that Gramps was adamant about, it was that Hamon was not to be used to assault his fellow man.

 

Still, even Gramps would have given those brutish oafs what for, but Granny

 

“Crap, I’m in for it now,” he groused, pinching the bridge of his nose. “Granny Erina is going to rake me over the coals for this!” he fidgeted, passing the opened bottle – the pop was rather good, at least – from hand to hand. “She’ll understand if I explain, won’t she?” shaking himself back to the present, Joseph found his eyes falling back on the small, slender form on the ground before him. “Now, Mr. Pickpocket, what’s say we get out of here?”

 

Pausing for a moment, Joseph waited for the lad to nod, then swept him up so that the pair of them could hightail it out of the alley they’d been standing in. He wasn’t so heavy, probably since he didn’t get much to eat, but Joseph was eager to get back out into the city. Anyway, the pickpocket couldn’t have had many fond memories of this particular alley, so the sooner the pair of them could hightail it out of there, the better.

 

Once the pair of them were far enough away that Joseph felt he could at least be reasonably sure that nobody had followed them, he allowed himself to relax. Opening up his wallet, Joseph checked to make sure everything was still where he’d put it.

 

“Ah, every pound still in place,” he said, smiling slightly. “Good.”

 

“Those are American dollars,” the pickpocket said, looking up at Joseph like he was the one being strange.

 

“Bah,” he grumbled. “Here, it’s dollars, over in Italy it’s called lira, Mexican money is called dinero,” he groused.

 

“Actually, Mexican money is called pesos,” the pickpocket interrupted, a slight smile starting to show on his face.

 

“Argh! There’s just too damn many words that all mean the same thing!” he shouted, falling to slump back against the concrete pilings of the overpass they were standing under. “Would you believe that one of my Aunties speaks eight different languages? Eight! I mean, really; what would you ever need to speak eight different languages for?”

 

Pulling a face as he heard the pickpocket laughing at him, Joseph paused to wait out the fit of laugher, brief as it ended up being.

 

“I meant to ask you this before, but what was that weird light you started glowing with earlier?”

 

“Oh, that? That’s a talent that Gramps has been working to teach pretty much everyone in the family,” he said, folding his arms behind his back as he looked up at the vast network of steel girders that supported the overpass that towered so far above their heads. “Well, those of us that can use it, anyway.”

 

“Wow,” the pickpocket said, sounding suitably awed. “So, your whole family can do stuff like what you just did?”

 

“Well, not quite all of them. My father never quite had the knack,” he said. “Neither did my Aunty Alice, or my Uncle Dio,” he said, perfectly aware that just saying something like that didn’t encompass any of the reasons why three of his family members were unable to use Hamon; or the specific and differing circumstances behind those reasons.

 

Still, some secrets were meant only for family ears; even he knew that.

 

“Oh,” the pickpocket said, still sounding a bit curious, but also like he understood just when to stop asking questions; Joseph was pleased with his discretion. “Anyway, I really owe you big time. Everyone calls me Smokey, and I’d sure like it if you’d tell me your name.”

 

“It’s Joestar,” he said, turning a grin back at Smokey as he stood tall; the same way Gramps did, when he would introduce himself to someone new. Even after so long in Tibet, it seemed to be a habit that Gramps was determined to keep. “Joseph Joestar. My friends call me Jojo.”

 

Of course, sometimes it got a bit confusing, those times when he and Gramps would be training together, since the both of them had the same nickname; and sure, it’d been funny those first few times when both of them would be talking with Speedwagon, and he’d forget that – at least to the old man – Gramps would always be Jojo. Still, it was an old joke, and old jokes didn’t really stay funny for long.

 

=BT=

 

“How long do we have until that convoy gets here, Alice?” he asked, looking back down the length of the tunnel; back towards the entrance.

 

“Given the speed they’re moving? About half an hour, perhaps less, depending on if they’re equipped for going off-road or not,” Jojo’s sister said, the thoughtful expression on her face hardening into one of resolve. “Jonathan, do you think that’ll be enough time for us to deal with this guy?”

 

“Not with any degree of certainty,” Jojo said, looking at the creature in the pillar with an expression of utmost concern upon his face. “Even channeling Hamon through an arrow shot into the creature’s head, I could hardly be certain of just how the energies would react with the surrounding stone.”

 

“What do you mean, Jojo?”

 

“Hamon interacts differently with stone than it does with living creatures, Speedwagon,” Jojo said, turning back to him with that same, worried expression that he’d worn when they’d all first made their way into this terrible, blackened cavern. “There’s too much a risk that, when the Hamon comes into contact with the creature’s body, it will merely serve to shatter the stone covering it and release the creature back into the world.”

 

“Yes,” he said, shuddering at the very thought of releasing the horrid thing they were facing from its stone slumber. “We could hardly risk something like that.”

 

“Well, whatever we are going to do, we’re going to want to do it fast,” Alice said, the two locks of hair she’d been using to monitor the approach of whoever it was in command of that convoy she’d told them about still stiffened and pointed down toward the entrance of the tunnel. “We’re running out of time.”

 

“We can’t simply abandon this place! If those people don’t know what kind of monster they’re dealing with, they could put the whole world in terrible danger!” he exclaimed, looking from the creature in the pillar – appearing so terribly, deceptively placid as it slumbered – to his old friends, already willing to place themselves in the path of such deadly peril, simply to ensure that no other person was forced to face it.

 

“I’ll speak to them,” Jojo said, setting himself forward again. “Perhaps, if I were to explain the nature of our present circumstances, I can make them understand the gravity of the situation.”

 

Robert allowed himself a sigh of profound relief; Jojo would be able to handle this. He would convince those men – whoever they were – not to go charging so recklessly into a situation that was entirely beyond their ken. And then, once they were safely out of the way, the three of them – or four; he didn’t want to discount Straizo, but the man was so terribly unobtrusive – would be able to return their attention to the creature locked away within the pillar.

 

They would be able to determine a method of destroying it at last.

 

=BT=

 

Smokey still didn’t quite know just what to make of Joseph – or Jojo, but he didn’t think the two of them were that close just yet – but, well… Watching as he threatened a cabbie was a bit much. Still, he was starting to get the feeling that, for all of Joseph’s tough-guy swagger, he was really a good man at heart. That bore out when, once his grandma had asked to know what he was doing, he paid for the cab and the three of them all climbed inside.

 

“So, where does your family live?” he asked, curiosity finally getting the better of him. “You said your grandpa taught you to use that light of yours, but I don’t know many places that he’d be able to learn something like that.”

 

“Gramps spends most of his time in Tibet,” Joseph said, leaning back in his seat as the cab set off. “And now, with Mum off in Venice on business… Well, Granny and I have been spending a lot more time together.”

 

Wow, his family’s pretty much scattered to the four winds, Smokey mused, feeling a bit sad.

 

“Speaking of time, when do you think Speedwagon is going to get here?”

 

“I’m not certain, Joseph,” his grandmother said, gloved hands clasped over the end of her pale-blue umbrella.

 

“Really, Speedwagon calls on us to come all the way out to New York on some business that he won’t even mention over the telephone, and then when we do come, he’s not even here to meet us,” Joseph said, leaning on his right hand with an annoyed expression on his face. “I think that was very rude of him.”

 

“I’m sure the oil business occupies a great deal of his time,” the old woman said; she seemed to be a lot more level-headed than Joseph, something that he wondered about for a bit.

 

He wondered if it was true for all the Joestars, that the women were calmer than the men.

 

“Say, Granny, do you think he’s taken up with Aunty Alice?” Joseph asked, starting to grin slyly. “Do you think that’s why he didn’t show up?”

 

“What are you suggesting, Joseph?” she demanded, starting to look more than a bit irate.

 

“Well, Aunty Alice is so well-preserved that even I would want to court her,” Joseph said, his grin stretching widely across his face. “So, it’s no surprise that an old man like Speedwagon would have the same sort of idea.”

 

When Joseph started to make kissy-faces as his grandma, and Smokey tried not to burst out laughing, the woman gave him a good batting about the head and shoulders with her umbrella.

 

=BT=

 

“You shouldn’t make insinuations like that,” Granny Erina said, as he rubbed the aching spot on his head she’d been smacking. “Particularly about our family.”

 

“All right, all right, I’m sorry!” he exclaimed, holding up his hands to ward off any further blows to the head. “I won’t do it again!”

 

After a last look, promising further chastisement if he had the misfortune to be caught acting up again, Joseph settled back into his seat to watch the city going by. Soon enough, the three of them had decided upon a restaurant to stop off at for supper. Stepping out while Granny Erina thanked the driver and paid him for his services, he turned as the front door to the restaurant was opened and a rush of warm air laden with enticing smells wafted out towards him. Smiling as he fell into step with Smokey and Granny Erina, Joseph paused a moment while the three of them awaited their turn to be seated.

 

Once that was over with, and they’d all taken their seats around the table they’d been seated at, Joseph noticed something particular about their server’s left arm…

 

“Hold on a moment,” he called, reaching out for the arm in question as the server paused in response. “Aha! Just as I thought: this is a Brando Industries medical prosthetic!” he squeezed a bit, feeling the framework of steel- “Ow!”

 

“Joseph! You cannot just manhandle someone’s arm if and when you find them interesting!” Granny Erina snapped, batting him upside the head once more for good measure.

 

“I’m sorry, I won’t do it again!” he hurried to promise, rubbing his smarting head.

 

“Good, now apologize to our server, Joseph.”

 

“Yes, Granny.”

 

After he’d done that, however, Joseph found his attention drawn away from just what it was that he intended to order by a call from one of the other tables. A large, unsavory looking man rose from his seat there, looking as though he had something of import to say.

 

“You’re Erina Joestar, aren’t you?” the man asked; Joseph narrowed his eyes, knowing that there weren’t many reasons for such a man to wish to speak to his granny, and that even fewer of those reasons were good. “I’ve had dealings with your Mr. Speedwagon in the past, and I’ve been keeping tabs on your Miss Brando’s expansion into the city. She’s been doing good work, your Miss Brando, ‘specially for someone her age. Anyway, I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but I got word that there was a battle down in Mexico; destroyed trucks, corpses, the works. No one knows what happened afterward, but given how many corpses ended up scattered around the jungle, I really doubt either of those two survived.”

 

The soft, sobbing gasp he heard from Granny Erina summoned the furious, boiling rage that Joseph hadn’t felt since those bastards had hijacked Speedwagon’s plane, particularly when one of them had broken his nose and caused him to bleed onto a suit that had been gifted to him by the very woman seated not one chair down from where he himself had been seated. Lunging out of his seat fast enough to send the thing toppling over, Joseph crossed the floor almost too fast for the callous bastard who’d been so rude as to just drop such terrible news on Granny Erina without even preparing her for it in any fashion at all.

 

“You are very thoughtless, just dropping that horrible news upon Granny Erina the way you did!” he growled, grabbing the man by his collar and hefting him firmly upright. “Don’t you see how much distress you’ve caused her?”

 

The punch that slammed the thoughtless oaf back into the table he’d been sitting at allowed him to let off some of the tension simmering away inside of him, but it was at least enough that he could offer what comfort he could to Granny Erina.

 

“Don’t worry, Granny, I’m still here,” he said, gently wrapping his arms around her shoulders from behind. “If there’s any way to get to the bottom of all this, you can rest assured that I’ll find it.”

 

“I just don’t understand,” Granny said, her voice breaking on the last word. “All of our family works to do good in the world,” she sniffled, pulling out her handkerchief to dab at her eyes. “I just don’t understand how anyone could wish to harm us for it.”

 

“I’ll call Dio,” he said, leaning his head against Granny Erina’s for a long moment. “All other considerations aside, he’s going to want to know about this.”

 

“No,” Granny Erina said, composing herself as she slowly rose from her seat. “I’ll call him.”

 

“Are you sure?”

 

“Yes,” Granny said, nodding with a sad sort of resolve. “You and Smokey enjoy the rest of the night.”

 

Sighing as he watched Granny Erina leave, knowing that there wasn’t much of a chance of him being able to convince her to change her mind – she was almost as unwavering as Aunty Alice, in her own, quiet way – Joseph turned his gaze back to Smokey.

 

“Looks like it’s just the two of us from now on,” he said, making his way back over to where the other young man was sitting.

 

“Yeah, looks like,” Smokey said, looking off in the direction that Granny Erina had left in for a long moment. “Anyway, I’m sure your family’s all right.”

 

“Yes,” he said, smiling softly. “We Joestars have a knack for surviving even the worst sorts of calamities.”

 

“Yeah,” Smokey said, though the expression that passed briefly over his face suggested that he might’ve wanted to say something more.

 

Still, it was probably the same sort of question that Joseph had found himself on the receiving end of often enough that he’d come to be able to predict it even when the potential asker fancied themselves too polite to say anything. The question being, of course, why exactly Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio  – if they were members of the Joestar family – did not share the same surname. And yes, there had been times when he’d wondered just that same kind of thing himself, but both Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio did share the same surname.

 

The pair of them just chose not to use it on any but the most binding of legal documents.

 

Asking Smokey if he knew of anyplace to eat where there weren’t going to be large crowds of people all wondering about what he’d just done ended up leading the pair of them to a quaint little café by the name of Irene’s. Looking to distract himself from all of the terrible revelations of what had seemed to be a perfectly agreeable day, Joseph began idly flipping through the pages of the magazine in front of him.

 

Well, that would certainly be distracting, he mused, good-humor only slightly strained by what he remembered. “Smokey, do you think this could be true? Could girls really make them bigger?” holding his hands up to his chest, mimicking the look of an actual brassier, Joseph played up his surprise for both their benefit and his own amusement.

 

“Let me see that,” Smokey said, either playing along for his own amusement, or just trying to be of help in his own fashion. “Go from an A cup to a C cup… Nah, it’s just a lot of snake-oil.”

 

However, he’d glimpsed a strange figure standing just outside the large, front windows of the café, and so could spare little attention for what else Smokey might have said. The figure he was seeing seemed to be rather tall, but was either rather bulky or wearing shapeless clothes underneath their cloak, because they – their clothes concealed too much for Joseph to tell if he was facing a man or a woman – did not seem to have the kind of defined musculature that he was used to seeing.

 

The head-wrap, covering every centimeter aside from a narrow strip across his eyes, was something that Joseph had only truly seen in movies and the like.

 

“Well now,” he said, having made his way out of the café so that he would be better able to speak to the newcomer who had seemed so particularly interested in him when he was merely sitting in the café after having a light meal. “You’re wearing quite the odd outfit. Really, it’s not that cold out tonight, so why don’t you take off that bulky coat of yours and come inside?” The newcomer continuing holding their silence, so Joseph offered them a smile. “Come on, I’m sure you have a very pretty face under all those wrappings, so why don’t you-” A ringing, metallic clatter drew Joseph’s attention to the ground, where… “Where did you get that?” he snarled, eyes narrowing in fury.

 

The infuriating bastard merely continued staring at him, not seeming to care in the slightest for the bolt from Aunty Alice’s steel-bow that now lay at both their feet.

 

“Don’t trifle with me, you masked bastard!” Lunging to grab the trailing edge of the cloak saw him only grasping air, as the bastard dodged back and away from him, coming to stand directly in front of the window that Joseph had first caught sight of him through. “All right, if you’re not going to answer me, then eat this!”

 

The Thompson sub-machine gun roared in his hands, as he let loose a relentless barrage of firepower into the callous bastard who’d just gone and dumped such a terrible, shocking revelation upon him without even a by-your-leave. He’d have thought it was that same bastard from the restaurant, but the eyes were wrong for that, and the stance itself was rather different. He didn’t know just who this bastard was, but he was going to personally ensure that they learned their proper lesson about tact.

 

When he stomped over to the broken window, before the near-empty café, peering into the darkness to see if he could catch a glimpse of that masked bastard, Joseph pursed his lips in annoyance at the shrieks and screaming coming from all around him. Really, you’d think he’d actually been aiming at people, the way they were carrying on. After driving a few stubborn girls off, Joseph looked down to see that Smokey was standing right beside him.

 

“Joseph, what the hell?! You just tried to shoot someone!”

 

Shaking his head, not having the patience to talk when that masked bastard was right in front of him – practically taunting him by removing the cloak and head-wrappings to reveal-

 

“Straizo?!”

 

“I had to be certain of your resolve, Joseph,” the vampire said, shaking debris from his now-tattered cloak. “I assume, given your reaction, you’re aware of the situation in Mexico?”

 

“Yeah, I heard about it a few hours before you showed up,” he said, as his Auntie’s retainer fell into step with him and the pair of them stepped across through the blown-out remains of the café window.

 

“Wait, you just shot him!” Smokey exclaimed, catching up to the pair of them, his eyes a bit wild as he shifted his gaze from him to Straizo and back again. “How is he so calm after that? In fact… how is he even alive?”

 

He laughed. “Please, Straizo’s a vampire. He can walk that kind of thing off, no problem.”

 

“A vampire?!”

 

“He isn’t aware of our circumstances?” Straizo asked, turning a raised eyebrow on him.

 

“Ah,” he laughed sheepishly, rubbing the back of his head. “Well, I’d only just met him around… I think it was just before noon?”

 

“So, he’s had little time to become accustomed to our bizarre circumstances,” Straizo said, fangs visible for a moment as he sighed. “You’re far too impulsive, Joseph Joestar.”

 

Grinning slightly as Straizo swept up the bolt he’d probably picked from one of the engines of the destroyed trucks he’d heard about, Joseph sighed. It seemed as though even he’d underestimated his Aunty and Speedwagon; they’d probably gone somewhere to regroup after the attack, since it had probably either destroyed or damaged a lot of their gear.

Chapter 18: A Matter Of Trust

Chapter Text

“So, what did happen down in Mexico?” he asked, returning his attention to Straizo as the pair of them began making their way away from the remains of the café.

 

“It’s a rather involved story,” Straizo said, folding up his tattered cloak and draping it over his left arm.

 

“Tell me.”

 

And so, Joseph heard the story of what had happened down in Mexico, even as he himself had been taking the time to accustom himself to the ebb and flow of life within the city of New York. There were quite a few exciting moments: Straizo and Aunty Alice combining their strength to throw over one of the large transport trucks, Gramps slamming a Hamon-powered punch into the ground and using the shockwaves to knock the soldiers assaulting them on their arses, Aunty Alice using her steel-bow to destroy the engines of the trucks; and, even near the end of the battle, after the soldiers had brought out a large UV light in an effort to disable both Aunty Alice and Straizo, Aunty Alice had been able to shelter behind her umbrella, and destroy the light by throwing her sword deep into the lens. That was all Straizo had been able to observe, however, since Aunty Alice had ordered Straizo to leave the battleground and make contact with him in New York.

 

Still, knowing that Gramps, Aunty Alice, and Speedwagon were all captives of the German army…

 

“Billie Jean, New York Post!” blinking at the cute, short-haired blonde girl with honey-brown eyes that had all but jumped in front of him while he’d been mulling over Straizo’s words, Joseph stopped short. “What do either of you two know about the mysterious shooting incident that took place not a few hours ago tonight?”

 

“Uh,” he responded, feeling about as awkward as he ever had. “No?”

 

“Come on, you must have at least heard something,” the reporter smiled slyly, then. “Or, were you and your girlfriend too busy to listen to anything that might’ve been going on?”

 

“I am not a woman, madam,” Straizo said, as Joseph tried not-very-hard to hold back a burst of laughter.

 

Grinning at Straizo once the reporter had left in search of someone who’d actually tell her something about the scuffle he and Straizo had gotten into not so long ago, Joseph pointed at his Auntie’s retainer. “The next thing you’ll say is: you’re insufferable, Joseph Joestar.”

 

“You’re insufferable, Joseph Joestar,” Straizo said, then harrumphed at him.

 

“Anyway, before we end up getting interrupted again, what did you, Speedwagon, Gramps, and Aunty Alice all go down to Mexico for?”

 

“We were searching out a means of destroying the man within the pillar,” Straizo said, eyes narrowing slightly in thought. “It was likely, if we’d not been interrupted so soon as we had, that your grandfather’s Hamon would have meant the end of the creature.”

 

“A pillar man?” he echoed, thoughts already turning toward just how he might be able to rescue his family from the Germans.

 

If there was anything that he could find to do, Joseph was certain Straizo would help in every way he could manage.

 

=BT=

 

Looking back at the trio following reluctantly behind him, Rudol von Stroheim found his gaze almost naturally drawn towards Frau Brando. The Führer hardly approved of her, but then the Führer was a fool in most aspects; anyone who would deny advancement to fully half of their population simply because they had unreasonable hang-ups about the proper position of the sexes was clearly not in full possession of their senses. Every time he found himself thinking about all of the potentially brilliant engineers, doctors, and scientists that the Führer’s foolishness was depriving them of, Rudol would find himself clenching his teeth in annoyance. Getting ahead in life was not a matter of sex, it was a matter of strength.

 

One had only to look to the accomplishments of Frau Brando to see just what kind of strength a woman could possess.

 

“Now, Herr Joestar, I think you underestimate us,” he said, turning his attention back to the British Hamon Master who had come to them from Tibet. “This entire complex is the product of German science, the finest in the world!”

 

“You’ve little enough experience with vampires, and now you seek to take possession of a creature that seems to have been involved with the very creation of the Stone Masks,” Herr Joestar said, his expression one of clear worry and disapproval. “You’re risking the lives of all the men under your command if that pillar man escapes his binds!”

 

“Herr Joestar, you’ve no cause to worry,” he said, smiling calmly back at the man. It was fascinating, the strength that Hamon could grant to those who used it, granting even a fifty-year-old man the means to fight at a level even his elite soldiers could not quite manage. “This bunker is in the middle of the desert; even if that pillar man was to escape, he would find no place to hide from the sun. Unlike your sister, he has no means of shielding himself from it. Now, if you’d be willing to excuse me for a few moments, I must attend to some business.”

 

“I certainly hope that this business of yours doesn’t involve those poor, shrieking wretches I heard through the walls when we came in,” Frau Brando said, red eyes narrowing as she studied him. “I’d hate to be forced to throw a train at your head.”

 

“You heard them?” he asked, intrigued all over again by the vampire woman trailing slightly behind him.

 

“You have no idea how well sound carries through steel walls, do you?” Frau Brando said, a tight, small smile settling upon her lips before fading almost as quickly as it had appeared.

 

“Is that true, sir? Are you truly holding people against their will in this complex of yours?!” Herr Joestar demanded, his disapproval of the situation clear in every line of his weathered face; truly, the Hamon Master had the kindest of hearts.

 

Stroheim could respect such a man: Herr Joestar’s kindness was just as much a part of him as his courage, but it was a known fact that such men often needed to be shielded from the true nature of the world, lest they spread themselves too thin in a vain attempt to combat it.

 

“It’s nothing for you and yours to be concerned about,” he said, nodding calmly to the three of them while making a discreet motion to his soldiers. “These men will escort you to the viewing area. I myself will be joining you once I have secured the materials for our experiment.”

 

=BT=

 

Eyes narrowed upon the man’s back as Stroheim swiftly departed their company, Jonathan turned his attention to his and Dio’s sister; she was, after all, the one with holdings in Germany and hence was far more likely to have had dealings with the sorts of men that Stroheim represented.

 

“Alice, what dealings have you had with these men?” he asked. “I’ve seen they way you look at them, and it’s clear you’ve little patience for the lot. Also, I don’t fully trust the avarice in their eyes,” he said, leaning in slightly so that he could speak in a lower tone.

 

Alice had said, and he’d learned well, that whispering tended to draw more attention than it deflected.

 

“You’d be right not to,” she muttered, carmine eyes narrowing as they took in the men hustling from place to place within the complex they had been taken into.

 

“What do you mean?” he asked, feeling a chill that had little to do with the re-circulated air within the complex.

 

“This isn’t really the place to get into that kind of thing,” Alice said with the same, icy calm that had descended upon her once she had realized just who it was that had taken such an interest in them; the calm that only gripped her when his and Dio’s sister was truly infuriated. “Still, if you do want all the gory details, I’ll tell you what I’ve found out.”

 

Her words did nothing to reassure him, quite the opposite, in fact; still, like as not, Alice knew these Nazis better than he did. He would trust her judgment, though he misliked the look of every one of the men in this complex.

 

“I’m glad to see you all made it without incident,” Stroheim said, making his way over to the door the three of them had come to a stop just in front of. “I’ve prepared the supplies for the blood-feeding experiment, so now the four of us will be able to observe the results in safety and comfort.”

 

“This creature was found surrounded by Stone Masks, and clearly has some kind of connection not only to them but to vampires as well, and you wish to risk awakening it with blood?!” he demanded, grabbing the foolish man’s shoulders and spinning him about so that the pair of them could face each other squarely. “Have you taken leave of your senses?!”

 

“This is something that must be done,” Stroheim said, his tone harsh.

 

A short, sharp laugh drew his attention to Alice. “The greatest atrocities in the world, and they all start out as something that just needs to be done,” his and Dio’s sister narrowed her eyes.

 

“My sister has the right of it,” he said, when Alice did not seem apt to say any more. “This mad scheme of yours will bring only disaster to the world! You must allow me to destroy that creature!”

 

“Commence with the blood-feeding,” Stroheim said, turning away from the three of them and making his way over to a pair of lab-coated scientists manning some form of controls.

 

“Stroheim!” he exclaimed, all but throwing himself forward.

 

The ominous sound of weapons being readied was a harsh reminder that, for all he or Alice would be able to protect themselves from the weapons that these men could bring to bear against them, it was Speedwagon’s life that would be at risk if he were to do anything foolish.

 

“This is not something that can be stopped, Herr Joestar,” Stroheim said, the cold determination in his eyes chilling Jonathan to the core; this was not a man they would be able to reason with.

 

=BT=

 

The feel of Straizo’s icy cold chest pressing into his back made their trip across the desert a whole lot easier, but there was still something nagging at his mind.

 

“Is that presence you’ve been feeling still out there, Straizo?” Joseph asked, as he guided the motorcycle the pair of them were riding deeper into the Mexican desert.

 

“Yes,” his Aunty Alice’s retainer said after a moment’s pause; though he sounded slightly annoyed. “I still haven’t managed to determine just where they plan to strike. For a human, they’re both swift and agile.”

 

“Perfect,” he muttered, rolling his eyes. “I’d hoped that we wouldn’t end up having to fight, particularly in a place like this, but it’s starting to look like we don’t have a choice.”

 

Straizo hummed softly, and Joseph knew what he was thinking: as a vampire, he’d need to stay under his hood in order to make sure that none of the lethal sunlight bathing this entire desert fell on him, so there wouldn’t be much he could do if it came down to a fight against whoever it was tailing them. Still, Straizo had never been the kind of person who could just stand aside if someone threatened those who he saw to be under his protection. Much as he didn’t want it to happen, it looked like they were going to have to deal with whoever it was tailing them before they could see about rescuing Aunty Alice, Gramps, and Speedwagon.

 

“About how close would you say they are now, Straizo?”

 

“Drawing closer, but whatever they’re wearing dampens the vibrations that I’d otherwise use to sense them,” Straizo said, and if the two of them had been able to face each other, Joseph knew that he would have seen the vampire’s eyes narrowed in annoyance.

 

“And I can’t exactly use Hamon-sensing with you on my back,” he muttered, thinking aloud for both their benefits. “It looks like we might have to stop for a bit.”

 

“Yes, it seems you’re right.”

 

Sliding to an easy stop, Joseph turned his motorcycle so that it wouldn’t tip over when he and Straizo climbed off, then stepped down on the kickstand to prop it up. Turning to look back at his Auntie’s retainer as Straizo stepped down from the other side, Joseph chuckled softly as he caught sight of the wrappings that Straizo had pulled up under his hood. It was one of the many ways that Aunty Alice had designed to shield her, Uncle Dio, and Straizo from the sun, but it was still kind of strange to see such a thing put to work.

 

Usually, after all, the three of them would be carrying those interesting umbrellas of theirs.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he caught sight of a tattered cloak drifting on the breeze – Straizo had left his own back in their hotel with Smokey and Granny Erina, so Joseph knew that it couldn’t have been his – Joseph braced himself for whatever was to come next. Whatever was to come turned out to be a tall man with a long, thin face, dressed in desert colors and armed with what seemed to be only a single knife.

 

“So, you managed to detect me even while I was employing my stealth skills,” the man said, bringing the knife up so he could run his tongue across the blade; Joseph pulled a face, not even a minute speaking to this guy, and he was already doing something that weird. “I suppose I should have expected as much from the vampire Straizo! My superiors were concerned when you departed from the battlefield so suddenly, but it seems that you were acting under orders after all!”

 

“Enough stalling,” he barked, starting to become annoyed. “Tell me, why were you following us, and who the hell are you, anyway?!”

 

“I am SS Special Forces Commander Donovan!” the man said, flourishing the blade he’d just been licking in a particularly disturbing manner. “And my purpose here, is to capture you and bring you under the control of the German Army, Straizo! However, I think my superiors would be far more pleased to have the two of you brought to them, rather than just one!”

 

“Oh, really?” he sneered, gathering Hamon to him as he took a stance; behind him and just slightly to the side, Joseph could see Straizo doing likewise.

 

Of course, without channeling Hamon, in Straizo’s case.

 

“Oh? You’re planning to challenge the power of SS Commander Donovan?” the man asked, flourishing his knife and running his tongue across the blade once again. “Very well, if the pair of you would rather be beaten down before you bow to the might of the German army, I’ll just drag your unconscious bodies into our base!”

 

Taking a stance, Joseph carefully positioned himself directly opposite Straizo so that he wouldn’t end up catching the vampire with any attack he made with Hamon. He could see Straizo doing the same, circling behind Donovan so that he wouldn’t be caught in range of any attacks that Joseph found himself needing to use. It wasn’t like either of them would need to worry about what Donovan was going to be doing, after all.

 

Laughing as Donovan’s knife skipped across Straizo’s left shoulder, Joseph continued to carefully position himself. “Did you really think that puny little knife of yours would be able to penetrate the bulletproof clothing that my Aunty designed?”

 

“I’ve heard all about your Aunt; Frau Alice Brando,” Donovan grinned, lightly tossing his knife from hand-to-hand. “Our army is very interested in her!” The amused expression on his face melted away. “What are you doing just standing there, little boy?”

 

Joseph grinned. “I’m distracting you so he can shoot you!”

 

Donovan barely had time to turn his head, before Straizo’s Space Ripper Stingy Eyes, well ripped right through his left bicep and caused him to drop the knife he’d been so clearly enamored of.

 

“Why, you-!”

 

“Oh Herr Donovan!” he called, grinning cheerfully at the man as he tried to whip around, clearly thinking that Straizo was the current threat. “Would you like to know what else I’m doing?”

 

“What are you-?” the German paused in mid-sentence, clearly taken aback by what he was seeing. “Hey, what’s going on with this cactus?”

 

“Why don’t you take a closer look, Herr Donovan?”

 

The Hamon-filled cactus that he’d been standing just beside exploded with the full force of a grenade, and Joseph smiled as he saw Straizo pulling down his hood and curling over defensively as the few bits of cactus-shrapnel that hadn’t imbedded themselves in Donovan’s face or chest bounced harmlessly off of the armored clothing that Aunty Alice had designed for everyone who did dangerous work as a part of her organization.

 

“Well, at least we know what he wanted,” he said, flashing an amused smile at Straizo as the vampire straightened himself up and finished brushing himself off.

 

“I suppose,” Straizo said, as Joseph finished tying Donovan to another cactus and the pair of them climbed back atop their motorcycle.

 

Waiting for a moment for Straizo to get settled again, Joseph smiled as he felt the familiar cold of Straizo’s chest pressing into his back. Nudging the kickstand back into place with his left foot, Joseph sent them roaring across the desert once again. They would clearly need to find some way to get into the base that Donovan had been blathering about, but Joseph knew that he’d need more information than he currently possessed in order to start formulating even the basics of a plan. Everything else would have to wait until he could make an actual assessment of what they were facing.

 

=BT=

 

Alice had fallen almost-completely silent when the three of them had been escorted into this viewing room that the Nazis had set up for their mad experiment, and Jonathan knew – beyond any doubt – that his and Dio’s sister was at her most dangerous in such a state of mind. While Dio’s fury may have been the more obvious, Alice’s was all the more lethal for the fact that it could so easily be mistaken for something harmless. If Dio’s fury was fire, then Alice’s could only be described as a glacier made of black ice.

 

Clenching his teeth, Jonathan forced his attention to return to the present; back to Stroheim’s mad scheme, and his own vain effort to stop it.

 

“How many innocents did you kill to extract the blood you’re feeding to that creature, Stroheim?!” he demanded, eyes narrowing; he could feel the same kind of fury that had long since taken hold of his and Dio’s sister building up within his own heart.

 

Only, his fury would not be nearly so calm as her own.

 

“You are a superior type of man, Jonathan Joestar,” Stroheim said, chuckling softly; Jonathan clenched his teeth. “Still, even you cannot deny the advancements we will be able to make from studying this creature-”

 

“You already have three of them, I don’t see what one more is going to provide for your people,” Alice said, in that soft, deceptively calm voice that signaled her fury to those who were not too foolish to take note of such. “Aside from getting you all killed, of course.”

 

“We would not be able to awaken those three under any kind of controlled conditions, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said, a smile beginning to stretch across his face. “I hear you’re something of a scientist yourself, so you must know the value of controlled conditions when conducting an experiment.”

 

“I also know the value of acquiring consent when you’re dealing with someone who’s not only capable of independent thought, but also of ripping this entire facility down around your ears,” Alice said, a plainly unimpressed expression upon her face.

 

“Come now, Frau Brando, this facility’s walls are fifty centimeters of iron, and the room itself is equipped with flamethrowers, machine guns, and enough explosives to blast that pillar into powder,” Stroheim said, the grin on his face far too calm for the mad scheme he was masterminding. “Advancing science requires a combination of caution and courage. We have taken precautions, so now it is time for courage!” Stroheim held up his right hand, clenching it into a fist as he allowed his madness to continue. “That was hardly called for, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said, turning slightly in response to what had, like as not, been a particularly unkind epithet in German.

 

“Oh, then please, allow me to clarify that,” the next thing his and Dio’s sister said was a German phrase that, while it seemed to be less outright insulting, still appeared to have some variety of negative connotation.

 

“Stop panicking and turn on the sprinkler systems,” Stroheim commanded; Jonathan forced himself to breathe steadily again, knowing that his Hamon would soon be required in order to fight whatever kind of horrible creature was about to emerge from the pillar before them. “Now, Frau Brando, we will see just who is the walking dead around here.”

 

Steadying his breathing once more, Jonathan returned his attention to the pillar in the center of the room. The blood that had been fed into it – Jonathan shuddered, and took a moment to apologize and to pray for those poor souls who had been forced to give up their lives to feed Stroheim’s mad ambition – was now fountaining out of nearly every crevice between the stone of the pillar and the shell of the man bound within it. The blood itself was swiftly washed away by the action of the sprinklers, but the man

 

“Look, he’s breaking out!”

 

Clenching his fists as he looked down into the walled chamber – he’d seen both Alice and Dio shatter steel after sheathing it in ice, so unless these walls had been made of some kind of cold-resistant metal, all of them were now in even greater danger than they had previously been – Jonathan forced himself once more to breathe steadily. Hamon was the greatest weapon he possessed, and while Alice was far from helpless, it would not have been in any way fair to force his and Dio’s sister to battle this creature on her own. Particularly since she had not been the one who’d been fool enough to tamper with such a horrible thing.

 

“His outer layer is transforming! It looks like it’s turning into flesh!” And indeed, Jonathan could see that very transmutation taking place before his eyes; far under them, rather. The scientist, clearly unnerved but seemingly determined to carry through with his work, continued reporting. “He’s trying to move!”

 

“Well, he’ll need a name, now that we know he’s alive. I know, I shall name him after the Mexican winds: Santana!”

 

“Stroheim, this creature is not a pet for you to name at your leisure!” he snapped, unable to hold his silence in the face of Stroheim’s continued madness.

 

“Three of your dearest friends are vampires, Herr Joestar, so I hardly see why you’re so eager to dispose of this one,” Stroheim said, grinning calmly but for the madness Jonathan could see in his eyes. “Still, if you haven’t the stomach for these kinds of procedures, than you can just look away while we take care of things.”

 

“Look, down in the chamber,” one of the scientists called, drawing their attention back to the center of all the horrors that had been happening on this terrible day.

 

“What?” Stroheim muttered, as the three of them stepped over to the large windows. “Look, he’s attempting to smell his way around, he’s-” Stroheim gagged, finding himself cut off by a vein from Alice’s pointer-finger that had wrapped around his neck.

 

“Please, if it wouldn’t overtax your tiny brain, do try to think of how you would react after waking up in such an unfamiliar place,” Alice said, her eyes narrowed as she unwrapped the vein she’d deployed from around Stroheim’s neck.

Chapter 19: Blow Me Away

Chapter Text

“Yes, I suppose you might be right, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said, briefly touching his throat with an amused expression. “Continue with the experiments! Open the door to the next chamber.”

 

“Is that a vampire?” Jonathan demanded, having caught sight of the poor wretch that was, even as they watched, looking to the man that had emerged from the pillar with the mad, desperate hunger that Jonathan had only seen in those few vampires that he had been forced to deal with during his training to fully master Hamon.

 

“This one is only three days old, so it’s nothing at all like your sister,” Stroheim said, a calm smile on his face that nearly contrasted the madness dancing in his eyes. “We haven’t given him blood him lately, so he’ll be wanting to feed as quickly as he can.”

 

Almost before Stroheim had finished saying that, the starving vampire leaped straight for the man who had been resting within the pillar. As the German soldiers behind him succumbed to their impatience and began disparaging the creature that had come out of the pillar, Jonathan narrowed his eyes in thought. It would not do, he knew, to be caught off-guard by anything this pillar man turned out to be capable of.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he continued observing the Nazi soldiers manning the checkpoint that stood before the base that Joseph had interrogated that man Donovan about, Straizo narrowed his eyes. Seeing the crude, piggish behavior of the men there only served to bolster his determination to see them dealt with. Still, they had not injured any of the women they were harassing, so Straizo found that he could wait to deal with them until Joseph had formulated a plan.

 

“Pigs.”

 

“Yes,” he said, in response to the disgust he could hear in the young Joestar’s voice. “Still, best to focus on getting inside, for the moment.”

 

“True,” Joseph said, and Straizo could see the grin beginning to spread across his face; the only warning most had before the young Joestar enacted one of his mad plans.

 

“What do you intend, Joseph Joestar?”

 

“You’ll see.”

 

He didn’t like the grin that stretched the young Joestar’s face, but Straizo was well acquainted with Joseph’s propensity for getting his way; there was little point, he knew, in arguing methods when they were likely short on time.

 

=BT=

 

“When we pass through the checkpoint and enter the Nazi base, Joseph Joestar, I am going to throttle you.”

 

Grinning in response to the vampire’s subdued grumble – really, anyone else would think his Auntie’s retainer was as stoic as ever – Joseph reached out to straighten his bright yellow headscarf.

 

What? I think you look rather fetching,” he said, grinning deliberately in the face of Straizo’s narrowed eyes. “I would never have expected canary yellow to suit you so well.”

 

“You’re insufferable, Joseph Joestar.”

 

Holding back a laugh through sheer force of will, Joseph smiled widely; these getups might not allow the pair of them to pass under the eyes of those pigs without incident – save for, perhaps, in Straizo’s case; truly, his Auntie’s retainer had the most lovely eyelashes to compliment his pretty face – but they would certainly put them off balance long enough for he and Straizo to properly address the threat they would otherwise have posed.

 

Getting through the checkpoint was, of course, not nearly so simple as just walking through in their borrowed disguises, but the stupefied confusion on the thuggish faces of the Nazis he and Straizo were, in the end, forced to fight would be a sight he rightly treasured. Not to mention the chance to see Straizo in a dress. Of course, he wasn’t about to mention that part of it.

 

Straizo really would throttle him, in that case.

 

Once the pair of them had taken the uniforms from the Nazi guards, he and Straizo took shelter under the shadows of a covered walkway to change into them. Leaving their borrowed dresses with a surprised trio of women who had been making their way up to the checkpoint, he smiled as asked them to make certain that Paula and Shania were both given back the spare clothes that he and Straizo had borrowed from them.

 

Needless to say, neither of them seemed to know quite what to make of him or Straizo; Joseph tried to suppress a grin, but knew from the disapproving look on the vampire’s face that he hadn’t quite succeeded all the way.

 

=BT=

 

Madmen! He was surrounded by madmen! Trying to calm his racing heart, Robert looked to Alice and Jojo as the pair of them continued to observe the goings-on within that terrible room where the Nazis had isolated the pillar man in a vain attempt to exert some measure of control over the creature.

 

“Jojo, you and Alice,” he started, then was forced to pause to swallow past a sudden lump in his throat. “You will be able to defeat that creature, won’t you?”

 

“Well, the thing eats vampires, so that’s going to make things interesting,” Alice said, narrowing her eyes in thought as she looked down into the chamber of horrors that the Nazis had caused to be built.

 

“It also seems to have the intellect to speak,” Jojo said, his gaze softening with what looked like pity; Speedwagon hoped that Jojo’s gentle heart wouldn’t come out of the impending confrontation too battered.

 

“Yes,” Alice muttered. “We’ll have to see how it reacts, before we can properly address it.”

 

The pair of them looked down into the chamber, Alice’s eyes narrowing as her agile mind went to work upon the terrible situation the four of them now found themselves facing.

 

“Alice, can you- Do you think you might be able to predict just how this creature intends to attack us?” he asked, feeling more chilled than ever at the thought of being trapped at the mercy of a creature that devoured vampires.

 

“I’ve some inkling, but I don’t think you’d want me speculating about that,” a thin, short-lived smile knifed its way across her face. “Wouldn’t want to give our enemy ideas.”

 

He swallowed another lump. “Yes,” Speedwagon could feel his heart pounding in his ears, and wondered for a moment how well Alice could hear it…

 

The thick, heavy steel walls around them may as well have been paper reinforced with matchsticks, for all the protection they could provide from the creature that had once been slumbering within the pillar-!

 

“What?! Where did the pillar man go?!”

 

“Alice?” he muttered, as the vampire launched herself across the room, kicking off the far wall and landing neatly on her feet as a sheet of ice spread down across the wall behind her.

 

“How long do you think that will hold it?” Jojo asked, already taking his customary stance and beginning to gather his Hamon as Alice positioned herself next to him; carefully out of the reach of Jojo’s hands.

 

“That was a fast-freeze,” Alice said, gaze trained upon the far wall, where the sheet of ice she’d created seemed to be holding firm. “If he’s really as strong as I am, he’ll-”

 

The sheet of ice shattered inward, raining glittering shards down upon the floor; Alice was moving before the first of them had a chance to clatter to the steel floor beneath them, and Jojo was right behind. Forced to blink the dryness from his eyes, Robert allowed himself a sigh of relief when he saw that the creature’s head had been frozen to the ground, and Jojo was bearing down upon it, fists charged with lethal Hamon. However, when the creature was able to force its own torso out of the way of Jojo’s strike, Robert felt his body all but seize up in panic.

 

“Fast, strong, and flexible,” Alice said, her stoic calm helping Robert to regain some of his own. “That’ll make things interesting.”

 

“Yes,” Jojo said, narrowing his own eyes.

 

=BT=

 

The creature – Santana, Jonathan recalled, though it was almost easier to forget that he had a name – leaped backwards into the air, the ice that Alice had sheathed his head in shattering into useless shards and falling away in what seemed to be the space between one blink and the next. Still, he’d long since become accustomed to the way that Dio and Alice could move when the situation called for it, and so Jonathan was not caught so flat-footed as their current opponent might well have wished. So, when the creature made a flying-leap at the pair of them, arms outstretched as though to grasp both of their shoulders – one in each hand – he and Alice were able to dodge by leaping to opposite sides of their current battlefield.

 

“He ate part of my suit jacket,” Alice said, sounding curious rather than afraid, as was her wont.

 

“What?”

 

But indeed, it seemed to be true: a chunk the size of a large hand had been torn free from the left shoulder of her brilliantly white suit, revealing to all and sundry the underlying layer of steel-and-titanium wire mesh that lent strength and durability to the armored cloth Alice had designed.

 

“Your clothes, they have metal in them,” the creature- no, Santana; no one who spoke so coherently could be called a mere creature.

 

“Indeed they do,” Alice said, narrowing her eyes as she and Santana faced each other.

 

“And you,” Santana continued, inscrutable gaze focusing upon Jonathan himself for a long moment. “You are a member of the Hamon tribe.”

 

Breathing deeply, Jonathan maintained the flowing Hamon that was the only thing protecting him from being devoured by Santana. Master Tonpetty had informed him of the history that bound those who practiced Hamon together; they were indeed the descendants – even if only in a metaphysical sense – of a tribe that had originally banded together in order to protect themselves from the depredations of the Pillar Men. According to what he had heard, there were indeed four of them… and yet, Jonathan would have been lying if he didn’t admit that he’d held at least some hope that the four of them would have chosen to remain dormant for all time.

 

Forcing his attention back to Santana – pushing aside the frightened mutterings of the Germans all around him – Jonathan steadied his breathing once more. He would have sought to offer Santana clemency, since his two siblings were indeed vampires as Stroheim had said, but there was something about the Pillar Man that gave him the distinct feeling that any such offer was more likely than not to be ignored outright. Jonathan could not, therefore, afford to let his guard down.

 

The sudden rattle and crack of machinegun fire drew some of his attention away from the Pillar Man named Santana. It seemed that the Nazis, not content anymore with merely standing upon the sidelines of this battle, were attempting to aid the pair of them in their struggle against Santana. However, the manner in which they had chosen to do so could hardly have been more counterproductive if such had been their very intention in the first place.

 

I’m bulletproof,” Alice scoffed, as the pair of them slapped aside the veritable hailstorm of bullets that ricocheted around the small room where they had all been confined in, he with his Hamon and Alice with the sword that she had designed for herself.

 

Unfortunately, it seemed that Santana was also capable of the same sort of feat.

 

There was no true signal for the resumption of their mutual hostilities – there very seldom was, when one truly entered combat – but resume them they very well did. Alice was the first to truly strike a blow against Santana, freezing his right foot solid and shattering the afflicted appendage into brittle shards, and for that Jonathan found himself grimly pleased. If nothing else, reducing Santana’s mobility would aid them in ending this battle before any of those they had chosen to stand in defense of could be harmed.

 

As though he’d plucked those very thoughts from their minds, Santana lunged forward, momentum off-balanced from his missing extremity, directly in the direction of-

 

“Stroheim!” the shout burst from his throat, as Jonathan himself lunged to block Santana’s path.

 

Hate the man though he might, no one deserved the horror that Santana inflicted upon his victims; even being devoured by a vampire was a kinder fate…

 

When Alice twisted around, positioning herself between Stroheim and Santana, Jonathan allowed himself to smile slightly; while he’d little doubt that his and Dio’s sister would happily cuff the man about the head and shoulders – severely, in fact – she was also not about to simply allow the man to be devoured alive if there was even a small chance that she could prevent such. Feeling distinctly more settled as Alice’s sword spread a patch of fast-frozen ice from the midpoint of Santana’s chest to just underneath his brow, Jonathan gathered his Hamon and slammed his fists into Santana’s back.

 

The Pillar Man screamed, flesh charring and crumbling away even as he threw himself out of Jonathan’s range, desperation clear in every line of his body. Knowing that he could not allow the Pillar Man the time he would need to heal himself, and that even with Hamon still within his body, Santana’s regeneration was clearly working to reverse the damage that Jonathan had inflicted upon him; the Pillar Man having long since shattered Alice’s ice. Santana’s eyes were the worst: the understanding, shading into fear as he was steadily driven back into the center of their battlefield and away from any of the helpless Germans he would have otherwise used to replenish himself.

 

It was a terrible thing that he and Alice were being asked to do, yet it was clear that Santana – and perhaps the other Pillar Men, as well – was both starving and had little regard for human life; he was nothing like Alice, or even Dio, who had both learned to temper their vampiric hunger. There was no hope for reconciliation in a situation such as this; only the knowledge that he must fulfill his duty as a Master of Hamon. Jonathan hated such moments.

 

Still, hate them though he might, Jonathan knew that there were few others who would not falter under such a responsibility, thus in the end it fell to him.

 

As Alice froze Santana’s remaining foot, binding the Pillar Man firmly to the floor, Jonathan breathed deeply to gather his Hamon a final time, and then lunged forward. His left fist slammed into the small of Santana’s back, his right into the back of the Pillar Man’s head, and Jonathan unleashed the energies that he’d been gathering. The Pillar Man named Santana died with barely a scream.

 

“If you’ll pardon me, Jonathan, I’ve some business to conclude with Stroheim.”

 

“Yes, I expect you do,” he said, following in her wake as Alice crossed the remaining distance between herself and the Nazi Major that had escorted her, himself, and Speedwagon into this terrible place.

 

“Gramps!”

 

“Joseph!” he exclaimed, turning at the sound of his grandson’s voice to see both Joseph and Straizo making their way over to stand beside him.

 

The pair of them embraced for a long moment, Jonathan taking brief note of a soft exclamation from Stroheim and then the whip-crack of Alice’s voice as she gave the man a proper dressing-down.

 

“Well, it seems we came just in time for the wrap-up,” Joseph said, grinning widely.

 

“I suppose you would be pleased about that,” he said, amused as exasperated at once.

 

Truly, if there was one area that his grandson seemed to have inherited from Dio, it was a firm rejection of any sort of work-ethic.

 

=BT=

 

“So, what’s been going on?” he asked, since Gramps wouldn’t have been this grim if there hadn’t been some reason for it; not to mention the fact that Aunty Alice was far too even-tempered to punch a man in the stomach and then proceed to read him the riot act for no reason.

 

Even if that man was German.

 

“There are three more of these creatures in Rome,” Gramps said, the main thrust of his attention clearly settling back upon whatever it was that he and Aunty Alice had just finished fighting against; then he seemed to come back to himself, his gaze sharpening until Joseph had the feeling he knew just what Gramps was about to ask him; he didn’t like it much, and he knew that Gramps wasn’t going to be happy when he heard Joseph’s answer. “Have you been keeping up with your Hamon training?”

 

“Uhm, well,” he scratched the back of his head, knowing that he was in for it. “Maybe a little? Off and on?”

 

“More off than on, I expect,” Aunty Alice said, having made her own way over to the pair of them with Straizo trailing slightly behind. “Anyway, considering our present circumstances, I think we’d be best served heading to Rome.”

 

“Yes, I think that would be best,” Gramps said, shooting him a disapproving frown as the four of them all fell into step with one another on their way out of the base. “We’re going to discuss this later, Joseph.”

 

He sighed. “Yes, Gramps.”

 

=BT=

 

She could practically hear the lecture that Jonathan was preparing for Joseph, and so Alice turned her attention to the travel-preparations she was going to need to make before they began making their way to Italy.

 

“I do believe we’ve had quite enough of your hospitality,” she heard Robert snap, in response to an offer made by Stroheim to arrange transport to Rome for all of them.

 

“I’ll be arranging our transportation,” she said calmly, still rather annoyed to have to be working so closely with Nazis; sure, she was doing everything superhumanly possible to cut down on the casualties that would have otherwise – and had been, back on her old Earth – been caused by the Holocaust, but having to stay so determinedly civil while dealing with this bunch of assholes

 

“We’ll send a transport for you when you arrive in Italy, then,” Stroheim said, seemingly perfectly amenable after she’d punched him in the stomach and all but called him a narcissistic, sociopathic jackass to his face. “Our people have been maintaining a constant presence to guard the three other Pillar Men, after you and yours did us the courtesy of properly turning them over.”

 

Shaking her head as she and the two other members of her family, plus Straizo, all made their way out of the Nazi base, Alice turned her attention back to what she was going to need to do once they’d all departed from this place. Considering their little punch-up with Santana, it was more than obvious that they were all going to be called on to deal with those other three Pillar Men if or when they started waking up. Here’s hoping those Nazis aren’t as stupid as the ones over here, at least, she mused, not feeling particularly charitable so far as the general intelligence of Nazis was concerned.

 

When the four of them managed to make their way out of the Nazi base, Alice found that the very transport she’d called from the first phone she’d had the chance to lay her hands on had just arrived to pick their group up. Not a one of them waved goodbye as they left, and Alice hardly needed to wonder why such had been the case. Once they were back on the road again, Alice let herself relax.

 

It’d still be some time before she and hers all made it to Italy, of course, particularly since they also planned to meet with Dio and Erina in order to reassure the pair of them that they were all doing all right. Sure, they’d all taken turns talking when she’d called them up at the hotel they were staying at, but nothing could really match the relief of a face-to-face meeting when one particularly wanted to reassure family or close friends that they were indeed all right. Erina and Dio being both, said meeting was all the more eagerly anticipated by her and hers.

 

Leaning back into the well-cushioned seat of their transport plane – Robert had had to firmly talk Stroheim out of lending them a plane, citing the fact that, as they were returning to America, anything bearing Nazi symbols wasn’t remotely likely to be welcomed with anything but armed weaponry – Alice considered what she was likely going to need, in order to properly address the threat posed by the three remaining Pillar Men. A new, bulletproof suit of clothing had to be first on the list, of course, since she didn’t want to go revealing her preparations to all and sundry while they were in the midst of combat the way Santana had forced her to do.

 

And, while she was at it, she’d secure some of the same make for Jonathan and Joseph as well, since they were both clearly going to be getting into it with those three as well; Caesar, being the Head of Security for Brando International’s Italian branch – though he’d taken a sabbatical, once the pair of them had heard the final words of Mario Zeppeli – already possessed a pair of such, one for business purposes and one for his off-hours. Because, as they both knew well, just because he wasn’t officially acting in his capacity as her Head of security didn’t mean that some unsavory type wasn’t going to try to make an attempt on his life. If only to say they had, before her remaining security forces hunted them down.

 

Still, her bulletproof suit jacket had proved its worth, even if it’d been in a way that she hadn’t particularly been anticipating; best she had more of them prepared, considering what they were going to be dealing with sooner than later.

 

=BT=

 

When the four of them made it to the New York estate that their family had established some time ago, Jonathan felt more than prepared to have a light supper and then head off to bed. This day of all days had been particularly exhausting. So, when the front doors were slammed open and Dio attempted to leap out and tackle him to the ground in a fit of what the blond was entirely too likely to term simple brotherly enthusiasm, Jonathan was all the more grateful to Alice when she arrested their brother’s motion in midair with a strong grip on the back of his belt.

 

“Not the time, peacock,” she said, her tone holding the same fond exasperation that Jonathan felt, himself.

 

Sighing, Jonathan thanked his and Dio’s sister for her quick action and continued on his way into the home that he and his family had made for themselves in New York. Dio and Alice’s holdings in Montana, while they were quite a bit larger than this place, always had the feel of hustle and bustle about them. Jonathan supposed that such a thing was only natural, as Montana was where Brando Incorporated had first been established.

 

Before the company had blossomed to become Brando International, of course.

 

“Jonathan.”

 

“Erina,” he said, smiling gently in response to the expression of fond relief that spread across her face as the pair of them beheld each other once more. “I’m so glad to see you again.”

 

“I’m glad to see you, too,” she said, smiling gently as the pair of them embraced for the first time in entirely too long. “I was so worried, when I received the news from Mexico. Dio, of course, was beside himself with fury, wanting to rush down there, attacking any and every German soldier he might’ve chanced to meet.”

 

He chuckled softly. “Well, you know how Dio is, when something happens to anger him.”

 

Chapter 20: Men Of War

Chapter Text

Looking down the hallway as he heard footsteps and the sound of a very familiar pair of people talking, Joseph smiled as he turned to Uncle Dio.

 

“Well, sounds like they’re right on time,” he said, grinning at the vampire as the pair of them settled down at the dinning table.

 

Uncle Dio laughed, not altogether softly. “Well, there are a great many things one can say about Jojo, but for all that, he does always strive to be punctual.”

 

Smiling as the six of them all sat down together at the table for dinner, Joseph took a wonder just how in the world Caesar was doing. The pair of them had met when Mum – who’d just returned from her last training-trip to Tibet with Gramps a year prior – had invited him to Air Supplena Island, to meet the student she’d taken on for herself. The two of them had gotten on well enough at first, what with Mum being his coach and all, but Caesar himself… Well, there was no getting around the fact that Caesar Zeppeli was a workaholic, a stick-in-the-mud, and just an all-around fuddy duddy.

 

And now we’re going to go to Italy to ask for his help, Joseph sighed, glad that they’d all finished their respective meals so that Gramps wouldn’t have even more of a reason than usual to get on him. Shaking his head as he went to go gather up his travel-pack of comics for the trip ahead – everything else they would need being either stored at Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio’s Italian estate, or was something they could purchase once they were in the country itself  – Joseph allowed himself another sigh as he finished. It wasn’t enough that Gramps is going to be all over me for not keeping up with my Hamon training. No, now I’m going to be getting it from Caesar, too.

 

Once he’d finished grousing, packing up almost as an afterthought, Joseph made his way down from his room to join up with the rest of his family. He could hear the end of Aunty Alice’s conversation, and then the soft click of the telephone as she placed the receiver gently back on its cradle.

 

“Is everything set up now?” Gramps asked, his usual serious expression firmly settled on his face; Joseph firmly resisted the urge to roll his eyes, since Gramps wouldn’t be happy with him if he saw something like that.

 

“Yes,” Aunty Alice said, with a look of satisfaction about her. “I’ve arranged our transport to Italy, and Elizabeth and Caesar know to look out for us when we arrive.”

 

“That’s good to hear,” Gramps said, smiling a bit sadly as the six of them all gathered together and began heading back down to the ground-floor of their estate, to make their way from there to the minibus that would take them to Aunty Alice’s personal hangar.

 

And, from there, all of them would board her private plane and head off to Italy.

 

=BT=

 

Once the six of them had made themselves comfortable inside Alice’s private plane, Jonathan attempted to make himself relax. Still, the threat of the three remaining Pillar Men – to say nothing of the final prophecy that Master Tonpetty had made before passing on – weighed heavily on his mind. Alice, naturally, had been able to tell from a simple look at him just how it was that he was feeling, her talent at reading subtle nuances of mood from even the smallest shift in a person’s stance and body-language coming to the fore again. He’d asked that she not share her observations with Joseph, Dio, or Erina – not wishing to worry them overmuch with matters they would not, ultimately, be able to change – and his and Dio’s sister had kindly acquiesced after he’d explained his reasoning to her.

 

It was, truly, the only way to ensure Alice’s cooperation: explaining your reasoning to her, and then allow her to speak upon whatever matter had been brought up for consideration. There had even been times when speaking to his and Dio’s sister had aided him in coming to a workable conclusion to some of the more vexing problems that he had been faced with. There were even times, though few enough of them, when he almost wished to tell Alice about Master Tonpetty’s final prophecy.

 

Still, it was a simple fact that, while his and Dio’s sister was determined to bend fate itself to her will, some things could not be avoided; and he’d no desire to trouble even a mind so agile as Alice’s with such bleak thoughts.

 

When they all arrived in Rome at last, the journey by plane being as smooth and calming to the nerves as Jonathan could have asked for, Jonathan smiled as he saw Elizabeth and Caesar making their way into the building that housed one of Alice’s many hangars.

 

“It’s so good to see you again, Elizabeth,” he said, smiling widely as his daughter-in-law rejoined the circle of their family for the first time in ten, long years.

 

“Mum!” Joseph’s voice was the next to break the comparative silence of Alice’s private hangar, and – as per usual for his boisterous grandson – all the more exuberant than Jonathan’s had ever truly been; as well, Joseph’s loud kiss to Elizabeth’s right cheek held all the affection that his grandson had for every member of their bizarre family.

 

As he watched the five of them all coming together once more, Jonathan spared a thought for both Erina and Speedwagon. He and Erina had mutually agreed that it would be far more preferable if she were to stay back in the Joestars’ New York estate, to say nothing of the effect that her presence – enchanting as he still found her, half a century into their marriage – would have upon his peace of mind, and hence his ability to fight. Yes, it was a fact that he fought all the harder with the love of those he cared for to bolster his resolve, but he could just as easily do such without bringing the members of his family into danger they were wholly unprepared for.

 

Dio, Alice, Joseph, Elizabeth, and Caesar were a far different matter; truly, there were times it seemed that there was nothing they could not handle, when they worked together.

 

=BT=

 

Sighing as he tried in vain to dredge up some enthusiasm for Caesar’s lecture, Joseph found his mind naturally wandering to just what it was that he planned to eat when they all made their way to the restaurant where they’d planned to discus their next course of action; those three other Pillar Men weren’t going to go and kill themselves.

 

“Jojo, are you even listening?” Caesar demanded, and Joseph winced as he felt the Italian punch him firmly in the left shoulder.

 

“Ow,” he groused, rubbing his shoulder.

 

“That’s your problem, Jojo,” Caesar said, frowning at him in that disapproving way he’d become so familiar with during ten of the fifteen years they’d been studying together; of course, as long as Caesar kept being so adorably fussy when he tried to “instill the proper work ethic” in him, Joseph was going to keep going on as he had. “You never pay attention to anything you should.”

 

“What?” he asked, holding his right hand to his ear, biting back a grin. “Sorry, I wasn’t paying attention.”

 

Caesar punched him in the right shoulder for that.

 

When they all made it to the restaurant at last, Joseph quickly took up the spot between Gramps and Aunty Alice; he’d have tried to snag the seat between Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio, but being thrown out of his chair once was more than enough for Joseph’s taste. After they’d all finished their respective meals – Joseph thought fondly of his Hamon-filled exploding lima beans, and the look on Caesar’s face when they detonated in it – Gramps was, naturally, the first to speak.

 

“Elizabeth, you’ve been here the longest, what do you know about the three other Pillar Men that Stroheim spoke of?”

 

“The Nazis took possession of them nearly as soon as Alice found them – clearly, they’d known about the creatures for some time – but she insisted upon sending some of her own people alongside them,” Elizabeth said, smiling slightly. “So, we’ve been kept reasonably aware of the goings on with regards to those Pillar Men.”

 

“They’ve also been asking us about our Hamon,” Caesar interjected, shooting him a snooty look over the expanse of the table; Joseph poked the tip of his tongue out at his fellow student.

 

“They also tried to tried to interview me about what I was capable of, as a vampire,” Aunty Alice said, a slight smirk on her face.

 

“What did you tell them?” he asked, knowing that, whatever it was, it was bound to be amusing.

 

“I told them to go talk to Dio,” she said, her amused smirk widening, even if only slightly. “He’s the one who enjoys showing off.”

 

Laughing along with the other members of his family, Joseph saw a pair of people – both about as different as could be: one of them in the harsh, crude uniform of a German soldier, and the other in the smooth, neatly-cut uniform of Brando Field Security, with the elegant, bulletproof great-coat that all of them wore – making their way into the restaurant with them. Turning to watch as the two of them made their way over to the table, Joseph grinned softly.

 

“Frau Brando! We’ve just finished making preparations for your visit!” the German soldier said, sounding particularly excited, though he looked rather young, so Joseph supposed it fit.

 

“If you and yours are ready, we can leave right away, ma’am.”

 

“Thank you, Simon,” Aunty Alice said, rising from her place at the table along with the rest of them.

 

Joseph found himself particularly eager to see what all the fuss was about.

 

“So, your name is Simon, is it?” he asked, smiling slyly.

 

“I’ve heard all about the owls, sir,” the man said, the expression on his face becoming one of tolerant amusement.

 

Chuckling as their group began to move down to the car, Joseph wondered for a moment just what all of them were going to see when they got there.

 

=BT=

 

When he’d first seen the huge form of the middle Pillar Man bursting free from the wall where the three of them had been imprisoned for… however long those creatures had been, Garfunkel melted back into the shadows to observe. If he was really facing something dangerous, Miss Alice was going to want as much information as he could carry back to her; true, if these Pillar Men did have the same refined senses as vampires then just standing in the shadows wasn’t going to do him much good. Still, he was one of Miss Alice’s eyes on the ground, and if that meant he was going to have to spend his life to warn the rest of her people about what was going on in this place, then that was what he was going to have to do.

 

It was just as she’d said to all of them when they volunteered to serve in her security forces in the first place: Miss Alice would spend their lives ruthlessly if the situation called for her to do so, but she would never waste them.

 

Holding himself steady, even as he watched the Nazi soldiers that he’d been stationed alongside be devoured alive by that Pillar Man, Garfunkel melted farther back into the darkness of the cavern, then turned and ran for the stairs. He knew that there wasn’t much chance of him being able to make contact with anyone in the city, considering where he was and what was likely to be chasing him, he would at least be able to get the word out to those who would be coming after him. His brother in particular wouldn’t be happy to know what had happened to him, but he’d understand.

 

Everyone who worked for Miss Alice understood, in the end.

 

Hearing the heavy footfalls of the Pillar Man closing in behind him, Garfunkel smiled grimly. The Pillar Man behind him, judging by the fact that he was allowing Garfunkel himself to set the pace of their run, was either trying to scare him, or else was the kind to think that every meal required a bit of sport. In either case, he wasn’t about to stop and try to think about just what his enemy may or may not have been thinking. Before everything else, he still had a message to deliver.

 

Reaching the top of the stairs, Garfunkel swung the hinged door out of his way and looked out into the darkened city before him. Spotting a streetlight close enough for his current purposes, Garfunkel prepped his electro-flare gun and fired smoothly into it. The hiss of escaping propellant, designed to be almost invisible to the naked eye, let him know that he’d managed; it almost felt like he was back on the range, having just finished training with the devices that every member of Brando Field Security carried at their sides when they were deployed in dangerous locations.

 

Eyes narrowed as he watched his chosen streetlight for any signs that he’d managed to hit his target, Garfunkel heard the heavy footfalls of his pursuer as they climbed up the stairs behind him.

 

“You’ve come to the end, human.”

 

When the streetlight flickered off, Garfunkel sighed in relief, even as he felt iron-strong fingers closing out his life…

 

=BT=

 

The ride would have been annoying enough, what with being crammed into a small space with Caesar of all people, but with the man’s friend Mark along it was even more interminable, especially since the pair of them were gabbing determinedly about Mark’s fiancée, and Caesar was also taking the opportunity to annoy him about the fact that he didn’t have a girlfriend waiting for him. He was just about to give a particularly crushing retort to that irritating Casanova, when the car they were all riding in lurched to an all-too-sudden halt.

 

“What’s the idea? Are we there yet?”

 

“We’re here, but take a look at this,” Gramps said, his serious tone cutting straight through any remaining levity.

 

Looking up the length of the streetlamp that Gramps had taken such an interest in, Joseph heard Caesar coming up behind him, but the sight of a streetlamp flashing the distinct code of three short pulses, three long, and three more short before pausing for a long moment… He knew what it meant; hell, nearly everyone present had been instructed by Aunty Alice about just what seeing this kind of thing meant.

 

“A lightning bug,” Caesar muttered, his expression slowly twisting into one of tempered fury as he stared up the length of the steadily pulsing streetlamp.

 

“Whatever’s down there… Well, at least we won’t be going in blind,” Aunty Alice muttered, carefully removing the signal beacon from the streetlamp, twisting it gently so that the clamps would disengage without tearing the delicate wiring within the body of the lamp.

 

Watching as all of their group each prepared themselves in their own ways to face whatever danger awaited them down in the depths of that cavern that the Germans had been working out of, Joseph began gathering Hamon along with Caesar. Whatever was down there, whatever had driven Simon’s brother to use the signal beacon that every field member of Brando Field Security had been equipped with for when they were forced to face dire situations, Joseph was going to make certain that Garfunkel – if he hadn’t run into anything too dangerous to survive – made it back safely.

 

When they came to the entrance of the cavern where the Germans had been working, Joseph found that the cover-plate had been slid back into place. He also saw that the cover-plate was apparently the Mouth of Truth, but he didn’t pay much more attention to it than to notice the thing. All of them had far more important things on their minds.

 

Merda,” Caesar hissed, leaning down to grab something from the ground, before even Gramps could take a step into the darkened tunnel gaping in front of them.

 

Before any of them could ask just what it was that had drawn Caesar’s attention, the blond stood back up. He was holding the gunmetal-gray uniform jacket of Brando Industries’ Field Security Forces; it was heavy enough to show evidence of the titanium-wire mesh layered within the inner-lining of the coat, and it lay piled atop the padded, impact-diffusing undershirt that served as further protection in the event that a member of the Security Force was confronted with an armed opponent. The entire uniform had, in fact, been lying haphazardly on the stone floor, at the top of what Joseph could now see was a long flight of stone stairs.

 

“Keep on your guard,” Aunty Alice said, her voice tight with controlled fury. “We may not know precisely what we’re facing, but it’s obviously dangerous.”

 

“I’ll bet you it’s those damned Pillar Men,” Caesar snarled, furiously gathering up the empty Field Security Forces uniform with short, sharp motions. “Mark, go back to the car and wait. This is no place for you.”

 

“I’ll take him,” Simon said, stepping forward so that he could put a hand on Mark’s right shoulder. “Boss? Whoever did this? Go get them.”

 

“We will,” Joseph promised, even as Aunty Alice gave a sharp nod and the rest of their group all began making their way down into the darkened cavern.

 

=BT=

 

Breathing deeply to keep his Hamon flowing, Jonathan made his way down into the darkened cavern at the head of the small group of warriors that were the only true hope that the human race – or Earth as a whole, he mused, reflecting upon the three vampires who had become, if not close kin, then at least friends – had against the Pillar Men. The cavern itself was dark enough that Jonathan suspected that something had gone truly wrong. That, combined with Garfunkel’s last message, and the obvious evidence of the man’s death that they had found at the top of the flight of stairs they were currently making their way down, made the fact all the more inescapable.

 

And so, as he and the members of his family – both extended and immediate – all made their way down into the depths of the cave where the three remaining Pillar Men had been discovered, Jonathan steeled himself for whatever it was that they would be forced to confront when they all arrived within the cavern.

 

“Wait,” Alice said, holding up a hand to halt them in their tracks.

 

“What is it?” he asked, just before any of the others could have spoken; he was certain they would have asked the same thing, however.

 

“All three of them are awake,” she said, his and Dio’s sister’s folded arms and narrowed eyes clear in every line of her posture, though the low light prevented him from seeing anything but the latter. “They’re talking about something.”

 

Talking?” Caesar echoed, speaking for the lot of them even as Jonathan himself looked off into the distance.

 

Indeed, there did seem to be three distinct shapes, moving within the darkness.

 

“What are they saying?” he asked, narrowing his eyes as he heard Alice humming in thought.

 

=BT=

 

“It appears to be night outside, Wham,” he said, smelling the all-too-familiar scent of chilled air, outside the cavern where the three of them had awakened after so long; he’d often wondered what the air of daytime smelled like, but such was only one of many reasons that he had designed the Mask.

 

Once they managed to obtain the Super Aja they sought, the three of them – the last of their race; the only ones who had not foolishly shackled themselves to tradition and convention – would stand under the light of the sun without fear.

 

“That is correct, Lord Kars. And, what shall be your bidding?”

 

“Easy,” ACDC said, the grin on his old friend’s face stretching all the wider, for how close all of them had come to their goal; particularly with the destruction of the Hamon tribe. “We will be searching for the whereabouts of the Red Stone of Aja. The Stone is the last piece we need, in order to complete the Mask. Then, we will unleash its power!”

 

Kars could almost taste it, that day when he and the rest of his kind would be able to drink in the sunlight, rather than cowering in fear of it.

 

“Of course, Master ACDC,” Wham said, still kneeling at their feet like a proper servant. “However, the human world has changed much over the years that we slumbered. Long ago, it was the Emperor of Rome whom possessed the Stone. Unfortunately, I am certain that age has ended.”

 

“Well then, we simply need to find where it is that the Stone currently calls home,” he said; the echoes of his own words, spoken in a voice that was only passingly familiar to him, made themselves known in Kars’ ears at that moment. “Do you hear something?”

 

ACDC harrumphed in amusement, still grinning. “Don’t they know how rude it is to come into someone’s home without announcing themselves? And then to go eavesdropping on us? How terribly gauche.”

 

Turning to fully face the group of humans, and the very familiar vampire who had clearly led them to this place, Kars found himself at least mildly surprised to see that there was another vampire – clearly a close relation, if their almost identical appearances were any indication – standing close to the head of the group. He could tell the vampires from their pitiful human brethren simply by the way their eyes were oriented: the weak eyes of the humans could not pierce even the feeble darkness that he and his own stood within.

 

However, the twin vampires who stood so brazenly before them, their gazes were locked upon Kars and his fellows; calculating, assessing… it was fascinating to watch.

 

“So, you were the ones who killed Simon’s brother!” one of the humans, originally standing near the back of the group as a subordinate, but then brazenly forcing himself to the forefront – the elder who had been standing there, searching in vain for their forms with his feeble senses, stepping aside with an inscrutable expression on his face – snarled. “You bastards, I’ll kill you!”

 

Laughing alongside the rest of his brethren, laughing at the foolish human and all of his kind who had said such words to them over the long centuries of their existence, Kars watched as the pair of humans – one light-haired and one dark – reached to some kind of containers attached to their waists. When they drew their hands back up, Kars found that – in spite of their strange forms – the function of the containers was at least familiar to him. He’d only a moment to wonder why even a human would have been so foolish as to bring a water-skin to what was inevitably to become a battleground, before the very water itself seemed to leap out of the skins, wrapping around the hands of the younger Hamon-users who were attempting to set themselves against Kars and his fellows.

 

He could see the Hamon energies that flowed through the very water itself, turning something that was either a harmless annoyance or a pleasant diversion into a weapon nearly as harmful as the Hamon that he could see crackling over the skin and around the fists of the elder Hamon user standing at the forefront of their little group; he wondered, for a long moment, just how a pair of vampires had found themselves entangled with the Hamon tribe. And, moreover, how it was that they had not been destroyed for the mere attempt.

 

Chapter 21: Demolition Man

Chapter Text

“Coming in, twelve ‘o clock!” she called, pulling Caesar’s arm to encourage him to move more quickly than he had been.

 

The three Pillar Men who had been preparing to charge them dove through what had been the center of their group, even as the six of them split up into groups of two in order to have the best chance they could of dealing with the three Pillar Men attacking them. Jonathan and Elizabeth had come together, pitting their longer experience against whatever ACDC – there were times when it was all she could do not to burst out snickering at the constant barrage of music references that the world as a whole seemed to live and breathe on – had up his nonexistent sleeves. Joseph and Caesar had naturally teamed up, and Wham had set himself against the pair of them.

 

Which, naturally, left her and Dio to fight Kars.

 

“I believe you have something that belongs to my sister,” Dio drawled, eyes narrowed even as he tried to project an air of nonchalance.

 

He’d never quite seemed to get that down.

 

“Oh?” Kars echoed, an amused expression spreading across his face.

 

“It’s no problem,” she said, as the three of them continued circling each other, each trying to properly position themselves, while at the same time keeping their opponent from doing the same. “I already had a spare,” she continued easily, wondering just how this latest dust-up of theirs was going to go.

 

She could get at least something of a read on him, but it was weird; like facing some kind of hybrid of herself and Dio, of all people. Kars had Dio’s attitude down to the swagger, but he also seemed to have the kind of calm that she, personally tried to maintain. Time would tell if he had Dio’s triggers, and would hence be relatively simple to deal with, or if he had her general sense of good-natured amusement at the world in general, and would perhaps be amenable to discussing another way to get what he wanted. Sure, it seemed that he was working on some kind of second-generation stone mask, but there wasn’t really a pressing need to kill anyone to get the components he would need to finish it.

 

Of course, for some people, that kind of thing was more a matter of want than need; time would tell if Kars was one of those, however.

 

“So, you’ve already made more of these interesting devices?” Kars asked, the smirk on his face widening all the more as he looked directly at her; his eyes were slightly narrowed, mimicking the expression that Alice had often heard described as being on her own face those times when she had found something interesting to investigate.

 

“Not that I mind, but aren’t we supposed to be fighting?” she asked, curious to know just how Kars would react to the idea.

 

Alice hadn’t blinked, having trained herself not to do so in combat over the five-plus decades that she’d spent as a vampire, and she was only breathing enough so that she could speak, but almost before she’d finished her last word, Alice found herself staring into the wine-red eyes of the Pillar Man who she’d only caught the most cursory of glimpses of, back when she’d pursued Caesar and a fleeing Mario Zeppeli up to that alley in the shadow of the Coliseum not so many years ago.

 

“Fight?” Kars chuckled, deep in his throat; from the angle they were both standing at, the hooded Pillar Man seemed to tower over her, and from the look on his face, he seemed to enjoy that fact. Prick. “I think I would much prefer that we talk, pet. After all,” he continued, reaching out to curl his right hand around one of the locks of hair she used for both enhancing her range of hearing, and sensing fine tremors. “We had such a promising first meeting.”

 

The meaty sound of Dio’s first set of finger bones being fired at Kars’ head managed to distract the Pillar Man for those few, crucial seconds that Alice needed to twist free of his grip, compress the lower half of her body like an accordion, and spring back up behind the Pillar Man good as new. She sacrificed the hair he’d been fondling, of course, but under the circumstances it was a small price to pay. Hair grew back, after all.

 

“Keep your filthy hands off my sister, Kars!”

 

What he said, only with less vitriol, Alice didn’t say, bracing herself for whatever it was that Kars was bound to do next; all other considerations aside, he didn’t seem like the type to take being attacked well at all.

 

=BT=

 

He still couldn’t believe it had worked, even now that he and Caesar were running alongside the Pillar Man named Wham, all of them searching for an underground lake. Of course, the whole thing had started when – after Wham had accused the pair of them of holding back, even with the Hamon-filled whips and blades made of water they had been aiming at him – he’d shouted that of course their prowess hadn’t impressed him, it wasn’t as though they’d had much to work with, considering the size of their canteens.

 

Wham had actually agreed with them, and now here they all were, looking for an underground lake so that the Pillar Man who had insisted on fighting them at their full capacity could have the battle he was so clearly longing for; it was just so bizarre.

 

“I can smell it, just up ahead,” Wham’s deep, steady voice echoed out from the darkness where he was, running along beside them; he knew that Aunty Alice or Uncle Dio would have been able to see through it just fine, and it looked like Wham was in the exact same position, the lucky bastard. “Soon, you’ll both have enough water so that you might give me a proper battle, Hamon users.”

 

How lovely, he mused, rolling his eyes. Still, it wasn’t like they were going to be getting a better deal; having a lake at their disposal would only serve to enhance their water-based Hamon attacks. Hell, they might even have enough water for that depending on how big the lake they were being taken to actually was. He’d have turned to share a word with Caesar, save for the fact that he already knew how good vampire senses were.

 

Given the way these three had been acting, Pillar Men had the same degree of sensitivity.

 

When the three of them finally made it to the shore of the underground lake that Wham had been leading them to, Joseph found himself smirking almost involuntarily.

 

“I guess this will do,” he said, feeling Caesar’s gaze on him, and turning back to grin at his friend and fellow Hamon user; this would be more than enough to use it, really.

 

“Wham, if it’s a fight you want, it’s a fight you’re going to get!” he heard Caesar shout, just before the pair of them turned to run out onto the surface of the underground lake that Wham had been obliging enough to find for them.

 

Synching his breathing with Caesar’s, Joseph grinned when he heard the sloshing of water as it rose up around the pair of them. He wondered, just for a moment, what Wham would make of what he had to be seeing. The feel of Caesar settling in behind him as their Hamon-and-water construct fully formed brought a smirk to Joseph’s face.

 

Whatever Wham had been expecting, he was definitely in for a surprise.

 

Breathing steadily and deeply, following the rhythm that Caesar had established for the pair of them when they had worked to perfect this particular construct, Joseph grinned as he felt the Hamon-charged water that made up the lower set of appendages of the construct that he and Caesar had made and refined together wrapping around both of his hands.

 

“Now Jojo, let’s see how this Pillar Man likes my Hamon Bubble Shot!”

 

Grinning, even as he maintained the steady breathing that would allow him to maintain control over the long water-whips that he’d worked so long to construct, Joseph felt one of his eyebrows begin to twitch as he caught sight of what Wham was actually doing. Is that Pillar Man laughing at us?!

 

=BT=

 

Leaping out of the path of a barrage of Hamon-infused bubbles, Wham laughed in delight. Truly, this was what he had hoped for when he had allowed that pair of Hamon users to follow him while he found a suitable body of water for them to utilize.

 

“A magnificent construct!” he exclaimed, throwing himself out of the path of one of the water-construct’s long, Hamon-charged appendages, as it buried itself deep into the stone where he’d previously been standing. “In return for showing me such a marvelous technique, I will show you one of my own! The Divine Sandstorm!”

 

=BT=

 

“Oh My God! He just threw a tornado at us!”

 

“Control your breathing, Jojo!” he shouted, even as one of the Pillar Man’s tornados slammed into the surface of the lake, throwing up huge waves and further disturbing the surface of the lake that he and Jojo were fighting on, causing the large bubble that he and Jojo were using to shield themselves from whatever kind of attacks that the Pillar Man in front of them was capable of using.

 

And yes, he hadn’t been expecting a tornado, but if he didn’t get Jojo to calm down, both of them were going to be in serious danger when the only thing holding back Wham’s tornados was his own Bubble Barrier.

 

“Oh come on!” Jojo shouted, as Wham leaped up and tried to slam another of those tornados down on them. “That’s not even fair!”

 

“Keep breathing, Jojo,” he reminded the pair of them; because yes, while he hadn’t been panicking nearly as much as Jojo, the sight of Wham falling down towards the pair of them with yet another tornado sprouting from the end of his huge arms hadn’t been good for his equilibrium, either.

 

=BT=

 

It was all Jonathan could do, after splitting off from the other members of his extended family, to keep his mind focused upon the task he’d taken up. Even having Elizabeth fighting at his side, her Hamon skills reinforcing his own, did not grant him so much of a reprieve as Jonathan had been hoping for. However, as matters presently stood, it was not any lack of skill on their parts that prevented himself and Elizabeth from overcoming the Pillar Man standing before them.

 

It seemed as though, in rather a complete contrast to Santana, ACDC possessed more esoteric abilities than simply being able to contort his body in ways that Jonathan had long since become accustomed to after so much time spent living with Dio and Alice; to say nothing of the regular visitations from Straizo.

 

“Well, it seems like the pair of you do know what you’re doing,” ACDC said, a wide grin spreading across his dusky-skinned face; Jonathan wondered about that, since it looked as though the Pillar Man’s skin had been browned by the sun, and he was fully aware that nothing unable to withstand Hamon would ever be able to walk unprotected in sunlight. “Good,” the Pillar Man standing before them grinned all the wider. “I haven’t had a fight this promising in two-thousand years!”

 

Leaping to the opposite side of the room, as Elizabeth did likewise, Jonathan just managed to avoid the spray of blood that coated the floor between them. It was yet another thing that, while he’d some experience from his dealings with Dio, Alice, and Straizo, made yet another point of contrast between vampires and Pillar Men. Because, while Alice, Dio, and Straizo all possessed the ability to draw in various liquids through their elastic veins, ACDC clearly possessed just the opposite ability.

 

Combined with the fact that ACDC’s blood had a marked and unpleasant tendency to melt through the very stone they were standing upon, and Jonathan could not help but find himself concerned as to just how in the world he and Elizabeth would ever manage to defeat the Pillar Man who had set himself against them.

 

“That was a very good use of your surroundings,” ACDC said, his tone actually sounding genuinely complimentary, as Elizabeth picked up one of the stay bits of rubble that lay on the floor of the cavern they were fighting within – if he’d had the time, Jonathan would have truly enjoyed exploring this place, considering how much of history such a cavern as this was bound to have borne witness to – charged it with Hamon, and threw it at ACDC’s head with all of the force that she could manage to impart. “I’m enjoying this more and more!”

 

Jonathan wondered, as he scooped up another piece of rubble, charged it, and hurled it with all of his might towards the Pillar Man, if this was how William Zeppeli had felt, all those decades ago. If, every time one of Alice’s new inventions – the spice packets that she’d thrown to disrupt Straizo’s Hamon, the explosive nets that she’d woven once she and Dio had made it to America under his very nose, and finally the titanium armor that she had constructed after fully establishing herself and Dio as a fixture within the American state of Montana – had been deployed against him, the elder Zeppeli had felt a flash of the same, smothering despair that Jonathan felt clinging to him as he and Elizabeth attempted to stand their ground against ACDC.

 

=BT=

 

The ceiling in front of them cratered deeply, because of course Kars would be able to jump to the ceiling with the same ease as she and Dio had been able to, and Alice leaped back and out of the way of the Pillar Man’s charge, all the while gathering another handful of ice-needles up in her hands. Edging back around Kars, as the Pillar Man stood up on the ceiling with them, Alice ground her teeth as he whipped around to face her again. Everything she’d been seeing from the moment that Kars had awakened from his stone slumber – however long that had been – seemed to indicate that Kars had some particular kind of infatuation with her.

 

And, while it was more than a bit annoying, it was also clearly something she could have used to her advantage in their current battle. That was to say, she could have, if Dio had been something less than rabidly antagonistic to the Pillar Man on pretty much every level that she could have conceived of. Really, it was kind of funny; the pair of them were so similar in temperament, but she was almost completely certain that both of them would have denied it vehemently if she were to bring the fact up in conversation.

 

Well, Dio would have, anyway; Kars was still enough of an unknown quantity that she couldn’t predict anything he’d do with any real degree of accuracy.

 

Still, that was something that this preliminary engagement was good for: more than anything else, she needed information. She needed to know not only what he was physically capable of, but what degree of mental flexibility he possessed, as well. Fighting Zeppeli had been so much easier after she’d gotten a good read on him; since, even with his skill in a combat art that had been expressly designed to exterminate vampires, the man’s sheer mental inflexibility had allowed her to not only surprise him with every new invention that she’d brought to field against him, but also to draw goad him into fights that any sensible person would have known were untenable to begin with.

 

Still, here and now she was back at square one, and on top of that it seemed that Kars was just as interested in her as she was in him; and potentially for the same reasons, as well.

 

Given the fact that the Pillar Man could see everything she was doing, the two handfuls of ice-needles she flung at his head did pretty much jack and shit, but the expression of amusement that spread across his face in the wake of her failure to so much as scratch him with the ice-needles that she’d pulled from the moisture lingering in the air so far underground gave her at least something to go on: whatever else one could say about Kars, he certainly had an ego.

 

=BT=

 

It was such an amusing thing, the way the little vampire tested him; she had to know that he could have destroyed her with the merest flick of his wrists, or else reached out to consume her with hardly a thought. And yet, she still insisted on testing him, launching attacks that he swatted aside, merely to determine what he would ultimately react to; what would draw his attention, in the end. He knew that Wham would have thought it the gravest of insults, that he was not being taken seriously by a mere vampire, but Kars knew that – above all other considerations when one was attempting to fight a previously unknown opponent – information was key.

 

In all of my centuries walking this world, I’d have never thought to see a vampire with eyes like my own, he mused, smile still firmly in place as he watched the young vampire leap lightly down from the ceiling once it had become clear that – with gravity now working in his favor just as much as hers – she would be best served by abandoning the high-ground that no longer served her purposes. Watching as she did so without the slightest hesitation, Kars felt himself smiling all the wider.

 

Clearly, pride was not something that hindered her in the slightest; yet another thing that the pair of them held in common.

 

He’d seen it in her the first time they had met, in that darkened street where feasting upon that unwary human had given him the strength to look out through his own eyelids, even if only for a passing moment. That sharp, pointed curiosity, even as she’d made her ultimately futile attempt to sever his extended veins and thus prevent him from feeding. The way she’d not even balked at tossing aside the sword she’d been holding rather than cling to it and be devoured like so many of the foolish humans he’d consumed over the many centuries he’d walked the world had impressed him, and Kars found himself hoping that the pair of them would meet again.

 

Now that they had, Kars could see that the calculating, assessing curiosity that he’d seen in her eyes the first time he’d glimpsed the young vampire had not merely been a reflection of his own when he’d seen what she was and how that other human she had been with deferred to her.

 

It was clear, seeing the way she prodded at him, that this young vampire possessed every measure of the curiosity that had drawn Kars himself to ascend to the lofty heights that his advanced biology had made possible. And, while the others might have easily dismissed her as a mere vampire, Kars knew that there was nothing mere about her. She would cut open the very world, just as he had, simply to find out how it functioned. Her brother was of no true consequence, just another arrogant vampire who’d clearly come to think far too much of himself in a world merely composed of humans.

 

Kars paid him as little mind as the creature deserved, a fact which plainly and rather amusingly served to infuriate him.

 

=BT=

 

As one more tornado in a long line of them slammed into the surface of the lake they were still standing on top of, Joseph braced himself as he and both Caesar tried to keep the bubble they were riding in steady, even as they tried to escape from the churning waters buffeting them. Their best bet, it was starting to seem, was to use bursts of Hamon-charged water to skip their bubble across the surface of the lake, and then making a run for it once they were back on land. Beyond that, Joseph couldn’t say.

 

It seemed like he and Caesar were going to have to figure the rest out when – not if – they made it back to land.

 

=BT=

 

Infusing his Hamon into the stone dust underneath his feet, Jonathan whipped it into the air, even as Elizabeth did the same beside him. It had become clear that – even for all of their prowess and skill – the pair of them simply lacked the sheer speed to outpace ACDC’s veins; to say nothing of the boiling blood that the Pillar Man could eject from each and every one of the openings in his flesh.

 

The cloth that he’d pulled up over his mouth and nose enabled Jonathan to make his way through the cloud of Hamon-charged dust that he and Elizabeth had raised to cover their escape without the worry of disrupting the Hamon they would need to maintain to make such a thing possible.

 

Running footsteps that didn’t sound quite like his and Elizabeth’s own, as well as the sight of darkly-clad figures running across the very walls draws his attention briefly, and Jonathan allows himself to relax slightly when Dio and Alice appeared beside him. The four of them, now having the benefit of his siblings’ enhanced powers of perception, were far more easily able to evade the Pillar Man that had to have been tracking them even through the clouds of stone dust that he and Elizabeth had been raising.

 

After he and Elizabeth had met up with Dio and Alice, it was not so long after that that they encountered Joseph and Caesar once again. Four out of their group of six – those who could use Hamon without the risk of destroying themselves in the process – took up a diamond-formation around the pair in the center, and the lot of them fled as fast as they could manage. Subtle flicks of Alice’s fingers – the sign-language that his and Dio’s sister had developed for those times when they couldn’t risk being overheard, but needed to communicate all the same – directed their group back to the entrance of the tunnels, but by a more roundabout route that enables them to escape the notice of the Pillar Men that still presumably stalked the caverns in search of them.

 

Once the six of them had successfully made their escape, meeting up with Simon and Marc in the same armored car they’d originally come to this place in, Jonathan finally allows himself to relax fully; they may not have struck any kind of decisive blow against the Pillar Men, but he could at least be content that all of his family – blood related and not – had made it out alive.

 

=BT=

 

While he, ACDC, and Wham swiftly departed from the caverns they had awakened within, Kars was only too pleased to allow his mind to linger upon the little vampire who he’d met for such a short time; the one with eyes that Kars had only seen before in mirrors. He wouldn’t have been at all averse to meeting with her again, Kars decided. However, having to deal with those Hamon tribe members who had attached themselves to her – to say nothing of her male counterpart – would be nothing more than an annoyance. Clearly, he would need to find a way to isolate her, if the pair of them were to ever have the chance for a proper conversation.

 

Smiling slightly, Kars reflected once again upon the Stone Mask that he had created for the last remnants of his race – those who had not allowed themselves to be foolishly blinded by fear and tradition – to use upon themselves. Perhaps I should look into creating another, he mused, feeling a pleased grin stretching his lips.

 

Chapter 22: The Stranger

Chapter Text

After thoroughly discussing their next course of action, the six of them had unanimously decided that it would be in their best interests if they returned to Air Supplena Island, both to regroup, and to train themselves for the next inevitable confrontation with the Pillar Men. Joseph, of course, had not been best pleased by the thought of further training, but even he had to admit that their dismal showing against the three of them – even with their clear advantage of numbers – necessitated either a more strict dedication to their training, or some burst of sudden genius.

 

Both of which would, of course, be given time to flourish in the peaceful environs of Air Supplena Island.

 

Once their helicopter had landed upon the pad at the west end of the island, Jonathan swiftly followed in Elizabeth’s footsteps as she debarked from it, and sighed with relief as he heard the others doing likewise.

 

Air Supplena Island felt much as it had, back when Jonathan had first set foot upon it, decades ago when he and Elizabeth had first come to the island in order to refine their Hamon abilities. There was the same air of peace and tranquility that he had come to appreciate all the more greatly during the more tumultuous times that their family had lived through.

 

“Plank! Brick! So nice to see you again!”

 

“Watch what you call us, brat,” Loggins growled, his tone far more exasperated than threatening; Jonathan could fully sympathize.

 

Grandson or not, Joseph was quite the trial when he put his mind to being so. Messina and Loggins, for their part, were quick to fall into step with their group as they all made their way into the compound.

 

“Joseph,” he called sternly, just before his grandson could make his swiftly-becoming-habitual rude gesture toward the building that housed the Hell Climb Pillar.

 

“Come on, Gramps,” the boy returned, more than a little exasperation coloring his tone. “I was stuck down there for two days!”

 

“Yes, and I believe a great deal of that time was due to your own stubborn insistence upon using the lake of oil at the base of the Pillar as a trampoline,” he said, turning a solidly unimpressed expression upon his wayward grandson; truly, Joseph and Dio had entirely too much in common for anyone’s peace of mind. “As I recall hearing from Elizabeth, you fully intended to leap the entire length of the Pillar, solely using the momentum and Hamon you had imparted to the oil. Which, while indeed a rather ingenious method of escaping the pit the Pillar stands in, was quite far from the point of the exercise you and Caesar were participating in.”

 

“Oh, but doing it the normal way is so dreadfully boring,” Joseph groused, an expression that was an easy match for Dio’s at its most plaintive, and in the veritable blink of an eye, there was Dio himself standing behind Joseph, arms wrapped around his grandson’s waist, grinning unrepentantly at him.

 

Jonathan sighed. “The pair of you are entirely impossible.”

 

Said pair turned their unrepentant grins upon each other, and then – simply because both of them knew very well that he didn’t approve of such things – they shared a noisy kiss directly upon the lips.

 

“Careful, Jojo,” Dio said, grinning as Joseph silently cackled with mirth; truly, the both of them were utterly incorrigible on their own, and only became moreso when in such close proximity. “If you keep acting that way, I just might end up finding a new favorite.”

 

“Aww, but you’re already my favorite uncle, Dio!” Joseph said, a sly sort of enthusiasm in his tone, just before he planted yet another noisy kiss upon Dio’s right cheek.

 

Sighing in a resigned sort of fondness as Dio and Joseph began playfully wrestling with each other, Jonathan continued on his way into the main building of Air Supplena Island’s compound.

 

=BT=

 

She didn’t know just what it was that Alice Brando was planning, but there could be no question that her Aunt-in-law – the vampire who had not only survived the attentions of a Hamon master of William Zeppeli’s caliber, and not only triumphed over him, but who had also managed to build and protect the foundations of an international corporation while she was doing so – had something in particular occupying her thoughts. She’d come to know very well the way Alice’s mind worked and so knew that, even as the vampire entered the code to allow herself to pass through the house’s security system, she was already considering ways and means of dealing with the Pillar Men who had emerged to threaten them and everything they cared about.

 

Elizabeth was pleased to know that humanity as a whole had such a mind on their side, even if Alice was no longer human herself.

 

Once the eight of them had made their way into the main house, the security-system resetting itself after the last of their passcodes had been entered, Elizabeth made her way up the main stairs to her room. While she did fully understand the necessity of planning for their next inevitable encounter with the three Pillar Men, Elizabeth knew that she didn’t have the same tireless nature as either of the vampires staying with them, and so the best thing that she herself could do was to get some rest. After a good night’s sleep, she would be of much more help than she would have otherwise been.

 

=BT=

 

As he watched Kars, his fellow Pillar Man hard at work sorting through a small pile of Aja stones that they had collected and brought to this place before going into their long sleep to wait for the Hamon tribe to die out, ACDC looked down at the block of stone that their leader had so carefully selected as the basis for his latest work.

 

“So, this vampire of yours is truly that interesting, is she?”

 

Kars grinned, looking down at what was clearly to become the latest of his Stone Masks; one with a rather singular effect, if the care his old friend was putting into its creation was any kind of indication.

 

“She’s unique,” his old friend – the pair of them had outlived most human civilizations given their respective ages, but considering how short-lived those creatures were, ACDC didn’t consider that kind of thing any real accomplishment – said, grinning all the wider as he extended his wrist blades and began making the primary incisions into the stone slab in front of him. “A unique existence; comparable to only one other.”

 

He knew the many and varied expressions on Kars’ face, subtle as they would have seemed to any outsider who might have been privileged to stay in the same vicinity without being devoured for their insolence.

 

“Would you like me to go and collect her for you?” he asked, his own curiosity swiftly coming to the fore; after all, anyone who served to remind his old friend of himself clearly had to be interesting in all the right ways.

 

The pleased smile that Kars turned upon him was all the answer that ACDC truly needed.

 

=BT=

 

It was more than clear, given everything that she’d heard about the various running battles against the three Pillar Men that her family had all been involved in, they would all be best served if they acquired some long-range weaponry before their next engagement. It was also obvious that, with Hamon being their best means of defense if not attack, she and Dio were going to need the second-generation armor that she’d developed. She’d been in the process of calling in to have the suits prepped and shipped out to Air Supplena Island, when the distinctive double-flash of the house’s silent alarm went off.

 

She wasn’t worried, at least not at first, since she knew that Suzie Quattro – Elizabeth’s housekeeper, who’s been taking more and more notice of Joseph every time her and Dio’s nephew showed up for a visit – had a bad habit of tripping the security system through sheer absent-mindedness. Really, if she didn’t know that the woman didn’t have a malicious bone in her body, Alice would have begun to suspect her as some kind of plant awhile ago. Already preparing the lecture she was going to give on the importance of maintaining proper security, particularly when they were faced with enemies like the Pillar Men, Alice made her way over to the main monitoring console.

 

Once she’d fully activated the thing, however, Alice swore softly and creatively in Italian and Japanese.

 

Picking up the emergency line, she hit the button that would connect her to Elizabeth’s room – as that was the other one down the hall that their unwelcome guest had appeared in, aside from Alice’s own – and paused to wait a few, long moments for her niece-in-law to pick it up.

 

“Alice?”

 

“We have a visitor,” she said, narrowing her eyes as she watched ACDC stride brazenly down the hallway that would take him to either her own room or else to Elizabeth’s, depending on just which turn he took down the upcoming fork in the path ahead.

 

“How many?” Elizabeth asked, her tone letting Alice know that the other woman fully understood the inherent risks of their present situation.

 

“Just one, but under the circumstances,” Alice paused, narrowing her eyes as the saw the Pillar Man pause almost in mid-step, head cocked as though he were listening to something far-off.

 

Vampire hearing being what it was, Alice wasn’t particularly eager to test the limits that a Pillar Man might have had. Pushing the small, recessed black button that would send the signal to begin evacuating the house.

 

“Alice?”

 

“We’ll talk later,” she said, narrowing her eyes as ACDC paused for just a moment at the intersection between the hallway that continued on to her room, and the one that split off towards Elizabeth’s. “There’s no point in shooting the breeze here.”

 

Just as she’d been starting to expect, ACDC turned his path down what Alice had come to think of as her hallway only a few seconds after Alice herself had finished speaking. Still, Elizabeth knew that their personal line wasn’t entirely secure anymore, and she’d sent the signal for a full evacuation of the premises. So, all that remained to be done was to get herself the hell out of Dodge.

 

=BT=

 

“Jojo!” Caesar called, just as Joseph had been preparing to unleash his Hamon Water Whip against his fellow student’s Bubble Launcher.

 

“The silent alarm?!” he exclaimed, having just caught a glimpse of the place where Caesar had been looking.

 

The light was a bright red, instead of the white Joseph had seen on every other occasion he’d been dubiously privileged to see it, but he still knew what it meant. This wasn’t a drill, and it wouldn’t be an enemy that they could actually stand against who’d invaded his mother’s home-away-from-home. Joseph ground his teeth, even as he fell almost instinctively in behind Caesar as the pair of them grabbed their emergency bags and hurried out of the training hall.

 

Sighing as he caught sight of Gramps and Uncle Dio, neither of them looking particularly happy about being forced to leave on such short notice, but it also looked like Gramps had managed to talk him down. Or at least get him moving, since Uncle Dio still didn’t look particularly happy about being forced to leave so quickly. Not like he was either, but Auntie Alice would drag anyone still inside out by their ears, and give them a thoroughly scathing lecture after she’d thrown them into the hydro-foil.

 

Still, even as he was mentally grumbling to himself about being forced out of the place he’d currently been calling home, Joseph continued on his way; making for the disguised launch site that had been designated as their meeting place in this kind of situation.

 

=BT=

 

It had been a rather novel idea, that the vampire his old friend had taken such an interest in might have devised a way to observe him from a distance – even through the walls that had stood like such flimsy sentries between the pair of them – but given what he’d heard her saying, just before she’d fallen silent in what had clearly been an adorably futile attempt to convince ACDC that she was no longer inside the room where she had foolishly trapped herself. This little vampire might very well have reminded Kars of himself, but it was plain that – for all she’d impressed the leader of their small group of remaining Pillar Men – this little vampire was still young.

 

Really, that could only make things more interesting; after all, if this little vampire of theirs had already managed to catch Kars’ attention at her age… Well, that was certainly something to take note of.

 

=BT=

 

After diving out of the large window she’d used more than a few times during drills for just this sort of occasion, Alice latched onto a jutting corner of masonry, throwing herself around it to bleed off excess momentum so that she could land more lightly when she inevitably hit the ground – vampire hearing being what it was, and the senses of a Pillar Man clearly being more developed even than that – and then hit the ground in a low crouch to diffuse even more of the impact caused by her landing. Alice could only hope that it would be enough, in the end.

 

Hurrying as quickly as she could, with only a single look back to make sure that ACDC wasn’t in position to catch a glimpse of her path as she made her way to the hidden launch site of the hydrofoil that she’d made a point of keeping prepped and fueled for just this sort of an occasion, Alice had soon arrived.

 

All of the others, including a fretting Suzie Q who stood between Joseph and Elizabeth, had gathered at that same point, and so Alice quickly made her way over to the hidden door within the hollow, artificial rock that she’d helped to build and install just to the right of the boat dock. Pushing it open, she held it just long enough for their small group to duck inside – with Jonathan giving her a one-armed hug in passing, and Dio stopping his near-constant stream of grumbled obscenities to kiss her firmly on the left cheek – and then ducked inside the small space, herself.

 

Inside was a space just slightly larger than the hydrofoil it concealed, leaving only enough room for the nine of them to pile in through the gull-wing doors, and then to pull them closed once the last of their group had gotten settled.

 

“I still don’t understand why we had to do this, sister,” Dio groused, and Alice could see him fidgeting in his seat. “We had several times that Pillar Man’s number-”

 

“Which would have meant precisely nothing, given the fact that Jonathan already said that ACDC possessed an omni-directional, mid-ranged attack that’s perfectly suited to dealing with large groups of attackers,” she said, turning just enough so that she could glare at her often-impulsive brother without twisting her neck any farther than was humanly possible; Joseph always tended to cringe when she did something like that, so she tried not to do it around him. “Now, put your harness on; we’re leaving.”

 

Grabbing the throttle, just as the sensor-triggered outer doors of their hidden launch site snapped open, Alice engaged the thing and felt the reassuring thrum as the hydrofoil’s overpowered engines kicked into gear.

 

=BT=

 

The sound that drew him out of searching the apparently empty room where the little vampire had clearly spent a great deal of time – if the lingering scents in the air and over the furniture within the room were any indication – was not one that ACDC had ever heard before in any form. In the broadest sense, he supposed that one could have said that it sounded like a drawn-out human scream, but there was something distinctly… artificial about it, in that case. Also, no human in existence – not even one who had been trained for all of their short lives in the practice – would have been able to scream in such a way for such a prolonged time. Nor would one of them be likely to bother, seeing little point in the act.

 

Launching himself out through the large window, ACDC landed easily on the grounds and began his search anew. It was not so long before he managed to regain his bearings and follow the trail that the little vampire had so obligingly left for him. However, when he came to the end of that very trail, ACDC found himself staring up at a large, dark-colored boulder, washed by waves from the sea and otherwise empty of anything that might have indicated just where that clever little vampire had managed to hide herself.

 

ACDC was just about to turn and leave, making for one of the other buildings that he’d left unsearched in his efforts to find that clever little vampire – truly, she was even starting to remind ACDC himself of his old friend, though of course a much younger version – when he spotted the subtle lines deeply scored into the face of the stone. They were far too perfectly regular to have been caused by any kind of natural cause, and so must have been the work of the clever little vampire he was pursuing. Pressing his right hand against the scored surface of the stone, however, yielded the most surprising result.

 

There was apparently a door set into the stone itself. Or rather a whole, if cramped, room within the very stone itself. The small room echoed with the same sounds of crashing water as the outside, if muted by the enclosure where he currently stood.

 

For all that it was presently empty, the small space within the thin shell of stone was rather fascinating; it was indeed something that Kars himself might have made, and just as inscrutable as one of his old friend’s inventions, considering its current state. So, it looks like you managed to escape me after all, little vampire, he mused, grinning at the empty room, hidden by its shell of hollowed-out stone. If nothing else, Kars would enjoy hearing of the exploits of his little vampire.

 

Truly, she was every bit as interesting as his old friend had implied.

 

=BT=

 

Settling back into his seat, just behind Auntie Alice and right next to Caesar, Joseph sighed as he felt the hydro-foil they’d all been riding in come bobbing to a stop.

 

“Signal’s been sent,” Auntie Alice said, and he turned to see her looking up from the control panel. “It should only take a couple hours or so for my people to pick us up.”

 

“That’s good to hear,” Gramps said, sighing softly as he leaned back in his own seat.

 

There was a certain air of unwinding tension from nearly every member of their odd family, and even Uncle Dio opening one of the gull-wing doors so that he could climb up atop the hydro-foil served to add to that. The soft sound of stealth-helicopter rotors brought his attention to the sharply angular, matte-black form of Spooky – or 59004-3, if one wanted to be pedantic about things – as it sliced smoothly through the air towards them. Good old Spooky, he mused, joining up with the others as the nine of them all piled into the helicopter.

 

“Thanks for being so prompt, Straizo,” Auntie Alice said, prompting a short round of acknowledgements that Auntie Alice’s retainer accepted with good grace.

 

As the small, dark form of the hydro-foil slowly slipped out of sight behind them, Joseph turned his attention back toward the matter of the Pillar Men. This whole debacle was simply more proof, as though any of them had needed it, that all of them would need both more training and better weapons if they were going to be able to deal with those three Pillar Men.

 

Leaning against the left-side window as the sea passed by beneath them, slowly tapering off into whichever nearby city they were currently flying over, before petering out into the large car-park and well-groomed grounds of Auntie Alice’s Triestina branch of Brando International. There were no cars in the park, not at an hour so late that it may just as well have been early, and as Spooky settled neatly down toward the tarmac far beneath them, Joseph found that he could only be grateful for such a thing. A feeling that was only reinforced as he watched a circular section of that same tarmac split neatly into quarters, the wedges seeming to resemble nothing so much as the near sections of a pie, just before they all retracted neatly into the roof of the underground hangar that now stood neatly opened to them.

 

As Straizo settled Spooky down on the landing-pad that had once been concealed by the tarmac, Joseph stood up and made his way out of the stealth helicopter alongside the other members of his small, bizarre family.

 

=BT=

 

Once she made it back up to her office, the last thing that Alice had been expecting was for the phone to start ringing; particularly since it was still early enough in the morning that the sun hadn’t risen yet.

 

“Who is this?” she asked, pressing the phone to her right ear before it could start ringing again.

 

“It’s good to hear from you again, Frau Brando.”

 

“Stroheim,” she said, rather unimpressed with the man’s penchant for appearing in just the places and times when he was least wanted.

 

“I think it would be in our best interests if we were to meet again, Frau Brando,” the man said, sounding as certain of himself and his motives as he ever did.

 

“What possible reason do you think I’d accept for working with a Nazi?” she asked, settling down in her plush swivel-chair – one of the first things she’d invented/re-invented once she’d truly gotten herself settled into the corporate lifestyle. “You are fully aware that I find your ideals personally abhorrent, right?”

 

“Yes,” Stroheim said, seeming to be amused by the particular turn that their conversation had taken. “I also recall that when one of our own men came to request that you begin producing those bulletproof uniforms of yours for our Wehrmacht, you laughed in his face, then told him to fuck off,” the man chuckled. “I truly admire one who is willing to stand by their principles, even in such trying times as ours, Frau Brando. However, this is no longer simply a matter of principles,” the man sobered, becoming serious. “Those Pillar Men are a danger to every living thing on this planet. Only one of them was a match for both you and Jonathan Joestar, and I received the same reports that you likely did concerning events in Rome. For the sake of all humanity, we can’t allow ourselves to be divided by matters of state. And, I can’t deny that, for all the advances that German science has made, we could do so much more if we had access to the resources of your company, Frau Brando.”

 

“You want to collaborate?”

 

“I think that would be in both of our best interests,” Stroheim said. “My people have been able to come up with a rather innovative idea for combating the Pillar Men, but the materials they would need to implement them have been diverted toward the war effort. If we had access to your materials and fabrication-”

 

“Yes, it is starting to sound like both of us have something that the other can use,” she said, curious enough about the man’s idea to give him at least some time to explain it. “All right, I’ll take a look at your proposal,” she said, debating for a moment whether or not to instruct him on where to meet her.

 

Then again, if he’d known where to call, then he probably knew where to find her, anyway.

Chapter 23: Take A Chance On Me

Chapter Text

Chuckling briefly to himself as he continued working on his newest stone mask, Kars reflected happily upon the story that ACDC had brought to him. Oh, my clever little pet, he mused, carefully shaping the stone claws that he would soon be able to set within the mask that he was creating. I can hardly wait to lay proper claim to you. Moving on to the more intricate parts of the mask, those that would crack open the little vampire’s skull and allow for the growth of a her own proud set of horns, Kars imagined the look on his soon-to-be pet’s face when he was finally able to lay his hands on her.

 

There was little question that she would fight; truly, his little pet was such a clever, defiant thing.

 

He would, therefore, need both time and care to cage her properly, at least until such time as she had come to fully understand her new status and place in the world. After that, they would truly be able to create things together. Of course, there would also be the matter of reshaping her from the mere vampire she was into the new, glorious form that he would give to her.

 

Truly, she should have been mine from the start, Kars reflected, a slight frown settling on his features as he continued his work. She should have lain beside me, in those caves that our people were so foolishly content to call settlements; should have stood beside me as I created the first of my masks. He and ACDC would have taken turns, marking her face with the designs they had chosen for themselves, at least until such time as she had been old enough to create her own.

 

He should have been the one to bring her out of the caverns; the one to teach her of the world and everything that could be done with it.

 

Truly, it was a frustrating situation; still, the fact remained that he had met that clever little vampire of his. And, even if she hadn’t been born one of his own, with enough time and proper training even she herself could be made to forget that. Smile returning to his face as he considered that, Kars continued about his work in a far better mood.

 

=BT=

 

When he and his chosen corps of scientists and engineers arrived before the proud, imposing form of Brando International’s Triestina tower, Rudol von Stroheim grinned as he considered the breakthroughs that he and his would soon be able to make with the aid of the vast funds and abundant resources that Alice Brando possessed almost as a matter of course. True, the vampire woman had made their mutual collaboration conditional – in that he was not to share any of what the pair of them created with the Third Reich in any way, shape, or form – but the Führer was a stubborn, prideful man, and would doubtless refuse to make use of anything that had passed through the doors of Brando International in any case.

 

Beyond even that, however, Rudol had no desire to find himself or his countrymen facing staring down the toothy maws of her armored siege-beasts; considering how completely the woman had managed to overcome the single greatest weakness of all of her kind, Rudol knew that it was all too likely that she had developed a means of shielding her most formidable creations from the UV light that would have otherwise destroyed them.

 

Stepping through the doors after a momentary pause, during which time Frau Brando gave them temporary passage through her security system, as well as a warning that any attempt to stray from the areas that have been opened to them would have thoroughly unpleasant and quite possibly dire consequences. He takes note of the warning, assuring the vampire that he will keep his people within the areas that she has designated for their use. He’d admit to some curiosity as to just what would happen if one of his own were to overstep their bounds, but Rudol wasn’t actually stupid enough to press his luck in such a way.

 

Truly, Alice Brando was not a woman to be crossed lightly.

 

=BT=

 

Working with Stroheim and his cronies had proved to be rather surprisingly non-terrible, especially considering the kind of truly spectacular ass the man had shown himself as, that first time the pair of them had been forced to work together. And, considering the rather interesting ideas he was bringing to the table, as well as the fact that he’d seemed to have gotten the memo that harassing any of her employees would ultimately result in the removal of his spine by way of his nose, Alice had found herself actually starting to enjoy working with the man. It wasn’t so much of a revelation, of course – that someone who espoused a stupid or abhorrent worldview didn’t, in and of themselves, have to be a stupid or abhorrent person – but it was a helpful reminder, all the same.

 

“Thank you for allowing us to make use of your facilities, Frau Brando,” the scientist that Stroheim had introduced as the leader of the team he’d brought to her, a man named Till Lindemann. “All of this would have been much more difficult without access to your facilities.”

 

“Clearly,” she said, smirking slightly as she looked out over the ranks of slowly-being-assembled constructs standing before them. “It also looks like you’ve been taking some cues from a few of my own projects.”

 

“Yes, Frau Brando,” Dr. Lindemann said, chuckling softly. “We have.”

 

=BT=

 

They’d gone straight down to one of the weapons-testing rooms, since that was the closest thing to a dojo they were going to be able to find in a place like Alice’s Triestina tower, and Jonathan had quickly set about gathering the tools that he and his would need in order to begin honing their skill for the battles that were soon to come. He knew that Alice and Stroheim – disapprove of the man though he might – were making their own contributions, but he didn’t wish to place any more strain upon his and Dio’s sister than he had already imposed. It would be completely unbecoming of a gentleman to do so.

 

And, even in such bizarre circumstances as he found himself facing so much of late, Jonathan would always strive to hold to the values of a true gentleman.

 

=BT=

 

Even with all of the freedom that he, Dio, had been granted as the co-owner of the company that he and his sweet sister had presided over the creation of, Dio still found himself restless as he strode through the halls. Those damned Pillar Men – particularly that bastard Kars – were an annoyance that had yet to be properly addressed. Yes, he knew that his sweet sister was working on some kind of project that would, like as not, give them all a far greater advantage over those arrogant bastards than they’d previously possessed, but he still couldn’t help wishing that it could all be done with sooner.

 

However, dear Alice’s staff were human, and humans all seemed to move so damnably slowly.

 

=BT=

 

“You’re sure you want to get into this?” she asked, narrowing her eyes slightly as Stroheim made his way into the room that his people had been working out of.

 

“I am completely certain, Frau Brando,” the man said, that same, stubborn look overtaking his face once again. “There’s too much of a chance that any other kind of control device might be destroyed during our next engagement with the Pillar Men,” he said, already beginning to remove his shirt. “This is the only way that we’re going to have any kind of chance at defeating them!”

 

She sighed, grabbing the lab coat that Dr. Lindemann  was offering to her. Even if it had been meant as something of a joke, Stroheim had clearly taken it seriously enough to submit himself to the process.

“All right, then,” she said, slipping on the lab coat and buttoning it up even as she made her way over to the table that had previously been laid out with surgical instruments. “Let’s see what we can do.”

 

As she organized her people, prepping for the surgery that she was soon to be performing – considering the fact that she did have steadier hands than anyone with a pulse, no one had seen any real reason to gainsay her on the matter – she gave half an eye to Dr. Lindemann as he and his prepped Stroheim for the procedure. They were about as professional as anyone could ask for, so that was nice; meant that she didn’t have to give them any more than a bit of a backward glance to make sure they were keeping on-task. It was almost like working with her own people, really.

 

For a bunch of Nazi scientists, at least this group wasn’t all bad.

 

Detaching her tympanic membranes as she finished cutting away the flesh of Stroheim’s scalp, Alice fetched the motorized bone saw from the medical tray that one of her people had wheeled in. Pinning back the flaps of skin that she’d separated, Alice activated the saw, smirking in a slightly annoyed manner as she recalled just how recalcitrant the man had proven himself to be on even the simplest matters. Of course, once she’d threatened to have him gagged if he’d opened his mouth a second time, he’d gotten the message and allowed her to administer the proper anesthetics while she worked.

 

Really, all this machismo is seriously a pain in my ass, Alice reflected, tempted to shake her head at the sheer, pointless absurdity of it. The sight of Dr. Lindemann waving to her drew Alice’s attention before she could act on what had ultimately been a mere, passing impulse. Taking a moment to both shut off the saw and reattach the tympanic membrane in her right ear, Alice turned her attention to him.

 

“What is it?”

 

“You couldn’t hear me?” Dr. Lindemann asked, the expression of clear surprise on his face providing her with a bit of amusement.

 

“I had my tympanic membranes detached,” she said. “Was that all you wanted to ask?”

 

“Actually, I was about to ask if you wanted me to fetch you any ear protection,” Dr. Lindemann said, looking fairly sheepish.

 

The pair of them shared a brief chuckle, then Alice returned her attention to the work that she was doing, detaching her right ear once again.

 

=BT=

 

He’d offered to look for that little vampire that he’d underestimated that first time, both since Kars had a rather personal interest in her, and because he himself was beginning to fully understand just why that was. After all, she’d been intelligent enough to recognize an untenable situation when it was presented to her, and instead of staying to fight like a fool, she’d been perfectly willing to retreat to a more advantageous position. It looks like you just might be a good match for Kars after all, little vampire, he mused, grinning softly.

 

He’d taken one of the long-coated humans who’d seemed to be a common presence within the city, devouring their body so that he could have both sustenance and a means of shielding himself from the sun, and found that they were actually some kind of secret guard force. They also seemed to be in the employ of the little vampire he was searching for, so that made things all the simpler. Still, ACDC supposed that he wouldn’t allow himself to become too complacent.

 

After all, the little vampire had already proved herself to be far more clever than he’d been expecting of one of her kind.

 

Tracking one of the others who he’d spotted in the same type of uniform that he himself had appropriated from the human who’d been unfortunate enough to cross his path, ACDC raised an eyebrow as he watched the human take out a small, starkly-white rectangle from what was clearly some sort of hidden pouch within the long, concealing, cloak-like garment he was wearing. The odd little rectangle had rounded edges, and a strip of some kind of darker material that didn’t seem quite like any kind of paint or pigment that he’d seen in his long life.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he continued watching the human who stood before the doors of a particularly tall tower, ACDC watched as the human stepped up to a small, odd-looking little panel by the side of the double doors. Focusing his eyes so that he would be able to see just what it was that the human was doing, ACDC raised an eyebrow as he saw the human take the rounded rectangle and run the side with the darkly-colored stripe through an indentation that had clearly been made to accommodate just that sort of thing.

 

It took a moment for even his superior intellect to decipher just what it was that he was seeing, but ACDC had soon realized that he was looking at some kind of lock; and, as strange a thing as it was to think about, it seemed that he was looking at some kind of lock and key.

 

Reaching into the cloak looking garment that he had taken from the human he’d previously consumed, ACDC dug into the hidden pouch there. Smirking widely as he grasped the strange, rectangular key that the human had presumably been presented with once he’d begun working for Kars’ clever little vampire, ACDC made his way over to the double doors. Taking out the odd little key that the human had been carrying, ACDC pushed it through the indentation in the same way that he’d seen the human who’d just let themselves into this tower that stood at what had to be the center of the human settlement it presided over.

 

Repeating the same steps that had gotten the other human into the tower had a rather odd reaction: first, the green light that had briefly flickered on after the human had tapped out an identical pattern on the strange tiles was red, and made a rather irritating buzzing sound; however, the most drastic difference was revealed when ACDC attempted to open the door; that is to say, he couldn’t.

 

The double doors before him stayed stubbornly closed, and there also came the sound of a deep, heavy thunk; as though something made of heavy iron had slammed into something else very much like itself. Narrowing his eyes – he would not be defeated by a mere door – ACDC raised his right leg and slammed it into the seam between the doors. He’d expected them to burst right open, but found himself laughing in sheer surprise as they held firm, even managing to repel him, if only just.

 

Well, little vampire, it looks like you really are worthy of Kars, he mused, grinning widely.

 

=BT=

 

“Standard procedure,” Alice reminded her people, narrowing her eyes as she made her way over to the central monitoring station. “Taio, bring us online.”

 

“Yes, ma’am,” Taio Cruz said, nodding as he brought up the view from the surveillance cameras monitoring the front of the building.

 

Lovely,” she grumbled, watching as ACDC himself turned around to mule-kick the front doors; he’d need something a lot better than that to get through her front doors, particularly since he’d already triggered the deadlocks that first time he’d tried to punch his way through.

 

Really, she’d tested her electromagnetic deadlock system against everything from tanks to missiles to various kinds of acids; ACDC would need something like a shaped-charge, or some kind of napalm-based flamethrower to get through them.

 

“It looks like we finished the operation just in time, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said; she caught sight of the wide grin on his face out of the corner of her left eye.

 

“Looks like,” she muttered. “Taio, keep an eye on things out here,” she said, pausing for a moment to make sure the man understood. “Well, Rudol, let’s roll out the welcome wagon.”

 

“Of course, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said, a wide, fierce grin overtaking his face as the pair of them turned and headed for the elevator.

 

Once they’d made it back down to ground-level, Alice sighed softly as she proceeded Stroheim into the vehicle bay where his people were making the final preparations to one of the transport trucks that she’d lent them for just this sort of occasion. The fruits of their collaboration had been lined up neatly inside the back of the truck, and once Stroheim came within range of them, he grinned all the wider; Alice chuckled softly.

 

“We should only need about five more minutes before we finish the last of the refits, Frau Brando,” Dr. Lindemann said, stepping neatly over to her and Stroheim, as the pair of them continued on their way up to the side of the truck. “Do you think this building’s defenses can hold out for that long?”

 

“I’m reasonably sure,” she said, since that was really all she could be, under the circumstances; this was a truly unprecedented occurrence, after all.

 

“Good,” Dr. Lindemann said, nodding.

 

Turning away, as Stroheim began speaking with Dr. Lindemann and she caught sight of the flashing light on the nearby wall-mounted phone, Alice made her way over to answer it.

 

“Hello?” she paused, a smile pulling at her lips as she heard the voice on the other end.

 

“Are you truly certain that you won’t be needing us for this battle?”

 

“It’s all right, Jonathan,” she said, smiling even though she knew that her adopted brother couldn’t see her. “ACDC’s pretty much the perfect counter to any of your guys’ skill sets right now.”

 

“I… Yes, I suppose so,” Jonathan said, and Alice could all but see the dejected, kicked-puppy look on his face; really, a man Jonathan’s age should not have still been able to manage the sad puppy eyes so well.

 

“Just sit tight,” she said, smiling for the both of them; she knew he’d get the idea, even without the pair of them being within sight of each other. “I’m sure you guys’ll have plenty of chances to take on one of the Pillar Men. Just not this one, okay?”

 

“All right,” Jonathan said, still sounding a bit reluctant. “I suppose, under the circumstances, we truly would not be of much assistance.”

 

The pair of them said their goodbyes, and Alice hung up so that she could rejoin Stroheim by the side of the truck they were soon to be departing on. By that time, of course, the oversized UV lamp was fully finished and fixed to the roof of the truck’s cab. Raising an eyebrow as she found Dio jumping into the cab with her and Stroheim, Alice pulled up her hood and turned to her brother.

 

“This is hardly the time for a joyride,” she deadpanned, pulling up the cloth mask that had previously hung loosely around her neck, then settling her polarized UV mask firmly over her eyes, snapping the clasps on the edges closed on the corresponding hooks sewn into the inside of her hood.

 

“Come now, sister,” Dio said, grinning as he pulled up his own mask-and-hood combo, then bringing his own UV mask up into place. “You didn’t think I’d let you go out to face that oversized blood-spewing brute all alone, did you?”

 

Alone?” Stroheim scoffed. “And, what do you think I am, Herr Brando?”

 

“You’ll be chopped liver if you don’t behave yourself,” Dio said haughtily, not missing a beat.

 

“Down boys,” she said, pressing a hand to both their heads as the pair of them began glaring at the other. “This is hardly the time.”

 

=BT=

 

The sound of another of those same interesting, self-propelled chariots that he’d seen so many of already nearly didn’t register to him for a long moment, at least until ACDC took notice of the fact that it seemed quite a bit larger than any of the others he’d heard on his way to the tower whose fascinating double doors were only just beginning to yield under his continued onslaught. Turning as he realized that the large chariot was aiming itself to collide with him, ACDC grinned as he caught sight of Kars’ clever little vampire riding inside of it.

 

Yes, there was also one of those dull, interchangeable humans, as well as the male vampire that Kars wasn’t particularly interested in riding alongside her, but those two would be easy enough to dispose of after he’d taken possession of Kars’ clever little vampire. Of course, it was plainly obvious that she intended to make it a struggle – at least as much as any vampire could manage when they were in conflict with such a superior being – but that would only make his inevitable triumph all the more pleasing. At the very least, he’d have an amusing story to share with his old friend.

 

=BT=

 

It was plain that ACDC had been prepared to fight the three of them, but the look on his face when she and Dio opened the back of the truck and unleashed their ranks of robotic Deinonychus on him… It was times like this that Alice wished she could reinvent the Smartphone with the current level of technology she currently had access to; scenes like that more than deserved to be preserved for posterity. With only a single, side-eyed look at each other, she and Dio quickly joined the fray alongside the group of robot dinosaurs that Stroheim had directed to attack ACDC.

 

While the robotic Deinonychus all around them harassed and harried and snapped at him under Stroheim’s direction, she and Dio moved in closer. She’d never had to strip anyone in combat before, but if they didn’t get that uniform off him – she knew just where he’d gotten it, too; the asshole – then all that UV lamp that doc Lindemann and his people had spend all their time mounting wouldn’t do them one damned bit of good. So, as the only two with hands that had any kind of appreciable manual dexterity, the task of getting ACDC out of his stolen Brando FiSec uniform would naturally fall to her and Dio.

 

With the main focus of ACDC’s attention taken up by the attacking robotic dinosaurs – Alice would never fail to find the concept amusing on pretty much every level, but now was hardly the time – she and Dio had a great deal more freedom of movement than they otherwise would have; all the same, she knew that this was hardly going to be a cakewalk.

 

Signaling Dio forward, she matched him step-for-step as the pair of them yanked off the armored greatcoat that the Pillar Man had been hiding under, and then tore their way through the underlying garments that had acted as further protection for him. Forced to dodge to opposite sides of their current battleground by a gout of blood hot enough to melt the tarmac they were standing on, Alice stood back up as ACDC’s gaze fell on her again. Really, it was becoming more and more clear that, whatever else the Pillar Men wanted, they clearly wanted her.

 

It was weird, possibly useful, and a bit annoying all at once.

 

Another veritable explosion of blood slathered the lamp, rendering it basically nothing more than an oversized, slightly misplaced, hood ornament. Hissing a soft urry through her teeth, Alice leaped up to the top of the truck, kicked her boots free as quickly as she could manage, and then hopped up to perch on the generator that had been installed to power the lamp. Quickly re-balancing herself, Alice plunged both feet into the wiring of the generator, quickly channeling as much electrical energy as she could up through her nerves and into her hands.

 

And then she grinned, because really, how many chances was she actually going to get to do this?

 

“And now you pay the price for your lack of vision!” she shouted, as Stroheim alone knew how many volts of electricity went blasting out of her hands and straight into ACDC.

Chapter 24: The Winner Takes It All

Chapter Text

When he saw his sweet sister standing atop their transport, wreathed in lightning like some kind of ancient goddess of victory, it was all Dio could do to restrain himself from leaping up to carry her back into the cab of their truck so that he could give proper tribute to the magnificence that he was bearing witness to. Still, he, Dio, held himself back until the smell of charring flesh – a horrible, unmistakable thing under any circumstance – came wafting over to him on the chill, meager breeze. Quite unlike the few other times he, Dio, had been forced to endure that particular assault on his superior vampire senses, this time he rather enjoyed the experience.

 

Or rather the sight of the one who was providing him, Dio, with such an experience as he was privy to at this very moment.

 

Yes, it was swiftly becoming entirely too clear that his own efforts at challenging those bastard Pillar Men – what remained of them, at least – would be rather superfluous, but here in this moment of moments Dio found that such a thing hardly mattered to him. Yes, in time all the annoyance he felt for the situation that had developed would return in full, but by such a time he, Dio, would have his sweet sister to speak his mind to. Dear Alice always seemed to know just what to say; she always seemed to know how to peel back all the layers of the world’s falsehoods to show him the truth of things.

 

It was one of the things he, Dio, loved most about her.

 

So, when that magnificent show of pure, elemental force ended – loath as he was to see such a thing, even under the circumstances – he, Dio, swept dear Alice into his arms and leaped back into the padded seat of the truck that the pair of them had been riding in. Yes, it was not exactly the most comfortable place that he, Dio, could have chosen for any kind of strenuous activity, but it was the closest place to their current position. He’d not have to delay his sweet sister’s reward for long.

 

However, when dear Alice somehow contrived to pull herself out of his embrace, launching herself out of the truck’s cab and landing neatly – though barefoot – upon the tarmac that had become their latest battlefield he, Dio, was swift to follow her.

 

“I miss anything?” his sweet sister asked, making her way over to the side of that upstart Stroheim.

 

Still, the sight of that bastard Pillar Man ACDC with a truly massive hole in his chest – the scent of charred flesh and blood wafting toward them on what meager breeze could be found on this breathless night – was truly an enticing one.

 

“It was rather odd, Frau Brando,” the annoying man said, frowning in obvious puzzlement at the remains of the Pillar Man as they continued to smolder.

 

“What about these guys hasn’t been?” his sweet sister asked, her usual good-natured amusement coming through one more.

 

“True, but this is the first time I’ve ever seen someone’s brain leap out of their head and try to attack,” Stroheim said, the dully confused expression on his face clearing quickly. “It was a good thing that I can still think so quickly in a crisis,” the arrogant human – no matter what kind of augmentations dear Alice had seen fit to give him, a mere human could never be a match for a vampire – said, a small, irritatingly smug smile on his harshly-angled face.

 

“To say nothing of our little joint project, of course,” dear Alice said, the tolerant smile on her lovely face showing none of the fury that he, Dio, felt at seeing her grand accomplishments belittled so easily.

 

Truly, his sweet sister was entirely too grand a person to let the opinions of those she considered beneath her affect her in any way. Still, that was all well and good: he, Dio, held more than enough fury for the pair of them.

 

“Looks like his spine was fused,” dear Alice said, her attention focused upon the pitiful corpse of the Pillar Man who had been so foolish as to challenge the might of his sweet sister and the company that she had spread so far across the very world in the mere span of half a century. “Organs were carbonized, too, so he would’ve probably been down and out even without the brain thing.”

 

As his sweet sister and that upstart bastard Stroheim began to move back towards the truck he, Dio, took the opportunity to spit on the corpse of the Pillar Man who had been so foolish as to challenge his dear Alice on her own grounds.

 

=BT=

 

While Dio got himself settled in the seat next to her, Alice resisted the urge to roll her eyes at his antics. Then, turning her attention back to more pressing matters, she looked over at Stroheim again.

 

“No sign of the others?” she asked, continuing the discussion that the pair of them had been having while her people had been loading up the truck.

 

“No, Frau Brando,” Stroheim said, the displeased look on his face nearly a match for the annoyance that Alice could feel smoldering inside her. “However they’ve managed to hide themselves, those last two Pillar Men have managed to evade both our soldiers and your security forces.”

 

“Yeah, that’s going to be a real pain in the arse to work around,” she muttered, narrowing her eyes as Stroheim turned her truck back around and guided the three of them and their – slightly reduced, it had to be said – force of robotic dinosaurs. “We’ll need to start making some plans.”

 

All things considered, however, she was starting to suspect that she already knew what was going to have to be done; all that remained, naturally, would be to convince the others.

 

Still, one thing at a time, here, Alice reflected, as Stroheim pulled the truck back into the loading bay and she, Dio, and the man himself stepped back down onto the tarmac. She’d only a brief moment to appreciate the fact that vampires like her and Dio didn’t sweat, as well as to make a mental note to grab a new pair of socks as soon as the opportunity came up. Or else to send Straizo to fetch some, since that kind of thing seemed to make him happy, for whatever reason.

 

Once she, Stroheim, and Dio had all made their way back into the main control room once again, Alice flagged down one of her people and sent them to fetch Jonathan and the other members of her and Dio’s family. Telling them to meet her in the tertiary conference room, Alice herself made her way back to the elevator. Stroheim was quick to fall in beside her, and of course that led Dio to practically teleport over to her opposite side, wrapping her left arm around his shoulders and glaring at Stroheim.

 

Stroheim, naturally, didn’t take much notice of Dio’s little temper tantrum, and Alice had more important things on her mind than catering to her twin’s mercurial moods. There was, naturally, going to be a lot of Intel she needed to gather, if she was going to be able to begin making preparations for the next phase of their battle against the Pillar Men. It was becoming more and more obvious that it was going to end in a battle, much as she would have liked to find out everything she could about the history that the pair of remaining Pillar Men had borne witness to.

 

It would have been nice to know just how many ways this new world of hers had truly diverged from the one where she’d lived Before, but if that wasn’t going to happen, then it wasn’t going to happen.

 

=BT=

 

When Aunty Alice had called them all down to the main conference room to discus what they were going to do next, Joseph hadn’t known quite what to expect. Finding Uncle Dio and Stroheim both glaring down at something a bit too small for him to see on the table, however, wasn’t at all like what he’d been preparing himself for.

 

“You can’t honestly think that this mad plan of yours will actually succeed, sister,” Uncle Dio nearly growled, the look on his face full of angry disapproval.

 

“Out of everyone here, I’m probably the only one that the Pillar Men wouldn’t either kill, eat, or both,” Aunty Alice said, sounding calm enough, though she looked annoyed to have to explain herself.

 

Joseph wondered how many times this latest argument of theirs had been rehashed, and just what this one was about. It wasn’t as though Aunty Alice and Uncle Dio didn’t argue over things; the pair of them were both determined and strong-minded people, and they didn’t always share the same views on things. So, some arguments were pretty much inevitable; just like he and Gramps tended to disagree on a lot of stuff. Didn’t mean they loved each other any less, though.

 

“What are you talking about?” he heard Gramps ask, over the man’s familiar, steady footsteps.

 

“Alice has some mad idea about allowing those bastards to capture her, so that she would be able to determine just where they’re presently hiding,” Uncle Dio growled, glaring down at whatever lay on the table in front of them.

 

“Oh, like the Trojan Horse!” he exclaimed. “That’s brilliant!”

 

Aunty Alice grinned, even as Uncle Dio turned that scathing glare on him. Joseph grinned shamelessly back, since there was no way in hell that Aunty Alice wasn’t going to get her way, and he wasn’t enough of an idiot to be the one trying to keep her from doing what she felt was right.

 

“Your idea does have merit, Alice,” Gramps said, though even he sounded rather disapproving himself. “Still, do you truly think that the remaining Pillar Men would be deceived so simply?”

 

“If we can play this right,” Aunty Alice said, nodding sharply, a look of satisfaction on her face that contrasted perfectly with Uncle Dio’s increasing frustration.

 

Oh? And just how do you think you’re going to be able to escape them in order to let the rest of us know just where it is that the Pillar Men are hiding?”

 

“That’s where this comes in,” Aunty Alice said, indicating the small thing on the table before them whose purpose Joseph was beginning to suspect he knew. “It’s a radio-transmitter. Really, brother dear, did you stick gum in your ears the first time I explained it to you, or are you just being deliberately obtuse?”

 

Joseph snickered as Uncle Dio subsided, grumbling, and Aunty Alice, Gramps, and Stroheim turned their attention back to making plans for what was clearly going to be some kind of elaborate trap for those last two Pillar Men.

 

=BT=

 

Frau Brando, having clearly had enough of her brother’s increasing – in frequency as well as simply in raw volume – arguments, had given him an ultimatum to either cooperate with the plan the rest of them were forming, or to find something to do besides complain about it. Herr Brando, clearly not having expected to be overruled so completely, had departed quickly, with not even a word or a look back. Frau Brando had been rather exasperated with the man, but as he’d expected the vampire had quickly returned her attention to their current task.

 

They’d naturally moved the operation out of her tower and away from all of the humans within the city it presided over, and were currently riding at the head of a convoy making its way into the Swiss countryside; the farthest place from both the war and from too many uninvolved people that might have otherwise found themselves caught up in what would doubtless become a battle. Looking over at Frau Brando as she drank from a small container of what she had informed him was sheep’s blood, Rudol found that she seemed to be ruminating upon some subject or other. Leaning back in his own seat, Rudol turned his attention back to the road.

 

Thus far, there didn’t seem to be anyone following them; neither of the two remaining Pillar Men had made so much as a cursory appearance on the road, and Rudol hadn’t seen any indication that Frau Brando had caught sight of them, either.

 

Still, simply because he hadn’t caught sight of either of them, that didn’t mean that they weren’t being followed. He knew that vampires such as Frau Brando were capable of moving faster than the human eye could track, so it stood to reason that Pillar Men – who hunted vampires for sustenance – would be capable of moving faster than even that. So, Rudol had resolved himself to simply watch and wait; it wouldn’t do anyone any good if he allowed his own misgivings to interfere with the plan that Frau Brando had constructed.

 

If nothing else, the vampire had proven herself more than adaptable enough to cope with any plan that went awry.

 

=BT=

 

Smiling with distinct satisfaction as he made his way through the darkened streets leading down from the mountain range, Kars reflected on the glimpses he’d caught of his dear, clever little pet. Yes, she’d been traveling in the company of more of those meaningless humans, but that was ultimately of little importance. It would be very simple for him to deal with them, and then to lay claim to his clever pet so that he could begin making his final preparations to shape her into what she truly deserved to be. At this stage, as a mere vampire, she had more in common with an uncut gem, rough marble, or a lump of clay: all raw potential in need of refinement.

 

And, while it was true that the world only needed one ultimate life form, having that clever pet of his close at hand would make even an eternal existence such as the one the two of them shared all the more palatable.

 

And so, Kars continued on his way through the darkened streets, following the tracks that the humans’ vehicles had left in the packed soil of the road. He followed them up to the wide expanse of packed soil, where the humans had parked their vehicles in a pair of neat rows, organized as well as a human could have hoped to manage, then turned to make his way up to the modest, two-storey building where the humans had clearly taken shelter from the cold that had such a pronounced effect on their weak bodies and yet meant less than nothing to him, Wham, or his clever little pet.

 

When he came to stand in front of the back wall of the building, in front of the room where he’d detected the fewest human lifesigns, Kars was just about to place his hands on the wall when he heard the echoes of what had clearly been some kind of sharp, sudden impact. He wondered at its cause for a moment, before recalling something that he’d observed some time ago. Bats used a distinct pattern of sounds to determine where they were in relation to both their potential prey, as well as to each other.

 

The sound he’d just heard, therefore, might very well have been his clever little pet’s way of seeing through the wall that would have served to shield him from anyone with more feeble senses.

 

Grinning as he pressed his hands to the wall, feeling another presence within the room, warmer than any vampire could have been, Kars’ grin shrank slightly as he realized that there was a human in the same room with her. It was rather annoying, seeing more evidence of just how much latitude his clever pet was willing to give the humans beneath her, but it was also merely a habit that could be corrected with proper training. Grin widening once more, Kars extended his Brilliant Bone Blades and cut cleanly through the thin, wooden wall that stood between him and the prize he’d been seeking.

 

=BT=

 

Turning at what sounded like a small chainsaw boring through the wall she’d sensed Kars standing on the other side of, Alice narrowed her eyes as she watched the Pillar Man tear through the wall. She’d signaled to Stroheim as soon as she’d become aware of Kars’ prowling around, so their robotic Deinonychus were already up and attacking just as Kars had made a hole large enough to step through. Standing up, Alice forced herself to glare at the Pillar Man standing framed in the door so that she could resist the urge to smirk at him.

 

He really didn’t know what he was getting into.

 

Their battle spilled out into the streets, just as she’d been expecting it to, but Kars seemed far more inclined to make for the small settlement they were just on the edges of rather than the mountains. There were probably multiple reasons for that, but she suspected that, for the most part, Kars probably thought he’d have some sort of an advantage on that kind of terrain. He was in for more than a bit of a surprise, of course.

 

Leaping easily up to the rooftops, Alice fanned out her ponytail as she caught sight of Kars out of the corner of her left eye. The pair of them alighted for a moment on a pair of neighboring rooftops, before the Pillar Man took a flying leap in her direction and the chase was on. The pair of them traded blows, on and off, as they crossed paths from rooftop to rooftop, and Alice narrowed her eyes slightly as she considered her current situation.

 

On the one hand, she was aiming to be captured, so that her people, and Stroheim’s, would be able to determine just where it was that the last two Pillar Men had hidden themselves; on the other, she also had to take care to make sure that Kars believed that he was the one who’d beaten her. And yeah, he did seem arrogant enough to buy it, so that could only make things easier. Now, all that remained was to keep Kars’ attention on her.

 

It wouldn’t do, after all, to have him running amok through a town filled with sleeping people.

 

=BT=

 

Grinning as he watched his clever little pet try – in vain, it had to be said – as she might to evade him, Kars continued after her. He only had to choose the right time, and the little vampire would all but fall into his arms, his to be shaped and molded as he pleased. Staying close on her heels, pressing her just enough to keep her fleeing, like a hawk under the gaze of a mighty eagle, Kars grinned all the wider as the little vampire glared defiantly back at him.

 

Glancing down, he smirked at the impotent fury of the humans beneath him; they’d no way of keeping pace outside of their vehicles, and even those who could have climbed to the lofty heights that he and his clever pet now stood upon were far too slow to have even dared to attempt to challenge him. Grinning as he returned his attention to the little vampire who he had allowed to lead him on such an amusing chase, Kars lunged.

 

Because, while it had been rather entertaining to allow his clever pet the illusion that she would be able to escape him, he was more than prepared to claim his prize.

 

Driving the Brilliant Bone Blade on his right wrist into the back of her neck as the pair of them fell toward the rooftop he had been aiming for, Kars neatly severed the nerve connections between the little vampire’s head and body. Carefully removing the longest bone in his left thumb, Kars placed it so that it would interrupt the growth of nerves when the little vampire’s body began attempting to heal itself. Without a way to restore the full functionality of her body, his clever pet would fall into a state of torpor until she was given blood to sustain and replenish herself.

 

It was one of the more interesting things that he had observed, during those times when he’d been exploring the capabilities of those he’d transformed through the use of his stone mask: that those who had transformed into vampires were capable of preserving themselves even in a state that would have killed a lesser being. It was simply more proof that his creations, even the ones he hadn’t ultimately intended to create, were far superior to any other kind of living creature.

 

Turning a glare at the steadily-pinking form of the eastern horizon, knowing better than most what it meant for his kind and those like him, Kars ducked into a nearby building. Looking down at the little vampire in his arms, Kars felt his good mood returning, even as his frustration with the inactivity that daylight inevitably forced upon him remained at the back of his mind.

 

Sliding his right hand down through the place where the two halves of his clever pet’s elegantly styled jacket met, Kars tore through the buttons that held it together, letting it fall to the ground, even as he set about making his way back to the large estate where he and Wham had settled themselves while ACDC had searched for either signs of the Red Stone’s whereabouts, or else the little vampire who had proven herself to be so very interesting. True, it seemed as though his old friend had ultimately been forced to give up his life in pursuit of such, but Kars would not allow his old friend to simply be forgotten.

 

He would make certain that both Wham and the little vampire would understand what kind of sacrifice that ACDC had made for them, and he would make certain to tell his clever pet all about the kind of man that ACDC had been; that way, at least something of his old friend would live on.

 

As he continued to discard the various articles of clothing that the little vampire had been wearing, Kars found himself smirking all over again as he saw how – like a lizard, shedding its tail to escape the grasp of a predator – his clever pet could have escaped from one of her own pursuers, leaving them with nothing more than a useless piece of cloth for their trouble. It was simply one more reason that this little vampire belonged with him: in nearly every way, save for age and experience, his clever pet was a clear match for him.

 

A snap of his fingers severed the ribbon that bound the little vampire’s hair, spilling out a wave of silken gold that Kars quickly draped over his right shoulder as he continued on his way to the large, empty building where he and Wham had sheltered themselves. It was a rather annoying reminder of this one’s male counterpart, but also one that would be easily dealt with once he’d gathered the proper materials to begin their respective transformations.

 

Making his way into the building at last, Kars ran his right hand underneath the high collar of the final layer that his clever pet had devised to shield herself from the sunlight that would have otherwise killed her, and tore it open in the same way that he’d done to the other garments that hadn’t been amenable to simple removal the way her secondary layers had been. Smiling as he felt the rough touch of the thin metal strands rubbing against his fingers, Kars turned to signal one of the vampires he himself had created to follow along beside him as he made his way deeper into the building.

 

“Ooh, who’s that? Did you bring her for dinner?”

 

“She’s mine,” Kars said, giving the vampire walking next to him a stern look. “And, if you tried anything, I doubt you would survive it,” he said, gently prying open his clever pet’s mouth in order to display her own fangs.

 

After that, things proceeded a great deal more smoothly.

Chapter 25: When I See You Smile

Chapter Text

Waking up was something of a chore, not really helped by the gnawing hunger that she was currently stuck with. Still, she’d known that there were going to be any number of inconveniences when one was acting as a hostage-in-all-but-name. When she felt the familiar weight of her unbound hair spread across her back and neck, Alice sighed in annoyance. That, of course, drew the attention of the other person she’d become aware of in the room with her.

 

She suspected that it was another vampire, both since she couldn’t hear their breathing and since no one in the room smelled at all human.

 

“Ooh,” said a particularly grating voice from the other side of the sheer curtain Alice found herself awakening behind. “You are cute.”

 

Narrowing her eyes, Alice studied the room she had awakened in; adjusting her eyes so that she could see through the thin weave of the bed curtains. It was swiftly becoming more and more obvious just where she was, and Alice narrowed her eyes in annoyance as her building recognition clicked fully into place.

 

“Hey, are you ignoring me?!” the annoying-voiced vampire said, whipping aside the bed-curtains to reveal… a spiky mullet, pale reddish hair, and an outfit that was a fair bit less colorful than she’d been expecting of someone working with Kars and his remaining crony.

 

Has anyone ever told you that you have a really annoying voice? she didn’t say, instead simply narrowing her eyes at the vampire currently harassing her. He made some more noise about how she should respect him or some such, but Alice was rather more focused on the fact that Kars – in his apparently infinite capacity to annoy her – had stripped her down to her underclothes before dumping her in her room. Taking a moment to check the status of the radio-transmitter she’d tucked into her liver, and to throw the annoying-voiced vampire to the other side of her room when he attempted to dive-tackle her, Alice stood up and made her way over to her closet.

 

Dressing herself in a pair of pale lilac slacks and a powder-blue long-sleeved top, Alice grabbed another of her hair-ribbons, chokeslammed the annoying vampire into a nearby wall twice, then tied her hair back and out of her face. Sighing as she adjusted her newfound outfit, Alice grabbed the annoying vampire, slammed him to the ground, and shattered his pelvic bone with a downward heel-strike. If nothing else, that ought to keep him off her back long enough for a meeting.

 

She was going to have words with Kars about setting up in one of her summer homes; particularly considering the fact that Cobain had chosen to stay here, since she’d found that the climate of Switzerland and the people of San Moritz agreed with her much more than any other place they’d been to in the intervening half-century that separated them from the time they’d spent back in London.

 

=BT=

 

The sound of swift, purposeful footfalls making their way toward the throne he’d set up for himself brought a small, pleased smile to Kars’ face. He knew that stride, just as he’d known the scents within this building, faded by time and overlaid by the scent of that other vampire that had been living in this place for such a long time.

 

“It seems we’re about to have a guest, Wham,” he said, turning a smile on his fellow Pillar Man, before returning his gaze to the entranceway of the room that he had seated the pair of them in.

 

The chairs that he and Wham were seated in had clearly been crafted from the finest of materials, since he could smell the mingled scents of animal hide, goose down, and some kind of exotic wood, even dulled by the passage of time and the lingering scents of other vampires – that other female in particular – as well as the annoying humans who seemed to be endemic to his clever pet’s life. He didn’t know what she saw in any of them, but such a habit could easily be corrected with time and effort.

 

Both of which he was fully prepared to devote to this particularly worthy task, of course.

 

Smiling in satisfaction as his clever pet presented herself to him once more, Kars found that she had once again covered herself in more of the fine, soft garments that he’d stripped from her when he had first brought her back to this place that she’d clearly made her home in some time ago.

 

“Pet, why do you insist on covering yourself like that?” he asked. “Aren’t you proud of what you are?”

 

“Well, it was either this or body-paint,” his clever pet said, folding her arms and standing before him with an adorable expression of quiet defiance. “And that stuff itches terribly.”

 

Chuckling in amusement as he observed the fall of delicately embroidered snowflakes across the right side of the pale blue shirt she was wearing, Kars smiled as he noted the way that she had seemed to have captured the very wind itself in frozen motion. So, you use your very body as a canvas; you’re not only inventive, but artistic as well, he grinned. Every time I find out more about you, pet, you only prove yourself more and more worthy of me.

 

“She truly does remind me of you, Lord Kars,” Wham said, and he turned back to his old friend, grinning in return at the pensive smile the last of his companions was wearing.

 

Taking hold of his clever pet, before she could say so much as another word, Kars settled the pair of them in his throne, carefully arranging the little vampire so that he could properly display her across his lap.

 

“There’s still something on your mind, isn’t there, pet?” he asked, flicking his fingers through her hair so that he could quickly snap the ribbon binding her golden hair; he’d get rid of such an annoyance soon enough, and then he could show his clever pet just what kind of canvas her body could truly become.

 

=BT=

 

“All right, the signal has stopped moving,” Von Stroheim reported, and Joseph let himself relax from all the tension that had been slowly building in both his body and mind while the signal had been in motion.

 

“Good, at least we know where they are,” Gramps said, fists unclenching slowly.

 

“Yes,” Stroheim said, nodding as he took out a map. “Now, all we need to do is determine exactly where that is.”

 

“Hey, wait, that’s Aunty Alice’s summer chalet!” he gasped, once Stroheim had managed to determine the precise coordinates of the radio-signal from the transmitter his Aunty had swallowed just before she’d gone out to get herself captured by Kars and his last remaining crony in an effort to play Trojan horse for them.

 

“Those miserable bastards have set up there?!” Uncle Dio growled, looking almost like he wanted to tear the very map from Stroheim’s hands, just to prove to himself that what Stroheim had said was indeed true; or, more likely knowing Uncle Dio, to disprove it.

 

“It’s one of your sister’s properties?” Stroheim asked, turning to Uncle Dio with a confused expression.

 

“The old owner of the hotel was simply going to allow it to close, so Alice bought it from him,” Uncle Dio said, eyes narrowed as he looked into the past. “Though really, Cobain was the one who ended up appreciating it the most, since she actually enjoys living in a place like this.”

 

“Well, I don’t think your sister would appreciate having one of her properties destroyed, though I expect she has others,” Stroheim muttered, narrowing his eyes as he looked down at the map in front of them.

 

“Oh, yes,” he said, laughing softly. “Aunty Alice has summer homes, and even winter homes, all over the world. She travels a lot; CEO of an international company, you know,” he finished, grinning.

 

“Yes,” Gramps said, sounding as grim as he ever did. “It seems as though the Pillar Men have taken advantage of the safeguards that Alice had built into that place when she laid claim to it.”

 

Sighing as he looked back down at the map laid out before them, Joseph saw Caesar clenching his fists out of the corner of his left eye.

 

“Boss, I swear I’m going to save you from those bastards!” his fellow student growled, glaring furiously down at the innocent map in front of them all.

 

=BT=

 

Lord Kars’ little vampire had wished to know just what had become of her retainer, a female vampire by the name of Cobain, and so Wham had picked her up and carried her from the room where the three of them had all seated themselves.

 

“I can walk, you know,” Lord Kars’ little vampire said, the expression on her face seeming to state without words that she was entirely unimpressed with her present situation.

 

“Lord Kars instructed me to look after you,” he said, flicking his eyes over the unimpressed expression on the face of Lord Kars’ little vampire before returning his gaze to the hall before him. “And, since he himself is clever and determined, I must assume that you share the same qualities, since he considers you an equal. And, since he would attempt to escape if he were placed in this kind of situation, I will assume that you yourself would do the same.”

 

Lord Kars’ little vampire laughed softly, as the pair of them continued on their way through the corridor still before them. It seemed that she truly understood his dedication to Lord Kars, and therefore the hopelessness of any attempts at an escape she might think to make. The sound of another vampire’s footfalls on the floor, as well as the soft swish of fabric, told him that the pair of them were closing in on the other female vampire who stayed within this large house that Lord Kars’ little vampire had once been the sole, uncontested master of.

 

“Miss Alice!” the other female vampire exclaimed, hurrying over to where he and Lord Kars’ little vampire were making their own way into the room where she’d been staying.

 

“Hello again, Cobain,” Lord Kars’ little vampire greeted; the calmness and good-humor in her tone reminding him all the more of Lord Kars.

 

Truly, the pair of them had indeed been destined to meet.

 

“Is there anything you need, Miss Alice?” the other female asked; this one had the heart of a proper retainer, and so was more than likely to survive once Lord Kars laid claim to the Red Stone and was able to take the last steps that he desired to do for so long.

 

“A strawberry milkshake would be lovely,” Lord Kars’ little vampire said, her tone slightly flippant, and a look of subdued amusement on her face a clear match for any that the last of his masters had worn.

 

“Oh, of course,” the other female vampire said, bowing slightly and the turning to hurry away.

 

“I’m glad to see that you fully understand your new situation,” he said, turning to make his way back to the room where he and Lord Kars had settled themselves when they had taken this place for their own use. “Lord Kars will take care of you, I can assure you of that; anything you desire will be yours for the asking. You will live, along with us, forever.”

 

“Forever is a long time, Mr. Pillar Man,” Lord Kars’ little vampire said, still sounding as perfectly amused as she had been before she had spoken to her retainer. “Still, you take over my summer home, bring one-hundred vampires into my parlor, and stick me with one of the most irritating people I’ve been forced to interact with for the past few decades. Really, you and your fellows have terrible manners.”

 

Chuckling at the admonishing tone in her voice, even as Lord Kars’ little vampire leaned up as though to whisper something in his left ear, Wham shifted his grip so that she would be better able to reach his ear. She had demonstrated courage, cunning, and tenacity, and so he would remember whatever soft words of defiance that she wished to give to him.

 

=BT=

 

Screaming directly into Wham’s ear, Alice backflipped out of his arms as the Pillar Man fell to his knees from the sudden assault. Before he could regain his bearings, Alice spread her arms wide to balance herself, opened up the back of her body so that she would have a constant supply of air for what she was about to do, carefully adjusted her larynx, then let loose with a keening, two-toned wail that would serve to disorient anyone in her vicinity. She’d already told Cobain to evacuate, using the coded phrase that let her fellow vampire know to go to ground within San Moritz, and to link up with her people or Stroheim’s as soon as she could manage.

 

With her cochleae collapsed in order to withstand the unrelenting sonic barrage she was bringing down on Wham’s head, Alice was immobile for the handful of moments it took for her to completely destroy the Pillar Man’s balance. Once Wham had fallen to the floor on his hands and knees, Alice stopped keening, leaped backwards out of the range of even the most enthusiastic of sudden lunges from her incapacitated opponent, she turned and ran deeper into the halls of this particular summer home. Her best bet for getting out of this place, and finding out just where it was that Kars had gotten himself off to when he’d left Wham in charge of her, was to make for the courtyard at the center of this place.

 

The solarium she’d designed would be the best place to put the last phase of her plan into action.

 

Smirking slightly as she heard Wham’s heavy tread following closely behind her, Alice turned a corner and saw Wham turning the one just behind her. Chuckling softly as she blew through the second-to-last pair of doors standing between her and the courtyard that she was aiming for, Alice smiled a bit wider as she heard Wham’s annoyed growling slowly closing in on her as she continued on her way. Grabbing a nearby fedora from a hat stand just outside the last of the doors that stood between her and the courtyard, Alice burst out through them, adjusting her hat and then slipping on the pair of gloves she’d had neatly tucked away in her pockets.

 

She’d had a pair tucked away in the pockets of every pair of pants she owned, simply so that she wouldn’t end up forgetting them those times when she was in a hurry.

 

“You can’t hope to escape me in a place such as this,” Wham said, a look of stern disapproval on his square-jawed face. “Though, I suppose I must commend your inventiveness once again. Before this day, I never knew that sound could be made into such a potent weapon. However,” the Pillar Man narrowed his eyes, clearly thinking he’d managed to get one-up on her. “Your own inventiveness is working against you now; you were the one who created glass that could filter the very light of the sun itself, enabling me to freely walk in daylight within this singular place.”

 

She smirked, opening her back once again so that she would have the air she needed for this next task of hers. “Oh ye of little faith.”

 

Before Wham could so much as open his mouth, Alice adjusted her larynx and belted out a high, sustained note. Holding it, even as the UV-filtering glass of her solarium began to crack and shatter around the metal support structure that had once held it up and now served to carry the resonance to each corner of her solarium’s sun-shield. Wham leaped backwards as broken glass began raining down from what had once been the roof, with lethal rays of sunlight pouring in as the shattered pieces broke apart entirely.

 

Pulling up the hood that she’d sewn into every one of her shirts, for those times that she had to go outside and didn’t actually feel like wearing a hat, Alice pulled up the lower part of her mask and leaped to the top of the steel cross-beam she’d been standing under.

 

A series of long, easy leaps took her up to the roof, where Alice quickly found one of the false chimneys she’d added to the leftmost and rightmost sides of the building, grabbed onto a hidden catch in the stonework, and pulled the lever concealed under it. Diving into the opening of the tunnel inside the false chimney, Alice fell through the entire length of the mansion, landing lightly in the hidden tunnel she’d had excavated beneath it. Grabbing a pair of UV-filtering ski-type goggles from a nearby hook, and quickly extracting the radio-transmitter from her liver, Alice pulled the hood of her shirt forward, clipping the edges to the hooks on her goggles and wedging the transmitter into a convenient gap in the wooden walls.

 

Moving quickly down the tunnel that would take her to the sub-basement of a café she’d bought out when she’d began making herself at home in this quaint little town, Alice turned her current situation over in her mind. There were all kinds of things she’d need to do in order to fully escape from her current situation, foremost among them being to implement the contingencies she’d developed to disguise herself from one of her own kind. Oh, this is just going to be lovely, Alice groused, rolling her eyes as she turned a corner and stepped onto the circular base of a hidden elevator.

 

Pulling the lever that stood on the right side of the platform, Alice allowed herself to relax ever so slightly as she was carried up onto the ground floor of the café that this particular tunnel exited into. Feeling a slight shudder through her feet as the base of the ornamental column that she’d had installed when she renovated the café she’d been standing underneath only a few moments ago, Alice smiled with some satisfaction as she saw the faux candle holder pop out and heard the two sides of the faux column rolling open.

 

Stepping out of the center of the concealed elevator, Alice turned to grab the tilted candle-holder, tilting it up and triggering the two halves to roll closed once more. Pushing the arm of the candle-holder until it popped back into place, Alice turned and quickly made her way out through the back entrance of the café. Her next destination firmly in mind, she hurried out to the edge of the town, out to what looked – for all intents and purposes – like a perfectly ordinary, boring building that one might use for storing any number of things. And yes, if anyone asked, they would be told that it was a storehouse that supplied a good number of the shops in the area.

 

And, for the most part they did just that; but, when dealing with the kind of weird shit that she seemed to end up facing on a near-monthly basis, one was rather obligated to take precautions.

 

Ducking under an overhang on the side of the building shielded from the sunlight by the bulk of the structure itself, Alice ran her hands over the entrance, spreading enough of her scent that Wham would follow this one, specific trail that she was leaving, and then quickly ducked inside the hidden back area of the warehouse. Shedding the clothes that she’d worn, after spreading her scent over a decent portion of the back room, Alice hung them on a concealed hook, and launched herself over the lip of the wall at the back of the building.

 

The structure had been concealed by both the height of the inner-wall itself, as well as the shape of the ceiling, which had been built with an eye to making the interior of the inner- and outermost rooms look just that much smaller than they actually were, and as she pushed down the small lever that would open the trapdoor beneath her, Alice wrinkled her nose. What she had to do next was not going to be pleasant.

 

Once she’d landed in the concealed room beneath the warehouse, Alice closed up her sinuses, grabbed hold of the handle that dangled before her, and pulled hard even as she closed her eyes tightly. Sealing her nose against the onslaught of harsh chemical cleaners – yet another advantage of her vampire physiology, on top of not actually needing to breathe for anything but speaking – Alice spread her arms and fanned out her hair in an effort to wash away the last, lingering traces of her scent.

 

After the last of the cleansers had been rinsed away by powerful jets of distilled water, Alice opened her eyes and made her way off of the grate she’d been standing on, and over to a second patch of floor, this one constructed of high-grade, heat-dissipating ceramic. Powerful jets of heated air blasted her dry, and Alice continued onward to a small closet that had been built into the wall.

 

Taking out a body-stocking – one that had been designed not only to completely occlude her scent when she wore it, but to seal her off almost completely from the outside world – Alice pulled it on and carefully adjusted it so that she was as completely covered as she could get without effectively blinding herself. Making her way down through another tunnel, this one connected to a clothing store, Alice stopped beside another hidden closet and grabbed a set of clothing and a wig from the opened closet.

 

Wham would, after he realized he couldn’t track her by scent, be looking for long blonde hair and a ponytail, and perhaps something with a hood if he’d been paying particular attention to what she’d been wearing. He wouldn’t be looking for someone with bright red hair and a pageboy cut, and he was particularly unlikely to stop someone who had a distinctly masculine body shape under their clothes. The many things one can do with proper padding, Alice reflected, a slight smirk on her face as she donned a pair of dark, UV-filtering shades and made her way up and out of the sub-basement room she’d entered.

 

Pausing to listen for the sounds of a crowd within the clothing store, Alice made her way out of the back room, walked among the racks and shelves as though she was browsing for the benefit of the few people who were inside the clothing store at the moment, and then headed back out into the street once more.

 

She knew that both her people and Stroheim’s would have gotten the data from the transmitter by now, and so all that remained was to link back up with them so that they could begin making proper plans to deal with those troublesome remaining Pillar Men.

 

The sound of running footsteps traveling in her general direction drew Alice’s attention as she made her way down the road leading into and out of San Moritz, but it was the sight of the running figure – twisting as he dashed around the corner of a nearby building, an expression of implacable rage on his face – that drew Alice’s attention. Really now, she groused, rolling her eyes as she reached out to firmly arrest the runner’s forward momentum with her left arm around his shoulders.

 

“What the hell do you thing you’re doing, you bastard?!” Caesar demanded, legs kicking madly as she hefted him off the ground.

 

“Agent Zeppeli,” she said, in her this-is-your-last-warning voice. “You know what I expect.”

 

Boss?”

Chapter 26: On The Outside

Chapter Text

Even though he’d known that his Boss was good at thinking and working under pressure, even though he’d known that she had defeated a Hamon Master without being forced to resort to lethal measures – though, in the end, his grandfather had still died; he’d confronted Dio about that, only to learn that his grandfather had died making a last attack on his sister while she and Jojo’s grandfather had been taking a cruise to the Americas for their honeymoon – and even though he’d known that his Boss wouldn’t have been happy to find him trying to face off with the remaining Pillar Men on his own, Caesar had still felt the need to try.

 

“Where were you planning to meet up with the others?” his Boss asked, turning to look at him from behind those inscrutable sunglasses she sometimes wore.

 

“Sorry, Boss, I know I shouldn’t have run off like that,” he said.

 

“Oh, I expect we’ll be having words about that when we get back, Agent,” his Boss said, lowering her sunglasses just enough to flash him a stern glare from her bright, slitted, crimson eyes. “However, all of that can keep. We need to meet up with the others, if we’re going to have any chance of dealing with Wham and Kars.”

 

“Yes, Boss,” he said, nodding. “Follow me.”

 

The pair of them made their way back through San Moritz, following the trail that he’d previously left on the snowy sidewalks, and Caesar quickly found that he couldn’t help sneaking glances back at his Boss as she tagged along with him on their way back. He’d seen her dressed in a lot of different suits and other clothes, and the occasional costume when she was in the mood or else there was a holiday when she could dress up for fun, but there had always been something at least reasonably recognizable about her.

 

Seeing her like this… Well, Caesar could begin to see at least some truth to the old stories that Jonathan had told about her.

 

=BT=

 

When he had returned to the palatial dwelling that his clever pet had made her own, Kars was surprised to find Wham waiting at the entranceway for him.

 

“Wham,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he studied the last of his remaining companions.

 

“Forgive me, Lord Kars,” Wham said, kneeling before him and bowing his head in submission and contrition both. “It seems that I underestimated your vampire once again.”

 

“She escaped?” he asked, not entirely certain how to feel about what he was hearing.

 

However, as Wham began to describe the events that had led up to their present situation, Kars found himself smiling; it seemed that his clever pet had not quite shown him everything she was capable of.

 

“You’ve nothing to apologize for, Wham,” he said, smiling contentedly as he reflected on the new facets that his clever pet had inadvertently revealed to him.

 

It seemed that his little hawk could sing like a nightingale when the mood took her; clearly something he and Wham would do well to remember, and him in particular since he’d yet to properly cage that little hawk of his. It was a rather interesting situation, to be sure.

 

=BT=

 

“So, what’d I miss?” Alice’s familiar voice nearly caused Jonathan to leap straight from his chair.

 

Dio, on the other hand, showed no such restraint. “Alice!”

 

Alice laughed gaily, as Dio spun her around in the air, seeming none the worse for wear after being forced to spend so much time as Kars’ captive.

 

“So, the transmitter’s been planted,” Alice said, moving to stand with him and Stroheim, narrowing her eyes as she looked down upon the map that had been laid out before them. “But, I’ll need to make some preparations of my own before we start anything else. Special K is bound to have noticed I’m gone by now.”

 

There it was again: the irreverent names that his and Dio’s sister would invent when she was forced to deal with those who aggravated her. Jonathan was glad to know that she would be all right, after such an ordeal as she must have faced at the hands of Kars and his remaining ally, Wham. He knew that Alice was not the type to simply allow others to fight what she considered her own battles, but he still couldn’t help being concerned for her.

 

Yes, he knew that Alice was far more apt than Dio to consult others when she found herself facing difficult situations, but Jonathan still found himself concerned for her; Alice would have doubtless said that such was in his nature, and then smile at him in that kindly-amused way she had while she went about her work. Though, I suppose there’s going to be more than enough work for all of us, he reflected, looking toward Stroheim and Alice as the pair of them began making plans for the next stage of their battle against the remaining Pillar Men.

 

=BT=

 

While he listened to the Boss as she put in calls for both her dinosaur cavalry – something she couldn’t seem to help smiling when she said, even though she’d been the one to form them in the first place – and a quartet of snipers drawn from the ranks of her Security Forces, Caesar found himself almost involuntarily thinking back on just how the two of them had met. It’d been long enough since his father had left him that he’d managed to establish himself as a feared presence to even the Mafia.

 

Of course, that had been what had attracted the Boss’ attention in the first place.

 

She hadn’t been like any woman he’d ever met before, and not just because he’d found out later that she was a vampire; not even because she’d had a sword concealed in what had seemed to be an ordinary, if ornately designed, umbrella. Not many people in her position would have actually gone out searching for people that even scared the Mafia into staying out of the territory they had claimed for themselves. Still, when he’d found himself facing her – back when he’d only known that there was a woman looking for him, not what she wanted or even who she was – Caesar was ashamed to admit that he hadn’t thought much of her.

 

After all, she’d only seemed to be a woman with an ornately made umbrella.

 

It was only after she’d cut every one of the weapons that he and his comrades had carried with them for so long in half, leaving him staring at the bisected remains of the wrench he’d carried with him into every battle that he’d been forced to face ever since he’d left his too-empty house in order to make sure that the last of what he’d considered his true family wasn’t left to starve in the gutter, that he’d realized there was something more to her; to Alice Brando, the woman whose name he hadn’t even known at that point. The last thing he’d been expecting, especially after having his weapon destroyed so casually, was to be invited to have lunch with the woman who had sought them out only to be attacked by them.

 

Still, that had been just what had happened, and Caesar had found himself sitting with her in a restaurant that he himself had never been able to enter. It hadn’t been for lack of desire, even back then, but simply because he hadn’t ever been able to scrape together the kind of cash that someone would need to have even a single meal in that kind of an establishment. Suddenly finding himself in the company of someone who could get him into all the best places in Italy had made agreeing to her proposal all the more attractive.

 

As he continued to watch, catching snippets of the Boss’ plans as she gathered all of the pieces she would need to play on this particular board and against these particular opponents, Caesar found himself reflecting back on the last time he’d seen his father; the last time that anyone had. And the first time that he’d laid eyes on those damned Pillar Men.

 

The Boss had been generous enough to allow him to chase after the man, that dark night when the pair of them had caught their first joint glimpse of Mario Zeppeli – though he’d learned later that the Boss had already had at least a passing acquaintance with the man, if only through Coach Elizabeth – and at first he’d been fully intending to beat some remorse into the man he’d seen so briefly. Still, once the three of them had arrived before the slumbering forms of the Pillar Men – not that he or the Boss had quite known what they were dealing with back then – Caesar had been entirely too ready to attack the man he’d thought had abandoned his family, so long ago.

 

That was when he’d learned the sad story of Mario Zeppeli, and just what his father had sacrificed to save the world from the threat of the Pillar Men.

 

It was only after that moment, when his father had asked the Boss to look out for him if she ever had the chance to meet him, that Caesar had been able to truly understand the depths of his father’s love for him; and just what the man had been willing to sacrifice for the sake of the world. It was kind of embarrassing, or at least he still thought so, but when the Boss had offered him her support, he’d all but collapsed into her arms sobbing. To this day, neither of them had spoken about it.

 

It was just one more thing he owed to the Boss; she knew how to be discreet, when someone asked her to.

 

=BT=

 

When his sweet sister had called for her magnificent army of dinosaur zombies, assembling them within the confines of one of the larger warehouses that she owned, he, Dio, found himself face to face with Tarkus for the first time in a great long while. It was a rather interesting experience, considering that he had merely revived the knight to act as an aide to his sweet sister while she was working, but he was admittedly rather more focused on his dear Alice’s plans for this next engagement of theirs.

 

If anything could be said about this plan of hers, it was bound to come off with quite the proverbial bang; possibly even a literal one, depending on what kind of other tools that his sweet sister had brought with her.

 

=BT=

 

“You’re sure you’re going to be able to handle this?” she asked, as Caesar picked up the UV sniper-rifle from its carrying case and slung it over his right shoulder.

 

“Yes, Boss,” Caesar said, clicking his heels sharply together and seeming to have to almost physically restrain himself from rushing off to the designated sniper-post.

 

“No jumping the gun, you understand?” she said, knowing that Caesar’s thoughts would inevitably be straying back to their initial encounter with Kars and all of the upheavals that that had brought up. “If you’re going to be a part of the sniper fireteam supporting us, I need you to keep a level head when you’re out there.”

 

“I promise, Boss,” Caesar said, nodding sharply.

 

“All right,” she said, as the distant sound of transport helicopters drew steadily closer to their position; the convoy of trucks was almost upon them, close enough for even a human to hear. “Meet up with the others. I expect you’ll want to be part of the group hunting Kars?”

 

“Yes. Thank you, Boss.”

 

“It’s not a problem,” she said, knowing that she was better served at this point by simply letting Caesar do what he wanted, rather than wasting time they might not have very much of rehashing an argument that was pretty pointless in the first place.

 

Yes, Caesar could be impulsive at times, but he respected her enough to keep a lid on it when she told him to be professional.

 

The pair of them parted ways, and she headed for the convoy of trucks making their way through the swiftly-falling dusk. Settling into her seat inside the lead truck of the convoy, Alice narrowed her eyes as the ground began to roll by underneath them. Their group was on the move, heading steadily back to what had once been her summer chalet; about to be engaged in battle with Kars and Wham.

 

She suspected, given everything she’d previously learned about the Pillar Man and his proclivities, that Kars would be expecting her to go to ground somewhere. Or, at the very least drawing back to lick her wounds, whatever he’d expect them to be after she’d escaped from Wham and made her way back to her people. Raising her right hand, up  to what anyone else who caught a glimpse of it might have just as easily dismissed as an ornate bangle that had been clipped to the right side of her hood, Alice toggled her hidden radio.

 

“Artillery unit, begin standard preparation,” she ordered, gently stroking the neck of her armored Ankylosaur as it shifted restlessly inside the transport truck the pair of them were traveling in. “Incendiary crews, I want you keeping your scopes out for any enemy vampires we might encounter,” she said, knowing that Kars had at least a small army of them, given what Cobain had seen while she’d been forced to keep her head down while Wham and Kars had been making themselves comfortable in her summer chalet.

 

Something they weren’t likely to be for much longer, if she and hers had anything to say about it.

 

“Ma’am, we are oh dark-hundred,” came the voice of the present commander of this particular battle group. “We’re launching.”

 

“Good to hear, Ike,” she said, quickly changing frequencies. “Caesar, you should be receiving the video-feed now.”

 

“We have it, Boss,” came the voice of her Head of Security for Brando International’s Italy branch, and present leader of the sniper team that had been given the task of eliminating Kars once she and her battle group had driven him out of the remains of her summer chalet. “We’re safeties off, and weapons hot. He won’t have a chance to escape us again.”

 

“Good to hear, Agent,” she said, intending to remind the man of just what he was doing; she knew he had a grudge against Kars, and considering what had happened between the pair of them she could fully understand it, but she was still going to need him to keep a lid on things while he was hunting for Kars. “You know what I expect.”

 

“Yes, Boss.”

 

Settling herself back down on the back of her Ankylosaur, Alice spread out her hairs and listened to the rumble of the engines of the trucks all around her. If it was late enough to let the Quetzalcoatlus loose, with not enough light in the sky to harm them, then it meant that they would be very close to her old summer chalet. Very close to where Kars and Wham were waiting for them.

 

“Artillery unit, you may fire at will.”

 

=BT=

 

When he began to hear a sound like a low, sustained roar, Kars found himself wondering just what kind of beasts could be making such a sound. However, when the ground shuddered and he heard the sound of thunder – louder and more close than he’d ever heard before – and the scent of distant fires that would spread quickly through the wood, fabrics, and other materials of the house he’d claimed from his clever pet.

 

Wondering just what in the hell was going on, Kars signaled to Wham and the pair of them quickly made for the site of the upheaval. The sight of the fires consuming the front face of his clever pet’s home infuriated him; knowing that some kind of inferior creatures were attempting to destroy what rightfully belonged to one of their betters. However, when he caught sight of some kind of strange beast, through the wall of rippling flames before him, for only a handful of moments before the beast charged through the walls.

 

“Kars!”

 

“You?!” he exclaimed, even as he was forced to leap backwards as the massive head of the magnificent beast ridden by his pet’s annoying male counterpart slammed down in what was clearly an attempt to bite him in half.

 

“Does my presence shock you, Kars?!” the male vampire laughed – laughed! – in a way that seemed almost perfectly calculated to irritate him. “Did you foolishly think you had seen the last of Dio Brando?!” Snarling as the male vampire laughed at him again, he quickly grabbed both the upper and lower sets of the immense beast’s teeth as the creature again attempted to close them over his head. “Hmm, perhaps this isn’t the best venue for our battle,” the male vampire sneered, chuckling even as Kars ground his teeth in sheer fury; how dare this inferior creature try to mock him! “I know! We should take this outside!”

 

Digging in his heels availed him nothing against the sheer size and weight of the creature he’d been set against, and all too soon Kars found himself driven out through the wall he’d been sliding inexorably towards. The infuriating laughter of the male vampire followed him out.

 

“What is this?!” he demanded, forcing the jaws of the beast he was fighting – it had to be some sort of zombie, since even with their close proximity he wasn’t able to hear any kind of vital signs from the creature’s body, magnificent as it truly was – closed even as the sheer muscle power of the beast tried to open them once again.

 

“Oh, I’m hardly surprised that a barbarian like you wouldn’t have heard of it,” the male vampire sneered, laughing in that same, infuriating way that Kars had heard entirely too many times before; truly, he would thoroughly enjoy devouring that one. “This is Tyrannosaurus Rex,” the male vampire said, seemingly only just able to stop himself from pausing to relish the very name; he supposed that Tyrant Lizard King was a rather auspicious name, if nothing else. “This is what’s going to grant me my victory!”

 

It was his turn to laugh, this time. “Magnificent as that zombie of yours is, I suspect the find wasn’t originally yours, was it?”

 

“What do you mean?” the arrogant creature demanded, and Kars knew he had him.

 

“She found it for you, didn’t she?” he needled, knowing that it had to be true. “You’d have never thought to look for this magnificent specimen if she hadn’t been guiding you, would you?”

 

“So, my sister is brilliant,” the male vampire snapped, sounding as though he was nearly biting off the ends of his words in his fury; it was nearly as perfect as Kars could have asked for. “I’ve never tried to deny it.”

 

“She was never meant to be yours,” he stated, ripping a pair of teeth free from the jaws of the zombie Tyrant Lizard who was no longer fighting him nearly so hard as it had once been, then leaping back out of range before the male vampire could think to send it after him again.

 

What?!”

 

He chuckled, deliberately, as he drove his knife of words in all the deeper. “Come now, you and I both know that she was destined for far greater things than merely playing nursemaid to such an inferior creature as you.” Looking down his nose at the male vampire was little different than doing the same to a human who happened to be riding on the back of a horse, and he’d dealt with more than his share of that kind while he and ACDC had been searching for the Red Stone of Aja.

 

However, it wasn’t the male vampire or his Tyrant Lizard that answered him, but a thin beam from somewhere off in the distance.

 

=BT=

 

“Caesar!” he snarled, biting down in the inside of his helmet in order to activate his radio’s microphone. “What the hell to you think you’re doing?!”

 

“Shut up, Dio,” the presumptuous human snapped back, as another shot from his sweet sister’s UV sniper-rifle blasted down into the spot where Kars had once been standing. “I don’t care what kind of claim you think you have on Kars’ life, but he killed my father, so he’s mine!”

 

Grinding his teeth, knowing that – even beyond what troubles a Hamon user could cause for him – his sweet sister would be a long time forgiving him if he did anything to disturb the perfection of the operation that she had planned so carefully, he, Dio was about to leave the field of battle, when he spotted the charging figure of the only other Pillar Man that had managed to escape his fated destruction at the hands of either his dear Alice herself or one of her elegant machines.

 

“Lord Kars!” the oversized brute shouted, charging into their battleground, swift and heedless enough that he, Dio, found himself wondering just what the brute thought he was doing.

 

That was, he found himself wondering such a thing, right up until the brute’s arms began to spin in two separate directions, and he somehow managed to throw up a cloud of dust so thick that he, Dio, could all but feel the grit on his own skin, even in spite of the fact that his armor and goggles had been specifically designed to be impermeable to such mundane things as that.

 

“Damnit, I’ve lost visibility!” Caesar snarled, even as he, Dio, grinned.

 

“Well, Caesar, it looks like your claim was just superseded!” he, Dio, called back, laughing gleefully as he turned his mighty tyrannosaurus rex, aiming for the center of the dust cloud that the brute named Wham had thrown up with all of his ultimately futile thrashing.

 

“Dio, what the hell do you think you’re doing?!”

 

“Come now, Caesar,” he, Dio, said, feeling pleased and supremely amused both at once. “We both know that you wouldn’t be able to make any kind of accurate shot with this much debris in the air,” he said, grinning all the wider as he charged into the still-handing cloud of dust. “However: I, Dio, hardly need air!” Adjusting his eyes so that he would be better able to see through the debris and dust that would have occluded the vision of any lesser creature, he bit down on his microphone once more to deactivate it, he, Dio, laughed in triumph. “What do you think of me now, Kars?! You bastard! You’ll never lay another hand on my sister!”

 

“You honestly believe that, vampire?”

 

Snapping around to face the sound of the purely infuriating voice that he’d learned to hate so very, very well during the course of the battle that his sweet sister had planned out so perfectly well, Dio yelled as he felt Kars’ heels slamming into his chin. Finding himself in freefall for a few, too-long, terrifying moments, Dio tried to right himself, but felt the Pillar Man’s fist battering him in the gut before he’d fallen even halfway from the lofty height he’d been all but launched to.

 

Slamming into the ground feet-first, Dio screamed as pain – sharper and more sudden than he’d ever felt in either his short life as a human, or his eternal life as a vampire – tore through his back, even as he tipped forward to sprawl inelegantly in the dirt. Feeling his arms leave the ground as he was picked up like some hapless plush toy, Dio realized with a sickening sinking feeling that he was completely unaware of a single physical sensation from below the mutilated remains of his back.

 

Feeling his armor – the only thing that would serve to protect him from sunlight, or else the blasts from his sweet sister’s UV sniper-rifles – torn away from his insensate form was almost a secondary thing, in light of that. As was, he couldn’t help but admit, the calls for a response that he could hear from his earpiece…

Chapter 27: You’re Gonna Go Far Kid

Chapter Text

“Did you really think that one of your meager kind would be able to defeat me?” he drawled, looking down with amusement upon the sprawled form of the male vampire beneath his feet.

 

However, the sound of his clever, determined pet’s voice – seeming to come from the shattered remains of the helmet that he’d taken from the male vampire on the ground – drew his attention down to the dusty ground.

 

“Dio, please respond.”

 

Crouching down, he picked up the cracked remains of some kind of smooth-sided device, just about the perfect size to fit into the innermost space within his ear. Chuckling softly as his lovely, clever pet’s voice came through once more, this time less of a plea and more a command. This was what came to mind, every time he would think of his clever pet’s voice. It was only natural, considering that she was a vampire and the others he’d seen were all lowly humans, that she would have been in command.

 

Picking up the other piece of the male vampire’s helmet, specifically the one that had been shaped to cover the lower half of his face – from his cheeks to his chin – Kars studied the workings of what seemed to be nearly the same kind of device that was made to fit inside the ear of whoever wore the helmet he had destroyed. It bore a distinct enough resemblance to the other device, that working out the function of the device currently in his hands was all the more simple. Particularly for one of his advanced intellect, of course.

 

“Dio, I know you’re there; I can hear you procrastinating.”

 

He chuckled, deep in his throat. “Pet, while I confess that I could happily listen to your lovely voice for the rest of this night, I don’t think that’s going to be possible under the circumstances,” he said, looking down at the sprawled form of her male counterpart.

 

Truly, lying at his feet was the only proper place for one of his lowly kind.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing her eyes in annoyed realization as she heard Kars’ annoying voice coming through over the radio she’d originally given to Dio, Alice switched off her connection to her brother’s microphone.

 

“Caesar, give me a SITREP,” she ordered, knowing that she wouldn’t be getting anything more from Dio unless he managed to get his radio away from Kars; something that was only marginally more likely than the pair of them taking up sunbathing.

 

“I lost sight of Dio,” he said, sounding about as annoyed as she felt, right at that moment. “He just went charging into that dust cloud that Wham kicked up, the idiot!”

 

“I expect I know where he is,” she said, narrowing her eyes just that much more as she considered what she’d just learned. “Anyway, have you managed to reacquire visual contact?”

 

“No,” Caesar growled. “I expect they’ve managed to get beyond the camera’s range.”

 

“I wouldn’t put it past them,” she muttered, flicking her tongue across her upper-right fang in frustration. “All right; we’re going to need to convene again, and soon.”

 

“Agreed, Boss,” Caesar said, and her radio gave a chirp as he shut it down.

 

Inhaling deeply so that she could sigh in annoyance, Alice turned her attention out to Stroheim and Tarkus. The Nazi cyborg and his squad of robotic dinosaurs were the first things that caught her eye, and she waved him over so that the pair of them could talk.

 

“We have a problem,” she said, once Stroheim had gotten close enough to hear what she was going to say. “It seems that Dio managed to get himself captured, and without a way of getting out, this time,” she informed the man, as in the background Tarkus proceeded to round up their remaining dinosaur cavalry.

 

“Kars was able to capture your brother?”

 

“I think we’ll find that Dio had just as much of a hand in his current situation as Kars,” she said, having known her brother for well over half a century. “He might’ve been one of the most powerful assets we had, but he’s not invulnerable to psychological warfare.”

 

Now that was something of an understatement; Dio was one of the most volatile people she’d ever had the dubious pleasure of working with in her long life, and certainly one of the few she’d voluntarily associate herself with, considering their familial bonds. Still, there was really no avoiding the fact that her brother would, more often than not, delegate the task of keeping a lid on his temper to her. She’d long since known that that kind of thing would bite him in the ass sooner or later, but she really had to confess that she’d been hoping that – when that time came – she would have at least been close enough to cuff him upside the head for it.

 

However, it looked like that kind of thing was going to have to wait awhile.

 

=BT=

 

Biting back a scream as that bastard of a Pillar Man devoured his left arm up to the shoulder he, Dio, glared in defiance.

 

“I must admit, I’m almost impressed with your fortitude, vampire,” that bastard said, grinning down at him in the most infuriatingly arrogant way that he’d ever seen.

 

Even that man hadn’t infuriated him nearly as much as the Pillar Man that stood so brazenly before him, in this abandoned place where he and the brute had gone to ground when his sweet sister’s forces had routed them from the sad remains of her former chalet. Even firing his Space Ripper Stingy Eyes directly at the arrogant Pillar Man’s head didn’t give him any satisfaction, because that miserable bastard dodged it with barely a move of his head!

 

Biting down on another scream, as the arrogant bastard devoured his right arm, leaving him with no more flesh or bone below that shoulder than what remained below his left, he, Dio, snarled as the arrogant Pillar Man laughed at him.

 

“Well, it seems as though you do have a few things in common with my pet, vampire,” the arrogant Pillar Man said, leering down at him in a way that seemed calculated to be as infuriating as it was possible for any creature to be; Dio snarled, baring his fangs at the Pillar Man.

 

“My sister is not your pet.”

 

=BT=

 

Alice was a whirlwind of concentrated purpose, but only those who truly knew her would be able to see it, Jonathan knew. To anyone else, his and Dio’s sister would appear to be a perfectly calm island of tranquility in the sea of barely-leashed chaos that the conference room they had all gathered in was swiftly becoming.

 

“All right,” Alice said, clapping her hands to further draw the attention of everyone who currently stood within the conference room. “Given what we know about Kars, I think we can make at least some educated guesses as to where he and Wham are currently staying.”

 

As he watched the meeting continue, Jonathan found himself hoping that those gathered here would be able to affect the rescue of Dio before those horrid Pillar Men could harm him in any permanent ways; he knew there was little chance that his and Alice’s brother would not be harmed at all.

 

=BT=

 

Finding himself confined to a bare room whose stark darkness was clearly meant to be oppressive he, Dio, growled as he heard the approach of another of those damnable Pillar Men.

 

“What the hell are you doing in here?” he demanded of the brute named Wham, who had been staring at him for some time before he, Dio, had deigned to notice the Pillar Man.

 

“Why do you continue to resist?” the brute asked, a curious expression upon his blunt face. “You must know that Lord Kars is inevitably going to defeat any allies that you and yours can gather, so why do you persist in challenging him? I’m certain he would be merciful to the both of you, if you would only submit.”

 

Hissing his fury at the Pillar Man who dared to mock both him and his sweet sister’s efforts he, Dio, narrowed his eyes and turned up his nose. “I would hardly call our efforts futile, you oaf,” he grinned widely, showing all his fangs. “Or, have you forgotten that two of your own are dead, Pillar Man?!”

 

“What do you mean?”

 

“The first of them I wasn’t present for,” he said, knowing that with both of his arms and his legs below the knees having been devoured by that bastard of a Pillar Man Kars he, Dio, wouldn’t be able to escape on his own without the aid of either circumstances or, much more likely, his sweet sister, but he would at least be able to scourge this brute to his heart’s content. “I was only able to observe it through the monitor cameras of the base, but watching the first of your worthless compatriots die was more than worth it!”

 

=BT=

 

“You witnessed Santana’s last moments, did you?” he asked, narrowing his eyes as he made his way inside.

 

“Lord Kars,” Wham greeted, bowing respectfully as he stepped aside.

 

Glancing briefly at his old friend, meeting Wham’s eyes for a moment, Kars turned his attention to his clever pet’s male counterpart.

 

“What? Nothing more to say?” he mocked, moving to stand over the pathetic form of the limbless vampire before him, Kars smirked. “You seemed so talkative when you were merely facing Wham, vampire. Could it be that you’re afraid of me?”

 

“I watched two of your fellows die, you miserable bastard!” the male vampire threw at him, snarling impotently in a way that could only truly be amusing.

 

“Are you referring to Santana?” he asked, smirking down at the pitiful, limbless form of the vampire before him. “He was nothing more than a child; a well-trained guard dog. He could never compare to us.”

 

“Oh, and what about that other compatriot of yours?” the male vampire asked, seizing on the only thing he could have possibly noticed.

 

“Yes, I suspect that ACDC also met his end, is that right?” he asked, grinning calmly.

 

“My sister slaughtered that imbecile!” the male vampire snarled, grinning like a mad dog, baring the fangs that the Stone Mask had granted him. “There was nothing more than dust by the time she was finished!”

 

“Master ACDC was defeated by a vampire?!” Wham demanded, clearly infuriated by the very idea of such a thing.

 

“He paid the price for his lack of vision,” the male vampire spat, grinning in that same, feral manner of his; however, something in the vampire’s demeanor suggested that he was repeating something he’d heard somewhere before.

 

“My pet said that, didn’t she?” he needled, grinning down at the pitiful form of the male vampire so far beneath him.

 

The amusement on the male vampire’s face vanished, faster than mists in a high wind. “My sister is not your pet!”

 

“She will be, soon enough,” he said, smiling calmly down at the pathetic vampire so far beneath him. “Still, even if I were to take what you say as truth, that only proves her all the more worthy of me.”

 

He could see the pitiful, impotent fury in the male vampire’s eyes, and dodged the blast of the creature’s Space Ripper Stingy Eyes at the last moment, simply to demonstrate his clear superiority over it. Turning slightly as Wham exited the room, he turned his back to the pathetic, limbless vampire seated in the chair behind him without another word.

 

“Lord Kars, do you really think it possible that your vampire was able to defeat Master ACDC?”

 

“Given what I’ve learned of her, I suspect she did,” he grinned, remembering the defiance in his clever pet’s eyes. “And Santana, as well.”

 

Wham’s eyes narrowed, as though he were looking into the past; remembering ACDC, and the times that he and Santana had met. Still, it was not the past that occupied Kars’ mind, but the future. The future, where he’d caged that clever hawk of his, and was free to shape her as he liked. She would be the treasure of his collection, and he would craft her into the magnificent Pillar Woman she should have been born as from the beginning.

 

“I would have never thought that a woman, even a vampire, would have been capable of such a thing,” Wham said, gathering himself once more from his musings. “She truly is your equal, Lord Kars.”

 

“Not yet,” he said, grinning as he thought of the Stone Mask that he had created for his clever hawk, the one that would began her proper transformation. “But, in time, yes.”

 

=BT=

 

Watching as the Boss laid out a case of grenades on the table, Caesar found himself wondering just what it was that she intended to do with them. The Boss had to know that the small explosion from any kind of grenade would hardly be enough to even damage a vampire like her, much less one of the two remaining Pillar Men.

 

“Boss, how do you think any of this is going to work? You would be able to resist an explosion from a bomb this size,” he said, looking from the case full of grenades to the black-suited form of the Boss; she was wearing that suit she had designed, the one that was designed for pure stealth and infiltration; matte black, and apparently capable of sloughing off any scent that it picked up from the surrounding environment. “So, what do you think these little things are going to do?”

 

“Both vampires and Pillar Men have greatly enhanced senses of hearing, and hence balance,” the Boss said, grinning slightly as she picked up one of the things he was beginning to suspect weren’t exactly grenades. “Both of which the Noisy Cricket here can play merry hell with.”

 

“Ah, I see,” Stroheim said, picking up one of the small, hand-held sonic grenades. “Yes, these Noisy Crickets of yours should do just fine.”

 

“All right, since we know where Kars and Wham are currently staying, all that remains is to deploy our forces,” the Boss said, narrowing her eyes as she looked down at the map they had all gathered around. “We’re going to need all of them, to keep Kars and Wham distracted while I fetch Dio.”

 

“Yeah,” Jojo muttered, picking up one of the Boss’ Noisy Crickets and staring down at it. “Uncle Dio can’t be too happy, cooped up in there with them.”

 

Narrowing his eyes as he considered what was going to happen next, Caesar flicked them over to the Boss, as she made contact with Straizo. Knowing that her retainer also functioned as a test-pilot for her various experimental aircraft, he’d a certain suspicion about what she wanted from him. So, he knew that her brother Dio was going to be in good hands, at least once they’d managed to extract him, anyway.

 

=BT=

 

Once they’d all gotten underway, with Alice herself sitting in a nearby tree to await the fireworks that would serve to cover her entrance, she found herself wondering for a moment just what condition she was ultimately going to find Dio in. While it was clear that not one of the two remaining Pillar Men had much of a taste for taking prisoners, Kars was probably canny enough to know that keeping one of captive was a good way to draw the attention of the other. Still, it remained to be seen just how deeply Kars was prepared to look.

 

After first missile had slammed into the façade of the mansion, shaking the ground and resounding like thunder through the air, Alice moved. All but flying over the leaf-littered ground, keeping low enough that she could remain stable even at the kind of speed she was moving, Alice paused for a moment as a breathless silence fell over the night. Pressing her hands flush against the wall of the mansion, Alice mapped it with her tremor-sense, and then skittered up the wall just as another sudden explosion shattered the night.

 

Pulling away a ventilation grate, Alice latched onto it with her elastic veins, pulling the thing closed behind her as she dove into the attic.

 

When the next explosion rattled the walls all around her, Alice dug her fingers into the wooden planks of the floor, pulled them up, and slipped between the two layers of flooring. Stretching and compressing her body so that she could fit through narrow spaces, in a way that almost reminded her of Santana’s escape from the Nazis not quite so long ago, Alice paused for a moment to take in the layout of the house once again.

 

Seems I’m headed for the basement, she mused, supposing it fit. If there was at least one lesson that those troublesome Pillar Men might very well have learned from their last clash with her forces, seemed to be that going higher wasn’t always the best choice. And, while she wasn’t exactly pleased to be dealing with the kind of opponents who actually learned from their mistakes, Alice knew that she couldn’t really count on finding herself set up against either myopic or just plain stupid opponents all the time.

 

Particularly when the opponents in question had lived for longer than some of the countries she’d been working with existed.

 

Pausing for a moment during another lull in combat, Alice mapped out the basement room now almost directly beneath her with her tremor senses. She could almost hear her brother’s frustrated cursing though the walls, and it gave her a much better idea of the layout of the room she was going to be entering, if only long enough to pull Dio out of whatever tight spot her troublesome twin had gotten himself wedged into this time.

 

Zeroing in on the chair in the rough center of the underground room, Alice dug her fingers into the planks once again, pulling them up in time with another, thundering explosion from outside the walls of the mansion she was making her way through. Tossing the shattered remains of the ceiling aside, Alice dove into the room, kicking off of the edges of the hole so that she would be able to land on her feet once again. Landing with her knees slightly bent from the impact, she dashed forward before even the first of the wood-shrapnel could hit the floor.

 

Narrowing her eyes as she picked up the basically limbless form of her twin, Alice leaped back up to the ceiling once again, punching through the floor and diving up into what seemed to be the main room of the mansion the two remaining Pillar Men had been sheltering in. Lunging forward as a cluster-bomb hammered the façade of the mansion once more, Alice kicked open the far wall, curling her fingers inward to tap the hidden radio-transceiver on her right wrist even as she did so.

 

Pinging Straizo, where he waited with the X-15.

 

The harsh scream of jet-engines, unmistakable to anyone who’d heard them before, shattered the night over even the sound of the ordinance being poured down on the remains of the mansion she was quickly leaving behind. Dropping into a crouch, Alice unfolded her legs in a leap calculated to carry her over the form of the X-15 as it screamed through the air. Grabbing onto the edge of the cockpit as Straizo tipped the opened canopy towards them, Alice hoisted herself and Dio into the back seat of the X-15 as it roared away.

 

The canopy slammed shut, locking itself and sealing out the screaming roar of the engines as Straizo guided them back to her main holdings in Venice. A sonic-boom rumbled through the body of the jet, as the hangar of her Venice Tower came into view and Straizo brought them fully into the hangar and the tail hook on the jet caught firmly. Sighing reflexively as she climbed up and out of the X-15, she called a brief thanks to Straizo as she made her way out of the jet and back through the hangar itself.

 

Looking down at Dio as her twin nuzzled her left shoulder, she saw him smirk in response, then turn and deliberately kiss the right side of her neck.

 

Shaking her head in fond exasperation, even as she continued down to the elevator that would take them up and out of the hangar, Alice made for the medical laboratory that rested a few floors below where they were currently standing. Shifting Dio just enough so that she could get to the buttons, Alice hit the one that would take her down to the floor she needed, and then leaned back against the wall to wait for them to arrive.

 

=BT=

 

Once his sweet sister had returned them to her holdings within the grand city of Venice he, Dio, had been furnished with two pairs of temporary prosthetic limbs, and put up in the generous suite that had been set aside for those who were in need of long-term treatment for a particularly involved operation. The scent of a familiar person, over and above the container of sheep’s blood that he was drinking, brought a cheerful smile to his face once again.

 

“Dio!”

 

“Hello again, Jojo,” he said, grinning up at his and Alice’s adorable puppy of a brother as he came into the recovery room.

 

“Look at you,” Jojo said, their adorable puppy said, strong voice quavering as he looked down. “Damn that Kars!”

 

Before he, Dio, could finish off the container of blood he’d been drinking from, Jojo hurried over to pick it up. He could feel a smile starting to emerge on his face, as Jojo swiftly arranged the pair of them on the bed together. Laughing softly as Jojo pulled him into his lap he, Dio, let himself fall back naturally as Jojo curled up next to him.

 

The sharp tang of human blood drew his attention as he finished off the last of the sheep’s blood that his sweet sister had given to him drew his attention back to his and Alice’s dear, sweet little puppy.

 

“Jojo?”

 

“Here,” Jojo said, smiling softly as he pulled Dio into his lap, gently laying his opened hand over Dio’s own mouth. “Rest, Dio, and take as much as you need.”

 

=BT=

 

As he felt the dull plastic of the artificial hands that Alice had built for Dio to use while she completed her work reaching up to gently support his own as he allowed Dio to feed from him, Jonathan closed his eyes. He’d never expected to have to face an enemy such as the Pillar Men had shown themselves to be, but after seeing what Kars had done to Dio… He couldn’t forgive such a thing. And, while he knew that Caesar Zeppeli had already laid a claim on the Pillar Man’s life for what had been done to his father Mario, he couldn’t help but think that such a thing wasn’t truly to be.

 

On a land born of fire, he mused, closing his eyes as he tried not to weep at what had been done to his and Alice’s brother. Dio would be able to smell his tears, and would inevitably wonder just what it was that had drawn such a reaction from him. He’d no more wish to speak of Master Tonpetty’s last prophesy to Dio any more than he’d spoken of it to Alice, but not exactly for the same reason.

 

Dio, well… he would be furious, and his and Alice’s brother was the kind to fight the very world if he thought it would get him what he wanted; but this was hardly the kind of thing that could be fought, not with any hope of winning. He knew that better than anyone, particularly after what he’d asked Master Tonpetty when he’d arrived at the temple in Tibet.

Chapter 28: And So It Goes

Chapter Text

The first thing he’d done, of course, was to ask just what it was that had driven William Zeppeli into such a rage at his dear siblings that he hadn’t even been able to think of them as people worthy of humane consideration – their vampire status aside – even as he’d been dying of the many sword wounds that Dio had been inflicting on him even unto the end of his life. He’d seen the misplaced fear and pity in William’s eyes, looking up at him, even as the light had faded from them for the last time.

 

As it had turned out, William had made a terribly unfortunate misinterpretation of the prophesy that he’d been granted. The vampires that had defeated themselves he’d been told of did not refer to those who would merely lay down and die, but to Dio and Alice, who had defeated the cruel nature of the stone mask with their own, human hearts. It was a sad thing, to know that William had died because he simply could not accept that his initial interpretation of Master Tonpetty’s prophesy had been wrong, but such a thing could hardly be helped by now.

 

Still, Jonathan couldn’t help wondering how things could have been different, if such a thing could have been possible; he thought that William could have been a good friend, if the man had been willing to look beyond his own preconceptions about vampires and see Dio and Alice for who they truly were.

 

When Alice returned from her laboratory on this level, he greeted his and Dio’s sister kindly, and watched as she turned her attention back to the work she was soon to be doing.

 

He knew that his and Dio’s sister would soon have their brother restored to at least some semblance of mobility by the time she was finished, Jonathan allowed himself to relax slightly. Yes, he knew that there would be many more tasks that they would need to accomplish before any of them would be able to call this battle truly finished, and he knew that he himself was not going to survive the ultimate conclusion of it, but Jonathan couldn’t help but wish to reach that conclusion.

 

If only so that his remaining family, and the world as a whole, would be able to live in peace.

 

=BT=

 

His sweet sister, brilliant creature that she was, had devised not only a pair of ingenious prosthetics to aid him, Dio, in running, fighting, and standing against Kars once again, but also equipped the ones replacing his arms with a variant of her Noisy Cricket – in his right hand – as well as a UV laser in his left. He was pleased to know that – even as he was recovering from the damage that that bastard of a Pillar Man had inflicted on him – he would be able to stand against him and his brutish cohort even so.

 

He, Dio, could hardly have been more pleased.

 

“All right, so you already know about the basic operation of the weapons I’ve built into your prosthetics, but I think it would be best if you familiarized yourself with operating them. Having something built into your limbs is different than just picking something up to use it.”

 

“Whatever you wish, sister dear,” he said, grinning back at his sweet Alice as she looked back at him, the usual, businesslike expression she wore when she was hard at work in her way.

 

She raised a subtly amused eyebrow at him, and the pair of them swiftly departed for the testing grounds that she had had built into this tower of hers. He’d become rather familiar with them, but moreso the training grounds that she’d designed for any place where he and their growing family chose to settle for longer than a few months. Places where those among their number who possessed abilities beyond that of the common rabble – either through the wonders of their own advanced biology, or through determination and training of the most esoteric sort – could not only hone their skills but develop all new ones without even leaving the comfort of the tower they were staying in.

 

He, Dio, had come to enjoy them quite immensely; he’d likely make a stop there, once his sweet sister had managed to familiarize him with the operation of the weaponry she’d been so kind as to install in his new limbs.

 

=BT=

 

The shattered remains of the human dwelling told only part of the story; it was the absence of the male vampire that Lord Kars had taken captive that truly displayed the full capabilities of the female vampire that Lord Kars had taken such an interest in; the one who had long since proven that she was a match for Lord Kars in every way but age and power. He’d no doubt anymore that the female vampire would resist every effort that Lord Kars made to court her in the way he was clearly doing.

 

It was, after all, what Lord Kars himself would have done, had their positions been reversed in some way.

 

“Not even a feather left to mark her passage,” Lord Kars said, satisfaction in his tone, even as he surveyed the expanse of the abandoned human dwelling where they had been keeping the male vampire in an effort to draw Lord Kars’ vampire to them. “Truly, I’m going to have to break her wings, if I’m ever going to cage that hawk of mine properly.”

 

“Indeed,” he intoned, though it was truly beginning to seem as though Lord Kars’ vampire was determined not to be caged.

 

With every new creation the female vampire unveiled, it seemed that Lord Kars grew all the more infatuated, and all the less willing to consider that there might have been another way of gaining that which he wanted. It seemed that Lord Kars’ vampire was the sort to hold an association with the humans who flocked to her, and so perhaps that could be a way to gain that which his Lord had come to desire so strongly.

 

=BT=

 

Disassembling his UV rifle with smooth, efficient motions, Caesar took a deep, harsh breath as he began reassembling it. Snapping it back together with the relentless efficiency that his training had engrained in him, he didn’t even pause for a moment as the sound of footsteps closed in on the table where he was working.

 

“You’re stewing again.”

 

“Boss,” he looked up at the vampire that had given him so much; a new home, a purpose, and even the chance to find out what had happened to his father. Shuddering as he felt her light touch on his right shoulder, Caesar leaned his forehead against her collarbone. “Even after all these years, nothing’s changed since that day.”

 

“You’re not crying; that has to count for something,” the Boss said, the gentle good-humor in her tone almost forcing a sickly sort of chuckle out of him, even as he felt his eyes stinging all the more.

 

The pair of them stood like that for a long moment, as Caesar tried to compose himself once more.

 

It truly was almost the same as what had happened on that terrible, long-ago day; the only difference was that the Boss wasn’t carrying him back to one of her holdings in Rome, he hadn’t been forced to witness the death of his father, and he knew just what kind of dangers there were in the world. In every other way, however, this was a clear match for the situation that he’d once faced. Even down to the gentle way the Boss was stroking his hair in an effort to help him regain his composure.

 

“Thanks, Boss,” he said, once he felt capable of standing back up without the risk of falling to his knees in anguish from the memories that all of this upheaval had brought back to the fore once again.

 

“Of course,” the Boss said calmly, gentle gaze focusing on him once more. “You know that you can always come to me when there’s something on your mind, Caesar.”

 

“I know,” he said, smiling for the first time since he’d made his way down into the training ground to be alone with his training and his weapon. “Thanks, Boss.”

 

The Boss nodded, turning to make her way out of the training room he’d been working in. Sighing as he looked up at her retreating back as she left, Caesar tried to compose himself again. He didn’t know what kind of man he’d have become if the Boss hadn’t been there for him, and the more time he spent with her, the less he actually wanted to know.

 

=BT=

 

Seated at the long table that he’d claimed for himself when he, and his bond-brother Tarkus had been invited to this place alongside their liege Lord and Lady, Bruford settled his right hand on the head of one of his feathered hounds – the ancient, undead creatures that his liege Lady had granted him access to – Bruford looked out over the expanse of the underground room that he and Tarkus had been given for their own use once they had been fully integrated in among the workings of their Lady’s growing empire. He’d been seeing less and less of his bond-brother of late; however, as Tarkus had become increasingly enamored by their Lady’s armored siege-beasts and his role as their keeper, Bruford had almost been expecting such a thing, truly. Tarkus would have had to have been a far different man for him to have done anything different.

 

The sound of the building-wide standby-alert brought Bruford out of his contemplations far more abruptly than he would have ever wished under normal circumstances; however, anyone who had ever participated in one of his Lady’s readiness drills would know that such a sound was one that signaled the end of normal circumstances.

 

Rising from his seat, Bruford signaled for his feathered hound not to follow – whoever it was that had opted to confront them, his Lady had determined that an overwhelming show of force was not the best face to present to them – and made his way over to the elevator that would carry him up to the surface levels of the building they were all currently staying in. Grabbing the armored-cloth cloak that would allow him to survive in sunlight – there was little reason to believe that this was not one of the ancient creatures that had dared to threaten his liege Lady and been punished so for their temerity, and hence no reason to think that she would not take the precaution of having every one of her marksman windows filled by a UV-rifle armed sniper – Bruford made his way over to the small group that had begun forming around her.

 

She nodded to him, as he insinuated himself into the group, composed as it already was of his Lady’s retainer – the vampire Straizo – as well as her right hand in this country, Caesar Zeppeli.

 

“Who are we facing?” he asked, knowing by the grimness of the expressions all around him that this was not to be a simple drill.

 

“Wham,” Caesar all but snarled, an unbecoming sort of rage on his face; Bruford tried not to think less of him for it, considering his past with the creatures they were facing.

 

“Yes,” his liege Lady said, sounding annoyed, but also sounding as though she had a reluctant sort of curiosity as to just what it was that the Pillar Man could have been intending by presenting himself to them in the manner that he had just done. “He’s just been standing out there; pretty much the only reason I didn’t send the entire building into high-alert status as soon as Melanie spotted him, really.”

 

“Indeed,” the vampire Straizo said, narrowing his eyes in contemplation as the four of them made their way over to the front entrance where the Wham the Pillar Man was waiting for them.

 

=BT=

 

For the life of her, she didn’t know just what it was that Wham could have been planning. Sure, she had some inkling of what anyone generally affiliated with Kars would want – namely her – but she didn’t know what Wham’s particular angle was, here and now. It seemed that she’d just have to poke him and see how he jumped, so to speak.

 

Not always the safest of prospects, particularly under the circumstances, but there were few faster ways to produce results.

 

He seemed to have been studying they layout of her building, when she came out to see just what it was that he was doing, so it seemed like not all of the Pillar Men were such a dull sort as Kars.

 

“Paying a visit, are we?” she asked, narrowing her eyes as she studied the tall, broad shouldered, thickly-muscled form standing before her tower complex.

 

“I’ve come to ask your indulgence, if you would hear me out,” the Pillar Man said, a slight tilt to his head so that he was actually looking at her rather than down on her, the way Kars always seemed to.

 

“You really think I’m going to invite you into my building?” she asked, narrowing her eyes as she studied the man in front of her.

 

Wham actually chuckled, though the sound was soft and rueful, rather than mocking the way it had been with Kars and ACDC. “I wouldn’t presume to be entitled to your hospitality.”

 

“Well, at least one of you has some manners,” she said, raising an eyebrow at the Pillar Man before her; none of her entourage made a sound, though there was definitely some amusement – good humored and not – lurking in their eyes when she paused to check their reactions. “All right; you have my attention, Wham. What did you want to discus?”

 

“I’m curious: why do you keep rejecting the offer of perfection that my Lord, Kars has made to you so many times?”

 

“I don’t recall ever hearing an offer,” she said, beginning to see the obvious cultural divide that she and Wham stood on either side of; under any other set of circumstances, she would have been rather more tolerant of such. “Though I do recall a kidnapping attempt, several assaults on my companions and subordinates, and the destruction of a great deal of my personal property.”

 

However, after everything that had happened, she’d more than had her fill of dealing with the overbearing arse that was Kars the Pillar Man.

 

“Yes, I suppose you would remember it in that manner,” Wham said, his tone a great deal more conciliatory than she would have expected from someone saying those words.

 

She raised an eyebrow, and then her left hand when it looked like Caesar was about to yell something unhelpful. “I know that memories can be self-serving at times, but none of the sacrifices I was forced to make would have been necessary if you and yours hadn’t been pursuing me.”

 

“Yes,” Wham said, sounding as though he was starting to understand just what he and his had driven her to. “I suppose I should apologize.”

 

You haven’t actually done anything,” she said, tilting her head slightly to the Pillar Man standing before her; she could hardly begrudge the man for following orders; well, not from someone like Kars, at least.

 

He did honestly seem the type to execute someone for not listening to what he said.

 

“I would not have expected such understanding, considering how many weapons of yours you have pointed at me,” Wham said, eyes flickering around the compound he was standing in, stopping for a handful of seconds on each and every one of the marksman-windows that she had a sniper posted in.

 

“You can hardly blame one for taking precautions, particularly when dealing with someone like you,” she said, folding her arms and tilting her head as she continued to observe Wham’s actions.

 

He didn’t seem particularly likely to attack; however, he was still a Pillar Man, and there was the inherent hazard in dealing with him.

 

“Yes,” Wham said, chuckling as he closed his eyes for a moment, clearly having conceded the point. “I would hardly expect you to leave yourself and your people vulnerable when meeting with me,” he sobered, becoming serious once more. “A leader must always look to the welfare of their people.”

 

=BT=

 

As he watched the Boss and Wham interacting with each other, Caesar found himself wondering just how in the world someone like Wham had ended up working so closely with a bastard like Kars. When the pair of them parted in an amicable sort of way, Caesar found himself wondering that all the more. Falling in behind the Boss as she made her way back into the Tower, Caesar re-slung his UV-rifle on his back and stepped back through the doors once again.

 

“I have to say, that went better than I was expecting,” the Boss said, once the four of them had made their way into the elevator and were on their way back up to her top-floor office.

 

“True,” Bruford said thoughtfully, an expression of deep thought on his face. “It seems a strange thing, to find a man of such honor in the company of a beast such as Kars.”

 

“You’re right,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he considered everything that had happened in the past; everything he’d learned about one of the two remaining Pillar Men that they had all been facing.

 

It really did seem like he had some code of honor that he followed, which did in fact make it all the more puzzling that he seemed to be such a dedicated follower of that bastard Kars. He could see that same curiosity of his firmly reflected on the Boss’ face as she made her way back into the Tower, and so Caesar knew that it was probably only a matter of time before they would be meeting with the Pillar Man named Wham again. He could only hope that it would be on their terms, rather than those of that bastard Kars.

 

=BT=

 

As he made his way back to the new holdings that he and Lord Kars had claimed for themselves after the destruction of the previous two buildings where they had been able to take shelter – even if in the most temporary sort of ways – Wham reflected back upon what he had learned of the female vampire after meeting her. The first thing he found was that he could no longer entirely bring himself to think of her as Lord Kars’ vampire. She had so clearly established herself as a leader of the humans who gathered to her that such a thing would have been disrespectful in the extreme.

 

Even if the vampire herself never came to know it, it was the one thing that he could do for her.

 

Because, even with the respect that the young vampire had rightfully earned with her poise, her actions, and the way she had spoken to him, it was still a simple, undeniable fact that she could never hope to best Lord Kars in combat. Even with all of her native skill and wit, Lord Kars would simply overpower whatever means of defense or attack that she could devise. He’d never been so troubled by the thought of an inevitable victory before; not since…

 

But no, the female vampire that Lord Kars desired had so little in common with that long-ago Hamon tribe member that even making the comparison was an insult to the strength that he had seen in every line of the young vampire’s face when the pair of them had stood before one another; every command that she had given.

 

He’d not so disparage all of who and what she was by making such a comparison, even though the vampire herself was not at all likely to hear of it. As he continued on into the inner-rooms of the building that he and Lord Kars had taken up residence in, Wham found his Lord – and one of the only remaining members of their kind, but he tried not to think of things in those terms, when he could avoid it – standing over a table that seemed to be crowded with colorful papers.

 

“Lord Kars,” he greeted, wondering for a long moment if he should call attention to what his Lord was doing, before Lord Kars turned to him with a look of pleasure on his face.

 

“Wham,” his Lord said, nodding briefly before returning his attention to the papers that seemed to have absorbed it so completely.

 

The sight of the female vampire’s face adorning nearly every one of them – those that actually featured images on the covers, rather than simply text – gave him at least some idea of just what it was that his Lord was looking for in what would have otherwise seemed like a purely indulgent collection.

 

“It seems that my pet has been quite thoroughly busy,” Lord Kars said, the pleased smile on his face twisting into a smirk as he traced the contours of the female vampire’s picture on the front of a brightly colored sheaf of papers.

 

He’d no knowledge of the written language that the female vampire and those humans that she had drawn to her used, but the more pictures that he studied, the more the female vampire stood out to him as a leader and a guide to the humans who had gathered around her. It also appeared as though she was a match for Lord Kars in sheer inventiveness, as well.

 

“Lord Kars, I know it is not my place to question you, but I have my doubts that this path you’re currently on will give you the resolution you desire.”

 

“What do you mean, Wham?” Lord Kars asked, the expression on his face transforming into one of interest.

 

“I feel I must apologize; I went to take her measure, rather than reporting back to you as I should have,” he said, dropping to his knees before his Lord, and hoping for a moment that he would not be punished too severely for his presumption.

 

“Oh?”

 

“Yes,” he said, bowing all the deeper before his Lord, in the hopes that he would somehow be able to make himself understood in the way that such a matter required. “She seems to be not only a dedicated leader and guide to the humans who gather around her, in addition to the weapons and tools that she designs and builds for herself.”

 

“Yes, that seems to be one of the only weaknesses that my pet is still prey to,” Lord Kars mused, turning his attention back to the sheaves of paper lying all about the table that he’d gathered on the journeys that he’d clearly been undertaking, and waving to Wham in order to signal him to stand up.

 

Briefly parting his lips, Wham realized that it would do him little good to speak his mind when it was clear that Lord Kars had very little interest in the perspective that he had gained with regards to the female vampire and the humans – and even other vampires – that she presided over. He thought it rather a sad thing, that Lord Kars seemed completely disinterested in learning about the female vampire, where she herself had seemed to be rather interested in learning everything that Wham had come to know about the Lord of the Pillar Men during the millennia the pair of them had spent together.

 

He not felt that it was his place, to tell her about the young warrior of the Hamon tribe and how Lord Kars had been forced to dispatch the boy, and of the deplorable state of mind that such a thing had spoken so clearly of. Still, he wondered just what it was that she would have said, if he’d deigned to tell her of such a thing. He expected, given all that he had learned of her proclivities, that she would not have held such a thing against him.

 

Alice Brando was not a woman who took her underlings lightly, after all.

Chapter 29: Everything I Own

Chapter Text

She’d ordered it shipped to her nearly as soon as she’d finished her impromptu meeting with Wham, and now Alice looked upon the latest iteration of the anti-Hamon battle armor that she had originally created in order to be able to stand against a combat art that had been developed specifically in order to hunt vampires like her, Dio, and Straizo. Given the fact that she couldn’t physically touch her current opponents – the pair of them that remained, though it was beginning to seem as though Wham wasn’t going to be an enemy of theirs for much longer, given how things were progressing – the armor she had designed to be able to deflect and diffuse Hamon-charged blows would provide a defense against the Pillar Men and their freakishly weird ability to actually absorb their food through their skins. She honestly doubted any of them would be able to eat through metal, at least in the time she was going to give them.

 

Or rather, the time she wasn’t.

 

=BT=

 

After managing to separate himself from Lord Kars, Wham began searching for the signs of Alice Brando’s influence within the human settlement that the pair of them had confronted each other within. It was becoming plain that she had established herself very well within the settlement where the pair of them had first become aware of each other, but the place that he was most interested in seemed to be a place for holding the ancient remains of the great, armored beasts that he and Lord Kars had encountered a great deal of when the female vampire had made her attack on the house of hers that he and Lord Kars had inhabited while they were attempting to draw her into their grasp. Back before he had realized what kind of a leader she was.

 

Before he had known the kind of strength he would find in her.

 

Ducking inside the large building that stood before him, taking care to evade the notice of the humans that were patrolling for others of their kind that might have been attempting to make their way into this place for whatever reasons that such creatures would have for attempting such a foolish thing, Wham found himself confronted by the seemingly picked-clean skeletons of the great creatures that he had faced on that occasion when Alice Brando had been drawn into combat with Lord Kars and himself. However, as he took the time to study the skeletons that had been displayed in the first room that any human who had chose to visit this place would find themselves inside, Wham found that the bones themselves were in fact made of stone. It was an odd matter to contemplate, that any creature would possess such a skeleton as the creatures he was seeing before him.

 

He wondered, for a long moment, just why he and Lord Kars had never encountered any of these creatures on the many travels that the pair of them had made during the course of their search for the Red Stone of Aja; and found himself wishing, for a handful of moments, that he could ask Master ACDC or Santana about what they themselves had seen during the course of their own travels.

 

The sound of footsteps drew his attention, and the fact that he was unable to hear any of the sounds associated with human life let him know that he was dealing with one of Alice Brando’s attendants, if not the vampire herself. Turning to confront the one making their way into the room with him, Wham found himself facing the tall, noble-looking form of the dark-haired vampire that had been standing next to Caesar when Alice Brando and her underlings had confronted him outside her building.

 

“She sent you out to meet with me?” he asked, smiling softly as the vampire made his way over to where he was standing.

 

“Indeed,” the vampire said, nodding even as he studied Wham more closely. “Though, she and I are both curious to know what it might be that you are seeking in this museum.”

 

“I’ve found myself curious about just why it was that neither I nor Lord Kars have ever encountered these creatures on our travels,” he said, looking back up at all of the skeletons that had been posed as though they still possessed the breath of life in their nonexistent bodies.

 

“My liege Lady has informed me that these creatures were all driven to extinction by some great calamity, before even the first human had raised their head,” the vampire said, narrowing his eyes as he looked up at the enormous skeletons that towered over them; skeletons that would have felt as though they dwarfed the pair of them nearly into insignificance, at least if Wham had not fully known the significance of his own existence.

 

“Such a long time…” he muttered, narrowing his eyes as he looked up at the displayed skeletons that stood above them both.

 

Lord Kars would, perhaps, know more of these great beasts than he himself did, but Wham was beginning to find himself reluctant to return to the side of the sole remaining one of his kind to have survived the battles that they had engaged in against the forces of this new world that they had awakened into, after being forced to hibernate for so long in an effort to escape from the attention and the implacable hostility of the Hamon tribe. Those of them that had remained after Lord Kars and Master ACDC had turned their own attention to them, of course.

 

“There is another place that you might wish to see,” the vampire standing by his side commented, bringing Wham’s attention back to the present from where it had idly wandered.

 

“What?”

 

“A place that very few are aware of,” the vampire said, assessing gaze focusing upon him for a long moment, as though to judge his worthiness to know such a thing as what he was being told. “None of those who come into this place as guests have been permitted to find out about what I am telling you now,” the vampire said, pausing for a moment of consideration as he looked over Wham once more. “There are those who would not be prepared to understand what my liege Lady is, and so this place has had to be concealed from them.”

 

“And, I suppose you intend to show me this place?” he asked, feeling rather pleased by the trust that he was being offered by the female vampire and her underlings.

 

Once the pair of them had agreed to the terms that he was to be operating under while he was paying his arranged visit to whatever place that Alice Brando’s vampire underling was going to show him, Wham followed behind him and found himself wondering just what it was that he was going to find when he finally arrived in whatever hidden place that Alice Brando had deigned to invite him to visit.

 

=BT=

 

“Oh, Straizo!”

 

The sound of Joseph’s voice, cheerful and full of enthusiasm as it ever was, drew his attention to where Alice’s retainer – the man who Jojo had told him had originally been a practitioner of Hamon, alongside the elder Zeppeli and another man named Dire – was seated at a low table, before the tub of spun sugar that Robert had known to expect would be sitting before him simply from the tone of Joseph’s voice. There was a clear, if subdued, expression of annoyance upon Straizo’s still-youthful face, as he seemed to deliberately pluck up another puff of the spun sugar he was eating with that strange utensil that had clearly been designed for the sole purpose of preventing his gloves from becoming sticky when he was enjoying that odd delicacy that he seemed to have developed a distinct kind of craving for.

 

“Come on, Straizo,” Joseph said, and Robert could all but hear the large, wheedling grin that the younger Joestar would naturally be wearing as he attempted to persuade Straizo to part with at least some of the spun sugar that he possessed; a task that Robert personally doubted that even Alice herself would have been capable of, if she had had any interest in such things in the first place.

 

“There are plenty of shops where you would be able to purchase a confection such as this, Joseph Joestar,” Straizo said, clearly having decided not to pay Joseph any mind; though Robert personally doubted that such a resolution would hold if Joseph decided to make a move toward him. “Therefore, I do not see why you continually hound me when I attempt to enjoy mine. You make very little sense, Joseph Joestar.”

 

“You make very little sense, Joseph Joestar,” Joseph said, at the same time as Straizo himself said those same, seven words.

 

Looking up from the newspaper he’d been reading, wanting to keep abreast of any new developments that might have pointed to the appearance of one of the two remaining Pillar Men, Robert saw Straizo glare in clear annoyance at Joseph’s antics, before the most subtle expression of pleasure came over the vampire’s face. The soft swish of a Tibetan Hamon master’s robes drew Robert’s attention, and he turned to see Jojo himself making his way into the room where Straizo and Joseph were sitting while they rested from all of the upheavals that were part and parcel of the battles they had all taken part in not so very long ago.

 

“Joseph.”

 

“Gramps!” Joseph exclaimed, all but spasming himself off of the davenport where he and Straizo had been seated while the latter had been attempting to enjoy his confection while the former had been attempting in vain to persuade him to part with it.

 

There was a definite air of smugness to the way Straizo continued eating his spun sugar as Jojo hauled Joseph off, berating him all the while.

 

“Did you manage to plan all of that, Straizo?” he asked, feeling rather amused at the prospect that the vampire had managed to set Joseph up to receive one of Jojo’s many lectures on propriety from the man himself.

 

“Not precisely,” the vampire said, as he closed the tub of spun sugar that he had been eating out of, carrying it and the utensil he’d been making use of over to the far right side of the room where the pair of them had been seated while they had been resting from everything that had happened to them during their various battles with the Pillar Men. “However, I did hear him coming.”

 

Chuckling deep in his throat, even as he watched Straizo hide away his spun sugar in a concealed cabinet that he then locked with a miniature key that he then concealed back up his left sleeve, Robert watched as Straizo released the latch he had been holding, allowing the cover-plate that he had previously pulled back slide down into place once again. Clearly, that cabinet of his had been designed for the sole purpose of thwarting any attempts that Joseph might have made at laying his hands on the sugary treats that Straizo had purchased for his own enjoyment. For just a moment, Robert found himself wondering if Alice had built it for him, or if Straizo had had it commissioned when it became obvious that Joseph wasn’t about to be deterred by something so simple as a plain refusal.

 

=BT=

 

Joseph seemed bound and determined not to listen to him, acting up in that same, melodramatic way that he’d become so terribly familiar with after living for so long with Dio; even going so far as to fall back dramatically upon his bed, moaning and twitching like a corpse in a theatre play. Sighing as he folded his arms, Jonathan pulled Joseph up from the bed where he’d thrown himself in such a terribly dramatic fashion.

 

“Straizo hardly put me up to this, Joseph,” he said, in response to his grandson’s exclamation as he fell back upon the bed the pair of them had been standing before.

 

“I know,” Joseph said, sitting back up on the bed with a sigh. “Still, you have to admit that it was rather convenient for him,” Joseph continued, folding his arms with a rather petulant expression upon his face.

 

Shaking his head, Jonathan settled down next to Joseph as his grandson chuckled softly. “You and Dio can be such a terrible trial, sometimes.”

 

“Yeah, but I’m sure you love us anyway,” Joseph said, that same, wide grin on his face that Jonathan had seen so many times before.

 

Patting Joseph strongly on the head, Jonathan firmly ruffled his grandson’s hair. “Of course I do,” he said, smiling back with all of the tenderness he felt for each and every member of his family.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he looked down at the address where he’d been sent, once Frau Brando and her people had finished conferring with Frau Joestar, Rudol Von Stroheim frowned as he realized that it was actually a candy shop. He didn’t know what the vampire had been thinking, to send him on such an absurd errand, but then Frau Brando did tend to make plans that operated on levels that very few people would look for or think to see coming. And so, gathering himself for what he was about to do, Rudol made his way into Sergeant Pepper’s Fine Chocolates.

 

Glancing around at all of the people looking at the many and varied confections on display amid the shelves and display units that stood within the shop, Rudol made his way over to the counter that had been clearly labeled for the purpose that he’d been sent to this shop for in the first place.

 

“I’m here to pick up an order,” he said, sliding over the ticket that he’d been given by Frau Brando when she’d sent him out on this strange errand that he was currently on.

 

“Ah, yes, order number 867-5309,” the man behind the counter said, smiling as he handed over the package of sweets that had evidently been prepared for him at the behest of the vampire who had sent him out to fetch such an absurd thing in the first place. “One pound of hand-packed cherry cordials.”

 

“Yeah, yeah,” he said, taking the package and making his way back out of the candy shop once again.

 

Grumbling softly as he made his way back to the car that Frau Brando had dispatched to transport him to and from the candy shop, Rudol climbed inside and settled himself down in the back of the touring car. Behind the tinted glass that allowed him to see out, if dimly, but would not allow a single person in the city to catch a single glimpse of what was going on behind those mirrored windows, Rudol found himself all the more curious about just why in the world Frau Brando and Frau Joestar had both been so damnably insistent upon sending him out to fetch a box of candy, of all things.

 

However, when he opened the package that Frau Brando and Frau Joestar had been so insistent upon him being the one to fetch for them, Rudol laughed aloud when he saw the contents. Only the finest Swiss chocolates indeed! Grinning as he settled back into his seat once more, Rudol firmly closed the box and turned to look out the window as the car he was in made its way steadily back to the compound where Frau Brando, Frau Joestar, and all of their comrades in arms were presently staying.

 

Firmly tucking the box underneath his right arm, Rudol made his way into the compound before him, flourishing the ID badge that he had been granted when it had become clear that their present battle against the remaining Pillar Men would necessitate the setup of a base of operations from which all of them would be able to stay in together.

 

“Ah, Rudol,” Frau Joestar said, a slight smile upon her face as the pair of them spoke with each other for the first time in roughly an hour. “I trust you managed to find what you were sent out for, right?”

 

He chuckled. “Yes, Frau Joestar,” he said, grinning as he fell into step with the woman as the pair of them made their way to the conference room where they were all due to meet up with the remaining members of their battle group, so that they could begin making plans for the next stage of their battle against the two remaining Pillar Men.

 

“Good,” she said, briefly lowering her sunglasses and flashing him an amused expression from the bright, steely blue eyes that she habitually kept concealed for whatever reasons of her own that he’d not yet learned.

 

When the pair of them had covered the rest of the distance that remained between them and the conference room, Rudol saw Frau Brando herself making her own way up to the large table that Herr Zeppeli and Herr Joestar the elder and the younger were all settling in around, themselves.

 

“Elizabeth, are you certain that bringing the Red Stone back out for this was truly wise?” Herr Joestar asked, as Rudol set the box of cherry cordials down on the conference table, opening it once again to reveal the Red Stone of Aja settled neatly in the center of the elegantly-styled chocolates. “I know that it was part of the prophecy that had been passed down from Master Tonpetty, but…” Herr Joestar paused for a long moment, his broad shoulders seemingly bowed by some kind of incredible, though intangible weight.

 

“It was made clear to the both of us that this was the only thing that would be able to grant humanity our final, total victory against the Pillar Men,” Frau Joestar said, picking up the Red Stone and displaying it for all of those present to see.

 

“Still,” Herr Joestar the elder said, gaze fixing upon the Red Stone for a long moment, before seeming to have to almost physically force himself to return his attention to Frau Joestar once again. “A great many things have changed, since the days when Tonpetty received that prophecy and made their plans to face the Pillar Men.”

 

“Is something wrong, Jonathan?” Frau Brando asked, narrowing her eyes in thought as she considered the man.

 

With a heavy sigh, a clear sign that there was something more to his melancholy than the man was willing to say, Herr Joestar the elder all but dropped back into his seat. Narrowing his own eyes as he studied Herr Joestar the elder along with all of those present within the conference room, Rudol considered just what it might have been that had caused such a reaction in such a previously controlled man.

 

=BT=

 

When he and the Pillar Man named Wham had made their way down into the undercity that his liege Lady had established when she’d truly began to form the ranks of her Dinosaur cavalry, Bruford found himself wondering just what the ancient creature would make of the presence of such ancient beings all around them. All of the animals around them were zombies, of course, but not every one of those present in this undercity was a member of his liege Lady’s fighting force.

 

Or even remotely suited for combat at all, in fact.

 

It was the latter of those kind, a creature by the name of Tiktaalik, that he was currently seeking. And, when he caught the scent of the meandering stream that had been created in mimicry of the lost world that Tiktaalik had inhabited, back when the first creature to walk the earth on four legs had emerged from the shelter of its watery home.

 

“You seem to be searching for something,” Wham observed, as the pair of them pressed deeper into the underground habitat that had been set up for the benefit and protection of the many and varied zombies that his liege Lady had raised from the depths of time where they had once been resting.

 

“Yes,” he said, smiling softly as he made his way over to the stream at last. “This creature was the first to set foot out of the waters where all life arose from at the dawn of time.”

 

Settling down by the near side of the creek that ran through this section of the underground habitat, Bruford looked down into the water. And there, eeling its way around and over the rocks that had been so carefully placed within the stream, in order to provide at least some shelter from the moving water when the creature desired to rest for either a night or a moment, was the very creature that Bruford had come to this place in search of.

 

“You brought me to this place for a fish?” Wham asked, sounding as though he was confused by the situation he had found himself in, but also as though he was willing to hear what it was that Bruford had to say.

 

“As I said, this creature was the very first to walk upon the surface of the Earth,” he said, reaching out to take a handful of cubed meat from the refrigeration unit that was periodically refilled by those who knew of and worked in this place, and holding them out to the Tiktaalik as the creature made its way up and out of the water to feed upon them.

 

“Yes, I suppose that would be worthy of respect,” Wham said, as the Pillar Man settled down next to him, watching the Tiktaalik as it fed, making its way slowly across the small spit of land that steed between it and the lagoon that the creature enjoyed so much.

 

Turning to watch as the Tiktaalik dropped into the lagoon with a flat splash, Bruford smiled as he watched the creature swimming away. And, while it was true that the creature wallowed and almost stumbled while it moved around upon the land, once underwater again, it revealed itself to be a much swifter and more graceful creature.

 

“I expect that this place does not merely act as a shelter for those creatures that your vampire rode into battle, yes?” Wham asked, as the pair of them stood back up once more and began making their way further into the undercity that sheltered the ancient creatures that his liege Lady had brought forward from the many worlds that had been lost through calamity or simply time.

 

“You would be correct about that,” he said, brushing off his trousers as he fell into step before Wham, as the pair of them continued on their way once more.

 

=BT=

 

When Alice had begun disseminating those photographs of herself wearing the Red Stone of Aja in an effort to draw Kars into an untenable confrontation with her forces, Jonathan had found himself entirely too conflicted by the situation that was swiftly building up before him. On the one hand, he knew that Alice and all of her forces were perfectly capable of coming out the better after a confrontation with the sole remaining Pillar Man. Or, at least the one who still seemed to be bound and determined to confront them.

 

On the other, however, the memory of Master Tonpetty’s final prophecy would not allow him to rest at ease with the direction that their battle seemed to be going.

 

“Herr Joestar, come!” Stroheim called, grinning in that slightly unhinged way the man always seemed to do when he was facing the concept of battle; it was one of the reasons that Jonathan could not find it in himself to trust in the man, no matter how many times he found himself fighting beside the Nazi major. “We’re moving! The operation is underway!”

Chapter 30: We Need A Hero

Chapter Text

“Of course,” he said, sighing as he stood up from the desk he’d been seated behind, writing in his journal about the many and varied upheavals that he had found himself facing in the weeks and months that he had rejoined Alice and her people in Rome to face off with the threat posed by a great many of the Pillar Men.

 

He’d no way of knowing if he would ever be able to return to this room of his, or to finish the latest journal that he had begun once he had once again run out of room in the last that he had been using. Sighing as he made his way down the stairs and out to the motor pool where all of their forces were beginning to assemble, Jonathan gathered his Hamon, flushing it through his body to purge the remaining aches from the tension that had been pressing down so hard upon him for so long. There was little he could say or do, now that it Alice and her forces – alongside those of Speedwagon’s self-named foundation, and even a sprinkling of Nazis that Stroheim had clearly been able to convince to come along with them by some means or another – had assembled and were clearly about to begin moving out in earnest.

 

There was Caesar, giving last-minute orders and instructions to a unit of riflemen who had been armed with the same kind of long-range UV-rifles that Jonathan had seen so many times before; there was Joseph, hitching up the straps of a large, sturdy tank of water that would provide his grandson with all of the weaponry he would need during the confrontation to come, or at least Jonathan found himself hoping that it would; there was Stroheim, along with a small knot of Nazi soldiers, and also those robotic dinosaurs that his forces and Alice’s people had collaborated upon; there was Straizo, Dio, and Alice herself, all wearing the armor that Alice had so diligently created and worked to improve over the half-century that she had lived as a vampire. Making his own way over to the trucks that would take them to their present destination – Kars had, as expected, taken Alice’s challenge and then issued one of his own – Jonathan flushed his body with Hamon in order to clear it of the few lingering aches that always seemed to build up when one was resting for too long in even the most comfortable of chairs, and then made himself as comfortable as he could in the front seat of one of the two lead trucks.

 

He’d little enough hope of knowing just what mad scheme Kars had had in mind when he had issued his challenge to Alice in the first place, but even seeing the phrasing that the Pillar Man had used had not helped so much as he would have wished; all he knew, in the end, was that Kars had hatched some mad idea of pitting his own creations against those he seemed determined to think of as Alice’s.

 

Jonathan himself was not fond of the idea – that Kars still thought of the men and women who had set themselves forward to serve as a part of Alice’s guard forces to be little more than the creations of his and Dio’s sister – and he knew from the expression on her face that Alice herself disapproved of the idea nearly as much as he did, but Kars had long since proved himself far too set in his ways – far too dangerous – to be allowed to live freely in the world that Alice had worked for so long to create. Sighing as he found himself jolted by the sudden lurch of the truck as it started up, Jonathan looked out onto the passing landscape as it blazed by. Kars had chosen the site of their battle, and while he’d often heard that one should not fight on ground chosen by one’s enemies, Jonathan felt that the Pillar Man’s own arrogance would keep him from preparing the grounds to any true extent.

 

The ground they were going to be fighting upon was that which stood outside the Coliseum in Rome, and Jonathan could not help but find himself wondering what they would be facing when they all arrived. He knew that it was likely to be at least a small army of vampires, if not a large one, since Kars had proven himself all too adept at creating armies for himself. However, unlike Alice, Kars seemed to favor humans in place of the ancient creatures that his and Dio’s sister had revived to fill out the ranks of her own forces.

 

A select few of them were being brought to this confrontation, but as Kars did tend to favor vampires as the bulk of his forces, the ancient zombies that made up Alice’s heavy cavalry had for the most part been left behind at the facilities that Speedwagon and his people had created and maintained for them to inhabit.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he beheld the approach of his pet and her entourage, Kars grinned as Wired Beck made his way up to him.

 

“I still can’t believe that you haven’t punished that terrible woman for being so rude when we met,” the vampire mewled, a thoroughly discontented expression on his face.

 

Scoffing, even as he began to see the graceful form of his pet in the lead transport, Kars found himself grinning as he beheld his clever little pet dressed for war the way she was. True, there was little chance that she and her human pets would be able to triumph over the power and experience that such a long existence as his had granted to him, but watching as she herself realized such a thing would be quite amusing in and of itself. Still, all of that would have to wait for the end of the battle; until he’d utterly crushed the last of his clever pet’s toys and brought the few worthy members of her forces into his fold.

 

Signaling to his vampire forces to hold, Kars made his way forward even as the large transport that had carried his pet – as well as that aggravating male counterpart of hers, and the other who seemed to function as a sort of right hand to her – stopped, and the doors to either side slammed open in order to allow the three vampires inside the chance to present themselves before him.

 

“I’m glad to see you were able to make it out this far on such short notice, pet,” he said, as his vampire made her way up to him, adorable expression of quiet defiance upon her lovely face; her male counterpart hissed at him, and was as amusingly infuriated as ever when Kars flicked his eyes over the creature and dismissed it just as simply as such a one deserved.

 

“Well, I could hardly let you and your fellows continue this pointless little rampage of yours,” she said, narrowing her lovely eyes in an expression that would let all of those beneath her know just how little regard she held for them; the fact that she thought she could look at him in such a fashion…

 

Well it had become more than clear, after all of their previous encounters, that after he caged this clever little hawk of his, he was going to need to train her properly.

 

=BT=

 

When Kars gave the signal to his vampire forces – an army that would have been fairly daunting to anyone without the proper weapons and training to cope with the abilities even a newborn vampire could bring to the table – Alice had long since been prepared to give the order to her own. When the units of rifle-armed men and women piled out of the transports that had brought them to this battleground in the first place – with Caesar naturally in the lead – none of the vampires present seemed to know how to react. Pleasantly enough, that vampire with the annoying voice that Kars had been so unutterably rude as to dump on her – on top of the way he’d invaded one of her summer homes and forced her to destroy such a large portion of it when she’d made a break for freedom again – was the first one to take a shot full in the face.

 

Clearly, someone had either forgotten the fact that she’d armed her people with long-range UV rifles, or was hoping that she’d forget to bring them for some reason or other.

 

Well, either way, Kars had clearly been disabused of such a stupid notion in one of the most permanent ways possible, and was now looking quite a bit more wary of any other unpleasant surprises that she might have waiting in the wings to spring on him. It was gratifying, in a way, to know that Kars was going to take her more seriously from now on. On the other hand, having more of his attention would inevitably cause complications in the future.

 

The remaining vampires that Kars had brought with him to this confrontation that the pair of them had arranged – each in their own ways, of course – all pressed forward, once they had borne witness to the death of the vampire with the annoying voice. A firm tap on the right side of her helmet caused the spring mechanism to snap shut once more, folding out neatly around her head and so serving to protect her from any of stray UV light that she might have otherwise had the misfortune to end up on the wrong end of during the kind of chaotic fracas that these kinds of battles had entirely too much potential to devolve into.

 

Narrowing her eyes as she heard Elizabeth’s light tread coming up behind her, and then the familiar crackling of Hamon as her niece-in-law obligingly filled the synthetic Aja Stones that she’d so carefully set into the back of her armor, charging them up so that Alice would be able to at least make some use of the energies that had proved to be such a double-edged boon in the past. And would likely prove so in the future, considering what the energy actually was, in the end.

 

The vampires surrounding them all surged forward at the order from Kars, and Alice whipped the Hamon-conducting scarf that she’d added to her armor-set – once she’d managed to craft a working Hamon-storage medium rather than simply a means of deflecting the energy that would have otherwise caused her the same kind of problems that William Zeppeli and his intractable stubbornness had caused her in the past – over her head and swept it through the ranks of vampires crowding around her and Elizabeth. The vampires around them fought like a mob: completely undisciplined, with only the sheer weight of their numbers posing a danger to those they were facing. Of course it was those same numbers, that when filled with Hamon and tossed back in among the flailing masses of undead bodies pressing in all around them, that made such good short-order bombs.

 

Really, all Kars had done when he’d sent this pack of brainless, low-grade cannon-fodder at them was to provide her forces with a thoroughly target-rich environment.

 

=BT=

 

“Useless, useless, useless!” he, Dio, laughed as he wielded the sword of cloth that Jojo’s Hamon had given him the ability to use against the worthless vampires that that equally worthless Pillar Man had thought to send against his sweet sister and the illustrious, well-trained forces that she had gathered about herself during the course of their company’s existence.

 

“Dio, are you doing well?” Jojo called back, Hamon-charged fists slamming into the ranks of imbecilic vampires that Kars had been so foolish as to set against them, the same fussiness that he, Dio, had heard from him so many times in the past suffusing his tone.

 

“Well enough, Jojo,” he said, chuckling softly as he jammed his silken sword through the head of a vampire attempting to leap at him once more. “How are you managing, hmm?”

 

“Better, now that I know you’re all right,” Jojo said, just as he, Dio, would have expected.

 

Grinning as he turned back to his own work, Dio felt the tell-tale subtle crackling as Jojo obligingly fed more Hamon into the ingenious energy-storage array that his sweet sister had designed for this second-generation armor of hers. Laughing wildly as he, Dio, whipped the Hamon-conducting cloth up and over his head and into the ranks of the lesser vampires that miserable bastard Kars had seen fit to sic upon them all, he watched with glee as they dissolved into screaming heaps of ash. Grinning, Dio turned to the next group that had so obligingly presented themselves before him.

 

They staggered around like fools, snapping like dumb beasts and stumbling like the mindless rabble they had clearly been even before Kars had recreated them as vampires; his sweet sister’s forces would have no trouble from them.

 

=BT=

 

“There seems to be no end to these vampires,” Stroheim groused, and Caesar smirked under the breathing-mask that would allow him to employ his Hamon even under the chaotic conditions of the battlefield they were all currently standing on.

 

“You should know that the Boss has a saying just for times like this,” he said, bringing his rapid-firing UV rifle up to his shoulder and sweeping it through the rabble of vampires that were possessed of such suicidal determination to reach the transport truck where he and Stroheim were standing, even in spite of the massive numbers that had already perished in the attempt.

 

“And what would that be?” Stroheim asked.

 

Caesar grinned, hearing the rising hum of his ally’s own UV rifle. “We’re not outnumbered; this is simply a target-rich environment!”

 

Even more of the enemy vampires fell, either to his own UV rifle, or to the robotic dinosaurs that the Boss had collaborated with the Nazi and some of his people on, and Caesar allowed himself to relax slightly; their struggle might not have been over, but at least there was the promise that it would be, soon enough.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he watched the steady destruction of the forces that he had brought to this battle with him, Kars found that he couldn’t quite manage to keep a smirk from pulling at his lips as he watched his pet work. It seemed that she was even more brilliant than he’d been led to expect; seeing the artificial Red Stones – they had to have been manufactured through some means, because there had never been a single Stone of the size, clarity, and purity of the ones that he’d seen adorning the back of her armor – under that Hamon-conducting cloth that he’d only had the opportunity to see on such a rare number of occasions that he’d been honestly surprised to see his pet and a select few of her forces draped in lengths of the cloth. Surprised, of course, until he remembered the sheer brilliance that his clever pet had demonstrated on so many occasions.

 

Truly, if she was able to manufacture Red Stones to her exacting specifications, then a simple piece of cloth – no matter its other properties – would doubtless prove no more trouble than that; likely less, in fact.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he adjusted them once again, Kars sought for and found his clever pet among the ranks of her forces. True, she was fighting alongside one of the meaningless, interchangeable humans who she allowed to hang off of her like clinging vines that some careless gardener had neglected to prune away, but that was simply one of the flaws that he would make a point to correct once he finally managed to cage that little hawk of his. Still, for the moment there was the matter of her remaining forces.

 

This farce of a battle, while it was meant to bring him ultimate victory, wasn’t a thing that would be won by the forces he’d created; no, that would be for him, and him alone.

 

Grinning as he made his way through the battlefield, the screams and shrieks of dying vampires echoing all around him, Kars made for the line of transports that had brought his clever pet and her forces to this place. Even if one of those humans had attempted to persuade her to bring it into battle with her, Kars knew that his little hawk would have been too clever to allow herself to be convinced of something that foolish.  Still, anyone who had taken the time to learn as much about his clever pet as he had could not help but notice the way she coddled the humans who flocked around her; one of those transports had to be the hiding place for the Red Stone that he had sought for so long.

 

With the vampires that he had brought with him into this killing ground that his clever hawk had made for them as cover for his own activities, Kars moved closer to the transports.

 

=BT=

 

Breathing deeply and rhythmically to keep her Hamon flowing, Elizabeth charged the faltering storage matrix in her Aunt-in-law’s armor, before returning her attention to the vampires all around them. She didn’t know what Kars’ ultimate goal was, since anyone with any sense at all would know that a vampire with access to the knowledge and resources that Alice Brando possessed as a matter of course would have so little trouble dealing with even this large an amount of them that it was all but guaranteed to be an exercise in futility to send them in the first place. Of course, given what she’d heard about Kars – most of it from Alice, since Dio firmly despised even the mention of the Pillar Man – there could very well be more to this than any of them currently knew. Still, all of that could wait for later.

 

For the moment, there was still the matter of the vampires crowding in around them; not a one of them seemed to possess the sense to retreat in the face of the clearly overwhelming odds they had been set against by the Pillar Man that had created them, and for the most fleeting of moments Elizabeth almost pitied them. She knew from the reports she’d read – both from the Speedwagon Foundation, and Alice’s own Brando International’s Paranormal Science Initiative – that vampires could just as easily be created from unwilling humans as those who had chosen to take up the Stone Mask for their own purposes. There might very well have been people who wished nothing more than to live untroubled lives, in among those who had given themselves over to Kars and his mad ambitions for their own, fleeting taste of power.

 

It’s not a pleasant thought, but Elizabeth keeps it in the back of her mind; it’s also one more reason that Kars needs to be destroyed, considering all that he had proven himself willing to do in pursuit of whatever aims that such a man would possess.

 

And so Elizabeth returned her attention to the vampires surrounding her, and the thought that some of them might very well have been little more than slaves tossed in as cannon-fodder before them only made her resolve that much sharper; her Hamon that much stronger, and her reactions that much swifter. Not a single one of Kars’ vampires make it through the impenetrable ring of death that she and Alice make of this part of their battlefield. Even when the Hamon that she’d lent to her vampire Aunt-in-law inevitably ran out, Alice simply pulled an ice-crafted pair of vicious looking trench knives from the very air around them; the first of the vampires to launch an attack on her after that finds those same knives imbedded in its head, torn in half in from the force of her leap, before she lands on the next one with the sheer power of a truck collision.

 

=BT=

 

Glaring at the pair of humans – one of those annoying Hamon users, as well as that one he’d seen in the company of his clever pet but never taken notice of before this point – standing atop the middle transport, each of them facing one of the ways that he would have needed to approach from in order to search for where the Red Stone must have been hidden when one of those fool humans had managed to convince his clever but soft-hearted pet to bring it along with them, Kars growled softly. This was a complication that he hadn’t foreseen, but perhaps he should have, all the same. After all, while his pet did allow those humans of hers far more latitude than she should have, she was far from stupid.

 

Truly, he should have been expecting the transports to be guarded.

 

Smirking as he turned back to the vampires that he’d employed to distract her attention while he made his move, Kars found himself almost involuntarily raising an eyebrow as one of those lumbering creatures – dressed on fitted armor that seemed designed to shield them from the bursts of ultraviolet light fired from those odd weapons that a great many of his pet’s human forces had been equipped with. Clearly, they were some manner of zombies raised by his pet.

 

Not one of them was the Tyrant Lizard that her irritating male counterpart had ridden into battle with him, so that was pleasing, at least.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes as yet another of Kars’ vampires collapsed into dust before him, Jonathan searched for the Pillar Man himself. He’d not seen hide nor hair of the terrible creature – a being that could devour the vampiric members of his family with but a touch, and had used such an ability to do unforgivable things to Dio – since Alice had met him before the commencement of their battle. It was not what he had been expecting from such a terrible creature as Kars, and Jonathan could not help the horrible thought that there was more to this battle than any of them had been led to believe. It was what Alice would have done – what Joseph would have done, as well, if he’d been the kind to plan and execute grand battles such as this one – presented her opponent with something large and obvious, in order to conceal the more subtle objectives that she had in mind.

 

It was plainly obvious when one considered how many of her personal properties had been riddled with secret doors and concealed passages, and how unnervingly good she’d become at giving meaningless concessions in order to gain prizes that would otherwise remain beyond her.

 

He didn’t like thinking about it, but there had been something in Kars’ eyes that reminded him of Alice; it reminded him of those during the American Civil War, times when they would discover a new atrocity perpetuated by those who still held their fellow men in bondage, or else one of the armies that had been fighting in the conflict that had inevitably erupted between those who had desired to continue such depraved acts, and those who had seen the cruelty of a system that shattered families apart and subjected their fellow men to such conditions that no humane person would have forced upon even a beast of burden. There had been no kindness in his and Dio’s sister’s eyes when she would receive reports of either a new atrocity, or else a slave encampment that had not been liberated by the Union soldiers on their march into the South. And yes, Jonathan himself felt little in the way of softer feelings for the men who’d been involved in such a horrid trade.

 

Still, what they had been made to face, once Alice had inevitably brought her own forces into the conflict…

Chapter 31: I Will Win

Chapter Text

His and Dio’s sister had never been the type to make use of any zombies but those of the ancient beasts she raised from bones and dust, and at the time he’d been glad for such a thing. That had, of course, been before he’d seen the results of Alice’s full ingenuity unleashed; before he’d seen untiring legions of clockwork soldiers marching out of the workshop she’d established on the former site of a town that she and hers had dismantled to its very foundations after a group of innocent young men had been falsely accused of the most grievous assault on a young woman of the town and executed in the most horrible manner conceived of in the modern era. And quite before Alice had unveiled her most terrible invention, shattering the morale of both armies and forcing all of them to come to an accord.

 

Alice had called them Hunter-Killers; she’d only built five of them, and five was all it had taken.

 

They were self-propelled, for a start, and armored in the most durable alloys that Alice’s facilities had been able to create. Such a thing would have been enough of a horror, but their armaments… Those had been the true horror of the Hunter-Killers: each of the five had been armed with a pair of gimbal-mounted swivel-guns, terrifying chain-fed weapons that had created an almost incomprehensible rain of death in the single battle that had seen them put to use.

 

There had been a single man – General Nathan Bedford Forrest – who had charged at the lead Hunter-Killer on his steed; he’d been sucked under the iron treads of the weapons platform with barely even a scream.

 

And, while it had been true that that man had been one of the most inhumane men that the Confederate army had ever produced, even such atrocities as he had committed merely merited a court-martial and either imprisonment or hanging, depending on what had been decided by due process of military law. Still, the horrible sound of flesh and bone being ground into the dirt as the Hunter-Killer rolled inexorably over him, spitting death at a rate that still terrified him when he chanced to think back on it, haunted Jonathan even to this day. Kars’ eyes… more than anything, they reminded Jonathan of those moments when Alice’s tolerance for the vagaries and foolishness of those around her would come to an end, and she would sweep them away with a terrifying finality.

 

More than anything, the thought terrified him, because he had also seen the way that Kars looked at Alice.

 

More than anything, Jonathan suspected that Kars felt his own kind of twisted kinship with Alice, and it was that side of her that attracted him. The thought horrified him on a myriad of levels, and so provided more than enough impetus for Jonathan to fight as hard as he could against the Pillar Man and whatever cruel ambitions he might have ultimately had. Because, while his and Dio’s sister might very well have had a streak of ruthless pragmatism that was frankly and honestly terrifying, she could always be brought back to herself once whatever issue had been troubling her was resolved to her satisfaction.

 

The thought of Alice in Kars’ hands horrified him, particularly in light of something he couldn’t forget her saying, back when they were all children; before the Stone Mask, before zombies and dinosaurs and Pillar Men, before animal blood and Hamon and William Zeppeli. He couldn’t remember who Alice had even been speaking to, or what had ultimately prompted such a reply in the first place. He could only remember her words, and the blank indifference in her eyes when she’d spoken them: I don’t care about most people, what makes you special?

 

It was not that he thought Alice malicious; far from it, in fact. Malice, after all, required an active interest in those around oneself, twisted though such a thing might have been. Alice was incapable of malice, simply for the fact that she barely took any notice of those around her, unless they held some sort of purpose to her; even most of those in her employ barely provoked the interest that Alice naturally devoted to her many and varied projects.

 

Truly, even the kindness she offered to those around her was of the same, indifferent sort; merely her way of slipping the notice of most people.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he continued searching for the last of the Pillar Men that had set themselves against Alice, Speedwagon, and the combined forces that both of their organizations had brought into this battle – Bruford had reported sometime earlier that their initial impressions of Wham had borne out: the second-last of the surviving Pillar Men was indeed an honorable sort, and was hence being kept from such a needless battle as this one – Jonathan turned his attention to Dio, once it had become clear that he would not be able to find the Pillar Man on his own.

 

“Dio!” he called, turning to watch as his vampire brother whipped the Hamon-conducting scarf that he, Straizo, and Alice all wore about the neck of their armor through another group of Kars’ forces. “Dio! I lost sight of Kars in this fracas! Do you think you might be able to find him?”

 

More than anything, that caught his brother’s attention; if anyone could have been said to have the right to hate Kars, it was Dio.

 

What?!” Dio demanded, the furious expression on his face plainly obvious, for all that the only part of his face actually visible was that which showed through the shatter-resistant glass of his slit-visor.

 

“I’m afraid that, in all this chaos, I wasn’t able to keep my eyes upon him,” he informed his and Alice’s brother, sending a Zoom Punch into the remaining ranks of vampires surrounding them.

 

Dio growled, freezing a pair of nearby vampires and then shattering them utterly with a heel-kick that propelled him over the heads of those that had once stood between the pair of them with its residual momentum. “Clever bastard,” he said, sounding as though such a sentiment physically pained him, though Jonathan knew that pain of that sort was limited to humans. “Did you happen to catch sight of where he might have gone, at least?”

 

“No, unfortunately I was too preoccupied with those in front of us to look for where he might have been going,” he admitted, as Dio landed beside him, freezing a trio of vampires who had thought to attack him while he and his brother had been speaking.

 

“I suppose there’s nothing for it, then,” Dio grumbled, even as he wrapped his armored arms around Jonathan’s waist and leaped with power that even Jonathan, with his mastery of Hamon, couldn’t manage. “We’ll simply have to search for him!”

 

Breathing slowly and deeply to channel the remaining Hamon that remained to him with his strength waning as the night wore on, Jonathan turned his attention back to the search for the Pillar Man who had made his escape in the same way that Alice herself would have done, had she been faced with the same circumstances as this. Searching as hard as he could, while he and Dio hovered in the air in the wake of another leap that took them over the battlefield once more, Jonathan spotted someone else they needed to speak to. When the pair of them landed next to Speedwagon, Jonathan allowed himself to rest for a moment.

 

“Jojo!” Speedwagon called, hurrying over with a smile upon his weathered face. “It seems that you’ll be done with this battle soon! I’m glad to see you’re both doing so well, though.”

 

“It’s good to see you again as well, Speedwagon, but I’m afraid that this battle is just a ruse,” he said, steadying himself as he stepped away from the comforting circle of Dio’s arms. “Kars is merely using these vampires as a cover for his own ambitions. It’s clear to me that he’s seeking the Red Stone of Aja.”

 

“The Red Stone?!” Speedwagon’s expression twisted into one of horror. “Elizabeth managed to convince Alice to bring it here! It’s stored in the lead truck!”

 

“I know,” he said, thoughts involuntarily returning to the expression of annoyance that had crossed Alice’s face at the mention of the prophecy Elizabeth had cited as her reasoning for bringing the Red Stone along with them; he knew that, if his and Dio’s sister had been given her way, the Red Stone would have never left the safe it had been stored in ever since he’d taken possession of it from Master Tonpetty. “I suspect that Kars is under the same impression; these vampires are meant to be a distraction for us, I know it!”

 

“You’d best go on, then! Both of ya!” Speedwagon exclaimed. “If Kars gets his hands on that Stone, the world is done for!”

 

“I know,” he said, nodding firmly. “Inform the others as soon as you can! Dio and I will delay him as long as we’re able!”

 

Feeling the armored arms of his and Alice’s brother wrapping around him once more, in just such a way that he could still maintain the deep, rhythmic breathing that would allow him to channel Hamon when he would inevitably need it, Jonathan steeled himself for the battle he and Dio were about to engage in. There would be little recourse for them, alone with the Pillar Man – a predator that fed even upon vampires themselves – until and unless Speedwagon was able to summon the remaining forces that had come to support them in this battle of theirs. Even Caesar and Stroheim had ultimately been driven off by some means that Kars had employed.

 

While Dio’s high leaping carried them steadily closer to the three transports that had carried the bulk of their forces to this battleground, Jonathan found himself reflecting back upon the prophesy that Master Tonpetty had given to him. Kars was clearly the wicked old tree that he’d mentioned, and Dio’s habitual nickname for Alice told him plainly who the owl was, but he’d still not managed to parse the phrase that referred to the twisted branches of that selfsame tree. However, with the ground falling away beneath him as Dio’s leap carried them the remaining distance that had formerly stood between them and the transport trucks that had been all but abandoned in the wake of the attacks that Kars’ vampire forces had been so persistently making upon them all, Jonathan knew that he’d no more time to think upon such a thing.

 

There was little time for anything but the Pillar Man he could now see; who was, even as he watched, turning to look up at the pair of them with an amused sort of malice in the bloody crimson eyes that every vampiric being seemed to have inherited from him.

 

“Well, it seems I’ve drawn your attention.”

 

“Kars!” he snarled, his own voice almost blending with Dio’s as the pair of them faced the Pillar Man who had been the ultimate author of so much suffering; even that of Dio and Alice themselves, when the Stone Mask that he created had pierced their brains and transformed them into creatures that could never truly stand under the light of the sun ever again. “For everything that you’ve done to our family – no, to the world as a whole! – I swear that the both of us will end you this very night!”

 

His pronouncement was met with only a coldly amused chuckle from the hooded Pillar Man standing before them. “Really? Just the pair of you? Human and vampire?”

 

Something in the way Kars’ tone twisted would have made the word an insult, if Jonathan had been the type to count the words of a creature such as Kars for anything.

 

A pair of strange, glistening blades – even longer than the Pillar Man’s own forearms themselves – emerged, shimmering in the remaining light from the transport trucks the three of them were currently gathered around. Even through his armor, Jonathan could see the way that Dio tensed.

 

“Jojo, I can hear those blades humming from here,” his brother muttered in his left ear, as the pair of them drew steadily closer to the Pillar Man as he prowled around the three lead transports. “They sound like some kind of chainsaws.”

 

“So, you do know how to use those senses of yours,” Kars said, grinning in that same, arrogant way that Jonathan had seen so many times on the Pillar Man’s face. “I’d been wondering.”

 

The almost feral growl that forced its way out of Dio’s throat prompted Jonathan to bar his and Alice’s brother’s way, before Dio could leap at Kars; that had to be what the Pillar Man had been planning, to bait Dio into a confrontation, and then trap him or devour him outright.

 

=BT=

 

Breathing heavily, Caesar raised his UV rifle and checked the charge on the power-cell: half depleted. It seemed that both his Hamon and his energy was steadily coming to its end, though in the case of his rifle he did have a spare power-cell. A trio of Stroheim’s robotic dinosaurs prowled around him, their metallic finish scuffed and a pair of them showing dents from the battle that had raged all around them. The battle itself had begun to wind down, with most of the vampires that Kars had thrown at them reduced to puffs of ash after the barrages of Hamon, volleys of UV rifle fire, and the glare of the lights that had been installed on the robotic dinosaurs that the Boss had collaborated with Stroheim and his people to create.

 

Still, there was something off about the whole thing; he couldn’t have said what it was, even if the Boss herself had been the one asking him, but it gnawed at him all the same. Shouldering his way through the gathering crowd of soldiers, forming up in ranks according to the training they had been receiving for so long. Caesar was pleased to see it, but didn’t allow himself to be distracted by that kind of thing.

 

The sight of Stroheim, hurrying toward them at a pace that only just missed being a run, prompted Caesar to narrow his eyes even as he turned; there wasn’t much doubt that he was reporting on a bad turn in the battle.

 

“I just received a report from Speedwagon!” the Nazi reported, coming to a stop just short of where Caesar and his gathered forces were reassembling their ranks. “This was all a ruse! Kars was making for the transports just as soon as he managed to drive us off!”

 

So, it wasn’t just me; there was something rotten here, he mused, narrowing his eyes even as he gave the order to his forces to form up on him once more. “Right! We’ll be right behind you.”

 

There was the expected rounds of salutes and acknowledgements from the soldiers all around him, and Caesar quickly fell into step with the Nazi who had been supporting them in all of their battles against the Pillar Men. All of them except one, given what I heard from the Boss, he mused, as they all began moving out.

 

=BT=

 

“Get out of my way,” he said, kicking the left transport at the foolish, male vampire who had dared to challenge him; even with the protection of the brilliantly-made armor that could only have been designed and built by his clever pet, such a thing was the height of foolishness.

 

He knew that the only true place for the Red Stone to have been placed was in the transport that his pet had been riding in; soft she might have been, but no one who’d watched her so long as he had could ever call his pet a fool. So he didn’t bother concerning himself with either of those transports where the scent of humans emanated from most strongly. Glancing over at the male vampire, as the foolish creature actually caught the transport as opposed to doing something sensible such as dodge before such a heavy thing could have fallen upon him, Kars dodged in turn as the vampire tried to throw the transport at him.

 

It was a futile effort, of course, but it seemed that the male vampire had actually learned something from his clever pet’s influence.

 

“Dio!” the Hamon user called to him, actual concern in his tone.

 

He still thought it rather odd, that a Hamon user would find himself in the company of two vampires – perhaps even three, depending on what the relationship between the Hamon user and his pet truly was – but this particular Hamon user seemed to have been tamed quite well by his pet during the course of her work. It was fascinating, the kind of holds his pet seemed to have developed over her inferiors. Still, everything else he’d seen of his pet’s handling of them indicated that she would need the training only he could provide for her.

 

Once he had completed her transformation into the glorious Pillar Woman that she deserved to be, Kars would see to it that his pet was made to understand how to properly deal with her inferiors.

 

=BT=

 

Fuck; fuckity fuck fucking fuck fuck, Alice groused, running at top speed back to the trio of transports that she and hers had traveled out to this battleground of theirs in. She probably should have been expecting Kars to be using these vampires of his as some kind of cover for his actual objective; both since the Pillar Man didn’t seem to have much regard for anyone besides himself, and because it was something that she herself would have done, if in a rather different way. Really, Kars did seem to have an uncomfortably large amount in common with her.

 

It was weird, and troublesome in a lot of ways, but the fact that she could at least make some guesses as to Kars’ next course of action by thinking about what she herself would have done under similar circumstances had its uses; she just had to remember to actually do it.

 

Grabbing a flying transport just before it could have gone over her head, Alice quickly righted the thing, setting it back down on its wheels before she turned her attention to the place where Jonathan and Dio were fighting Kars. It seemed that the Pillar Man had realized just where she’d put the Red Stone. Running her tongue over her top left fang in annoyance, both for the fact that she’d let Elizabeth convince her to bring the stupid thing in the first place – prophesies were nothing but trouble, really – and for the fact that Kars was either the recipient of one hell of a windfall of blind luck, or else he was starting to be able to predict her moves just as well as she could predict him.

 

Either one would be troublesome, but it was the second that would be slightly more difficult to adapt to.

 

Kars, clearly having heard her approach from where he was – having torn the passenger-side door free from the lead transport, and clearly ready to fling it at Dio and Jonathan with the next move that either of the two made – whipped around as she took her first steps onto this new battlefield of theirs.

 

“Pet,” he said, that same annoyingly arrogant grin on his face as every other time he’d seen her; it was getting old, but Alice knew that there was no point in letting herself get riled up by that kind of crap. “I’m glad to see you made it so quickly, but do allow me to take care of these pests for you.”

 

Sighing in a resigned sort of annoyance, as Jonathan and Dio shouted the Pillar Man’s name in what sounded a fair bit more like blind rage – and a nigh-homicidal amount of it, in Dio’s case – than would be good for any of them, Alice dodged around the door that the Pillar Man had flung at her brothers, yanked the flying door out of the air, and sent it blasting right back at Kars. Just as she’d been expecting, Kars back-handed it out of the air, but it did delay him long enough for her to make it over to where Jonathan and Dio were standing.

 

She and Dio moved close enough to lean their cheeks against one another, communicating in the way that the pair of them had spent such a long time developing; one that allowed them to speak privately, even in the presence of other vampires.

 

­“What kind of an alarm did you place on that Stone of ours, sister dear?”

 

“Sonic alarm; if he manages to get that compartment open, you’re going to want to have your eardrums detached.”

 

“Well then, we should see about preventing such a thing, sister dear.”

 

The pair of them separated quickly, moving to reinforce Jonathan before Kars could make another move against them. Jonathan quickly gathered his Hamon, recharging their storage matrices before gathering Hamon to himself so he would be able to fight Kars, as well. The feel of charging feet, carried up through the ground through both of her armored sabatons, obviously drew Kars’ attention as well. Before she, Dio, or Jonathan could make another move – faster than even she or Dio were able to react – Kars leaped through the newly-opened cab of the lead truck.

 

The brain-shattering, shrieking wail of the alarm she’d set on the glove compartment, for the few moments it took for her to neatly disassemble her eardrums, brought an almost involuntary growl from deep in Alice’s throat. Leaping to the top of the transport, Hamon crackling through the scarf still wrapped around her neck, Alice whipped the charged scarf forward, aiming for Kars’ right hand, where the Pillar Man had the Stone. However, Kars was even faster than she’d been expecting, dodging backwards as her Hamon-charged scarf slammed into the rocky ground at his feet.

 

Leaping down from the transport that she had been standing on, Alice caught sight of Dio leaping down right beside her, and the pair of them dashed after Kars. She’d caught a flash of that same, annoyingly cocky grin on the Pillar Man’s face, and as she reassembled her eardrums after having gotten far enough away from the transport that she didn’t have to worry so much about sensory overload anymore, she heard Dio’s sustained, furious wrryy. The sound of Stroheim’s voice, calling out to his robot dinosaurs to command them to attack Kars as the Pillar Man sprinted away from them all, drew her attention back to the fact that it wasn’t just on her, Jonathan, and Dio to fight against Kars.

 

It was a rather pleasant thought, that; still, it wasn’t as though many of them had a chance against Kars, considering just how overmatched she and Dio seemed to be.

 

When Stroheim’s robot dinosaurs dashed off after Kars, their group splitting around her and Dio as they continued on their way, Alice shifted aside to allow them to pass, and then followed swiftly in their wake. If nothing else, they would make good cover for her and Dio to move under. The sound of Jonathan’s familiar footfalls behind her brought the slightest of smiles to her face, and as she heard the crackle of Hamon within the crystal matrix of her armor, Alice signaled to Dio, and the pair of them leaped lightly up onto the back of the robot dinosaurs in front of them.

 

As Stroheim gave the order for his ranks of robotic dinosaurs to fire the UV-lasers that Alice had installed in their mouths, Alice prepared herself to fight again. Once Kars had been frozen in place by the UV beams, she and Dio would be able to smash his stone form to gravel; something Dio was clearly going to revel in, of course. Narrowing her eyes as she watched Kars trying to shield himself from what was coming for him, Alice wondered what Kars’ next move was going to be.

 

He had to have one planned; it was what she would do, after all.

Chapter 32: Livin’ On A Prayer

Chapter Text

The familiar feel of the spines of his stone mask, driving themselves into his brain as they hummed with the power of the Hamon that his pet and her forces had so generously given to him, brought a pleased smile right back to his face as he his body began to hum with the new power that his latest iteration of his mask was even at this very moment granting to him. As the mask, its purpose fulfilled, shattered into fragments from the overload of Hamon that the Red Stone had channeled through it, Kars stepped forward to collect his clever pet.

 

She’d leaped onto one of those constructs of hers, riding on its back in a clear effort to attack him when he had been incapacitated by the UV lights that she had mounted within their mouths.

 

Truly, he’d have to remember to congratulate her for such a thing, once he’d polished off the last of his little hawk’s flaws. Dashing forward, through the beam of UV light that was still being projected from that construct she was riding and even over the screams and dismayed cries of the human pets that she had gathered so close around her, Kars opened his arms to scoop her up. Smirking as she leaped backwards, once again willing to concede such a meaningless concept as pride in order to secure something that truly mattered to her, he leaped forward a second time.

 

Such a thing was just one more reason that his little hawk properly belonged with him.

 

=BT=

 

The sight of sunlight gathering at the eastern horizon, a sight that had brought such hope to him during the times when he, Alice, and Dio would hunt wicked vampires during the time the three of them had spent in Tibet during his training under Master Tonpetty, brought no such feelings into Jonathan’s heart on this day. The sight of Kars, his hood torn away by either his own efforts or the spines of the new mask that he had obviously been carrying with him; like as not for just such a situation as this, was not one to grant any of those who stood here against him hope.

 

“Hmm, what a lovely sight,” Kars said, arrogant even in his pleasure. “The light of the sun is a truly wondrous thing,” Kars turned to Alice, a hint of cruel amusement arising on his face as his bloody crimson eyes locked upon her armored form. “I suppose I should apologize to you, pet,” Kars said, raising his arms as though he was going to make another grab for Alice where she was standing, right hand hidden behind the curve of her hip. “But, there’s only room for one ultimate life form in this world!”

 

A wave of blackness – No, those are feathers! – spread down from Kars’ shoulders, all the way up to his hands, which were themselves transforming into what looked like the clawed wings of some immense bird. Kars leaped into the air, making a diving grab for Alice, even as his and Dio’s sister dove out from under him, running as fast as any vampire was capable of. Kars whipped around, following in Alice’s wake with a horribly arrogant cackle.

 

“Mr. Joestar!” Caesar called, drawing his attention before Jonathan himself could have set off after his and Dio’s sister.

 

“What is it, Caesar?” he demanded, feeling the urgency of Alice’s flight from Kars as a vice around his very heart.

 

“I’ve made contact with Straizo,” the young Italian said, a serious expression on his face as the pair of them faced one another. “We need to move quickly, if we’re going to be able to meet up with him.”

 

“But Alice-!”

 

“She’s buying us time!” Caesar shouted, before he could finish so much as a single sentence. “Now, come on! Straizo is going to be here soon!”

 

=BT=

 

Well, this is a hell of a thing, Alice mused, charging across the empty landscape with Kars flapping the shiny black wings that used to be his arms, eating up what distance that she tried to put between the pair of them. It always seemed to be something that she was dealing with; whether it was the oddity of actually being able to intercede in the Civil War, when she’d thought that she and all of her siblings had been born too late for that kind of thing, or running like hell from some crazy birdman that wanted to… Well, she didn’t know what Kars ultimately wanted from her, but she knew enough about the Pillar Man’s personality to know that she wanted nothing to do with it.

 

The sound, and then the scent, of some small animal falling towards her drew Alice’s attention up to… Of all things, a rabid squirrel that was falling down toward her. Shifting slightly, Alice swatted the thing with a high-speed evaporation freeze, shattering it under her foot as she kept running. Pulling a couple loops of her hair through the tremor-sensors that she’d installed on the top and the back of her helmet – for those times when she was operating under the sun, and thus couldn’t really stick her hairs out in order to sense the delicate vibrations in the air that would tell her the locations of things when she couldn’t turn around to see them for whatever reason – Alice narrowed her eyes as she sensed a large collection of wriggling somethings dropping down towards her.

 

Well, at least I have his attention, she mused, chilling her hands as she gathered a jagged handful of frozen needles in both of them, then launching herself into a leaping pirouette as she flung them up into what turned out to be a falling school of what seemed to be rather large piranhas. Really now, hissing softly as she rolled under Kars’ dive, launching herself forward in almost a sprinter’s stance, Alice tugged on her tremor-sensors as she caught the distant sound of a sonic boom. When she leaped the edge of the cliff, Kars slamming into her from behind, Alice smirked, even as she heard the shattering crack of her titanium armor and felt something digging into the back of her skull…

 

=BT=

 

Well done, pet, he mused, grinning as he gripped his clever little hawk in the security of his ribs and pulled her in close to his chest, even as he extended elastic veins from his arms and legs, pulling her limbs in close to his own so that he could fold them properly within his own malleable flesh. As he’d seen before, and come to expect from his pet when she would leave the sanctuaries that she had clearly established for established for herself throughout the length and breadth of the world, there was a secondary layer under the elegant but useless armor that he’d peeled from her insensate form as he drove her into torpor once more.

 

Regaining his position in the air above all of the forces that his clever hawk had brought to this place – forces that he would make a proper assessment of once he’d begun his pet’s transformation into the Pillar Woman that she deserved to be – Kars became aware of that same, sustained scream that he’d heard once before.

 

Turning to confront whatever it was that was making such an annoying racket, Kars found himself confronted by some kind of aircraft.

 

=BT=

 

Shuddering as he beheld the black-winged form of Kars, Jonathan came to understand yet more of the prophecy that Master Tonpetty had granted to him. Kars’ ribs, extending from his chest and wrapping around Alice’s torso like some terrible parody of the clamps that Alice herself would often use when she was constructing something or other, made more than clear just what twisted branches Master Tonpetty had been referring to in his prophecy. Only the top half of Alice’s body was visible; her arms and legs having clearly been hidden away within the folds of the Pillar Man’s flesh. Jonathan could only hope that they were merely hidden, as opposed to being devoured the way Kars had done to Dio.

 

Thoughts of his vampire brother brought Jonathan’s attention firmly back to the present, just in time for the sound of something beating against the shatter-resistant, UV-filtering glass of their plane’s canopy to catch his ear.

 

Kars!” Dio’s snarl, filled with more hatred than he’d ever heard even from his mercurial brother, almost encompassed the hatred that Jonathan himself felt for the Pillar Man who was flying above them even now.

 

Even the fact that he’d clearly refrained from maiming Alice in the same, cruel way that he’d done to Dio was no comfort, since he was clearly taunting them with her unconscious form: an elastic vein of the same kind that Dio, Alice, and Straizo would all use to extend their reach at times was wound around Alice’s right wrist, tensing and relaxing in order to send her right hand rebounding off of the canopy over their heads.

 

“Straizo, open the canopy!” Dio snarled, turning his attention from the cruelly taunting form of Kars in the sky as though such a thing physically pained him to do.

 

“Calm down, Dio,” Caesar said, though there was more of a growl in the young Italian’s voice than Jonathan thought would help any of those present here.

 

The sight of Kars’ grinning face outside the canopy of their plane, leering down in that same, cruel way that he’d seen the Pillar Man do so many times in the past… Jonathan knew that his and Alice’s brother would not be calmed until their sister had been restored to them once more. Neither would he, but Dio’s fury was not to be underestimated.

 

“Straizo, open the bloody canopy!”

 

“Dio!” he called, drawing the attention of his and Alice’s brother, before he could do something mad in the blind fury that was clearly building in him. “That’s Kars’ plan! He wants you to do something mad. If the canopy is opened at this speed, and with the plane this high in the air, we’ll all be thrown free from the aircraft as we’re in motion!”

 

Beyond that, there was also the simple fact that all of the oxygen would be torn loose, suffocating those members of their party that required breathing in order to sustain themselves. However, at the moment Jonathan knew that his and Alice’s brother was not sane enough to truly comprehend that fact, simple as it was. Dio’s anguished scream sounded nearly inhuman, but even with the maddened, helpless fury in his carmine eyes, his and Alice’s brother allowed himself to flop back into the seat he’d been settled in.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing his eyes slightly as he beheld the humans in that aircraft of theirs, Kars dismissed them; confined as they were by that metal coffin of theirs, even those vampires that tailed so obediently after his clever hawk would be helpless to stop him. A moment’s concentration saw him extruding a pair of jets from his back, and Kars turned his flightpath. There was truly only one proper place for his pet’s transformation into the Pillar Woman that she was meant to be to begin: the temple where he and his had consumed the humans who had been foolish enough to attempt to challenge their dominion.

 

=BT=

 

“The Boss used herself to buy us time,” Caesar said, leaning forward to take Dio’s armored hand. “She knows what she’s doing; trust her.”

 

“This plane is armed for combat with vampires,” Straizo said, his steady tone lending some much-needed calm to those aboard the aircraft that Jonathan and all of his people were pursuing the Pillar Man through the air to whatever destination he intended to make for when he’d taken Alice. “We have Starburst, Rattler, and Shrieker rounds,” Straizo continued, and Jonathan could just about see the thoughtful frown upon the other vampire’s face.

 

“We should probably save the Rattlers and Shriekers until we manage to get Alice away from him,” Caesar said thoughtfully. “She won’t be able to protect herself from the sensory-overload they’re designed to cause, considering the state she’s in.”

 

“Yes,” Straizo said, the steady calm in his tone a sharp contrast to the simmering tension in the plane as a whole, and the seething rage he could see on Dio’s face in particular. “Firing Starburst.”

 

Finding himself clenching his fists almost involuntarily, Jonathan forced himself to relax as he watched the Starburst missile streak over Kars’ head, breaking apart into multiple smaller magnesium-flares which then exploded into the kind of horrible, eye-searing light that would incapacitate any vampire who found themselves caught out in it. Their jet thundered over the Pillar Man’s head, turning around to unleash another Starburst missile into Kars’ path, before turning to race out of the way of any possible retaliation.

 

“Caesar, you know this area better than anyone else here,” he said, turning around in his seat as best he could so that he could properly speak to Caesar where he was sitting. “Do you know of any volcanoes close enough to reach?”

 

“Yes, of course!” Caesar exclaimed, a grin breaking out on his face as he turned back to Jonathan. “Isola de Volgano!”

 

“How long do you think we can keep him following us?” Joseph asked, seeming more than a little unsettled by the whole situation; Jonathan could hardly blame him, truly.

 

This was an unsettling situation for all of them.

 

“We’ll keep him following as long as we need to, Jojo,” Caesar said, a note of grim pleasure in his voice.

 

Narrowing his eyes as Straizo jinked the plane around, following Caesar’s directions as Kars righted himself in the air and followed quickly after them. Even from such a distance as their plane was maintaining from the Pillar Man, Jonathan could see the lines of tension and fury in every line of his body. Maintaining the deep, steady breaths that would allow him to channel his Hamon, Jonathan braced himself as Straizo accelerated the plane, turning their path steadily towards Isola de Volgano.

 

Towards a land born of fire…

 

=BT=

 

Snarling as he turned to confront the insolent pests who had dared to attack him with those infuriating weapons of theirs, Kars narrowed his eyes as he focused on the fleeing aircraft that had been harassing him.

 

“My apologies, pet, but it seems that you will have to wait a bit longer to become what you were meant to be,” he said, glancing briefly down at his clever hawk, as he turned once again to confront the infuriating creatures aboard that aircraft of theirs.

 

Redeploying the jets that he’d used to maneuver, Kars set off after that aircraft, and all of the irritating pests riding within it.

 

=BT=

 

Growling under his breath he, Dio, tried to settle himself back into his seat. He knew that his sweet sister would berate him for being so tense as all this, he knew that she would have been able to keep a level-head aside from the cold fury that would make things all the clearer in her eyes, but such a thing had never truly been in him. He knew that his sweet sister was not of a kind to approve of such a thing, but no matter how the pair of them had worked at such a thing, his temper had never seemed one to be tamed.

 

Forcing himself to at least unclench, before any of the others riding in their plane could turn around and see what he was doing he, Dio, turned to look out through the canopy once again.

 

It seemed that they were nearing the volcano that Jojo had been so insistent that they all go to, and he could see the infuriating sight of that bastard Kars through the rear monitor-cameras. He could also see the unconscious form of his sweet sister, hanging like some kind of twisted ornamentation from the ribs that that infuriating bastard of a Pillar Man had wrapped around her. Hissing as he remembered once again the way that Kars had pulled his sweet Alice into the very flesh of his body once he’d grabbed her from the back of the robotic dinosaur that she had been standing upon, he tried to settle himself once more.

 

Their plane bucked as Straizo forced Kars down with a sustained blast from the VTOL jets, and he, Dio, grinned under his helmet as the infuriating creature was pushed ever closer to the caldera of the volcano they had all finally made it to. The coup de grace was a Starburst missile, launched directly into his face as he tried to regain his lost altitude with those ridiculous wings of his.

 

Laughing aloud as he, Dio, watched Kars plummet down toward the volcano that was to be their battleground, he braced himself as Straizo sent their plane into a sharp descent.

 

=BT=

 

Breathing slowly and deeply, both to calm himself and to channel the Hamon that he and his would sorely need once Straizo had forced Kars down to the rocky ground of the volcano, Jonathan shuddered slightly as Straizo fired a last Starburst missile as they all followed Kars as he landed. The rumble of the VTOL engines as they activated, with Straizo’s firm hands guiding them to a smooth landing, not very far from the place where Kars had crashed into the ground, prompted Jonathan to close his eyes briefly.

 

You will meet your death on a land born of fire; to free an owl from the twisted branches of a wicked old tree, you will give your last breath to a young lion on the peak of a blazing mountain. Such had been Master Tonpetty’s last prophecy to him; such had been the warning that Jonathan had carried for such a long time, and it was firmly in his mind as Straizo guided them down to land on the burning ground of the volcano underneath them. Closing his eyes for just a moment, Jonathan rose from his seat at last, making his way out alongside Straizo, Caesar, Joseph, and Dio.

 

The fury that he could still see in every line of Dio’s armored body prompted Jonathan to reach for his and Alice’s brother’s right shoulder, gripping it strongly enough that the vampire would at least be able to feel the pressure through his armor. Before he say so much as a single word, however, their group of five was forced to split apart as a hail of Hamon-charged feathers – of all things – sliced through the vary air where they had just been standing. Even through the heat-distortion in the air, Jonathan could see the vortex of air created by the feathers’ passage.

 

“Get out of the way! That windstorm is as sharp as his blades!” he shouted, warning the members of his family before they could be caught unawares by what he had only just seen.

 

As Kars raised himself back up, black wings slicing through the air as they launched yet another barrage of those lethal feathers of his, Straizo and Dio leaped forward to intercept them. The scarves that the pair of them wore over their armor served to drain the lethal Hamon from the feathers, causing them to burn to harmless cinders in the heat of the volcano where the six of them were battling. The sight of Alice, wrapped in Kars’ exposed ribs, with most of her body hidden by the Pillar Man’s flesh…

 

Jonathan could fully understand, and thoroughly sympathize with, the pure rage that he could both see and hear in his and Alice’s brother’s mien.

 

“We have to get close enough to pull her out of there,” Caesar said, seemingly having to bite down on his own rage to do so.

 

“Yes,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he considered just what they were going to need to do in order to accomplish such a feat; Alice would have known in an instant, but the fact remained that they didn’t have her to guide them in this situation. Thus, it fell to them; to him, in particular. “Dio, Straizo, you two take up guard positions on either side of us; we’re going to need you to keep the air clear of those damnable feathers of his. Joseph, stay close to me; we’re going to need to get Alice out as fast as we can. Dio, how fast can you freeze one of your own kind?”

 

“Fast enough, Jojo,” his and Alice’s brother said, pure determination swiftly taking the place of the helpless fury that he’d earlier been prey to.

 

“Good,” he said; the pair of them both knew that ice acted as a barrier for Hamon, and that a vampire such as Alice could survive freezing without a single jot of harm. “We’ll need a burst of both positive and negative Hamon, in order to force Alice free from Kars’ body. Joseph, that’s where you and I will come in.”

 

“Right, Gramps,” his grandson said, nodding firmly as the four of them all took up their appointed positions. “Let’s go!”

 

With Dio and Straizo to either side, absorbing the Hamon from the feathers that Kars was almost continually launching at them now, he and Joseph were able to weather what would have otherwise have been an impassable storm of lethal, razor-sharp feathers. However, it seemed that Kars was far from the mindless barbarian that Dio was most apt to describe him as, because once it had become clear that the feathers he had been using against them were no longer going to be of any help…

 

“Are those some kind of fish?!” Dio demanded, and Jonathan could not quite tell if his and Alice brother was more incredulous or annoyed.

 

“Piranhas! They’re piranhas!” Joseph exclaimed.

 

“Mind your breathing!” he shouted, though he felt rather off-balance from the whole situation, as well.

 

“Bastard!” Dio snarled, whipping his scarf forward to sever one of the flying piranhas cleanly in half.

 

Dio and Straizo made quick work of the piranhas Kars had launched at them, cutting the creatures down with no more mercy than Kars himself had shown any of them, and Jonathan found that he could feel nothing but relief for the fact of it. Giving Dio something concrete to vent his rage on was also clearly helping his and Alice’s brother; helplessness was not something that any of their family had ever been the kind to accept with grace. Nor should it have been, Jonathan knew.

 

Dio and Straizo pressed their hands against Alice’s head just as soon as the pair of them had managed to reach her, and when he and Joseph were finally able to latch onto Kars’ body just long enough to fill the Pillar Man’s body with their opposing charges of Hamon, Alice’s frozen body was launched free as though it had been fired from a cannon. Feeling all the lighter, as Dio swept their sister up in his armored arms and dashed back from the infuriated form of Kars, Jonathan smiled slightly.

 

“Give me that!” the Pillar Man roared, black wings all but slamming into the ground with their powerful down stroke, as Kars launched himself back into the air.

 

Dio’s only answer was a blast from his Space Ripper Stingy Eyes that seared into Kars’ left shoulder, and a particularly rude gesture as he ran steadily back to the plane that they had all journeyed to this place in. A barrage of Hamon-charged feathers, thick enough to nearly blacken the sky where they passed, slammed into the side of the plane. The Hamon in the feathers was enough to ignite the remaining fuel in the tanks and the jet detonated in a horrifyingly spectacular explosion, scattering the shrapnel of what had been their only means of easy escape from this place.

 

The fact that Jonathan knew that his own life was to end upon these grounds meant little in light of the fact that his family seemed to be trapped.

Chapter 33: Holding Out For A Hero

Chapter Text

“Gramps!”

 

Jonathan felt himself pushed to the side, narrowly dodging another rain of Kars’ Hamon-charged feathers, he then looked over at Joseph. His grandson seemed to either have lost his breath in the effort, or else taken a severe injury. The horrid sight of Joseph’s right arm, or rather the charred stump where his right arm ended – just above the elbow, in fact – struck Jonathan to his very heart.

 

“Glad-” the harsh pants of a man in unspeakable pain cut off whatever it was that Joseph had been intending to say, but his grandson smiled grimly and forced himself to continue on in spite of that. “Glad I managed to make it in time.”

 

“Joseph,” he said, raising a hand, filled with Hamon; it wasn’t as though he could actually manage to do anything aside from easing the pain that Joseph was so clearly in, but he’d do that without a moment’s hesitation at any time.

 

“Thanks, Gramps,” Joseph said, smiling back at him, even as he steadied his breathing and the pair of them returned their attention to the mad Pillar Man that they were all facing.

 

=BT=

 

Watching as his sweet sister began to revive at last, the ice that had preserved her from the Hamon that his sweet puppy and his Little Jojo had used to free her from that bastard of a Pillar Man that had taken her captive beginning to melt at last he, Dio smiled widely under the ingenious, folding helmet that his brilliant Alice had designed and built.

 

“It’s so good to see you again, sister dear,” he said, wishing for a long moment that he could have properly greeted his magnificent Alice, now that she was recovering from this most troublesome of ordeals.

 

“It’s good to be seen, under the circumstances,” his sweet sister said, sitting back up, though there seemed to be a lingering sort of stiffness to the way she moved; he supposed that the last of the ice hadn’t yet melted, even in the heat of such a place as this.

 

It was a troublesome thing, to be sure, but hardly a disaster, considering.

 

“Stay here, sister,” he, Dio, said, reaching out to gently settle his dear Alice back onto the stone of the volcano they were all battling upon the face of. “Let us handle this boorish creature for you.”

 

“Yes,” his sweet sister said, eyes narrowing slightly, before she pulled down the flap of fabric that would act as a means of protection against the sun without the helmet that that bastard of a Pillar Man had deprived her of. “All other considerations aside, I wouldn’t be much help against a Hamon-user without my armor.”

 

Growling deep in his throat as he, Dio, remembered the sight of his dear Alice’s magnificent armor shattering to pieces as that miserable Kars shredded it, he found himself brought swiftly back to his senses at the feel of his sweet sister’s right hand upon his shoulder.

 

“Keep a lid on it, all right?” his sweet sister said, a sharp tone of command to her voice, even as he, Dio, saw her eyes narrowing behind their cloth shield. “The last thing we need is anyone here going in half-cocked.”

 

=BT=

 

Forced to dodge yet another barrage of those damnable devil fish that Kars was launching at them again, since it was clear to even an idiot that the feathers that he’d been previously using weren’t going to work on them anymore, Joseph panted as he looked over at Gramps again. Anyone, even the aforementioned idiot, could tell that the old man was worried about what had happened; or, what could happen to them, after their plane had been destroyed by that bastard of a Pillar Man. Still, there was a lot that had gone wrong during the battle against Kars.

 

For one thing, Aunty Alice had been taken out of the fight entirely; there was no way for her to use Hamon without the crystal-matrix in her armor to channel it, or the scarf that allowed her to fight more effectively.

 

=BT=

 

Glancing back at the form of his and Dio’s sister, sidelined as she was by the fact that that horrid Pillar Man had shattered her armor and thus deprived her of both the crystal-matrix and the scarf that she used to channel and use Hamon safely, Jonathan sighed. Knowing that Alice had already done everything in her power in order to ensure that Kars was trapped in this place alongside them – held down in a single place, so that he would no longer be such a danger to the Earth and all of the people living on her – gave him at least some hope that, even if he himself would not be able to leave this place alive, his family would at least be able to continue on.

 

Kars had regained the air at this point, and was clearly aiming to capture Alice once again, and so Jonathan gathered himself and made his way back over to where Joseph was standing.

 

“Hey, Gramps,” Joseph said, turning to smile at him.

 

“How are your Hamon reserves?” he asked, turning to look over at Kars as the Pillar Man climbed steadily back into the air.

 

“About back to normal,” his grandson said, glaring briefly up at Kars, before he turned back to look at him where he was standing. “Do you think we might have the chance, in our current condition.”

 

“Not in our current condition, no,” he said, sighing as he gathered himself for what he was about to do; it seemed that there was truly no escaping the fate that had been planned for him. “Still, there is something we can do.” Rather; a last thing I can do, he mused, knowing that Joseph would have attempted to stop him if he told his grandson just what it was that he planned to do.

 

Just as Alice, Dio, Elizabeth, and even Erina would have done, if any of them had been able to find out his plan in some fashion or other.

 

“All right, Gramps, sounds good,” Joseph said, nodding in the decisive fashion that he’d come to expect from his willful grandson in such situations as this. “What do we need to do?”

 

“Just give me your hand,” he said, feeling a distinct, sharp pang in his heart as he forced himself not to pluralize the word as he spoke it; it was simply one more reason that the Pillar Man before them needed to be destroyed.

 

Once Joseph’s remaining hand had been sandwiched within his own, Jonathan reached deeply into himself, gathering all of the Hamon that he had managed to generate during all of the years that he had lived in this world. This last had been a technique that Master Tonpetty had given to him, alongside the prophecy that had hung over his head for such a long time that he’d almost become accustomed to such a thing.

 

“Ultimate Deep-Pass Overdrive!” he shouted, feeling all of his remaining Hamon – every last drop of it – draining into his grandson; in the end, all that Jonathan could find it in himself to regret was the fact that he’d not get to meet any of the future generations of his and Erina’s family…

 

=BT=

 

“Whoa!” he exclaimed, as the sudden sensation of Gramps’ Hamon flooded into him, throwing his head back and nearly causing him to stumble to the ground; panting as he tried to regain at least some of his equilibrium after everything that had happened. “Gramps…”

 

Looking down at the poor, sad, old corpse that had once been his dear Gramps, Joseph gathered himself for what he was going to have to do; the first thing, of course, would be to take Gramps’ corpse to Aunty Alice so she would be able to keep it safe while he and the others dealt with that bastard Kars. Once he’d finished with that, Joseph turned his attention back to Dio and Straizo as the pair of them fought a holding action against the bastard Pillar Man who had already taken so much from them as a family.

 

“Welcome back, Little Jojo,” Uncle Dio said, as the three of them all took up their positions in battle again.

 

“Good to be back, Uncle Dio,” he said, bracing himself once again for what he was going to need to do.

 

Winning this fight wasn’t even going to be the most challenging thing he was going to have to do; explaining what had happened to Gramps, particularly to Uncle Dio, that was going to be the real problem that he would face.

 

=BT=

 

Narrowing her eyes as she felt the increased rumbling from the volcano that they were all standing on, Alice stood back up, just as Kars was suddenly launched skyward on a broken piece of the ground. Dio and Joseph had also been dragged along for the ride, but if there was anything she knew about her brother and her grand-nephew both, it was that the pair of them were fully capable of getting out of situations that would have challenged the mettle of anyone else. Making her way over to Straizo as her aide struggled back to his feet, she called out as he started looking up into the sky where the rock was swiftly ascending out of even the enhanced eyesight of a pair of vampires like them.

 

“Come on; the volcano is about to erupt! We need to be out of the caldera when it does!” Watching as Straizo’s gaze began to shift to the corpse that she’d draped over her back, she rapped out her next order in the tone that always drew her fellow vampire’s attention as well as his obedience. “We can discuss things later; but if we don’t clear the area now, we won’t be leaving at all!”

 

“Yes, ma’am.”

 

The pair of them turned quickly, leaping the rim of the caldera and sliding their way down to the sea. Hitting the water, Alice fast-froze a raft under the pair of them just as Straizo’s gaze began to shift back to the air. Once she’d gotten Jonathan’s corpse settled in the center of the raft that she’d constructed, Alice turned her own gaze to see just what it was that her aide was so interested in.

 

“Help me steer this thing,” she said, as the falling forms of Joseph and Dio became clearer amid the mass of broken rock that was falling through the sky toward where she and Straizo were currently standing.

 

“Yes, ma’am.”

 

Working together, the pair of them were soon able to position the raft close enough to the point where Dio and Joseph were going to be landing that they were able to pull the pair of them out of the water before they could start sinking.

 

“Where is he?” Dio asked, as soon as he’d managed to get his feet back under him.

 

“Back there,” she said, knowing just what it was that her brother would be interested in; particularly after spending enough time with Joseph that he’d probably been informed of the specifics of what had gone on.

 

Pausing for a moment as Joseph slipped his remaining arm around her shoulders, Alice held his hand in both of hers and the pair of them made their way over to the center of the raft where they were all gathered at this point.

 

=BT=

 

“Jojo…” he, Dio, muttered, looking down at the sad, pitiful form that had once been his sweet puppy.

 

True, it was something that he’d known that Jojo was capable of doing – clearly, something that that old Hamon master had taught to him; though if he, Dio, had known about such a thing, he would have given the man such a lecture – if not in the specific, then in general because he’d known the puppy for so long. Jojo had never been the kind of person he could allow such a threat as that bastard Pillar Man to continue to exist in the world, particularly when he had the power to do something about it.

 

Sighing as he, Dio, dove into the water in order to sculpt the bottom of what was to be their transport back to the mainland that they had departed from what seemed to be such a very long time ago, he made his way back up to the surface to climb back into what had become much more of a proper watercraft by this point. Stopping to embrace his sweet sister he, Dio, continued on his way up to the side of the corpse of his and his dear Alice’s sweet puppy.

 

“Uncle Dio,” his Little Jojo greeted him, turning away from the corpse that they had both been watching over ever since his sweet puppy had sacrificed himself in order to ensure the death of that bastard of a Pillar Man who had threatened their family and the world they all lived in.

 

=BT=

 

While Dio and Joseph held their vigil over Jonathan’s corpse, she and Straizo steered their course back to the mainland so that they would be able to let everyone know what had happened to Jonathan. To say nothing of the conclusion of their battle with Kars. Once they’d arrived back in one of her holdings in Italy, Alice stepped down from what had become a makeshift boat made of crafted ice.

 

“Milady, it pleases me greatly to know that you and yours are well,” Bruford said, meeting up with the four of them as they carried their burden back towards the tower that their icy watercraft had arrived at.

 

“Not all of us,” Dio said, a slight growl to his tone as the four of them began making their way into the tower so that they could get Jonathan’s body settled somewhere.

 

There was a brief moment of hesitation in Bruford’s manor, before the old knight seemed to realize just what it was that her brother was getting at.

 

“Ah, so Sir Jonathan has come to the end,” Bruford said, making his way over to the wrapped form at the center of their group as they continued forward.

 

Bruford was quick to join up with them, taking his own position at the center of their group and propping Jonathan’s body up with his right arm. The five of them then continued on their way into the lobby of her Triestina Tower, settling Jonathan’s body down on a nearby couch, while Dio and Bruford set themselves to watch over it, and she went to inform the rest of their group about what had happened on the volcano. And also, what she’d been told of the battle with Kars.

 

=BT=

 

While Aunty Alice went to go tell everyone what had happened to Gramps, Joseph made his way back over to the couch where Uncle Dio and Bruford were sitting with his corpse. Wrapping his arms around Uncle Dio, as the vampire turned to look his way, the pair of them settled down into the plush cushions and allowed themselves to rest for the first time since this whole thing had started.

 

“My Little Jojo,” Uncle Dio muttered, blond hair tickling his chin as the vampire tucked his head against Joseph’s left temple. “Why do you think Jojo didn’t tell me, Dio, what he planned to do?”

 

“I think Gramps was thinking of all of us,” he said, feeling as though something of Gramps – aside from even the Hamon that Gramps had given to him at the very end of his life – lived on in him, even now. “I think he didn’t want any of us to be worried about him, considering what was going to have to happen.”

 

“It had to happen?” Uncle Dio echoed, something fragile in his manor, even for all the bluster he was clearly starting to build up.

 

“Considering what kind of abilities Kars was demonstrating, I don’t think there was any way for all five of us to survive,” he said, shuddering slightly as he recalled the sheer power and abilities that Kars had been demonstrating, even up to the point where he’d managed to overpower the Pillar Man and maneuver him into the place atop the volcano where he’d been able to launch him out of the atmosphere.

 

It almost reminded him of the way Dad had died; though his plane had broken apart in the upper-atmosphere, coming down as a shower of shooting stars while he, Mum, Uncle Speedwagon, and Uncle Dio had all watched in the kind of helpless horror that could only truly be experienced by someone on the ground when they were watching as someone so high in the air died in a blaze of fire and light.

 

Still, at least there was the hope that Kars wouldn’t be coming back from such a thing, just as Dad hadn’t been able to do such a thing, in the end.

 

Still, as the three of them all settled down on the sofa together, each trying to get a handle on what had happened in their own way, Joseph found himself wondering what would happen next.

 

The next couple days, as they got the funeral arrangements made for Gramps and got everyone up to speed on just what had happened to Kars at the conclusion of such, seemed to pass in something of a blur. Everyone seemed to be feeling the same, though, so at least Joseph hadn’t found himself alone in all that.

 

“Little Jojo,” Uncle Dio said, making his way into the room he’d been given within Aunty Alice’s Triestina Tower, draping himself around Joseph’s shoulders as though he was some kind of vampire mink stole, or something.

 

“Hullo, Uncle Dio,” he said, gently pulling the vampire’s arms over his shoulders, so that the pair of them could settle more comfortably into the large chair that had been placed within the large room that had been given to him when he’d gotten settled in the Tower along with the rest of their family,

 

Uncle Dio had been getting a bit more clingy of late, ever since Gramps had died; not as though Joseph didn’t understand why such a thing had happened, but it was something he’d become almost uncomfortably aware of during the duration of their stay. Still, it was clear that Uncle Dio had been cast fairly adrift by being forced to essentially watch as someone he’d loved and cared about for so long as he had Gramps had died while he’d been ultimately helpless to do even a single thing about it. It had to be the worst feeling in the world, especially for someone like Uncle Dio.

 

=BT=

 

“You’re certain about this?” she asked, raising an eyebrow at Bruford as he unclipped the clasp of his cloak, and then slipped the cloak itself off.

 

“Aye, milady,” Bruford said, nodding in that way he did when he was certain about something that he’d decided to do. “I feel that I have seen enough for two lifetimes.”

 

“Well, it is your decision,” she said, and then smirked slightly. “Though you’re going to be the one that has to explain this to Tarkus, you know.”

 

Bruford chuckled softly. “Aye, I could hardly do anything less.”

 

=BT=

 

When their family, extended and immediate, had all gathered for Gramps’ funeral, he couldn’t help but notice the fragility in Uncle Dio’s demeanor; even after all this time, it seemed that Uncle Dio hadn’t quite managed to come back to himself. Even with all of the support that he still had from Aunty Alice in particular – to say nothing about Granny Erina, Uncle Speedwagon, and Straizo, Bruford, and Tarkus – Uncle Dio still hadn’t managed to pull himself back together again. It was one of the saddest things that Joseph had ever seen, knowing what kind of person that Uncle Dio had been, and then seeing just what the death of Gramps had done to him.

 

So, even as he was making plans to marry Suzie Q, Joseph was also talking to her about making a place for Uncle Dio to stay in whatever home they managed to establish for themselves when the pair of them were finally able to settle down.

 

=BT=

 

Turning at the sound of a rather familiar voice, grumbling what were clearly the kind of Elizabethan-era flavored obscenities that the man had proven himself to be so fond of – particularly when she’d told him about the terminology that was used to describe the era he came from – Alice raised an eyebrow as she watched Tarkus stomp his way into the room that she’d taken up a position in.

 

“I didn’t know if you were going to show up for this,” she said, stepping slightly to the left so that she could make some space for Tarkus to stand at the window beside her.

 

“Even though he is being a damned fool, he shouldn’t do this kind of thing alone,” Tarkus grumbled, folding his thick arms across his broad chest as he faced the large, UV-filtering picture window that stood before the balcony overlooking the eastern expanse of the Italian city.

 

Without another word, Tarkus knocked on the tempered glass that separated the pair of them from the open balcony where Bruford was standing, looking out toward the still-darkened horizon. Or, at least he had been, before Tarkus’ knocking drew his attention back to the pair of them where they were standing. Watching as Tarkus and Bruford both pressed their hands against the glass that separated them, palms flat against one another’s, Alice smiled slightly as Tarkus glared in response to Bruford’s calm smile.

 

It was rather interesting, watching the interactions of two people who had known each other long enough to be able to communicate without words, in the same way that she and Dio were sometimes able to do when they interacted; still, it seemed as though she wasn’t going to have that kind of a chance for much longer.

 

When the sun finally began to rise, with Bruford opening his arms wide as though he planned to embrace it, Alice narrowed her eyes as she watched the man’s body crumble under the harsh light of the sun as it poured down on him. Tarkus sighed harshly, having clearly inhaled deeply for just such an occasion, and as she flipped the switch that would extend the bulletproof, anti-UV glass shielding around the balcony that Bruford’s armor was now sitting on, Tarkus stomped out onto the balcony to fetch it.

 

“What are you planning to do with that?” she asked, raising an eyebrow as she watched Tarkus carry Bruford’s empty cuirass back into the room where the pair of them had been standing while they stayed with Bruford in his final moments.

 

“If it’s all the same to you, Milady, I’ll be keeping it in my room from now on,” Tarkus said, glancing briefly at her, before returning his attention to the cuirass he was holding.

 

“Very well,” she said, nodding as she turned to make her way back to her office.

 

There was still work to be done, of course; as the CEO of a massive international corporation, there was always work to be done.

 

=BT=

 

As he made his rounds of the Boss’ holdings, searching for Old Man Speedwagon at her behest, Caesar found himself wondering just how the old man was doing. Something had seemed to go out of him, when he’d heard the news that Jonathan had died on Isola de Volgano, and the Boss had asked him to keep an eye on the man while he was rambling about the grounds of her Santa Barbara estate. He didn’t know just what he was going to find, once he’d laid his eyes on the man, but he was going to find him, all the same.

 

Once he’d made his way out to the elegant gardens that the Boss maintained, Caesar caught sight of Old Man Speedwagon, facing the statue of the dog, peacock, and owl that Dio and Jonathan had commissioned as something of a centerpiece of the garden.

 

“So, this is where you ended up, Old Man,” he muttered, making his way over to check the man’s pulse; as he’d almost been expecting, there wasn’t one.

Chapter 34: Hey Girl

Chapter Text

He, Dio, had been careful to establish a routine with regards to his visits to his sweet puppy’s grave; after all, his sweet sister had often proved that the appearance of normality was often the most unbreakable of shields.

 

“Happy birthday, Jojo,” he, Dio, said as he set down the slice of delicious fudge cake that someone within the ranks of the caretakers had proven to be so fond of, if the note that he had received from them the last time that he, Dio, had made his way to the old Joestar manor was any indication. “It’s so good to be able to see you again.”

 

Left unsaid, of course, was how much better it would have been if he had actually been able to see his sweet little puppy once again. Still, there was a way that he, Dio, would be able to keep at least something of his dear, sweet little puppy close by. And, considering the way that he’d elegantly crafted such an appearance of harmlessness in all of the time that he’d spent in this quiet little graveyard that had been established at the far end of the Joestar estate, the caretakers were more than willing to allow him, Dio, free access to all of the graves that stood within the small plot.

 

As he, Dio, discussed the more prosaic aspects of what had happened during the course of the last year, he was also keeping his tremor senses attuned to detect any of the caretakers who might have been close enough to see what he was truly planning. Once he was certain that he was as completely alone as one could be when one was still within the bounds of a human settlement he, Dio, turned his attention to the matter of the excavation that he’d truly come back to this lonely place to perform. The scent of warm earth all around him would have overwhelmed the scent of the chocolate cake that he, Dio, had brought to this place with him; at least if his senses as a vampire had not been greater than that of any human who had ever lived.

 

Hello again, puppy, he, Dio, mused with a smile as he brought up the ornate coffin that Jojo had been buried in. Now, I have something for you to keep, he reflected, as he extracted the bones from his thighs; he’d spent quite the long time extracting the marrow from them, so that he would be able to bring at least some life back to the dry bones that he, Dio, was bringing up from the very ground beneath him. And now, I’ll have something to keep from you.

 

Settling Jojo’s recovered thigh bones into his own flesh he, Dio, set his own extracted bones into the coffin in just the same place as Jojo’s had once been. Carefully settling the coffin back in its hole and setting the dirt that had once covered it back to rights he, Dio, rolled the turf back over the exposed ground, taking the time to make certain that any of the humans who worked in this place would be able to tell that it had been disturbed in the first place. Standing back up once again he, Dio shifted upon his newly resealed legs.

 

It did feel slightly odd, as he pulled his pants back up and set his clothes firmly back to rights once again, but as he, Dio, began to make his way back out of the Joestar plot and back through the estate that he’d once lived in alongside his sweet Alice and his adorable puppy, he smiled as he set off once more.

 

“I shall see you again next year, Jojo,” he, Dio, said with a bright, calm smile upon his face.

 

Continuing on his way, back to the car that he’d left behind when he’d made his way back to the estate where he, Dio, had stayed for such a long time during the course of his life as a human, he smiled as the door was opened for him.

 

“Vanilla Ice,” he, Dio, said, nodding to the man that had taken the place as his retainer in the same manor that Straizo had appointed himself as the retainer to his sweet sister.

 

“Lord Dio,” the man said, bowing deeply to him as he held the door of the Jaguar open for him.

 

“Take me back to the airport, Enya,” he said, crossing his legs at the ankles as he settled back into the plush seating at the back of the Jaguar he’d had specifically designed with his preferences in mind.

 

“Of course, Lord Dio,” the old woman – well, old compared to most of the other humans that he, Dio, maintained an association with at present – said, and he could see a pleased smile on her face as she took them all back to the holdings that he, Dio, had established within Egypt.

 

He’d be particularly pleased to make his way back, considering the plans he had in mind…

 

=SC=

 

Taking a deep breath of the dry, spicy-scented desert air – such a contrast to her home back in Cardiff, and also to a lot of the other places that Father would find himself travelling to in his capacity as one of the Brando Corporation’s Quality Assurance officers – Loreena McKennitt smiled as she settled back into the chair in the café she was seated at, sipping from the mocha she’d bought for herself. Picking up her sketchpad again, Loreena flipped to an empty page and began working on a picture of the veritable sea of sand dunes that their plane had passed over when their family had made the journey into Egypt in order for Father to make certain that the products that the branches of Brando International were putting out were up to the standards that had been set out in the company’s charter.

 

The sound of a pair of footfalls making their way over to the table where she was sitting drew Loreena’s attention to where a couple of men were standing next to each other; one of them in particular was more than a little familiar to her.

 

“Oi, Mr. Brando!” she called, when it started to become more than a little obvious that the unfamiliar man was starting to wish that Dio Brando was as far away from him. “I didn’t expect to see you here!”

 

“Little Lori!” the man exclaimed, turning his attention to her, and incidentally allowing the man he’d probably been flirting outrageously with to escape from him; which, with a distinctly grateful look in her direction, he did. “How marvelous to see you again, my dear,” he said, wide grin on his face as he sauntered over and practically poured himself into the chair next to her. “How have you been lately?”

 

“Things have been good,” she said, smiling both for Mr. Brando, and for the fact that she’d managed to help that man escape from him.

 

She knew the kind of outrageous flirt that Mr. Brando could be, and also how overbearing the man could also be when he put his mind to it; it wasn’t really the kind of thing that most people liked having to deal with for a long time. In fact, only his twin sister seemed to be able to keep a leash on him with any degree of certainty. Still, as the pair of them discussed her father, his work, and what she herself had been doing while Father was making his rounds in this part of the world, Loreena found herself relaxing as she and Mr. Brando spoke to one another.

 

Even though the man was an outrageous flirt, and more than a little overbearing, but for all that he was ultimately harmless.

 

Once the pair of them had parted company again, Loreena turned back to her sketchpad and began sketching once more. Finishing the last dregs of her mocha, Loreena got up from the table where she had been sitting and began making her way to the park that she’d seen on her way to the street café where she’d got the drink in the first place. Looking for a comfortable bench beneath one of the trees within said park, Loreena smiled as she made her way over to one and settled herself down to continue sketching.

 

=SC=

 

Once he, Dio, had made his way back to the hotel and spa that he’d been establishing for some time, he found himself smiling all the wider. Seeing Little Lori again, even though she wasn’t quite so little as she had been when he, Dio, had last seen her, had been a treat. Even though she had distracted him from speaking to that interesting Egyptian that he’d spotted on his way through the city. He’d seen in her eyes that such had been her intent from the start, but the resulting conversation had been interesting enough that he’d been willing to indulge the girl, if only to satisfy his own curiosity.

 

“Enya,” he called, pitching his voice to carry through the expanse of his home as he removed the elaborate coat that he, Dio, had been wearing in order to shield himself from the sun while he was out and about during the course of the day. “Have you managed to acquire that antique you were searching for?”

 

“That I have, Lord Dio,” the woman who had attached herself to him, Dio, nearly as soon as the pair of them had encountered one another on that long-ago summer’s day said.

 

As he continued over to the rack to hang up his coat he, Dio, heard the familiar sounds of Enya’s footfalls making their way through the hall and into the main room that he was standing in once more. Shedding his shirt and hanging it on the hook next to the jacket that he’d been wearing during his trip through Cairo he, Dio, turned to see Enya making her way back into his main room holding a large bow and what seemed to be an ornate, stone arrow.

 

“So, this is the antique that you’ve been searching for for such a long time,” he, Dio, said, narrowing his eyes as he contemplated the weapons that the withered old woman was presenting to him. “And, you say that this will grant me, Dio, access to even greater power than that which the Stone Mask itself granted.”

 

“Indeed it will, Lord Dio,” Enya said, looking up at him in that worshipful way that a great many people that he’d met during the course of his eternal life tended to do; it was something that his sweet sister had never truly come to approve of, though she tolerated it with an amused sort of good-humor when she found herself confronted with such a thing.

 

“Very well, then,” he, Dio, said as he presented himself before the withered woman who had attached herself to him for such a large proportion of her human lifespan. “I, Dio, invite you to proceed.”

 

As Enya drew back the string of the bow she was holding, aiming the ornate stone arrow squarely at him he, Dio, braced himself for what was about to happen. True, as a vampire he was immune to any form of physical pain, but there were more kinds of pain in this world than strictly the physical. He, Dio, had learned the lesson both painfully and well.

 

He still didn’t like thinking about it.

 

When the arrow struck him he, Dio, felt as though he had been stuck by far more than a simple carved stone… It felt as though he’d been struck by all of the thunderbolts in a storm, each of them woven together into some kind of unimaginable super-bolt of some kind. It had been a long time indeed since he, Dio, had had the urge to breathe in the manner of a human; however, when the arrow struck him he, Dio, had to admit that such a temptation had been present.

 

=SC=

 

The sudden flash of… something startled Alice out of the meditative state that she usually fell into when she found herself with no immediate, pressing obligations, and she sat back up in her seat. The closest she could come to describing what had happened was that it’d felt like some kind of high-voltage electrical jolt had passed through her. It was hardly the strangest thing she’d had happen, but it was at least odd enough that Alice knew she’d probably be best served checking in with Dio.

 

Odd things happening to her with no explanation always did seem to lead back to her capricious twin, in some way or another.

 

Still, there was the matter of her meeting with the contractor to discuss the construction of a new building in the general area of France where her company was looking into expanding toward. That kind of thing seemed like it could wait, at least until she’d managed to settle the matter of the new facility she wanted to establish. Once her private plane had landed in France, Alice got up out of her seat, thanked Straizo for his work as her pilot, and made her way down the folding stairs and into the hangar.

 

=SC=

 

Turning to watch as the figure that he, Dio, had summoned from deep within his very Self – something that was called a Stand; at least according to what Enya had said, so many times that he’d almost found himself struggling not to memorize her spiel – he made his way over to the apparition that he’d named The World. Both for the tarot cards that that handsome stranger Muhammad Avdol had seemed to favor for making his predictions, and for the power that he intended to lay claim to. Because, while it might very well have been true that his sweet sister had brought a great deal of the world as a whole to fawn at her knees, there were still places that stubbornly resisted the gifts she brought.

 

As well, there were… other uses that he could see for such a divine power as a Stand; uses that could not truly be supplanted by even the most ingenious of his dear Alice’s inventions. At present, however, it remained to be determined just what this Stand of his was capable of. It would not do, after all, to be uninformed about what had become such an intrinsic part of his being.  His sweet sister had, after all, impressed upon him the great value of information; truly, it was always better to have as much as one could.

 

=SC=

 

After she’d finished meeting with the contractor – a rather excitable man by the name of Philippe Collins – Alice continued on her rounds about the small, French town where she was looking to build her newest facility. She’d always done this, once she’d settled on a place to begin construction, since making her facilities blend into the landscape and architecture of a place more often than not helped in making them more acceptable to the people she was trying to work with.

 

The sound of a scuffle, far-off enough that whoever was fighting had probably thought they were safe from interference by either the authorities or just people passing by on their way through the town, saw Alice turning her path toward the sounds of the scuffle that was occurring rather far off from where she was currently standing. Narrowing her eyes as she drew close enough to begin seeing what was going on, Alice realized that it wasn’t two people scuffling with one another, but what seemed to be an old man attacking a much younger woman.

 

Folding her arms in annoyance as she hurried her pace, Alice tracked the sound and the sight of the pair of them to a dark alley under the light rain that was falling over the city where she currently was.

 

Lightening her steps, so that she would be able to stalk up to the man without the risk of him hearing her when she drew close enough for human senses to begin registering her presence, Alice closed with the bald man that was now looming over the young woman – little more than a girl, Alice realized, once she had the chance to study the pair of them in more detail – catching the bald man by the back of his shirt collar, and casually tossed him into the wall of the alley they were all presently standing in.

 

“Rude,” she muttered, making her way over to the girl and helping her back to her feet. “Where are your shoes?” she asked, turning her attention to the girl she’d just rescued. “On second thought, give me a moment.”

 

Turning, she kicked the bald man back into the alley wall that he’d clearly stumbled away from, and turned her attention to dealing with the bald man. It seemed as though the girl would keep, at least for long enough that she could deal with this cretin.

 

“I’ll let you off with a warning this time, little man,” she said, narrowing her eyes as she drove her right heel into the bald man’s gut; he was one ugly son of a bitch, too. Uglier than she’d seen in some time, really.

 

Before she could get another word out, however, Alice was forced to whip around, grabbing the extended wrist of a strange, fast-moving figure. Raising an eyebrow as she beheld the figure whose motion her actions had arrested, Alice found that it looked a bit like Altaïr crossed with a Bedouin, oddly enough.

 

“Interesting,” she muttered, studying the figure whose right wrist she’d grabbed hold of; when it tried to lunge at her, under what seemed to be the direction of the ugly son of a bitch she’d originally started out dealing with, she used the figure’s own momentum to twist it around and stab it with what looked like some kind of a retracting knife that stuck out of its wrist. The sharp tang of human blood drew her attention back to the bald man she’d originally started out dealing with. “Very interesting.”

 

A large patch of seeping blood was slowly spreading down from his shoulder; it was an odd mirror of the shoulder of the figure that she’d stabbed with its own blade.

 

Making her way over to the bald man again, she grabbed him – the odd figure in the Assassin / Bedouin garb seemed to have vanished once again – dragged him back to the mouth of the alley, and threw him into a Dumpster by the side of the road.

 

“Well, now that we’re done dealing with that miscreant,” she said, casting an annoyed look back at the mouth of the alley before turning her attention back to the girl she was talking to. “What happened to you?”

 

“He chased me into this alley, miss,” the girl said, fidgeting with her fingers a bit. “I… I don’t think he meant anything good.”

 

“Yes, I expect you’re right,” she said, narrowing her eyes in the bald man’s direction. “Were you headed anywhere in particular, before you were accosted?”

 

“I was going to meet up with my brother, miss,” she said, as Alice made her way over to the girl.

 

“Well, I don’t see you making it very far without shoes,” she said, glancing down at the girl’s bare feet. “Come on,” she continued, holding out her hand to the girl. “I have a car waiting for me; you can catch a ride with me back home, and we’ll pick up your brother on the way.”

 

“Thank you, miss,” the girl said, reaching out to take her offered hand.

 

Gathering the girl up into her arms, Alice made her way out of the alley. Blinking as she felt something go out of her, and saw a flash of muddy shoes being wrapped up in what looked like the kind of rags that she kept in the trunk of her car in order to wipe down her umbrella on rainy days like this one, Alice shook her head as he continued on her way out of the alley where the pair of them had met.

 

“So, what’s your name?” she asked, as the pair of them continued on their way out of the alley; she’d been just about to reach into her pocket to ping Straizo with her car, so he’d know where to meet up with her, when that same something reached into her jacket’s right pocket and did it for her.

 

“Sherry Polnareff, miss,” the girl – Sherry, apparently – said, as the pair of them made their way back to the street just in time for Straizo to pull up to where the pair of them were beginning to make their way down the sidewalk.

 

“It’s good to meet you, Sherry,” she said, as Straizo got out of her silver Jaguar and opened the door for the pair of them. “Did you and your brother arrange to meet anywhere in particular? Or should we just expect to meet him on the way there?”

 

“No, miss,” Sherry said, smiling as the pair of them climbed into the Jaguar and settled themselves down.

 

Glancing down at the wrapped bundle of rags just sitting there on the floor of the car, Alice narrowed her eyes. She was clearly going to have to look deeper into what was going on with her, but that kind of thing would have to wait until she’d gotten Sherry and her brother back to their home. Once she’d gotten Sherry to tell her just where she and her brother Jean Pierre lived together, Alice directed Straizo to follow those directions, and she herself looked out for a man fitting the description that Sherry had given her of her brother, Jean Pierre.

 

=SC=

 

The feel of her stomach rumbling brought a soft laugh from Loreena, prompting her to stand up and begin making her way out of the park where she had been seated under one of the trees working on her sketches of the pyramids that she’d seen while she and her family had been staying in Egypt. Catching sight of an odd, green figure, Loreena turned to study it more closely. It was clearly something inhuman, and the fact that it was standing close to someone in the park… Someone else here has one of these, too?

 

Reaching deep into herself, Loreena felt the power that had always been within her responding just as quickly as it ever had. Petting the head of the creature – if someone had seen it, they might have said it looked like some kind of a robotic cat, or maybe a greyhound crossed with one; though if they’d been at all familiar with exotic animals, that same person might have recognized it as a mechanical-looking Fossa – Loreena sent it out to meet with the redhead who seemed to be connected to that strange, alien-looking green man that she’d seen.

 

=SC=

 

Sighing as he stared out at the park that he’d come to, Noriaki Kakyoin wondered if even a single one of them would be able to understand what he was going through. When he felt something that felt almost like either plastic or body-warmed metal bumping his right hand, almost as though whoever or whatever it was that was standing there was trying to get his attention. Turning to look over at who it was, Noriaki felt it nudge him again, and then looked down.

 

Standing there, wagging its oddly-tipped tail at him… Noriaki didn’t know quite what it was, but it seemed like it was trying to lead him somewhere. Once he’d gotten to where the strange creature was trying to lead him, Noriaki found himself looking down at a girl with long, wavy blonde hair, wearing a long, pink-and-purple striped skirt and a loose, dark red blouse. Finding that his own phantom companion had followed him to this place, Noriaki found that he couldn’t quite think of anything to say, even when she reached out to lace her fingers through those of the phantom that had been following him for as long as he could remember.

Chapter 35: One Of Us

Chapter Text

“I’m Noriaki Kakyoin,” he forced out, even as he found himself almost falling to the ground as he sat down so fast.

 

“I’m Loreena McKennitt,” she said, smiling as she gently squeezed the green hand of the phantom that had been with him for so long that it had begun to feel like a part of him, though until today he’d thought that it was a part that no one else would be able to share. “It’s nice to meet you, Noriaki.”

 

Her accent didn’t really sound like she came from anywhere in America, but she was blonde, so Noriaki wasn’t quite sure what to think. Still, it would probably be rude if he asked about something like that, even though the pair of them did seem to have more in common than he’d ever thought he’d find with anyone else. Reaching out to pet the head of the phantom companion that Loreena had been kind enough to show him. Smiling as he moved to sit closer to her, Noriaki reached out to lace his own fingers through the ones on her left hand.

 

He could still feel the muted sensation of Loreena’s fingers on his own, and when he looked over at the strange, green humanoid figure who had been with him for as long as he could remember, he saw that her right hand was still holding its own in the same way that the pair of them were now holding hands; it was something to remember, the way he could feel something when someone touched that strange phantom of his.

 

=SC=

 

When she’d dropped Sherry and Jean Pierre Polnareff back at their small, cozy-looking home deep in the countryside, Alice had found herself swiftly invited over to dinner. Jean Pierre hadn’t been about to take no for an answer, and since she didn’t have any pressing reason to refuse the hospitality that the Polnareffs were offering, both she and Straizo had soon found themselves seated at the small dining room table. Alice quickly found that Jean Pierre was nearly as much of a flirt as Dio, though when lightly rebuffed he did back off without any of her twin’s overblown histrionics, which was a nice change of pace.

 

“It was good to meet the both of you,” she said, once their meal had been finished and she and Straizo could leave without being rude.

 

“Thank you so much for helping my sister when she ran into that horrible man,” Jean Pierre said, just about bounding forward so that he could hug her. “If you ever find yourself in need of a place to stay, Miss Brando, you can feel free to call me any time at all.”

 

“I’ll be sure to keep that in mind, Jean Pierre,” she said, using the name that the Frenchman had been so insistent that she address him by when the pair of them had first met. “Thanks again for your hospitality.”

 

“Of course,” Jean Pierre said, smiling as he escorted her back to the door so that she and Straizo would be able to leave.

 

“That was rather unexpected,” Straizo said, once the pair of them had taken their leave of the Polnareffs and gotten far enough away that they could speak among themselves without being rude.

 

“Considering Jean Pierre, I was almost expecting something like that,” she said, as Straizo opened the door to her Jaguar and let Alice get herself comfortable. “He does seem like the type.”

 

“I suppose,” Straizo said, shutting his own door and settling down in the driver’s seat once again.

 

The familiar rumble of the Jaguar’s engine helped Alice to focus on the questions that she was going to ask Dio, foremost among them just what he’d gotten up to that had ended up with her gaining access to whatever kind of new power that she’d seen in action while she’d been escorting Sherry Polnareff back to her car. She’d known that he’d been making forays into Egypt, with the goal of eventually opening a resort and spa in Cairo, and so she gave instructions for Straizo to take her to the airport again. She was going to have to make a few arrangements, but she’d be able to make her own way to Cairo soon enough.

 

She’d get her answers, one way or another.

 

=SC=

 

As he and Loreena made their way through the city, both of them talking about the strange spirits that seemed to have been following the both of them around ever since they could remember, Noriaki found himself honestly grateful for the existence of the Brando Corporation for the first time since he’d heard of it. He’d have probably never had the chance to meet Loreena if not for her father having traveled to Cairo on business for the company. Especially since he’d never even thought to look for people like him in Cardiff.

 

He hadn’t even known where Cardiff was, really; he’d never had any reason to think about people who lived in Wales.

 

“So, yours has two forms?” he asked, looking back over his right shoulder as the pair of them followed along in his and Loreena’s wake.

 

“Yours almost seems to, too,” Loreena said, smiling at him in a way that he’d started to find more and more reassuring the more he heard it. “I mean, the way it turns into all of those ropes and streamers.”

 

“Yeah, I guess,” he said, turning to look back at the pair of their phantom companions as they walked along behind the pair of them. “Still, do you think you could show me it?”

 

“Sure,” Loreena said, turning to look back at her mechanical cat. “All right, show us what you’ve got!” she called, grinning widely.

 

The cat nodded back at her, in the same way that his own green phantom would nod at him, those few times when he would ask it to do something for him. As his green phantom took a step back, the cat stood up, front and hind legs shifting and reconfiguring until it stood on two legs like a human; last was its face, which actually opened up like one of those giant robots that he’d seen in Super Sentai, making it almost look like the newly-reconfigured cat was wearing the top of its head as some strange kind of hat. Last of all was the way it pulled what seemed to be a pair of swords from its own arms, whipping them out and looking like it was some kind of dual-wielding ninja, or something.

 

All in all, it was a lot different than the way that his own green-man could transform into those ropes and tendrils.

 

“That’s amazing,” he said, making his way over to look closer at the transformed phantom that Loreena had showed to him. “I didn’t know that they could have weapons like this,” he continued, making his way over to look more closely at the swords that the transformed cat was holding.

 

They looked like some kind of rapiers, but they didn’t seem to have any cross guard, and the blades seemed to have just the slightest curve to them. It did seem kind of strange, but since his own green-man seemed to be able to throw those strange rocks of its, Noriaki wasn’t going to say anything about it. Really, maybe that was just the way these things happened; Noriaki couldn’t have said that he really knew anything about what was going on.

 

He’d never seen anything like this before; he’d never even met another person with the kind of phantom guardian that he himself had before he’d run into Loreena McKennitt and her transforming robotic cat.

 

“Thanks… For showing me that,” he said, smiling at her as her transformed cat stowed away its swords and transformed back into what seemed to be its normal form.

 

“You’re welcome,” Loreena said, smiling as the pair of them fell into step with each other again. “I’m really glad I could have the chance to meet you, Noriaki.”

 

“I’m glad we had the chance to meet, too,” he said, lacing his fingers together with hers as the pair of them continued on their way through the city.

 

“Little Lori, are you on a date?” a man’s voice – one that Noriaki had never heard before, but Loreena seemed to be familiar with if the look on her face was any indication – spoke up, and Noriaki turned to see a blond in a really extravagant-looking suit grinning happily at the pair of them. “That’s wonderful!”

 

“Mr. Brando,” Loreena said, laughing softly in that way that people did when someone they knew had just done something silly, but also something that they’d learned to expect.

 

“Please, Little Lori, call me Dio,” the man said, practically sauntering over to the pair of them, the swing of what seemed to be a folded umbrella of all things drawing all the more attention to the motion of his walk; at least it would have, if Noriaki hadn’t been making a point to keep his eyes on the man’s face. “After all, your father works for my sister, and that just about makes us family.”

 

There was a cheerful smile on the man’s face as he went over to hug Loreena, but there was also something about him… Noriaki couldn’t quite think of the words to describe it, but Dio didn’t really seem to be a normal person at all. Noriaki didn’t know if that kind of thing would be good or bad, but it would clearly be something that he’d have to keep an eye out for.

 

“Now, where are you and your new boyfriend headed, hmm?” Dio asked, smiling invitingly at the pair of them, before he looked up and raised an eyebrow. “Oh, and it seems like we have something else in common, too.”

 

Before Noriaki could wonder if Dio really meant what he seemed to be talking about, a golden figure appeared next to him; this one was just as inhuman as the green-man and the cat who walked beside him and Loreena. The new, golden phantom reached out to pat both of their heads, before stepping behind them to make its way over to where their own phantoms were standing, looking up at the newcomer as it crouched down to scratch under the chin of Loreena’s cat, before standing up and wrapping its left arm around the neck of Noriaki’s own green-man.

 

“Wow, I never knew you had one of these, too, Mr.- I mean, Dio,” Loreena said, and Noriaki could fully understand the surprise she was feeling; considering how well she’d seemed to know Dio, the fact that he’d had a phantom guardian of his own and hadn’t told her…

 

Well, Noriaki didn’t know if he’d have as easy a time forgiving the man as Loreena seemed to be having.

 

=SC=

 

Grinning as he, Dio, ushered Little Lori and her boyfriend – a rather cute little thing by the name of Noriaki Kakyoin; clearly from Japan given his name – into the custom-built limousine that he’d commissioned from his sweet sister’s machine shop before he’d begun his efforts to build the resort and spa that he and his were working to establish on the outskirts of Cairo he, Dio, found himself wondering just how and when it was that Little Lori had managed to obtain her own Stand. And, while he had been planning to talk find Little Lori and invite her to come with him to the spa and resort that – even while it was still under construction – was still one of the most magnificent places in Egypt.

 

At least, those that had been constructed during the modern era, of course.

 

When he’d managed to get Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend settled down in the back of his limousine he, Dio elected to show them some of the improvements that he’d had made to the vehicle when he’d commissioned it for his own, personal use.

 

“You even had a karaoke machine installed?” Noriaki asked, seeming rather confused.

 

“Yes,” he, Dio, said, smiling at the adorable little human still looking around in confusion at the opulence that he and Little Lori had been surrounded by, just as soon as they’d taken his invitation and elected to come with him. “Now, have some sodas and relax. Unless either of you want to sing, of course,” he continued, grinning.

 

Little Lori laughed softly. “I don’t suppose you have cherry soda, do you?”

 

“Would you like black cherry, or normal cherry, my dear Little Lori?” he, Dio, asked as he reached over to open the small refrigerator that he’d had installed, alongside all of his other improvements.

 

Watching as his Little Lori and her boyfriend Noriaki settled themselves down together he, Dio, chuckled softly enough that their human senses wouldn’t be able to detect it. It was a rather amusing thing; Enya had told him that fate drew Stand users together, but he’d never had concrete proof of such a thing before this day. However, seeing that Little Lori and Noriaki had been able to meet up in such a way as they had… Well, something like that was all the proof that he, Dio, truly needed.

 

=SC=

 

In the end, he and Loreena had ended up singing a few songs before they’d gotten to the new resort and spa that Dio and the people who worked for him were setting up on the outskirts of Cairo. Dio had joined in with them, and even sang a few songs on his own; it’d been kind of funny, seeing an important businessman like Dio Brando seemed to be singing karaoke in the back of his own limousine, since that was only something he’d heard of Japanese businessmen doing.

 

And, well… it was obvious that Dio Brando was just about as far from being Japanese as you could get.

 

When the three of them – four, if you counted Dio’s really eccentric personal assistant, Vanilla Ice – arrived at the half-built form of the Desert Rose Spa and Resort, he and Loreena made their way into one of the finished rooms of the resort. It just the kind of place that he’d been thinking of, when Dio had first told him the name of the place where they were all going to be staying in: done in soft shades of golden yellows, soft reds, and even the occasional deep purple, with large windows that looked out on the landscaped grounds, and were even positioned so that whoever was staying in this room would be able to watch the sun as it rose into the sky.

 

All in all, it was a place that Noriaki could easily find himself becoming comfortable in.

 

“So, your father works for his sister?” he asked, once he and Loreena had managed to settle themselves into the room that Dio had given them for as long as they were going to be staying at his resort.

 

“Yeah,” Loreena said, smiling as she settled back onto the large, plush chair that was just opposite the one that Noriaki himself had sat down in. “Dad works for one of Alice Brando’s Quality Assurance teams, so we move around a fair bit.”

 

“That sounds lonely,” he said, thinking back on his own, solitary existence; even though he had been the only one to know about the phantom green-man that followed him, he hadn’t been forced to move from place to place in the wake of his father’s job.

 

Noriaki honestly didn’t know if he could have survived something like that, much less come out as well as Loreena seemed to have done.

 

=SC=

 

When Lord Dio informed her that they were going to be playing host to someone important to him – more important, even, than the little girl and her boyfriend that had paid them a visit when Lord Dio had brought them to the Desert Rose – Enya had quickly set about making preparations to welcome her. Lord Dio had at least told her that it was another woman that they would be welcoming into their midst, though he’d clearly had his own preparations in mind while he was talking, since he hadn’t told her just who it was that would be bringing into their home. Still, those kinds of things were at Lord Dio’s discretion.

 

When she made her way to the foyer, the sound of three, sharp knocks on the door drew Enya’s attention. Well, Lord Dio seems-

 

The sight of that hateful woman, the one who had abused her poor son and then thrown him out as though he were nothing more than trash…! Still, knowing that the hateful creature had been such a fool as to come to this place; oh, Lord Dio would- kiss his way up the column of her neck, softly nuzzle her right ear, and gather her into his arms-! Forcing herself to loosen her clenched fists before Lord Dio could turn around and see her, Enya quickly put her hands behind her back.

 

“Enya, my dear, I don’t suppose I’ve ever introduced you to my sister,” Lord Dio said, and Enya nearly swallowed her own tongue; the thought that the hateful woman who had attacked her poor, dear son could have been related in any way to Lord Dio… “Her name is Alice, but she really doesn’t get to visit much.”

 

“While it is nice to be able to meet one of your retainers, brother dear, but I can walk on my own,” that hateful woman said, and Enya shuddered at the sound of her voice.

 

There was the same, unmistakably regal aura of command that had drawn her to Lord Dio when she’d been a younger woman, and there was no question in Enya’s mind that – if she so much as glanced into that hateful woman’s eyes – she’d fall under the same kind of spell that Lord Dio’s gaze had put her into when she’d first looked into his eyes.

 

The hateful woman’s soft, amused chuckle nearly caused Enya to break that vow just a handful of moments after she’d had the chance to make it. “A woman her age, and she’s shy. Now there’s something you don’t see every day.”

 

“Welcome to our resort, miss,” she forced out, trying not to choke on the words as they threatened to stick in her throat.

 

“Really now, Enya, you call me Lord Dio, and all you can think of to call my sweet sister is miss?” Lord Dio said, cold hand under her chin as he forced her to look directly at him; Enya felt chilled, seeing the coldly amused annoyance in her Lord’s beautiful crimson eyes. “You’ll have to do better than that.”

 

“My apologies, Lady Alice,” she said, once Lord Dio had been kind enough to let her go.

 

Much better,” Lord Dio said, in that tone of his that let those beneath him that they had been granted the only reprieve he was going to allow them, and so had better count themselves fortunate; Enya had never before thought that she would ever end up hearing that tone from her Lord for any reason.

 

Of course, she’d also never thought that the hateful woman who had attacked her poor son to actually be related to Lord Dio; much less that he would care about her so much as he clearly did.

 

=SC=

 

Once the pair of them had left Enya – Alice had had to almost literally bite her tongue to keep from laughing at that one; almost like she’d had to when she’d met up with Loreena McKennitt, but to a somewhat lesser extent, since she hadn’t been quite as much of a fan of Enya’s music as she had been of Loreena McKennitt’s – behind, Alice turned her attention to her brother.

 

“Another of your underlings?” she asked, though she suspected the answer.

 

“Yes, though she’s never reacted so unhelpfully to someone before,” Dio said, a contemplative expression flitting over his face as he glanced back the way the pair of them had come.

 

“Might want to look into that,” she suggested, as the pair of them continued on their way to the living room of the mansion that’d been the first thing her brother had had the construction crew that he was still periodically hiring from one of her firms work on for him.

 

“Yes, I suppose I should,” her brother said, nodding to himself as they made their way into the living room at last.

 

And, incidentally, caught sight of a rather familiar person seated at one of the game tables at the far left side of the room.

 

“N’Doul, hanging around here again, are you?” she asked, chuckling softly as she settled herself down at the same table that the agent of one of her Execution Squads had seated himself at.

 

“Yes,” the blind psychic said, smiling in that contented way he always seemed to do when he was staying Cairo; or, to be more precise, when he was around Dio.

 

Still, a lot of people seemed to have a crush on her brother; she’d gotten used to it, though it was still funny from time to time.

 

“I expect you have a reason for calling upon me, sister dear,” Dio said, grinning at her in that way he had of doing that said he was just as aware of what someone wanted to talk about as they were.

 

“Indeed,” she said, smirking slightly as she summoned Stardust.

 

Given this world’s predilection toward “all music references, all the time” – as well as the fact that what had to be her new Stand looked like it was wearing Ziggy Stardust’s outfit, with Indiana Jones’ hat pulled down far enough that no one would be able to see its eyes, if it even had any in the first place – she’d named her Stand accordingly. She’d also chosen the name of the other Stand that she possessed, the one that could all-too easily be mistaken for a simple, unadorned bracelet around Stardust’s right arm, with an eye to the theme that she’d established for her own Stand. It was thin and white, after all.

 

After she’d spent some time contemplating the two Stands that she’d been granted when Dio had presumably either stabbed himself or had someone shoot him with the Stone Arrow, Alice had realized that her having ended up with two distinct Stands made perfect sense. After all, even though she hadn’t used the name in basically a century, she still had the memories and life experiences of Sarah Williams; it was only natural. Well, insomuch as having superpowers grafted onto her soul by a non-firearm projectile weapon could be considered natural, of course.

 

“A rather interesting Stand you’ve been granted, sister dear,” Dio said, smiling widely as he leaned his chin on his right fist, studying the interplay of both external and internal light across Stardust’s casually standing form; interestingly enough, depending on how the light caught her Stand, one would be able to catch glimpses of what looked like a view of deep space as seen from very far away, another reason why she’d given her Stand its name. “Still, it is rather poor manners to wear a hat not only indoors, but at the table, as well.”

 

When her brother reached out, obviously intending to remove the hat that was probably just as much a part of Stardust’s head as the Egyptian-style crown that The World – or whatever name Dio’s Stand had been given here and now – was wearing, her own Stand smirked as her brother’s reaching fingers passed clean through the brim of the fedora-portion of her Stand’s head.

Chapter 36: Knowing Me, Knowing You

Chapter Text

“Stardust, a demonstration if you please?” she asked, just as Dio turned to regard her Stand with an expression of frank incredulity.

 

Stardust nodded at her, smirk widening as her Stand casually walked through the table that she, Dio, and N’Doul were all seated around, making for the single unoccupied chair that stood around this particular table; a table that was meant to be used for card games of up to four people. Grabbing the chair with its left arm, Stardust swung it through the table a couple of times, before reversing its grip on the chair and setting it down on top of the table where the three of them were still seated.

 

Quite the interesting power your Stand possesses, sister dear,” Dio said, eyes calmly tracking Stardust as her Stand calmly made its way back through the tabletop to stand at ease behind her chair again.

 

“Yes, I’ll have to consult with the Speedwagon Foundation,” she said, leaning back in her chair as she studied Stardust in her own turn; the Stand itself blew a kiss to her, and Alice got the impression that it was winking at her even without visible eyes. “They’ve probably heard about something like this.”

 

“Hmm, I suppose that I should do so, as well,” Dio said, looking back at The World as the gold-and-green Stand preened behind him. “Still, I expect that you didn’t come here merely to show me your Stand, sister dear.”

 

“No, that’s more your style,” she said, smirking slightly as her capricious twin grinned at her; really, that was all the confirmation she’d needed.

 

Not that she’d really needed it in the first place, considering how long the pair of them had known each other.

 

“Come, I’ve set aside a place for us to determine just what manner of capabilities our Stands possess,” Dio said, leaving N’Doul at the table while the pair of them made their way on through her brother’s house and up to the room that he’d spoken so obliquely of possessing.

 

On their way up, the sound of a familiar set of light footfalls drew her attention to the appearance of someone she’d come to know at least reasonably well – if only in a second-hand sort of way – during the time she’d spent working in the Italian branches of her company.

 

“Enrico,” she said, turning as the young priest made his way up to the pair of them. “Domenico said you’d gotten off somewhere again,” she chuckled softly. “I suppose I should’ve expected a hopeless romantic like you to end up here.”

 

“Yes,” he said, smiling in that gently-abashed way he had. “I know that Domenico hardly approves, but your brother is a precious friend to me.”

 

“Yes, I’m aware of that,” she said, clapping Enrico’s left shoulder as she and Dio made their way past him. “He’s developed quite the following.”

 

The pair of them shared a smile, as she fell back in beside Dio and the pair of them continued on their way deeper into Dio’s Cairo holdings; there were times when she found herself recalling the few events from JoJo’s Bizarre Adventure that she’d been aware of Before, with a certain wry amusement for the fact that her capricious twin had still chosen to settle in Cairo for whatever reason. There’d been a theory floating around about that, she remembered, though she couldn’t for the life of her recall anything more about it than the fact that it had existed.

 

Still, the fact that she’d basically thrown JJBA canon into an exploding sun with all of the changes she’d made meant that, whatever the article in question had said, it was a moot point by now.

 

When she found their path taking them through one of the places where Dio seemed to be keeping the odder pieces in his collection, Alice raised an eyebrow as she caught sight of a mostly-full dispenser of brightly-colored super bouncy balls.

 

“You’re still keeping that old thing?” she asked, folding her arms as she turned to her brother.

 

“What? It is a reminder of a rather interesting time,” her brother said, grinning unrepentantly back at her.

 

“You like being reminded that you were banned for life from FAO Schwarz?” she scoffed, folding her arms and giving her impulsive brother a firmly unimpressed look, even as the pair of them continued on their way deeper into Dio’s Cairo holdings.

 

“To be fair, sister dear, Little Jojo was banned for life, as well,” Dio said, unrepentant grin still firmly on his face.

 

“And, I suppose next you’ll be telling me that that had nothing at all to do with your goading him,” she said, giving her twin a Look that could have withered grass.

 

Dio’s only response was a laugh, as the pair of them continued on their way deeper into her twin’s mansion, finally seeming to arrive at their destination. There was, as seemed customary at this point, someone waiting for them there. Raising an eyebrow as she beheld the man’s rather distinctive outfit, Alice turned back to Dio.

 

“So, who’s Peter Pantsless, here?”

 

Dio laughed. “My sweet sister, this is my own retainer,” her twin turned to the large, broad-shouldered, long-haired man standing in front of the double-doors that the pair of them had stopped in front of. “Vanilla Ice, this is my sister.”

 

“My Lord Dio has told me everything about you, My Lady,” Vanilla Ice – Alice firmly bit back a laugh – enfolded her offered right hand in both of his own. “I’m honored.”

 

“Right, then,” she said, nodding as Vanilla Ice opened the door to what seemed to be the same kind of sparring-ring that she’d had installed in all of her own larger holdings – those that had a significant presence of Treadstone agents and agents-in-training within their walls – and the three of them made their way inside at last. The World was the first of their respective Stands to reappear, but Stardust was only a few moments behind in manifesting itself once again, and a third that obviously belonged to Vanilla Ice made its own appearance known not soon after. Vanilla Ice’s Stand… well, pretty much every one of them was unique, so the thing clearly fit the pattern in that regard.

 

But, it was also substantially less humanoid than either Stardust or even The World; really, it resembled a goblin, more than anything else, or possibly someone’s idea of a demon.

 

“So, what; we just send them in the ring to spar?” she asked, figuring she’d at least some idea as to how things were going to go from this point on.

 

“Yes, sister dear,” Dio said, smirking in that way he did when he was particularly pleased.

 

“Very well, then,” she said, gesturing for Stardust to take its own place in the ring alongside The World and whatever the name of Vanilla Ice’s Stand turned out to be.

 

=SC=

 

He, Dio, had found himself wondering just what manner of abilities his sweet sister’s Stand would possess ever since he’d first laid eyes upon the oddly-attired figure that had appeared at dear Alice’s side after he’d given young Enya leave to fire that strange, stone arrow at him. Even knowing that the Stand seemed to have a rather odd way of interacting with the matter all around it he, Dio, still found himself craving to know more about just what manner of divine power had been granted to his dear Alice through the links of blood and Destiny that had been forged about them when the pair of them had been born.

 

And also he, Dio, found himself wondering about the links of Fate that he himself had forged when he’d taken some of his sweet puppy’s bones into his own body; still, that kind of thing was for later.

 

When his World threw the first punch, a blow that would have felt like nothing more than the lightest of taps when it connected with his sweet sister’s Stardust he, Dio, was hard-pressed not to show his startlement as his World’s fist passed cleanly through the lower torso of his dear Alice’s Stand, and then that selfsame Stand all but sauntered right through the body of his World as it stood in the same kind of shock that he, Dio, was feeling as Stardust stepped through his World’s back and out the other side of his Stand.

 

Stardust, then, held out its right arm out and he, Dio, found himself nearly reeling in shock as some kind of white sledgehammer appeared in that same hand.

 

“What is that?” he, Dio, demanded, turning his attention to his sweet sister.

 

“That’s The Duke,” his dear Alice said, a slight, amused smile on her face as the pair of them continued to observe the goings-on between their respective Stands.

 

“Your Stardust possesses a Stand of its own?” he, Dio, asked, turning to his dear Alice in confusion.

 

“Apparently so,” his sweet sister said, folding her arms as she clearly considered the pair of Stands currently before them.

 

“How strange,” he, Dio, said as he himself considered the trio of Stands that the pair of them had been granted by that marvelous Stone Arrow that he had allowed Enya to fire at him.

 

=SC=

 

When she and Noriaki made their way down to the dining room of Mr. Brando’s mansion, the pair of them came across someone that seemed to be another one of the man’s friends.

 

“Good afternoon,” she said, as the blind man tapped his way over to the counter where people were obviously meant to prepare food for themselves, coming to stand beside the pair of them as she looked for something for herself and possibly Noriaki – depending on his own, personal tastes – to eat.

 

The sound of another pair of footsteps behind her drew Loreena’s attention, and she found herself startled for a moment by the sight of Noriaki’s own phantom guardian, before she remembered that Noriaki tended to do that kind of thing when he met new people. Really, it was a big part of the reason the pair of them had ended up staying with Mr. Brando in the first place.

 

Still, there was the simple fact that a blind man wouldn’t react to Noriaki’s phantom guardian in the same way that someone who could actually see it would.

 

“It sounds as though we have something more in common than simply our association with Lord Dio,” the blind man said, a rather enigmatic smile on his face.

 

Loreena almost asked him what he meant, before she found herself all the more startled by the sight of what seemed to be a tendril made of water – of all things – shoot its way up the length of the blind man’s body, before curling around his shoulders.

 

“Wait, you have one of these, too?” Loreena found herself asking.

 

“Yes,” he man said, turning to the pair of them with a kind, though still sort of mysterious smile on his face. “It would seem that fate does indeed draw Stand users together,” he continued, the smile on his face widening just that much more as he seemed to study the pair of them, for all that his eyes clearly didn’t work.

 

“Stand users?” Noriaki asked, making his way over to where the pair of them were standing, phantom guardian following in his wake. “Is that what other people call us?”

 

“Yes,” the man said, smiling kindly at the pair of them, though his expression had changed slightly when he’d seemed to realize that he knew something they didn’t. “Those that follow in our footsteps, that stand by us even when no one else will, are indeed called Stands. Mine goes by the name of Geb,” he said, turning to face the pair of them more squarely, even considering the obvious signs of blindness that she and Noriaki could see all the more clearly, since the man had his eyes open and uncovered for some reason or other. “And, my own name is N’Doul. Might I know your names, and the names of your own Stands, as well?”

 

“Well, my name is Loreena McKennitt, and this is a friend of mine,” she said, turning to look over at Noriaki for a long moment, and while he didn’t actually say anything, she got the feeling from the look on his face that he wouldn’t mind her speaking for him. “His name is Noriaki Kakyoin. Our Stands don’t really have names, though,” she said, as her own Stand appeared, raising itself up into the two-legged, dual-wielding form that made it easier for it to see and interact with people.

 

Or to fight, but she didn’t see that kind of thing happening anytime soon.

 

“Hmm, well that simply won’t do,” N’Doul said, a disapproving expression appearing on his face as he seemed to study the pair of them, even without the use of his eyes. “Every Stand needs a name; I’ll have to speak to Lord Dio about this.”

 

Lord Dio? she wondered, biting back an incredulous sort of smile as N’Doul turned and left the room. “Well, that was kind of strange,” she said, as Noriaki sidled up to her and the pair of them began looking for some food to prepare for themselves.

 

“I didn’t know he had one of these, too,” Noriaki said, looking out the way that N’Doul had gone when he’d left. “And, he called them Stands?”

 

“Yeah,” she said, considering just what it was that N’Doul had said, when he’d been talking to the pair of them. “Still, you could have introduced yourself when we were talking,” she continued, turning to look at Noriaki more squarely, even as the pair of them continued searching for something to eat. “That, back there, well it was a bit awkward.”

 

“I know,” Noriaki said, and Loreena thought she could see a brief shudder run the length of his back; she definitely noticed the increased rigidity of his posture, though. “And, I’m sorry. I guess I’m just not used to meeting new people.”

 

“I guess I can’t argue with that,” she said, reflecting back on the lingering awkwardness of their own first meeting.

 

=SC=

 

When she and Dio had finished testing the capabilities of their own Stands against each other – he’d gained access to time-stop, just as she’d been expecting – she and Dio made their way back up and out of the sparring room where she, Dio, and Vanilla Ice had been working to discover the capabilities of Stardust, The World, and The Duke. Vanilla Ice hadn’t stopped staring at her, in that way that suggested that he didn’t approve of one aspect or another of what she was doing, ever since she’d revealed the extent of The Duke’s shape-shifting capabilities.

 

“I don’t quite think your retainer approves of me,” she said, low enough that only another vampire would have been able to overhear their conversation, as she and Dio continued on their way up through his Cairo holdings.

 

“I don’t think he’d expected that you would be given access to two Stands, sister dear,” Dio said, smiling in that way he had as the pair of them made their way out of the underground sections and back up into the livable, more public areas of his mansion. “Truly, even I hadn’t been expecting such a thing,” her capricious twin continued, chuckling in a reflective sort of way.

 

“I suppose,” she allowed, folding her arms neatly behind her back as she and Dio continued on their way.

 

The sound of familiar footfalls drew her attention as she and Dio lapsed into a comfortable silence once again, and Alice looked up to see the form of N’Doul making his way over to the three of them.

 

“N’Doul,” she greeted, taking note of the way the blind psychic – rather, Stand user – seemed to have something more than simply a greeting on his mind.

 

“Lord Dio, Commander,” he said, nodding to Dio and then to her in turn. “A certain matter has come to my attention.”

 

“Oh?” she asked, giving N’Doul her attention as the agent fell into step with their trio as they all continued on their way. “How much of a concern would you say this is?”

 

“Nothing that would concern the company as a whole,” N’Doul said, sounding as though he wished to reassure her as quickly as he could. “Still, it seems as though the Stands that those children Lord Dio invited into this place along with us have not been granted even names.”

 

“Oh?” Dio asked, turning his own attention to N’Doul. “I’d had the feeling that those two had only truly discovered their abilities when they met, but I’d hardly realized that something like that could be the case,” her capricious twin said, a look of interest on his face. “I shall have to do something about that.”

 

“If you insist,” she said, turning her attention toward the next matter that was going to be of import to their rather eclectic family.

 

There was the matter of getting ready for Jotaro’s birthday, given that it’d be coming up in a couple months – and Dio fully enjoyed springing those kinds of things on every one of their family members, no matter how old they got – and they were clearly going to have at least some kind of elaborate celebration in order to mark the occasion of his fifteenth birthday. It was just the kind of thing her brother did, really. Hell, he was fully willing to pack up and head back over to England to celebrate Jonathan’s birthday at the old Joestar estate.

 

Still, she’d always known that her brother was more than a bit sentimental, particularly in that way.

 

Hell, him having time-stop with his Stand fit just as well with the general mind-set that her twin was operating under: Dio was the kind of person who wanted to have everything stay the way it had been when he was happiest. Really, she’d have been surprised as all hell if he hadn’t been thinking about how he could have saved Jonathan back during their battle with Kars on that volcano, if he’d been in possession of his Stand back during the earlier parts of their lives.

 

Making her way back into the main room of the mansion, Alice continued over to the ornate phone that Dio had clearly bought for himself when he was settling into this place in a long-term sort of way. Picking up the handset, Alice dialed a number that she’d come to know very well during the course of her life.

 

“Good morning!” called a gruffly familiar voice; Alice smiled gently.

 

“It’s coming up on that time of year again,” she said, leaning lightly against the wall nearest to her as she settled in for a conversation of some length or another.

 

Joseph chuckled, wicked grin coming over the line as loud and clear as it would have been if she’d been speaking to her grand-nephew live and in person. “Yes, Aunty, it is.”

 

“I suppose you and Dio have been collaborating?” she asked, smirking slightly as she and Joseph settled into what had become a rather familiar routine over the intervening decades.

 

Something like that,” Joseph said, shades of an unrepentant grin to rival any of Dio’s in his voice.

 

“Well then, I suppose I should come and pick you up soon, then,” she said, feeling rather amused by the implications she was hearing in Joseph’s voice as the pair of them continued their conversation.

 

“Well, you are the only one of us with a private plane,” her grand nephew said, the amused grin that he had to be wearing coming through loud and clear in his voice.

 

“Yes, I suppose that is a better reason than most,” she said, smirking back at Joseph even though the pair of them couldn’t see each other over the phone she was currently using.

 

When the pair of them said their goodbyes for the moment, Alice turned and made her way to where she could hear the voices of Dio and N’Doul as they spoke about what the fact that Loreena McKennitt’s and Noriaki Kakyoin’s Stands didn’t seem to possess names of their own.

 

“A moment?” she called, during a lull in their conversation as the pair of them continued speaking.

 

“What is it, sister dear?” Dio asked, his usual smile appearing on his face as the pair of them turned to regard one another.

 

“I’m going to go and pick up Joseph,” she said.

 

“Oh, of course,” her brother said, grinning widely as he turned to look her way. “Our little Jotaro is going to have another birthday soon; I shall have to do something for the occasion.”

 

“Something besides the big party he’s going to grudgingly tolerate?” she retorted, smirking back at her brother as the pair of them spoke.

 

Dio laughed, and she turned to make her way out of the house to meet up with Straizo, so that the pair of them could begin making their way to New York so that she could pick up Joseph and the pair of them could then make their way to Japan in turn. Once she’d made it back to Straizo and the car where her fellow vampire had seemingly been waiting, Alice gave the man instructions to bring her back to the airport where her private plane had been landed when Straizo had brought her to Cairo in the first place.

 

When she and Straizo made it back to the hangar once again, Alice made her way into the passenger cabin, settling herself down while Straizo prepped the plane itself to lift off.

 

Their journey to New York was just as short as the latest jet engines that her many and varied companies could make it, and Alice was soon able to make her way into the private hangar that she’d ordered built back when she’d first come to properly establish herself within the city.

 

=SC=

 

Humming tunelessly to himself as Roses drove him to the private runway that Aunty Alice would be arriving at – or, given what kind of speed her private planes were capable of, had probably already arrived at – Joseph settled back into the cushy seats in the back of his limo, grinning as the thought of just exactly what he was going to do when he and Uncle Dio were able to start making proper plans for how they were going to celebrate Jotaro’s upcoming birthday. Sure, it might have still been a few months before it actually came up, but there was really no harm in getting things prepared and ready.

 

“Thanks, Roses!” he called, climbing out of the limo and making his way into the hangar proper. “Aunty! Thanks for picking me up like this!”

 

“I’m glad to see you came so promptly,” Aunty Alice said, her soft chuckle echoing in his direction even as he turned at the familiar, light sound of her footsteps.

 

“Well, I’d hardly go and miss something like this,” he said, grinning widely at his aunty as she made her way over to him. “Oi. Suzy! It’s time to get up and go!”

 

“Coming, Jojo!” the bright, chipper voice of his wife of more than half a century preceded her as Suzy made her own way out of the limo to join up with the pair of them. “Oh, our little Jotaro is going to be fifteen soon!”

 

“Right,” Aunty Alice said, smiling at the pair of them as she made her own way over. “Let’s get underway; there’s still a fair bit of ground to cover.”

 

“Right, Aunty!” he called, grinning as he hurried onto the plane behind her, with Suzy following quickly behind him as they all got themselves settled in the cabin.

 

Once they were all in the air, looking down on the city as it seemed to shrink to the size of a model railroad, Joseph popped his ears as they leveled off above the clouds, looking out over the sea as they started crossing over it.

Chapter 37: Why Should I Worry

Chapter Text

It was always an interesting sight, watching the ocean as it shrank down through the windows of any plane, since it really did look like something out of one of those model railroads he’d seen around some of Aunty Alice’s holdings when she’d invite him over for one reason or another. Settling further into his seat as they all crossed through whatever time zone they were currently flying through, Joseph chuckled to himself. His sweet little Holly might have married that deadbeat Kujo, but that was no reason for him to go and lose contact with his grandson.

 

When the four of them all made it to the private hangar that Aunty Alice had established for herself in Japan, the sound of someone else’s footsteps drew his attention.

 

“Kosaku, good to see you again,” Aunty Alice said, that same, calm tone to her voice that he’d heard so many times when she spoke to people she knew.

 

“Oi, Kawajiri!” he called, waving to the little porter who started taking out the little bits of luggage that he and Suzy had brought to Japan with them.

 

“Joestar-san,” he said, nodding to him as the four of them made their way out of the plane and continued on to the car that Straizo climbed into first, since he’d probably been the one to drive the thing here in the first place.

 

The rest of them had soon made their own way into the car – not really a limo, but fancy enough to seem like one – and Joseph settled down, grinning as he thought about the kind of elaborate party that he and Uncle Dio were going to throw for Jotaro. Sure, his grandson wasn’t the type to enjoy something like that – not with the kind of I’m-too-cool-for-this attitude that the brat had been developing during the course of his stay in Japan – but he and Uncle Dio would at least be able to have their fun springing the party on him.

 

The ride over to the mansion that he’d helped Holly to buy when she had married that deadbeat bastard Kujo was about as short and simple as he could’ve asked for, and the four of them had soon arrived.

 

=SC=

 

The mingled sounds of Joseph, Suzy, and Holly as the three of them all said their hellos for the first time drew her attention for a moment, before Jotaro’s familiar form emerged from one of the other rooms.

 

“Hey,” Jotaro said, after casting an unimpressed look over at the trio who were reacquainting themselves after their separation.

 

“Good to see you again, Jotaro,” she said, smirking in amusement as Jotaro rolled his eyes in the general direction of his family members as the three of them started making their way into the house so that they could get settled.

 

“You mind?” Jotaro asked, flicking his gaze in the direction of Joseph and the others, his usual economy of words coming to the fore again.

 

“You want me to run interference for you again?” she asked, raising an eyebrow even as she smirked ever so slightly wider.

 

She and Jotaro had seemed to connect fairly well, both of them being fairly low-key kind of people, surrounded by big, bombastic personalities.

 

Jotaro nodded, humming slightly in thought as he began making his way back into the mansion once again.

 

=SC=

 

When she’d been able to beg some time off from Lord Dio, to make her way into the city of Cairo; she’d hated lying to her Lord, but such a thing had clearly been necessary, considering how enamored he was of that hateful woman who, while she had left on some kind of errand or other, was clearly going to return if Enya herself didn’t do something to prevent that. And so, she’d taken to making inquiries, seeking out those who would be willing to hear her out. Those who would be willing to dispose of that horrible, hateful woman.

 

Those who would be able to help her avenge her poor son.

 

It was only a small group that had actually agreed to meet with her, at least for the moment, and as she made her way into the small, darkened café that she had told them all to meet her inside, Enya gathered herself for what she was going to need to do next.

 

=SC=

 

Looking around at all of the people who’d come when that weird old broad had called them up for this little meeting of theirs, Hol Horse looked around at the small gathering he’d just become a part of.

 

“So, where’s this weird old broad we’re s’posed ta meet?” he asked, after a long moment spent studying the milling crowds in the café; no one seemed to quite fit the voice and mannerisms of the old broad who’s voice he’d made a point to memorize as well as he’d been trained to do.

 

“I’m here,” said that same voice that he’d heard over the phone when this whole thing had been set up, and Hol turned to look over at her.

 

She was even older and more decrepit-looking than he’d been expecting when he’d first heard her voice; looked like things were a bit more involved than he’d been given to expect. When she glanced down at the gun that he had in his holster – the Emperor – Hol made a note of the fact that he was dealing with another Stand user. That might complicate things, he mused, as the old broad made her way over to their table.

 

“I’ve gathered you all here because I need you all to help me dispose of someone,” the old broad – the Stand user that he’d been steadily composing a report about as he observed her – said, glaring at him in particular.

 

Looked like there was something else he’d need to take note of in his report.

 

“Who did you call us here to kill?” one of the other men – Dan Steele, maybe? He couldn’t really remember – asked, folding his arms across his chest and glaring out at everyone in the café, before returning his attention to their group where they were seated.

 

“Her,” the old broad said, slapping a photograph down on the table that the eight of them had all gathered together.

 

Pressing the tip of his tongue against his top row of teeth, Hol Horse stared down at the photo of the Boss Lady that had just been placed down on the table; it looked like he was going to have something interesting to report when he reported in.

 

“Are you insane?!” Dan – the only one of the man’s names he could actually remember, at least enough to put in his report – demanded, looking like it was only the presence of everyone else in the café that kept him from leaping out of his seat to yell down at the old broad. “Do you even know what you’re asking?!”

 

“What? Are you afraid of her?” the old broad sneered; Hol Horse forced himself to swallow a laugh.

 

“I happen to enjoy living,” Dan snarled, shuddering badly enough that Hol could see it as clearly as the Commander – or TIM, but he’d never actually met the man behind the moniker – could have when she was the one overseeing her troops.

 

That was, if she herself had ever been able to meet up with any of them in the first place; like the Boss Lady herself said, image was very important to someone like her.

 

“What do you mean?” the old broad demanded, clearly trying to growl, even with most of her teeth missing.

 

“You mean you don’t know?” Dan demanded, eyes darting around the room as he leaned in closer, ironically making it all the more obvious that he was trying to keep something secret. “Alice Brando’s got access to more than just her Treadstone agents; and I’m not just talking about Blackwater,” Dan’s eyes darted around the darkened room again, and Hol Horse firmly bit back a grin. “There’s always been rumors that she has a third level of training; beyond even the Blackwater agents, that do things that even Blackwater wouldn’t be capable of, since they’re still connected to her,” Dan shuddered. “People also say that she has those agents recruited from military prisons; I’ve heard of Fort Leavenworth and places like that mentioned as where she looks for them. They handle things that none of her other agents could be seen doing.”

 

“What are you talking about?” one of the women at the table asked, looking like she didn’t know quite what to believe.

 

“There’s a story going around, that there was some group of corrupt cops somewhere or other,” Dan said, looking around at all of the other people gathered at the table with them. “Alice found out about it, of course, and sent some of those secret agents of hers out,” Dan said, looking at the woman – Mariah, Hol recalled – who’d spoken up just a bit ago. “And then, well…” Dan breathed deeply, shuddering. “The only part of the lead cop anyone found was his skin, hung in a tree near his house.”

 

What?!” the other blond who’d been seated at the table with them – Tennille, Hol recalled, though he had the feeling that that name might have been an alias – demanded, sitting up straight in his seat where he’d previously been slouching easily while he’d seemed to be taking in the other people at the table.

 

Not many of theirs actually knew each other when they didn’t need to work together on a mission or in teams on an operation, but Hol made a mental note to catch up with the man; at least after he’d made his report, of course.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d finally been able to extricate himself from the crazy old woman who had brought up the insane idea of challenging Alice Brando and the power that she held in the world that they all lived in, Steely Dan panted as he hurried back to the hotel room that he’d been staying in when he’d come to Cairo after being called up. Shuddering as he stepped back through the doors of the hotel, Steely Dan kept a careful lookout as he continued on his way back up to his room.

 

There was no telling if he was being stalked by one or more of Alice Brando’s secret agents.

 

When he finally made it back to his room, Dan froze as he saw the mess of shattered glass spread across the floor, seemingly leading to the head of his bed, and the crossbow bolt that had been buried in the wall there. Shuddering as he made his way over to yank out the bolt, he also noticed that there seemed to be a message tied to the shaft of the bolt. Untying the message, he found that it only contained a single line: You have chosen wisely.

 

It had clearly been printed off a computer, or Xeroxed, so he couldn’t tell anything from looking at the style of the writing; anything like who might have written something like that.

 

=SC=

 

“Holly! My little baby Holly!” he, Dio, laughed as he spun his adorable great grand-niece around, as she giggled and squealed.

 

“Uncle Dio, I’m not a baby!” she laughed, as he set her gently down on the floor and the pair of them embraced heartily.

 

“Compared to me you certainly are, baby Holly,” he, Dio, said with a grin; out of the corner of his eye he, Dio, caught sight of his sweet sister and N’Doul with their heads leaned together, seemingly discussing some matter or other.

 

He wondered for a moment about such a thing, but then dismissed it from his mind; there were a great many things that his dear Alice needed to do, considering the fact that she held the highest position possible in the international company that she herself had established and continued to build up to this very day. It was likely simply more corporate matters that he, Dio, had been uninterested in since the first time that his sweet sister had endeavored to explain such things to him.

 

“Uncle Dio, you haven’t forgotten about me, have you?” his Little Jojo wheedled, grabbing him from behind.

 

“Certainly not, my Little Jojo,” he, Dio, laughed as he turned around to firmly embrace his adorable nephew in turn.

 

Narrowing his eyes in amusement as he, Dio, saw their adorable Jotaro attempting to edge his way past them and into the house where he was all-too likely to sequester himself in the room that had been prepared for him when he, Dio, had had the place built in the first place, he turned to confront the youngest member of their happy little family.

 

“Jotaro, wherever are you planning to go?” he, Dio, asked, making his way over to pick up his adorably dour little Jotaro. “And without even giving your dear old Uncle a hug? You naughty boy.”

 

“Fuck off, Uncle Dio,” Jotaro grumbled, seeming to be almost physically restraining himself from squirming in the way that he’d always done before when he, Dio, had done such a thing.

 

“You rude little brat,” he, Dio, laughed as he tugged the brim of Jotaro’s ratty old cap down over his eyes.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d finally managed to get away from Uncle Dio, Gramps, Granny, Mom and all of their collective weirdness, Jotaro settled down in his room. At least it was quieter than anywhere else in the house; and yeah, he knew that he was going to have to deal with those annoying old guys and their equally annoying ideas for celebrating his birthday, but at least he’d have his aunt to keep the old guys from getting too annoying with all their crap. The two of them had seemed to understand each other without words nearly since the day they’d met; something he’d come to appreciate more and more as he found himself dealing with all the weirdness that the Old Man and Uncle Dio brought up with their antics.

 

Even Mom didn’t really seem to understand him the way that Aunt Alice did, even without words.

 

A soft grumble from his stomach prompted Jotaro to sit up, but when he looked over at his nightstand he saw that there was a bag of potato chips and a can of orange soda set neatly down by the table lamp.

 

“What the hell?” he muttered, making his way over to the nightstand and looking around.

 

Sure, he knew that Uncle Dio had a bunch of servants and retainers and crap, but he didn’t think that any of them could have been that quiet. Looking around the room, even as he picked up the chips and soda, Jotaro frowned as he made his way over to the big, squashy chair that had been set in the room, beside an actual table rather than the nightstand that he’d first found the food set out on top of.

 

It was weird as fuck, but he couldn’t see any indications that anyone else had been in the room with him.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing her eyes as she caught sight of that hateful woman making her way into the house where Lord Dio lived with all of his subjects and retainers, Enya growled under her breath. The sheer cowardice that Steely Dan had displayed when he’d heard who it was that she had gathered them in that café to tell them about – the hateful woman who she wanted dead more than anything – infuriated her more than anything else that she’d experienced since she’d felt the echoes of her poor son’s pain after he’d suffered so much abuse at the hands of that horrible woman. It had to be nonsense, anyway.

 

The fact that that hateful woman hadn’t had the nerve to kill her poor son made believing such wild stories like the ones that coward Dan had been mewling about all but impossible, and convincing the braver members of the mercenary group that she had gathered to her in the café where the eight of them had gathered had become all the more simple when she had reminded them of such a fact.

 

And so, returning to Lord Dio’s mansion had been all the more simple, armed with the knowledge that she had new weapons and allies that that horrible woman would not have a chance against. Even being forced to watch that hateful woman’s interactions with Lord Dio were made more simple when she reflected back upon the meeting that she had arranged, and all of the mercenaries who would soon come down upon her like the iron fist of justice. Even my own Justice will do the same!

 

Narrowing her eyes all the farther as she watched that hateful woman moving through Lord Dio’s holdings as though she owned them, Enya swallowed yet another snarl; she knew that Lord Dio had greater, more powerful senses than any mere human could have been said to possess, and the simple fact was that that hateful woman seemed to possess the same caliber of senses. Enya knew that she would have to act far more carefully, given that the horrible woman seemed to be settling in to stay for some time. And yes, while it would make dealing with her a great deal more simple, Enya hated seeing the horrible woman in such a sacred place.

 

It wasn’t suited to her at all.

 

=SC=

 

“How did you manage to find any of this out, sister dear?” he, Dio, asked as his sweet Alice detailed what she and N’Doul had actually been talking about when the pair of them had met up with each other in the shadow of their little family gathering.

 

“You are aware that I have access to a great deal of resources, yes?” his sweet sister asked, raising an eyebrow as she faced him down over the expanse of the small table the three of them had settled around.

 

“Well, yes, but I’d hardly been expecting you to have spies in the area,” he, Dio, chuckled as the pair of them continued their discussion.

 

“Yes, apparently Enya made that same assumption,” his sweet sister said, a rather amused smile appearing on her face as their conversation continued.

 

“Yes, Enya,” he, Dio, said, narrowing his eyes as he recalled the true reason for his and Alice’s meeting. “Dear little Enya,” he hissed. “I’d thought that there was something odd about the way she’d been looking at you. I shall have to find a way to punish her for such a transgression.”

 

“Not necessarily,” his dear Alice said, folding her arms in a contemplative sort of way. “My agents would be more than able to handle this kind of situation.”

 

“No, there has to be consequences for this,” he, Dio, said, even though he was perfectly aware that his sweet sister and her forces would have been perfectly capable of dealing with any number of troublesome people that that miserable, faithless traitor Enya had gathered to her with her efforts. “Little Enya has to know the true price of betrayal.”

 

“Well, if you’re certain,” his sweet sister said, though it was clear from her demeanor that she didn’t fully approve of the course of action he, Dio, was planning.

 

Still, the only way that a young fool such as Enya would learn her proper lesson was if he and his were there to confront her about her transgressions; it was a lesson that he’d no intention of allowing her to survive.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d actually made his way down to the kitchen, wanting something more than just a bag of potato chips and an orange soda – though hell if he knew where it’d come from in the first place – Jotaro made sure that none of the more annoying members of his family were going to be around, since he wasn’t really in the mood to deal with any of them when there was something so strange going on with him. He might go and talk to Aunt Alice about things, if the weirdness didn’t stop on its own or something, but for the moment he was content to forget about that kind of thing while he went to get his lunch ready.

 

Looking around the empty expanse of the kitchen, Jotaro sighed in relief, even as me made his way over to the large fridges at the far end of the room. Pulling open the doors of the left-side fridge, Jotaro looked into it and tried to decide just what it was that he wanted to have. The sound of clattering dishes drew his attention, and Jotaro looked over at the plate that had just been set out on a nearby countertop. What the hell is going on?

 

The sound of the fridge door that he’d let slip closed being yanked open again caused him to snap his gaze in that direction, just in time to see some packets of food and condiments being set out around the plate that’d just been dumped on the counter a few seconds earlier. Backing up almost against the fridge itself as some kind of invisible thing began shuffling the packets of food through the air even as he watched. Shuddering as he jumped out of the way as that same something pulled the fridge door open, slamming it shut again in just a second. Panting as he made his way over to the plate on the counter, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he studied the… whatever it was that had been set on the plate.

 

It looked like a normal club sandwich, hell it even smelled like one, and the root beer that had been set down beside the plate looked just the same, but Jotaro still found himself unsettled as he looked down at the sandwich that had been set out in front of him; he’d really have to talk to Aunt Alice about this weird shit that seemed to be happening around him lately. Before things started getting out of hand.

 

=SC=

 

Given everything that had happened with regards to Enya – in particular the mercenaries that the old woman had gathered up in what was to prove a futile effort to kill her for some reason or other – she and Dio had stepped up their respective efforts to gain a working understanding of Stardust, The World, and The Duke. The shapeshifting abilities of her secondary Stand seemed as though they would be one of the most potent assets the pair of them were going to have, at least aside from the time-stopping power of Dio’s own Stand.

 

“Well, it seems as though this is the limit of what our Stands are capable of at present, sister dear,” Dio said, looking at their three Stands as they stood together, The World wrapping its arms almost possessively around Stardust’s shoulders.

 

“Yes,” she said, nodding. “We should make contact with N’Doul.”

 

Dio chuckled. “I still can’t believe that he was one of your agents, as well.”

 

“I have a lot of agents you don’t know about, brother mine,” she said, smirking right back.

 

Her brother chuckled again, as the pair of them paused a moment to allow their Stands to catch up with them and vanish once more, and they made their way deeper into the mansion so that they could meet up with N’Doul again. The three of them had soon joined up again, and then made their way out of the mansion in order to find a battleground that wouldn’t be too badly affected by the destructive abilities of their respective Stands, and whatever the abilities of the mercenary group that Enya had recruited possessed, as well.

 

Narrowing her eyes as her tremor-senses began to pick up the approach of another, distinctly familiar tread, Alice chuckled coldly.

 

“It seems we’re about to have company,” she said, fanning out her hair to get a better picture of just where it was that Enya was currently approaching them from.

 

“Yes,” Dio said, a cold smirk curling his own lips as the pair of them continued on their way forward.

Chapter 38: Village People

Chapter Text

The sight of Enya herself, just rounding the corner of the building as the footsteps that she and Dio had been tracking ever since she’d first detected them over and above the milling crowds in this part of the city, brought a tight, narrow smile to her face as she, Dio, and N’Doul continued on their way through the quarter of the city where they had been searching for either the woman herself or some of the mercenaries that N’Doul had described in his report.

 

“Why, Enya, how nice to see you out and about,” Dio said, his tone a passable imitation of her own “you are currently knee-deep in shit; good luck extricating yourself”.

 

“Lord Dio!” the woman exclaimed, looking almost starkly terrified to see the pair of them; or rather, probably at the sight of Dio giving her that kind of look.

 

“You know, I’ve been hearing the most troubling rumors, my dear Enya,” Dio said, all but stalking his way over to where the elderly woman – the one who actually looked her age, at least – was standing, stock-still in obvious terror as the pair of them made their way over to her.

 

“How did your meeting go?” she asked, cold smile widening slightly at the terrified expression on Enya’s face as the three of them moved in closer.

 

“I- I don’t-”

 

“Don’t try to lie to me,” she verbally steamrolled, before Enya could work up anything more than a couple words of the no-doubt pitiful excuse she was about to hand over. “I have people everywhere; I know you were meeting with a group of mercenary Stand users, and I know you were planning to have them attempt to kill me. They’d fail, of course, but the collateral damage in a place like this would be troublesome to deal with. Now, since it’s obvious that you’re not going to give up on this pointless little feud you seem intent on instigating with me, we need to arrange a place for it. Somewhere away from any civilians who might otherwise find themselves caught in the crossfire of a Stand battle.”

 

“What makes you think that I would ever agree to do anything you want?!” Enya demanded, just before she was unceremoniously pulled into the ground as Stardust grabbed her ankles and sank downward.

 

“Ah, you must have mistaken that for a request. One wonders how,” she said, in her “explaining the obvious to stupid people” tone. “Though I suppose I can indulge you, if just this once: if you truly are so dimwitted as to refuse, I’ll simply have Stardust let go. Your lungs, which you might have actually realized shouldn’t be working when you’re up to your eyeballs in solid concrete, will fuse permanently with the molecular structure of the sidewalk you’re swimming in. In fact, so will every other one of your other organs; really, the only way anyone would actually be able to find your corpse after that is with ground-penetrating RADAR, or some other comparable system.”

 

Stardust yanked Enya the rest of the way into the sidewalk where she, Dio, and N’Doul were all standing, giving the woman just the slightest taste of what would inevitably happen if she was so unutterably stupid as to keep pressing for a confrontation right here and now. Narrowing her eyes slightly as Stardust yanked Enya back out of the ground, tossing the other woman down and then calmly stepping through her on its way back over to where the three of them were all standing. As Enya gasped for air, shaking badly enough that even someone without the enhanced senses of a vampire would have probably been able to see it, Alice narrowed her eyes slightly.

 

Only time would tell how this would all go down, in the end.

 

=SC=

 

As he, Dio, watched his sweet sister forced his traitorous little Enya to submit to her will – as he’d known that she would, though not ultimately how she would do such a thing – he grinned fit to show all of his fangs. Shivering in anticipation as his dear Alice narrowed her eyes in distain at the pathetically mewling form of Enya upon the sidewalk he, Dio, folded his arms and waited to hear what his sweet sister would say next.

 

“This is my world, little girl; I just let you live in it.”

 

His dear Alice would, like as not, say – as she had said so many times before, when he’d asked her that sort of question – that it was mere theatricality that prompted her to say such a thing, but he, Dio, knew that it was just one more facet of what made his undeclared empress of the world who she ultimately was. In the end, of course, Enya capitulated, and a location was chosen. He and his sweet sister, along with the forces that they would be able to bring to battle, would meet the mercenary forces that dear little Enya had been able to gather up.

 

It would be a rather interesting battle, though hardly a lengthy one, of course.

 

=SC=

 

“Oi, Pucci,” he called, catching sight of the weird priest that hung around Uncle Dio like one of those chattering, annoying girls at high-school. “Have you seen Aunt Alice lately?”

 

He’d been looking around the house for a long time, and more of that weird shit had kept happening all around him: when he’d been feeling a bit thirsty, a bottle of water had appeared in his right hand; when he’d been craving something salty, it’d been neatly-sliced hunks of what had ended up being salami. And now, when he’d wanted to find Aunt Alice so he could talk to her about just what in the hell was going on, he’d found himself led to the one person who seemed to know everything that was going on in this place.

 

Well, the only one who he could actually stand, anyway.

 

“Alice and Dio informed me that they would be out of the house for some time, while they resolve a matter of some import,” Pucci said, studying him with that same, assessing look that Aunt Alice would turn on him whenever she saw that there was something out of place about him. “However, if there is something troubling you, Jotaro, you may feel free to speak to me about such matters.”

 

“I guess,” he said, flicking his own eyes over Pucci; the guy had always seemed a bit weird to him, but he only really acted that way when Uncle Dio was around; not that Uncle Dio really seemed to discourage it, from either him or that pantsless weirdo Vanilla Ice, either. “I think I’m being haunted,” he admitted, knowing that Pucci wasn’t the kind of guy to go sharing something that he’d been told in private.

 

“Haunted?” Pucci asked, his expression looking curious, but not like he was about to call Jotaro a liar or anything.

 

“Yeah,” he said, holding out his right hand and concentrating for a moment on his craving for something salty; in basically the blink of an eye, another neatly-sliced chunk of salami had appeared right there. “Something or other keeps bringing me things like this. It started late yesterday; I wanted a snack, and then there was some potato chips and a soda in my room.”

 

“It sounds rather like this is a positive development, Jotaro,” Pucci said, settling back more comfortably in the chair that he’d found the man seated in when whatever it was that was haunting him had led him into the room .

 

“What, like a guardian angel or something?” he asked, not quite sure how he felt about that kind of thing. “I know you’re a priest, but do you really think that’s what’s going on?”

 

“Given what you’ve told me, that is what sounds the most likely,” Pucci said, calmly as he ever did.

 

Really, when he wasn’t fawning over Uncle Dio like one of those annoying girls back at school, Pucci was like another island of calm in all of the craziness that Jotaro found himself dealing with when he was around the rest of his bizarre family; with the clear exception of Aunt Alice, of course.

 

“I guess,” he said, leaning back in his own chair as he contemplated the salami in his right hand for a moment, before taking a bite.

 

The sound of a clunk on the small end table between the two chairs that he and Pucci were sitting in drew his attention, and Jotaro looked over to see a glass of what seemed to be some kind of fruit juice with ice in it. Lifting it for a sip, he found that it was apple. The best kind of thing to have when you were eating salami, at least as far as he was concerned.

 

“Well, I suppose you have your answer now,” Pucci said, his usual, gentle smile appearing on his face once again.

 

“I guess,” he said, finding that he couldn’t quite muster the will to get into an argument with Pucci, of all people.

 

He was the kind of guy who would let someone keep talking up until they realized that what he was saying actually made sense; really, it was just one more thing that reminded him of Aunt Alice. He still wanted to talk to her when she got back, of course, but it wasn’t like he was panicking about things anymore, or anything.

 

=SC=

 

When she and Dio had made their way to the outskirts of Cairo, Alice made it a point to contact Straizo and have him send over Wham and Tarkus. While she honestly doubted that any of the mercenaries that Enya had hired would be capable of standing up to a pair of vampires like her and Dio, it was always better to have extra forces on and when you were confronting a mostly unknown quantity like Enya and her group of mercenary Stand users. Even N’Doul’s Blackwatch contact hadn’t managed to gather any more information about them than the fact that they existed, and so Alice wasn’t about to go into this kind of scrap without two of her most powerful allies.

 

Besides, she knew very well that the pair of them would enjoy going out in the field again, after so much time just spent sparring with each other.

 

When she had received confirmation that the pair of them would be coming soon – delivered rather enthusiastically by Tarkus himself – she informed Dio and N’Doul, and the three of them made for the LZ that she and Tarkus had agreed on when they’d been arranging for his and Wham’s arrival. The high, harsh whine of VTOL engines as the PX-22 supersonic transport plane appeared in the sky over their heads, lowering itself smoothly back to the ground as the last rays of the setting sun vanished beyond the horizon.

 

“I’m glad you managed to make it so promptly,” she said, raising an eyebrow as she realized it wasn’t Straizo behind the controls. “Though I am surprised to see you, Domenico.”

 

“Yes,” the Italian said, a calm smile on his own face. “I didn’t want you facing a group of Stand users without backup.”

 

“Yes; even considering the time I’ve spent working with mine, I suppose I could use someone else who has more experience with these matters,” she allowed, a slight smile emerging on her own face. “Thank you for coming.”

 

You’ve gained a Stand as well, Boss?”

 

“Not long ago, but yes,” she said, as Wham and Tarkus made their own way out of the plane and joined the rest of them on the ground.

 

“Stands, Milady?” Tarkus asked, turning a look of confusion on her, even as he took out the rocked-powered hammer that he’d had fabricated for himself once he’d really gotten into his sparring with Wham, and hadn’t let out of his sight ever since.

 

“It’s too long a story to get into here, but I’ll try to cover as much as I can while we make our way,” she said, smirking slightly as Tarkus stowed his rocket-hammer on the specially-designed sheath that he’d commissioned once he’d gotten hold of his hammer.

 

=SC=

 

It’d been more than three hours since he’d last seen Aunt Alice, and Jotaro couldn’t make himself wait any longer. Sure, Pucci had said that she and Uncle Dio were out taking care of something or other, but not even calling to tell everyone how long they were going to be out? Something about that just didn’t sit right with him; Aunt Alice wasn’t the type to stay silent for so long, particularly since she knew that people worried about her when she was out. Even with the vampire thing and all, there was no way in hell that Aunt Alice would be out so long without making contact with them, even if Uncle Dio didn’t think that that kind of thing was important.

 

Making his way out of his room and down through the wide hallways, Jotaro continued on his way down to the main room of the mansion; he could hear the Old Man talking to someone who sounded like that Egyptian guy he’d met on one of the other trips down here he’d made, some time or other before.

 

“Oi, Old Man!” he called, once he’d made his way fully into the main room, catching sight of the pair of them sitting on a pair of couches surrounding a low table. “Do you know where Aunt Alice is?”

 

“No,” the old man said, shaking his head; he looked about as worried as Jotaro was starting to feel, so he knew that he wasn’t the only one who hadn’t been contacted by Aunt Alice when she had left the mansion on whatever errand it was that she’d figured that she and Uncle Dio needed to do on their own. “That’s why I called Avdol here: he’s a fortune teller, so he should be able to tell where she went and what she’s doing.”

 

“There’s also something else,” said the Egyptian man who’d come to the mansion to meet up with the Old Man for whatever other reason. “Mr. Joestar has told me that the Stand you possess has no name; he has asked me to help you to choose one for it.”

 

“Stand?” he asked, narrowing his eyes as he wondered just what in the hell this guy was getting at.

 

“I asked Pucci about what was going on with you,” the Old Man said, a slight smile on his face. “He was a bit evasive, considering the whole priest-in-training thing and all, but I got to know at least enough to figure out what was really going on with you.”

 

“All right,” he said, letting himself slump down onto the couch beside the Old Man, though far enough away that the Old Man couldn’t grab him and hug him or anything stupid like that.

 

“First, I wish for you to draw a card,” Avdol said, holding out the deck of oversized cards. “These are Tarot cards; the cards of fate will aid your efforts in finding the name that best suits the Stand you have been granted.”

 

Looking down at the cards that Avdol was holding out to him, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he reached out with his right hand to take the deck as the Egyptian handed it over to him. He was about to start flipping through the cards themselves, wondering just what kind of cards there actually were in a Tarot deck, since he hadn’t seen any cards that he’d been able to recognize from any of the other kinds of decks that he’d seen before, but Avdol took them back before he could get a look at anything more than the first card at either the top or bottom of the deck.

 

“That will be enough, young man,” Avdol said, smiling kindly at him as he began shuffling the deck again.

 

Jotaro didn’t know just what in the hell the man was doing, but he’d wait and see what was going to happen before he started demanding answers; who knew, he might just end up getting his answers without actually having to do anything.

 

=SC=

 

The scent of old stone and dry sand permeated the air, as she, Dio, Domenico, Wham, Tarkus, and N’Doul all made their way into the abandoned, forgotten cityscape beyond the outskirts of Cairo. Narrowing her eyes as she studied their current surroundings, Alice wondered for a moment what kind of people had been responsible for building this place, back when it had been an actual city rather than just the remains of one. Still, that kind of thing was a concern for later; now, she and her comrades had work to do.

 

Still, Alice made a mental note to let the Speedwagon Foundation know about it, after all of this had been concluded.

 

Scenting the air for any nearby people, Alice signaled for the benefit of the pair of non-vampiric members of their party, and Dio chuckled deep in his throat, grinning widely as the six of them began to move in.

 

“It’s pretty obvious that she’s going to try to split us up,” she said, speaking just loudly enough that Domenico – the only one of them whose lack of experience with these kinds of operations was likely to cause him any kind of problems in the battle they were all about to be heading into – would be able to hear her without difficulties. “Still, she doesn’t really know what she’s dealing with, and it didn’t sound like any of her hired goons would be prepared to deal with anyone but ordinary Stand users or humans.”

 

“Yes,” Dio said, grinning in an amusedly conspiratorial sort of way. “I never did get around to telling dear little Enya just what it was that you and I actually were, sister dear.”

 

“Good; that’s something we have over her,” she said, nodding as the six of them began to draw within sight of what seemed to have been the main square of the empty, abandoned city they were all making their way deeper into. “Everybody ready?” there was a brief chorus of affirmations, after which Alice nodded sharply.

 

=SC=

 

When she caught sight of Lord Dio, along with that hateful woman and what seemed to be some sort of entourage that followed in their wake, Enya found herself smiling for the first time since she had borne witness to the unsettling power of that hateful woman’s Stand. And yes, it had rattled her when she had found herself trapped within lightless stone, but the simple fact that she had not been left to rot within the street where she had suddenly found herself buried proved that the hateful woman’s threats had been little more than empty words, in the end. The simple fact that she hadn’t even been able to find it in herself to kill Enya’s poor, innocent son said everything Enya needed to know about her.

 

Hateful as she was, the woman was too pitiful to pose any kind of true threat.

 

=SC=

 

As the Commander had ordered, N’Doul had allowed himself to be separated from the main force of their group by the efforts of what seemed to be a fellow Stand user. The man was clearly nowhere near as versed in Stands as he had clearly come to think, considering the way that he’d not seemed to be taking account of his surroundings, as well as the fact that N’Doul could feel his approaching footfalls – hasty and ill-considered as his approach clearly was, even against a man he’d seen was blind – and the way that he didn’t even pause to check his approach when he summoned his own Stand.

 

Clearly, this man was not about to survive the lesson that he would soon be given.

 

The Stand that his soon-to-be-dead opponent had brought out seemed to be taller than the man himself – if the length of the stride and the weight of the steps that he could detect were any sort of indication – and N’Doul took brief note of such a fact, even as he prepared his own Geb to strike as soon as the man had come within his range. When the man had come within the lethal range of his Geb, N’Doul drove his blade of water through the man’s head before he had time for more than a surprised sort of breath. The thud of an empty body falling to the ground, as well as the sudden absence of the Stand that the man had summoned to fight for him brought a slight, pleased smile to N’Doul’s face.

 

The Commander is going to want to know about this, he mused. Even beyond the fact that first blood had seemingly gone to him, she would want to know that the enemy’s forces had been cut down in strength. Only four of the five brought here remained, aside from Enya herself.

 

=SC=

 

She’d tagged the man as soon as his eyes had fallen upon her; he was a short man, with an almost excessively stupid-looking hairstyle, even for the world where she’d presently found herself. Really, it looked like someone had taken Dr. Robotnik’s mustache, put a bunch of bells in it, and was trying to pass it off as hair. It had almost been enough to distract her for a moment from the sick, possessive lust in his eyes when he’d looked at her that first time that their respective groups of six had encountered one another.

 

She’d sent Stardust to wait underground as soon as he’d turned his full attention toward her, and allowed him to think he’d been chasing her while she’d separated him from what allies he could claim among the ranks of Enya’s hired goons.

 

“Hello,” she said calmly, smirking ever so slightly, as Stardust leaped out of the ground, wrapping its arms around the man’s waist and hurling him to the dusty ground, dragging him under until his desperately waving arms were the only visible parts that remained; the sudden way they stopped, frozenly clawing at the open air, was the first indication that Stardust had let go. “And goodbye.”

 

Turning to nod at her Stand as it rose back out of the ground, flourishing a cheerful bow, Alice chuckled as she felt Stardust retreating back to wherever it was that Stands rested when they weren’t called upon to fight in one battle or another. She sometimes wondered just where that was, but she had more than enough time to think about that kind of thing when she wasn’t in the middle of an operation.

 

=SC=

 

In the end, Avdol and the Old Man had both needed to work together to find out just where it was that Aunt Alice had gone. And, when it had turned out to be that she, Uncle Dio, and a group of her people had gone out to fight some crazy group of what seemed to be Stand users, he’d insisted on going out to help. According to everything that Avdol had been saying, his own Stand was one of the most powerful that the man had ever seen, and only a Stand user could come out on top in a fight against another of their own kind.

 

Sure, Aunt Alice and Uncle Dio might have been vampires, but even the Old Man had admitted that there was no way of telling how that kind of thing would help them in a battle against people who possessed the same kind of weird-assed powers that he, the Old Man, and Avdol all had right now.

 

In the end, the Old Man had managed to make a map leading them to just where it was that Aunt Alice and Uncle Dio, along with whatever other people had been drawn into the battle with them. The three of them had hopped into one of Aunt Alice’s rugged dune buggies, and set off as quickly as they could. About the only thing that Jotaro could find it in himself to be grateful for was the fact that the sun had set awhile ago.

Chapter 39: The Ninjas

Chapter Text

Sure, there was a full moon high in the sky, but it wasn’t moonlight that vampires like Aunt Alice and Uncle Dio had to worry about. So, that was at least one good thing that he could see about the situation they were all going to be making their way into, even if he couldn’t think of any others. When the three of them finally made it to the deserted city that Aunt Alice, Uncle Dio, and everyone else who had come with them had gone off to, Jotaro narrowed his eyes just that much farther as he, the Old Man, and Avdol all began making their way into the empty city.

 

Calling Star Platinum, Jotaro focused on the Stand’s enhanced vision.

 

“There’s some kind of fog bank covering part of the city,” he said, wondering if there was someone else with that kind of power, or if Domenico Pucci really had come here to Cairo with whoever else it was that Aunt Alice had seemingly called to her side when she’d gone into battle.

 

More and more, it was starting to seem like this had been one of Aunt Alice’s plans, and not just something she’d been caught up by when whoever it was that had attacked her had made their move; still, Aunt Alice had always said that it was better to have forces that the enemy didn’t know about.

 

“Come on,” he said, having made his decision as he called Star Platinum back again. “Let’s get moving.”

 

=SC=

 

Making his way into the fog-enshrouded part of the empty city, both since he was curious about what could have been causing it and because Jotaro had suggested that it might have been Domenico and his Stand causing this kind of thing, Joseph steadied his breathing and began to channel Hamon in earnest. Before he could take another step, however, the sound of something large exploding drew him up short.

 

“Holy shit!”

 

Following the sounds of metal shrapnel raining to the ground, Joseph stopped short as he saw the remains of what seemed to be some kind of car that looked like someone had strapped a bomb to the front of it. The sight of what seemed to be a young woman running from the sight of the exploded vehicle drew his attention then, and Joseph turned to head her off before she could get too far.

 

“Move it, handsome!” she shouted, just as the pair of them caught sight of each other.

 

“What’s going on?” he asked, adjusting his hat before it could go flying off from the speed that the pair of them had both started moving at.

 

“There’s no-! ”

 

“Joseph Joestar, is that you?” asked a familiar voice, as a very familiar Stand appeared out of the fog next to him.

 

“Domenico!” he exclaimed, grinning as he recognized the form of Weather Report, now standing on his left as it strode calmly out of the thick fog. “Hey, I thought it was you. What’re you doing out here?”

 

“That woman you’re with is one of Enya’s mercenary Stand users,” Weather Report stopped walking, though it was clear that Domenico was ready to act at the slightest hint of hostility from what had turned out to be an enemy Stand user. “However, I have my doubts that she has any true desire to carry this battle to its ultimate conclusion.”

 

“You’re damned right,” the woman snapped, glaring from him to Weather Report, and then turning her attention back to him; Joseph figured it made sense, since Weather Report – or any Stand, it seemed – didn’t quite look human enough for most people to feel comfortable talking to. “I didn’t sign up to try fighting against someone who could control the damned weather; I was just here to knock off some company manager or something. So,” the woman said, seeming to deliberately turn her attention away from everything that had happened, grinning in what seemed to be an overblown, seductive fashion. “What’s say you and I get out of here, handsome?”

 

“I’m married,” he said, feeling like he almost had to laugh at the sheer absurdity of the situation that he was currently dealing with.

 

“Ms. Mariah, have you already given up on me?” Domenico asked, his tone clearly teasing, and the amused grin on his face becoming plainly visible as Weather Report lifted the fog that had enveloped their battlefield.

 

“You pelted me with hailstones the size of golf balls, tried to explode me with those lightning bolts of yours, and then had me wandering in this stupid fog of yours until lover boy came here to find me!” Mariah growled, pointing fiercely at Domenico as he made his way over to where the pair of them were standing; Joseph couldn’t help but notice that he hadn’t dismissed Weather Report yet. “I don’t care how cute you are! If you take one step closer, you’re going to be facing the full power of my Stand, you bastard!”

 

“I would not advise that you attempt anything of that sort,” Domenico said, the amused grin on his face not having gotten even the slightest bit smaller. A cloud emerged around Weather Report’s right hand, crackling with lightning as the Stand clenched its fist.

 

Mariah growled, and Joseph winced slightly.

 

“Hold up, hold up!” he said, hopping between the pair of them, just before the pair of them could leap back on the attack again. “It sounds like this is all a big misunderstanding! So, why don’t we just, not start smashing each other’s heads in and talk?”

 

“Hmm, I suppose,” Domenico said. “Of course, there is always another option, Ms. Mariah.”

 

“What’re you getting at?” Mariah demanded, narrowing her eyes as Domenico continued facing her, staying carefully just outside of the limit that she had specified as being allegedly beyond the range where she would send her Stand after him.

 

“The woman that you were sent here to attack is always on the lookout for people with talent and dedication to join her organization,” Domenico said, straightening himself up and folding his arms neatly behind his back, standing at ease in a way that couldn’t help but remind Joseph of the way that Aunty Alice stood when she was speaking to someone she’d taken an interest in.

 

He couldn’t help but think things were going to go better, from this point on.

 

=SC=

 

When he, Dio, had caught sight of that handsome stranger Muhammad Avdol and his thoroughly fascinating Stand – resembling a rather magnificent firebird, and going by the name of Magician’s Red – it was all that he could do not to laugh in sheer, amused pleasure. Even though the pair of them had ended up being confronted by a rather annoying, unimportant little man by the name of Rubber Soul, having such a lovely combat-partner as the man standing beside him made things quite a bit more bearable.

 

“Mr. Brando, will you please stop making bedroom eyes at me and focus on the battle?”

 

He, Dio, chuckled at the resigned expression of annoyance that appeared on the Egyptian’s lovely, dusky-skinned face. “I suppose I can indulge you for the moment, my dear Avdol.”

 

“Are you two faggots actually planning to fight me now?” the fool man demanded, grinning in that same way he’d been doing ever since he’d met the pair of them in combat; it was rather adorable, how the imbecile didn’t have even the slightest clue that he only remained breathing by the grace of Dio Brando.

 

And such grace could be taken back just as easily as it had been given.

 

He, Dio, exchanged a single nod with the handsome Egyptian who had been so kind to give him company while he dealt with the annoyance who dared to challenge his dominion. The pair of them nodded to one another and he, Dio, grinned all the wider.

 

“Magician’s Red!”

 

“The World!”

 

“Don’t’ make me laugh! My Yellow Temperance-”

 

“Crossfire Hurricane Special!”

 

Laughing in sheer glee as the fool tried in vain to leap out of the way of the veritable hail of anhk-shaped bolts of blazing fire that rained down upon him he, Dio, focused upon the most unique of powers that his glorious Stand had granted to him.

 

“The World! Time: be still!”

 

For just a single, wonderful moment he, Dio, could see the very air rippling as the gears of time were stopped by the firm hands of his mighty Stand. Grinning all the wider, enough to show his fangs if there had been anyone at all who could have seen a single thing in his world of frozen time he, Dio, moved to confront the fool who had been so arrogant as to place himself in opposition to one of the Twin Vampire Lords of the Earth. Slamming his right fist into the fool’s gut, just hard enough to launch him across the expanse of their battlefield when he, Dio, allowed inertia to have sway once more.

 

“And now, let time resume,” he, Dio, said with a slightly smaller grin.

 

The stupid look of surprise on Rubber Soul’s face as he slammed into the wall of the building on the far side of the empty courtyard that the three of them had been fighting in drew a deep, hearty laugh from him, Dio, as he watched it happen.

 

“Avdol, would you like to do the honors?” he, Dio, asked, knowing that fire was one of the best ways to dispose of trash that had outlived its usefulness.

 

The fact that such a thing was also a truly horrible way to die was not so much a consideration; well, not so much, anyway.

 

“Right,” the handsome Egyptian said, nodding in a way that seemed both decisive and uncomfortable at once. “There is truly nothing redeemable about you, Rubber Soul; burn to a crisp!”

 

The stench of charring meat and hair, even over and above the quickly-silenced screams of the man on the ground before them, made it necessary for him to firmly bite back a grin as he, Dio, watched the imbecile’s rightful sentence be carried out. There was truly something to be said for the proper disposal of such rubbish.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d met that weird scrawny guy with the stupid-looking big arms, Jotaro hadn’t wasted any time in summoning Star Platinum; this new guy’s Stand seemed to have some kind of an ability to possess machines. Or at least cars, since the first place that he’d seen it was in that stupid-looking car that the bastard had tried to hit him with when he’d arrived. Still, the look of shock on his stupid face when Star had launched him out of the car with a single punch had been pretty funny.

 

“Hey! That wasn’t fair!”

 

“Fair?” he scoffed. “You think I give a shit about fair?”

 

This bastard knew what he’d done when he’d thrown in his lot with Enya and all of her mercenaries; when he’d tried to run him over with that Stand-possessed car of his; when he’d decided that whatever kind of money that Enya was offering – or however the hell else the old hag had managed to convince a bunch of mercenaries to go after their family, Aunt Alice in particular – was worth attacking someone he clearly didn’t know, and therefore wouldn’t have anything against.

 

Especially not this kind of idiot, who looked like he’d never done a normal day’s work in his life.

 

“Star Platinum!”

 

His Stand acknowledged him with its usual sharp cry of “ora”, leaping forward to launch a barrage of punches down on the scrawny little bastard as he tried to make another lunge for that Stand-possessed car of his. Moving forward once Star had finished its work, Jotaro kicked the man away from the car, and the sent Star after the thing. There was no point in leaving anything to chance, considering what kind of a Stand user he seemed to be dealing with.

 

Turning back to look at the scrawny guy as he lay twitching on the ground, Jotaro paused for a couple seconds to make sure that the man wasn’t going to be getting up for awhile.

 

Yare yare daze,” he muttered, tugging down the brim of his cap as he turned to leave the site of his battle with the Stand user who’d had that stupid Stand-possessed car.

 

=SC=

 

The sound of panting drew Alice’s attention again, and she nodded to Stardust as her Stand slipped back underground, with The Duke launching itself at the empty window of a nearby building in the form of a spring, before shifting to look like a wind chime as it hung from the top of the empty windowpane. Smirking slightly as she herself leaped up to the top of the empty buildings all around them, Alice paused to watch for the approach of the Stand user that had been stalking her nearly as persistently as that annoying, gross little midget that she’d previously dealt with.

 

It was more than obvious that the pair of them had both taken the same kind of interest in her, the purely kind of physical reaction that she’d seen from more than her fair share of people, and Alice had known just what that particular mercenary wanted from her. She also knew how unlikely it was that she’d be able to come to any kind of accord with this one, anymore than she’d been able to do such a thing with the midget that she’d dealt with some time earlier.

 

Narrowing her eyes as she heard the pounding footfalls of the woman she’d led into this area of the empty city that she and hers had led Enya’s mercenary forces on a merry chase through, Alice smirked as she caught sight of The Duke flapping its tassel in anticipation. The motion itself was subdued enough to pass for the action of the light breeze that was blowing, at least if someone was as careless as the other woman moving along beneath her seemed to be, so Alice wasn’t particularly worried about that.

 

“Damn it, where did that damned woman go now?” the stocky, heavy-set woman demanded of no one and everyone, as she stopped in the middle of the empty street, looking around with sharp, annoyed little darts of her gaze.

 

Leaping lightly back to the ground, once it was clear that the other Stand user was about to make her way out of the area, Alice didn’t bother to suppress a smirk as she leaned against the near side of the building that The Duke had taken up a post on.

 

“You’re really putting a lot of effort into this, Ms. Nena,” she said, carefully positioning herself so that she was far enough away from The Duke that even an astute observer wouldn’t be able to keep the both of them in sight at once.

 

“You-! How the hell did you manage to get away from me?!” the heavy-set woman demanded, a wild-eyed look of fury on her face as the pair of them faced one another.

 

Alice chuckled, folding her arms and narrowing her eyes, smirking. “Well, isn’t that just the sixty-four dollar question.”

 

“You-!” Nena snarled, an expression of tooth-grinding – quite literally so, since she was actually grinding her teeth as the pair of them stared one another down – rage appearing on her face. “You pretty girls are all the same: everything just given to you, while the rest of us have to struggle for even the slightest thing! Well, I’m going to take that pretty face of yours, right now!”

 

Will you, now?” she drawled, smirking all the wider as Nena stared her down, watching as The Duke shifted shape into a sharp-ended spring.

 

“What the hell are you so smug about?!” Nena demanded, actually beginning to look a bit rabid.

 

“You’re in just the right place, Nena dear,” she said, just as Nena opened her mouth again and The Duke launched itself into the back of her head.

 

Stardust leaped back out of the ground, sweeping its right wrist over The Duke, and allowing the secondary Stand to wrap itself back around it, settling back into its default disguise of a thin, white bracelet. Turning away from the corpse, Alice began making her way back to the center of the empty city. She’d been hearing the sound of other Stand battles, on and off, while she had been positioning Nena for the end of this battle of theirs.

 

=SC=

 

Heart hammering in her chest, as she ran through the streets of the necropolis that that hateful woman had lured her and her allies to when she had given Enya that ultimatum and forced her into the streets of this dead city, Enya focused as hard as she could on the powers of Justice, drawing up more of the corpses that she had gathered to herself when she had passed through one of the graveyards on the way to this place. The horrible scream of the rocket that had been attached to the hammer that that horrid giant of a man that that hateful woman had brought to this battle – as distinct from the titan whose form she had only, thankfully, been able to catch the briefest of glimpses of when that hateful woman had brought her forces down upon them all – when Enya had sent those who had been touched by Justice into the streets of this empty city, caused her to shudder in her very footsteps as she listened to the sounds of those Justice’s own being shattered utterly.

 

Shuddering as she saw the severed limbs and shattered bodies that had been left behind by the giant and his infernal rocket-powered hammer, Enya hurried to escape from the necropolis where she had found herself trapped when that hateful woman and her army of horrors had fallen upon here.

 

“Now, Enya dear, wherever are you thinking to go to?”

 

Enya felt almost as though her very blood had frozen in her veins, at the sound of Lord Dio’s beautiful voice; she hadn’t even heard his footsteps approaching!

 

“Lord Dio!” she exclaimed, turning around to see the almost amused smirk on her Lord’s face as he approached her.

 

“Now, you didn’t think you were actually going to escape from this place, did you Enya?” Lord Dio asked, smirk widening into a grin that showed his fangs; there were few enough times that she could remember seeing such things, but each and every time they had served to remind her that, for all of Lord Dio’s power and beauty, he was still a predator in the end.

 

The sight of another man approaching, this one the young Italian that she had caught the briefest of glimpses of when that hateful woman and her forces had first appeared in this dead city alongside her, brought Enya up short, just as she was about to start running for her life. She’d no way of knowing just how she would ever be able to get, but finding herself at the mercy of this newcomer made her realize that such a thing had been a false hope in the first place. The sight of the hateful woman herself, as well as the young man in the long coat walking next to her, caused Enya to shudder in a mix of terror and hatred.

 

“Ah, so this is where you managed to scamper off to,” the hateful woman said, folding her arms as she continued stalking forward.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing her eyes as she caught sight of Enya herself, Alice turned to look for a moment at Jotaro as the pair of them continued on their way into the center of the empty cityscape. Her great grand-nephew looked like he was trying with not much success to hold himself back from Stand-blitzing Enya until she was little more than a pile of bloody giblets on the ground.

 

“Keep a lid on it for a bit, ‘kay?” she asked, leaning over so that she could speak lowly enough that no one but Jotaro would be able to overhear her.

 

“Yeah,” Jotaro muttered, tugging on the brim of his cap in that same, nervous gesture that she’d seen him do so often.

 

The sound of approaching footfalls, as the rest of her forces converged on the center of the empty city that she had met the mercenary forces that Enya had hired, brought a small smile to her face as she and Jotaro continued on their way forward, closing in on Enya like the proverbial slowly-tightening noose. The sounds – and even the feel, coming up through the ground under her feet – of Wham and Tarkus slaughtering their way through the Stand-possessed corpses that Enya had brought along with her to this battleground let Alice relax just that much more, even as she found herself wondering for a moment just where in the hell she’d gotten those corpses and been able to move them into place pretty much under the respective noses of her and her forces.

 

Still, that kind of thing wasn’t important, so Alice put it out of her mind as she and Jotaro closed with Enya at last.

 

=SC=

 

Smirking as he, Dio, caught sight of his sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo, he chuckled as he called out his glorious Stand once again. There could truly be only one fate for such betrayal as Enya had so willingly committed, and he, Dio, was going to relish delivering it. Just as he’d beheld the gathering forces of his sweet sister – as well as both his Little Jojo and his Littlest Jojo – he, Dio, called out to his glorious Stand once more.

 

“The World: time be still!”

 

The sensation of his glorious Stand halting the gears of time once again brought a wide, pleased grin back to his face as he leaped into the air. There was something special that he, Dio, had prepared for such a moment. Something that would make quite the impact on the foolish woman who had dared to cross him in such a way as that young fool had dared to do.

 

=SC=

 

It seemed like he’d just blinked, when he and Aunt Alice had caught up to that old hag who was trying to attack her for whatever stupid reason that’d come into her head, when-

 

“What the hell?” he found himself almost forced to say. “Where the fuck did Uncle Dio get a steamroller?”

 

Aunt Alice laughed softly. “Well, you know how he likes to prepare for these things.”

 

Turning to look over at his aunt as she seemed to study the sight of the steamroller – seriously, a fucking steamroller – that had been dropped down on her from out of what had looked like a clear sky, Jotaro wondered just what in the hell Uncle Dio had been thinking when he’d picked that thing up. And just where in the hell he’d been able to find the thing in the first place. Still, it wasn’t like Uncle Dio was likely to tell him, so Jotaro tried not to think about that kind of thing.

 

The ten of them – some of the people from Aunt Alice’s company, the Old Man and Avdol, and what seemed to be one of the old hag’s mercenaries who’d actually had the sense to jump ship before Aunt Alice had been forced to deal with her personally – all met up in the center of the city.

 

“Well, I suppose that’s one way of dealing with a troublesome Stand user,” Aunt Alice said, sounding fairly amused; though nowhere near as much as Uncle Dio clearly was.

 

“Of course, sister dear,” Uncle Dio said, grinning in that way of his that told anyone who saw him that he didn’t have a single regret about whatever it was that he’d done. “You’ve never known me to do anything by half-measures, have you?”

 

“No, I suppose not,” Aunt Alice said, giving Uncle Dio that same look she always gave him when he’d done something dumb.

Chapter 40: Mamma Mia

Chapter Text

When she’d sent Wham, Tarkus, and Domenico back to Italy – Tarkus in particular being eager to get back to his seemingly endless sparring with Wham – she’d almost been expecting it when Domenico had asked for a couple days’ leave to reconnect with Enrico at Dio’s mansion, and granting it was a simple matter of contacting Caesar and letting him know that Domenico was going to be away from Italy for at least a few days. She’d also made sure to let him know that Mariah was going to be meeting with him, since she’d taken the offer of employment that Alice had made her when the pair of them had met.

 

Once the remainder of their group had returned to Dio’s mansion again, Alice allowed herself to relax from the state of determined alertness that she’d had to remain in while confronting Enya and her band of mercenary Stand users. Sure, physical tension wasn’t a problem for a vampire like her or Dio, but mental tension was of course a different story. It was good to be back, under the circumstances.

 

Making her way back to the room that Dio had built and furnished for her to use while she stayed in this particular mansion, Alice smiled slightly as she saw the shelf full of model planes and aircraft that Dio had obviously collected for her when he had been decorating the room for her. The shelf itself stretched the length of the wall on the left side of the room, and came up to Alice’s waist when she made her way over to examine it.

 

=SC=

 

When he and the rest of his weird family – and Aunt Alice, of course – had all made their way back to Uncle Dio’s mansion again, Jotaro had found himself feeling a lot more settled about things. Looks like Pucci knew what he was talking about, he mused, smirking as he made his way back to the kitchen to fix himself something to eat. The sound of fluttering wings drew his attention, just as Star tossed a neatly-sliced bit of ham over his left shoulder.

 

Chuckling softly as he glanced over at the perch where Pet Shop had landed, Jotaro turned his attention back to what he was actually going to eat.

 

When he’d finally decided on fixing himself a steak topped with sautéed mushrooms, the sound of hurried footsteps – familiar footsteps – brought Jotaro up short, just as Star had finished bringing him a cutting board, a steak knife, and the wrapped cuts of meat that Uncle Dio had stocked his fridge with.

 

“Jotaro, honey, I’m so glad that you and Uncle Dio had a good time out there,” Mom said, and Jotaro could see her smiling brightly through Star’s eyes as she hugged him from behind. “Now, what- Oh, here, let me fix that for you, sweetie!” she said, gently nudging him aside as she hurried to put on one of the brightly colored aprons hanging from a trio of hooks on the far wall.

 

“Mom, I can-”

 

“Oh, don’t worry about it, sweetie,” Mom said, grinning all the wider as she came back with a pink polka dotted apron firmly tied around her waist. “You just let me take care of everything!”

 

Coughing into his right fist to hide a smile, Jotaro left the kitchen; he knew that there was no point in trying to argue with Mom when she was in one of these moods of hers. He’d tried it once, and once was enough to know just how futile that kind of thing was.

 

=SC=

 

Taking a deep breath as she started gathering and preparing all the spices for the sauce that Jotaro liked on his steak, Holly set out the mushrooms that Jotaro had clearly been about to cut up for himself before  he started them sautéing. Tossing them all up into the air, she hit them with a few Hamon-charged taps of her fingers, smiling as the remains of the dirt that had been clinging to them exploded out into the air with a soft poof. Evening out her breathing again, she tossed the mushrooms back into the air, hitting them with precise bursts of Hamon to cut them neatly apart.

 

Making her way over to the large refrigerator at the far end of the kitchen, Holly got out a stick of butter, carried it over to the rack of cookware so that she could pick up a frying pan, set it down near the bowl of mushrooms that she’d previously prepared, sliced it in half, then set that half in the pan so that it could heat up while she put back the butter. Picking up a slotted spoon so that she’d be able to stir both the butter and the mushrooms as they cooked, Holly smiled just that much wider as she made her way back to the stove again.

 

Jotaro was such a good boy, trying to give her a break by cooking for himself.

 

=SC=

 

The sound of fluttering wings drew his attention, and Jotaro glanced over at the perch by the coffee table for a long moment, before a slight tug on the back of his head drew his attention to what Pet Shop was really doing.

 

“Stop trying to preen my hair,” he said, turning so he could give an annoyed glare at the falcon as it perched on the back of the couch he’d been lounging on.

 

Pet Shop gave him his usual unimpressed look, fluffing his feathers up before beginning to preen himself. Rolling his eyes, Jotaro settled back down on the couch. Lifting up his left arm so that the falcon could land on it, Jotaro moved him over to the perch that had been set up in the huge sitting room, beside the coffee table he was sitting at. A lot of places had been set up in the house for Pet Shop, since the falcon was pretty much given the run of anywhere that Uncle Dio lived, or that was what Jotaro had heard from Aunt Alice when he’d asked her about that kind of thing.

 

“My hair just does that,” he said, in response to a disapproving caw from the falcon perching to his left. “I brushed it this morning.”

 

Turning back to the small shelf of books that had been set by the coffee table he was seated at, Jotaro flipped through them and picked out one of the Calvin and Hobbes collection that stuck out from the shelf. Chuckling softly as he opened the book, Jotaro settled back into the couch.

 

=SC=

 

When he, Dio, had seen the control that his adorable Littlest Jojo had demonstrated over the Stand that had been granted to him by the efforts that he had gone to when he’d paid his first visit to his sweet little puppy’s grave, he’d found himself rather pleased by the whole matter. However, there was also something else that he, Dio, could do for his cute Littlest Jojo. To that end, he’d gone in search of Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend.

 

The pair of them, and in particular their Stands, would provide some amusement for the his Littlest Jojo, and perhaps the pair of them, as well.

 

He’d eventually managed to find the pair of them in the shaded balcony that he’d had set up, in preparation for the garden that he’d been setting up for those who would be coming to the spa that he would soon be running, and he, Dio, found himself smiling as he paused for a moment to watch his Little Lori painting while her adorable boyfriend sat next to her with the look of someone who was enthralled by what he was seeing happen. Moving closer he, Dio, found that Little Lori was painting her own interpretation of the garden that he and his underlings were slowly working to create as a place where those who would eventually come to his spa would be able to enjoy alongside those members of his family that would be staying in this mansion of his when the spa of his was up and fully functioning.

 

It was a rather beautiful thing, he had to admit.

 

Pausing to await the completion of the work that Little Lori was pouring so much of her heart and time into, knowing from his own time spent with his sweet sister when she had had the time to paint for her own enjoyment he, Dio, smiled as he continued on his way over to Little Lori’s side.

 

“That’s a wonderful painting, Little Lori,” he, Dio, said as he stepped over to where the pair of them were seated, looking out over the expanse of the freshly-planted garden.

 

He, Dio, had little enough interest in what an average human would have seen when they looked over the expanse, but there was a certain sense of promise about each and every one of the young trees, shrubs, and flowers that had been planted in elegant, sweeping patterns throughout the expanse. He could see what this place would become, given enough time to grow and he, Dio, rather enjoyed the thought.

 

“Thanks,” Little Lori said, pausing for a moment as she recalled just what it was that he, Dio, had said to her so many times before. “Dio. Was there something else you wanted to talk about?”

 

“Indeed,” he said, smiling brightly as he caught sight of the interested expression beginning to appear on the adorable face of her boyfriend. “There is something that I, Dio, wish to speak to the both of you about.”

 

Moving to stand between the pair of them he, Dio, leaned in with a conspiratorial smile on his face.

 

=SC=

 

He’d moved into the dining room when Mom had brought out the steak he’d been about to cook for himself, and the sound of Pet Shop’s fluttering wings had brought a a small half-smile to his face, even though he knew just what it was that the falcon was interested in. Tossing a bit of the steak he was eating to Pet Shop as the falcon fluttered over his head to land on the nearby perch, Jotaro chuckled softly as he cracked open the bottle of root beer that Mom had brought out for him. Before he could take another bite, however, the prickling sense of anticipation began creeping up his spine.

 

Looking around at the room he was seated in, even as Star appeared beside him with his fists raised, Jotaro found that it was just as empty as it was when he’d made his way into the room: just him, Pet Shop, and now Star himself. Though there was still the sense that someone or other was watching him, Jotaro couldn’t tell just what it was that they were planning to do, if anything. Sighing heavily as he called Star back, Jotaro tried to settle himself back down at the table again.

 

There was no point in letting whoever this was ruin the meal that he was eating, since it didn’t really seem like they were going to attack him or anything.

 

Once he’d finished his meal, Jotaro went to put his dishes in the sink, then called Star back to his side as he made his way back through the mansion. There was still that prickle of anticipation that had settled between his shoulder blades – just below his neck – that let Jotaro know that he hadn’t really managed to escape from whoever it was that was stalking him. Well, whoever it was that’d been setting off his nerves while he’d been trying to eat dinner.

 

Making his way out into the garden that Uncle Dio had clearly laid out and had planted, Jotaro jerked in surprise as he felt something slamming into his back. Whipping around as fast as he could, he saw something that looked like some kind of catlike thing – something that was probably another Stand, since it was way too brightly colored to be any kind of cat that he’d ever seen – was standing up in the branches of the closest tree to where he was standing. Narrowing his eyes as he caught sight of just what it was that the other Stand was holding in its mouth-

 

“Give me my hat!” he shouted, even as Star dashed forward to grab the Stand.

 

The damned thing was just that much faster than his own Stand, though, and so it managed to skip out of the range of Star’s arms as he reached for the thing, turning to make a run back into the mansion. Following in Star’s footsteps as the pair of them chased that bastard of a Stand that had stolen his hat, Jotaro found himself being led into one of the unfurnished rooms that had some kind of a purpose that he didn’t really know or care about. There were two other people sitting there; well, only the girl was actually sitting.

 

The bishonen-looking guy in the green school uniform was just leaning casually against the far wall; that catlike thing must have been his Stand, given the smug way the thing had been perching in the tree just before Star had made a lunge for it, curled up next to the girl and just sort of wagging its tail.

 

=SC=

 

The sight of the kid rushing into the room where he’d prepared his Stand – Mr. Brando, who insisted that everyone call him Dio, which still felt a bit too informal for Noriaki so early, had said that he was going to ask someone to help him and Loreena name them – brought a slight smile to his face.

 

“All right, I’ve found you!” Jotaro snarled – actually snarled, which almost made Noriaki chuckle – as he stomped into the room that he and Loreena were staying in. “Now give me back my hat!”

 

Wow, he really does like that hat of his, Noriaki mused, trying as hard as he could not to start snickering; the way Loreena was already doing, prompting Jotaro to glare at her. Jotaro’s own Stand, a big purple barbarian-looking thing with long, waving hair and what looked like some kind of fancy boots, was still trying to grab for Loreena’s Stand as it jumped around on the tendrils that Noriaki’s own Stand had lined the room. It seemed, however, that Jotaro’s Stand was just that much slower than Loreena’s own.

 

It also looked like Loreena’s Stand was also fast enough to make it look like it was doing some kind of ninja trick; almost like there was actually more than one of it.

 

=SC=

 

Grinding his teeth as that damned bishonen’s damned cat Stand dashed out of the range of Star’s fists, the brim of his hat still firmly clenched in the thing’s mouth, Jotaro called Star back to his side. Storming over to the bishonen – who seemed to be on the verge of outright laughing it him, and who as a consequence he really wanted to punch in the face – he narrows his eyes at the small smirk that settles firmly on the annoying bastard’s face.

 

“Give me my damned hat back, already,” he snarls in response to that smirk, and grinds his teeth again when all it prompts in return as a chuckle.

 

“Wow, he really wasn’t kidding about you and that hat of yours,” the annoying bishonen said.

 

And didn’t it just fucking figure that he’d have his hands in this, too. “Uncle Dio put you up to this,” he grumbled, knowing that this was just the kind of stupid thing that either his uncle or the Old Man would have been responsible for.

 

Hell, maybe the both of them had been in on it; it was in character for either of them, and so there was no real way of knowing just who’d been responsible for this pain-in-the-ass plan in the first place.

 

“He’s your uncle?” the girl who’d been sitting on the floor asked, having stood up just as he’d come into the room, the melon-man looking Stand that was probably hers forming the top half of its body out of those green tendrils that had been strung all around the ceiling of the room, looking down at him with that alien face of its.

 

“It’s a long story,” he said. “Now give me back my hat,” he snapped, holding out his right hand as he called Star back to his side again.

 

“All right,” the blonde girl said, laughing softly as she beckoned to- the cat that had been holding the brim of his hat in its mouth for as long as the three of them had been talking.

 

“Wait, that was your Stand?” he asked, looking from the green melon-man to the cat that had just given him his hat back. “You stole my hat?”

 

“I didn’t think you would actually chase me for it,” the girl said, laughing softly as her Stand made its way back over to where she was standing, sitting down next to her and wagging its tail.

 

“Well, I guess we know better now,” the bishonen said, though there was a look on his face that Jotaro didn’t particularly like.

 

Nearly before he could blink, Jotaro found his hat yanked right off his head – again! – this time by that damned melon-man Stand that the bishonen had clearly sent out after him just because he was being a bastard.

 

“Hey!” he snapped, just as the blonde girl yelled what seemed to be the bishonen’s name, sending Star after the melon-man that had grabbed his hat right off of his head, holding it in its hands and looking like it was actually taunting him as it clung to the wall near the ceiling. “Bastard!”

 

=SC=

 

The sound of the phone ringing drew Holly’s attention, just as she’d been making her way to the room that Uncle Dio had directed her to while she and her family were staying with him at his mansion in Cairo, and Holly almost immediately found that same phone right in her hand just as she’d been considering picking it up. Gaping for a moment, as she looked down at the phone in her right hand, Holly sighed briefly and put it to her ear.

 

“Hello?” she paused, waiting for a moment as the familiar voice on the other end of the line answered her. “Oh, Straizo! It’s nice to hear from you again! Did you want to speak to Aunt Alice?” she paused again, nodding. “All right, I’ll go get her!”

 

Hurrying up the stairs, after having gotten confirmation from Straizo as to what Aunt Alice’s retainer wanted from her, Holly laughed softly; Straizo had actually sounded frazzled as he was talking to her. And, while Holly knew that it wasn’t nice to laugh at that kind of thing, but with the way that Straizo was always so calm and collected when he talked, hearing some actual emotion in his voice couldn’t help but be funny. At least a little bit, anyway.

 

=SC=

 

The sound of a familiar set of footsteps making their way up to her door drew Alice’s attention, just as she’d finished examining the well-stocked bookshelves perpendicular to the wall that held the model plane, airship, and spacecraft collection that Dio had assembled for her either before or after he’d gotten himself and Joseph banned for life from FAO Schwarz, and Alice made for the door once again.

 

“Holly,” she greeted, smiling and then raising an eyebrow as she way the expression on the younger woman’s face. “What’s on your mind?”

 

“Straizo is on the phone for you,” Holly said, obviously trying not to burst into outright laughter as the pair of them spoke to each other.

 

“Well, then, I suppose I should go find out what he wants,” she said, though she was beginning to suspect just what it was that had been getting to her retainer; really, there were few enough things that could.

 

Once she’d made her way down to the phone, settled neatly on the table – ornate as everything in Dio’s mansions tended to be – Alice picked it back up.

 

“He’s getting antsy again, isn’t he?” she asked, in a tone that said that she was already fully aware of what was going on.

 

“Yes,” Straizo said, her retainer’s tone actually noticeably tight with tension; it was the kind of thing that no one who didn’t know him as well as she and hers did would likely be able to hear, but it was there all the same. “He’s been getting underfoot to a much greater extent than usual.”

 

“I suppose I should speak to Dio, then,” she said, knowing how her brother felt about dogs in general – and Iggy in particular – but also fully aware that Iggy was devious enough to find his own way to get to her if she didn’t bring him over soon. “Everything else aside, Iggy’s not the patient type.”

 

“Yes,” Straizo said, and she could just see him narrowing his eyes in annoyance; either that, or he was glaring down at Iggy.

 

“Iggy,” she said sharply, in response to the excited barking that she could hear on the other end of the line. “I know this kind of thing isn’t easy for you, but I want you to keep a lid on it until I send for you. Understand?” narrowing her eyes in response to the distinctly wheedling whining coming more clearly over their connection, as Iggy presumably lifted himself up to the level of the receiver with that sand-construct that was presumably his Stand.

 

Glancing down the hall as another set of familiar footfalls began making their way closer to where she currently was, Alice raised an eyebrow as she caught sight of Avdol.

 

“Ms. Brando, it seems as though we will soon be joined by a rather troublesome presence,” said the Egyptian that her capricious twin had set his sights on for the present; though it wasn’t as if she couldn’t see why.

 

“Another of your Tarot readings?” she asked, feeling rather amused; it certainly seemed as though those kind of things had a great deal more sway here and now than they’d had Before.

 

At least, given what she could still remember from Before.

 

“Yes,” Avdol said, smiling gently as he began shuffling those cards of his once more. “However, it also seems as though we will soon be meeting new people, as well.”

 

“Something auspicious, it sounds like,” she said, leaning against the wall beside the table that the phone had been set up on top of.

 

“Indeed,” Avdol nodded, the calm smile on his face growing just that much wider. “The pair of them will be coming to this place in search of answers, but if we welcome them as friends, then we will be able to gain steadfast and dedicated allies for the future.”

 

“That’s good to know,” she said, cradling the phone and wondering for a long moment just who it was that was going to show up at their place next.

 

Still, the fact that it wasn’t going to end up being another one of Enya’s hired goons was a good thing, at least.

 

=SC=

 

“Has the image at the back changed?” his brother asked, as the pair of them pressed on through the streets of Cairo.

 

Flipping to the back of his comic again, Boingo found himself staring at the four-armed goddess that had been on the back-cover of his comic ever since Thoth had first manifested itself. “Yeah; it seems like we’re on the path that Fate wants us to take.”

 

“All right,” his brother said, nodding sharply as he made the decision that Fate was leading them to. “Who are we going to meet when we make it to this mansion?”

 

Flipping back to the next page that had been revealed, Boingo studied it. “A woman is going to be the first one that we see when we get there,” he said, wondering if the flowering vines that he could see wrapped around her arms and behind her head like a halo was her Stand, or just meant that she was a kind person.

Chapter 41: Lay All Your Love On Me

Chapter Text

Chapter Note: Dio pretty much reaches Peak Creepy in this chapter, and he has access to timestop.

 

The sound of a couple, sharp knocks at the door drew Holly up short, just as she’d been on her way to the kitchen to start dinner. And, while she did remember that Uncle Dio had… different dietary needs, and didn’t really need to eat, she also knew that he enjoyed having actual meals every once in awhile; particularly when she was the one to cook them. She could remember him saying that every time that she and the rest of her family had been invited to stay with him at one of the mansions that he’d had built, and she was happy to do these little things for him. When she made her way over to the door to answer it she found a pair of strange people standing there.

 

“Good afternoon,” she said, looking over the strange people who’d come to Uncle Dio’s mansion for whatever reason.

 

“Hello,” the tall man with a hat that kind of reminded her of Jotaro’s, at least in a way, though it was a lot taller than her son’s.

 

“Thank you for being so cordial, miss,” the tall man said, as the little boy with the comic clutched in his arms looked shyly up at her. “May we come in?”

 

“I’ll have to talk to my uncle about that,” she said, knowing that while Uncle Dio did enjoy meeting new people, he didn’t like having just anyone being invited into his holdings.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way to the other side of his room he, Dio, looked down at the ornate pocket watch that his sweet sister had bought for him quite a long time ago; one that he’d had repaired more than a few times as the years since his dear Alice had purchased it for him with some of the funds that their company had generated in the early days of its existence. Before it had begun to become the vast, international juggernaut that their company stood as today.

 

It seemed that his World’s current limit for holding the gears of time stood at four seconds; he could only hope that such would be enough time for what he, Dio, had planned.

 

When his World was forced to release the gears of time he, Dio, heard the sounds of hurried footfalls making their way to the room that he had set up for himself when he’d first been laying down the plans for the mansion where he and his lovely family were staying. Making his way over to the door as his World followed in his footsteps he, Dio, opened it, grinning widely as he saw his sweet little baby Holly standing in that same door.

 

“Baby Holly,” he, Dio, greeted. “Is there something you wished to talk to me about?” he asked, catching sight of the expression on her face and wondering just what it was that had drawn her to him at this time and place.

 

“There are people at the door,” baby Holly said, the concern on her face seeming to be more that he, Dio, would not approve of those who had come to visit them than about what those same people might try to do.

 

And truly, with so many of his and Alice’s sweet family now in possession of the glorious power that he, Dio, had been granted by the Stone Arrow that he’d allowed Enya – fool that she’d unfortunately turned out to be – to fire at him when she’d informed him of just what it could do, there was little enough that any of them would need to worry about from this day onward.

 

“Well then, I suppose I should go see just what it is that these newcomers want,” he, Dio, said, grinning cheerfully at baby Holly as he wrapped his left arm around her shoulders and gently guided her back out of his room.

 

Time would tell just what these newcomers had truly come to his Cairo holdings for, but he had to confess to at least a modicum of curiosity about the matter.

 

=SC=

 

Knowing that Mr. Brando would pester him incessantly – or just flirt with him all the more outrageously, which was almost more of an annoyance than simply being pestered by the man – he’d called the three whose Stands had not yet been granted names down to the expansive living room, keeping his deck of Tarot cards close by so that he would be able to give them their proper names. Names that would allow their users to bond all the more closely with the Stands that they had been granted, as well as to make it more simple for those who would be using them in combat to call for them when they needed such aid in battle.

 

Once the three of them – Noriaki Kakyoin, Loreena McKennitt, and his friend’s daughter Holly Kujo – had all made their way over to the table where he was sitting, Muhammad Avdol looked up at them.

 

“It’s good to see that all of you came so promptly,” he said, smiling gently as the three of them all arrayed themselves on a nearby couch, turning to look at him as they finished settling themselves down.

 

“You said you were going to help us find names for our Stands?” Noriaki said, and there was a definite thread of curiosity in the young man’s voice.

 

“Yes,” he said, nodding as he began shuffling the deck in his hands; he had already gotten to know the three of them well enough to determine what kind of people they were.

 

Now, he simply had to find out just what kind of names that the cards of fate would give to their Stands. As he shuffled the deck again, half-closing his eyes as he meditated for a long moment upon the kind of people that he had found these three to be. His gaze settling for a long moment on young Noriaki Kakyoin, Avdol drew the first of his Tarot cards.

 

“The Hierophant,” he said, considering just what such a card said about the young man seated before him. “Therefore, I will give your Stand the name Hierophant Green,” turning his gaze to Loreena, even as Noriaki repeated the name that he had given to his Stand in a thoughtful sort of way. “The Ace of Swords,” he paused for a moment, smiling slightly as he recalled the story of the meeting that had taken place between the two young people seated before him. “I will, hence, grant your Stand the name Crimson Ace,” smiling all the wider as he turned his gaze to Holly Kujo, who was beginning to lean forward with a definite air of anticipation on her face; truly, he was almost entirely certain as to what name the cards of fate would give to her Stand. “The Queen of Cups,” he said.

 

“Oh, that’s a lovely name!” Holly exclaimed, before he could think of a more proper name for the Stand that Mrs. Kujo had been granted.

 

“Well, I suppose we’ll call your Stand Queen of Cups, then,” he said, smiling back at Mrs. Kujo as the four of them all began to rise from their seats.

 

Noriaki Kakyoin and Loreena McKennitt both went off together, just the way he’d been expecting them to do considering how close they’d been when he’d first seen them, and Mrs. Kujo made her own way back up into the upper-storey of the mansion they were all currently staying in.

 

=SC=

 

When all of the members of their lovely family – including his sweet sister, as she’d had nothing to keep her up, no projects or the like that needed attending to for their company – had all settled down for the night, with even the guests that baby Holly had invited over and Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend finding places for themselves to stay he, Dio, knew that the best time to make his move had come. Making his way up into the rafters, where there would be even less chance of someone catching a glimpse of him when they desired a late-night snack, or else to use the facilities. At least, those who had not been granted such amenities in their own rooms.

 

Chuckling as he, Dio, began making his way up a nearby wall to the second-storey of the mansion that he and his were all staying in, he took a moment to regain his composure before he began moving again. There would be no point, after all, in concealing his actions from those around him if he were simply caught by the basest kind of chance. Holding himself still for a long moment, looking down at the door that stood before the room his dear Alice was staying in for the duration of the time she would be able to stay with him.

 

Calling his World back to his side once more he, Dio, whispered a specific instruction into his glorious Stand’s hidden ears.

 

Once the gears of time had been stopped, held firm in their place by the mighty hands of his glorious Stand he, Dio, leaped easily down from the wall and made his way over to the door. Slipping into the room where his sweet sister was resting, untroubled by the affairs of their company or any projects that she might have started during the course of her work for the company that the pair of them had created over the course of their long lives. Making his way over to the bed she was currently laying in, wrapped in the soft cotton sheets and the down comforter that he, Dio, had provided for her, he looked down at the pocket watch that he, Dio, had brought in with him for just this sort of an occasion.

 

One second had passed.

 

Running his tongue over his top two fangs as he opened his overcoat in order to gain access to the tools that he, Dio, had brought to this place for just such an occasion as this – the plans that he, Dio, had been concocting ever since he had discovered the true power of his glorious World – he took out the needle and the vial that he had brought in with him and leaned up and over the foot of the bed that his dear Alice was laying in.

 

Two seconds had passed.

 

Flipping the coverlet away from his sweet sister’s body he, Dio, crawled his way up the length of her legs to her slender waist. Chuckling softly as he leaned down to nuzzle her left hand – as that was the one closest to where he currently was – he, Dio, swept his right hand under the elastic of the cotton sleepwear his sweet sister was currently attired in, pulling both layers of clothing firmly down. Firmly resisting the urge to hum as he worked he, Dio, gently nudged his sweet sister’s knees apart.

 

Three seconds had passed.

 

Setting his sweet sister’s clothing back to rights again he, Dio, leaned back down to plant a gentle kiss in the palm of his dear Alice’s left hand, before climbing down and wrapping her back up in the blankets and coverlets that he’d pulled off. Setting them firmly back to rights, so that his sweet sister would have no reason to suspect that anything untoward had happened he, Dio, hurried out of the room and firmly closed the door behind him.

 

Four seconds passed; time resumed.

 

Ducking once again into the recesses of the rafters, concealing himself carefully from anyone who might chance to be out and about at this late hour, and those who might chance to look up he, Dio, laid his right hand over the pocket where he had stored the vial that now held the precious samples that he had taken such care to harvest. Now, all he would need was a surrogate. And such a thing will be quite easy, considering the talents that I, Dio, possess.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way down to the main dining room, Hierophant Green testing the limits of their current range by stretching itself along the high ceilings of the wide hallway he was making his way through, Noriaki leaned gently against Loreena’s right side as the pair of them continued on their way.

 

“This is such a strange place,” he said, pausing for a moment as he caught sight of Mr. Brando waving up at him through Hierophant Green’s eyes; concentrating for a moment, he made Hierophant wave back.

 

“I know,” Loreena said, smiling gently at him as the pair of them continued on their way down the stairs and then through the rest of the hall to the dining room. “I mean, I knew that Mr. Brando was eccentric, but I didn’t really expect him to be so,” Loreena said, laughing softly as she called out Crimson Ace and let it scamper down the stairs in front of them. “Determined.”

 

“I guess that’s one word for it,” he said, smirking as he thought back on the way that Mr. Brando had been flirting with Mr. Avdol for the entire day, even trying to sit in the man’s lap and kiss him while he and Loreena were still in the same room.

 

Mr. Avdol had pushed him off, with the sort of long-suffering expression on his face that said almost more clearly than words that he’d dealt with that same kind of thing more than a few times in the past. It was kind of funny, though he’d tried not to laugh while he’d actually been watching it happen, since that would have been rude and he didn’t want to offend the man who’d invited them into his home and allowed them to stay with what seemed to be his family.

 

“Oi, hat thieves,” a familiar, gruff voice echoed down to them, and Noriaki looked back to see Jotaro Kujo himself making his way down the stairs. “You’re not planning to try again, are you?”

 

I certainly wasn’t,” Loreena said, laughing as Jotaro turned an annoyed glance on her, then turned the full force of his attention to Noriaki himself.

 

It was almost like being interrogated in complete silence; Noriaki folded his arms, smirking back at Jotaro as the other teen stared at him.

 

“I’ll think about it,” he said, as Hierophant Green curled around his shoulders, forming itself briefly into the tendrils that he had strung all over the ceiling in that unfurnished room that the three of them had first truly met in.

 

He could almost feel Jotaro’s glare boring into his back, but he of course reserved his attention for Loreena, even as she briefly palmed her face, muffling chuckles even as she did so. Leaning in close to Loreena again, Noriaki smiled softly as she wrapped her right arm around his neck.

 

=SC=

 

Grumbling softly as that annoying bishonen hat thief continued on his way down the stairs, cuddling with what was probably his girlfriend as the pair of them continued on their way to the main dining room, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he turned over just how to get back at him for not only stealing his hat but also being so stuck up about it. The girl wasn’t so bad, since it seemed like she’d just gotten carried away when Uncle Dio had put her up to that damned prank. He knew that Uncle Dio was annoyingly good at getting people to do stupid stuff when he wanted them to.

 

It was annoying as all hell, but it was also the same kind of thing that Aunt Alice could do; still, it wasn’t like she would go out of her way to piss him off for no reason.

 

Breathing slowly and deeply, bringing up the flowing Hamon that Uncle Caesar had taught him, Mom, and most of the other members of their family to use, he summoned Star again. The Stand was grinning at him, and Jotaro smirked back. There were other ways of dealing with someone than just beating them up, after all.

 

After breakfast, which had been fixed by both Mom and that pantsless weirdo Vanilla Ice – one of Uncle Dio’s other hangers-on, and one who actually did act like those annoying girls back at school – Jotaro made his way back out of the kitchen after the annoying bishonen who had been acting so high-and-mighty since the pair of them had first met. Sending out Star to help him look, Jotaro found himself being led out to the back of the house to the garden that Uncle Dio and whoever he’d had working on the place had set up.

 

“Good morning, Jotaro,” the bishonen’s girlfriend – who was nice enough that Jotaro had made up his mind that he was going to try as hard as he could to remember her name – said, smiling brightly at him for a moment before she turned back to that painting she was working on. “It’s nice to see you again.”

 

“Yeah,” he said, nodding briefly to her as he made his way over to that annoying bishonen; the bishonen who had turned to smirk at him even as he’d made his way over to where he was standing.

 

Or really, leaning against the railing that ran along the edge of the covered balcony that overlooked the still-unfinished garden.

 

“Well, good morning to you, Jotaro,” the annoying bishonen said, smirk widening just enough that Jotaro wanted to put both his and Star’s fists through it.

 

Not to mention the fact that he hadn’t even bothered using any kind of honorific when he talked; it wasn’t like they were speaking in English at the moment, or anything.

 

“Are you guys fighting, or something?” the girl asked, and Jotaro tried to remember just what her name was, since she was easy-going enough not to be annoying.

 

“You don’t have to worry,” he said, switching back to English so he could reassure her; he still wondered just what in the hell her name was.

 

“Yeah, Loreena,” the annoying bishonen said, starting to grin again; that was at least one thing he could be grateful to the guy for, though. “We’re just having a nice talk.”

 

“As long as you don’t break anything,” Loreena said, with the same kind of look on her face that Aunt Alice would give Uncle Dio when he did something dumb. “I’m pretty sure Mr. Brando would kick both your arses, family or not.”

 

He barked a chuckle, turning to smirk back at Loreena where she was sitting. “I’m pretty sure Uncle Dio knew what he was getting into when he put you and your boyfriend up to this, Loreena-chan.”

 

Loreena shook her head, palming her face as she turned back to her painting in a resigned sort of way. “All right, just don’t drag too many people into this little spat of yours.”

 

“No worries, Loreena-chan,” the annoying bishonen said, grinning briefly back at her, before his grin melted back into the smirk he’d been wearing when Jotaro had gone to confront him. “Me and Jotaro are getting along just fine.”

 

“Sure you are,” Loreena said, in that same way that Aunt Alice would have said that kind of thing; hell, the look on her face was a lot like the ones that Aunt Alice would wear when she would berate Uncle Dio for doing something dumb.

 

Hell, it was pretty weird.

 

=SC=

 

When he and Jotaro Kujo, the weird kid who he and Loreena had met up with a few days ago, made their way back to the unfurnished room where the three of them had met in the first place, Noriaki looked back at the Stand that Jotaro had called out. It looked like some kind of ancient-style, loincloth-wearing barbarian man with no ears. One that also happened to be purple, of all colors.

 

It was about the strangest thing that he’d seen; well, at least as far as Stands went.

 

“So, you’re the one who wanted this fight, Jotaro,” he said, smirking as he called out Hierophant Green, the Stand hovering around his shoulders as he and Jotaro faced off with each other.

 

“Shut up,” the other boy grumbled, sending out that Stand of his. “Star Platinum!”

 

Glancing for a moment at Hierophant Green, Noriaki smirked as his Stand darted up to the ceiling, yanking him up and out of the way of the punch from Jotaro’s Stand that would have otherwise flattened him where he was standing. Chuckling as he and Hierophant Green positioned themselves: on the other side of Jotaro, and up near the ceiling, respectively, Noriaki signaled to his Stand in that way that the pair of them had been able to do since he’d first become truly aware of each other.

 

“Emerald Splash!”

 

Narrowing his eyes, even as he felt his habitual smirk widening into a grin as he and Jotaro turned their Stands to face each other more squarely, Noriaki found himself chuckling almost against his will as Jotaro’s Stand blocked the Emerald Splash with its crossed arms.

 

“Your Stand is very powerful,” he said, grinning as he folded his own arms, calling back Hierophant so that he wouldn’t be caught off-guard by anything that Jotaro might send his Stand out to do. “I don’t know of anyone else who could block the Emerald Splash.”

 

Yare yare. I didn’t know Stands could even do that,” Jotaro said, cocking his head in an interested sort of way.

 

“Well, I don’t know if any others can,” he said, smirking as the pair of them circled each other briefly. “But, that’s one of the things that my Hierophant can do.”

 

Jotaro scoffed, though it didn’t really seem like he was trying to make fun of Noriaki or dismiss his Hierophant or anything; really, it just seemed to be the kind of person he was. “Right; whatever that means.”

 

It was Noriaki’s turn to scoff, then, feeling more than a bit amused by the whole thing. “I guess you haven’t seen many Stands, then.”

 

=SC=

 

Humming as he, Dio, made his way back down the grand halls of his mansion, he reflected back upon the fruits of his day’s labors. He had indeed managed to find a surrogate to host the sample that he had collected from his sweet sister only just last night, someone by the name of Shiobana, who had fortuitously been vacationing in Cairo and had even more fortuitously been perfectly amenable to acting as the surrogate that he, Dio, had been in need of. All she had wanted in return was something of a stipend, in order to continue the life that she had become accustomed to.

 

It was, of course, nothing that he, Dio, couldn’t manage.

 

Having asked Vanilla Ice to keep an eye on her, and to make sure that she got everything she needed in order to care for the child that she would soon be the mother of, at least, so far as anyone else would know, he felt a great deal more content about matters. Folding his arms behind his back as he, Dio, began to hear the sounds of what seemed to be some kind of Stand battle. Turning his path to where it was that he could hear those distinct sounds coming from he, Dio, smirked as he caught sight of his Littlest Jojo and Little Lori’s adorable boyfriend.

 

It seemed as though this was more of a sparring match than an actual fight, considering the amusement lurking in both of their expressions as they faced off with each other; it was rather interesting, all told.

 

His thoughts naturally drifted back to Little Lori herself, and how slowly the pair of them seemed to be moving with their relationship. And yes, he was perfectly aware that his sweet sister would have advised him not to meddle in such a matter, citing the dislike that most people possessed for those who would attempt to play matchmaker in such things, but watching the pair of them moving at a veritable snail’s pace was rather troublesome. He would have to do something about that.

Chapter 42: We Are

Chapter Text

Pausing for a moment to study the form of Little Lori as she continued painting her beautiful masterpiece he, Dio, found himself smiling in a fond sort of nostalgia. He also found himself wondering if his sweet Alice could still find the time for herself to paint, in the way that she had done back when they had been not only children, but also simple humans living in the Joestar estate back in the English countryside. He wondered about that, and almost without his consciously willing it he, Dio, found his World standing beside him.

 

The pair of them shared a deep gaze into each other’s eyes and then he, Dio, smiled softly. After all, if his World could indeed halt the gears of time, then such a thing could indeed present a way for him to present his dear Alice with something wonderful. Still, there was also the matter of Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend.

 

He would have to find something to bring the pair of them closer together; they truly did make a sweet couple.

 

=SC=

 

Once he and that annoying bishonen – Noriaki Kakyoin, though he still wasn’t going to think of him as anything but the annoying bishonen he’d proved himself to be on so many occasions – had finished showing off their Stands to each other, about as much as they’d been trying to beat the shit out of each other with them, Jotaro made his way back to his room to get some rest.

 

Then, recalling that the Old Man was staying here and would probably want to come to his room and pester him about something or other, Jotaro turned to head for Aunt Alice’s room. It was the one place that he’d be able to get some peace from the Old Man and his endless capacity to annoy him, and Jotaro knew that Aunt Alice would be willing and able to toss the Old Man out on his ass if he tried to come in there and irritate them. Knocking on the door, he smiled slightly when Aunt Alice came to open it.

 

“Jotaro,” she greeted, her right eyebrow raised slightly in that way she had of questioning someone without actually having to say a single thing.

 

“You mind if I stay here for a bit?” he asked, sticking his hands in his pockets as he stood outside the door.

 

“Joseph?” she asked, a soft smirk on her face as she stepped aside to let him make his way into her room.

 

“Yeah,” he said, smirking slightly as he made his way inside.

 

“Dio gave me another walk-in closet,” she said, an amused expression on her face as she stepped behind him to close the door as he made his way inside. “I haven’t really started to fill the thing yet, so you’ll have a fair amount of room if you want to stay in there.”

 

He chuckled, continuing on his way inside, pleased that he wouldn’t have to deal with the Old Man if he wanted to come around and annoy him for some stupid reason.

 

=SC=

 

Humming cheerfully as he, Dio, made his way back from the chemist, he turned briefly to watch as Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend sat with each other and their respective Stands. And yes, it did seem as though the pair of them might indeed begin to make a more than token effort with respect to their courtship, but there was still no telling just when or how they would ultimately come out if he, Dio, didn’t properly intervene. Really, the pair of them should truly think him for what he was going to do.

 

Both of them had seemed rather lonely, though Little Lori handled such a thing with a great deal more aplomb than her adorable boyfriend.

 

Settling back into his room with his purchases he, Dio, began carefully putting them away so that he would be able to conceal them from those who might chance to get a look inside his room for whatever reason. He would also have to make a point of speaking to Vanilla Ice about preparing some special meals for Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend; something that would put them on the proper path with regards to their relationship.

 

=SC=

 

Mommy… Shuddering as he continued on his way through the streets of Cairo, J Geil rubbed his arms to try to keep himself together. He’d felt the sheer weight of whatever kind of force had just crushed his poor mother, and had found himself falling to the ground. Luckily, he’d managed to drag himself into a secluded alley, so that no one else had been able to interfere with him while he was weak and all but helpless. Mother had told him that she was going to meet with that horrible woman who had attacked him back when he’d been in France with that girl.

 

And then… He shuddered again, leaning against the wall of the building whose shadow he was standing in. there weren’t many windows in the alley he was standing in, so he wouldn’t be able to send the Hanged Man out to take revenge for his poor mother on the ignorant people milling all around him, so he had to get somewhere that he could do something like that. Mother didn’t deserve to die alone and forgotten, after all.

 

=SC=

 

Tapping his way down the hall, N’Doul lifted his head and sniffed the air, smiling as he continued on his way to the dining room; it seemed as though dinner was ready. The clatter of serving dishes and cutlery made a slightly unpleasant background as he settled himself down in his accustomed chair.

 

“So, Uncle Dio, tell us more about this girl you met,” Holly Kujo chirruped, and N’Doul could almost hear the wide, cheerful smile that she was wearing on her face.

 

That was just the kind of person that Holly Kujo seemed to be; truly, she seemed to endeavor to bring whatever happiness that she could to anyone and everyone that chanced to come into contact with her. It was one of the many reasons that he could understand Lord Dio’s desire to protect her, leaving aside the fact that she was a close member of his family. Holly Kujo was not a woman who should be exposed to the cruelties and savagery of the world; it was something that every member of Lord Dio’s entourage could agree upon.

 

Smiling softly as Lord Dio discussed the woman that he had brought into their midst in order to bear the child that it seemed that she was carrying on his behalf, N’Doul thanked Joseph as he handed over a plate of meatloaf and settled more comfortably into his chair. It was at moments such as this that N’Doul found himself all the more grateful for Alice Brando and everything that she had done for him.

 

She was not a woman who would allow the simple-minded fools in the world to dictate what was good and what was evil, after all.

 

=SC=

 

Once they’d all finished dinner, even Aunt Alice and Uncle Dio who didn’t actually eat, Jotaro excused himself from the table and made his way back to his room. At least long enough to throw the Old Man off his trail, anyway. Sending Star into the rafters, to keep an eye out for the Old Man while he was in his room, and then quickly left for Aunt Alice’s room. Sure, he knew that he wouldn’t be able to do this kind of thing forever, since even as annoying as the Old Man was he wasn’t an idiot.

 

Well, not that much of one, anyway.

 

“Jotaro,” Aunt Alice said, smirking slightly as she stepped out of his way. “Careful, I might start thinking you like hanging out in my closet.”

 

Shaking his head, Jotaro grumbled good-naturedly as he made his way over to the walk-in closet that Uncle Dio had had built for Aunt Alice. Sliding open the door, Jotaro made his way over to the beanbag chair that he’d taken in the last time he’d stayed in Aunt Alice’s closet. Pulling the chain for the light bulb in the center of the space, Jotaro smirked as he looked down at the collection of wraparound sunglasses that had been neatly lined up on top of the small chest of drawers that was standing just under the chain that he’d just pulled.

 

Chuckling softly as he plopped down into the center of the beanbag chair he’d set up for himself, Jotaro curled up, nodding to Star as his Stand handed him another of his manga.

 

=SC=

 

“Hello, Mr. Ice,” she said, feeling slightly strange as she saw Mr. Brando’s strange retainer showed up at the door of the room where she and Noriaki were staying. “Was there something you wanted?”

 

“Lord Dio sends his compliments,” the man said, handing over the tall mugs that he’d been carrying when he’d first showed up. “He wishes for you both to enjoy this.”

 

“Well, tell him thanks for us, then,” Noriaki said, making his own way over to stand beside her in the door, taking the mug of what seemed to be the cherry soda that he’d enjoyed so much when he’d first tried it.

 

“I will be certain to convey your gratitude, Noriaki Kakyoin, Loreena McKennitt,” the man said, nodding to the pair of them in a way that almost made it look like he was bowing to them, or something.

 

“Well, that was a bit odd,” she said, looking at the door for a lingering moment, before turning back to Noriaki where he was standing.

 

“Well, I guess it just goes to show how much he’s starting to care about us,” Noriaki chuckled, taking a long sip of his cherry soda. “He’s a bit meddlesome, it seems.”

 

“More than a bit,” she said, grinning a bit herself as she had some of the chocolate milk that Vanilla Ice had delivered to her, evidently on the orders of Mr. Brando himself. “Still, it was nice of him, at least.”

 

Noriaki chuckled softly, as the pair of them made their way over to the table that had been set up for them – or, anyone who stayed in a room like this, really – and settled down around it to have their drinks.

 

=SC=

 

The ringing of the phone drew her attention to the office-section of the room that Dio had set up for her, and Alice made her way over to the elegant, polished cherry wood desk that had been set up on the far right side of the room. All of the furniture in this part of her room had been made from cherry wood, lending a certain elegance to the place, even though Dio had clearly come to understand her desire to have more of a focus on function over form, particularly when she was using something strictly for business.

 

Settling down behind the desk where the phone had been set down, she picked it up and held it to her left ear, raising an eyebrow as she heard the familiar, subtle crackling in the background of the line that meant that this call was being routed from her Lunar base.

 

“Hello?” she said, settling down on her left elbow and tilting her head slightly.

 

“Ma’am, it’s good to speak to you again,” Jim Lovell, the head of senior-staff at the Lunar base observatory, greeted with what sounded like a calm smile on his face.

 

It was something she’d become more and more used to, ever since she’d assigned Brando Aerospace to examine Apollo 13 for flaws and the problem that would have otherwise stranded them in orbit had been discovered before it could cause them the kind of problems that had occurred Before. Of course, NASA had still ended up being slowly edged out of their role of exploration beyond the environs of Earth by her own Brando Aerospace, but then politicians weren’t typically known for their depth or breadth of vision. That, at least, was something that this place had in common with things that she remembered from Before.

 

Most of the astronauts that had been tapped for the Apollo program, and even the earlier Mercury and Gemini programs, had thrown in their lot with Brando Aerospace when the company had begun to truly rise to prominence in the world at large. The only thing that she hadn’t actually been able to do was intervene to save the lives of Gus Grissom and his crew, during the fire in the Apollo 1 capsule. Still, the simple fact of the matter was that Brando Aerospace hadn’t been prominent enough within the company in order to intervene in that kind of thing.

 

It wasn’t the greatest kind of situation, but she’d done everything she could with the abilities and capital she’d possessed at that point in time; there was really no point in dwelling on things that couldn’t be changed.

 

“Commander.”

 

“Hold on a moment, Jim,” she said, turning to N’Doul as he made his way over to the desk where she was seated. “Has something come up?”

 

“I’m afraid there’s a situation in Cairo,” the blind agent said, adjusting his darkened glasses in that certain way that all of her Blackwater and Blackwatch agents had been trained to use in order to communicate the seriousness of a given situation. “The man you encountered in France seems to be making quite a nuisance of himself.”

 

Before she could do more than rise from the chair where she’d been seated, telling Jim that she would get back to him when she returned, she heard the heavy footfalls of her capricious twin as he made his way up to the room that he’d given to her when she’d chosen to stay in this place for what time that she could.

 

“-entire family of fools,” Dio snarled, clearly having been muttering some kind of maledictions against something that seemed to relate to the man they were going to have to deal with soon.

 

“What was that?” she asked, as Dio made his way into her room at last.

 

“The man N’Doul is telling you about is the fool son of that traitor, Enya,” Dio said, a tinge of annoyance remaining in his eyes, even as he turned to her with a cheerful sort of expression on his face. “It seems as though the death of his worthless mother has caused him to lose what little sense he had in that empty head of his.”

 

“He’s related to Enya?” she asked, feeling a slight tinge of annoyance for not having dealt with the man in a more permanent way when the pair of them had first encountered each other all those months ago when she and the Polnareffs had first met in the wake of that moment.

 

“The imbecile is her son,” Dio sneered, the annoyance in his tone slowly shading into real anger, though Alice rather doubted that it had so much to do with the fact that Enya’s son seemed to be attacking the people of Cairo, and more to do with the fact that there was a loose end that they’d yet to tie up. “And, it seems that he is just as much of a fool as she was.”

 

“So, we’re all going out to deal with him?” Jotaro asked, slamming his way out of her closet, and actually managing to sound like he thought asking was only a formality.

 

“Oh?” Dio asked, her twin’s habitual good-natured amusement returning in force as he turned his attention to Jotaro where he was standing. “You want to come with us, my Littlest Jojo?”

 

“Yeah,” Jotaro said, a distinct expression of annoyance on his face; he really wasn’t a fan of the nickname that Dio had given him.

 

The four of them had soon come to an accord, and were able to move out. The signs of distress weren’t exactly hard to find, since the man who’d accosted Sherry Polnareff in France was apparently as much of an idiot as he’d presented the impression of being, because there were people running and screaming in the shopping district, where there were a great deal of windows that his Stand was darting between, cutting down the people who happened to be unfortunate enough to be standing in its way.

 

All four of them summoned their respective Stands, and she nodded to Stardust, who obligingly launched itself at the Stand that had been causing so much trouble. When said Stand tried to leap to the window on the opposite side of the street from where they were all gathered, Alice could almost feel Stardust smirking as it teleported just in front of the point the enemy Stand was going to enter the other window, grabbed the enemy Stand’s head, and drove its thumbs into the thing’s eyes.

 

The sound of a man screaming in agony drew all of their attention, and Alice smirked as Dio laughed outright.

 

“Well done, sister dear,” her capricious twin said, a wide grin on his face as he, Jotaro, and N’Doul turned toward the sound of the man screaming in the distance.

 

=SC=

 

When the asshole causing all the trouble had been caught by Aunt Alice, running out of the alley he’d been hiding in with blood dripping from his eyes, Jotaro ground his teeth. Uncle Dio had told him that damage and injuries were shared between Stands and their users, but up to this point he’d never actually seen that kind of thing in action. It was creepy as fuck, but there was still some element of usefulness to it. Or, at least that was what Aunt Alice probably would have said.

 

He just thought it was creepy, really; watching the guy running out of the alley, screaming and with blood pouring down his face from what remained of his eyes.

 

Sending Star after him, wanting to shut him up as fast as he could since the noise was not only pissing him off, but would also draw in more people who could only get in their way while they tried to get all of them out of the way, Jotaro had the Stand snap his neck after it had managed to jump him from behind. Uncle Dio’s Stand appeared just beside Star, seeming like it could teleport in just the same way as Aunt Alice’s Stand had shown that it was able to do.

 

“That was well played, my Littlest Jojo,” Uncle Dio said, grinning widely as he sauntered over to where he and Star were standing, with the broken-necked form of the asshole who’d been attacking all of those people – at least the ones who hadn’t been smart enough to scatter when that Stand had been jumping between all the windows in Cairo’s shopping district – lying slumped at his feet.

 

“What happened to the Stand?” he asked, knowing that there would be hell to pay if they let that damned Stand up again and it started killing people even without the commands of its user.

 

“I had Stardust pin it down, and then it faded out when you snapped that guy’s neck,” Aunt Alice said, making her way over to the four of them where they were standing together, Stardust peeking out briefly to wave at them before it vanished into her body again.

 

“Good,” he said, tensing up as Uncle Dio stepped over and hugged him, narrowing his eyes as the vampire nuzzled him. “Fuck off, Uncle Dio.”

 

“You cheeky little brat,” Uncle Dio chuckled, as his Stand ruffled Star’s hair, mussing it up in a way that would have been annoying as all hell if he’d actually yanked off Jotaro’s hat and tried to do that to him.

 

“If the both of you are finished,” Aunt Alice said, in that tolerant way she had of letting people she cared about know when they were being dorks and she was just about to call them on it, but would give them one last warning, all the same.

 

“Yes, we truly should be getting back home,” Uncle Dio said, as N’Doul made his way back over to them; probably after having gone to get the police or some kind of clean-up crew, or something like that.

 

As the four of them made their way back to the car that’d brought them to this part of Cairo in the first place, Jotaro almost sent Star to look back at the carnage that that Asshole and his Stand had been responsible for. If they’d managed to hear about this shit sooner… Shaking his head in annoyance, knowing that he shouldn’t let himself dwell on things that couldn’t be changed, Jotaro kept walking.

 

The past was the past, and he hadn’t heard of any Stand that could change it.

 

=SC=

 

Once he, his sweet sister, his Littlest Jojo, and N’Doul had all returned to his holdings in Cairo at last he, Dio, made his way back to the room that he had so carefully prepared for himself when he’d prepared this place for the use of not only those transient tourists who would be staying in this place once the hotel and spa had been properly completed, but his lovely family when they would have the opportunity to stay with him. There were still matters of import that he, Dio, would have to attend to before he could truly call this day done.

 

Matters of a far more cheerful nature than being forced to clean up the lingering taint of Enya and her fool offspring, happily enough.

 

Making his way over to the concealed cupboard where he’d stored his purchases from the chemist he, Dio, hummed cheerfully as he began to prepare the next batch. He’d seen some results from his initial workings, and yes he was fully aware that some matters were best handled with delicacy, tact, and above all time, but there were simply times that one was better served putting a hand into something than simply to wait and allow nature to take its course.

 

Such a thing was particularly true when one found themselves dealing with mortals.

 

Thoughts of mortality, of course, could not but serve to remind him of the loss of his poor, sweet puppy. That damnable Kars…! Setting down the powders he was working with, before he, Dio, could have crushed them in the wake of the accustomed rush of white-hot fury at the mere thought of the Pillar Man he, Dio, found himself lost in memories for a time.

 

Not only had his own helplessness in the face of the sheer inequality of their respective powers and abilities infuriated him almost beyond all reasonable measure, but knowing just what it was that the creature had had the gall to plan for his sweet sister… Finding himself actually growling as he forced his thoughts back to the present moment and the matters he was currently attending to he, Dio, rubbed his mouth as he dragged his attention back to the happier matters of Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend.

 

=SC=

 

Sighing as he settled himself down in the beanbag chair he’d brought into Aunt Alice’s closet, Jotaro found that he couldn’t quite get the things he’d seen out of his head. Not like he hadn’t been trying or anything, but every time he’d tried to think of something else, the sight of those people who’d been cut to pieces by that asshole’s Stand would come right back to him, almost as fresh as the first time he’d seen them.

 

Hell, he could practically still smell the fresh scent of blood, just as nauseating as when it had first been spilled.

 

“Well, this is certainly an odd place to find oneself.”

 

Whipping around at the familiar sound of Enrico Pucci’s voice, Jotaro found that Star hadn’t quite finished bringing him things when he’d discovered the Stand and gotten a name for it.

Chapter 43: I’ll Be There For You

Chapter Text

“You seem troubled, Jotaro,” Enrico said, glancing briefly at Star, then around at the closet where he currently found himself. “And it seems as though, loathe though you may personally be to call for help when you require it, it seems that your Stand is a great deal more willing than you to seek aid.”

 

“You know what Star is?” he asked, seeing the way Enrico looked at Star with the sort of recognition that he hadn’t seen from anyone but those people who already had Stands; or Aunt Alice, but she was pretty hard to surprise in any case.

 

“I suspected that you had come into possession of something of this nature, but I knew that your yourself would need to experience the knowledge you possessed in order to truly understand it,” Enrico said, and Jotaro folded his arms as he stared down at Uncle Dio’s follower.

 

He wasn’t quite as weird as Vanilla Ice, but he had his moments.

 

“So, you have a Stand too, then?” he asked; Avdol had explained that the only people who could see Stands were those that possessed them as well, so it was a natural thing to think.

 

The crowned figure that rose, smirking, from Enrico Pucci’s back could only be the Stand that he hadn’t shown to Jotaro the first time that the pair of them had spoken about the weird shit that had been happening to him.

 

“This is Whitesnake, my troublesome Stand,” Enrico said, holding out his right hand as he gestured to the Stand that was, even as he spoke, turning that smirk it had been wearing back down on him.

 

“This is Enrico, my troublesome master.”

 

“Yours talks?” he demanded, wondering just what in the hell was going on, since that had clearly been a different voice than the one that always came out of Pucci’s mouth.

 

“Whitesnake has always been rather outspoken,” Pucci said, a small smile passing briefly over his face, before he became serious again. “Still, I doubt your Stand would have brought me to you if all you wished to do was discus my own circumstances.”

 

Watching as Whitesnake darted over to the door of the closet – that really felt more like a normal room, since it didn’t have all that many clothes in it at the moment, and also because it was seriously fucking huge – Jotaro wondered just what in the hell Pucci had sent his Stand out to do, before Aunt Alice’s Stand stepped right through the door, without even bothering to open in it the first place, and handed over a chair before turning and vanishing out through the door again. Pucci took the chair, thanking his Stand for fetching it for him, and settled himself in it as Jotaro watched.

 

“So, seeing as your Stand clearly brought me here for a greater purpose than mere chitchat, tell me what is truly on your mind, Jotaro Kujo.”

 

Sighing, knowing that Pucci wasn’t the type to betray a confidence once he had it, Jotaro settled himself back in his own seat.

 

=SC=

 

Curled up with Loreena on one of the large, soft couches that had been set up in what seemed to be some kind of a lounge – as he’d seen more and more workers coming through the place, Noriaki had found himself reminded that it was eventually going to become some kind of combined hotel and spa, or that was what Mr. Brando kept insisting on – Noriaki wrapped his arms more tightly around her waist as the pair of them leaned in closer for another kiss. Once the pair of them had broken apart, more from a need for air than because either of them had been properly satiated, Noriaki curled his right hand into Loreena’s mass of soft, wavy blonde hair, pulling her in as close as he could while the pair of them kissed more deeply.

 

Something about being with Loreena felt so right; really the pair of them were already so much alike, both having been born with their Stands, and both of them having led such lonely lives before they met, it was almost like fated had brought the pair of them together.

 

He’d have to remember to thank Mr. Ice for the steamed pork buns he’d brought, though given that they’d probably been another present from Mr. Brando, it might’ve been best if they thanked him, too. And, since he was the only one out of the pair of them that they knew had a Stand… Hierophant Green rematerialized in response to his thoughts, the way it always had – the way he knew it always would – and Noriaki directed it to find Mr. Brando. Loreena’s Crimson Ace appeared just as his Hierophant had departed, hopping up onto the couch to nuzzle him softly, just as Loreena herself leaned in and the pair of them began kissing again.

 

=SC=

 

When he, Dio, had found himself sought out by the Stand of Little Lori’s adorable boyfriend, he’d found himself all the more pleased with his workings thus far. Since Little Lori was hardly the kind to set her Stand to a task that she herself was perfectly capable of managing, and her boyfriend had seemed rather of the same mind he, Dio, knew that there was very likely to be a great deal more occurring than either of them would have been amenable to speaking about with someone who they would likely consider uninvolved with their charming little courtship.

 

No matter how deeply that he, Dio, had ultimately involved himself in such a thing.

 

Making his way into the lounge, a place that he’d been having more and more work done on as he finalized the plans for the Desert Rose and all of her amenities he, Dio, smiled as he watched Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend as they made themselves comfortable on one of the couches that he’d had put in specifically for those kinds of activities. Smirking as he, Dio, passed them by on his way to go speak to one more in a long line of contractors that he’d been dealing with more and more of late, he hummed softly as he continued on his way.

 

Perhaps he, Dio, would see how these developments panned out, before he made any further moves on that particular project; it seemed to be going rather well, for a start.

 

=SC=

 

When she’d made it back to her room, with Jotaro hiding out in her closet in case Joseph wanted to pester him about something or other – not an entirely unlikely prospect, since even with all of Dio’s other band of eccentrics, a great many of them seemingly Stand users as well, Joseph was still apt to seek out Jotaro when he just wanted to hang out with someone – Alice had found Caesar on the line.

 

“So, someone took over the old gang you formed?” she asked, raising an eyebrow as she settled more comfortably into her chair at her desk in this particular room.

 

“It happened awhile ago, Boss, but whoever’s taken command now,” there was a sigh over the line, and Alice had the distinct feeling that he was quite a bit more worried than he was letting her know. “They’re starting to get into things I tried to keep my people out of when I was the one in charge,” another sigh, and Alice got the feeling that he was nerving himself up to ask a favor; she didn’t have to spend long thinking about what it might have been. “Do you think you could have Tim look into things there?”

 

“I think I could arrange something,” she said, tilting her head slightly. “Was there anything else you wanted to talk to me about?”

 

“No, Boss,” Caesar said, sounding a great deal more calm than he had during the beginning of their exchange; all to the good, as far as she was she was concerned. “Thank you for hearing me out about this; I know you were enjoying your vacation, but…”

 

“Some things are more important,” she assured the man, as Caesar trailed off from what seemed to be an effort not to say anything he thought might come out wrong; he’d always seemed to step more lightly around her, even in spite of all the years the pair of them had known each other.

 

It was kind of strange, but she’d long since realized that it was just how Caesar was going to be around her.

 

More pressing, however, was the matter of TIM; The Illusive Man, a man whose face and name were known only to her. That is, Jack Harper didn’t actually exist anywhere but on paper, and in the vague memories of the Mass Effect trilogy that she’d somehow been able to hold onto for long enough to construct the persona that she used to investigate those things that Alice Brando – philanthropist and kindly corporate overlord that she was – couldn’t be seen sticking her hands into.

 

Making her way down the hall to Dio’s room, Alice knocked a couple times, and folded her arms neatly behind her back while she waited for her capricious twin to make his appearance.

 

“Sister, how wonderful to see you again!” Dio exclaimed, grinning widely as he appeared at the door of his room. “Come in, come in!”

 

“I’m afraid I don’t have time for that,” she said. “Something’s come up in Italy,” she continued, watching as an expression of obvious discontent spread over his face as she continued. “Caesar asked me to see if one of my people could look in on it,” she said, knowing that there was little chance of her getting out of Dio’s mansion without a fuss, considering their present circumstances.

 

“Wha- but, I thought you were enjoying your time here, sister dear,” her capricious twin said, the unhappy expression on his face becoming all the more pronounced with every word he spoke.

 

“I am, but there are still matters that I have to attend to,” she explained, knowing that this wouldn’t be the end of things; Dio wasn’t the kind who could let go of something he wanted when he’d gotten his hands on it. “I’m going to head back to Italy, but I’ll be in contact when I can.”

 

“No!”

 

It only seemed to take the equivalent of the length of a human’s eye blink, before Alice found herself in Dio’s room, seated in one of the large, deep plush chairs that Dio favored. Standing back up, Alice summoned Stardust as she made her way up and out of the room.

 

“Dio, I’ll be in touch, but I do need to take care of this,” she said, making determinedly for the door, for just a moment, before she had Stardust teleport her to the lower level of the building.

 

Continuing on her way through the building, Alice heard the sound of hurried footfalls making their way down the stairs towards her. Having Stardust look back over her left shoulder, Alice rolled her eyes as she saw Dio practically dashing down the stairs after her. Another blink of lost time, and Alice found herself cradled in Dio’s arms, and sighed in annoyance.

 

“Dio, I’ll be in touch, but I am going to need to go to Italy,” she said, calling upon Stardust to literally pull her through Dio’s chest and out his back. “That was interesting,” she muttered, as she passed through her capricious twin’s body, feeling as though she’d just passed through some kind of storm made almost entirely out of static electricity. “Really, we’re both immortal,” she said, turning her gaze back to her brother as she folded her arms, rather annoyed by this whole charade and everything to do with it. “We have all the time we’ll need.”

 

It was a simple matter to have Stardust teleport the pair of them into Dio’s foyer, and then to make her way out of the mansion where she and the other members of their family had been staying for the last few months. The sight of her touring car, with Straizo clearly at the wheel as he usually was, prompted Alice to turn her path in order to intercept the path that her retainer was going to have to take to get to the garage that Dio had constructed in order to store the many vehicles that he’d collected over the course of his time.

 

Well, his time spent in Egypt, anyway.

 

Knocking on the window, she drew her fellow vampire’s attention, signaling for him to roll down the window so that the pair of them would be able to speak more freely.

 

“I was under the impression that you were going to be staying here for the foreseeable future,” he said, raising an eyebrow as the pair of them faced each other.

 

“There’s been a change of plans,” she said, as Stardust reached into the car to unlock and then open the passenger door on the side she was standing, letting her climb into the back of the car. “I’m going to need to head to Italy; Caesar informed me of a situation that needs looking into.”

 

Iggy was curled up there, nestled deeply in the plush seats that lined the back of the car, yawning deeply as he raised his head, then barking happily as he raced over to sit in her lap.

 

“Hey, pup,” she said, petting Iggy as the dog settled himself down, turning to bare his teeth at her in what had always looked like a grin that was just a bit too human for anyone else to really deal with; she thought that that might have another of the reasons that no one else had seemed to want to have anything to do with him; there were more than a few times that Iggy could seem far too human for anyone else to be comfortable with.

 

Glancing over her right shoulder as her car lurched back into motion, already suspecting what she was going to see but wanting to have it confirmed all the same, Alice shook her head as she saw Dio running at the car. Turning to Stardust, she nodded even as her Stand stood up, phasing through the windshield at the back of the car and tossing her brother’s Stand off as it tried to grab onto the back of the car. Sighing again as she shook her head, settling back into the seat as Iggy barked softly.

 

“Easy there, pup; I haven’t forgotten about you,” she said, chuckling softly as she stroked the dog between his ears, settling all the more comfortably back into the seat they were both in, as Straizo took them both to the hangar that she’d originally arrived in when she’d arrived with Joseph and Holly.

 

Once the three of them had made their way back to the hangar again, Alice tucked Iggy neatly into the crook of her left arm, standing up as Stardust opened the right-side door for her again, tossing over her umbrella-sword as the Stand smiled softly and faded back into her body once more.

 

“It’s seems that you have acquired the same kind of abilities that he possesses,” Straizo said, an expression of curiosity plain on his face, as the three of them made their way back into the plane, with Stardust proceeding to teleport inside the aircraft so that it would be able to open it up for them.

 

“Yes,” she said, casting a glance back over at her fellow vampire as the pair of them settled into their respective places within the plane. “I could make an arrangement for you, if you want.”

 

“No need,” Straizo said, having settled himself down in the pilot’s seat and begun making preparations to return them to Italy for the first time in at least a couple decades or so. “I’ve found myself content with what I am.”

 

“As you will, then,” she said, smiling softly as Straizo taxied them out onto the runway; Iggy firmly nudged her right hand, folded in her lap, as the terrier nestled itself more comfortably there. “All right, pup; I haven’t forgotten about you, no need to fuss.”

 

=SC=

 

“Uncle Dio’s going to be pissed,” he muttered, having sent Star out to see what Aunt Alice was talking about when she’d gotten that call.

 

“Yes,” Pucci said, looking out toward the front door of Aunt Alice’s room as the pair of them came out of her closet. “Dio will not be best pleased to know that his sister is going to be departing for an unknown amount of time.”

 

“Yeah,” he said, as Star vanished back into his body again, going to wherever it was that Stands went when whoever had them wasn’t actually calling on them to do anything. “You think I could bunk with you, for awhile? Uncle Dio’s going to be… Well, he’s Uncle Dio,” he said, knowing that while Pucci was a lot like those annoying girls that hung off of him back at school, he was still a pretty understanding type in general.

 

“Yes,” Pucci said, nodding as he turned back to look at him. “I think that Joseph would be best suited to caring for Dio at this time.”

 

It wasn’t quite what he’d had in mind, but Jotaro knew that it was really the best that he could expect from Enrico Pucci, considering the kind of man he was. “Thanks.”

 

=SC=

 

When he, Dio, made his way back to the room that he’d had built and then furnished for himself, he wrapped his own arms around The World’s as his glorious, loyal Stand held him from behind. Truly, he’d not been expecting the responsibilities of his undeclared empress – his sweet sister – to intrude so suddenly, so rudely in fact, on the little sanctuary that he, Dio, had worked for so long to create for himself in the midst of Egypt’s rolling dunes and ancient places. Leaning back for a lingering moment in his World’s arms he, Dio, gathered himself and continued on his way back to his room.

 

Making a point of passing through the lounge that he, Dio, had set up for the use of those who had been fortunate enough to find themselves invited to his mansion he managed to spot Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend curled up together on one of the larger couches near the back of the lounge. Out of the way of what foot-traffic would eventually and inevitably be winding its way through such a place in the wake of his Desert Rose’s grand opening, and therefore quite a bit more intimate.

 

Rather the perfect place for young lovers.

 

Feeling a great deal more cheerful, now that he’d had the chance to see the fruits of at least one of his projects he, Dio, began making his way to the room where he’d set Ms. Shiobana up under the care of Vanilla Ice. Humming cheerfully as he reached the door he, Dio, opened it and made his way inside.

 

“Mr. Brando,” Shiobana exclaimed, looking over at him as he, Dio, made his way inside.

 

“I expect you’ve been doing well, Miss,” he, Dio, said as he made his way over with a cheerful smile; it was clear to see that his sweet little Gio was well on his way to being brought into the world.

 

“Oh, it’s been so nice to stay in a place like this,” the woman – flighty as she had proven herself during the time that she’d spent within the walls of his mansion – said, smiling brightly in the way that he’d seen so many women who were not his sweet sister or his adorable Baby Holly.

 

That annoyingly vapid way that he’d come to find himself so annoyed by the more he, Dio, had been forced to behold it. Yes, he was fully aware that such a thing had a great deal of use – people who were generally uninterested in looking as deep into whatever circumstances they might find themselves facing were quite simple to lead anywhere that he, Dio, might wish to do so – it was still rather irritating to find himself faced with them. Still, he would only be forced to endure the presence of the Shiobana woman for another handful of months; such was a fact that he, Dio, would remind himself of when he inevitably found his patience wearing thin.

 

Spending what time he, Dio, could endure in the presence of the Shiobana woman while the pair of them spoke about how his little Gio was coming along, he found himself rather pleased; not with the woman herself, of course, since she was a flighty little fool and he’d be perfectly pleased to be rid of her once she had finally brought his sweet little Gio into the world, but knowing how the little one was doing was quite a pleasing thing.

 

Making his way back to his room he, Dio, smiled with the satisfaction of a task well on its way to a pleasing conclusion.

 

=SC=

 

Once he’d managed to get himself settled in Pucci’s room – the man’s closet wasn’t quite as big as the one that Uncle Dio had had built for Aunt Alice, so staying in there wasn’t as comfortable as it’d been when he was staying in there – Jotaro found himself wondering just what had drawn Aunt Alice away from Uncle Dio and everyone else. It’d almost sounded like there was something big that she was going to be looking into.

 

He knew that Aunt Alice wasn’t any kind of detective or anything, but that was still the impression he’d gotten from the parts of the conversation that he and Star had been able to overhear.

 

“Jotaro.”

 

“Huh?” he said, twitching slightly as he saw the smiling face of Pucci’s Stand making its way into the closet where he’d been trying to make a place for himself with only a certain amount of success.

 

“Here,” Whitesnake said, chuckling as it handed over a sandwich and a can of root beer. “Enrico thought you might want to have some food, since it’s been awhile since you last ate.”

 

“Thanks,” he said, taking the food from the Stand as it offered it to him, chuckling softly as he was reminded of the times when Star had fetched things for him.

 

Whitesnake grinned in passing, before Pucci’s Stand turned and left the closet where he was staying; where he was going to stay, at least while he was staying in close proximity to both Mom and the Old Man.

 

=SC=

 

When she, Straizo, and Iggy had all arrived back in Italy once again, the first thing Alice found when she’d made her way back up to her office again was the expected form of Caesar waiting for her.

 

“I’m glad you could make it back so quickly, Boss,” the head of her Treadstone organization said, smiling at her as Alice made her way over to the desk that was the centerpiece of her large office.

 

“It sounded like you could use help coping with this situation,” she said, nodding at the blond – his hair only having just begun to go gray at the temples, considering his extensive training with Hamon – as she settled behind her desk so that the pair of them could speak in a more comfortable fashion. “So, some of your people have made contact with you?” she asked, wanting to be certain of just what it was that she was going to be getting into so she would be able to decide on a proper course of action to handle it.

 

“I’ve been staying in contact with them, Boss,” Caesar clarified, positioning himself neatly in front of her desk as the pair of them began hashing out just what it was that they were going to do in response to this latest situation they had found themselves facing. “All of them have been saying that there’s someone making his way through the ranks; someone who wants to change Passione into something else.”

Chapter 44: I Want You Back

Chapter Text

She hummed softly in thought. “Well, it does sound like this is something he’d be best suited to looking into. Do you know of anyone he would be able to make contact with, in regards to your organization?”

 

“I’ll speak to them again, Boss,” Caesar said, looking a great deal more content than he had when she’d first arrived in her Venice Tower.

 

“Thank you, Caesar,” she said, smiling and nodding sharply in return. “I’ll get in contact with TIM, then.”

 

Caesar bowed neatly in return, and the pair of them separated to go about their various tasks. She, of course, would have a simpler time of setting up the untraceable phone line that she used to operate as The Illusive Man during those times when she needed someone with only a tenuous connection to Alice Brando; a connection known only to those in the upper-echelons of either Treadstone or Blackwater. When Stardust climbed back out of her body, Alice smirked slightly.

 

There was only one other being on Earth who would know that Alice Brando and Jack Harper were one and the same.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way back into the room where he and Jotaro were staying, Enrico found himself reflecting again on the sadness that he had seen so clearly, even behind the smile that his old friend had offered him. It was a difficult thing, supporting Dio through those times when he would find himself bereft of his sister’s presence. Enrico had at least some idea of the pain that Dio went through during those times, with Domenico and Perla away from him for so long in Italy, but he would have been the first to confess that even he did not love with nearly the depth or the fierceness that Dio felt for those he had given his heart to.

 

Still, he was also fully aware that Alice had her responsibilities to the world that they all lived in, and was not the kind to idly set such things aside.

 

And so, once again it fell to him, supporting Dio through such a trying time as this one. Enrico could only be grateful that nothing else of the world outside the walls of the sanctuary that Dio was establishing for himself in Cairo had intruded upon the peace that Dio would need to regain his footing and thus reestablish himself. Most of those who held a place in his old friend’s heart were at least still present: his sweet Holly, mercurial Joseph, and even Jotaro, loathe as the child might have been to admit to the depths of his feelings at his age.

 

Teenagers could be adorably foolish in such matters, Enrico reflected with a smile.

 

“Is his latest project going well?” he asked, as he and Vanilla Ice crossed paths in the hall leading to the guest rooms that had been – and always would be – reserved for family and the close, personal friends of such.

 

“Indeed,” the man – as much Dio’s right-hand as Straizo was Alice’s – said, a pleased expression on his face for all that he did not smile. “Lord Dio is most pleased with the progress that he has been witnessing thus far.”

 

“I’m glad to know that,” he said, smiling as the pair of them parted for their respective rooms, feeling all the more pleased that his old friend would have yet one more thing to comfort himself with, and thus ease the heartache that had been caused when demands from the world outside their walls had pulled his dear sister away from him once more.

 

Enrico knew that he was far from the only one that wished for an end to such things, but the world remained what it was, and even he had no inkling of a Stand that might be able to change it.

 

=SC=

 

“That looks like Shiva.”

 

Boingo started, looking back over his left shoulder at the man who’d just showed up; Joseph Joestar, the father of the kind woman that he and his big brother had met when they’d first come to this place, seeking whatever it was that Fate had brought them there for. Joseph laughs in that way that he does when he’s done something that a lot of people would probably call rude, waving his large hands as though he was trying to shoo something small away from his face.

 

“Sorry about that, but you always look so serious when you’re reading that comic of yours,” Joseph – Well, Mr. Joestar – said, smiling cheerfully as he made his way over to plop down on the couch next to him. “That’s just like the pose I saw that Shiva statue in,” Mr. Joestar said, pointing to the four-armed goddess that had appeared at the back of his manga almost as soon as he’d gotten it, slowly becoming clearer as time passed. “And… that almost looks like a black hole, in its left hand.”

 

Looking back down at the goddess that had slowly shown more and more of herself over the months and years that Boingo had possessed Thoth, he found that there was something in the upper-left hand of the goddess. He didn’t know quite what a black hole was, but Mr. Joestar sounded like he knew a lot more than either Boingo or his big brother, so the round, purple and black thing with all of the teeth probably was meant to be a black hole. He wondered why the goddess would be holding a black hole in one of her hands, and just what Shiva had to do with anything.

 

He didn’t know if Mr. Joestar would think he was rude for asking, though, and big brother was the one that talked to people; Boingo didn’t really know what to do.

 

=SC=

 

Settling down next to Loreena as she painted Mr. Brando’s garden – a lot of new additions had been put in; bushes full of tiny, sweet-smelling flowers, and some kinds of trees that he didn’t quite know what to call – Noriaki wrapped his left arm around her waist and leaned back into the plush cushions of the bench the pair of them were sitting on together. Closing his eyes for a long moment, Noriaki found himself almost drifting away on all of the scents that were wafting in the air from all the plants that had been moved in lately.

 

He’d learned what this place was meant to be, at least until he’d sent Hierophant Green to talk to Mr. Brando. Apparently, this place was meant to be a garden that the people who would come to the spa that was steadily being built – the Desert Rose – could walk around, or sit in, to enjoy while they were on vacation. Mr. Brando had also said, since he and Loreena were the first ones to be able to see it – even if it wasn’t truly finished at this point – the both of them could feel free to make suggestions about what other things to add. Or even to change.

 

Yes, Mr. Brando did have final say in everything, but he’d made it clear that their suggestions would have a great deal of weight, as well.

 

=SC=

 

As he had watched Dio steadily working to regain himself, after the unceremonious departure of his beloved sister on some task that her career or those within their company demanded of her, Enrico had found himself all the more pleased to be given the chance to help such a caring man as Dio Brando. It was the same kind of loving care that Dio had offered him when the pair of them had first met, after all. When he had first laid his eyes upon the man he would come to care about so deeply, Enrico had thought him simply a lost tourist, having lost track of his tour group as he’d lounged in a pew near the back of the church where Enrico had been staying during the fateful time when he’d encountered him.

 

Not that he had truly known how deeply entwined their fates were to be, when he’d made his way over to the lounging man in the pew. Dio had taken out an ornate pocket watch, shaking it beside his right ear, and then laughingly suggesting that he’d merely forgotten to wind it when Enrico had expressed concern about his separation from the tour guide who had clearly been long-since departed by that point in time. Dio, however, had simply linked their arms together and appropriated Enrico himself as the new tour guide that he would be making use of.

 

He hadn’t known quite what to make of such a brash, cheerful man when the pair of them had met for the first time, but Enrico often found himself looking back with a definite sense of fondness upon that meeting.

 

When Dio had noticed that he’d had some difficulty walking, he’d not only taken it upon himself to carry Enrico to a place where the pair of them could settle down together, he’d then taken a look at his twisted foot. And then, through means that Enrico still did not quite understand, Dio had been able to heal the damage he had been forced to live with up to that point.

 

Enrico would always be grateful to the man for his consideration on that day of all days.

 

When the pair of them had parted for the day, Enrico had found himself wondering just when he would have the chance to meet the man who had introduced himself as Dio Brando. He had also found himself troubled by a revelation that one of his parishioners had confessed to him; the knowledge that she had taken the man that would eventually regain his birth name of Domenico Pucci, taken him from the hospital bassinet where he had been sleeping, switching him out with her own sickly, dying child. The man he would know as his brother had, for the first few decades of his life, adopted the name Wes Blumarine.

 

He’d also fallen in love with their sister, Perla, a situation that had rather demanded correction; after all, Domenico’s love had not been of the chaste, playful kind that Dio shared with his own beloved sister.

 

The firm that he’d hired had had connections to Alice Brando, a sure sign that fate – the force of gravity that acted to draw all souls together – was already acting to draw them to one another. Perla had also been working for her, which was simply one more thing that contributed to his understanding of just how much of their fate was to be bound up with that of the Brando family. When Alice’s firm had finished their investigations into Domenico’s and Perla’s respective pasts, revealing their relationship to each other and thus reuniting the Pucci family once more, Dio had been the one to bring him to meet his then newly-revealed siblings.

 

Domenico had been both pleased, and rather amusingly awkward, considering his intentions toward Perla at that time; the ring that he’d purchased, to present her as an engagement gift, had instead been repurposed as a birthday present.

 

“Thinking deep thoughts?”

 

Turning at the sound of a familiar voice, a smile already emerging on his face, Enrico saw the familiar form of his brother. Domenico’s long, white hair was currently tied back in an elegant braid, with soft feathers and beads that seemed to be made of moonstone decorating the fringes that framed his face.

 

“Just reflecting a bit,” he said, smiling all the wider for his dear brother. “Fate has been good to us.”

 

Domenico laughed, soft and supremely amused. “You and your fate. One could almost be forgiven for thinking that that was your greatest interest, rather than that collection of dime-store romance novels everyone knows you keep under any bed you spent more than a month in.”

 

Enrico scoffed, though the smile he was wearing remained firmly on his face. “Come now; I hardly bought all of them from a dime-store.”

 

“No, some of them were bought for you,” Domenico retorted, grinning unrepentantly at him as the pair of them stood, overlooking the steadily growing form of Dio’s garden; the same garden where he’d caught the occasional glimpse of Noriaki Kakyoin and his beloved Loreena McKennitt, as the pair of them made themselves comfortable in such a place as the Desert Rose, incomplete as it currently was.

 

“Yes, I suppose I have been rather simple to shop for,” he said, feeling the reflective atmosphere of their current place of residence stealing over him once again.

 

“Speaking of gifts, you have to know that Dio’s going to go all-out for the birthday of that child he’s been preparing for for so long,” Domenico said, and Enrico couldn’t help but to shudder, even as Domenico laughed at the thought of such a thing.

 

“Yes, I have found myself becoming rather well-acquainted with his penchant for grandiose gestures,” he responded.

 

“Whatever could be the matter, brother?” Domenico asked, and Enrico knew that – should he chance to look over at his brother once more – he would only see the same kind of unrepentant grin on his face as had taken residence on Dio’s so many times. “I thought you were quite fond of the man.”

 

“I love Dio as I love God,” he said, turning at last to face the expected grin on Domenico’s face. “Yet there is only so much dedicated absurdity that I find myself capable of dealing with.”

 

Unspoken, and yet clear for all of that, was the recollection of the first birthday party that Dio had thrown for the three of them when they had all been reunited for the first time in the wake of Alice Brando’s intervention. The event that stuck out most clearly in his mind was – much as he might have tried to forget it in the intervening years – Dio himself, bursting from the top of the large cake that had been delivered to the three of them at the table where they sat. Enrico could still recall the feel of Dio’s lips on his own.

 

The kiss itself had tasted of the buttercream frosting that had flecked his old friend’s mouth.

 

Domenico’s supremely amused laugh brought him firmly back to the present, and Enrico cast a firmly unamused expression at him in return.

 

“You know, I think that might have been the only time I’ve actually seen someone only capable of speaking in fragmented consonants,” Domenico said, still grinning at him in that way that he’d become so accustomed to being wary of from Dio himself.

 

It was at times like this, when Enrico would find himself entirely sympathetic to Jotaro’s desire to avoid the notice of his grandfather, particularly when he and Dio had been placed in such close proximity to one another; such a thing was, all too often, a recipe for madness and quite a bit of annoyance to all and sundry.

 

=SC=

 

When Star had heard someone making their way into Pucci’s room, Jotaro had sent his Stand to listen at the door of the closet he’d been making himself more and more comfortable in as time went on. Through his Stand’s ears, Jotaro had found that the light footsteps didn’t sound at all like those of the Old Man when he would stalk him with intent to annoy, and so the sight of the closet door opening didn’t cause him to outright cringe the way it would have if he’d been expecting the Old Man to show up.

 

“Pucci,” he said, as the man made his way into the closet where he’d taken to hiding out from the Old Man, and even Mom when she got too enthusiastic for his tastes. “What’s going on?” he asked, noticing the bag full of those cheesy romance books that Pucci liked to read hanging neatly from his right shoulder.

 

“I think, Jotaro, that I might very well be joining you in this place in a short time,” Pucci said, the kind of expression on his face that Jotaro could clearly recall feeling on his own when the Old Man was being particularly annoying.

 

“Fuck; the kid, right?” he muttered, recalling just what kind of things they were going to be dealing with in just a few months; Uncle Dio was going to be on cloud fucking nine once that kid of his had joined them all, and he got even more determinedly weird when he was happy.

 

“Language, Jotaro,” Pucci said, in that way he did when he knew that someone was probably ignoring him, but he couldn’t help saying something; probably came with being a priest, or something. “But, yes.”

 

“Thought so,” he said, moving the beanbag chair that Star had helped him to bring to this place out of the way so that Pucci could make a place for himself, too.

 

It was going to be a hell of a thing, once that Gio kid had been born; not that their family hadn’t welcomed new members before, but dealing with Uncle Dio while he was still on his “new Dad” high… Yeah, he got why Pucci didn’t want to be alone while they all had to deal with that. Sometimes, it felt like he, Aunt Alice, and Pucci were the only normal people in their whole family.

 

Even though Pucci’s obsession with Uncle Dio was still pretty weird.

 

=SC=

 

When the news of a new addition to the Brando family had come through, Caesar had found that the grin on his face wouldn’t leave, no matter if he was training new recruits for Treadstone, or even meeting with his counterpart in Blackwater. Making his way back up to the top of the Venice Tower, where the Boss had posted herself while she made contact with the Tim and the people who worked with him, he found himself humming the soft tune that the Boss would hum while she was engaged in a particularly difficult task.

 

“Boss! You’ve gotten the news, too, haven’t you?” he exclaimed, making his way into her personal office.

 

“I have,” she said, chuckling softly as she turned that sun-bright smile of gentle amusement on him. “Dio’s been calling anyone whose phone number he can find in his address book, chatting their ears off about the new kid he’s going to be bringing into the family. Believe me, I know.”

 

He laughed soft, conceding the point. “Yes, I suppose you would have been the first he told about something like that.”

 

“I’m the first he tells about a lot of things,” the Boss said, her usual wry amusement coming through in force once again. “Whether I want to know or not is another story, sometimes.”

 

The pair of them shared another laugh, both of them having to come to know Dio Brando well enough to understand just how much his desire to share everything of himself with his sister informed his every thought and action.

 

“Do you think he might want to have you take a hand in raising the little one?” he asked, not quite sure how the Boss would react to that kind of a suggestion but wanting to know, all the same.

 

“I certainly hope not,” the Boss said, giving a clearly exaggerated little shudder. “Get them old enough to have a personality, and I can deal well enough, but in regards to that,” she looked him directly in the eyes, a sardonic smirk on her face. “I’ve always been more in favor of kittens, as opposed to human infants. At the very least, they’re cuter.”

 

Laughing, knowing that the Boss had probably been asked just that kind of question more than her fair share of times – people always did seem to think that women were best suited to looking after children, for some reason or other – for her to be that unimpressed by the question, Caesar turned his attention to the other matter that he’d been interested in.

 

“How have your effort to contact Tim been going?” he asked, feeling again the shudder of unease up his spine as he considered what could be happening to the people he’d known – even the children that he hadn’t had the chance to meet yet – while he stayed safe under the Boss’ careful watch.

 

Not knowing was the worst part of the situation he found himself facing.

 

“He’s expressed in interest in making contact with them, though he’s a recluse for the most part,” the Boss said, a considerate look on her face as she turned to look at him again. “He wanted me to ask if your people would be amenable to conducting business over the phone.”

 

“I don’t know,” he said, considering the ranks of Passione that Tim would be dealing with. “Give me some time to make contact with them, and I’ll get back to you.”

 

“Very well, then,” the Boss said, nodding sharply in that way of hers.

 

=SC=

 

It was almost April and he, Dio, found himself all the more eager for the date that had been specified for the birth of his sweet little Gio. Still, there was at least one other matter of import for him to enjoy himself with while he, Dio, awaited that moment. Humming softly to himself as he wrapped the amusing presents that he, Dio, had purchased for those of his dear family who had come to his Desert Rose to enjoy the amenities that were slowly, steadily being brought in as the date of his grand opening drew ever closer.

 

There was also a choice selection of gifts sent along by his sweet Alice, even though she herself would not be able to be present for their latest celebration of April Fools Day.

 

Once he’d gotten the last of his and his sweet sister’s presents wrapped he, Dio, made his way to the family room that he’d had built in the private area of his Desert Rose when he’d been planning it out. Humming as he set out the presents that he’d wrapped, displaying them neatly and cheerfully for the dawn of the first day of April, and the April Fools celebration that they were all to have on that happy day. Once he, Dio, had finished with that happy task, he made his way back to his own room to wait for the morning.

 

Such a thing would be particularly enjoyable, considering that Enrico and his sweet brother had come to the Desert Rose to stay for a time.

 

=SC=

 

The first day of April was kind of something that he’d been dreading, considering that both Uncle Dio and the Old Man were here at the Desert Rose; he could at least be happy that the old Old Man – that was to say, Jonathan Joestar – had pushed for April Fools to be celebrated with something other than the barrage of pranks that Uncle Dio had played on him on the previous April 1st of every year before that. It was at least better than it could have been, Jotaro knew, but it was still annoying at the end of things.

 

Still, as he made his way down to the Desert Rose’s family room, Jotaro found himself reflecting that it was at least better than it could have been.

 

Making his way over to one of the large, plush chairs that had been set around the perimeter of the round room, Jotaro sank into the thing and watched as Uncle Dio passed out the presents that he’d clearly wrapped and put out for them all. Taking his own present with a bit of trepidation, Jotaro relaxed as he saw the label. Aunt Alice had been the one to give him this one; that meant that it wasn’t going to be something as stupid as what Uncle Dio would have gotten for him.

 

Once the last of the presents had been passed around, Jotaro was the first to open his, considering that he’d been the one that Uncle Dio had singled out. Peeling back the wrapping, looking down into the box with a slowly-growing smirk, Jotaro looked up as the Old Man called over to him.

 

“It’s perfect,” he said, in response to the question of just what it was: the image of Sam the Eagle had been printed on the neatly-folded shirt, along with the phrase “You are all weirdoes.”.

Chapter 45: The Name Of The Game

Chapter Text

Sighing in good-natured annoyance as he unwrapped the present that his dear friend had given to him on this occasion for celebrating the absurdity that Dio had been known to bring into the lives of those he was particularly fond of, Enrico found himself with the familiar urge to palm his face and sigh as a nearly life-sized body pillow – with a rather sultry, silkscreened image of a nearly-unclad Dio Brando – flopped open onto his lap with a quiet sort of flump.

 

“Thank you, Dio,” he said, turning a deadpanned expression of exasperation on the man who had been such a good – if terribly, terribly odd – friend to him for so long. “I shall treasure this, truly.”

 

Yare yare, daze,” Jotaro muttered, clearly having caught sight of the absurd gift that he’d been given.

 

“Yes, quite,” he said, allowing himself to sigh, at least softly.

 

He’d been expecting absurdity, of course – Dio Brando was a thoroughly eccentric man, and this was a holiday dedicated to celebrating absurdity in any and all forms – but seeing it set before him… Well, it was certainly absurd, one had to say. The sight of Joseph Joestar, wearing a sculpted piece of foam-rubber on his head that was made to look like a wheel of Swiss cheese, with what seemed to be some kind of either slogan or else simply another kind of saying upon the front of the headwear, nearly drove Enrico to rolling his eyes outright.

 

The same for Dio, who had gotten what looked like a Samba hat, piled high with what seemed to be either plastic or wax fruit.

 

=SC=

 

When he and Loreena had first been invited to the April Fools celebration that Mr. Brando, his family, and the two Pucci brothers that had come to the Desert Rose – one of them with Mr. Brando’s sister, and the other who seemed to have been invited by Mr. Brando himself – Noriaki hadn’t known quite what to make of everything that was going on. It seemed to be just exchanging a bunch of silly gifts, really; so finding himself with a wrapped present in his own lap was kind of surprising. He hadn’t thought that anybody who lived in this place would have been the kind to invite someone they didn’t know to celebrate whatever kind of holiday that April Fools was for them.

 

Still, finding himself with a present in his lap… well, it wasn’t anything like what Noriaki had been expecting.

 

Opening the present that Mr. Brando had passed over to him, after he’d finished passing out the other presents to the members of his family – or the close friends that the Pucci brothers so obviously were – Noriaki found himself looking down at a pair of glasses that had a plastic nose and a mustache attached on the bottom. As well as what seemed to be a pair of bushy eyebrows, of all things, attached at the top of the glasses. Hearing Loreena’s surprised sounding laugh, Noriaki looked over to see that she was holding a headband with what seemed to be a pair of alien antennae sticking up from it.

 

Then, after he’d only blinked what felt like once, Noriaki found that the glasses had been stuck on his face, and when he looked back over at Loreena, he saw that she was wearing the headband that she’d been given, too; the pair of them shared a long gaze, before the both of them started laughing.

 

=SC=

 

When he, Dio, had presented the last of the April Fools Day presents to his sweet family – including Little Lori and her adorable boyfriend – he grinned at the confusion he could see writ large on the faces of both of the children that he, Dio, had invited into his sweet home. Smirking softly as he, Dio, signaled to his World, he felt the gears of time halt in their tracks once more, and laughed delightedly as his World stuck the Groucho glasses and the alien antenna headband firmly back upon the faces of Little Lori and her sweet boyfriend.

 

The pair of them were so thoroughly amusing in their confusion.

 

“All right, that’s enough of that,” Domenico Pucci, cheeky thing that he was, said, looking over at him with the tolerant amusement that he’d seen so often on the young man’s face. “I think those two have had quite enough of your teasing, Mr. Brando.”

 

“Now, Domenico, I’ve told you to call me Dio,” he, Dio, said as he turned to look at Enrico’s rather amusing brother.

 

“Yes, I know,” Domenico said, smiling in that insolent way of his.

 

“Cheeky brat,” he, Dio, chuckled as his lovely family all settled back down into the chairs that he, Dio, had provided for them.

 

“Well, I guess he told you, Uncle Dio,” his Little Jojo said, grinning widely at him as he adjusted the pair of hats – one of them the sculpted piece of foam-rubber that had been made to look like a wheel of cheese, with the words “full-blown cheese head” carved into the front, and the other the fedora that he’d taken to wearing in clear imitation of his dear Alice – he was wearing, so that he wouldn’t end up knocking off the fedora with an errant motion of his head.

 

“Now now, let’s have no more bickering,” his adorable Enrico said, casting a subtly reproving glance at Domenico and his Little Jojo where they sat. “Today is a day for celebration, after all.”

 

=SC=

 

Once he’d managed to get away from Uncle Dio and all his determined weirdness, Jotaro carefully made his way back to Pucci’s room, if only so he’d be able to stay out of whatever it was that the Old Man and Uncle Dio were inevitably going to do. He’d seen the dress that the Old Man had gotten, and with Uncle Dio getting a Samba hat… Yeah, he didn’t want to be out and about when the pair of them were in the same place.

 

Turning as Star heard someone making their way into the room, Jotaro sighed as he realized that it was just Pucci coming back to the room they were currently sharing.

 

“Hey,” he greeted, as Uncle Dio’s weird – though, it had to be said, more tolerable than the Old Man – friend made his way into the closet where Jotaro had set himself up while the Old Man and Mom were both close enough to bug him if he’d stayed in the room that Uncle Dio had pointed out for him.

 

“A rather interesting celebration,” Pucci said, settling down next to him on the chair that he’d brought in for himself once the pair of them had realized that the date of that kid of Uncle Dio’s being born.

 

Or, more to the point, when Uncle Dio was going to go from just being weird, to being aggressively weird and happy, too.

 

“Yeah,” he said, leaning back in the beanbag chair where he’d set himself up after making his way into Pucci’s room. “I heard it was after Old Man Jonathan got sick of Uncle Dio pranking him all the time, back when April Fools would come around, all those years before.”

 

“Yes, I’d supposed things came about in such a way,” Pucci said, still seeming more than a little weirded out by everything that had gone on; part and parcel of dealing with Uncle Dio.

 

“That’s Uncle Dio for you,” he said, shrugging as he took the manga that Star handed him, turning back as Pucci chuckled, shaking his head softly.

 

“Yes, I suppose I should have become used to this kind of thing, considering how we met, so long ago.”

 

He scoffed, finding himself laughing, just a bit. “Uncle Dio takes a lot of getting used to.”

 

The pair of them looked back at each other, sharing another chuckle for a long moment.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d refreshed and steadied himself with his conversation with young Jotaro, Enrico made his way back down through the halls of the Desert Rose. Dio had put a temporary halt to the construction of the hotel, resort, and spa that he’d planned to open within the outskirts of Cairo while he was awaiting the birth of his son, and he had also invited the pair of men – brothers, even as he and Domenico were, though Enrico found that he couldn’t quite approve of either of the Darby brothers – who seemed to have attached themselves to the man. The sounds of a rather aggressive-sounding discussion, distinct from an argument because he wasn’t currently hearing any blows being exchanged, drew Enrico down to the large main game room that had been set up for the enjoyment of those who would inevitably make their way to the Desert Rose in order that they might enjoy themselves all the more while they stayed in Egypt.

 

Raising an eyebrow as he found Joseph Joestar lounging with complete insouciance before the elder Darby brother, Enrico turned at the sound of someone making their way over to him.

 

“Oi, ‘Rico!” the younger of the pair of them said, making his way over to where Enrico was currently standing. “Come to watch the show?”

 

“Joseph and your brother are going to have another of their competitions, I take it,” he said, turning a brief glance on Telence, before returning his gaze to where the elder Darby and Joseph were clearly getting set for another game of cards.

 

“Well, my brother does have his pride as a gambler to defend,” Telence said, grinning in amusement, though there was a certain hint of arrogance to his manner.

 

It was part of why he’d never truly approved of the pair of them; both Darby brothers seemed to possess that same arrogance, which he thought was a great deal of the reason that the elder of the two continued to persist in his efforts to defeat Joseph Joestar at the card games that Joseph could easily be said to be an undisputed master of. Enrico personally thought that such a thing was nearly the height of foolishness, but it was not his own time that was being wasted, Enrico was not particularly interested in intervening that something Joseph seemed to enjoy so much.

 

Even as he departed from the room, Enrico could see the goading grin on Joseph’s face; there was little doubt in his mind that Joseph would be claiming another victory – or several, depending on the hard-headed obstinence of the elder Darby brother – this day.

 

The sound of Dio humming drew his attention, and Enrico happily followed it to the room where his old friend had made himself quite at home ever since the livable portions of the Desert Rose had been completed. Chuckling softly as he heard the strains of The Bee Gees’ “More Than A Woman” through the door that he then proceeded to knock upon. Receiving the expected invitation to enter, Enrico made his way over to the table that his old friend was seated before, shirtless as he’d come to expect from the man.

 

These were, after all, Dio’s private quarters; it was to be expected that the man would make himself comfortable when he was most at home.

 

“Did you invite the Darby brothers?” he asked, glancing down at the project that Dio seemed to have in the process of assembly before him; it seemed to be a pile of cloth pieces.

 

Or else it was merely in the very early stages of assembly.

 

“They seem, rather, to have invited themselves,” Dio said, chuckling softly as he returned to setting out the fabrics he was clearly going to be working with. “As they are wont to do, when Daniel finds that my Little Jojo is going to be in a certain place at a certain time.”

 

Enrico chuckled softly, seeing the amused expression that Dio had turned on him, clearly inviting him to share in what was clearly a private joke among the members of the family that he, his brother, and their dear sister had been invited to become a part of not so very long ago.

 

“I suppose that makes sense,” he said, reflecting upon the little he’d seen of the pair of brothers who had seemingly invited themselves – though it was clear that they’d had permission from Dio himself – to the Desert Rose. “Daniel does seem to be rather competitive.”

 

Dio laughed aloud, a sound that served to bring joy to Enrico’s heart; at least when such a sound was genuine. “Yes; he’s never actually managed to defeat my Little Jojo, mind you, but I think that even that serves to motivate him.”

 

“Yes, it seems as though such a thing would serve that kind of purpose, for a man such as him,” he said, smiling slightly, even as he looked down at the project that Dio seemed to have finished assembling the parts for; it seemed, in fact, that he intended to sew something together from the fabric he’d gathered.

 

The spool of white thread that he’d set down upon the table next to him was simply more proof of what he’d been musing upon.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d caught his first glimpse of that new guy who’d come to the Desert Rose, Telence something, Noriaki hadn’t quite known what to make of him. He and Lori had talked about it, and they’d both decided to wait and see. And sure, while it was pretty funny to go down to the game room and watch Mr. Joestar beating the older Mr. Darby at any kind of card game Mr. Darby could think up, Noriaki still didn’t know what to make of the younger of the two brothers.

 

“Hey, I’ve been looking for you two!”

 

Turning at the sound of an unfamiliar voice, Noriaki found himself facing the younger of the pair of brothers; he was a bit stranger looking up close, with the facial-tattoos that he had on his nose, his chin, and also his forehead. He’d never seen someone who did something like that, and Noriaki found himself wondering just what kind of a person he was. He almost looked like a delinquent, really, given everything he’d done to himself.

 

“Really?” Loreena asked, a her usual kind expression on her face, though she was clearly just as curious as Noriaki was, too.

 

“Yeah, I finally got settled in my room, and I was wondering if you guys wanted to come play some video games with me,” the other guy said, his expression becoming inviting.

 

Noriaki found himself almost involuntarily raising his eyebrows. “You have a room here, too? Then, you’re one of Mr. Brando’s other friends.”

 

“Dio’s got a lot of friends,” the tattooed man said, grinning widely. “And, he likes it much better when people actually call him Dio, you should know.”

 

“Yes,” he said, sighing. “I just- I can’t get used to that.”

 

“Ahh,” the tattooed man said, rubbing his chin in thought, the grin on his face still firmly in place. “Well, going by your accent, I’d say you’re Japanese,” he gave Noriaki another, rather amused-seeming, once over. “And, given that outfit of yours, it’s pretty plain that you’re a student. So, if you’re having trouble with informality, you must be new to all this.”

 

“Fairly so,” Loreena said, laughing softly in that way she had of doing when she thought he was being silly but was trying to be kind about it. “My father works for Mr. Brando’s sister, so this is really the most interaction I’ve had with him, myself. Noriaki and I met up in Cairo, so he actually has even less experience with this kind of thing than I did. I at least knew that Mr. Brando was an unashamed eccentric before all of this.”

 

“Well, Dio certainly is certainly an eccentric,” the man, clearly another of Mr. Brando’s friends, given the way he was talking and the fact that he had a room of his own within the Desert Rose. “And anyone can see he’s completely unashamed about it,” he laughed, looking over the pair of them with an expression that Noriaki could only really describe as cheerfully calculating. “Anyway, before we get into all of that, my name is Telence T. D’arby. The ‘D’ has an apostrophe, as my brother is so fond of pointing out,” he said, grinning at them in that way that people did when they were inviting someone else to share in a private joke. “What are your names, then?”

 

“I’m Loreena McKennitt,” Loreena said, and Noriaki stepped forward, his left hand on her right hip, smiling slightly as she turned to nod subtly at him.

 

“I’m Noriaki Kakyoin,” he said, smiling just that much wider as he remembered how she’d ended up having to introduce him, back when he’d still been trying to find his feet in the Desert Rose; and around Mr. Brando in particular.

 

“Ahh,” Telence said, looking over the pair of them with a knowing sort of expression. “You two are a couple, aren’t you?”

 

“I think we might be moving that way,” Loreena said, as she leaned in closer to him, and Noriaki wrapped his arms the rest of the way around her waist.

 

“Yeah,” he said, leaning his chin on her right shoulder, as the pair of them stood together for a long moment. “I think we are.”

 

“Well then, what’s say the two of you come up to my room, and have some fun as a couple?” Telence offered grandly, making his way over to the pair of them so he could clap them both on the shoulder. “You know, make it official and everything?”

 

“I guess we could do that,” Loreena said, after the pair of them had shared a speaking glance.

 

“Well, come on, then,” Telence said, turning and beginning to make his way toward the room that was obviously his, if the way he was smiling was any indication. “Like I said, I managed to get everything the way I like it. So, it’s only right that I get to show it off to someone.”

 

“And we’re the lucky two?” Loreena asked, a sardonically-amused expression on her face, as the pair of them fell into step behind Telence as he made his way to the room that Mr. Brando had given to him when he and his brother had first showed up at the Desert Rose to make themselves at him.

 

“That’s right,” Telence said, grinning back at them as he and Loreena continued following in his wake.

 

=SC=

 

“And that’s the game,” he said, not even bothering to hide his grin, as a certain Daniel J. D’arby screamed like a little baby and threw his hand of cards down on the chips they’d been betting for. “And, next you’ll say: ‘hand me the cards, Joestar! My pride as a gambler won’t be trampled so easily!’ right?”

 

“Hand me the cards, Joestar! My pride as a gambler won’t be trampled so easily!”

 

Grinning all the wider as he handed over his own cards, just as Daniel seemed to realize just what it was that he’d said, Joseph laughed aloud at the expression of impotent rage on his face.

 

“Are you having fun, my Little Jojo?”

 

“Hey, Uncle Dio,” he said, leaning back in his seat as his grand-uncle reached down to cuddle him, chuckling as the vampire kissed him firmly on the cheek. “Well, I’m having fun,” he said, grinning in response to the amused smirk that he could see emerging on the vampire’s face. “Though I don’t think you can really say the same for him,” he said, pointing with his newly-dealt hand to where Daniel was sitting, plainly starting to grind his teeth.

 

“Yes,” Uncle Dio said, chuckling again as he straightened back up. “Well I, Dio, hardly think that dear Daniel engages in these little matches of his for fun, you understand.”

 

He laughed outright, once Uncle Dio turned that fanged grin of his back on him. “Yeah, I’m getting that.”

 

Waving to Uncle Dio as he walked off, laughing at their antics the way he always did when he and a certain Daniel J. D’arby would find themselves in close company again, Joseph turned his attention back to Daniel just as the inveterate little cheater finished setting himself up for one more loss in a long line of them.

 

“Oi, you finished cheating there, Darby?” he asked, deliberately running the man’s name together, just to needle him that much more. “Can we finally get started?”

 

Grinning all the wider at the man as he actually growled in response to that one, Joseph settled back into his seat, deliberately laconic once more; Daniel was so easy to rile.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way back to the room that he and young Jotaro were currently staying in, Enrico found himself thinking about the two brothers who had seemingly invited themselves into the Desert Rose; with Dio’s tacit permission, of course, since he would have struck them down in half an instant if he hadn’t been kindly disposed toward their presence in one of his homes. Or in the life that he had built for himself over the many years that he and Alice had spent in the world that the pair of them all but owned. Enrico still found that he still didn’t know quite what to make of the pair of them.

 

Yes, the pair of them were clearly friends of Dio’s, but Enrico couldn’t quite say that he approved of them.

 

Smiling slightly as he found his closet door opened for him by Jotaro’s Star Platinum, Enrico made his way forward to see just how the boy was doing; and to tell him of the latest happenings in the place where they had all gathered together.

 

“Good afternoon, Jotaro,” he said, making his way over to the boy who had made himself so at home in such a small place.

 

“Hey,” he said, looking up from the comic that he’d settled himself in to read. “They’re putting in a pool, and some kind of a fountain that Uncle Dio says people are going to be able to play in.”

 

“Ah,” he said, nodding as he settled himself down next to Joseph so that the pair of them would be able to speak in a more comfortable manner than they otherwise would have. “It seems as though we’re playing host to more of Dio’s friends.”

 

“Which ones are they this time?” Jotaro asked, a laconic sort of apprehension – contradictory as such a description might have sounded if spoken aloud, or if applied to someone who was not Jotaro Joestar – on his face as he looked up once more from the comic that he was reading.

 

“A pair of brothers with the surname Darby,” he said, understanding better than most the reason for young Jotaro’s reaction to such news as he was receiving; truly, there was no shortage of eccentrics who had been attracted by the charisma that Dio Brando exuded as a matter of course, and if there was anything that Jotaro had proven himself to have a low tolerance for, it was eccentricity.

 

Truly, Enrico could sometimes find himself being overwhelmed by the sheer exuberance with which Dio Brando embraced those around him.

 

Jotaro scoffed, seeming rather unimpressed with the information he’d been given. “Telence isn’t so bad, if you can deal with being challenged to a match every now and then; he’s really into those video games of his. But his brother… He’s got this stupid idea that he can put one over on the Old Man, not that the Old Man really helps or anything, and so every time the Old Man kicks his ass at another of those games of his, he’ll go off on another of those damned tirades of his, and then challenge someone else.”

 

“Sounds rather troublesome.”

 

“Yeah, he is,” Jotaro said, an unimpressed expression passing over his face, even as he returned his attention to his comic.

Chapter 46: The Longest Time

Chapter Text

Once the three of them had all made it to the room that Telence D’arby was staying in, Loreena found herself wondering if there was anything that she’d be able to occupy herself with, while Noriaki and Telence were playing with each other. She’d never found herself particularly interested in actually playing videogames, though she’d occasionally wander down one of the display isles in a store that sold them, if only so she could look at the art displayed on the boxes. You never really quite knew where you were going to find inspiration, after all.

 

“You’ve got a pretty nice setup, here,” Noriaki said, and Loreena smiled softly as she noticed how much more at ease with himself and everyone else around him he seemed to have gotten.

 

It was a nice thing to notice, particularly when she found herself remembering what he’d been like for the first few weeks that he’d stayed in this place.

 

“Oi, you want to take the first turn?” Telence offered, holding out what was presumably one of the controllers to the video game system he’d been talking about all the way up to the room that Mr. Brando had given him to stay in.

 

“Thanks, but it sounds like both of you would have a better time than I would,” she said, smiling at the pair of them as Noriaki and Telence began to get themselves settled down in front of the game-system that Telence had just finished setting up for them. “I’ve never been much of a fan of video games, myself.”

 

“What, really?” Telence asked, a look of abject surprise on his face as he turned back to look at her; it was like he’d never met anyone who didn’t share his obvious passion for the video games that he wanted to share with him.

 

Really, it was kind of funny.

 

“Oh, right,” Noriaki said, a sheepish expression spreading over his face as he and Telence settled themselves down in the chairs that the tattooed man had directed them to. “You really enjoy reading and painting more than this kind of thing, don’t you? Sorry about that.”

 

“It’s all right,” she said, smiling softly to reassure Noriaki that she didn’t hold anything against him. “I know you like this kind of thing, and it can be kind of interesting to watch.”

 

At least sometimes that was true, depending on what kind of game was being played, and sometimes on the skill of the players involved.

 

=SC=

 

Humming softly as he, Dio, continued about his work, he found himself smiling all the wider as he checked the calendar once more. It would not be long, it seemed, until he, Dio, would be able to hold his sweet little Gio in his arms. To show the little one off to all of his new brothers and sisters, as well as all of the extended family that his son would properly have when he was brought into the world that would already have such a wonderful place for him. There would be no need for any son of his to struggle to make their way in the world, nor even to bend Fate itself to their will.

 

Not when all such things had already been taken care of; true, the world as it stood was not yet perfect – not yet the heaven that he, Dio, and all those he loved deserved to live in – but there would still be time to create a Stand capable of building Heaven from the imperfect, transient things of this world.

 

He, Dio, had not been about to deny himself the pleasure of holding his son in his arms simply because he’d not yet managed to arrange the world to his own liking. Chuckling as he pulled the string on the small music box he’d ordered from yet another branch of his sweet sister’s globe-spanning company he, Dio, grinned as he listened to it playing the specific tune he’d ordered. Satisfied with his acquisition he, Dio, made his way back over to the table where he’d just about assembled his current project.

 

Truly, if he was to properly celebrate the birth of his sweet little Gio he, Dio, was going to have to have the project he was working on prepared before that day.

 

=SC=

 

Chuckling softly to himself as he worked on his latest couple of projects, Telence T. D’arby considered again how he was going to get that cute girlfriend of Kakyoin’s to play with him. The kid was pretty good, but Telence had gotten a feel for him over the times they’d spent playing video games together, and he knew more than a few ways that he could get the better of him. Still, that wouldn’t help him with Loreena McKennitt, since she didn’t seem to be really interested in video games at all.

 

It clearly wasn’t going to be easy, but his Atum didn’t actually require that the victim lose to him in a video game, though that kind of thing was the most enjoyable way he’d found to build his collection…

 

The sound of someone knocking on his door drew Telence’s attention, and he got up from his desk to make his way over there so he could see just who it was who’d come to talk to him for whatever reason. Opening his door, he blinked in surprise as he found himself facing the blind Stand user named N’Doul.

 

“Hey,” he said, looking up and down the form of the man speaking to him, wondering just what in the hell he’d come to his room for. “N’Doul, right?”

 

“Yes,” the man said, and Telence almost felt like the man’s eyes, blind as he knew they were, were staring holes right through him. “Telence T. D’arby,” the man said, and Telence forced himself not to shudder; there was something entirely too unsettling about the way the man seemed to be watching him. “I hope you’re settling in well.”

 

“I am,” he said, trying to get some kind of a read on the enigmatic man staring down at him, even blind as he was.

 

But Atum could only answer him when he asked the right questions, and if he didn’t know what to ask… Well, that was that. When N’Doul turned away, leaving with the same kind of abrupt suddenness that he’d first appeared with, Telence found himself wondering again just what in the hell had been going on. He’d have known if the strange man had been there to attack him, since that was one of the first things he always asked Atum when he found himself in situations like this.

 

What the blind man had wanted, however, Atum still couldn’t tell him.

 

=SC=

 

When she’d gotten word from Caesar, stating that his associates in Passione would be much more amenable to dealing with Jack Harper – she’d told him that The Illusive Man was an alias he used, and he’d laughed ruefully at his own confusion – if they could actually see him while they were speaking to him. And, while she’d more or less been expecting such a thing to end up being the case, she’d have been lying if she didn’t admit that she found that fairly annoying.

 

It was nothing she couldn’t deal with, but it was annoying all the same.

 

Thus informed of what she was going to need to do, Alice had given Straizo instructions to take care of the day-to-day running of her company, and then made her way down into the laboratory that she used for developing new materials. Or, in this case, constructing the new persona that she was going to need, in order to make any headway with the people that she was going to be meeting. Or rather, the people Jack Harper was going to be meeting.

 

Stardust appeared in the lab, seeming to have summoned itself of its own accord – more and more, it was starting to seem like Stardust and Whitesnake had a great deal more in common than her Stand did with Dio’s own Stand, despite the fact that she and Dio were twins and most of her association with Enrico Pucci was of a rather indirect sort – and tilted its head as Alice turned a considering expression upon her Stand.

 

“Well, I suppose since you’re here, you might as well make yourself useful,” she said, smirking wryly.

 

Stardust grinned in response.

 

=SC=

 

The sound of something exploding was the first thing that roused Jotaro from a sound sleep, but when he saw Pucci coming into the closet where he’d been staying, an exasperated look on his face rather than any of the urgency or fear he’d have expected if there was actually something going wrong, Jotaro sat back down.

 

“The hell’s Uncle Dio doing this time?” he asked, knowing just who was ultimately responsible for whatever kind of weird shit was going on, even if he didn’t know quite what it was, yet.

 

“Making a spectacle of himself with party crackers, or so Whitesnake reports,” Pucci said, his face twitching slightly as another muffled explosion sounded.

 

Yare yare,” he muttered, pulling down the brim of his cap. “It’s today, isn’t it?”

 

“According to the calendar he’s been making a point of checking every day for the past week, yes,” Pucci said, plopping down next to him with a gusty, exasperated sort of sigh. “Gio Brando is set to enter the world on this very day.”

 

“Uncle Dio’s going to be insufferable,” he said, using one of Straizo’s favorite ways to describe the Old Man when he was being particularly troublesome.

 

“He’s going to want to have cake,” Pucci said, the slightest twitch to his mouth letting Jotaro know just what he thought about that. “Nothing palatable, either; no, one of those unbearably sweet kinds.”

 

Looking over at Star, having had more than enough experience with Uncle Dio’s weird taste in cake, he nodded and his Stand vanished and quickly reappeared holding a pair of chocolate bars. Turning to Pucci, having finally found a kindred spirit in this kind of thing – it was one of the few things that he and aunt Alice didn’t have in common, actually, but of course she didn’t pester him about it the way he knew Uncle Dio would have if he ever found out about it – Jotaro handed one over to Pucci.

 

“Here,” he said, handing over the second of the two bars he’d had Star fetch. “Uncle Dio usually lets me get away without eating any cake if he sees I’ve got one of these.”

 

“99% cacao,” Pucci muttered, turning the bar over in his hands, examining it in the same sort of way that Aunt Alice would do when she was presented with something unfamiliar; he’d known that there were a lot of things about Pucci that reminded him of Aunt Alice, so finding one more thing was kind of nice, in a weird sort of way.

 

“They make a 75% bar, too, but that’s really too sweet for me,” he said, shrugging. “Still, Uncle Dio might let you get away without having any cake if he sees you with one of these, too.”

 

“I suppose,” Pucci said, just a second before Jotaro found both himself and Pucci dropped onto Pucci’s bed.

 

“Now, you two weren’t thinking to hide from my little GioGio’s first birthday, were you now?” Uncle Dio drawled, grinning down at the pair of them, even as he grabbed him and Pucci under each arm. “And you, my grumpy little cat,” Uncle Dio said, grinning down at him in particular. “I can’t believe that you, of all people, would want to miss out on your own cousin’s first birthday.”

 

Yare yare, daze,” he muttered; still, being called a grumpy cat was at least a bit better than being called the Littlest Jojo.

 

“Yes, quite,” Pucci muttered, and Jotaro could see him pinching the bridge of his nose the way people did when they were trying not to get a headache. “I am perfectly capable of walking, Dio.”

 

“I know that,” Uncle Dio said, grinning in that annoying way he had when he knew he was being a pain in someone’s ass, and he wanted to do it even more.

 

Rolling his eyes as he saw Uncle Dio’s Stand opening the door for him, Jotaro folded his arms as he found himself being carried out the door and down the stairs. There was the expected debris from all of the party crackers that Uncle Dio had been screwing with, the confetti and streamers all over the damned stairs and the railings that led down into the living room, and Jotaro rolled his eyes as the three of them went down. Turning to glare up at Uncle Dio as he started to hum that birthday song that he’d heard so many times when he and the Old Man would ambush him for another of those annoying celebrations that they liked to spring on him every damned year like clockwork, Jotaro wondered just when in the hell this whole thing would be over.

 

=SC=

 

His grumpy little cat had finally settled down, even as Enrico had stopped squirming in that adorably subtle way he had of doing, when he, Dio, had made it down to the salon where all of the others who had been invited to his Desert Rose had presented themselves to welcome his little GioGio into the world. Tossing the pair of them down on a couch that he, Dio, had had set out for just this sort of an occasion. He hadn’t yet managed to have the party room entirely set up yet, but this would suffice for the time being.

 

Chuckling as he, Dio, settled down in the chair that had been set up to preside over the gathering of his sweet family and those friends of his who had proven themselves worthy to stand beside him in the new world that he was going to make he, Dio, smiled all the wider as he looked them over. The sound of a distant rapping on the front door of his Desert Rose, just as Vanilla Ice had obligingly settled his sweet little GioGio down in his lap, caused him to raise an eyebrow, returning his gaze to his loyal Vanilla Ice.

 

“Vanilla, kindly go see who that is, would you?”

 

“Yes, Lord Dio,” his faithful retainer said, sweeping a bow as he quickly departed from their gathering.

 

=SC=

 

Finding himself and Loreena invited to another celebration by Mr. Brando, another one that felt like it should really be only for the family that Mr. Brando had gathered around himself, had still been pretty strange. But, as Mr. Brando’s Stand made its way around the table, handing out plates of cake and putting colorful hats on each and every one of them as it finished with that, Noriaki chuckled softly. As weird as things around here could get, Noriaki was finding himself more and more at home.

 

Everyone here was a Stand user, after all; there was nothing in his life that could compare to the kind of companionship that he’d found in this place.

 

When Mr. Ice came back into the room, leading a big guy with silver hair done up in some kind of style that Noriaki hadn’t seen before, Noriaki found himself surprised. He thought that every one of the people who meant something special to Mr. Brando and his family had been invited to this celebration.

 

“He says his name is Jean Pierre Polnareff,” Mr. Ice said, leaning down so that he could speak to Mr. Brando where he was sitting with his little baby, cuddling it close and playfully tweaking the little thing’s nose every now and then.

 

Watching as Mr. Brando raised an eyebrow, once Mr. Ice had leaned close to speak to him without anyone else being able to overhear, Noriaki found himself wondering just what in the world was going on. He supposed that he was going to find out when all of the rest of those present did, but there was still a part of him that wanted to find out sooner.

 

“Ah, so you’ve met my sister,” Mr. Brando said, grinning widely as he waved the newcomer Mr. Polnareff down into a seat next to Loreena. “Come, then; celebrate with us, Jean.”

 

“Well, thank you for inviting me, Mr. Brando,” Mr. Polnareff said, settling down in the seat that had been offered to him; the one that put Loreena between the pair of them. Something that Mr. Polnareff seemed to take notice of right away. “And who is this vision of loveliness?”

 

“I’m Loreena McKennitt, Mr. Polnareff,” Loreena said, sounding almost like she wanted to laugh, but knew that that kind of thing would have been rude; especially considering where the both of them were, right at the moment.

 

“What a lovely accent you have,” Mr. Polnareff said, laying it on a bit too thick for Noriaki’s taste. “Are you from England?”

 

“Wales, actually,” Loreena said, smiling slightly as Noriaki reached out to clasp her left hand, pulling it into his lap as she leaned back into the circle of his arms.

 

Out of the corner of his left eye, Noriaki noticed Mr. Brando smiling slyly at them; he was starting to understand more and more why Jotaro looked so exasperated whenever he ended up having to spend time with the man he called his uncle. Really, Mr. Brando seemed to go out of his way to do anything and everything that defied convention, just to say he could. And, while it could easily be said that Stand users defied convention simply by existing, Mr. Brando clearly defied convention because he thought it was fun.

 

=SC=

 

Finding himself with his little cousin Gio Brando in his arms, while Uncle Dio went around serving the monstrosity of buttercream frosting and sprinkles that he called a cake, Jotaro looked down into the little guy’s eyes. They had a lot more amber to them than he’d been expecting, really. Still, he’d heard that only vampires actually had the kind of blood-crimson eyes that Uncle Dio and Aunt Alice both shared, so maybe this was what their eyes had looked like back when the two of them had been human, too.

 

Back in the nineteenth century, Jotaro mused, offering Gio his right pointer-finger as the kid started to reach out of the bundle of blankets that Uncle Dio – or Vanilla Ice, but he didn’t quite see Uncle Dio letting anyone else handle his kid after he’d just come out – had wrapped him up in so he wouldn’t get cold or anything like that. Chuckling softly when Gio grabbed his finger, Jotaro tugged lightly and found himself smiling just a bit wider as Gio tugged back.

 

“Quite the grip my little Gio has, right, my Littlest Jojo?”

 

Sighing as he turned to see Uncle Dio leaning over him, Jotaro rolled his eyes as he continued playfully tugging on Gio’s little hand. “Whatever you say, Uncle Dio,” he muttered, knowing that the vampire would be able to hear him; Aunt Alice had told him about the acute senses that she and the rest of her kind – the few of them that there were – possessed.

 

Shaking his head as Uncle Dio turned back to the last slices of the cake he’d probably baked himself, Jotaro scoffed as he watched his weird uncle turning to Pucci with that same look of determination he always got on his face when he was going to try to get someone to do something dumb. Or at least something that they weren’t fond of doing.

 

=SC=

 

Fighting himself not to twitch as he found himself confronted with the mass of frosting and sprinkles that Dio had created in order to celebrate the birth of his clearly beloved son, Enrico sighed in relief as Domenico took the plate from him. He had ended up taking a bite – though thankfully only one – when Dio had turned a look of sorrowful pleading upon him, and asked if he truly didn’t enjoy the cake that he had spent such a long time making. Enrico, knowing that for all his bluster Dio was a truly sensitive soul, had in the end submitted himself to eating at least a single bite.

 

Such had been all that he could stand, in the end, of a dessert so rich in sweetness Enrico would have been shocked to learn that it contained anything less than a pound of sugar.

 

As the celebration began to wind down, with Enrico having cleansed his palate with the unsweetened chocolate that Jotaro had been kind enough to give to him before this exercise in oddity that his old friend would doubtless consider one of his more sedate celebrations. Particularly given the presence of young Gio among all of the festivities. Enrico had his doubts that such a young child as Gio currently was would possess even the faintest memories of the celebration being ostensibly held in his honor; however, in light of the sheer tenderness that he could see in every line of Dio’s ageless face when the vampire held his son – such tenderness as Enrico knew full well that he was capable of, but had little chance to see under most circumstances – Enrico was glad to be with his friend in such a time.

 

He simply wished that Dio had chosen to prepare a more palatable cake to welcome his son into the world.

 

=SC=

 

Once Uncle Dio had finished being weird at them all, going back to his room with little cousin Gio – Jotaro finally allowed himself to roll his eyes; really, he was glad that Uncle Dio and the Old Man hadn’t tried to overrule Dad or Mom when they’d been in the process of choosing Jotaro’s own name, since there was entirely too much of a chance that Jotaro himself would have ended up with some kind of weird, rhyming name of his own if that had been the case – Jotaro gratefully made his own way back to Pucci’s room. Sure, he knew that there was pretty much no chance in hell that anyone didn’t already know that he was rooming with the man, but it was a rare person who was willing to bother Enrico Pucci when he wanted to be alone.

 

The guy had a lot more in common with Aunt Alice than most people knew, including the ability to be really scary in that soft-spoken way of his; really, it was one more reason that Jotaro had come to like him, even with as weird as he could get about Uncle Dio.

 

Settling himself down in the space Star and Pucci had both made for him in the latter’s closet, in the beanbag chair beside the pile of manga that Star had fetched from his room, Jotaro made himself comfortable again. The party for cousin Gio had been just as weird as he’d been expecting, with Uncle Dio bringing out a stuffed cake that played the Happy Birthday cong alongside the actual, normal kinds of stuffed toys that all of the people who weren’t crazy had bought to celebrate cousin Gio’s first birthday. Still, it’d been fun enough, and Uncle Dio had been preoccupied enough with cousin Gio that he hadn’t tried to get anyone to do anything too weird.

 

Aside from conning Pucci into eating that overly-sweetened mass of frosting and sprinkles he called a cake, but that was really Pucci’s own fault for having no spine when it came to Uncle Dio; he’d at least thanked Jotaro for the chocolate, once the party had broken up and everyone had left to go back to their own rooms.

 

Stretching as he heard the sound of someone making their way into the room, Jotaro smirked slightly as the closet door opened and Pucci made his way into the closet with him.

 

“Quite the celebration.”

 

“Yeah,” he allowed, smirking in response to Pucci’s subtle smile.

 

Both of them knew that it was hardly going to be the only one Uncle Dio was going to drag them to.

Chapter 47: I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing

Chapter Text

Just when he’d managed to get himself settled, after the strange, unsettling visit that he’d had with N’Doul – which the party for little Gio Brando had helped quite a lot with – Telence found himself once again confronted by the blind man that had come out to by weirdly cryptic at him for whatever reason that kind of man would have. Having once again found himself the target of those useless, enigmatic, hidden eyes, Telence tried as hard as he could to fight back the shudder that wanted to crawl up his spine. He hated himself for failing.

 

“Telence, are you familiar with what they say about still water?”

 

Still water…? he mused, wondering just how in the hell he was supposed to know anything like that; he was just about to open his mouth to tell the man that no, he didn’t know what in the hell he was talking about so would he please just go the hell away, when he recalled something that he’d been told awhile ago. That was what my last handler said, the last time I reported to him… But, if this guy’s using a Blackwater code… Telence found himself tensing, even as he tried as hard as he could not to be obvious about the fact that he was doing so, which probably went over about as well as a concrete airplane given that this guy was Blackwater, but there was at least the chance that N’Doul would respect him for the effort.

 

“Telence, you are aware that Lord Dio is quite fond of Noriaki Kakyoin and Loreena McKennitt, are you not?” N’Doul asked, and there was something in his tone that made him have to fight down a shudder; or maybe it was just because he knew N’Doul was a Blackwater agent.

 

“Yes, I’m aware of that,” he said, working up a smile that he hoped would placate the man, even though he knew from even his comparatively few encounters with his own handler back in the day that Blackwater agents weren’t the kind to be fooled by outward appearances.

 

“That’s good to hear,” N’Doul said, and there was still something in his tone that unsettled Telence as the pair of them continued speaking; or rather, his lack of a real tone.

 

As N’Doul turned to leave, Telence finally allowed himself to shudder as he leaned against the door he’d closed as quickly as he could manage without actually slamming it. He couldn’t help thinking about what he’d heard his old handler say, back when the pair of them had spoken about the subject: there were no rogue Blackwatch agents.

 

=SC=

 

Sighing as she set the phone down, Loreena reflected on what she’d just heard; apparently, her father had finished his work in Cairo, and the pair of them were going to be leaving Cairo in about three days. Making her way out of the Desert Rose’s front room, Loreena made her way back to the room that she and Noriaki had been sharing for the few months that the pair of them had been staying at the hotel alongside Dio Brando and his eccentric family. Sighing again, even as she called out Crimson Ace to walk beside her and give her at least some of the support that she was going to need to face what was coming – she’d honestly tried not to make close friends in the past, since she always knew what was going to be coming when she and her father inevitably had to move – Loreena wrapped her left arm around her Stand’s neck as she made her way over to the door to her and Noriaki’s room.

 

Taking a deep breath as she let herself into the room, Loreena caught sight of Noriaki sitting at the table, clearly waiting for her to get back from talking on the phone.

 

“Loreena-chan, what’s wrong?” he asked, getting up out of his seat so that the pair of them could share an embrace for the first time since she’d left to go speak to her father in the Desert Rose’s front room.

 

“It looks like I’m going to be leaving again soon,” she said, as the pair of them curled up together on the small couch that Mr. Brando had had brought into their room.  “Dad says he’s done with his work here, so the pair of us are going to be moving on.”

 

Unspoken was the fact that, while she had originally enjoyed moving around alongside her father on his many and varied business trips – since they had been and likely would continue to be a great source of inspiration to her when she was painting or drawing – there wasn’t really a way of bringing Noriaki along with them. And, now that the pair of them had gotten to know each other so well, she wasn’t at all eager to leave him behind the way she it seemed that she was going to have to.

 

What? When?” Noriaki asked, sounding like someone had just punched him in the face; he looked like it, too, and for just a second Loreena found herself regretting having told him in the first place.

 

“In about three days,” she said, gripping his hands tighter as Noriaki’s face crumpled.

 

Still, there might be a way that she could work things out; Mom had chosen to stay back in Wales, since she’d never been one for traveling all over the place the way Dad’s job – and honestly his temperament, as well – had called for him to do for so long. The pair of them had long conversations on the phone, and would meet in person whenever their respective schedules allowed for such a thing. Given the look on Noriaki’s face as he followed her out of the room, though, Loreena didn’t think he’d be amenable to anything like that.

 

At least not so early in their relationship, anyway.

 

=SC=

 

As he and Loreena-chan made their way down into the front room of the Desert Rose, where Loreena-chan had gotten the bad news from her father, Noriaki found himself wondering if there was anything he could do about it. Or, really, if there was anything that Jotaro Kujo and his family could do. Sure, all of them seemed at least a little eccentric – even Miss Holly, who was the kindest person he’d met if he didn’t count Loreena-chan – but they were also fellow Stand users, and all of them lived in Japan.

 

So, even though he and Jotaro did still have their differences, it might just be worth asking; he had the feeling Miss Holly would probably be willing, and she could probably convince her son to do something nice for a change.

 

Swallowing a chuckle at the thought of Jotaro Kujo and his endless quest to exact revenge for his stolen hat – which really would be endless if he kept being so annoying about it – Noriaki turned and started making his way toward the room where Miss Holly was staying. As he did so, Noriaki couldn’t help but consider the look on Loreena-chan’s face as she continued down to the main room of the Desert Rose; it’d looked like she had something important on her mind. He wondered what it could be, but knew that there would be at least be a little more time for him to find out.

 

And, with some luck and Miss Holly’s approval, he’d have more than just a little time.

 

=SC=

 

The all-pervasive chemical stink, something that her enhanced senses as a vampire had made all the more troublesome to deal with, hung in the air as Alice continued the work that she and Stardust had begun on the full-body prosthetic that she’d need in this day and age – considering the fact that she was both the head of an international corporation, and had had so many photos taken with various and sundry heads of state in her time and the time of her alleged predecessors – to pass as the man she was going to be going undercover as for this particular operation. Unlike in previous eras, where she hadn’t had the dual complications of fame and physical development to deal with, she couldn’t just throw on some clothing that looked masculine and pass herself off as someone she wasn’t. To say nothing of the way that fashions had changed in the intervening years, she’d become rather famous for wearing tailored suits with slacks.

 

A lot like the kinds of thing she’d worn in her Fleetwood Mac persona, really.

 

=SC=

 

Once Loreena had finished speaking to her father, telling him about who she’d met and just why it was that she wanted to stay – either in Cairo, or in Japan if she could manage to bring one or more of the Kujo family around – she felt lighter than she had when she’d first gotten the phone call in the first place. Dad had been understanding about what had ultimately drawn her to stay, just like he’d been understanding about why Mom had wanted to stay back in Wales while he went off on his various jobs for Brando International. Smiling as she made her way back through the Desert Rose’s main room, Loreena began to hear the sounds of a couple of people making their way down the main staircase.

 

A couple of rather familiar people.

 

“Loreena-chan!” Noriaki called cheerfully, hurrying carefully down the stairs so that the pair of them could hug; even as they did so, she kept an eye on Jotaro.

 

Something told her that she’d have an easy time guessing what he was going to say, if not how he was going to say it. Particularly since Jotaro Kujo was almost compulsively taciturn.

 

“Oi, you got anything besides those paintings of yours?” Jotaro asked, and Loreena almost had to force herself not to laugh, as she once again found her initial impression borne out; she shook her head, not quite trusting her voice at the moment. “Good, come on,” he said, as Star Platinum appeared behind him. “We’re gonna be leaving soon.”

 

Sure enough, in the Stand’s arms were the few paintings that Mr. Brando hadn’t bought from her, as well as the sketches that she’d done when she hadn’t quite been in the mood to paint but had still wanted to do something, and Loreena found that she couldn’t quite manage to hold back a laugh. Still, all Jotaro did, as the pair of them fell into step beside one another, was mutter that Japanese phrase that seemed to be his habitual response to anything that annoyed him.

 

Or really, anything at all, given that everything seemed to annoy him in one way or another.

 

=SC=

 

Mom had been particularly enthusiastic about welcoming Loreena into their home, once they’d made it off the plane and back into Japan proper again, but the Old Man seemed to be bound and determined to tease her about her and Kakyoin’s budding relationship. Loreena gave as good as she got, though, so at least Jotaro found that he could have some actual peace and quiet while he made his way back to his room.

 

It was kind of weird, though, the way that coming home to the mansion that the Old Man had bought as a honeymoon present – probably just to show off how rich he was – didn’t seem that much different than staying at the Desert Rose with Uncle Dio. Sure, there were a lot more of Mom’s personal touches to the house they were currently staying in, and also the fact that the Kujo house was obviously Japanese in contrast to the Desert Rose and its clear Egyptian roots, but even in spite of that there was something that he couldn’t describe that united the two places.

 

It wasn’t something that he spent a lot of time thinking about, but having just arrived back in his house from the Desert Rose, Jotaro found the thought sticking in his mind for a long moment.

 

Sighing as he shook his head, Jotaro began making his way to the kitchen. Turning to smirk at Star, as his Stand appeared beside him, Jotaro chuckled. At least not everything that had happened at the Desert Rose was as annoying as he’d been expecting, what with being stuck with the Old Man and Uncle Dio for such a long time.

 

Still, even with the annoying girls that he knew would be waiting for him when he got back, the prospect of going back to school was a refreshingly normal one.

 

=SC=

 

“Thanks again for offering to take me in like this, Mrs. Kujo,” she said, as Jotaro’s mother continued showing her all around the huge house where she and her son lived.

 

Really, even considering the fact that Mr. Joestar had bought the place for them, it was really huge for just two people to stay in all on their own; and maybe that was some of the reason that Mrs. Kujo had been so willing to invite her to stay with them.

 

“Oh, you don’t need to thank me, Loreena-chan!” Mrs. Kujo chirped, with the same buoyant cheerfulness that seemed to be as natural a part of her as Jotaro’s laid-back calm. “Come on; Dad offered to let you stay in his room, so you won’t have to worry about getting used to sleeping on a futon,” Mrs. Kujo laughed, looking as though she was remembering something funny. “Dad was always complaining about that; really, you should’ve heard him.”

 

She laughed, too; really, Mr. Joestar did seem to be just the kind of reckless exaggerator that Mr. Brando clearly took some perverse kind of pride in being. It was probably a lot of the reason why the pair of them got along so well, aside from the fact that they were both family and hence also had the advantage of that kind of closeness, too. As she and Mrs. Kujo made their way back to the main room of her and Jotaro’s immense, traditional Japanese-style house – Mrs. Kujo had been adamant that that was what it was, even though Loreena herself hadn’t had a basis for any kind of comparison – Loreena found herself smiling all the wider as she caught sight of Noriaki waiting for her.

 

He was sitting on one of the many cushions that Mrs. Kujo seemed to have set around in lieu of chairs, at least in those places that clearly showed her influence – or else that of her husband, who she’d mentioned as being out of the house about as much as Loreena’s own father had ended up being – in their decoration and furnishings. As she and Mrs. Kujo came back into sight of the room, Noriaki got back to his feet, his usual, small smile slowly spreading across his face.

 

“Thank you so much for letting Loreena-chan stay with you, Holly-san,” Noriaki said, bowing more deeply than she’d ever seen him do before.

 

“You don’t have to thank me, Noriaki-chan,” Mrs. Kujo said, laughing softly as she made her way over to where Noriaki was standing, Loreena following in her wake.

 

Slipping her left arm around Noriaki’s shoulders, Loreena held him for a long moment, before they said their goodbyes and he turned to leave the Kujo household.

 

“Well now, let’s see about getting you a uniform, Loreena-chan,”  Mrs. Kujo said, turning back to her with a determined sort of smile.

 

“You have uniforms here?” she asked, wondering what kind of schooling she would find in this place, since it was a lot different from anywhere else she’d been.

 

“That’s right, you’ve never been to a Japanese school before, have you, Loreena-chan?”

 

“Well, I’ve been to a lot of other kinds of schools,” she said, smiling back at Mrs. Kujo as the pair of them made their way back to the room where she was going to be staying. “But, you’re right: Dad doesn’t do any work in Japan. I’m pretty sure Ms. Brando has other people for this part of the world.”

 

=SC=

 

Once he and Star had gone back to his room, sandwich and chilled soda in hand, Jotaro made his way over to his desk. Having the chance to get away from all of the shit he had to deal with around Japan had been nice enough, but now that he was back, he was at least going to make some effort to get back into his usual routine. Though there were clearly going to be a few changes, considering the way that Mom had invited Loreena to stay with them, just so she and that annoying bishonen hat thief would be able to stay together while her dad did whatever kind of work that Aunt Alice was having him do for her and Uncle Dio’s company.

 

Whatever that was.

 

The new routine that he and Mom settled into wasn’t that different from their old one, even with the addition of another Stand user into their sprawling, oversized house. And even though Loreena wasn’t quite used to all things Japanese, the way that Mom had worked so hard to become over the years that she’d spent with Dad, she did seem easygoing enough to adapt to how things were going to be from now on. Or at least for however much time she was going to be spending in Japan with them.

 

=SC=

 

When he set out for school, after he and his parents had finished settling themselves back into their house after their vacation in Egypt, Noriaki found himself honestly excited by the prospect for the first time in a long while. After all, he’d met more Stand users over there than he’d ever thought possible, and had even been given the chance to meet someone who seemed to have even more in common with him than just being a Stand user. It wasn’t anything like what he’d been expecting, when he and his family had set off from Japan in the first place, but Noriaki had long since admitted to himself that he hadn’t had much hope for that trip in the first place.

 

Back then, he’d all but given up hope of ever meeting anyone who could understand him; anyone who would be able to see his Hierophant Green for what it truly was, and hence to accept Noriaki for who he truly was.

 

Now, after all the people that he’d met in Cairo, Noriaki found that he felt much more settled. Having already spoken to his parents about transferring to the school that Jotaro – and Loreena-chan, since he’d heard that Miss Holly had helped her to get all of her papers in order so that she could attend alongside him and Jotaro – went to, Noriaki had made his way to Jotaro’s house as quickly as he could. Not so much for Jotaro himself, since fellow Stand user or not, that guy was entirely too into himself for Noriaki to deal with in large doses.

 

Or, at least too into his hat, anyway.

 

When he made it to the porch of the Kujo house – the mansion that seemed to be almost the same size as the hotel where he and Loreena-chan had met first with Mr. Brando, and then with the other members of his family – Noriaki smiled as he watched Jotaro cringe in that way he somehow did without actually moving, as Miss Holly kissed him goodbye and wished the pair of them a good day at school.

 

“Your mother really loves you, you know,” he said, grinning slightly as he made his way over to where Loreena-chan and Jotaro were just starting to make their way away from the Kujo house.

 

“Whatever,” Jotaro replied, adjusting his hat in that way he seemed to do when he was annoyed by something but didn’t want to say anything.

 

Then again, Jotaro seemed to be annoyed by almost everything.

 

When the three of them came into sight of the school at last, Noriaki wrapped his left arm around Loreena-chan’s right, lacing their fingers together as the three of them all continued on their way. As their trio stepped onto the school grounds, however, Noriaki couldn’t help but notice the way that Jotaro was tensing up. Sure, it was about as subtle as everything else he did, but Noriaki couldn’t help but wonder just what could have drawn that kind of a reaction from him.

 

At least, he wondered that up until the swarm of chattering girls began closing in all around them. For a few moments it seemed as though, with their attention focused squarely on Jotaro, he and Loreena-chan would be able to make their way to class at least relatively unmolested. That was, of course, when one of the girls turned her attention to him.

 

=SC=

 

He knew that he shouldn’t have been watching the annoying girls’ discovery of Loreena’s annoying bishonen of a boyfriend like it was his own personal sitcom – particularly given the fact that it was something that Uncle Dio would have done without a second thought, probably sending out his own Stand for popcorn just so he could really rub in the fact that he was relishing in someone’s annoyance – but there was just something intrinsically funny about watching someone else having to deal with all of the girls who seem to want to nothing more out of their lives than to hang off of him like some kind of barnacles.

 

“Oi, Loreena, we should get going,” he called, drawing the attention of the only girl that he could honestly say that he was actually friends with.

 

“Yes, it probably would be best not to be late on the first day of school,” Loreena said, sounding amused and more than a little frazzled at once; not much point in asking why that was.

 

“She’s my sister,” he said, in response to one of the chattering girls’ demands to know just who Loreena was and why she was so close to him.

 

Leaving the girls to their confused muttering, even as Loreena herself laughed softly and that annoying bishonen hat-thief managed to catch up to them again, Jotaro smiled slightly as he continued on his way to school. This time, things might not be so bad, he mused, even as he caught the annoyed look the bishonen was shooting him over Loreena’s right shoulder. Tugging the brim of his cap, he smirked back in response.

 

Sure, that was something Uncle Dio would have done, too – and had done, more than a few times when there was someone who he particularly enjoyed screwing with in his sights – but Jotaro figured he could allow himself at least a little bit of leeway for this, even if he’d never admit it in front of anyone who might tell Uncle Dio.

 

=SC=

 

It was strange, Enrico found, missing the presence of Jotaro Joestar when the boy was little more than a phone call away. Whitesnake had, of course, chided Enrico in his gentle way, reminding him of what it was that he already knew. What he’d found himself forgetting, when he looked at his closet and found that it was empty.

 

And so, that was why Enrico had made his way over to the telephone that Dio had been kind enough to install in the room that had been furnished and set aside for him even during the prolonged construction of the Desert Rose. Dialing the number that Mrs. Holly Kujo had been kind enough to grant him the use of, during the time that her family had been staying under the care of Dio and his dear friend’s servants, Enrico waited through the familiar tones of a long-distance call connecting.

 

“Greetings, Holly,” he said, smiling gently as he heard the kindly woman’s gentle voice once more. “It pleases me to hear from you again, but I confess that I wished to speak to Jotaro. Would you mind fetching him?”

Chapter 48: Happy Nation

Chapter Text

It hadn’t been easy, getting his hands on Enya’s old list of contacts – particularly since Dio had been on what might have easily been called a crusade against anything and everything that had more than the most passing of connections to the hag after what she’d been stupid enough to try doing – but in the end Telence had been able to copy enough of them down that he’d felt at least reasonably sure he would be able to gain at least some kind of success. Even if only indirectly.

 

Still, knowing that Dio wasn’t the kind of person who would think twice before attacking someone if he so much caught a hint of Enya Geil’s remaining presence – the man wasn’t particularly sane or restrained when it came to those people he considered either personal enemies or a danger to his family as a whole – and having access to the old hag’s contact-list would probably be considered a big one. But really, it wasn’t like he was going to send any of these guys after the Commander, or anything. No one sane would go after the Commander, and that wasn’t just because she had Blackwater on her side, and every Blackwatch agent – in-training or not – was in contact with one of their agents in the person of their handler.

 

No, anyone who’d seen Alice Brando at work already knew why smart people didn’t fuck with the Commander.

 

Besides, it wasn’t like he was actually planning to kill anyone, no matter what kind of ideas had been in N’Doul’s head when the Blackwater agent had delivered something that couldn’t have been mistaken for anything but an ultimatum.

 

=SC=

 

Her first day attending school in Japan hadn’t quite been anything like what Loreena had been expecting: aside from having to dodge pretty much every girl in the school – or what had felt like every girl, anyway – Loreena had found herself relying more and more on both Noriaki and Jotaro to figure out what people were saying. Everyone just seemed to talk so fast, seeming to expect that everyone else would be able to follow them when they seemed to be speaking a hundred words a second. Aside from that, no one seemed to know quite what to make of a foreigner who looked like her and wasn’t from America.

 

No one really seemed to know anything about Wales, either, since most of them seemed apt to ask her if she was sure she wasn’t American.

 

It was all fairly strange, but Loreena figured that she wouldn’t have to deal with that kind of thing once the novelty of her presence had finally had a chance to wear off; she’d just have to be patient. What was actually troubling – as opposed to the consistent sense of annoyed amusement she felt at almost constantly being asked if she was from a place where she’d only spent a few months during a business trip with her father – was the fact that she seemed to be the target of several of the girls who had been pestering Jotaro when he’d been making his way to school in the first place. So far, it didn’t seem to be anything dangerous, but finding herself pushed to use Crimson Ace to avoid being drenched by a bucket of water that had been rigged up over one of the doorways that she’d passed through had been one of the more troublesome things that Loreena had found herself having to deal with during the course of her day.

 

Still, having the chance to stay with Noriaki instead of being forced to leave with her father when his work inevitably called for him to move was worth quite a bit, as far as she was concerned.

 

That was certainly an interesting day,” she said, as she, Noriaki, and Jotaro all made their way back to their respective homes.

 

“It was a pain in the ass,” Jotaro groused, before turning a slight smirk on her as she continued to keep pace with him. “Though the way you used your Stand to throw off every one of their stupid pranks was kind of funny.”

 

“I aim to please,” she volleyed back, offering a smirk of her own in return.

 

“I still can’t believe how persistent those girls were,” Noriaki said, the dubious expression he’d worn for so long coming back as his thoughts clearly returned to the day that they’d all just been through together. “Even after both of us said we weren’t interested,” he turned an amusedly-chiding look on Jotaro. “Well, I said I wasn’t interested; your responses weren’t fit to be printed.”

 

“Fuck off,” Jotaro shot back, glaring at Noriaki with about his usual level of annoyance for life, the universe, and everything.

 

“He’s so articulate, isn’t he?” Noriaki asked, turning to her with an airily-mocking expression on his face.

 

Loreena tried to stifle a laugh, but given the annoyed expression that she was getting from Jotaro as the pair of them split off from Noriaki to make their way back to the Kujo mansion, she couldn’t help suspecting that she hadn’t been entirely successful.

 

=SC=

 

When he and Daniel had finally taken their leave of the Desert Rose – since none of the people they were interested in were staying there anymore – Telence had made certain to carefully conceal the list of names that he’d copied down from that old hag’s list of contacts. He didn’t know if Dio had managed to find out about them, but if there was one thing that any sane person would want to avoid, it was a misunderstanding with Dio Brando. Especially if said misunderstanding ended up giving him the impression that you were going to be a threat to the people he cared about.

 

One thing Dio and the Commander definitely had in common was their intolerance for threats of any kind.

 

Once he and Daniel had settled back into their cozy little house, with Daniel still grumbling about the way he kept losing to Joseph Joestar in spite of the fact that it would have probably taken an actual clairvoyant to beat him, Telence made his way up to his room. He knew from long, amusing experience that his brother wasn’t going to be fit company for anyone who wasn’t in the mood to listen to his grousing for at least the next day, if not the next couple of days. That, of course, would give Telence all the time he would need to contact one of the old hag’s remaining associates.

 

Really, he knew just the one to use, under the circumstances.

 

=SC=

 

Falling into a routine at the Kujo house – Mrs. Kujo had insisted that Loreena call it that, even in spite of the fact that anyone with working eyes could see that the place was obviously a mansion – took a bit longer than she’d been expecting, since after all the time she’d spent moving around with her father had kind of made the constant movement seem a lot more normal than staying in one place had been. Still, she had all the time she would need to get used to that kind of thing. Mrs. Kujo had been adamant about that one thing in particular: that Loreena should consider herself just as much a part of the family as Jotaro for as long as she was staying in the same house as both of them.

 

Loreena thought it was really nice of her, but she also got the feeling that – while Mrs. Kujo loved her son more than pretty much anyone else in the world – the woman was also happy to have another girl in the house.

 

=SC=

 

After another day with Jotaro and Loreena-chan at school – another day of having to deal with the weird girls who seemed to have nothing better to do than try to hang around with Jotaro and him, or try to chase Loreena-chan off; or both at once, but it seemed like they’d given up on that after Jotaro had shouted at them a couple of times – Noriaki found himself invited to have dinner with Loreena-chan. Jotaro, and Miss Holly. He supposed that he shouldn’t have been as surprised by the offer as he’d initially found himself being, since Miss Holly was the kindest person he knew aside from Loreena-chan, but Noriaki still found himself more than a little off-balance from the whole thing.

 

Even considering how many Stand users that he’d previously met in Egypt, there were times that Noriaki still couldn’t believe that the life that he was steadily making for himself back in Japan was actually real.

 

Dinner was just as pleasant as he’d been given to expect from the other times he’d been invited to stay and have dinner at the Kujo house, and Noriaki made certain to thank Miss Holly for allowing him to stay and share it. It was far from the first time that Miss Holly had done this time of a thing, but Noriaki liked to think that he was setting at least some kind of an example for Jotaro. No matter how much the other boy rolled his eyes or told him to fuck off.

 

Both of which he’d actually done when Noriaki had informed him of his intentions, though some of that might have been due to the way he’d phrased things; he tried not to make it too obvious during their respective interactions, but Jotaro was really fun to wind up.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way to the place he’d set up for their meeting, Telence checked his approaches to make sure that no one was close enough to see what he was going to be doing; after all, he’d no way of knowing how many of the people in Cairo had been recruited into Blackwatch. It was part of what made the organization so robust: no one agent knew everyone else in their cell, let alone everyone else in the whole of the organization. In fact, he’d heard more than a few of his fellow Blackwatch agents speculating that not even their Blackwater handlers knew every member of the organization.

 

Really, the Commander herself was probably the only one who could know every member of not only Blackwatch, but Blackwater as well, both since she’d been the one who’d first formed the organizations in question, but also because of what the Commander actually was.

 

When he spotted the woman coming toward him, with a baby in her arms and an agitated expression on her face, Telence signaled for her to follow him.

 

“Don’t be so jumpy,” he said, moving his mouth as little as he could without mangling his speech into unintelligible gibberish; a skill he’d honed during his time in Blackwatch, of course. “I know this probably seems pretty illicit, and you’ve more than likely heard about what happened to your compatriots that Enya hired – not to mention the old hag herself – but I’m not looking to get into a fight with Alice Brando.”

 

Left unsaid, of course, was the fact that no sane person would; if this was one of the mercenary Stand users that Enya’s contact list had spoken of – the user of the Stand Death 13 – then she probably already knew what had happened to a good number of her fellow Stand users when they’d made the mistake of following Enya’s lead. All to the better, as far as he was concerned, since it was best to avoid those kinds of misunderstandings. Particularly when you were trying to operate around both Lord Dio and the Commander.

 

“It’s not that, sir,” the woman said, gaze darting around at the empty alleyway he’d steadily maneuvered the air of them into – this one conspicuously without the secret entrances to one of Blackwatch’s bases in this area concealed in the structure of its walls – even as she seemed to be trying not to shudder as hard as she could.

 

It was an eerie reminder of his own encounter with N’Doul; not something Telence really needed at the moment.

 

“Look, there’s no one following us,” he said, trying to put the woman at ease, even as he found himself starting to get more and more annoyed by her histrionics, subdued as they ultimately were. “I made sure of that when I led you here. So calm down, all right?”

 

=SC=

 

Finding himself having to deal more and more with all of those annoying, chattering girls who kept trying to get him to notice them in all of those ways that they did, Jotaro made it a point to stay close to Loreena, even if it meant that he also had to deal with that annoying bishonen boyfriend of hers. None of them wanted to get near her, not after she’d successfully used Crimson Ace to turn each and every one of every one of their stupid pranks back on them. And as long as he stayed close enough to her, none of the annoying girls who seemed to want to throw themselves at his feet day in and day out were either brave or stupid enough to try anything like that.

 

It was nice to be able to have some time away from them, at least.

 

When the three of them all made their way back to Mom and the house where they lived, Jotaro rolled his shoulders as he made his way back inside. He suspected that Pucci had called and left a message again, the way he seemed to be doing a lot more, lately. The guy seemed to be eager to share every little thing that was going on back at the Desert Rose, and while it was kind of interesting to know what was going on with his little cousin, Pucci always seemed to want to talk about how he was doing. And really, after the third day spent talking about all the shit that went on at school with those pain-in-the-ass girls – after Pucci had actually expressed some weird kind of approval of them, and Jotaro had hung up on him in return – he’d seemed to have gotten the message and backed off.

 

Jotaro knew damned well that Uncle Dio would have been leveraging the unholy fuck out of all those girls if they’d been throwing themselves at his feet – the same way he did with anyone else he found that went in for that kind of shit – but as he’d been more than willing to explain to Pucci, not everyone went in for that kind of shit even when it was all but forced on them day in and day out. In fact, it just made that kind of shit all the more annoying, really. He’d done his best to explain that to Pucci, too, though he didn’t quite know if he’d made any kind of impact.

 

At least he’d gotten the man off his back about all of the other shit, though.

 

=SC=

 

When the woman he’d been trying to talk to had pushed her baby into his arms and then stumbled off like she didn’t know why she’d even come to meet him in the first place, even when he’d tried to get her attention without the risk of drawing the attention of people who might have been Blackwatch to himself – any of his fellow agents had been trained to investigate disturbances that might have proved to be the work of either hostile Stand users or other enemies of the corporation – Telence found himself wondering just what in the hell he’d ended up getting himself into. He also found himself starting to feel more than a little drowsy, even as he tried to press on through the city in search of that strange woman.

 

Sure, he had more than his fair share of doubts that she was the Stand user Death 13 at this point, but he still wanted to know just what in the hell had been in her head when she’d pushed that baby on him and taken off.

 

Shaking his head, once he’d managed to get out of sight of the sparse crowds that were still out now that the sun was starting to set in earnest, Telence made for one of the hidden Blackwatch stations in this part of Cairo. This one wasn’t one of the larger bases where several members of a cell – or potentially of multiple cells, since one of the first things that any Blackwatch agent learned if they wanted to survive their first year was not to go blathering about other cells; you never really knew when Agent Zero was prowling – could meet to discuss strategy or to blow off some steam, but the small outposts where a single agent would be able to recover after a particularly difficult task.

 

It was one of the many ways that the Commander looked after her people, and Telence found himself more grateful for it now than he had been in a long time.

 

Once he’d managed to make his way to the outpost, Telence pulled a catch that had been hidden by the architecture of the alley walls that now surrounded him on all three sides. Ducking into the small room that his efforts had just revealed, Telence settled down in the cot as the door silently closed behind him. Yawning deeply, as the fatigue that he’d been determinedly pushing away for so long caught up with him at last, Telence closed his eyes…

 

…Blinking in surprise as he found himself sitting up, his head resting against some kind of hard surface, Telence looked around in confusion.

 

“The hell?” he muttered, finding himself staring down at what looked like some kind of abandoned amusement park, from the vantagepoint of what was obviously a Ferris wheel. “What even is this place?”

 

The sight of a large number of balloons – of all things – flying up past the gondola where he was currently sitting drew Telence’s attention then, and without quite knowing why, he made his way over to the left side of the gondola, grabbing what seemed to be a Tarot card from the end of one of the strings as they drifted their way up past him. Narrowing his eyes as he caught sight of just which card it was that had been basically presented to him when he’d found himself obeying what was clearly the will of the Stand user whose world he was currently in, Telence spoke aloud for the benefit of the one who’d probably been listening in from the very beginning.

 

“Death 13.”

 

“Rally-ho!” called the voice that had to belong to the Stand user he’d been looking for for such a long time. “So, who do you want me to kill for you?”

 

“I’m not hiring you to kill anyone,” Telence said, folding his arms as he looked up at the scythe-wielding Stand that resembled nothing so much as the oddest sort of cross between a clown, the Pope, and the Grim Reaper.

 

Really, he’d seen some decidedly odd looking Stands during his time, but this one stood out even among those…

 

=SC=

 

Finding herself with a lot less free time than she’d become accustomed to, even when she and her father had been moving between more than their fair share of countries during the course of his work for Brando International, Loreena still tried to make as much time as she could to work on her sketching. She knew that she couldn’t really expect to be able to paint anything, not with school taking up a lot more of her time than either the tutors that her father had employed, or most of the schools that she’d spent an appreciable amount of time at, but painting was a messy business anyway.

 

Really, she wouldn’t have felt right doing that kind of thing outside of a studio, considering how meticulously clean Mrs. Kujo seemed to keep her house.

 

One of the things she did find herself enjoying – over and above the chance to stay in one place with Noriaki rather than to go bouncing between all four corners of the Earth with her father the way she’d done for so long – was the sheer variety of landscapes visible in Japan. Sure, the place was more than a bit urbanized in quite a few places, but the parks more than made up for that.

 

“Lori-chan, Kakyoin-kun and Jotaro are coming!” Mrs. Kujo called, sliding open the door to the room that Loreena had fully settled herself in some time ago.

 

That was another thing that she’d found to like about living in Japan: every month seemed to bring some new kind of festival for people to enjoy.

 

“I’ll be right out!” she called back, pulling on the kimono that Mrs. Kujo had bought for her when she’d first been settling into the house.

 

Suiting actions to words, Loreena made her way out of the room and over to where the rest of their group was waiting. She always thought Jotaro looked more than a little strange in a kimono, mostly because he stubbornly refused to take off his hat, but there was also something else that made the attire seem distinctly odd on him; not something she could have put a name to, but something there all the same. Still, given Mrs. Kujo’s sheer, unrelenting determination to hold to the traditions of her adopted country – except for, interestingly enough, when it came to celebrating Christmas – Loreena got the distinct feeling that she was ultimately the one responsible for getting Jotaro dressed to go to the Cherry Blossom Festival Loreena had been hearing so much about.

 

But it was starting to seem like not even a particularly determined Stand user could separate Jotaro from his hat.

 

Smiling softly, both for the thoughts she was having and the way that Noriaki had come right over to help her with tying up the kimono that she was wearing – there was something about tying it up right-handed that seemed to be taboo for pretty much everyone, but Loreena could never quite recall the reason when she tried – but Noriaki had all but jumped at the chance to offer his services at tying the stays that held her kimono shut. Though he didn’t actually call them that when he’d made the offer.

 

It was another thing that she’d gotten used to while traveling with her father: everyone seemed to have different names for the same kinds of things, and while Loreena did try to learn them so that she’d be able to speak clearly to those people when she needed to, the names she’d first learned for those same things were always the ones that first came to mind when she thought of them. It was something that she and Noriaki teased each other about, off and on when Mrs. Kujo had first bought her the kimono that she was wearing. And, it was also something that seemed to be shaping up to become a private joke between the pair of them, as well.

 

As the four of them piled into the car that Mrs. Kujo had directed them to, each being as careful as they could not to rumple the clothes that they were wearing – though Loreena got the distinct impression that Jotaro was only so careful so he would be able to avoid a lecture from his mother – she and Noriaki settled themselves in the back seat, heads leaned together as Mrs. Kujo started the car and they all set off to the festival grounds. Stifling a yawn with her right hand, as a strange, sudden feeling of lethargy crept up on her all unawares, Loreena found that she wasn’t the only one who seemed to be having trouble keeping her eyes open at the moment.

 

Noriaki was blinking slowly, in that way he did when he was trying to avoid falling asleep but knew that he couldn’t quite manage with the state that he was in at the moment

Chapter 49: Dancing In The Dark

Chapter Text

Loreena could have sworn that she’d only closed her eyes for the briefest of moments, but when she opened them, she found herself staring up at drifting puffs of cotton-candy clouds as they passed by over her head. Blinking as she sat up, she realized that the strangeness of her current situation hadn’t remotely ended with the clouds that she really shouldn’t have been seeing, considering the fact that the car that she, Noriaki, and the Kujo family had been traveling in hadn’t been a convertible.

 

Climbing out of the giant teacup where she’d found herself when she arrived in this strange-but-familiar place – really, the empty amusement park she was currently making her way through reminded her so much of the carnivals that she and her family had gone to when she was younger. Looking around, Loreena found herself growing more than a little uneasy about the fact that there didn’t seem to be a single other person around besides her in this strange place. Looking up…

 

She found herself staring at Jotaro.

 

“Oi, you finished with your nap yet, Loreena?” he asked.

 

“Yeah, yeah I am,” she said, feeling for a long moment as though there was something she’d forgotten, but then putting that kind of thing aside.

 

She’d probably remember it if it turned out to be something important, anyway.

 

“Well, let’s all get going, then!” Mrs. Kujo exclaimed happily, all but jumping up and clapping her hands with the sheer exuberance that Loreena could see in every line of her body.

 

It was really kind of funny, how Jotaro and his mother were such complete, polar opposites; if anything, Jotaro seemed to have more in common with his aunt than anyone in his immediate family, and given everything she’d learned during the time she’d spent with them, Alice and Dio had been adopted into the family instead of born there. Yes, Loreena was perfectly aware of the fact that there was far more to family than simply blood, but she’d thus far never had such a concrete demonstration of the truism.

 

She still found it both cute and kind of funny, though she was sure Jotaro wouldn’t have appreciated the sentiment.

 

As the four of them made their way to the spot that Mrs. Kujo had evidently reserved for them – which was still a pretty novel thought, given that Loreena had never heard of anyone having to reserve space in a park of all places – she couldn’t help but notice that there were more than a few people who seemed to be giving them a particularly wide berth.

 

“What’s going on now?” she asked, once she was sure that no one else but their group was close enough to overhear.

 

“Just some fucked-up superstition,” Jotaro said, looking about as unimpressed as she’d ever seen him.

 

“Oh, right,” Noriaki said, chuckling softly. “There are four of us.”

 

That’s supposed to be an explanation? Loreena mused, determining that she would get at least some information out of Noriaki when the four of them all managed to find the place that Mrs. Kujo had reserved for them. Soon enough, however, Loreena saw that Mrs. Kujo had already taken care of all of the setup, too. There was a thick, cozy-looking blanket all spread out on the ground where they were going to be sitting while they watched the cherry blossoms as they fell.

 

She and Noriaki settled down together, but before Loreena could take out the sketchpad that she’d brought with her for the occasion – the newest of the three she’d bought for herself since she’d been living in Japan – she found herself feeling unaccountably tired. Closing her eyes briefly… she found herself looking down on what seemed to be an empty amusement park from the vantagepoint of a Ferris-wheel gondola.

 

“Wha-”

 

“Loreena-chan, you ended up here, too?”

 

“Noriaki?” Crossing to the other side of the gondola where she’d somehow ended up in, Loreena sat down next to him. “Do you have any idea how we ended up here?”

 

“I’m sorry, Loreena-chan, but I’m not even sure where here is,” Noriaki said, looking about as confused as she felt, right at the moment.

 

The Ferris wheel gondola that the pair of them had somehow ended up seated inside lurched into motion then, and both she and Noriaki braced themselves in their respective seats. Loreena could only be thankful that this kind of thing had started before she’d made up her mind to go over and sit with Noriaki so that the pair of them could take a bit more comfort from each other’s company while they were stuck in whatever kind of strange place this was. Once their gondola had made it down to what passed for the ground in this strange, unearthly place, she noticed that there was someone running up to them.

 

Someone familiar…

 

“Telence!” she called, as she and Noriaki climbed down from the gondola.

 

“Loreena! Noriaki!” the man himself called back, sounding a bit out of breath, but really only like he’d been running; probably to find them, given the look on his face as the three of them all met up again in… whatever this strange place was.

 

You ended up here, too?” Noriaki asked, before Loreena could articulate the same kind of question; really, she was still wondering where here even was.

 

“Yeah,” Telence said, looking around in that same way that she and Noriaki had both done, once they’d realized that they were somewhere entirely different than where they’d been to start with. “I guess this Stand doesn’t have much of a distance limitation.”

 

“I guess this kind of thing really is too strange not to be caused by a Stand,” she said, chuckling softly. “Still, what do you mean by that?”

 

“Well, I expect the pair of you have gone back to Japan by now,” Telence said, smiling in a knowing sort of way at her and Noriaki. “But, whatever kind of Stand this is, it managed to catch me all the way in Cairo.”

 

“This could be a problem,” Noriaki said, a worried look on his face, even as he looked back up to the sky; the clouds there looked strange, making the thought that this whole place was the creation of someone or other’s Stand all the more plausible.

 

“Right; there’s no way of knowing just how far the effect can reach, if it managed to get hold of you,” she said, sobering as she looked around at the place where the three of them had found themselves.

 

It was a strangely innocuous sort of place: an empty amusement park that seemed to be done in pastels and candy-colors, with even the sky itself sharing in that same sort of theme. Just as she’d had that particular thought, though, something indefinable seemed to change about the Stand-created world all around them. Loreena wasn’t sure she could have described it to anyone who asked, but before she could think too much about that kind of thing, something dropped out of the sky with the clear intent to land on their heads.

 

However, when she saw the massive scythe that the newcomer – it had to be a Stand, considering what it looked like, but Loreena would have been the first to admit that she didn’t know just how a Stand could manifest inside a world that seemed to be created by a Stand – was about to bring down, Loreena realized that landing on them was probably the last thing she’d have to worry about.

 

“Look out!” Telence shouted, throwing himself toward her and Noriaki where they were standing, just as some kind of- some kind of a massive, glowing net sprang into being just in front of where they were all standing.

 

However, before she could do anything more than wonder about just what it was that they were all seeing… Loreena found herself staring up at the kindly face of Mrs. Kujo as she smiled down at her. Jotaro’s voice was the first thing she actually heard, however.

 

Yare, yare daze, if the both of you were just going to sleep through the whole thing, we could’ve just stayed home.”

 

“No, no, I wanted to show Loreena-chan the festival, too,” Noriaki said, as Loreena levered herself back up.

 

She couldn’t help but wonder just why in the world she and Noriaki had both ended up falling asleep in the Kujo family car on their way to this place, since as far as she knew the both of them had been able to get a good sleep the previous night. And, while she didn’t actually know what Noriaki had had for breakfast, he hadn’t been acting like someone who had still been in need of a good meal. It was all fairly strange, but before she could think more deeply on the strange things that seemed to be happening to her and Noriaki on this strange day, Loreena winced as she felt some kind of sharp thing slapping against the left side of her neck.

 

Reaching up, she found to her surprise that one of her earrings seemed to be thrashing around on its own. Removing the hook from her earlobe, Loreena looked down as the earring in her hand gave one last, weak thrash, and then settled back down again.

 

“This is the first time I’ve seen you take your earrings off, Loreena-chan,” Noriaki said, having clearly come to sit beside her while she’d been making her examination, to see if she could find out just what had been going on with one of the few pieces of jewelry she wore on a day-to-day basis. “In fact, I think it’s the first time I’ve seen them up close at all.”

 

Moving slightly, so Noriaki could lean in closely the way he clearly wanted to, she smiled slightly as he picked up the dangly thing by the hook.

 

=SC=

 

The first thing that he noticed about Loreena-chan’s earrings was how complicated they were; he’d first thought they would be like the cherries he wore in his own ears, but that was about the farthest thing from what he was seeing now. The least complicated part was the hoop at the top, but that had been strung with an intricate web made of silver wires. Caught up in the center of the web was a small chip of light blue stone, in fact it looked like just the same kind of stone that had been threaded through the top of the sculpted metal feather that had been strung through a small loop at the bottom of the larger hoop.

 

There was the same kind of loop at the top of the hoop, which held the hook that the earring hung from.

 

“I wasn’t expecting them to be so complicated,” he said without thinking, pausing for a long moment as he realized just what he’d said. “I mean, they’re very pretty, but I have to admit I was expecting something simpler.”

 

Loreena-chan laughed softly, but she didn’t sound like she was trying to make fun of him, or anything. “I know; really, I saw them at the boutique, and they looked so pretty I just had to pick them up.”

 

“I think they look wonderful, Loreena-chan,” Mrs. Kujo said, smiling kindly at the both of them.

 

Yare, yare, can we stop talking about earrings, already?” Jotaro, resident killjoy, said with his usual level of distain for pretty much anything and everything. “There’s still the festival, after we’re done with all this.”

 

“Right,” Loreena-chan said, laughing softly again; Jotaro always did sound kind of funny when he was trying to pretend not to like anything. “We’ll keep that in mind.”

 

=SC=

 

Looking down at Mannish Boy – that was the way the user of Death 13 had introduced himself, once the pair of them had been able to establish a reliable sort of communication with one another – Telence saw that the mercenary Stand user had stopped squirming. He’d also woken up, so that was probably the reason that he’d been able to escape the strange net that’d sprung up in front of his Stand when the pair of them had made their move on Noriaki Kakyoin and his cute little girlfriend.

 

The pair of them would make wonderful dolls, and since the three of them had all become such good friends while they’d been staying in Cairo together, Telence would make sure to treat them better than all of those other trophy dolls who he’d won when their former selves had been foolish enough to bet their souls in a wager against him.

 

Still, since he didn’t know just what in the hell had gone wrong during all of this, and there was too much of a chance of the both of them being caught out by Noriaki and his other friends if they stayed too close to the festival grounds where so many people were already starting to make their way to. Pulling up the hood of his cloak, careful to keep out of sight of anyone who might chance to look their way, Telence made his way steadily back to the small Blackwatch outpost he’d managed to make himself at home in.

 

Someone else might’ve been surprised, how easy it was to move between countries, but being Blackwatch opened quite a few doors that that someone wouldn’t have even known about.

 

=SC=

 

Once they’d all finished showing Loreena around the festival – which was a lot less annoying that it could have been, but more annoying than he’d wanted it to be, once some of the girls who trailed after him caught up with their group – Jotaro was more than happy to head back to the car and get the hell out of there. Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend had managed to make it at least that far before the pair of them had fallen asleep again, but considering that the pair of them had already had a nap on their way to the festival, Jotaro didn’t quite know why either of them would have wanted another one.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he saw one of Loreena’s earrings thrashing around, jerking back and forth like someone was playing with it or something, Jotaro reached out to grab the thing and steady it; it was just what Loreena had done, but he couldn’t help but notice just how much the thing seemed to actually be fighting him. Hell, if he hadn’t been able to see that there were no other Stands in the back of the car where the three of them were sitting, Jotaro would’ve sworn that this was the work of someone’s Stand.

 

Still, he knew that Stands couldn’t really move around without someone to order them, and that anyone who had a Stand could see another Stand when it made its move, so what he was seeing couldn’t be another Stand. That still left the question of just what in the hell he was seeing, of course; what he was feeling as he held onto the earring that Loreena was wearing. It was thrashing like there was something caught in it, which was all the fucking weirder since he could see that the thing didn’t look any different than it had when she’d taken it off the last time.

 

He didn’t think there was any such thing as invisible Stands, but he’d have been the first to admit that he didn’t know much more about Stands other than the fact that they existed and almost all of his family had them; that meant that he should probably talk to the Old Man’s friend from Egypt if he wanted any real answers.

 

Once they’d all made it back to the oversized, sprawling mansion that Mom still insisted on calling a house, Jotaro woke up Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend. For a handful of seconds, just before she blinked and her gaze cleared, Jotaro managed to catch a glimpse of… Something he could have sworn was the same, calculating sort of curiosity that he’d seen on Aunt Alice’s face when she had a difficult problem in her sights, and all she needed was that one piece of information that would let her begin pinning it down. Still, after those first few moments of waking, Loreena seemed to have forgotten whatever it was that she’d been thinking about.

 

If anything, that just made him all the more determined to talk to the Old Man’s friend – the one with the Tarot cards; the one whose name seemed determined to stay irritatingly just out of his reach the more times he tried to recall it – from Egypt.

 

So, once Loreena had gotten settled in again and her annoying bishonen boyfriend had left for the day, Jotaro made his way back to his room, heading for the phone that he hadn’t had much cause to use until now. Plugging the thing back in, since just because he hadn’t seen much use for the thing when Uncle Dio had bought it for him didn’t mean there weren’t other people who’d been more than happy to bother him with it, Jotaro pulled his desk chair over and settled down in it. Sighing as he dialed the familiar number that would connect him to the Desert Rose.

 

He knew that at least one of the people there was more than likely to remember the Old Man’s friend and his Tarot cards; at the very least, they’d be able to tell him the man’s name.

 

“Oi, Pucci, does someone there know what that guy’s name, you know the one with the Tarot cards? The one the Old Man invited?” he said, once he’d gotten through to the man who seemed to have either made a point of answering all of the incoming calls to the Desert Rose, or else told whoever had gotten themselves stuck with the job – most likely that pantsless weirdo Vanilla Ice – to get him whenever they heard that Jotaro was the one calling.

 

Either way, it meant that he was going to be dealing with Pucci again; not something he minded, since Pucci was one of the more normal people who hung out with Uncle Dio, but it did give this whole thing a weird kind of feel of normality.

 

When he’d managed to get Pucci to make contact with the Old Man’s friend – turned out his name was Muhammad Avdol, something Jotaro made a point of writing down, both since he wasn’t all that good with foreign names, and he didn’t want to embarrass himself by having to ask the man himself for his name when they inevitably met again – Jotaro let himself settle more comfortably back into his chair. Avdol was bound to know if what he’d just been forced to deal with was because of someone’s Stand or something like that.

 

=SC=

 

Leaning against Noriaki’s chest as she looked at the earring she was holding, the one that Jotaro had told her had been flipping around in that same, strange way that she’d felt when she and Noriaki had fallen asleep the last time, Loreena couldn’t help but wonder just what in the world was happening.

 

“Do you think this might be the work of someone else’s Stand?” Noriaki asked, gesturing down at the earring in her hands, and also giving voice to the same question that’d been on her mind ever since Jotaro had told her what had been going on.

 

“I think that’s what Jotaro’s trying to find out,” she said, just as the young man in question made his way back out into the sitting room where she and Noriaki had settled themselves down to wait.

 

“Avdol’s going to be coming by soon,” he announced, settling down opposite the pair of them where they’d settled down.

 

“Your grandfather’s friend from Egypt?” she asked, remembering the man who’d helped them to choose names for their Stands with the help of the deck of Tarot cards she’d seemed so fond of.

 

“Yeah, that one,” Jotaro said, giving her a sidelong glance before turning his attention to the pair of them once again. “Anyway, He’ll probably be able to tell us more about just what the hell’s been going on; whether all the weird shit happening is from someone’s Stand or not.”

 

“Thanks, Jotaro,” she said, turning to smile at him; first he’d been kind enough to offer her a place to stay so that she wouldn’t have to leave Noriaki behind when her father left for wherever it was that his work for Alice Brando and her company had taken him, and now he was making contact with a man he only knew though his determinedly eccentric grandfather.

 

“Whatever.”

 

“No, I really mean it,” she said, leaning forward but forcing herself not to touch Jotaro where he sat; Noriaki had been fairly adamant, in his gentle way, that Japanese people didn’t do casual touching. “You really didn’t have to go to all this trouble for us, so it’s very kind of you to do so.”

 

“It’s fine,” Jotaro said, looking like he might’ve been smiling, himself, even though the expression on his face hadn’t seemed to change all that much. “Don’t make such a big deal of it.”

 

That was one of the things she’d found most interesting about living with Jotaro and his mother: Mrs. Kujo seemed to have inherited all the expressiveness in the family, and since she hadn’t had much of a chance to see Mr. Kujo – he seemed to be just as elusive as her own father, and seemingly for the same kind of reason – she didn’t know how much Jotaro took after the man. Or if he did at all, really.

 

It was an interesting conundrum, but until she managed to actually meet the man in question, it was entirely academic.

 

=SC=

 

After making arrangements for his friend Paula to mind his shop while he was away, Muhammad Avdol made his way back to the Kujo household in Japan. He hadn’t been expecting to be called back on such short notice, but when he’d been given the time to sit and ponder the situation he had found himself confronted by, Avdol had found that it did in fact make sense. It was fate itself that drew Stand users together, the steady currents of destiny that bound the lives of those who had been touched so deeply by the otherworldly forces that manifested a Stand in the first place. It stood to reason, then, that a home that contained four Stand users, and a fifth that had become close enough to be considered a true part of the household himself would attract others of that selfsame ilk.

 

Now, it only remained to determine if this new presence that had imposed itself in their lives would prove to be to their benefit or their detriment; Stand users varied almost more than humanity as a whole, it seemed.

 

Once his plane had landed back in the airport – Dio Brando, even as troublesome as that man seemed determined to prove himself, had offered him the use of his private plane in order to make the journey faster, and likely also so help him avoid what the blond clearly thought as the hassle of making his way through the crowds that could always be found in such a place, though he’d refused in an effort not to find himself indebted to such a determinedly odd and eccentric man – Avdol made his way through the crowds and out to the car that Mr. Joestar had promised would be awaiting him when he made it out of such a place. Sure enough, both the vehicle and the driver were indeed waiting for him, with what Avdol could nearly swear was the exact same sign that he’d seen the first time he’d met his old friend and the driver who had worked for him for so long.

 

It even made sense that such would be the case, since there was little point in making an entirely new sign when the original would suffice.

Chapter 50: S.O.S.

Chapter Text

“So, what’s this about a potential enemy Stand?” Mr. Joestar asked, as the pair of them climbed into the back of his car and set off for the Kujo household once more.

 

“I’ve little way of knowing, given what Jotaro was able to tell me, if this new Stand user will prove to be an ally or enemy,” he said, knowing that Mr. Joestar was not one to take the safety of his family lightly, but also wishing his old friend to be in full possession of even the small amount of facts that he and Jotaro – though mostly Jotaro, since he was closer to the action in this particular instance – had managed to assemble. “However, it seems as though their Stand has been having an adverse effect on Noriaki Kakyoin and his friend Loreena McKennitt.”

 

“You mean, his girlfriend,” Mr. Joestar said, a sly grin beginning to stretch his mouth. “I really have to do something nice for those kids.”

 

“I don’t think they would thank you for it, Mr. Joestar,” he said, knowing that – while Loreena was the kind to take such things in stride – Noriaki would not be pleased to find himself the target of both Dio Brando and Joseph Joestar, particularly when their attention seemed to have been drawn to the interactions between himself and the young woman who he seemed to be courting in his own way.

 

And, more pertinently, at his own pace.

 

“Ah, Uncle Dio said both of them are clearly perfect for each other, but they don’t seem to want to do anything about that,” Mr. Joestar said, rolling his eyes and adding an overdramatic shake of his head for what seemed to be good measure. “Still, it looks like that kind of thing’s going to have to wait till this whole thing with whoever this new Stand user gets resolved.”

 

“Yes,” he allowed, not wishing to become distracted by matters that were ultimately of little import; things would become clearer when the pair of them arrived at the Kujo household once more.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d finished talking to Pucci for the day – seriously, the guy was starting to sound as fussy as Uncle Dio; probably came from living with him for such a long time – Jotaro hung up on the man, shaking his head in exasperation as he made his way out of his room and down the hall. Sure, he knew that Star could and would fetch him any kind of food – or anything else, really – that he wanted, but there were times that all he really wanted was to stretch his legs and get some air.

 

Still, Jotaro eventually found himself making his way down the hall to the room that Mom had given to Loreena while she was staying with the pair of them in Japan. Pausing outside the door, Jotaro wondered what he’d find if he opened the thing and checked in on her without knocking. Sure, he knew that kind of thing would be rude as all hell – fuck, he’d punch anyone but Loreena or Mom in the face if they did something like that; Mom because she was Mom, and Loreena because she’d only do that if the house was on fire or something – but given the way she’d been falling asleep at weird times all through the day…

 

Before he’d had time to do more than consider that last part for more than a handful of seconds, Star emerged and slammed the door to Loreena’s room wide open. Swearing softly under his breath, and already mentally composing apologies for the way his Stand kept jumping the gun whenever he had a thought that he felt more than a little strongly about, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he caught sight of the way that Loreena had slumped in the desk chair that Mom had brought in nearly as soon as she’d made up her mind that the girl would be staying with their little family.

 

Sure enough, when he looked down at Loreena’s head, pillowed on her folded arms, that same earring that had been thrashing around all those other times when he’d seen her like this was doing just that same thing; he didn’t know just what in the hell was going on, but there was no doubt left in his mind that this was the work of an enemy Stand.

 

=SC=

 

“Whoa!” he exclaimed, as that strange Stand swept down out of the mint-green sky, wielding the huge scythe that seemed to be just as much a part of it as the robes that it was wearing.

 

However, when the attacking Stand got caught in that same, ethereal-seeming netting that had sprung up in front of them the last time that he, Loreena-chan, and Telence had all ended up in this strange place together, Noriaki stopped in his tracks. If there was anything that he could actually be glad about, after ending up in a place like this, it was the way that physical sensations didn’t seem to translate over to this place. So, he wasn’t out of breath from his run, and he didn’t need to take any time to recover from pelting full-out across what seemed to be an entire fairground.

 

“Looks like we got lucky again,” Telence said, turning to look at him and Loreena-chan with a smile that Noriaki couldn’t help but think looked more than a little forced.

 

“Yeah, looks like it,” Loreena-chan said, though most of her focus seemed to be on the netting that seemed to be protecting them.

 

He wondered about it himself, particularly since he could have sworn that there was something more than a little familiar about it, but he didn’t feel right speculating in front of Telence; true, he might have been reading too much into things, but there was always the chance…

 

Sitting up suddenly, Noriaki looked over to see his mother looking at him with a worried expression; he wondered what might have been on her mind, for the handful of seconds he had before she started speaking.

 

“Your friend Jotaro-san is on the phone,” she said, her expression becoming less concerned and more controlled as she spoke.

 

He knew that she didn’t really approve of him spending so much time around someone who had gained the kind of reputation that Jotaro Kujo had, deserved or not, but on the other hand he also knew that she didn’t want him to go back to being the kind of withdrawn, closed-off person that Noriaki knew he had been before he’d met Jotaro Kujo and the rest of his eccentric family. Before he’d known just how many people shared his circumstances, in the end.

 

Thanking his mother as he made his way out of his room, Noriaki tried not to spend too much time wondering just what Jotaro had called him up for; he’d find out soon enough, so there was no real point in wondering about that kind of thing.

 

When he’d made his way out to the living room, picking up the phone that his mother had been kind enough to leave out for him, Noriaki leaned back against the wall of the kitchen.

 

“Sorry I didn’t get to you right away,” he said, after he and Jotaro had finished their mutual greeting.

 

“It was because you were sleeping, wasn’t it,” Jotaro said, and it did sound much more like a statement than a question, and while Noriaki knew that Jotaro Kujo was a far more confident sort of person than he was, there was something more to all this.

 

Noriaki didn’t know just why he thought that, but… “You know something, don’t you?”

 

“I know that what’s been attacking you and Loreena is probably an enemy Stand user, and I know my old man is going to be bringing that guy we all met up with in Egypt – Muhammad Avdol; the guy with the Tarot cards – back out here so he can help us figure out just who this guy is and just where he might be operating from,” Jotaro said, giving Noriaki a much clearer idea of what they were going to be getting into.

 

“All right,” he said, nodding even though he knew that Jotaro wouldn’t be able to see him. “I’ll meet you two at your house, then.”

 

“Good; we’ll be able to sort this out better once we’re all back together,” Jotaro said, his tone firm and decisive again.

 

=SC=

 

Once he’d gotten off the phone with Loreena’s annoying bishonen boyfriend, after having gotten the girl herself back on her feet, Jotaro made his way back to the huge main room of their equally huge house so that the three of them could start getting ready for the new arrivals. And the meeting that they were all going to be having once the three remaining members of their group all made it to the house.

 

Once he, Mom, and Loreena had finished getting the main room ready, setting out the food that Mom had fixed for all of them to eat while they discussed what to do – what they’d be able to do, Jotaro reminded himself, much as he hated the thought of being so helpless against whatever bastard was trying to attack them now – about the enemy Stand user that he was almost certain had been attacking Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend since Mom had invited the pair of them along to the Cherry Blossom Festival, Jotaro made his way to the front room to wait for the Old Man, Avdol, and Loreena’s annoying bishonen boyfriend.

 

Sure, he might not know just when Avdol or the Old Man were going to be arriving, and he was nearly certain that Loreena’s annoying, bishonen boyfriend would make it before either of them considering how close their respective houses were – at least in a general sense, anyway – but Mom would be disappointed with him if he didn’t make at least some effort to be hospitable. Even to annoying people like that bishonen hat thief.

 

The one who still hadn’t apologized for letting Uncle Dio goad him into that shit; just like Uncle Dio hadn’t apologized for doing that shit in the first place, which only made it more annoying.

 

Nodding at Loreena as she settled herself down at the table, Jotaro rolled his eyes as Mom came over to cuddle him, kissing his right cheek once she’d gotten done fussing.

 

Yare, yare daze,” he muttered, as he watched Loreena help Mom to set out the last of the refreshments they were going to be offering to the Old Man, Avdol, and Loreena’s annoying boyfriend.

 

Heading for the door once he’d heard the three, sharp knocks he’d been keeping an ear out for, Jotaro grumbled softly as he opened the door on the annoying hat thief.

 

“Are Avdol-san and your grandfather going to be here soon?” he asked, an honestly concerned expression spreading across his face.

 

“You’re still worried about that enemy Stand?” Jotaro asked, watching as their guest took off his shoes and then leading him over to the table where Loreena was sitting.

 

“I can’t really explain it, but I have a bad feeling about this,” he said, glancing over at Loreena for a moment as she put her left hand on his arm to either comfort him or just let him know that she was there. “I don’t really remember anything about what happens to us when we sleep, but I…”

 

=SC=

 

Noriaki trailed off, not really knowing just how to articulate exactly what it was that he’d felt, in those few moments between waking and sleeping; what fewer of them he could even consciously recall, now that he’d been awake for at least an hour. He knew that Jotaro wasn’t really fond of him, in any case, and while the other boy was fun to wind up when all of them were going about their normal lives, Noriaki had always known that there would be a price to pay for that kind of thing.

 

Happily enough for his peace of mind, Jotaro’s grandfather and Avdol-san arrived not long after he himself had made his way to the house that Jotaro and his mother both shared. Once Jotaro’s grandfather had finished greeting him – something Noriaki still found amusing, even under these sorts of circumstances – he and Avdol-san settled themselves down at the table and Noriaki allowed himself to relax, even if only slightly. At least they’d be able to get some answers about what was going on.

 

“So, about that enemy Stand that seems to be making its move,” Jotaro said, opening their conversation with his usual bluntness.

 

“Yes,” Avdol-san said, taking them all in with a sweep of his gaze. “It seems that we are indeed under attack by a malicious Stand user. It only remains to be determined just what type of Stand they possess.”

 

“If it helps anything, one of Loreena’s earrings always seems to go crazy when she falls asleep, and if what I saw from the both of them earlier still holds up, both she and that boyfriend of hers both fall asleep at the same time,” Jotaro said, and Noriaki found himself wondering just what it was that Jotaro expected to find out from an earring.

 

Of all things, he couldn’t figure out what something so small might help them to find out. Even when Loreena-chan obligingly handed over her right earring to Avdol-san so he could take a look at it, Noriaki didn’t quite know what any of the others was expecting to find out. Therefore, when Avdol-san looked like he had managed to find something out, just from a tiny little thing like Loreena-chan’s earring, Noriaki didn’t know what to think.

 

“I’ve seen something like this before,” Avdol-san said, narrowing his eyes contemplatively as he looked down at the earring in his hand. “Mrs. Kujo, might I have a look at your library? I think there might be something about this in there.”

 

“All right,” Miss Holly said, and Noriaki turned to watch Avdol-san as he made his way out of the main room and back into the large library that Noriaki hadn’t really been given any reason to think too deeply about until just today.

 

Miss Holly had sounded more than a little confused, herself, and Noriaki found himself hoping that the both of them would be able to get at least some kind of satisfactory answers once Avdol-san came back with the book that he’d gone to look for. While Jotaro’s grandfather asked him and Loreena-chan about anything they could remember from those times when they found themselves under the influence of the mysterious enemy Stand who’d attacked them for whatever inscrutable reason that someone like that might have had.

 

He was still wondering about that, when Avdol-san came back into the main room, carrying a thick book with him.

 

“I knew I’d seen nearly that exact design somewhere before,” Avdol-san said, a certain satisfaction in his tone, as he opened the book and flipped through it.

 

The page he finally stopped on looked like a much larger, more elaborate version of Loreena-chan’s earrings. For one thing, there were three feathers, each of them at the end of a long cord of some kind, fastened at the bottom of the large hoop. For another, there were what looked like stone beads, strung into the netting itself, and at the center of the net was a hole. It was fairly small, and Noriaki found himself wondering if Loreena-chan’s earrings had just been too small to display that hole, or if the chip of stone in the center of the weave had been just large enough to conceal them.

 

He also wondered what the hole was ultimately for, but Noriaki suspected that all of them were going to find that out sooner than later, so he didn’t bother asking.

 

“This gives us a great deal of insight as to the nature of the enemy’s Stand,” Avdol-san said, sounding pleased.

 

“What do you mean?” Miss Holly asked, looking about as confused as Noriaki himself felt, under the circumstances.

 

“What you are all looking at is called a Dream Catcher,” Avdol-san said, indicating the large, intricate drawing in the book he’d gotten to show them. “As the name would suggest, it serves as a defense against the mind, even in the depths of sleep. According to what I’ve read about the lore surrounding them, good dreams are able to pass easily through the hole in the center of the netting, but nightmares find themselves swiftly caught, melting away in the first light of dawn.”

 

“Damn,” Jotaro said, turning a slight smile on Loreena-chan where she was sitting. “I guess we should’ve paid more attention to those earrings of yours.”

 

“And here I thought I just picked them up because they were pretty,” Loreena-chan said, laughing softly as she briefly fiddled with her left earring.

 

“That might have been the reason you told yourself afterward, but it was clearly the hand of fate, guiding you to protect yourself,” Avdol-san said, smiling in what looked like kind of a proud way.

 

It was almost like he was proud of Loreena-chan, which was kind of a strange thing to think about, but maybe he was.

 

“Yeah, it also gives us nearly the perfect way to deal with whoever this bastard that keeps attacking you two is,” Joestar-san said, folding his arms and glaring down at the table for a lingering moment, before turning back to the rest of them with a grin.

 

“You think the rest of us should try going to sleep too?” Jotaro asked, a certain hardness to his eyes. “See if we get caught up in this bastard’s Stand?”

 

“I think that plan would have a more than reasonable chance of success, yes,” Avdol-san said, smiling in that same, calm way he always seemed to do.

 

“Someone capable of Hamon should stay awake, since it’s pretty clear from that book that sunlight is the best defense against nightmares, at least once they get caught,” Joestar-san said.

 

“I’ll stay up, then,” Miss Holly said, speaking up for the first time since all of them had gathered around the table to talk about the enemy Stand that was threatening them. “You guys all have more experience at dealing with Stands than I do.”

 

“Yeah, and you’re better at using targeted Hamon,” Joestar-san said, nodding decisively. “All right, so it looks like we’re all set as far as these first steps go. ”

 

=SC=

 

“Now we just go to sleep, right?” he asked, not quite sure how to feel about deliberately exposing himself to an enemy Stand; still, that thing seemed like it’d been targeting Loreena and her annoying boyfriend in particular, and since the both of them were his friends – even with how much that annoying bishonen hat thief reminded him of Uncle Dio – Jotaro wasn’t about to let them get mixed up with that shit now that he knew what was really going on.

 

“I think it would be best if we all got set up in one of the other rooms,” Mom said, looking like she was thinking hard about what they were all going to have to do next; he didn’t know if he liked seeing her so serious about something, but he figured that that was just the way moms got when someone threatened their kids.

 

Or people who lived with them, considering the way they’d started this whole thing to help Loreena.

 

Once the six of them had all made their way to one of the larger rooms, one that didn’t have a defined use but usually ended up being a place for holidays and parties and stuff, Mom and the Old Man started setting up futons and cushions and things like that. Loreena’s annoying boyfriend volunteered to help them with the setup part of things, but neither of them seemed to be interested. Once the last of the five futons had been set out for all of them, Mom sat down on the cushion she’d gotten for herself.

 

Jotaro also noticed that she had an empty glass, a small tape dispenser, and what looked like a roll of dental floss in front of her, but Jotaro she had at least some idea about what to do with those things. Taking off his slippers as he laid himself down on the nearest futon, Jotaro rolled his eyes as he heard the Old Man grumbling about using them again. Really, the old fart should’ve already realized what he was getting into when they’d been setting this whole thing up in the first place.

 

If he didn’t like it, that was his own damned fault.

 

=SC=

 

Breathing deeply and steadily, as she watched her grandfather, her sweet little Jotaro, Loreena-chan who she’d all but adopted as a daughter, and her darling boyfriend Noriaki-chan, Holly maintained the flowing Hamon that she would need to deal with that horrible Stand once her family managed to draw it out from wherever it was hiding. She was also taping a strip of dental floss – the best she’d been able to find on such short notice, since she didn’t really do that much sewing and so didn’t tend to keep yarn balls around the house. Maybe I should start, she mused, fastening the strip of dental floss to the open end of the cup so that she’d be able to hang Loreena-chan’s earring on it once they’d managed to catch the enemy Stand.

 

It was something she’d heard Auntie Alice saying, more than a few times when the subject of supplies came up: better to have something and not need it, than to need it and not have it.

 

Making her way over to Loreena-chan, checking to see what might have been happening – well, at least what she’d be able to see from the outside world where she was waiting, anyway – Holly saw that the earring was starting to thrash around like something had gotten caught in the netting. Taking a deep breath, not quite knowing how far she could get from Loreena-chan’s head before she got out of range of the enemy Stand, and not wanting to hurt Loreena-chan with her Hamon besides, Holly made her way back over to fetch the cup she’d prepared for just this sort of thing.

 

Making her way back over to where Loreena-chan was all stretched out on the futon her grandfather had brought out for the girl, Holly put down the glass and looked at her earring again. It had started thrashing around a lot more since she’d left and come back, and Holly didn’t quite know what that meant. If it was a good thing or a bad thing, but either way she was going to make sure that whatever enemy Stand they were facing wouldn’t be able to threaten anyone ever again.

 

Carefully taking Loreena-chan’s left earring out, making sure that she didn’t wake the younger girl up, since she didn’t know just what that would do to the rest of her family and friends if she left them without Loreena-chan’s protection, Holly hung it on the strip of dental floss that she’d prepared beforehand. Focusing her Hamon, even as she curled Queen of Cups around Loreena-chan’s earring. She’d only done it a few times before, channeling Hamon through her Stand, but it seemed to work even better than directing it though her fingers.

 

And, if nothing else, she could reach much farther with Queen of Cups than she could on her own.

 

“Sunlight Yellow Overdrive!”

 

=SC=

 

They’d just managed to establish just where they all were, and how they’d each ended up in this Stand – Death 13, it seemed to be called – when the world around them started to come apart. It almost seemed like it was burning, and when he saw the Old Man grinning, Jotaro knew just what was going on.

 

“Telence, we’re going to be leaving soon!” Loreena’s annoying boyfriend called, even as the dream-world around them burned away to ashes. “I hope you’re going to be all right, too! We’ll meet again later!”

 

He could have sworn that he’d just closed his eyes briefly, but…

Chapter 51: I Go To Extremes

Chapter Text

When he sat back up, looking around at all of the others who’d been laid out on their futons all around him, Jotaro found himself wondering just what in the hell had been going on.

 

“Did it work?” he called, turning to Mom; the most logical explanation, given everything that had happened and everything that they’d been doing beforehand, was that they’d faced the enemy’s Stand.

 

Though why in the hell he didn’t remember even a bit of it… well, that was something else.

 

“Once the enemy’s Stand had been captured, I pulled Loreena-chan’s earring out and hung it up, so I could get a better shot at it with my Hamon,” Mom said, holding up the cup with what seemed to be a strip of dental-floss taped across the rim.

 

“Ah, so that was what that was for,” the Old Man said, looking down at the cup as Mom pulled out Loreena’s earring and handed it back to the girl.

 

Her Stand was out, and Jotaro smirked slightly as the thing sniffed at the earring that Mom was handing over.

 

“It looks like everything’s been taken care of,” the Old Man said, smiling in that obliviously cheerful way he’d seen so often from Mom; Jotaro rolled his eyes.

 

Sure, it seemed like everything was going well, but Jotaro couldn’t help the thought that this wasn’t quite the end of things.

 

=SC=

 

“Sir, the travel reports for the Japanese branch of Blackwatch,” Paul Simon, the coordinator for Blackwater’s international operations and the master of the Stand Band On The Run, said, making his way over to where N’Doul was standing.

 

Thanking the vampire for his efforts, N’Doul narrowed his eyes as he caught sight of a certain name on the report. It seems as though my message didn’t quite sink in properly, he mused, making his way over to the phone so that he could contact Lord Dio. The trust that the insolent Telence T. D’arby shared with Lord Dio would provide the means that N’Doul would need to deal with the boy once and for all.

 

The method by which Band On The Run operated, while a great boon to Blackwatch when those in the indirect employ of the Commander needed to move with discretion and silence, also made it impossible for those wearing the bands that the Stand would place upon them to be found. No one hunting for them would be able to track them by any means. In fact, the harder they attempted to search, the less likely they would be to find their quarry.

 

He’d personally borne witness to such an effect; one of those who served under him had been pursued by the police, but banded as they were, even when one of the officers had passed directly in front of her, the man had been completely unable to catch so much as a glimpse of her where she stood.

 

However, the fact that those under the effect of Band On The Run could not be found did not prevent them from being caught; it was perfectly possible for those who knew the nature and proclivities of those who had been banded to set an ambush. To that end, Lord Dio would serve for dealing with Telence and putting a final end to his foolishness.

 

=SC=

 

Softly singing the lullaby that Mother had sang to him, back when he’d merely been a human working alongside his sweet sister in that small hotel in one of London’s poorer districts, he, Dio continued feeding his adorable little Gio the formula that he had specifically mixed for the the baby so that he would be able to grow up properly. Just as he was about to finish, however he, Dio, heard the sound of the phone ringing. Raising an eyebrow even as he, Dio, summoned The World to give him an extra pair of hands so that he wouldn’t have to set Gio down just anywhere before he’d finished feeding the little one he, Dio, felt the phone pressed against the right side of his head as The World obediently fetched the useful little device for him.

 

“This is the Desert Rose; management speaking, though if you’ve called to make reservations, I’m afraid we’re not open to the public just yet,” he, Dio, said, smiling softly.

 

“Lord Dio.”

 

“N’Doul,” he, Dio, said, blinking in surprise. “I hadn’t been expecting to hear from you for quite some time; you always seem to have something or other occupying your mind between those times when you take your leave.”

 

“I apologize, Lord Dio, but this isn’t a social call,” N’Doul said and he, Dio, could all but see the contrite expression on his faithful servant’s face.

 

“Oh?” he, Dio, prompted as he finished feeding little Gio and patted his son’s back; he wasn’t fond of what could easily happen next, but every book he’d read about caring for babies stated that such was an important part of making certain that they would be well.

 

“I’m going to need to read you in on Protocol Zero, Lord Dio,” N’Doul said.

 

How interesting, he, Dio, mused as N’Doul began speaking of a rather interesting system that his sweet sister had seemingly developed in order to handle those foolish enough to defy her when she had offered them the infinite freedom of a Blackwatch agent.

 

=SC=

 

Sitting up suddenly, after the last of Death 13’s dream-world burned away all around him, Telence looked down at the smoldering body of Mannish Boy in his arms. There was smoke coming out of his mouth, as well as the charred remnants of his eyes, and as Telence got back to his feet, he tossed the corpse into a nearby trashcan and hurried out of the house he’d been using. He’d stuffed the owners into a pair of hastily made dolls, after they’d been foolish enough to challenge him for the right to stay in their home.

 

As much as he didn’t like the idea of destroying even something he’d spent so little time on as those dolls he’d stuffed the souls of the former owners of the house he’d been staying into, Telence only had a limited amount of space and he was fully determined to reserve it for the dolls that he’d so carefully crafted for Noriaki Kakyoin and Loreena McKennitt, so he tossed the other three dolls into the oven, turned the appliance up to the maximum temperature possible, and left the house he’d taken shelter in behind.

 

With any luck, the fire would serve as another distraction for anyone who might have had a Stand capable of tracking him indirectly.

 

Well, it looks like I’m not going to be able to get my hands on them that way, Telence mused, making his way through the part of town where he’d determined that Noriaki Kakyoin and his family lived together; the Joestar mansion, where Loreena McKennitt was staying, was a bit farther away, taking up a fair bit of space at the end of a street. It wasn’t nearly a match for the Desert Rose, or any of the other properties that Dio or Alice owned, of course, but Telence supposed it was comfortable in its own way.

 

=SC=

 

It was weird, falling back into their normal routine after having been under attack by an enemy Stand, but Mom wasn’t about to let any of them start slacking off just because something fucked-up had been going on. And sure, it wasn’t like any of them were going to be complaining about that kind of thing – mostly because none of them really remembered it – but Jotaro couldn’t quite help the thought that something should have actually changed after everything that had happened.

 

And yeah, there were a few differences between now and then, but they were all the annoying kind.

 

Loreena and her annoying bishonen of a boyfriend were getting even more lovey-dovey than usual; not that anyone who wasn’t a Stand user could tell, since the both of them had their Stands cuddling and nuzzling each other. Her annoying bishonen of a boyfriend not wanting to disturb the “peace and tranquility” of the school by carrying on with Loreena the way anyone without a Stand would have been doing. Or, the way the Old Man had probably done with Granny Suzy anytime he could get away with it.

 

Rolling his eyes as he caught sight of Hierophant Green and Crimson Ace, wrapped around each other and cuddling up in one of the nearby trees, he turned to see Loreena and her annoying boyfriend making their way out to meet with him so the three of them could start making their way back to their respective homes.

 

“Well, today was a productive day,” Loreena’s annoying boyfriend said, sounding more pleased than Jotaro had ever found himself feeling after a school day.

 

Then again, he really did seem like that kind of person.

 

As the pair of them continued with a conversation that they’d been having off-and-on in the times between their classes, Jotaro turned slightly. He could have sworn that he’d seen someone familiar, just across the street, but when he’d actually stopped to look for them, it was like they’d never been there at all. That’s weird, he mused, narrowing his eyes as he found himself wondering just what in the hell was going on.

 

=SC=

 

Chuckling as he watched the pair of Stands – Loreena’s Crimson Ace and Noriaki’s Hierophant Green – follow along after their respective masters, cuddling in the way that said masters would have probably been doing if Noriaki wasn’t such a prude, Telence smiled as he followed along in their footsteps. Jotaro had triggered Band On The Run’s active effect when he’d glanced over, a rather amusing thing that would make it all the more simple for him to keep up with them. Still, the question of just how he was going to be able to finish those dolls he’d been working on remained unanswered.

 

It was infinitely frustrating, but it was starting to seem like he should back off for the moment – since he’d only come to Japan on the assumption that Mannish Boy’s Death 13 could have given him the final pieces he’d been lacking to finish those dolls of his – and head back to Egypt again. Sighing as he took a long look at the pair of them – he’d even taken the time to sew magnets into the hands of the dolls he’d made for them, so that the pair of them would still be able to hold hands – Telence turned and began making his way back out of this particular quiet little neighborhood. He’d come back later, of course, but for the moment he needed to regain his bearings and start making a new plan.

 

There was a part of him that still wondered just how those two had managed to escape Mannish Boy’s Death 13 so easily, but if there was anything that someone who’d been with Blackwatch as long as he had managed to learn, it was that some mysteries wouldn’t be solved by just one person; he’d have to ask Noriaki and Loreena about it, once he’d gotten them settled into their new lives.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he, Dio, contemplated the information that his loyal servant N’Doul had presented him with; the Zero Protocol had been a rather inspired solution to the difficulty posed by the powers of his sweet sister’s servant, though he’d hardly expected anything less from the brilliant woman who had stood by his side for all the days and nights of his glorious unlife. Still, the small pleasure that he, Dio, felt at knowing that his dear Alice had managed to gain the services of such a useful Stand and its master was almost completely overshadowed by the fury that he, Dio, felt at knowing just how much of a fool Telence T. D’arby had ultimately shown himself to be.

 

It was purely and simply infuriating, knowing that one of those he had given his trust to had tossed it aside in such a disgusting way.

 

His glorious, loyal World brought him the phone, and he, Dio quickly made arrangements to travel to his holdings in Colorado; they were far enough away from his and his sweet sister’s first estate in Montana – the place where their company had begun, and a place that he, Dio, had often returned to in the past – that he could return to them in at least some semblance of secrecy. Such a thing would be important for the next stage of his plan; the part that he, Dio, would soon play in bringing Telence – the same kind of fool that Enya and her worthless son had proven themselves to be – to justice for what he’d been attempting to do for so long.

 

Once he’d informed Vanilla Ice that he was going to be leaving the Desert Rose for an indeterminate amount of time, with instructions not to inform anyone outside of his immediate family of just where it was that he, Dio, was going to be heading to, he picked up little Gio and made his way out to the private airport that held his personal plane. After he’d begun settling himself in, his faithful servant came out to the airfield and he, Dio, smiled as Vanilla Ice climbed into the pilot’s seat and guided the three of them steadily into the air.

 

Relaxing into his seat at the back of the plane he, Dio, held his adorable little Gio closer, musing on just how it was that he would properly address the foolishness of young Telence.

 

=SC=

 

Looking over at Jotaro, Noriaki found that his and Loreena-chan’s friend – odd though he had proven himself to be on so many occasions; to say nothing of his pronounced lack of anything resembling manners – didn’t seem to have settled down, even after all the time the three of them had spent walking peacefully.

 

“Come on, Jotaro, school isn’t that bad,” he said, trying to break the tension that he knew would otherwise spread to him and Loreena-chan, no matter how the pair of them tried to avoid it.

 

“It’s not that,” Jotaro said, his tone as brusque and annoyed-sounding as Noriaki had ever heard it.

 

“Is this about whoever it was you thought was following us?” Loreena-chan asked, turning to look at him, even as he had Hierophant Green wrap its arms more securely around her Crimson Ace.

 

“Yeah,” Jotaro said, casting what seemed to be a mildly amused glance over at the pair of their Stands, before returning his attention to Loreena-chan as the three of them continued on their way to school for the day. “I could swear that there was someone following us, but whoever they were I guess they left.”

 

Noriaki hummed softly, wondering just what it was that Jotaro had been seeing; it could have been someone else’s Stand, or else a person who had been going the same way for completely innocent reasons. Jotaro was the kind who got himself worked up over nearly every kind of thing, so Noriaki didn’t quite know what he should expect. Still, he’d keep an eye out, all the same.

 

Jotaro wasn’t someone who got worked up over nothing, after all.

 

=SC=

 

After the three of them had made it to school, without him seeing – or in this case not quite seeing – whoever it was that had been following them through last night and into this morning, Jotaro allowed himself to relax just slightly. He didn’t know if there would be anyone else coming to spy on them, or whatever else that guy had been trying to do – whatever it was that’d drawn them to him, Loreena, and that annoying bishonen boyfriend of hers – but Jotaro was going to keep an eye out for whoever they were.

 

Once the three of them had made their way to school, Jotaro rolled his eyes as he caught sight of the familiar crowd of girls all gathered around the front entrance, and more when he saw they way that all of their eyes turned towards the three of them; him and Loreena’s annoying boyfriend in particular, of course. Out of the corner of his right eye, Jotaro saw Crimson Ace and Hierophant Green unwinding themselves from each other. Smirking slightly as the three of them continued on their way up to the building, Jotaro deliberately bumped Loreena’s left shoulder, walking close to her as they made their way up to the chattering group of girls.

 

Even if it was annoying, knowing that there was at least one person – he’d count the annoying bishonen, but he still hadn’t apologized for being letting Uncle Dio goad him like that, or being such an ass about stealing his hat – that he could call a friend in this whole annoying mess.

 

=SC=

 

After he, Dio, had settled comfortably back into his Colorado holdings, he was of course quick to invite the D’arby brothers to stay with him for a time. Daniel, after determining that his dear Little Jojo would not in fact be putting in an appearance, naturally decided to stay at home and brood over his losses. However, that fool Telence – the only once that he, Dio, was actually interested in at this point in time – did in fact desire to have some time away from home.

 

Ostensibly to think about things without the distractions presented by his brother’s presence but he, Dio, was fully aware of what the little worm was truly thinking about.

 

Turning to make his way deeper into his holdings he, Dio, found himself smiling again as he continued onward to a room nearly at the exact center of this mansion that he had had prepared for just this kind of occasion. He hadn’t expected to have to make use of it to deal with Telence, of all people, but perhaps he should have seen such a thing coming. Telence, fool that he was, did have a marked tendency to obsess over the things that he desired.

 

It was rather annoying, of course, but in this case it would also prove rather useful.

 

Leaving a message for Vanilla Ice, instructing his faithful servant to send the little fool to meet up with him once the boy had come to his holdings in Colorado he, Dio, settled himself into the room that he’d had specifically built and laid out for just the purpose that he was drawing Telence to this meeting; to his death, as was only proper after the things that he’d been attempting.

 

=SC=

 

There was still a part of Jotaro that prompted him to keep an eye out for that same, strange figure that he’d caught only the barest glimpses of, back when he, Loreena, and her annoying boyfriend had been going and coming from school – the fact that he’d only caught glimpses of whoever or whatever it was when he was around those two hadn’t gone unnoticed, and in fact had spurred Jotaro to stay around them as much as he could stand – but as things around them settled back down to what passed for normal, he couldn’t help the thought that whatever had been happening was over. Not that he wasn’t grateful for the reprieve or anything, but he couldn’t help wondering about it, either.

 

He didn’t think he’d been imagining things…

 

=SC=

 

When Dio had called him to his study, Telence had been quick enough to respond that even the offer of tea and cocoa had been almost secondary to the chance to speak with the man. He knew that, if there was anyone in the world who would understand what he’d been trying to do, it would have to be Dio Brando. There was no one who cared for the people who’d he’d taken into his life like him, and there was nothing that Dio wouldn’t do to protect those people.

 

He’d have to understand what it was that Telence had been doing; he’d just have to explain it to the vampire properly.

 

Once he’d made it to the study where Dio was waiting for him, Telence found himself smiling in return as the vampire turned his attention to him.

 

“Telence, I’m glad to see you’ve made such good time,” Dio said, but there was something in his eyes – that same kind of coldness that Telence had heard described by a few of his other handlers – and the presence of that little kid Gio in his lap gave him more than a bit of pause.

 

Gathering himself as well as he could without breaking stride, Telence made his way over to the pair of large, plush chairs that had been set up in nearly the exact center of the elaborate, spacious study that he’d been invited into when Dio had called him to this place for whatever kind of meeting the vampire had had in mind. He wasn’t as sure of himself and where he stood with Dio as he had been when he’d first come in, but Telence at least knew that he wasn’t one to be too impulsive, even though he was still fully aware that the vampire had a temper.

 

Dio’s sharp, crimson eyes and amused, unreadable smile followed him as Telence settled himself down into the chair that the vampire directed him to.

 

“Do you know, I’ve had a rather interesting conversation with N’Doul,” Dio said, the smile on his face growing slightly colder and all the sharper for it.

 

“Oh?” Telence prompted, feeling as though he was being slowly pierced even without Dio turning that strange, eye-fluid cutting beam on him; he didn’t really know what was going on, but Telence was starting to suspect he wasn’t going to like it.

 

“Yes,” the smile on Dio’s face widened, his fangs becoming visible at the edges of his mouth, and Telence found himself all the more uneasy at the way his expression was transforming; if he hadn’t been smiling so widely, his expression would have been a dead-ringer for the way he’d heard the Commander’s described, right before she stabbed someone with that sword of hers and threw their twitching corpse down a nearby incinerator chute. “It seems that my sweet sister has been working with a rather interesting Stand user, and so was forced to develop counter-measures of a rather esoteric sort. Something by the name of the Zero Protocol?”

 

Telence could have sworn that the world fell right out from under him at that moment. “You’re Agent Zero?”

 

There was nothing friendly about the way Dio chuckled, though there was still a cruel sort of amusement in the sound. “Telence, do you really think that I, Dio, would explain one of my sweet sister’s most closely guarded secrets to you? Particularly now, of all times?”

 

Shuddering at the sheer, sadistic amusement he could plainly see on Dio’s face, Telence wondered just how in the hell he’d ever managed to make Dio Brando so angry. The pair of them had hardly been the best of friends, true, but seeing the look Dio usually reserved for the people he was about to kill aimed at him… Telence didn’t have more than a few seconds to reflect on what he was seeing, before the world really did fall out from under him.

 

=SC=

 

Watching with a sense of satisfied amusement as Telence plunged inevitably downward into Aretha’s watery domain he, Dio, settled back into his chair as the section of floor and the plush chair that had been firmly bolted to the floor for just this manner of occasion. Truly, it no longer mattered what manner of Stand Telence had been aided by; he would either starve to death in the depths of the pool or drown in its dark waters after he lost the last of his strength, and either way Aretha would feast upon his remains.

 

Chuckling softly he, Dio, resolved that he would pay a visit to her later; even a Deinosuchus required some company, from time to time.

Chapter 52: Temporary One

Chapter Text

Once she’d finished the last of her adjustments on the animatronically-enhanced suit she was going to be wearing during the course of her infiltration of the shadow-faction operating within the greater whole of Passione, Alice stepped back as Stardust emerged from her body, turning to pull her out of the suit that she’d spent the better part of a few months working on. Pausing for a moment to look over her work from the outside, Alice smiled.

 

Given how she herself was only just able to tell the difference between “Jack Harper” and the sleeping form of someone who was actually alive was because of her vampiric senses, and the fact that she’d been the one to create the suit in the first place.

 

Well, I suppose I should work on the next part of my disguise, she mused, settling down in the chair that she’d brought in for just these kinds of projects.

 

Humming, Alice reflected with some amusement just how many similarities that she’d found between this world and the one she’d lived and died in Before. Martin Sheen in particular seemed to be a point of commonality, which was a good thing, considering that it would have hardly seemed like The Illusive Man at all without that particular reference, and she’d long since forgotten what the original performance sounded like.

 

Of course, she’d have to make a few of her own changes, since it would hardly do to have someone connecting Jack Harper to anyone in particular; anyone but Passione, of course. Naturally, it’d take time to refine the voice, but fortunately that wasn’t something she was being pressed for at the moment.

 

=SC=

 

Humming to himself as he, Dio, prepared for his sweet little Gio’s second birthday, he looked up with a pleased smile as Enrico made his way down into the main room of his Desert Rose.

 

“It seems another celebration is upon us,” Enrico said, a gentle smile on his face, though he, Dio could still detect a certain uneasiness behind it.

 

Honestly, he’d no concept of how both his dear Enrico and his adorable little Jotaro could have failed to discover the sheer joy inherent in sweet foods, and yet it seemed as though the pair of them had come to some sort of an accord on that. Among other things, of course, but that in particular seemed to be something they were in perfect agreement upon. Truly, it made not a lick of sense.

 

“Yes,” he, Dio, said, turning to smile back at Enrico where he was standing; odd though the man might have been, he was truly a dear friend.  “You have sent out the invitations, yes?”

 

“Of course, Dio,” Enrico said, smiling back at him. “Every one of those near and dear to us knows that next week is to be a special time for our family.”

 

Smiling at his sweet Enrico as he turned to make his way back up into the living area of his Desert Rose he, Dio, found himself hoping that he would at least have the chance to see his dear Alice during the course of this celebration. Yes, he was fully aware that her work with the company that the both of them held joint control of – though his was steadily becoming something of a formality, considering the businesses that he, Dio, was steadily forming for himself – took up a great deal of the time that she would have otherwise used to spend among those that cared for her. Still he, Dio,  would hold out the hope of seeing his sweet sister at the celebration of their little Gio’s second year in this world.

 

A world that he, Dio, had not arranged to his liking as yet, but even flawed as it was it remained the world that they all had to live in.

 

=SC=

 

Making her way down into the depths of the compound where Wham and Tarkus were staying, Alice heard the familiar sounds of dedicated combat that she’d become so accustomed to when making her rounds of this place when she had the time; what little her various projects would allow her, of course. As she drew closer, not bothering to make her steps silent, both for the simple reason that she didn’t want to bother with announcing herself, as well as the fact that Wham’s senses were more finely developed than even her own. There’d have been no point in attempting to be subtle around the last Pillar Man.

 

“It’s good to see you again, Lady Alice,” Wham said, turning to regard her, even as he grabbed Tarkus out of his charge, suspending him high enough in the air that even Tarkus’ own long, tree-trunk like legs couldn’t reach the floor of their dojo.

 

“Oi, Milady, come for a chat?” Tarkus asked, swinging his rocket-powered hammer back up onto his back, then glancing over at Wham so that the Pillar Man would let him down.

 

“I wanted to let the pair of you know that I’m going to be incommunicado for some time,” she said, as the three of them made their way over to the table that had been set up specifically so that the three of them would be able to converse with at least a modicum of comfort, if not normality. “So, if there’s anything the pair of you might need right away, do let me know.”

 

“Another side of beef?” Tarkus suggested, a whimsical sort of smile on his face.

 

“So, you’re saying you want a whole cow delivered every week, rather than just half?” she tossed back, smirking at the teasing expression on the old zombie’s face.

 

It was always rather interesting to consider, that the pair of them were so much older than her, and yet both Wham and Tarkus had proven to be so perfectly willing to defer to her judgment on so many matters. It could have easily been because of the way that she’d proven herself willing to listen to their views when the pair of them chose to express them, and in Wham’s case the way that the pair of them would talk about the things that he had borne witness to, during the course of the long history that he and the rest of his kind had lived through. She’d often invited Tarkus to participate in those discussions, of course, but it’d become more and more obvious that that kind of thing wasn’t to his taste.

 

Kind of a pity, really, since while he hadn’t borne witness to as much of history as Wham, Tarkus had at least been awake for more of it.

 

=SC=

 

Growling softly as he sniffed around, searching for the human bitch who’d taken him in, feeding him and treating him the way someone like him deserved, Iggy summoned The Fool to lift him up onto the desk where she spent so much time. The feel of something grabbing his collar, lifting him up off the desk, drew him to call on The Fool to deal with whatever it was. But, when it turned out to be Stardust, the Stand of the bitch who’d taken him in when he’d been out on the streets, he tried to relax as the Stand held him in its arms.

 

Sure, it didn’t seem like his human bitch had come back yet, but it seemed like she still knew how to look after him properly.

 

When the Stand took him over to the wall, slipping its left hand through it to grab some of his favorite treats, Iggy let himself settle down. Even if she had just left her Stand to look after him, his human bitch still seemed to know just how to take care of him properly. Really, the only thing he was missing here was some actual bitches to keep him company. Still, every time he’d tried to let his human bitch know just what it was that he needed to properly settle into a place like this, she never seemed to pay attention to it.

 

So, there were still a few things that he needed to do to properly train her, but anyone knew that these humans needed a lot of training.

 

Using The Fool to pat Stardust’s head as his human bitch’s Stand dropped him in the room that she had prepared for him before she’d taken him off the streets and into wherever it was that she lived. It was at least nice enough, as far as places where humans lived went, but Iggy couldn’t really be perfectly content without a few actual bitches of his own. He just had to get that human bitch of his trained up properly.

 

=SC=

 

Humming to himself as he, Dio, set about preparing more of the decorations for his sweet little Gio’s second birthday, he also found himself reflecting upon the progress of young Loreena and Noriaki’s relationship. Or rather, the profound lack of progress. Because, while it was more than clear to anyone who watched for more than a few minutes that the pair of them were simply made for each other, watching the pair of them actually court each other was an at turns amusing and annoying reminder of his first Jojo and little Erina.

 

However, while he’d been content enough to allow his adorable, foolish little Jojo and Erina the time that they needed to actually realize how much the pair of them truly meant to each other, the presence of his sweet little Gio made the issue all the more pressing. He, Dio, hardly wished for his sweet little Gio to grow up without a Jojo of his own, but it was also plain for anyone to see that his adorable Jotaro was far too particular about both his companions and his solitude to settle down with just anyone. Truly, Dio doubted that the littlest of his Jojos would even be willing to settle down with someone he chose for him.

 

Truly, his adorable Jotaro had always been a rather willful sort.

 

And so, with all of those matters in mind he, Dio, set about preparing something more for little Loreena and her sweet Noriaki, since this particular celebration would not only be to commemorate his sweet little Gio’s second year in this world, but also to welcome the new little one who would serve as his little Gio’s own Jojo, even without truly being a Joestar. However, it was also plain for anyone who had spent enough time around his sweet family to see that this new little one who would soon come into the world would be welcomed by his Joestars as one of their own, regardless of the circumstances of their birth.

 

Just as he, Dio, had been, so long ago.

 

Setting aside his completed project with a small smile he, Dio, returned his attention to the decorations that he was preparing for his sweet little Gio’s party. He still hoped that he would have the chance to see his dear Alice at the celebration, but he was also fully aware of the fact that his sweet sister had more than her fair share of responsibilities in the world as it was. Therefore, until he had managed to arrange the world to his liking, he, Dio, would have to savor the time that he would be allowed to spend in his dear Alice’s company.

 

The time would come when he, Dio, would gain the power to remake the world with the power of his World; he, Dio, would make certain of it.

 

=SC=

 

Rolling his eyes as he looked down at the aggressively fancy invitation that his weird Uncle Dio had sent out to him, Jotaro sighed. There wasn’t much of a chance of him getting out of this, since Uncle Dio would be even more insufferable if he tried something like that, but the thought of the sugary monstrosity of a cake that Uncle Dio was going to try stuffing them all with – not to mention the way that Uncle Dio himself was going to be so aggressively happy at all of them – made him shudder almost involuntarily.

 

“Jojo, did you get the special package that Uncle Dio sent?” Mom asked, bursting into the room in almost the same way that Uncle Dio had done more than a few times when he’d been staying in the Desert Rose; it was one of the many ways that Mom got on his nerves, the way she reminded him more than a bit of Uncle Dio, sometimes.

 

“Yeah, I got it,” he said, trying not to grumble too much.

 

Sometimes, he wondered if Mom had gotten her aggressive bubbliness from Uncle Dio, or if she’d somehow come by it naturally; either way, it was more than a bit annoying.

 

The sound of someone else making their way down the hall to his room, obviously Loreena, drew Jotaro’s attention, but before he could make his way over to the door, Mom had just about whipped it open, that big, welcoming smile stretching all over her face again.

 

“Good morning, Loreena-chan! Did you get the invitation to little Gio’s birthday party, too?”

 

“I did,” Loreena said, and he could tell from the look on her face that she was still more than a little off-balance from how aggressively happy Mom was being at them so early in the morning; just more of a confirmation that Mom was too much for any normal person to deal with. “I think both me and Noriaki are invited, though, or at least that’s what it sounded like.”

 

“That’s great!” Mom exclaimed, hopping the way she did when she was even more excited than what seemed to be normal for her. “Come on, let’s all go have breakfast, and we can talk about this as a family!”

 

Rolling his eyes as he followed Mom and Loreena out of the room, Jotaro headed for the dining room so that he’d be able to have breakfast, probably with Loreena’s annoying bishonen of a boyfriend showing up, if he did end up getting invited in the same way Uncle Dio had invited Loreena along, probably because the both of them had become a weird part of their weird family. Which probably meant that he was going to be, which was kind of annoying.

 

Still, at least there’d be a few other people around to take Uncle Dio’s attention off of annoying him during the party that they were all going to be heading off to next week.

 

Settling down to have breakfast with Mom and Loreena, Jotaro grumbled softly when Loreena’s annoying boyfriend did end up showing his pretty face, rolling his eyes and looking off into the well-maintained yard that Mom had poured so much work into. Even once they’d all finished their meal, the fact that Loreena’s annoying bishonen boyfriend was going to the same school as the pair of them meant that he wasn’t going to be able to get away from him for the rest of the day.

 

School in general was annoying enough without being stuck with Loreena’s annoying boyfriend; still, watching Loreena deal with the chattering girls who still hadn’t managed to get the idea that he wasn’t interested in them was always good for at least a chuckle. Still, the end of the day couldn’t come fast enough for him, considering.

 

=SC=

 

Settling herself firmly into the prosthetic shell that would soon come to be known as Jack Harper, Alice carefully stretched her vocal chords in the way that she’d discovered in order to make herself sound at least reasonably similar to Martin Sheen. Sitting up, and making a few, final adjustments to her present disguise, she smiled softly.

 

“Well then, let’s see what we can do with this,” she said, a stranger’s voice sounding in her ears.

 

Making her way out of the building where she and Stardust had set themselves up in her new, temporary identity, Alice in her guise as the face of The Illusive Man continued on her way into the back streets of Italy. Caesar had informed her about the haunts that Passione tended to stay in, and further about the best places to intercept their patrols and so be better able to find their agents. It was with this in mind that Alice, wearing a face and form that no one in Passione – shadow-faction or not – had ever seen, continued her search for the hideout of one of the compromised cells of Caesar’s do-gooder gang.

 

Even after all this time, that was still a rather amusing concept.

 

Once she’d managed to find one of the safe-houses that Passione had established, one of those that Caesar had informed her was compromised by the shadow-faction that had formed within the organization itself, Alice reflected on the way that Caesar had been so intent about not bringing either of the shadow-organizations that she had formed into the internal matters of Passione. And yes, she could fully understand the man’s desire not to start an underground war between what seemed like a group of powerful Stand users and her own supernaturally-empowered forces, but working like this…

 

Well, it brought back more than a few memories of the time she’d spent as Fleetwood Mac, following in the footsteps of one Robert E.O. Speedwagon.

 

Making her way up to the reinforced door of what would have otherwise looked like a perfectly ordinary building, Alice knocked with the cane she was holding. She’d foregone the use of either her sword-concealing umbrella, or one of the many sword-canes that she owned, mostly at the urging of Caesar, since the man was a great deal more familiar with the way that Passione operated, even with the infiltrators who’d managed to make their way in, and she knew from her own experiences with both Blackwater and Blackwatch about the pronounced antipathy that organizations like Passione had for those they didn’t know walking into one of their sanctums carrying concealed weaponry.

 

Still, even bereft of the more esoteric of her supernatural abilities – considering the fact that she didn’t want to reveal her true nature, or else end up destroying her suit after having spent so much time working on it – Alice was perfectly content with her enhanced strength, perception, speed, and reflexes. Knocking in the pattern that Caesar, as well as a few others that she’d interacted with in her guise as The Illusive Man, had informed her was to be used when she wanted to gain access to one of Passione’s safehouses, Alice waited for a lingering moment for the small slit on the door to open.

 

“What do you want?” demanded a male voice, once the slit in the reinforced door had been pulled back.

 

“Just a man,” she said, the smooth, low voice of Jack Harper echoing back to her for the first time since she’d developed the voice in the first place. “Wondering if you would lend me your ears.”

 

The eyes displayed by the slit widened ever-so-slightly, clearly not having expected to hear Caesar’s code-phrase from a man he’d never met before. The door itself was opened not soon after that, allowing her to see into the room. There were a few people sitting in the room, along with what seemed to be quite a few nondescript crates of what figured to be supplies. There was also someone else in the room, however; someone that no one else in the room seemed to be aware of.

 

He seemed rather large, and not in the best physical condition, if the way she could hear his heart straining and the sound of his lungs was any indication. Something to keep in mind, Alice mused, as she marked him with her tremor-senses and turned her attention to the rest of the men in the room. None of them seemed particularly ill-disposed toward “him”, but on the other hand none of them seemed particularly impressed, either. She could work with that.

 

Like every job she’d taken on, discovering just who was at the heart of this shadow-faction that had formed within Passione was going to take some time; Straizo would have to handle things without her, but the man had proven himself to be more than capable on many occasions.

 

“So, what does one of Caesar’s men want with us?”

 

=SC=

 

As he, Mom, and Loreena continued packing their bags to make the trip to the Desert Rose to celebrate little cousin Gio’s second birthday, Jotaro found himself wondering just what Uncle Dio had thought up to annoy him with this time. It was something he’d always had to wonder about, ever since he’d grown up enough not to find Uncle Dio’s antics funny, and it was something he had to wonder about even more, since they’d learned a couple days ago that Aunt Alice was in the middle of something that needed her full attention and so wouldn’t be there to keep at least most of Uncle Dio’s attention off of him.

 

It was going to be even more of a pain in the ass than usual, dealing with Uncle Dio when he’d only have Pucci to throw between the two of them, but maybe Whitesnake would be willing to give him some backup, since Pucci’s Stand seemed to know how much of a weirdo the man was, too.

 

As Star tossed the last of the bags into the car that was going to take them to the airfield, Jotaro called his Stand back and then settled himself down into the car along with Mom and Loreena. Sighing as the car set out, Jotaro found himself wishing for a long moment that Aunt Alice could have come with them. Still, he knew that she had a lot of responsibilities, working for Brando International, especially because anyone with half a brain would know that Uncle Dio couldn’t manage anything like that.

 

Once they’d all gotten to the plane, Jotaro had managed to push the thoughts he didn’t want to bother with to the back of his mind, looking out on the world as it seemed to shrink away under him as the plane took off into the sky, heading for Egypt and Uncle Dio’s Desert Rose.

 

The ride itself was as quiet as even he could ask for, though the way that Mom insisted on cuddling him on the way over was more than a little annoying, but soon enough they’d all made it to Uncle Dio’s holdings again and he, Mom, and Loreena all climbed out of the plane, heading for the interior of the resort. It was looking a lot more complete since the last time they’d all come here, of course, almost seeming ready to be opened to the public, or else Uncle Dio was being a perfectionist again and there were still some things that he wanted to have done to the place.

 

The sudden sound of something exploding, just behind his head, made Jotaro whip around, calling Star- right before he saw Uncle Dio grinning at him, brandishing the remains of one of those annoying party poppers that he seemed to like so damned much.

 

“Feeling a bit jumpy, my Littlest Jojo?”

 

“Fuck off, Uncle Dio,” he grumbled, picking some of those annoying streamers off his shoulders and hat.

 

Shaking his head, he called out Star, just to make sure that Uncle Dio wouldn’t try to cover him in any more of those damned streamers, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he saw Uncle Dio call out his own Stand, grinning as the thing waved to him. Rolling his eyes, Jotaro made his way over to the table full of presents that had been set out for little cousin Gio’s birthday so he could drop off the wrapped present that he’d bought for the kid. Continuing on his way over to the couches that’d been draped with colorful, festive cloth, Jotaro rolled his eyes again.

 

Sure, he’d seen just the same kind of thing the last time that Uncle Dio had set this kind of thing up, but it was still a bit of an eyesore.

Chapter 53: Crazy For You

Chapter Text

Looking around at all of the people who’d been invited to the party, Noriaki found himself surprised all over again at just how welcome he felt in a place like this. He’d been alone for so much of his life, that even after he’d met Loreena-chan, Mr. Brando, and even Jotaro, that Noriaki found himself almost waiting to wake up. Even after all this time, sitting here in this place still seemed surreal; he couldn’t really say that it felt like a dream, not after everything he’d been through, and not after everyone he’d met, but he still felt an undeniable sense of surreality to everything.

 

His mind knew that everything was real, of course, but there was still that small part of his heart that didn’t quite believe it.

 

Sighing, having gone to wash his hands, the way that everyone else had done when they’d come to the Desert Rose, Noriaki splashed some water on his face to wake himself up just that much more. Yes, there might have still been those parts of him that didn’t quite believe that all of this was real, even if he didn’t think it was actually a dream, spending time with the people who were so kind to him would at least help a little bit.

 

Smiling softly as he made his way back out to the party room that had been set up by Mr. Brando for all of them to use, Noriaki curled up against Loreena-chan and continued to watch the party. Loreena-chan laughed at Mr. Polnareff’s silly flirting, up until his little sister bopped him over the head with one of the pillows and the Frenchman burst into exaggerated sobbing and apologies.

 

Really, Mr. Brando and Mr. Polnareff acted a lot more like each other than he thought that either one would enjoy having pointed out.

 

Smiling as Jotaro’s little cousin Gio was passed over to him and Loreena-chan to hold for a lingering moment, Noriaki chuckled softly. Mr. Brando really did seem to like showing him off, and when he looked up to see the way the man was smiling at him, Noriaki almost found himself laughing. He swallowed it, of course, since that kind of thing would have been fairly rude, even if he did kind of think that Mr. Brando wouldn’t have called him out for it.

 

Once the party had started to wrap up, everyone who’d come to the Desert Rose was invited to stay over for as long as they wanted. Jotaro and his mother, though mostly Jotaro, decided to only stay the night before they went back to Japan. He and Loreena-chan volunteered to stay for a bit longer, since there was something warm and familiar about this place; something that made him feel more at home in this kind of place than he’d ever felt in any other place he’d ever been.

 

Taking the glass of cherry soda that Mr. Brando pressed into his hands as he and Loreena-chan made their way up to the room that Mr. Brando had told them was reserved for them and them alone, Noriaki sipped at it as he and Loreena-chan made it to the top of the stairs and split off from the main group. Passing by Mr. Ice on their way to their room, Noriaki blinked in surprise ad he saw Mr. Brando standing in front of their door. Smiling back as he caught sight of the warm, cheerful smile on Mr. Brando’s face as he turned to them.

 

“Good evening,” he paused for a moment, catching himself as the smile on Mr. Brando’s face widened and became just that much more amused. “Dio.”

 

“You’re learning, my sweet Noriaki,” Mr. Brando said, smiling more brightly at the pair of them. “But, there is one last thing I would like to say to you, before you go to your room.”

 

He was just about to ask what that was, when he caught sight of… of Mr. Brando’s… Mr. Brando’s eyes… Enjoy each other’s company, my dear children…

 

=SC=

 

Smiling with sheer pleasure as he watched his dear little children leaning in to kiss, already beginning to disrobe each other, even as Vanilla Ice ushered them into the room that he, Dio, had given to them to use, he continued smiling as he, Dio, continued on his way to his own room. There were still a few things that he would need to take care of, considering just what his sweet Loreena and Noriaki were going to be doing for the night – what he, Dio, could already hear happening with more and more enthusiasm, even through the thick, soundproofed walls that he’d deliberately had installed in his Desert Rose – to make certain that his sweet children would have the chance to be as happy as possible.

 

Even in this simple, flawed world that was all they had at the present.

 

“Come, Vanilla Ice,” he, Dio, called over his shoulder, smiling at the faithful man who had supported him for such a long time, at least in relation to a mere human’s lifespan. “We’ve still some work to do.”

 

“Of course, Lord Dio.”

 

Smiling as he made his way back into his room he, Dio, smiled all the wider as he settled down at his desk to begin preparing for the next phase of his plan. His sweet little Gio would love the new friend he was going to have, even though they would only be an honorary Joestar, at least if the child didn’t choose to marry into the line later in life. Still, for the time that the pair of them would be children, the new little one would be closer to his sweet little Gio than any of the others that might have tried to lay claim to their heart.

 

He would, of course, need to consult his sweet children as to the theme of their soon-to-be-impending nuptials, but as it seemed that dear Noriaki wasn’t as close to his own parents as his sweet Loreena was to her father, or especially as his adorable Jojos were to one another he, Dio, felt very little need to make contact with the Kakyoin brood.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing her eyes, behind the transparent polymer of the painted lenses in “Jack Harper’s” face, Alice paused for a long moment, looking up at the waning moon and listening as the footsteps pacing her stopped. It seemed as though she had picked up a tail while she’d been speaking with the shadow-faction of Passione; rather annoying, since whoever it was seemed bound and determined to follow her back to the storehouse where she was aiming to store her prosthetic for the night.

 

It seemed as though she’d a few loose ends to tie up, before she could head back to her Naples compound to begin putting together what little she knew from the information she’d managed to gather this past evening.

 

Continuing on her way back to the storehouse, Alice tracked a second presence that seemed to be following in the footsteps of the other presence, though in their case she couldn’t track their footsteps so much as their heartbeat. It seemed as though this one wasn’t actually walking, in favor of some other kind of means of moving. Inhaling deeply though her nose, turning slightly so that she would be able to better catch the scents of anyone close enough, Alice found to her annoyance that the wind was against her. Focusing on her tremor-senses once more, Alice tracked the two humans who were trying to track her.

 

She could’ve easily vanished from their weaker senses, but considering the fact that she wished to preserve the illusion that Jack Harper was merely human, she couldn’t really go after either of them since someone human wouldn’t have been able to tell that they were being tracked in this low light. Narrowing her eyes behind “Jack Harper’s” animatronic face, Alice continued on her way to the outpost she’d disguised as a house so that she could lay down her present disguise and deal with whoever the pair was that was following her.

 

Once she’d made it back to the “bed”, actually a table that had been set up to look more like something that someone might sleep in, Alice laid “Jack Harper” down, tucking him in and then having Stardust teleport her to the other side of the room. The sound of footsteps making their way into the room drew her attention, and Alice narrowed her eyes just that much farther as she watched whoever it was on the outside twisting the doorknob. Leaning lightly against the far wall, Alice stretched open her slit-pupils and folded her arms, watching all the more intently as whoever had been following her made their way inside.

 

The first of them, at least.

 

Stretching her slit-pupils just that much wider, as whoever it was that had been following her revealed himself to be a man. He was rather lithe, with a moppy haircut that fell over his eyebrows but was just short enough not to fall into the eyes themselves, and Alice quickly determined that – whatever else this man was – he was both young, and completely human. To say nothing of the fact that she could clearly hear the young man’s heartbeat, the way he was looking around told her plainly that he couldn’t see her nearly as well as she could see him at the moment.

 

Might as well test the waters, she mused. “Is there something you’re looking for, young man?”

 

As the brazen invader stopped dead in his tracks, heart hammering loudly enough that Alice was sure that even he could hear it, Alice smirked slightly at how clearly off-balance he clearly was.

 

“You know, it’s rather rude to invade someone else’s home, to say nothing of walking right into their bedroom without even a by your leave,” she said, folding her arms and stretching her pupils nearly as wide as she was capable of; currently, she could see nearly as well as she could at early dusk, though the colors of everything within her field of view were muted from the lack of actual light in the room where she and the more brazen of the two stalkers she’d been tracking were currently standing. “So,” she continued, when the man standing before gritted his teeth, peering deeper into the darkness that shrouded her like an insubstantial cloak. “Where’s your accomplice?”

 

“I came here alone,” the man insisted, his heart beginning at last to settle down from the panic-speed it’d been racing at; an interesting development, considering that he was obviously lying.

 

“Of course you did,” she deadpanned, stalking forward. “Still, we shouldn’t be having our discussion here. My associate may be a deep sleeper, but even he can’t sleep through everything.”

 

Wrapping her left arm firmly around the man’s shoulder, Alice called on Stardust to jump them to the faux living room of this little outpost. Her larger, more humanoid Stand had demonstrated this short-range teleportation a few days ago, something that complemented its intrinsic ability to phase through solid objects, enabling the pair of them – or the three of them, counting The Duke – to move between rooms in whatever building they were in without crossing the actual space in between said rooms. It was at least marginally useful, particularly in situations like this.

 

Dropping the intruder to the floor, Alice paused for a long moment as she caught the sound of the second intruder’s heartbeat drawing steadily closer to the outpost. Narrowing her eyes as she tracked the second as they moved closer, still with not the slightest sound of footfalls to indicate that whoever it was, was actually walking. Before she could think any further about just what was actually going on with that second of the two intruders that she’d been tracking, the man laying on the floor of the outpost’s main room glared up at her.

 

“Green Day!”

 

“Stardust.”

 

Just as soon as the intruder’s Stand had emerged – a large- stocky, green figure with what seemed to be paler green pinstripes and some kind of pipes on its head – Stardust grabbed the thing, jumping it up through the roof of the outpost and phasing its bottom part – what would have been the Stand’s ankles, if Green Day had actually had anything resembling legs or feet – into the rooftop to strand the thing. Inside the outpost, the intruder yelped and fell to the floor, clutching at his ankles.

 

“Wha- what the hell was that?” he demanded.

 

“What, did you think you could sic your Stand on me without consequences?” she asked, smirking slightly.

 

Adjusting her pupils as Stardust toggled the lights, revealing the true colors of the admittedly young man she was speaking to, Alice folded her arms and narrowed her eyes as she stared down at him.

 

“Who sent you after me?” she prodded, wanting to see just how this little man would jump, metaphorically speaking.

 

“I came on my own,” the green-haired man – hardly the strangest thing she’d seen in this world, but amusing for all of that.

 

“Indeed,” she deadpanned, narrowing her eyes as the man on the floor tried to stand back up; he seemed to regain his composure, then, so presumably he’d recalled his Stand.

 

The man shuddered as he stood back up, brushing himself off and arranging his clothes so he presumably would look or feel less rumpled than he clearly was. Watching the man as he struggled to look at her, shaking, his heart pounding almost as hard as when she’d first called his attention to her back in the storage room where she’d dropped “Jack Harper”, Alice lightly chewed the inside of her lip when the man turned to look at her with the same expression on his face that she’d seen entirely too many times when anyone unfortunate enough to have drawn her brother’s attention would look at him, at least once he’d finished working on them.

 

All other considerations aside, it was rather annoying; she’d no real use for the kind of worshipful minions that Dio went out of his way to cultivate.

 

“Well, if you did come here on your own, you might wish to know that someone seems to be following you rather  closely,” she said, wondering how the man would react to having the other – who was more than likely his companion – outed to him. “It doesn’t seem as though they honestly trust you.”

 

The man standing in front of her shuddered. “You found-” he said, before seeming to strangle the rest of whatever he was going to say right in his throat, muttering something at a volume he seemed to think that she was incapable of hearing.

 

“Were you trying to say second? Or is Secco someone you know?”

 

=SC=

 

What in the hell is this woman?!  It was all Cioccolata could do to keep himself standing; looking at her, right there in front of him, looking like there was nothing in the world could possibly faze her… She was like something supernatural, almost as though nothing so mundane as terror or despair could take hold of her at all… Grinding his teeth, even as he saw the woman narrowing her eyes as she seemed to loom over him, Cioccolata forced himself to look up into those blood-crimson eyes of hers.

 

Even if she had managed to find Secco with the power of that strange Stand she’d attacked him with, there was no way she’d be able to deal with the power of both Green Day and Oasis. Secco was closer, beginning to move under the floor of the house that he’d followed Jack Harper to, before this strange, infuriating woman had emerged from the shadows to torment him.

 

“It seems we’re about to have another guest,” the woman said, her eyes momentarily shifting, just before Secco – wearing Oasis as the suit that allowed him to hide in the ground and evade detection by anyone who wasn’t this infuriating woman! – was thrown into the room where the both of them were standing.

 

Clearly after having been dragged by that infuriating woman’s Stand, if the way it came sauntering into the room after tossing Secco down on the bare, hardwood floor. Just as he was about to call out for Green Day again, in spite of what had happened the first time, so he would be able to make this woman suffer for looking down on him. When Green Day emerged, however, that woman’s Stand buried it in the floor beneath them.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing her eyes as she watched the messy-haired man fall to the floor, gasping as he found his Stand shoved deep into the floor beneath their feet, Alice turned to watch as the other man – this one wearing a suit and actually swimming through the floor beneath their feet; it seemed that this one had a rather interesting Stand – rose from the floor. The first man struggled to rise from the floor, clearly having dismissed his Stand if the way he was no longer gasping for breath was any indication, but before he could either try to rush her or re-summon that odd-looking Stand of his, Stardust appeared behind him.

 

“Are you familiar with the mechanical aspects of respiration?” she asked, feeling slightly amused at the way the man was focused so completely on her, to the exclusion of the clear and present danger closing in on him.

 

“What?”

 

“The mechanics of respiration, specifically in humans,” she reiterated, smirking slightly as Stardust snickered silently. “In particular, the role that the ribcage plays?”

 

“I’m in training-”

 

“That’s good to hear,” she said, grinning as Stardust moved forward, phasing through the man’s skin so that it could grab hold of his rib-cage, pulling it out and leaving the man to gasp and twitch on the floor like a landed fish.  “At least you’ll know what’s happening to you.”

 

When the other man, the one who’d been stalking her just as long as the first with his Stand – Green Day, with whatever strange, esoteric abilities such a Stand might possess – leaped out of the ground with a shout that sounded more than a little animalistic. Narrowing her eyes as Stardust intercepted the man in mid-leap, Alice smirked as her Stand pulled both the man’s thigh bones as well as his upper-arm bones right out of his body. As the man tried to pull himself back into the ground, presumably in order to attempt to make an escape or else to try attacking from a different angle, Stardust jumped him up to the ceiling.

 

Her Stand had also managed to jump the man out of his own Stand, but the other man recalled it nearly as soon as he’d begun falling, so it didn’t make that much of a difference in the end; though the man who’d been wearing his Stand rather than commanding it did look a fair bit younger than his compatriot. All in all, it was a rather curious situation.

 

“Right, since you’ve probably been sent to tail me by whoever it is that’s been trying to move in on Caesar’s territory, I suppose there wouldn’t really be any point in asking you to work with me,” she said, twitching her ponytail up into her right hand. “Still, asking isn’t my only option.”

 

She’d always found this sort of thing – the buds of vampiric flesh that she, Dio, and every other one of their kind who’d managed to discover the ability were capable of creating – both odd and mildly distasteful. Useful, to be sure, but it always felt… Well, Alice had the feeling that human words hadn’t been invented to describe what she felt those times when she’d been forced to make use of this particular aspect of her abilities, but she got the feeling that H.P. Lovecraft would have figured out some way to describe it.

 

Pulling the flesh-bud free from her hair after it had finished forming, Alice turned to look back down at the man gasping on the hardwood floor; time she finished with this.

 

=SC=

 

Finding himself in bed, with someone warm and soft wrapped around him, Noriaki tensed slightly as he found that he couldn’t quite remember just how he’d ended up in what was obviously his room, and when he looked over to see that Loreena-chan was the one curled up with him… As Loreena-chan’s eyes fluttered and she turned to look over at him, Noriaki could see the same confusion he was feeling right now visible on her face, as well. Pulling away as gently as he could, shuddering as he found that neither of them were wearing any of their clothes, Noriaki stumbled as he got out of bed and started making his way to the attached bathroom.

 

He was trying not to think about the dry, sticky feeling all over his skin, but even given what he wasn’t trying to think about… Noriaki shook his head, forcing his attention back to the present, tossing his clothes into the laundry-chute that’d been neatly built into the far wall as he continued on his way into the lavish bathroom. He’d never quite understood why Mr. Brando had put two showers in their bathroom, but now he found himself grateful for it in a way that he hadn’t been before.

 

It probably was just because Mr. Brando enjoyed his luxuries so much.

 

Once he’d managed to get himself clean again, Noriaki made his way back out into the room that he and Loreena-chan shared, continuing on his way over to the closet so he could get dressed for the day. Standing in front of his and Loreena-chan’s closet, Noriaki blinked as he found an odd, sweet taste in his mouth. Rubbing his eyes, Noriaki yawned as he gathered up another of the uniforms that he’d brought with him the first time he’d come to this place.

 

“You’re still wearing those?” Loreena-chan asked, giggling cutely at him as she dressed in a colorful blouse and long skirt. “We’re not even in school right now.”

 

“Just because you don’t care that we’re both still students, doesn’t mean I’m going to let your laxity rub off on me, Loreena-chan,” he said, leaning over to kiss her cheek as the pair of them dressed up again.

 

Out of the corner of his right eye, Noriaki caught sight of Mr. Brando as he made his way into the room that he and Loreena-chan had been given by the man. Pulling on his jacket, Noriaki turned to look at the blond as he made his way inside.

 

“Good morning,” he said, not entirely sure how he should react to Mr. Brando this time; on the one hand, the Desert Rose was his house and not just the place where he worked, but on the other, he had given this particular room to him and Loreena-chan, and it was rude to come into someone else’s room without even announcing yourself.

 

“Good morning, my sweet children,” Mr. Brando said, grinning at the pair of them.

 

Almost before he could blink, Noriaki found Mr. Brando standing right behind the pair of them, right hand on his right shoulder and left hand on Loreena-chan’s left shoulder. He’d always had the feeling that there was something different about Mr. Brando, something even beyond his Stand that set him apart from everyone else, but even seeing – or not seeing, in this case – the way he moved when he’d made his way inside… Noriaki still didn’t quite know what was going on with the man.

 

Still, as he and Loreena-chan were gently escorted out of their room, with Mr. Brando walking just behind the pair of them and seeming all too eager to guide them to some place that even amid all his chatter he didn’t seem to want to talk about, Noriaki couldn’t help the feeling that there was something he was forgetting…

Chapter 54: Falling For The First Time

Chapter Text

Once he’d brought his sweet Little Lori and her adorable Noriaki out to his parlor so that the three of them could properly begin their discussion of their impending nuptials he, Dio, chuckled softly as he watched the pair of them settle themselves around the table that he’d had set out with a pleasant, healthy breakfast for the pair of them to eat while they spoke he, Dio, smiled as he watched the pair of them turning to each other with an adorable look of love on their faces.

 

It was simply one more sign that the pair of them were destined to meet.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing her eyes as she watched the pair of men who’d been sent out to tail her, Alice found herself rather interested in the way that Secco – having recalled his Stand, and then deployed it again – was also watching the pair of them. It was beginning to seem that the man wasn’t particularly fond of his partner, so it could be said that he wasn’t fond of the other man. Still, the fact that he’d immediately summoned his Stand, as well as his carefully controlled body-language, gave Alice very little to work with, insofar as determining what the man was actually thinking.

 

As the man she’d just fed one of her own flesh-buds rose back to his feet, twitching slightly as his bodily-functions reset themselves, Alice called Stardust back to her side, waiting for a long moment as the man’s eyes clouded over ever-so-briefly, before clearing as he made his way over to her.

 

“It’s generally considered polite to introduce yourself when you meet someone,” she said, smirking slightly as she watched the man compose himself again.

 

“Right, sorry,” the man said, straightening himself up and making his way over to her, bowing neatly at the waist as her flesh-bud fully settled itself. “My name is Cioccolata, Miss.”

 

“And Secco would figure to be the man following you, yes?” she asked, raising an eyebrow as Cioccolata – she found it rather amusing that his name wasn’t yet another of the music references that she’d become so accustomed to hearing and hearing about in this rather interesting world – straightened back up, turning slightly to regard the man standing next to him.

 

“He’s always been something like a pet to me,” Cioccolata said, glancing dismissively at the man, who’d dismissed that wearable Stand of his and revealed himself to have a thin, lanky form and hair that seemed to hover indecisively between off-white and the palest shade of blue she’d seen in some time.

 

“Indeed,” she said, turning her own attention to the smaller man – she didn’t know if he was truly younger, but it was clear from the way he deferred to Cioccolata that he at least thought of himself as some kind of a subordinate to the man – who stood with a distinct sort of stoop to his shoulders. “So, what’s your take on all of this? Secco, wasn’t that your name?”

 

Secco nodded, though he didn’t seem inclined to actually say anything.

 

“Don’t worry about him,” Cioccolata said, his tone as arrogant and dismissive as she’d ever heard from him. “He doesn’t talk much, since he knows he’s got nothing to say.”

 

She could just tell that dealing with this guy was going to be a distinct pain in her ass; still, with Mystery Man moving in on Caesar’s territory the way he seemed determined to do, she needed a man – or men, if Secco was determined to tag along with a man who didn’t seem to respect him on any kind of level – on the inside. Even if she was going to be forced to dispose of them later, which might very well end up being the case, she’d at least be able to get some use out of the man.

 

=SC=

 

When Loreena and her annoying bishonen of a boyfriend didn’t show up at school for a few days, Jotaro found himself wondering just what in the actual fuck was going on. Neither of them seemed like the type to just go skipping out like this, particularly considering the way Loreena’s pain-in-the-ass boyfriend would get on him whenever he suggested skipping out of the more annoying lessons they had to take during the course of their day. Particularly English, since he and Loreena were already long since fluent in the language.

 

Loreena was fluent in a lot of languages, which he figured fit since her old man did work for an international company.

 

The more and more he thought about it, the more he knew that Uncle Dio had to be behind whatever was going on. The last place he’d seen the both of them was at the party for little Cousin Gio, and the fact that the pair of them had chosen to stay at the Desert Rose – where Uncle Dio could not only get to them, but where he had pretty much uncontested access to the pair of them – was just one more thing pointing to the conclusion that he couldn’t help but come to.

 

He needed to talk to Aunt Alice, and then the pair of them needed to go find out just what Uncle Dio was doing, and then kick his ass if it ended up being something as stupid as what he usually got up to.

 

Keeping his resolve in the back of his mind, as he continued through the rest of the annoying day he had to deal with – particularly the girls, who without Loreena’s annoying bishonen boyfriend to distract their attention, or Loreena herself to scare them off were getting even more annoying – Jotaro managed to get through another annoying day at school. Once he made it back home, batting off Mom as she started to fuss over him, Jotaro finished his assignments and then made his way over to the phone that Aunt Alice had bought for him for his sixteenth birthday.

 

“Straizo,” he greeted, once he’d managed to get through to Aunt Alice’s office. “Connect me to Aunt Alice,” he said, knowing that Straizo would understand what he wanted.

 

The pair of them knew each other well enough, after so long. Once he’d managed to get through to Aunt Alice – though it kind of sounded like she had some kind of project of her own going on, given the way she sounded – he explained what he’d sussed out about what Uncle Dio was probably doing to Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend.

 

“Yes, I suppose I can’t really put it past the man,” Aunt Alice said, sounding about as unimpressed as he felt; Uncle Dio really could be a pain in the ass, sometimes.

 

A lot of times, really.

 

The pair of them chatted for a few more minutes, catching up on what had been going on with each of them – it turned out that Aunt Alice did have some sort of a project in the works, though he didn’t end up finding out anything more about it than the fact that it existed – and Jotaro frowned as she told him what’d been going on in her part of the world.

 

“Someone’s really trying to move in on Caesar’s turf?”

 

“Yes, though I have one of my people looking into that kind of thing,” Aunt Alice said, then chuckled softly. “I suppose I am honor-bound to tell you that you’re free to call him Uncle Caesar, Jotaro.”

 

He scoffed. “Yeah, he’d love that, I’m sure. Still, you guys are doing all right over there, right? None of those bastards are giving you any trouble?”

 

“Not at present, though I have one of my people looking into them, so that could easily begin to change in the near future,” Aunt Alice said, and Jotaro narrowed his eyes.

 

“You need some help with those bastards, you know you can call me,” he said, remembering that Aunt Alice was far enough away from him that he wouldn’t just be able to look at her and she’d know that he was offering help.

 

“I’ll keep that in mind, Jotaro,” Aunt Alice said, and he could tell that she was smiling.

 

Settling back into his chair after Aunt Alice had wished him goodbye and then hung up, Jotaro finished up the rest of his homework and got ready for tomorrow. He knew that Aunt Alice would be picking him up on the coming weekend, and then they’d go see just what in the hell Uncle Dio was doing with Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend. And probably kick his ass, depending on how stupid he was being.

 

=SC=

 

Finding out from Jotaro that Dio was Up To Something again, Alice rolled her eyes as Stardust made its appearance once more.

 

“I suppose I should have expected Dio to pull something while I was away,” she sighed, folding her arms and glaring out the wide windows overlooking the expanse of the eastern horizon.

 

True, she had been trying to teach her capricious twin to actually respect the desires of people who weren’t them before she’d set off back to the company that the both of them had laid the groundwork for but she’d inevitably found herself in charge of when Dio had lost interest in the business side of things and moved onto his own business. The lessons clearly hadn’t taken, if what Jotaro was implying turned out to have any sort of validity, so Alice was finding herself more than a little annoyed by the whole prospect.

 

First there was this whole shadow-faction of Passione that’d started forming under the direction of the man that Cioccolata had informed her had never given them his name; she didn’t know quite how such a thing was even possible, whether it was Cioccolata resisting her command to give her the man’s name – implicit as it had ultimately been – or else the ones who’d formed Passione’s shadow-faction being so willing to follow a man whose name they didn’t even know. And then, as if all of that wasn’t enough to deal with, now it seemed that Dio was getting up to something untoward again.

 

Informing Straizo of what she was going to be doing, Alice made her way out to the helipad, her loyal aide following in her wake.

 

=SC=

 

He’d been kind of glad that Aunt Alice had offered to pick him up on the weekend, if only so Mom wouldn’t be getting on him so much about leaving the country on a school night. Finishing packing up the few things that he was going to be taking with him when he and Aunt Alice went to the Desert Rose to kick Uncle Dio’s ass if he was doing something stupid, Jotaro swung the back up onto his shoulder and made his way out to the back of the house. Leaning against the outside wall, after he’d said goodbye to Mom so she wouldn’t come after him to fuss the way she would have if he hadn’t, Jotaro waited to hear the soft sounds of the well-maintained engine of Aunt Alice’s car as it pulled into the driveway.

 

Once the pair of them had met up with each other again, Jotaro thanked Aunt Alice for picking him up and slid into the back of the car.

 

Leaning against the left-side wall of the car, Jotaro watched as the streets and other cars passed by through the tinted windows, eyes flickering occasionally as something interesting caught his attention.

 

After the three of them had made it back to the airfield they were going to be leaving from, climbing aboard the small, personal plane that he’d been in so many times before, Jotaro settled into his seat, turning to watch the ground as it fell away beneath them. He wondered just how hard he was going to have to kick Uncle Dio’s ass, once they found out just what in the hell he was doing. He wondered about just what he was going to find Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend doing, too.

 

Really, that felt like the more pressing issue, right at the moment.

 

=SC=

 

Humming softly as he, Dio, continued to make out the invitations to the impending nuptials of his sweet Loreena and her adorable Noriaki, he finished up the last few of them, and then turned to the envelops that he’d had specially printed just for this sort of occasion. Taking care to fill each of them lovingly, he sealed them and set them aside to stamp and address. The sound of someone making their way over to where he was sitting drew his attention just as he’d been about to place the first of his stamps and he, Dio, turned to see his faithful Vanilla Ice making his way over to the desk where he was seated.

 

“What is it, Vanilla?” he, Dio, asked, sealing and stamping the second of the invitations that he’d finished making out.

 

“Your sister is going to be paying a visit soon, along with your young nephew Jotaro,” his faithful retainer reported to him, bowing deeply.

 

“Truly?” he asked, smiling as he, Dio, stamped and sealed the third of the invitations, “Well then, I suppose I should go and prepare for their arrival,” he, Dio, said with a chuckle.

 

Making a quick stop in the room that Little Lori and her sweet Noriaki were sharing he, Dio, checked on the pair of them. His sweet children were settling in well, of course, and the loose, billowy clothing that Little Lori tended to favor would make things quite a bit more simple when the child she was carrying began to show at last. He was glad to know that the pair of them were doing so well, and the presence of his sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo was likely to make the pair of them all the happier.

 

He, Dio, was all the more pleased to know that more of his dear family would be present at the Desert Rose alongside him.

 

Airing out the rooms that his sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo would be staying in for however long they were present within his Desert Rose, removing the drop-cloths that kept his staff from needing to do so much dusting in the rooms that he, Dio, didn’t make use of when his sweet family wasn’t present and fluffing the pillows on his sweet sister’s bed while his loyal World did the same on the bed that his Littlest Jojo would be making use of.

 

Humming to himself as he finished the last of his work, pausing for a moment to straighten a few of his sweet sister’s models – the model airplanes, jets, and lunar landers that she had made such a point to look for when she had the chance – he, Dio, turned his path toward the kitchen. His sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo would be wanting some food when they arrived. Or at least his Littlest Jojo would, since as a vampire like himself, his dear Alice did not actually require anything aside from blood to survive.

 

Still, she did take pleasure in the act of eating the same as he did, and that was truly all that mattered.

 

Preparing a well-seasoned steak and a bowl of sautéed mushrooms for his Littlest Jojo, he then prepared a bowl of sausages for his sweet sister. It was something that the both of them would enjoy when they arrived, and as he, Dio, set out a bucket of chipped ice with a can of root beer, one of 7-up, and a jar of candied cherries in grenadine. He himself had also come to enjoy the drink that had been named after Shirly Temple, and so he, Dio, also made his way over to the large, side-by-side refrigerator that he’d had placed in his kitchen.

 

Preparing himself a tall, chilled drink of that same kind he, Dio, made his way out to the small airfield that he’d had cleared and prepared for when his sweet sister or the other members of his dear family would come to visit him.

 

Looking up to the sky as the light began to fail at last he, Dio, smiled as he caught sight of the approaching form of his sweet sister’s personal plane approaching the airfield, the running lights on the bottom of the plane flashing more and more brightly as Straizo brought the plane in for its landing. Smiling all the wider as he saw the running lights of the runway lighting up as proximity-sensors detected the plane as it came in close enough he, Dio, took another long drink as he continued watching. Once the plane had made it down to the ground he, Dio, quickly made his way to the side of his sweet sister’s plane. As she and his Littlest Jojo descended from the ramp he, Dio, embraced each of them in turn.

 

“It’s so good to see you both again, my dear family,” he, Dio, said, grinning widely as the pair of them came down to stand on the tarmac beside him.

 

His sweet sister gave him the kind of bland, distant smile that had never failed to unsettle him whenever he happened to see it. And, as he ushered the pair of them into the halls of his Desert Rose he, Dio, tried as hard as he could not to shudder. He didn’t know just what it was that he, Dio, had done to displease her and yet, when he turned to look at his Littlest Jojo, he found that his dear little nephew was looking at him in a rather unimpressed manner as well.

 

It was hardly the most promising start to the time they would be spending together.

 

Gently guiding his sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo to the dining room where he’d set out the food that he, Dio, had prepared for the both of them, he turned over just what difficulties the pair of them might have had with him at this point in time.

 

=SC=

 

One look at her capricious twin’s face, and Alice could tell that he hadn’t even the slightest idea of why she and Jotaro had come back to this place. Still, it wasn’t as though she had any concrete idea of what it was that he was actually doing, much less what was in his head when he’d been doing. All she and Jotaro really had was a suspicion, and the knowledge that Loreena McKennitt and Noriaki Kakyoin weren’t in school when they should have been.

 

Still, there was a better than average chance that he was involved with their absence, considering how close he was to the pair of them, and the circumstances of such an absence.

 

After they both had the meals that Dio had been generous enough to prepare for them, or at least that’s how he would have phrased it, Alice found herself faced with the prospect of discussing more serious matters with a man who seemed to go out of his way to avoid serious anything. Stardust emerged, an annoyed look on the parts of its face that were visible, echoing her own feelings in the way that she’d become more and more aware of during the time that the pair of them had spent with each other.

 

First off, of course, they needed to find out if Loreena and Noriaki were even here in the first place.

 

“Oi, Uncle Dio, just where the hell are you keeping Loreena and that pain-in-the-ass boyfriend of hers?”

 

Of course, one could always count on Jotaro to cut straight to the heart of any situation that he found himself in.

 

“Why, the both of them have been staying here with me,” her capricious twin said, smiling in that way that Alice had come to be ever more annoyed by after seeing it so many times. “They’re quite happy.”

 

“Yes, and I’m sure their feelings on the matter are perfectly natural,” she deadpanned, narrowing her eyes slightly as Dio turned an expression of calculated innocence her way.

 

Enthralling people and making them want to do what you wanted them to was an almost trivial matter for a vampire who’d been exploring their abilities for as long as the both of them had been doing; she’d even used it a few times herself, though only under pressing circumstances.

 

“Well, I suppose I might have hurried things along a bit,” Dio said, folding his arms with a petulant sort of defiance. “Still, even you would have to admit that the pair of them have been abysmally slow about their courtship, sister.”

 

“Be that as it may, that is their choice, brother dear,” she retorted, all the more unimpressed by her twin’s antics.

 

“What the hell did you do?” Jotaro demanded, Star Platinum popping out of his back even as Stardust delivered Alice’s annoyed swat to the back of Dio’s head.

 

“Ouch,” Dio pouted, folding his arms and calling out The World to stand beside him as though to complete their trio of Stands.

 

Or as though he thought it would keep her from rightfully smacking him for any other stupid things he’d been getting up to.

 

“Very well, I shall take you to see our young friends, and they can tell you just how happy they are to be here,” Dio pouted, turning to lead her and Jotaro up the stairs to the rooms that their family – extended and immediate, as had been the case for quite some time – all made use of while they were enjoying his hospitality.

 

Or, at least that was how he would always put it.

 

When she and Jotaro made their way up to the room that Loreena and Noriaki had claimed for themselves, with Stardust retreating back to wherever it was that Stands stayed when they hadn’t been called out and Star Platinum just about marching alongside Jotaro, Alice narrowed her eyes. She didn’t know just what she and Jotaro were going to find, once they started talking with Jotaro’s missing friends, but Dio didn’t seem like the kind to use flesh-buds on people he liked.

 

Still, he was the type who wanted to arrange the world to suit himself; really, things could go either way from this point.

 

=SC=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he slammed open the door to the room that Loreena and her annoying bishonen boyfriend shared, Jotaro quickly found himself facing Loreena; he also found himself looking right at her as she lounged in one of the big, plush chairs.

 

“The hell’s he been feeding you?” he demanded, once he’d managed to get a close enough look at her to tell that it wasn’t just her clothes that were making Loreena look different. “You’re getting fat.”

 

“Now that was hardly called for, my Littlest Jojo,” Uncle Dio said, frowning at him in that annoyingly pouty sort of way that had always reminded him of those idiot girls who kept following him around; it pissed him off, but Aunt Alice was good enough about slapping sense into Uncle Dio’s empty head that he didn’t have to deal with that kind of shit nearly as much as he probably would have without her.

 

Really, he didn’t even want to know what Uncle Dio would be like without Aunt Alice to keep him from being even stupider than usual.

 

“The hell’re you talking about, Uncle Dio?” he demanded, turning to glare at the vampire.

 

“That’s hardly fat that our dear Loreena has been putting on,” Uncle Dio said, folding his arms as he settled down on the huge bed that this particular room came equipped with two of.

 

“What’re you getting at, Dio?” Aunt Alice demanded, and Jotaro tried not to smirk as Uncle Dio cringed slightly.

 

It was both the tone she was using, as well as the fact that she’d gone so far as to use Uncle Dio’s actual name when she was speaking; though just his first, so he wasn’t in as much trouble as he could have been, but even an idiot would know that he wasn’t far-off.

 

“It’s nothing too untoward, sister,” Uncle Dio said, looking more than a little desperate; he had to know he’d fucked up, now it was just a matter of getting the dumbass to admit it.

 

“That wasn’t what I asked, Dio.”

Chapter 55: My Mind

Chapter Text

Wincing as he, Dio, turned to see the coldly unamused expression that his sweet sister was turning upon him even as his Littlest Jojo folded his arms and glared at him, he prepared himself once again to explain his motives to his sweet, protective family. Truly, their undying zeal could be such a trial, sometimes.

 

“I was simply acting to hurry the courtship of our dear young friends,” he, Dio, said, repressing a shudder as his sister’s cold, piercing gaze landed upon him again. “Anyone can see that the pair of them are simply meant for each other.”

 

He’d said more than a few times that she was terrifying, often to his sweet sister’s face, and yet he, Dio, had somehow always managed to forget what it was to face the terror his sister could summon up as a matter of course.

 

“Un-thrall them and then let them say that, Dio,” his sweet sister said, narrowing her eyes and slanting a glance down at him from where she was still standing.

 

The only times when his sweet sister would refuse to sit down was when she was particularly displeased with him and he, Dio, shuddered slightly as he found himself pinned by that sharpened gaze once more. Gathering himself he, Dio, made his way over to speak to his dear children. His sweet Alice would find a way to make his life more than a bit unpleasant if he didn’t comply with her wishes in this matter.

 

That power that the pair of them had cultivated, during the time that they had spent walking the world and arranging it as they liked – though he, Dio, still intended to make a new world from the base materials of the imperfect one that he and his dear family all lived in – would give her all the leverage she would need, should his sweet sister decide that she wished to punish him, Dio, for what she clearly saw as a transgression.

 

Making his way out of the room where his sweet sister, Little Lori, and his Littlest Jojo would be awaiting his presence alongside their adorable Noriaki he, Dio, sighed as he tracked down the boy that the rest of his dear family presently wished to see. Once he, Dio, had managed to find the boy, he led him back.

 

“You are capable of removing this compulsion of yours, yes?” his sweet sister asked, still standing calmly within the room; the sight of her cold expression as she focused upon him, Dio, made a shudder crawl up his spine.

 

“Compulsion?” his adorable Noriaki asked, turning a rather adorably confused expression upon him, Dio, where he stood.

 

=SC=

 

“The hell’re you talking about, Aunt Alice?” he asked, turning to look at her from where he’d been glaring at his dumbass uncle.

 

“Vampires like Dio and I have the capability to enthrall someone, making them more inclined to follow directions we give them, or even just to go along with where we want them to go,” Aunt Alice said, arms still folded as she glared down Uncle Dio.

 

“The hell did you fucking do?!” he demanded, more than a few pieces fitting together and Star leaping out of him almost before he’d thought about that kind of thing.

 

He was fully willing and ready to punch Uncle Dio in the face with Star’s fists – both of them, considering what kind of bullshit he’d just been pulling – when Uncle Dio’s annoying Stand leaped out and caught them both by the wrists.

 

“I, Dio, only intended to bring our sweet children closer together,” Uncle Dio said, prompting Aunt Alice’s Stardust to slap him on the back of the head, actually walking right through Uncle Dio’s annoying Stand to do it.

 

It was always funny, whenever he saw Aunt Alice’s Stand doing things like that.

 

Uncle Dio, of course, pouted when Aunt Alice disciplined him, but he was back to what passed for normal in a few seconds; he was still as annoying as ever, of course.

 

=SC=

 

After she and Jotaro had managed to knock some actual sense into Dio’s empty head, and the pair of them had discussed just how they would be able to undo the enthrallment that her capricious twin had used on Loreena McKennitt and Noriaki Kakyoin, she found that the only real way to undo that kind of thing was to use Hamon. She figured it fit, since Hamon did seem to be the go to for anything and everything involving vampires and their associated abilities and offshoots.

 

Fortunately enough, Jotaro had insisted on coming with her, and so he was able to use his own Hamon to reverse what had been done to Loreena and Noriaki.

 

“So, that’s what he was doing to us,” Loreena grumbled, glaring at Dio even as she wrapped her hands around her protruding stomach.

 

More and more, Alice was beginning to suspect just what it was that her moronic twin had gotten up to while he’d had pretty much uncontested access to a pair of vulnerable teenagers that he’d decided he liked, specifically together. It fit with everything she’d already known Dio was capable of, of course, but the fact that he’d actually gone so far as to essentially force two of their friends – or anyone, really – to essentially rape each other, just because he wanted to give his kid a companion… It was infuriating on any number of levels, but she was at least going to keep trying to knock sense into Dio’s empty, self-indulgent head.

 

“I don’t see why the both of you are being so serious about this,” Dio said, the usual pouty expression he wore when she tried to get him to actually think about something before he went off and did his usual stupid shit firmly on his face, and his arms firmly wrapped around Loreena’s waist, stroking her stomach as he held her close. “I’ve told you just why it was that I did this.”

 

“That isn’t the point,” she said, narrowing her eyes at Dio as he pouted up at her and Jotaro. “You’re also making Loreena uncomfortable, so let go.”

 

When Dio seemed about to start protesting, Stardust yanked him out through the back of Loreena’s body, then teleported him to the other side of the room. Shaking her head, Alice made her way over to the bed where Loreena was sitting.

 

=SC=

 

Grabbing Uncle Dio as the bastard actually tried to defend himself after all the shit he’d pulled while the rest of their family hadn’t been there to pull his head out of his ass before he managed to do something stupid, Jotaro belted him across the face and shoved him into a nearby chair.

 

“No,” he snarled, Star emerging to help hold Uncle Dio down before he could start making a real pain in the ass of himself. “After everything you just did, you don’t get to talk anymore.”

 

It seemed like he only blinked once, and then Uncle Dio was standing next to the chair he’d been pressing him down into; still, even as Uncle Dio brushed off his clothes.

 

“Now now, my Littlest Jojo, there was no call for that,” Uncle Dio said, pouting and brushing imaginary dust from his suit as he stood up. “The only thing I truly wished to do was to bring your dear friends closer to one another. Yes, my sweet little Gio will truly enjoy having a companion once their little one is born, but I-”

 

Stardust slapped a hand over Uncle Dio’s mouth before he could spit out any more of his idiotic bullshit, and Jotaro turned to watch as Aunt Alice made her way over to where Uncle Dio was standing.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way over to Loreena-chan as Jotaro and his aunt argued with his uncle about what he’d done to him and Loreena-chan – he only remembered a little bit of it, for the most part he felt like he’d been in some kind of a haze; he hated the thought that Loreena-chan had been forced to go through just the same kind of thing he had – he wrapped his arms around her as the pair of them watched Ms. Brando dealing with her brother. Noriaki still didn’t know quite how he felt – how he should feel – about what Mr. Brando had done to them.

 

Yes, the man kept saying that he cared about them – and Noriaki had always wanted a family – but the fact that he couldn’t even remember most of what he and Loreena-chan had been doing while they’d been staying with Mr. Brando, and then with the way Loreena-chan was pregnant now…

 

He didn’t quite know if he would be so willing to call Mr. Brando a liar as Jotaro seemed to be implying – as hard as he could without saying the actual words – but there was still the matter of what the man had actually done.

 

“Mr. Brando?” he called, instantly drawing the man’s attention, and also causing him to pout in that way he’d always seemed to do when anything didn’t go just the way he wanted it to.

 

“Noriaki, now you know I’ve told you to call me Dio,” Mr. Brando said.

 

“He can call you whatever the fuck he wants after what you did, Uncle Bastard,” Jotaro snapped, cutting Mr. Brando off before he could say anything else.

 

Noriaki knew that it would have been rude to smile after hearing Jotaro say something like that to his own uncle, but he found that he couldn’t quite stop himself from feeling pleased, all the same. Nerving himself up, and taking Loreena-chan’s hand when she offered it to him, Noriaki cuddled closer to her as he tried to work out just what he wanted to say to Mr. Brando. He knew that he’d never quite been the best at confronting people; certainly nothing like Jotaro, or even Ms. Brando when she was talking to her brother.

 

Still, he was going to at least try.

 

“Mr. Brando, I don’t think you quite understand the position you’ve put us both in,” Noriaki said, gathering his composure as well as he could manage with the man standing over him, a disapproving look plain on his face. “Loreena and I were just starting to date seriously, and now…” he shook his head. “I mean, I know you probably meant well,” he said, ignoring the way that Jotaro scoffed and Ms. Brando narrowed her eyes, slanting an unimpressed gaze at her brother. “But, all of this is just too sudden.”

 

Mr. Brando sighed almost explosively, throwing himself down in a nearby chair. “Truly, the pair of you have been moving so abominably slowly with your courtship I, Dio, honestly thought you would welcome some friendly intervention.”

 

“That’s not a decision you get to make, Dio,” Ms. Brando said, her tone flat and coldly annoyed at the same time; Noriaki was glad to have more people on his side than just Jotaro and Loreena-chan, who while they were the closest friends that Noriaki had ever had, didn’t seem to be able to make much of an impact on Mr. Brando with their words.

 

No matter how much Jotaro snarled at his uncle while he tried to keep him in line.

 

=SC=

 

Watching Loreena’s bishonen boyfriend try to make his case about how much of an asshole Uncle Dio had been to them was actually kinda pathetic, really. He hemmed and hawed too fucking much, and even when he seemed to be actually trying to make a point, he’d always shoot himself in the goddamned foot by trying to dance around it. Then again, lots of people back in Japan seemed to do that same kind of shit; probably why they pissed him off so much.

 

“Look, if you want Uncle Dio to know just how completely shitty what he’s been doing to you and Loreena is, you can’t keep backtracking so goddamned much,” he said, stalking over to swat the dumbass bishonen upside his curl-topped head. “Everyone here knows that you’re probably gonna keep the baby, but that doesn’t mean you just knuckle under for all of the other shit that Uncle Dio keeps trying to foist off on you.”

 

“You’re talking about the marriage,” Loreena said, settling back on the bed and looking like she was trying as best she could to get her feet back under her while they were talking.

 

“We haven’t even talked to our parents,” Loreena’s dumbass boyfriend said, fiddling with his hands even as he wrapped his arms around Loreena’s waist.

 

“Yes, I should probably speak to Caesar,” Uncle Dio said, smug smile coming back to his face as he stood up again.

 

Cocky bastard; more than anything, Jotaro wished he could punch sense into his uncle’s empty head.

 

“What do you think Caesar has to do with any of this?” Aunt Alice asked, narrowing her eyes as she turned to face Uncle Dio again.

 

“Isn’t he dear Loreena’s father?”

 

=SC=

 

It was all she could do to keep from laughing, since under the circumstances something like that would have probably been really inappropriate, but Loreena couldn’t quite help the feeling she had. Under the circumstances, she’d take whatever levity she could get.

 

“Whatever gave you that idea?!” she asked, laughing softly even as she sat up within the circle of Noriaki’s arms. “I mean, Father works for one of your sister’s Quality Assurance teams, he’s not the leader of Treadstone!” she said, struggling to regain her composure, even as Mr. Brando curled up on the chair he’d thrown himself down on while they were all talking.

 

“Ah, I was wondering how an Italian man like him could have had a daughter so clearly Welsh,” Mr. Brando said, grinning with clear amusement as they all talked to each other.

 

Mr. Brando didn’t really seem to understand how wrong what he’d done to them actually was, no matter how much any of them tried to explain it to him. Up to this point, Loreena hadn’t fully understood just how childish Mr. Brando was, but after seeing how he tried to argue his case – not even having any kind of point besides the fact that he’d wanted to make someone to be friends with his son, and he thought that she and Noriaki were taking things too slowly with regards to dating and all – Loreena found that all that she really wanted to do was get all of this over with.

 

Still, even after she and Noriaki left the mansion that Mr. Brando had had built for himself on the outskirts of Cairo, there would still be all of the problems that his actions had caused for them to deal with.

 

=SC=

 

After trying to verbally pound sense into Dio’s empty head for what felt like – and probably was – entirely too long, Alice was almost pleased to head back to Italy and hunt down whatever shadow-faction had been trying to subvert Passione from the inside. Once she’d arrived back in her Naples branch of Brando International, with Straizo’s reserved stoicism there to greet her as she retook control of from him once more.

 

“It seems that one of your agents, a man named Cioccolata, has made contact,” her oldest aide reported, and while she suspected that anyone else would have displayed at least some curiosity about the matter, Straizo was just as stoic as she’d ever heard him; honestly, she wondered if the man had any modicum of curiosity about the world they all lived in.

 

“That’s pleasing,” she said, settling back down behind her desk so that she could make contact with the man himself.

 

Narrowing her eyes as she considered just how she was going to handle this latest batch of problems that were being presented to her, Alice found herself raising an eyebrow during the course of Cioccolata’s report. Apparently, the shadow-faction that had been formed within Passione was being headed up by a man named Solido Nazo; a man who seemed to be obsessed with remaining far enough behind the scenes that he’d never actually met anyone who wasn’t within his inner-circle.

 

One more person in a long line of them who seemed to need both a good psychiatrist and a swift kick in the ass.

 

Still, knowing the man’s name and a modicum of his proclivities would at least help her in beginning to root him and whoever his cronies were out of Passione, bringing it back under Caesar’s control for as long as he wanted to maintain his position. However, Caesar would need to step down eventually, since he didn’t seem particularly interested in becoming a vampire like her and Dio.

 

Once she’d finished her work for the day, finished her work for the day, Alice went to meet with N’Doul; the head of Blackwater would really be the best one to set up her response to the incursion into Passione, though he would need to begin recruiting more Blackwatch agents within Italy as a whole.

 

=SC=

 

Finding himself alone again, his sweet children taken from him by his dear family who still didn’t seem to understand what he, Dio, had intended for their future, he sighed as he settled back into his cozy chair. The sound of Vanilla making his way into the room where he had secluded himself brought a small smile to his face.

 

“Come inside, Vanilla,” he, Dio, called as his loyal servant made his way into the room that he’d chosen for his reflection.

 

He, Dio, had almost gone into the solarium, there to look out upon the sunrise that he would be able to observe in complete safety. And yet, the very glass that shielded his undead flesh from the sunlight that would have otherwise destroyed his body down to the last cell was a product of his sweet sister’s brilliant mind. It would be as though he was sitting in her very hands, even while she had taken the children that he loved so much from the shelter of the Desert Rose where he, Dio, had been caring for them.

 

Speaking to Vanilla helped, at least a little but he, Dio, could still feel the aching emptiness at his core in the absence of his sweet Loreena and his dear Noriaki.

 

Yes, the fact that the pair of them fully intended to keep the child that he, Dio, had helped them to realize that they truly wanted was something of a comfort, but under the circumstances he, Dio, could only truly find it rather a cold one. Wandering into the library that he, Dio, had had constructed and then filled with a great many subjects he, Dio, found his eyes settling almost reflexively upon the shelves that would have creaked under the weight of the tomes of astronomical, geological, and other scientific texts that his sweet sister had purchased for the library once he, Dio, had told her of the plans that he had been about to undertake.

 

Pulling his gaze away from the laden shelves, themselves constructed with materials and expertise that had been given over to him, Dio, by his sweet sister. He continued on his way through the length of his grand library, searching for the section that he, Dio, had constructed to house the religious texts that he had collected. His sweet sister had never truly believed in any such thing as was contained in the books that he had purchased for his collection, being more interested in the study of what she had often said could be considered as nothing more than interesting mythology.

 

He’d never quite understood the way that his sweet sister looked upon the world that the pair of them all but ruled, even at this early stage of both their lives, no matter how many times that he, Dio, made the attempt to see the way that she did.

 

Still, as he, Dio, settled himself down for some deep reading upon a subject that he was rather interested in he, Dio, still found himself wondering just what had been in the minds of his sweet sister and his Littlest Jojo when they had taken Little Lori and his dear Noriaki from him. It was a question that he doubted that he would ever truly obtain the answer to, particularly considering the way he, Dio, had attempted to ask after just what it was that they had intended when they took Little Lori and her dear Noriaki from his home.

 

Truly, there were some questions that simply could not be answered.

 

=SC=

 

Once he and Aunt Alice had managed to get Loreena and her annoying boyfriend – who was actually starting to seem less annoying after all the shit that had happened to him, but like hell was he going to let the bishonen know that he was starting to soften; sometimes it was just best to stick with the status quo, especially when something as shitty as what Uncle Bastard had done to them had gone on – back to Japan, there had still been the matter of explaining just what in the hell had happened to the both of them when Uncle Bastard had gotten his hands on them. Jotaro could only be glad that he hadn’t been the one who ended up having to tell Loreena’s and her boyfriend’s parents about what had happened to them when they’d been trapped with Uncle Bastard and his stupid ideas about what he thought people wanted.

 

Or really, what he wanted from people, and then convinced some of them that they should want.

 

Still, knowing that two of the only people he could actually stand were going to be away from school for an indeterminate period of time while their families dealt with what Uncle Bastard had done to them was annoying enough that Jotaro found himself wishing that he could personally fly back to the Desert Rose and punch sense into Dio’s empty head, but he’d already tried that when Aunt Alice had originally brought him out to Cairo in the first place. It hadn’t worked then, and Jotaro doubted that something like that would work now. Not with how damned, determinedly oblivious his bastard uncle had already proven himself to be.

 

Even so, leaving things the way they were didn’t sit right with him, either; there had to be some way to keep his idiot uncle from doing something that shitty again.

 

When he thought back on some of the stories that Aunt Alice had told him, and the Old Man had confirmed when he hadn’t quite believed what he’d been hearing – back before he’d known just how much weird shit there was out about in the world – Jotaro found himself remembering that there’d been some other people working with Aunt Alice and the Old Man, back when all that shit with the Pillar Men had been going on.

 

According to what the Old Man had heard from Aunt Alice, the guy who’d founded the organization hadn’t been impressed with Uncle Dio at all.

 

So, after having made up his mind to talk to Aunt Alice, since while the Old Man would obviously know what he was getting at, he’d waste more time than Jotaro was prepared to give if he asked him about getting in contact with the organization that had been working with his family while they’d been dealing with all the weird shit that’d come up before they’d settled down. So, making his way to the phone that Aunt Alice had bought for him a few birthdays ago, he settled down in the chair by his desk.

 

“Hey, Straizo,” he greeted, once he’d managed to get through to Aunt Alice’s office. “Can you put me through to Aunt Alice?”

 

Once he’d managed to finally get through to the only person in their weird family who’d ever really made any sense to him, Jotaro allowed himself to relax a bit.

Chapter 56: Love, Truth, And Honesty

Chapter Text

Finding out that Jotaro was interested in working for the Speedwagon Foundation, particularly since Rob himself hadn’t ever truly been a fan of Dio’s – a sentiment that she was coming to understand more and more as time wore on – was a rather interesting development. Still, after putting Jotaro in contact with the Speedwagon Foundation’s Personnel Division, Alice turned back to her ongoing investigation into the shadow-faction within Passione. Just because she’d placed N’Doul in charge of the investigation as a whole, that didn’t mean that she herself wasn’t going to keep tabs on it.

 

If nothing else, she wanted to know just who Solido Nazo – the name could have easily been an alias, particularly given what Cioccolata had reported about his mental state and what the man seemed to ultimately want – truly was and why a man with his obvious mental issues would even attempt to make a power play like that in the first place.

 

Sure, there were only so many things that she herself could actually do, considering that she had a company to run, but keeping up with Cioccolata’s reports and N’Doul’s efforts would provide her at least a modicum of insight into what was going on in her Italian territories.

 

=SC=

 

After having been put in contact with the Speedwagon Foundation by Aunt Alice, Jotaro had made arrangements to meet with one of their agents for an interview. The woman’s name turned out to be Bessie Smith, and she was one of the more tolerable people that Jotaro had ended up interacting with, so that was at least nice. Getting himself a position turned out to be fairly simple, too, especially since the Foundation turned out to be really interested in recruiting for the kind of freelance work that he’d honestly been hoping to land anyway.

 

After all, even if school was mostly just a pain in the ass, it wasn’t like a full-time job was something he could manage at the same time.

 

=SC=

 

After he and Loreena-chan had managed to smooth things over with their respective parents, Noriaki had found himself torn. On the one hand, this was the kind of opportunity he’d never thought he’d have in his life, and on the other the way he’d actually gotten the opportunity… Noriaki shuddered again, as he shied away from the thought of what Jotaro’s uncle had actually been doing to him and Loreena-chan while they’d been essentially trapped in the mansion that he kept for himself in Cairo.

 

“Are you really sure that you want to name him that?” Loreena-chan asked, turning to him with an expression of subdued curiosity on her face; he could tell that she was thinking just as much about what Jotaro’s uncle Dio had done to them as he was trying not to, and he tried to smile for her. “I mean, you’ve told me how many times that people got your name confused when you were writing it down for people.”

 

“I know,” he sighed, trying as hard as he could to keep smiling for her. “I understand just how much trouble we’re both going to have, but… Well, my parents really wanted to name me Tenmei, and I just… I really want to be able to give them that.”

 

Loreena-chan smiled, laughing softly. “All right, I guess I can give you this one. I guess I’ll just have to name the next one.”

 

“Thank you, Loreena-chan,” he said, smiling as widely as he could, considering everything that had happened.

 

Even after everything that had been done to her, Loreena-chan was still determined to keep smiling; Noriaki wished he could find that kind of strength. Still, now that he and Loreena-chan were going to be getting married, Noriaki thought that he might be able to start working on gaining the kind of strength that Loreena-chan already had. If there was one good thing – aside from Tenmei-chan, of course – that had come out of everything that Jotaro’s uncle Dio had done to them, it was the way he and Loreena-chan were getting the chance to get closer to each other.

 

=SC=

 

When he’d gone back to school, with the promise that Bessie Smith or someone else who worked with the Speedwagon Foundation would contact him when they wanted to speak to him again, Jotaro found himself feeling even more disconnected from all of the shit going on around him. Without Loreena and her annoying boyfriend – who was going to end up being her husband once they came back to finish their schooling; if they even did that at all – around, Jotaro found himself having to deal with the more annoying parts of confronting large groups of people on his own.

 

Still, even the annoyance of having to deal with all of those chattering girls who hadn’t moved on from their empty-headed crushing on him wasn’t all that important in the grand scheme of things; it wasn’t like he was going to stay around them forever, anyway.

 

The next time he finds himself forced to think about his bastard of an uncle is, of course, little Gio Brando’s second birthday, when said bastard invited them all to come celebrate the occasion. Seeing Loreena and her husband as blushing newlyweds, even with Loreena as heavily and obviously pregnant as she was, made the whole thing a hell of a lot more bearable than it otherwise would have been, so at least he wasn’t actively wanting to strangle his bastard uncle while he was there.

 

Not until the end of the celebration, when his bastard uncle started loudly speculating about just when Loreena’s baby – the one that his bastard uncle had conned the both of them into having for whatever selfish reason; though to hear him say it he was doing them a favor – was going to be born, and Jotaro found himself basically honor-bound to throw a slice of cake at him.

 

“There’s no call to be wasting perfectly good cake, my Littlest Jojo,” his bastard uncle said, having caught the cake slice on a plate right before it would have hit his annoyingly smug face.

 

“The fuck’re you talking about?” he demanded. “That’s like ten kilos of sugar, at least,” he grumbled, making an annoyed gesture at the cake.

 

That time, he’d seen his bastard uncle’s Stand for about half a second, so he suspected there was some other kind of power that his bastard uncle was using when he’d make that kind of weird shit happen; the kind of weird shit he’d make happen did sometimes make it seem like he was cutting out chunks of time like some kind of film director and splicing them back together. Or maybe that was just how it looked from the outside, but it wasn’t like this was the only chance he was going to get to find out about it. If there was one thing Jotaro knew about his bastard uncle, aside from the fact that he was a brat that never seemed to grow up, it was just how much of a show-off he was.

 

There was no chance that he wouldn’t abuse whatever power his Stand had given him enough times for Jotaro to determine just what it actually was.

 

=SC=

 

When Dad hung up the phone, a month after he, Dad, and all of his aunts and uncles had celebrated his birthday, he looked really happy. Gio wondered about that, at least until Dad picked him up, smiling that wide, happy smile he always wore when something was going just the way he’d always wanted it to.

 

“My dear, sweet little Gio, our wait is over,” Dad said, snuggling him tightly as he left for the place where they would be able to fly out to wherever it was that they were going to be going. “Your little brother is about to be born.”

 

“Thanks, Da,” he said, not knowing quite what else to say. “That’s good.”

 

Dad had said that his new baby brother Ten-May was going to be born in whales; Gio had asked him how anyone could live in whales, or in a whale, and Dad had laughed and laughed. Gio still wondered what was going to happen when they got to where all the whales were, and as he cuddled closer to Dad, he also wondered if they were going to have to get all wet to visit his new baby brother.

 

Gio didn’t really like being wet, unless Dad was giving him a bath or he and Dad were swimming somewhere warm.

 

When Dad took him out to the hangar, where they were going to be able to fly out to where all the whales were, Gio waved to Vanilla as the big man who followed Dad around and did all of the stuff that Dad wanted him to helped Dad and him into the plane. Dad hummed happily as he buckled Gio into the tiny seat that he’d brought in, and Gio smiled up at him. Dad was always happier when Gio smiled, so Gio tried to smile as much as he could.

 

=SC=

 

When they’d all been invited to celebrate Tenmei Kakyoin’s first birthday – the kid was pretty much Dio’s, considering everything the bastard had done, but he wasn’t about to say anything about that to Loreena or her husband, of course – Jotaro found himself having to deal with his bastard of an uncle again. Sure, he was staying as close as he could to Aunt Alice, so the both of them could tell his bastard uncle to piss off whenever he got too overbearing, but it was still a fucking pain in the ass.

 

Still, at least they had a half-decent cake, this time.

 

Sure, it was still a bit sweet for his taste, but at least no one expected him to eat any of it. Settling down beside Loreena, who was at the center of pretty much everyone, all of them gathered around to coo and baby-talk little Tenmei, Jotaro poked the little guy’s left fist and was rewarded with his finger being grabbed firmly by the finger. Smirking slightly as he shook the brat’s fist around, getting him to laugh as he squirmed in Loreena’s arms.

 

“You’re pretty good at this, Jotaro,” Loreena’s husband said, grinning as he settled down on the couch next to Loreena.

 

“Guess my little cousin Gio is good for something,” he said, smirking.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way over to his dear friend as Dio leaned against the far wall of the small, comfortable home that Noriaki Kakyoin and his wife Loreena had settled down in, Enrico found that Dio was holding little Gio close to him, seeming as though he wished to both make his way over to stand with the small family that the children he’d become so close to were slowly beginning to form for themselves, and also to stay right where he was.

 

“Is something wrong, Dio?” he asked, making his way over to stand with his dear friend and the young boy who had brought him such happiness.

 

“I seem to have caused my Littlest Jojo rather a great deal of consternation,” Dio said, laughing softly with a sort of self-deprecating air.

 

“What do you mean?” he asked, turning to his dear friend, worried at the possibility that he might have been concealing more deep emotional wounds that he was not speaking of.

 

Dio chuckled softly. “It’s nothing so bad as all that; no one truly understands my motives, but I will continue to help them, all the same.”

 

“So it would seem,” he said, reaching out to wrap his right arm around what he could of Dio’s broad shoulders.

 

It truly did seem that no one, aside from those who had taken the time to dig deeper into his motives, truly understood Dio Brando. Still, even if he was one of a select few who Dio had been so generous as to give his heart to, Enrico would always do everything in his power to be worthy of the trust that Dio Brando had gifted him with. And so, if Jotaro was indeed the one who was causing Dio so much distress as he seemed to be, Enrico was going to make every effort to see that the pair of them were able to reconcile.

 

=SC=

 

Once the party had broken up an all of them had gone their separate ways again, Jotaro found himself wondering just when he was going to find himself on the wrong end of one of Enrico Pucci’s damned interventions. He should have expected it, after having spent so much time at Tenmei’s party determinedly avoiding the bastard, that his uncle would go crying to the one man just as annoyingly determined to bring everyone he could into his bastard uncle’s happy la-la land. But, with the party and everything that’d been going on, Jotaro had to admit that that kind of thing had been pushed right out of his mind.

 

In light of that, having to go back to school isn’t so damned bad.

 

Having Loreena and her husband – though no one but them really knew about that, since they weren’t about to start spreading things like that around – back with him helps, since Loreena’s just as quick to chase off the annoying girls  – who’d never seemed to get the fact that he was fucking uninterested through their empty little heads – as she’d ever been, and with a lot of the pressure off Jotaro found himself actually enjoying school for the first time in a long while. For the first time since Loreena had left, in fact.

 

Still, time isn’t about to stand still for any of them, and it’s becoming obvious that none of them quite have the same kinds of interests. Loreena’s interest in painting and drawing was plain for anyone who’d known her for more than a few hours to see, and even though her husband shares an interest in art, he doesn’t have nearly the same kind of passion that Loreena has for the subject. No, his interest is more in the sciences, though it seems to lean toward geology for the moment. As far as he goes, Jotaro finds his own interest leans a great deal more toward biology.

 

Marine biology in particular, which he hadn’t quite been sure about pursuing, at least not until that study session that he, Loreena, and her husband had had at the library; talking to the librarian had actually helped.

 

=SC=

 

As they all started putting together their applications for the universities they were aiming to attend – all three of them with the not-so-secret hope of attending the same university as at least one of the others – Jotaro smirked slightly as he watched Star, Hierophant Green, and Crimson Ace gathering the materials the three of them were working with so that they could bring them over. Working together with the three of them – even though Loreena’s husband was still a pain in the ass – was one of the few things he truly enjoyed about the scutwork they were all being forced to do.

 

After sending all of their respective applications off to the universities they were all thinking of going to, he went back home while Loreena and her husband made their own way back to the house that the pair of them had moved into together. Sure, Mom had offered to put them up at their house – which was still entirely too big for its own good – but the both of them had smiled and declined. Sure, they both came right back when the responses from their chosen universities began coming in, but Jotaro still found himself wondering where their little group was ultimately going to end up.

 

Whatever happened, though, Jotaro promised himself that he wasn’t going to let the only two friends – outside of his family, at least – slip away from him.

 

=SC=

 

In the end, the three of them ended up going to an American university, which Jotaro had been almost enthusiastic about, at least up until he remembered that staying in America – even if the university they were going to be studying at was in Florida – would put him closer to his eccentric uncle. Noriaki couldn’t help but find it funny, how determined Jotaro seemed to be to dislike his uncle. Really, for all that the man could be both overbearing and odd, Joseph Joestar was one of the kindest people Noriaki had met.

 

As the three of them settled into a new routine – with Joseph Joestar actually offering to put them up in one of the hotels he owned, but Jotaro naturally refusing – Noriaki found himself both relieved and a bit uneasy about the way he and Loreena-chan could openly wear their wedding rings without people saying strange things about them. Sure, some people seemed to think it was strange that they’d gotten married so young, but most of them didn’t seem to be that interested in what he and Loreena-chan were doing.

 

That was comforting, at least.

 

When Jotaro ended up bringing a woman named Stephanie Nicks – who told them to call her Stevie just as soon as he and Loreena-chan were introduced to her – to the family nights that Friday had become for their little group, Noriaki found himself feeling more than a little amused by the thought that Jotaro was beginning to settle down a bit, himself. The sight of Jotaro with Stevie brought a smile to his face every time he saw them; still, the more he saw them together, the more he found himself reminded of Jotaro’s aunt.

 

Stevie had the same kind of quiet reserve that Jotaro’s aunt, Alice Brando, seemed to naturally have, and while Noriaki knew that he really shouldn’t, he couldn’t quite resist the urge to tease Jotaro about the fact that he seemed to be falling in love with someone so much like his aunt. Jotaro’s surly glare became something of a permanent fixture on his face, when the pair of them were talking, though Stevie seemed amused. Loreena-chan eventually got him to stop, though.

 

Jotaro seemed even more fond of her after that, of course.

 

=SC=

 

The announcement that his Littlest Jojo was going to be having a little Jojo of his own – he, Dio, would have to think up something to call the little one, once he’d had a chance to meet them – brought a smile to his face as he bustled about. While he was fully aware that his Littlest Jojo was still rather displeased with him, considering how close the little one was to his adorable Noriaki and his sweet Loreena, there were other methods that he, Dio, could use to make contact with the growing family that his sweet children were forming for themselves.

 

It was a truly wonderful thing, knowing how well he, Dio, had managed to cultivate the Joestars once he had truly taken a hand in their development.

 

The sound of small, padding feet making their way over to where he, Dio, was standing brought an even larger smile to his face. Turning to gather his darling little Giogio up in his arms he, Dio, laughed softly as he nuzzled little Gio’s soft, golden hair.

 

“You seem really happy again, Daddy,” little Gio said, looking up at him with the kind of earnest gaze that reminded so much of his sweet sister; truly, the pair of them were such wonderful counterparts.

 

More than anything he, Dio, was pleased to be able to know the both of them.

 

“We’re very lucky, my little Gio,” he, Dio, said, leaning down to press a gentle kiss to the top of little Gio’s head. “Our dear Jotaro is about to have a little one of his own.”

 

Little Gio seemed to understand immediately just how wonderful it was that their Littlest Jojo had welcomed his own little Jojo into the world; how wonderful it was, that their sweet family was about to grow all the larger. Making his way out to the helipad, once he’d gathered up the gifts that he, Dio, had picked out to bring to his Littlest Jojo’s party for his own little Jojo he, Dio, smiled softly as Vanilla met up with him. More than anything, he simply wished to see how his Littlest Jojo was settling into the new era of his life that he’d just begun.

 

To see what his Littlest Jojo’s path would be, now that he had become a father.

 

Once the pair of them had arrived at his Little Jojo’s house – he was the one hosting the party to welcome their newest, tiny Jojo into the world – he, Dio, laughed as he made his way into the building. The room was large, and as well-appointed as any of the rooms that he, Dio, had set up for the various events that had been hosted at his Desert Rose. The sight of nearly all of his sweet family, save for those who had found themselves called away by the responsibilities that the world pressed upon them, brought a wider smile to his face as he made his way inside.

 

Truly, his growing family was a happy one; all the more reason for him to find a way to remake the world, his sweet family deserved to have only the best.

 

=SC=

 

Making his way through the house, humming softly as he picked up one of Dad’s vases, using the power of Gold Experience to reshape it into a frog, Gio made his way to the solarium. That was one of Tenmei-chan’s favorite places to work, ever since Dad had first invited little Tenmei and his family to stay with them when Gio was just six years old. Now, at eight, Gio had gotten used to the way his Tenmei would make for the solarium whenever he and his family were invited to stay with him and Dad at the Desert Rose.

 

Looking for the table where Tenmei had settled down, Gio chuckled, cradling the little frog in his hands as he moved steadily closer. He knew, from all the times that he’d played these kinds of games, that he didn’t have to sneak around the way he was doing, but it did make things more fun when he would tell himself that he’d managed to pull one over on little Tenmei. Even though anyone who actually looked could see the way Tenmei immersed himself in his art.

 

The way he loved every line of each picture he was drawing, and almost seemed to want to sink into every one of them even as he was creating it.

 

Setting his frog gently on top of little Tenmei’s head, Gio laughed softly as he settled down in the chair next to him. It was always funny, watching little Tenmei when he was so deeply focused; Gio sometimes found himself wondering if this was how Aunt Alice got when she was working. Dad liked to talk about her, especially considering how far she lived and worked from the Desert Rose, and more than anything Gio wanted to meet her. He wanted to talk to her, for longer than the length of the parties that she always came to.

 

Reaching out to gently tug little Tenmei’s tight ponytail, Gio smiled as little Tenmei turned to look at him.

 

“Hey,” he said, picking up his frog and setting it down on the table.

 

“Oh, hi Gio,” little Tenmei said, turning to him with a surprised expression.

 

“You didn’t even see me when I came in, did you,” he said, reaching out to stroke little Tenmei’s soft hair.

 

He really liked looking at it, Tenmei’s hair was like a perfect mix of his mom and dad; the color was something Dad described as strawberry blond, and both the softness little Tenmei’s hair, as well as the way that it had both Miss Loreena’s waviness and Mr. Noriaki’s loose curls, brought a smile to his face whenever he got the chance to touch it. Getting the chance to see little Tenmei again always made him happy.

 

He could definitely understand why Dad was so happy, whenever he had the chance to see Cousin Jotaro, or any of the rest of their family.

 

~Stardust Crusaders: End~

Chapter 57: Ordinary World

Chapter Text

~Diamond is Unbreakable: Begin~

 

 

Returning to Japan, after spending such a long time in Wales watching his two sons – the younger who was named Ichigo, and had been born just a couple months after Jotaro’s own daughter, Jolyne – grow into the kind of young men that he could be proud of; the kind that he’d wanted to be, insomuch as Tenmei and Ichigo had grown up surrounded by friends, Noriaki had found himself with an odd sense of homesickness. True, he’d settled in among the members of the Joestar family, but living in Wales with Loreena-chan had made that place feel more than a bit like home, too.

 

And so, having made his way back to Japan again, this time with Tenmei and Ichigo in tow, Noriaki smiled.

 

“So, we’re looking for a family by the name of Higashikata, right?” he asked, as Jotaro climbed out of the car that had brought the both of them to this quaint little town by the sea.

 

“Right,” Jotaro said, nodding, and Noriaki found himself grinning as he recalled the circumstances that had brought all of them to this place in particular.

 

“How badly do you think your grandma is going to mangle your grandpa for this?” he chuckled. “Or, do you think she’s already started?”

 

Yare, yare daze; I can still hear him yelling, back from when we found out about this new kid,” Jotaro growled, sounding both annoyed and slightly amused at once.

 

“Yeah,” he said, laughing softly. “He was all ‘Oh My God! How am I going to make up for sixteen years of missed birthdays?!’”

 

Yare, yare daze,” Jotaro grumbled, shaking his head as he made his way back over to the car. “Come on, kids. We’re there.”

 

“Oh, so this is Japan,” Tenmei said, looking around at the place where they’d all arrived.

 

“It looks neat!” Ichigo exclaimed, hopping out of the car, followed in a laconic sort of way by Jolyne.

 

“It’s not that great,” Jolyne drawled, slapping Ichigo’s back as she made her way over to stand beside him. “You’re such a doofus.”

 

“Wow, look at that fountain!” Tenmei exclaimed, smiling brightly as he caught sight of the front of the school; the first place they were going to be searching for Joseph Joestar’s son.

 

The one he’d had while he was married; the one Grandma Suzie was going to throttle him for, if she hadn’t started already.

 

“Aw, what a cute turtle!” Ichigo exclaimed, racing out ahead of Tenmei, drawing a chuckle from both his older brother and Noriaki himself as he did so.

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of running footfalls came as a really welcome distraction, but at the same time Josuke also found himself wishing that he hadn’t heard them at all. If he was ever gonna get over his fear of turtles, he was gonna have to get close to one. He was gonna have to get close to this one.

 

“Oi,” he started to say, then found himself speechless as he saw the little kid coming over to him. “Uh, hi?”

 

“Hi, niisan!” the little guy exclaimed, smiling happily up at him. “Is this cute little turtle yours?”

 

Before he could say anything, since he didn’t want to give the kid the wrong idea about him and any creepy turtles, the sight of four of his upperclassmen distracted him again.

 

“Oi,” the blond, the one who seemed to be the leader, said, looking down at the both of them.

 

“Oh, wow, your hair is the same color as my big brother’s!” the little kid exclaimed, pointing up at one of the four of them; this one had a mohawk, one that seemed to be dyed.

 

Josuke wondered what that said about his older brother.

 

“Oh, is that your big brother?” the leader asked, pointing to where another kid was sitting on the edge of the concrete pond.

 

This one looked a bit older, but he was still clearly a little kid; his hair did look like it was the same color as the guy with the mohawk, but his was a lot longer, hanging down his back in a long tail, and a pair of thin, silver hair clips held back the fringe of hair that was a bit too short to be drawn back into the rest of his ponytail, but still clearly long enough to fall into his face if it wasn’t held back. Josuke thought it was kind of cute, actually.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he saw the group of delinquents – actual delinquents, not people who just didn’t give a damn about how annoying people thought of them, and just tried to live their lives the way they wanted to – staring down at Kakyoin’s little kids, Jotaro stalked over to the four of them.

 

“What the hell do you bastards think you’re doing?” he demanded, narrowing his eyes as he came up to stand over the four idiots who were clearly about to start doing stupid shit to Kakyoin’s kids.

 

The four idiots looked back at him; Jotaro glared, and the entire group took off without another word or a look back. Glad not to have to deal with yet another bunch of annoying idiots, Jotaro made his way over to the fountain.

 

“Hey,” he called, looking down at the three kids – Kakyoin’s two kids, and the older kid sitting on the fountain looking over at them; the one who was just starting to look up at Jotaro as he and Kakyoin made their way over to where he was standing – all gathered together at the fountain.

 

“Uncle Jotaro!” Ichigo exclaimed, bouncing up to run over to hug his legs.

 

“Hey, kid,” he said, reaching down to ruffle the little guy’s bright, soft red hair. “So, anything interesting going on?”

 

“We found a really cute turtle!” Ichigo exclaimed, tugging on his right hand to try and lead him over to the fountain.

 

He could already see the little turtle that Ichigo seemed to be talking about, as well as the fact that Tenmei had gone into his own world while he was working again; it was kind of funny, since that was the same kind of thing that Loreena did when she was working on one of her paintings.

 

“Good afternoon,” the last and oldest of the three kids who’d all been sitting around the fountain said, standing up so he could bow respectfully to him and Kakyoin. “My name is Josuke Higashikata.”

 

“Higashikata?” he echoed, finding himself forced to look at the older kid – Josuke; his uncle, as weird as that kind of shit was to think about – in a new light.

 

“Well, looks like we found who you were looking for, Jotaro,”  Kakyoin said, making his way over to where he, Josuke, and his two kids were all gathered together.

 

“Wait, what do you mean, you were looking for me?” Josuke asked, a look of surprise overtaking his face as he stared the pair of them down. “Who am I to you?”

 

Jotaro sighed, wanting more than anything to go back home and strangle the Old Man, just a bit. “You’re my grandfather’s son. His name is Joseph Joestar, and he met your mom back in his sixties, but he was already married when he did.”

 

“Oh,” Josuke said, sounding like he didn’t quite know what to do with the information he’d just been given; still, he bowed deeply again, and Jotaro found himself wondering what he was going to say next. “I’m sorry to have caused so much trouble for the Joestar family, sir. Please, if I’m really causing so much trouble for the Joestar family, you don’t have to do anything for me. I don’t want to be any trouble.”

 

“You’re not going to get in any trouble, Cousin Josuke,” Jolyne said, laughing. “Gramps, your dad, just wants you to be a part of the family, even if you don’t want to come move to New York with him,” Jolyne grinned up at him. “But, Gramps was kind of freaking out about how many birthday presents he owes you, now that he knows you exist.”

 

Josuke laughed, too, but he sounded a lot more uncomfortable about what was going on than Jolyne clearly was. “Tell him he doesn’t have to worry about that kind of thing, either.”

 

=DiU=

 

If there was one thing he hadn’t been expecting to happen today, it was meeting up with what seemed to be a couple members of his estranged family before he’d even gotten to properly start his day. Still, they at least seemed like good people, so he’d give them at least some chance; he’d at least get to know them, before he made up his mind about everything.

 

After they’d all introduced themselves – Noriaki Kakyoin-san and his two kids, Tenmei and Ichigo; and then Jotaro Kujo and his little girl Jolyne, then him Josuke Higashikata – Josuke found himself with a pair of little sidekicks following him, even as Tenmei-chan kept trying to sketch everything he could keep his eyes on for more than a second. Really, it was starting to seem like he’d be a lot happier when they all made it to his house and he could actually sit down while he was working.

 

When he’d finally did make it back to his house, Josuke was quick to invite the five of them inside, after informing his mom about just who all of the strange people he’d met actually were, and then he found himself sitting down for lunch with Mom, the Kujo small family, and the Kakyoin family. At least, most of those two families; two-thirds, in Jotaro-san’s case.

 

“So, how is Joseph-san doing?” Mom asked, returning her attention to Jotaro-san where he was sitting.

 

It’d been a bit embarrassing, the way she’d reacted when she’d first seen Jotaro-san, but he and Kakyoin-san had reacted well and all of them had eventually managed to get along with each other so they could talk.

 

“The old man’s all right,” Jotaro-san said, almost seeming like he was trying as hard as he could not to say something else; getting in to how annoying he clearly thought his old man was wasn’t the point of this conversation, so he probably wasn’t going to bring that kind of stuff up. “He’s been kind of worked up about how many of Josuke’s birthdays he’s missed, but other than Granny Suzie kind of wanting to strangle him, he’s doing all right.”

 

=DiU=

 

Settling back into his chair as Kakyoin’s kids – mostly Ichigo, though, since Tenmei seemed more interested in going back to his sketching now that they’d all gotten settled down – started getting in on the whole conversation, trying to get to know the new member of their family. Jotaro found himself thinking about what he and Kakyoin had been sent here for; they hadn’t just come to see how the Old Man’s family was doing, both of them were doing freelance work for the Speedwagon Foundation, and had been sent to this cozy little town to see what the result of so many Stand users gathered together in the same place ultimately was.

 

Of course, Kakyoin was actually working for the Foundation itself, while Jotaro himself did freelance work, keeping up with his marine biology studies and the job he was aiming to get at the aquarium.

 

=DiU=

 

Looking out his window, as he caught sight of the purple-eyed form of White Rabbit hopping onto the windowsill outside of his room, Keicho Nijimura opened his window to let the Stand in. He’d made contact with Jack Harper, and now meeting up with the man’s Stand was the next step in his initiation; his next step to becoming a member of Blackwatch. Settling back into his chair, as White Rabbit hopped down onto his desk, Keicho took out a pen and paper so that he and Jack Harper would be able to exchange messages.

 

All right, so this marks the beginning of our association; however, I would appreciate knowing just why it is that you want to join up with Blackwatch. Normally, Blackwatch agents are vetted from within the company itself. When White Rabbit finished writing, Keicho took the pen, the paper, and narrowed his eyes slightly as he thought about how he was going to respond.

 

When I was young, there was a killer loose in Morioh; none of the police could find him, since it seemed he had some kind of supernatural power. It was most likely a Stand, given everything I’ve learned about how Stands work, since I managed to get my hands on that bow and arrow, he explained, narrowing his eyes as he found himself thinking back to when he was a child; back when that killer had been stalking Morioh’s streets. He’d been an arrogant man, Keicho had seen that even as a child, so the sight of that sniper’s shot taking off most of his head had drawn him to follow up on whoever it was that had been responsible for executing the killer.

 

Even as a child, he had been adept at calculating trajectories, and fortunately for him he’d been close enough to the body to determine just where it was that the shot had come from.

 

Ah, you were living here during the hunt for Angelo, White Rabbit wrote, a frown on its lapine face; Keicho found himself wondering if the expression was something of a match for the one that Jack Harper was wearing.

 

Tapping the desk next to where White Rabbit was working, he took the paper back. That’s one of the other reasons I want to join up with Blackwatch: the more I get to know you, the more obvious it becomes that you’re just the kind of person I’d want to work with.

 

Oh? White Rabbit wrote, tilting its head slightly, catlike purple eyes focusing on him; he could almost feel Jack Harper’s regard, as the man studied him through the Stand that he sent out to vet those who wished to join Blackwatch from outside Brando International.

 

Yes. I can see how much we have in common from the way you act; you’re careful, deliberate, meticulous, considerate, and clearly intelligent. I respect that, he wrote, settling back into his chair again.

 

So that’s why you want to work for Blackwatch, White Rabbit wrote, then rubbed its chin with its right paw.

 

The sound of someone trying to open his door drew both of their attention, and White Rabbit was quick to hop out of the window that Keicho had left open for the meeting that he and White Rabbit had been holding for the last few nights. Turning, even as he folded up the paper that he and Jack Harper had been using as yet another intermediary for their efforts at communication, Keicho found that it was indeed his little brother, Okuyasu.

 

“Bro, has there been any response from that Harper guy you were talking about joining up with?”

 

The fact that their father always worked late was the only thing that kept Keicho from belting his idiot little brother across the face; the absolute last thing he needed was their father finding out about his plans. Both because he didn’t need the old man meddling in his business, and because he honestly doubted that Mr. Harper would appreciate having an uninvolved civilian set on Blackwatch’s trail. Really, Keicho suspected that the only reason the man had been so lenient with him was because he’d expressed a desire to join up with the organization. Of course, the fact that he was likely to have to bring Okuyasu in, at least in on the secret if not into Blackwatch itself, was rather troublesome.

 

That was why he’d continued his experiments with the bow and arrow: he needed a Stand user who would be able to keep Okuyasu out of trouble, since anyone could see that his idiot little brother was no good at that kind of thing, himself.

 

“I’ve been speaking to him, yes,” he said, turning to Okuyasu as his idiot little brother made his way into Keicho’s to stand beside him at his desk.

 

“So, how’s it been working?” Okuyasu asked.

 

“We’ve established contact,” he said, dismissing his idiot little brother as he turned his attention back to the Stand users that he had created.

 

Not a single one of them were remotely suited to looking after Okuyasu.

 

=DiU=

 

Packing up all of the drawings he’d made, actual drawings rather than just the sketches he’d been working on while he’d been staying alongside his father, his little brother, and their family friends the Joestars, Tenmei paused for a long moment as he felt himself practically vibrating with excitement. He hadn’t quite appreciated it, back when Dad had been inviting him and Ichigo to come along with him, but Morioh was where the Rohan Kishibe both lived and worked.

 

Tenmei had always wanted to meet the man, but more than that he wanted to work for him; it was the one thing that he and Mom didn’t quite see eye to eye on.

 

Not that they’d ever really had any disagreements on the subject, it was just that different things made them happy when it came to the subject of their art. Mom liked to paint, and her works could take up incredibly large canvases when she was particularly inspired. Most of her work also seemed to be based on a fantastical version of the world, one which seemed to combine elements of both Celtic and Japanese folklore. Tenmei, on the other hand, felt like the world as a whole was amazing enough not to need any of that kind of embellishment.

 

He also wanted to have more people getting the chance to see his artwork than just the ones who’d come to the galleries that Mom sold her paintings to.

 

Getting the chance to work for Rohan Kishibe would let a lot more people see his artwork, and if he could show the man how good he was at making background art, Tenmei was sure that he would have his chance. Once he’d finished with his packing, carefully buckling shut the holder for his drawings that he’d bought for himself with the allowance Dad gave him, Tenmei took a deep breath to fortify himself, and then continued on his way out of Cousin Josuke’s house.

 

Auntie Tomoko had been quick to offer to let them all stay in the guest room after she’d seen how much Uncle Ryohei enjoyed playing with Ichigo and Cousin Jolyne; though he seemed to like Ichigo just that little bit more, since living for so long with Uncle Jotaro had definitely left its mark on Cousin Jolyne. Smiling softly as he caught sight of Uncle Ryohei putting his hat on Ichigo’s head, Tenmei chuckled as he saw the hat – which was perfectly sized to fit on Uncle Ryohei’s head, of course – falling down over Ichigo’s eyes.

 

“Ah, good morning, Tenmei-chan!” Uncle Ryohei called, waving to him as Tenmei made his way to the front door. “You have a nice day, now!”

 

“Good morning, Uncle Ryohei. I will! I’ll see you when I get back, you and Ichigo have fun!” he called back, smiling as he made his way out the door.

 

Just as he’d made it halfway down the path, Cousin Josuke caught up with him.

 

“Hey, kiddo, where’re you headed off to with all that art of yours?” Cousin Josuke asked, an interested look on his face as the pair of them fell into step with one another.

 

“I found out that Rohan Kishibe lives around here,” he said, grinning up at Cousin Josuke. “And well, I was hoping that I could have the chance to talk to him,” he said, pausing for a moment as he considered whether or not to tell Cousin Josuke about what he was actually planning; still, he didn’t want to jinx it, or anything. “Also, there was something I wanted to ask you.”

 

“What would that be, kiddo?”

 

“Well, it’s about your hair,” he said, stopping so that the pair of them would be able to talk without worrying about walking into anything.

 

“What about my hair?” Cousin Josuke asked, giving him a sort of gimlet stare.

 

Tenmei wondered just what that was about for a moment, but he pressed on before he could think too much about it. “It’s so artistic. It almost looks like you sculpted it,” he said, finding himself a little surprised as Cousin Josuke’s expression went back to his usual happy one. “Would you mind if I touched it?”

 

“I guess that’s okay, kiddo,” Cousin Josuke said, crouching down so that he’d be able to reach his hair.

 

“Ah, it is springy,” he said, softly poking the sculpted mass of hair that Cousin Josuke seemed to put so much work into. “I thought it would be, but this is really neat.”

 

Cousin Josuke chuckled warmly. “All right, that’s enough poking, kiddo.”

 

“Right, sorry,” he said, smiling as the both of them started walking again.

 

Both of them parted ways for the morning, and Tenmei took a moment to gather himself again, before he pressed on to Rohan Kishibe’s house. Once he’d made it there, Tenmei paused to collect himself again. He found himself almost vibrating with excitement again, and once he’d managed to stop himself he knocked on the door.

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of someone knocking on his door, someone who should not have even been anywhere near his home when he was working, disturbed Rohan while he was working. Finding his way back to his front room, Rohan hoped that whoever had come to his home would at least have something that he could use for his manga, even if it was just the kind of small observation about the world. Opening the door, Rohan looked around and found the space empted; he found himself more than a little annoyed, before a young voice called his attention to the little boy standing on his doorstep.

 

“Good morning, Rohan-sensei,” the little boy – who had long, smooth, simply-styled red hair, held out of his eyes with a pair of shiny silver hairclips – said, smiling up at him.

 

“How did you find my address?” he asked, wondering at how a little boy had ended up on his doorstep.

 

“I looked you up in the phone book,” the little boy said, holding what looked like some kind of portfolio against his thin, narrow chest. “And, well, then I called the operator.”

 

“I’ll have to speak to them about that,” he muttered, narrowing his eyes. “Well, I suppose you can come inside.”

 

“Thank you so much!” the little boy said happily, following him inside, still holding that portfolio of his close to his chest.

 

Studying the child as the pair of them continued on their way deeper into his home, up to the studio where he spent so much time working, Rohan continued on his way over to the desk where he’d left the manuscript he’d just finished working on. The question of whether or not the boy would be compatible with the manuscript was still open, but considering how close the both of them were to his work space, Rohan knew that it wouldn’t be that way for long.

 

“Why don’t you sit down?” he suggested, gesturing to a nearby chair.

 

“All right, but I was-”

 

“Just settle down, I want to show you something,” he said, moving to take the little boy’s portfolio so that he could set it aside. “Here, take a look at this,” he said, once he’d fetched the manuscript that he’d just completed.

 

“Wow, you are really good at composition,” the little boy said, then made a sound of surprise as Heaven’s Door went to work on him.

 

Leaning over the little boy, Rohan took a moment to write down instructions for the him to sit still while he was reading.

Chapter 58: You’re The Boss

Chapter Text

Apparently, he was an artist like his mother, who wanted more people than just the ones who came to his mother’s gallery to see the art he created. I guess I should probably take a look at what he’s done, Rohan mused. Even if it was just to satisfy his own curiosity, before he sent the boy away with instructions not to bother him again.

 

Opening the portfolio, however, revealed a rather beautiful rendering of a lake; Rohan almost found himself expecting to be able to reach down into the shining, painted water of the first page he was looking at. The feel of hardwood under his fingers, when he actually did find himself instinctively reaching down for one of the painted rocks at the bottom of the lake, came as a rather startling surprise. Naturally, someone who could capture reality this well so young had to have something worthy of reading in their memories.

 

Making his way back over to the chair where he’d sat the little boy down, Rohan began paging through the memories that Heaven’s Door had revealed to him. Apparently, the boy had inherited his artistic temperament from his mother, who sounded as though she was a rather interesting person, as well. However, the main point that stood out to him was the new knowledge that he was being presented with.

 

Apparently, the ability he had been granted some time ago was known as a Stand to those who studied them, and there apparently were those who studied Stands. An organization that Tenmei-kun’s father Noriaki worked for: the Speedwagon Foundation. Paging through the rest of Tenmei-kun’s recent memories – Rohan was hardly going to hurry, since he was going to have easy access to Tenmei-kun and his memories for a long time to come – Rohan Kishibe found himself more inspired than he had been in quite some time.

 

He knew just what kind of gift he was going to give Tenmei-kun.

 

Making his way back over to his desk, Rohan picked up a pen and made his way back over to where Tenmei-kun had been settled down while he’d been reading the memories Heaven’s Door granted him access to.

 

“All right, Tenmei-kun, you can be my assistant,” he said, smiling softly as he put his pen to the paper that Heaven’s Door had revealed for him.

 

First, of course, was the rule that all proper manga-ka abided by: I am prepared to give my life for Pink Dark Boy. The second was just to be certain, since he’d never really worked with anyone else: I will listen to and obey the manga-ka Rohan Kishibe, like a good assistant. The third was the present he’d intended to give the boy, once he’d found out just how much inspiration he was going to have, now that Tenmei-kun was going to be working for him: I will manifest a Stand just like my father’s Hierophant Green.

 

Given how excited Tenmei-kun had been, the first time he’d been able to catch a glimpse of even the slightest outline of his father’s Stand, Rohan was certain that he’d be pleased with the present that he’d been given. It must have been so frustrating for him, only being able to see a distortion in the air – and later, what his memories had elegantly described as a figure made of what looked like the finest, clearest glass – but also being told about the kinds of things that his mother and father were capable of with their own Stands.

 

Tenmei-kun was clearly more interested in his father’s Stand than his mother’s, so he’d be all the more pleased to have a Stand like his.

 

Closing up the book that Heaven’s Door had allowed him to open, Rohan watched with interest as Tenmei-kun’s eyes flashed a dull, greenish-white, the Stand that he’d given his assistant bursting free from his body as Tenmei-kun threw his head back in what seemed to be some strange sort of reflex. The Stand that rose from his body was as green as its name seemed to suggest, but what struck him was the body structure of the Stand.

 

Nothing about how it appeared seemed to give the slightest hint as to what it was capable of; Rohan wondered if that held true for every Stand, and he also looked forward to finding out.

 

=DiU=

 

After sending out a small reconnaissance force from Bad Company, Keicho found himself once again with more free time than he suspected the school staff would appreciate. Still, he’d already completed his work, as meticulously as he ever had, and now he found himself facing a rather annoying development. It seemed as though one of his helicopters had been spotted. True, such a thing did signify the presence of another Stand user in close proximity to the school – if not inside it as a fellow student – but the simple fact that he’d been unaware of such a development beforehand was troublesome.

 

If there was anything Keicho truly detested, it was not being in possession of the full facts of any situation.

 

Narrowing his eyes as he tracked down the source of his current frustration, Keicho back-traced the path of Bad Company’s helicopter to one of his fellow students. It seemed as though the Stand user was indeed one of his fellow students; one with a rather distinctive hairstyle, he noted. Signaling for his helicopter to return to his position, Keicho narrowed his eyes as he watched the unknown student – who turned out to be Josuke Higashikata, someone he hadn’t had that many interactions with – turn and follow his helicopter.

 

Folding his arms loosely behind his back, Keicho made his way over to one of the benches so that he could sit down while he and Josuke spoke to each other. Settling down on a nearby bench, Keicho waited for Josuke to make his own way over to where he was seated.

 

“Higashikata-san,” he said, as his classmate made his way over to the bench.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way into the room that he’d given to Tenmei-kun while his new assistant stayed with him, Rohan found himself frowning thoughtfully as he watched the boy going about his work.

 

“Tenmei-kun, I read in your file that you were ambidextrous, so why aren’t you using both of your arms for this?” he asked, making his way over to put his right hand on top of Tenmei-kun’s head.

 

“I’ve kind of gotten out of the habit of that, since there isn’t that much furniture around here that’s designed for left-handed people,” Tenmei-kun said, and Rohan found himself rather annoyed.

 

This time with himself, since he hadn’t bothered to think about the implications of what Tenmei-kun was actually capable of. Looking over the table where Tenmei-kun was sitting, Rohan made a note on the pad that he carried for whenever he had ideas when he was outside of his own home, Rohan turned and left Tenmei-kun’s room. Before he could order Tenmei-kun to use the other arm that he would otherwise lose the comparatively rare talent of being able to use while he worked, Rohan could clearly see that he would need to pick up some new furniture.

 

It was more than a little annoying, but he supposed that this was the price of having someone else working for him.

 

=DiU=

 

Looking back at all of the people, going about their lives in the park where he’d stopped to people-watch for a bit, Noriaki found himself more than a little curious about just what kind of Stand users lived in this place. Morioh seemed to be the most normal kind of place, which was more than a little funny considering how many Stand users were reputed to live in the town, but then again Stand users were just as human as everyone else. For the most part, anyway, since Noriaki had met a few Stand users who weren’t actually human.

 

Alice Brando, her brother Dio, Iggy, and Dio’s pet bird Pet Shop were the first of those who came to mind, of course.

 

Turning his attention back to the report that he was composing, Noriaki looked up and smiled as Jotaro settled himself down at the table as well, his old friend carrying a coffee and a cherry soda.

 

“Kind of a boring place,” Jotaro said, looking around at the little park just off from the cute café that the both of them had found during their trip through the little town.

 

“I guess,” he said, chuckling softly. “Still, maybe these people don’t have much of an appetite for the kind of excitement that you like so much,” he said, feeling more than a little amused.

 

Really, Jotaro Kujo was honestly the most contradictory sort of person that Noriaki had ever met in his life; passionate about a job that had required so many years of intense study, but with a need for excitement that had driven him to volunteer as a freelance agent for the Speedwagon Foundation, with the caveat that he be on the front-lines whenever one of their field agents ran into an enemy Stand user. Which, given that Stand users all had the same variability as anyone else in the world, was indeed something that came up every once in awhile.

 

Something he knew Jotaro could hardly have been more pleased by.

 

“The hell’re you?” Jotaro demanded, and Noriaki almost found himself palming his face by pure reflex.

 

More than a few times, he’d found himself wondering if Jotaro’s abrasive personality was a direct contributor to the number of battles that the pair of them had participated in; somehow, he had the feeling that that kind of thing would end up being more true than he’d have ever wanted it to be.

 

“Good afternoon,” he said, turning to look over at whoever it was who had just come up to their table to talk.

 

“Yeah, hi,” said a boy who seemed to be on the shorter side, with what seemed to be nearly the same hairstyle as Josuke-kun. “Uh- Well,” the boy said, eyes darting over to Jotaro; Noriaki could practically feel his old friend’s glare boring into the newcomer. “Y’see, my name is Tamami Kobayashi, and I was wonderin’-”

 

“No,” Jotaro cut in, before Kobayashi-san could say anything else. “Now fuck off.”

 

“Jotaro,” he groaned, palming his face as Jotaro stood up from their table, glaring down at Kobayashi-san like a human monolith. “I’m sorry about this, Kobayashi-san,” Noriaki said, reaching out so he could help the young man up from where he’d fallen when he’d found himself the target of Jotaro and his terrifying glare.

 

“Yeah, hangin’ out with such a scary guy,” Kobayashi-san said, turning to him with a distinctly uncomfortable expression on his face. “Don’t you feel bad about that?”

 

Noriaki found himself laughing softly. “Well, that’s just how Jotaro is,” he said, rubbing the back of his head; really, the awkward situations he got into when he and Jotaro found themselves working together was one thing he could have easily done without. “I’ve known him for so long, I’ve pretty much gotten used to this kind of thing.”

 

“Oi, bastard, what the hell are you trying to do with your Stand?” he heard Jotaro demand.

 

“He’s a Stand user?” Noriaki asked, turning back to Jotaro, and then looking back over at Kobayashi-san.

 

“Uh, well, that is-”

 

Given the sheer discomfort on Kobayashi-san’s face, Noriaki was almost expecting it when the young man tried to run from them; he was also fully expecting it when Jotaro sent out Star Platinum to fetch him.

 

“All right, all right!” Kobayashi-san exclaimed, as soon as Star Platinum had dropped him by the side of their table. “I’m sorry, boss! I didn’t know you were such a great guy! Really! I really respect ya!”

 

Holding his napkin up to his mouth, Noriaki tried to keep himself from bursting into outright laughter.

 

=DiU=

 

After having spoken to Higashikata-san, Keicho found himself getting more of a feel for the guy than he would have if he’d just been chatting casually with his classmate; he’d never been one for small talk, anyway.

 

“So, that’s why you had your Stand out,” Higashikata-san said, looking over at him with a rather interested expression on his face. “You’re looking for a babysitter for your little brother? Why didn’t you take out a classified ad, or something?”

 

He scoffed. “Classified ads wouldn’t tell me who I could really trust. Only another Stand user would be able to handle this job.”

 

“So, what, is your little brother a Stand user too, or something?” Higashikata-san asked, turning to him with an incredulous expression on his face.

 

“Yes. Unfortunately, Okuyasu is too naïve to really survive on his own; he really is just like a little kid,” he said, turning so that he could determine if anyone else was approaching their position while at the same time determining just how Higashikata-san would react to what he was saying.

 

“So, you want me to come over to your house to meet him, or something?” Higashikata-san asked, seeming as though he was actually prepared to do what he was suggesting.

 

“First, I would like to know what your own Stand is capable of,” he said, turning to face Higashikata-san.

 

This would be the deciding factor; not only would finding out the nature of Higashikata-san’s Stand help him to determine something of his classmate’s character, he would also find out just where it was that Higashikata-san would fit into the plans that he was making. Whether he would be best suited looking after a naïve fool like Okuyasu, or if he should tell his classmate about his plans to join Blackwatch and thus bring him in, as well. After all, he’d found out something of the nature of Blackwatch’s structure from his conversations with Harper-san.

 

Blackwatch agents operated out of cells, with their handlers being their only connection to Brando International; if they themselves didn’t choose to join up with the company.

 

=DiU=

 

“Wow, Uncle Ryohei, you’ve really been everywhere in this town?”

 

Laughing softly at the cheerful little boy who’d wanted to come with him on patrol, Ryohei Higashikata reached down to ruffle the boy’s hair as the pair of them continued on their way through the town. “Well, this place isn’t such a big town, so it’s probably not as impressive as that would’ve been, but I have been pretty much everywhere in Morioh, Ichigo-chan.”

 

Ichigo-chan – Ichigo Kakyoin, who he’d met back when his son was introducing the parts of their family that Ryohei had found himself wondering about nearly ever since Josuke had been born – was really the most adorable little boy that he’d had the chance to meet in quite some time. Not that Jolyne-chan wasn’t just as cute in her own way, but living with someone like Jotaro – Josuke’s nephew, which was just as strange to think about as it had been the first time that he’d heard it – seemed to have caused her to grow up a lot faster than most people her age usually did. Or maybe it was just that Jolyne-chan was just naturally grown up.

 

Either way, it was just that much more fun spending time with Ichigo-chan.

 

Once he’d finished with his patrol for the day and was able to head back home, Ryohei found himself thinking back on what he’d learned about the man who’d been so negligent that he’d not only failed to take responsibility for the son he’d had with Tomoko-chan, he’d also cheated on the woman who’d already been married to him. Still, it wasn’t as though he could blame Jotaro-san for anything, since not only was Jotaro-san fairly unimpressed with his grandfather in general, he’d also been fairly understanding of Ryohei’s feelings on the matter.

 

Being a father himself, it was clear just why Jotaro felt that way.

 

Smiling as he made his way back into the house, Ryohei caught sight of Noriaki-san setting the table for dinner. Once he was close enough to see Noriaki-san’s face, however, he saw that there was something clearly troubling him.

 

“What’s wrong, Kakyoin-san?” he asked, once he’d made his way over to the table and Noriaki-san had finished setting the table for the meal that they were all about to have for the evening.

 

“I think Tenmei-chan managed to make contact with that manga-ka he was so interested in working with, but I haven’t heard from him since he left,” Noriaki-san said, sighing softly as he sat down at the table, looking up briefly at Ryohei as he slumped down in the nearest available chair.

 

“Ah, so that’s it,” he said, settling himself down in the chair next to Noriaki-san, so that he could be there for the other man.

 

Having three fathers in the same house, each of them having brought their own children to stay with them, was an experience that Ryohei hadn’t ever expected to have. And, even given the clear friendship that existed between Noriaki-san and Jotaro-san, it didn’t seem as though Jotaro-san was the kind of person to share much besides an unspoken closeness with those he cared about. So, as he, his daughter, and all of their guests settled down to have dinner together, Ryohei kept an eye on how Noriaki-san was doing.

 

If Tomoko-chan had slipped out of contact with him, he’d have been just as worried about her as Noriaki-san was about his son, and Tomoko-chan was a grown woman, not a little boy the way that Tenmei-kun was.

 

=DiU=

 

“All right, Tenmei-kun, time for dinner,” he said, pausing in the doorway for a moment to observe Tenmei-kun at work, before making his way into Tenmei-kun’s room so that he could deliver the food he’d prepared for his loyal assistant. “Eat it and clean up, before you go back to work.”

 

“Yes, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, nodding as he got up to take the tray with him over to the chair and table that he’d set up for just that kind of an occasion, once it’d become clear that he and Tenmei-kun would be working together. “Thank you very much.”

 

“Come to my office when you’re finished eating,” he said, after a moment of consideration.

 

There wouldn’t be much of a point in keeping Tenmei-kun around, if he wasn’t going to make use of the memories that Heaven’s Door had allowed him to gain access to, after all.

 

After he’d gotten Tenmei-kun’s promise to come to his office, Rohan made his way back to where his own meal was waiting for him. Finishing his food as quickly as he could, so that he would be able to gather his notebook and his pens in order to record the memories that he’d been given access to before Tenmei-kun was finished with his own meal. Smiling as his assistant made his way into his office for the second time that day, Rohan directed him to sit down on the other swivel-chair that he’d brought over to stand beside his desk for just the occasion.

 

“You’re very prompt, Tenmei-kun,” he said, knowing from his research he’d done that the boy responded well to compliments.

 

“Thank you, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, as he settled down in the chair, taking the manuscript that Rohan had just finished work on and began reading it.

 

Opening the book that Heaven’s Door revealed to him once more, Rohan carefully set aside the manuscript, grabbed his notebook, and began meticulously reading the memories that Tenmei-kun had offered to share with him in return for the opportunity to demonstrate his skills as an artist. And, even though Tenmei-kun’s art was more suited for putting in art books or hanging in galleries – a great deal like his mother’s, in fact – his memories would give Rohan everything he needed to improve Pink Dark Boy all the more.

 

=DiU=

 

Following Nijimura-san back to his house, Josuke found that the guy really did live in his neighborhood. It wasn’t quite something he’d paid much attention to, considering the fact that he’d figured neither of them really had anything in common. Still, given that the both of them were Stand users, he figured that that was at least one thing that the both of them could talk about. Right now, though, he was going to see about this babysitting job that Nijimura-san had asked him to look into.

 

“Come on, let’s go meet this little brother of yours,” he said, as Nijimura-san paused for a moment in front of his door.

 

“Of course,” Nijimura-san said, nodding. “Dad should be out, if not at work than at the bar with his coworkers; he won’t be home until Okuyasu and I are basically in bed.”

 

The pair of them made their way up the stairs and though the front door, and Josuke found himself wondering if basically never getting to see their Dad was why Nijimura-san was so cold to pretty much everyone. He also wondered just what Nijimura-san’s little brother was going to be like, and how much he was going to have to do to take care of the kid. He hoped Nijimura-chan wouldn’t end up being some little toddler, or a baby or something, since he wasn’t that good with little kids.

 

“Okuyasu, I’ve brought someone to meet you,” Nijimura-san said, as the pair of them made their way deeper into the house, up the staircase, and over to a pair of doors on the left-hand side of the hallway. “Okuyasu!”

 

“Bro, it’s good ta see ya again!”

 

The hell-?! “This guy is my age,” he snapped, turning his attention to Nijimura-san, feeling more than a little annoyed to have been called to potentially babysit a guy as old as he was. “I thought you said you needed a babysitter.”

 

“You can think of it as being his companion, if you like,” Nijimura-san said, turning to him with the same, annoyed look that he’d seen so many times before while the pair of them had been speaking. “But, Okuyasu is basically a little kid; he’s too naïve to survive in the world as it is, so he needs someone to look after him while I work.”

 

“Yeah!” Okuyasu exclaimed, grinning widely in a way that almost did make him look like a little kid. “Bro’s trying to join up with Blackwatch! He’s even managed-”

 

“Okuyasu!” Nijimura-san snapped.

 

Josuke was starting to understand why Nijimura-san had compared his younger brother to a little kid, but there were just some things that he couldn’t leave alone; not once he’d heard about it, anyway.

 

“The hell is Blackwatch?” he asked, folding his arms and turning to Nijimura-san again, feeling both curious and more than a little annoyed.

 

Of course, judging by the look on Nijimura-san’s face, he got the feeling that he wasn’t nearly as annoyed with him as Nijimura-san was with his younger brother.

 

“They’re under the command of Jack Harper, and their purpose is to safeguard society from the shadows,” Nijimura-san said, after a scathing glare at his little brother, who backed up a few steps under the sheer force of it. “I’d been hoping to form a cell of my own, so that I would be able to join them, but you can see why I need someone to look after Okuyasu.”

 

“Yeah, but I don’t see why you told me you needed a babysitter,” he grumbled, frowning at Nijimura-san, as the pair of them continued their conversation.

 

“I suppose,” Nijimura-san said, turning to look out the window. “Still, it’s getting late; you should probably head back to your house before Dad comes back.”

 

“Yeah. I’ll talk to you later,” he said, turning to make his way out of the Nijimura household. “Have a nice night.”

 

There was still the question of just what in the hell Blackwatch really was, since the explanation that Nijimura-san had given him had been the barest of bare-bones explanations. Still, the thought of protecting people – even if it was from the shadows like these Blackwatch guys were doing – was a pretty great one. Those were the kinds of thoughts that’d been steadily pushing him towards joining Mom’s Gramps in the police.

 

Still, whenever he’d hear Gramps complaining about all the paperwork and bureaucracy, he’d find himself wishing there was another option for him.

Chapter 59: Karma Slave

Chapter Text

“Tenmei-kun, drink this and then go to bed,” he said, making his way over to where his new assistant was sitting, a mug of warm broth in his hands, reaching down to close the book that Heaven’s Door had revealed for him as Tenmei-kun took it from him.

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

Putting the notebook he’d been filling out on his desk, so that he would be able to reach it while he continued working, Rohan turned to watch for a moment as Tenmei-kun left the room, then made his way back to the room Rohan had given him to stay in. Turning back to his work as he heard Tenmei-kun’s door closing, Rohan turned his own attention back to his work. Even with Tenmei-kun working for him, there were still things that only he could do…

 

=DiU=

 

When he woke up, Josuke found that Nijimura-san’s words were still sticking in his mind. He couldn’t help but wonder about who in the hell those Blackwatch guys actually were. Sure, protecting society from the shadows sounded all well and good, but anyone could say that they did that kind of thing.

 

What mattered what someone actually did.

 

When he’d made his way back to school, Josuke found Nijimura-san waiting for him; there was a look on his face that suggested there was some bad shit going on.

 

“What is it?” he asked, making his way over to Nijimura-san so that the pair of them would be able to have a private conversation.

 

“I’ve gotten word that one of our fellow students was attacked in his home,” Nijimura-san growled, narrowing his eyes in what seemed like a disgusted sort of way. “Toshikazu Hazamada has clearly been using the Stand I gave him in careless and destructive ways.”

 

“Wait, you can give people Stands?” he asked, frowning.

 

He’d had a long discussion about those kinds of things – not to mention how many of his family members had them, which had been a whole weird thing in and of itself – with Jotaro-san and Kakyoin-san when the both of them had settled down in the guest room that Mom had offered to them and their kids. It was all really weird to think about, but when he’d seen both Jotaro-san and Kakyoin-san had showed him their Stands, he’d had to accept what they were saying.

 

He still kind of wondered if he’d ever really get the chance to see what Star Platinum and Hierophant Green were capable of; it had to be something interesting, given how confident the both of them seemed to be.

 

“Dad did some work for Dio Brando,” Nijimura-san said, then frowned. “Though he never mentioned to me what the hell it actually was. Still, Dio gave Dad a bow and arrow, and I found out about its capabilities through my own experiments.”

 

“Wait, you’re the one who gave him his Stand? And, do you mean that there are more like him out there?” he demanded, narrowing his eyes.

 

For a moment, Josuke could almost feel Crazy Diamond inside him, echoing with his own desire to punch some sense into Nijimura-san.

 

“I’ve been searching for someone to look after Okuyasu for longer than the pair of us have been acquainted with each other, Higashikata-san,” Nijimura-san said, sounding unimpressed and more than a bit annoyed. “I’d been hoping that I could trust him, if not to look after Okuyasu, then at least to aid in my operation to join up with Blackwatch. However, it seems as though he’s been misusing the power he was granted.”

 

“Are we going to have to deal with any more of these Stand users of yours?” he demanded, feeling more than a little annoyed, himself.

 

“It’s possible,” Nijimura-san said, narrowing his eyes as he seemed to consider Josuke’s question.

 

Josuke at least hoped he was considering it, since it’d be annoying to have to beat the information out of him.

 

“All right, so how many Stand users did you create with that bow and arrow of yours?” he demanded, folding his arms and glaring at Nijimura-san.

 

“Five,” Nijimura-san said, folding his own arms and narrowing his eyes as he seemed to fall into himself in thought. “Wait; there might have been six.”

 

“Well, which was it? Five or six?”

 

=DiU=

 

Following the path that Tenmei-nii had taken, Jolyne pulled Ichigo along as the dummy started to seem like he was going to stop.

 

“Come on, ya dummy,” she said, looking back at Ichigo as she kept pulling him along. “We’re going to visit Tenmei-nii, wherever he’s working.”

 

“But, you don’t know how Tenmei-nii gets when he’s working, Jojo-nee,” Ichigo, the dummy, said. “He really doesn’t like to be interrupted when he’s working.”

 

“Yeah, but he likes us,” she said, firmly tugging the dummy along again.

 

The dummy sighed, but he didn’t try to pull away again, so at least he seemed to be trying to listen to her. As the both of them continued on their way down the path that Tenmei-nii had taken to get to wherever it was that he and that manga-ka he’d talked about were working, Jolyne chewed her lower lip as she found herself wondering just which house the both of them were staying in.

 

Tenmei-nii hadn’t told them exactly where he was going to be staying, but that just meant that she and the dummy would get to have the fun of finding him!

 

=DiU=

 

Holding the safety pin that he had taken such great care to disinfect, Rohan pulled down Tenmei-kun’s left earlobe.

 

“Bear with me for a bit longer, Tenmei-kun,” he said, holding Tenmei-kun’s earlobe steady as he drove the pin through the flesh, dabbing away the welling blood with a rag soaked in boiled water.

 

“Yes, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, standing obediently still as Rohan thoroughly cleaned his ear, then pushed the post of one of the earrings from his own collection into his assistant’s waiting earlobe.

 

Standing up again, Rohan reached down to carefully adjust the vest that he’d ordered for Tenmei-kun while he’d ordered the larger drawing desk that would allow Tenmei-kun to use both of his arms. Tilting Tenmei-kun’s chin up so that he could get a better look at his assistant, Rohan smiled as he clasped the center of the vest closed with one of his own pins.

 

“I’ve finished setting up your room for you, Tenmei-kun,” he said, guiding his assistant back to the room that he’d given him to work out of. “Once you’ve gotten settled in, come back out and meet me. I need some more of your reality.”

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

Smiling as Tenmei-kun made his way back into the office that he’d set up for him, Rohan paced him up the stairs, before splitting off to make his way to his own office. He’d gotten so many interesting things from Tenmei-kun already, he could only look forward to what else he was going to be able to discover in the pages of his assistant’s memories. Chuckling softly as Tenmei-kun made his way into his office, Rohan stood up and made his way over to the door.

 

“Come on, Tenmei-kun,” he said, smiling as he guided his assistant to the small sofa that he’d brought in just for the sort of work he was going to be doing. “Now, show me more of your reality.”

 

Tenmei-kun’s chest, face, and arms popped open, displaying the pages that Heaven’s Door had unveiled for him to read. Raising an eyebrow at the sight of a thought that Tenmei-kun had had sometime during the last two days, Rohan smiled.

 

“You remind me so much of myself, Tenmei-kun,” he said, chuckling softly as he reached down for his helpful assistant’s right wrist, pressing his open hand to his chest as Tenmei-kun continued breathing softly. “I don’t really know, myself, just why the pages in your chest aren’t warm the way the rest of your body is, but that’s the way Heaven’s Door seems to work,” he said, pausing for a long moment as he had a thought, himself. “We’ll start seeing what that Stand of yours is capable of, once I finish my work for today.”

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

=DiU=

 

“So, you shot four people with this Stand-granting bow and arrow of yours, and you also shot a rat and a cat?” Josuke demanded, feeling more and more annoyed at how outright dumb someone so meticulous could be. “And then, like that wasn’t bad enough, you lost track of them?”

 

“I wasn’t as experienced with using the bow and arrow, when I created those two,” Nijimura-san said, as though that was any kind of defense for how much he’d fucked everything up; or maybe not everything, but it was still one hell of a fuckup.

 

“Right, so you’re helping me find this bastard, and then you’re going to come back to my house so you can have a talk with Jotaro-san,” he growled, shoving Nijimura-san to get him moving.

 

“I suppose there’s no helping it,” Nijimura-san said, and he actually had the nerve to sound annoyed.

 

Seriously, after all the shit he’d pulled…

 

“Come on,” he snapped, determinedly dragging Nijimura-san into the school building once again.

 

Classes had at least ended, so there was less of a chance that any of their fellow students would run across them while they were trying to deal with Hazamada and whatever the hell he was trying to do.

 

“So, do you at least know what Hazamada’s Stand is capable of, or are we going to be heading into this blind?” he demanded, as the pair of them continued on their way into the school building.

 

“There’s some medium he uses to control the bodies of anyone who falls under his Stand’s sway,” Nijimura-san said, narrowing his eyes in the way that Josuke was starting to see that he tended to do when he was thinking really hard about something or other.

 

Josuke only hoped that he was actually thinking about what abilities Hazamada’s Stand had, so they wouldn’t end up getting into more shit than they could really deal with.

 

=DiU=

 

Taking a deep breath as he finished the last of his work for the coming week, Rohan made his way back to the room he’d set Tenmei-kun up in while he worked.

 

“Tenmei-kun, come down to my office,” he said, opening the door to his loyal assistant’s office and looking for a moment at the larger, wider desk that he’d had delivered just today.

 

“Yes, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, rising without hesitation and following him back as Rohan made for his office again.

 

Once the both of them had made their way back, Rohan sat down with his drawing pad and notebook, while directing Tenmei-kun to wait in the middle of his office, far enough away from anything breakable in his office.

 

“All right, Tenmei-kun, let’s see if we can determine the capabilities of your Stand.”

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

=DiU=

 

Once the pair of them had managed to corner Hazamada, though he had to admit that most of that was because of Nijimura’s Bad Company surrounding him with mini-copters and tanks, all of them looking ready to fire on him the second he did something, Josuke allowed himself to relax. Sure, it wasn’t like they’d beaten him yet or anything, but there weren’t that many things that Hazamada could do to get himself out of this.

 

“All right, you bastard,” he said, still more than a little annoyed that he’d ended up having to take time out of his day to deal with this kind of shit. “We’ve caught you. You didn’t have to do this kind of shit, but if you don’t want us to kick your ass, you’ll knock it off and stop fucking around with people.”

 

Hazamada’s eyes flicked almost convulsively between the pair of them for a long moment, before he actually seemed to just how fucked he would have been if he’d tried to start shit with the pair of them and actually managed to settle down before he and Nijimura-san were forced to beat the living shit out of him. Not having to get his hands dirty in that kind of way was nice, at least, but there was still the problem of Nijimura and all the shit he’d already pulled.

 

So, even though he didn’t have to get his hands dirty yet, it didn’t mean that he wasn’t going to end up having to kick someone’s ass before this day was over.

 

“All right, Nijimura,” he said, turning his attention to the bastard who’d already caused so much trouble for all of them. “You’re coming with me.”

 

“Understood,” Nijimura said, as the pair of them turned away from the cowed form of Hazamada so that they could begin making their way back to his house.

 

So that they could have their discussion with Jotaro-san, and he could finally get some of the shit he’d been forced to deal with on this particularly stupid day off of his chest.

 

=DiU=

 

Once he’d given the order for Tenmei-kun to bring out his Stand once more, Rohan stood up as he found said Stand standing neatly beside Tenmei-kun.

 

“So, Tenmei-kun, your father named his Stand Hierophant Green,” he said, turning away from his examination of the Stand he’d given Tenmei-kun as a present when he’d taken into his service.

 

“Actually, I think it was a friend of the family who named his and Mom’s Stands, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, sitting down in the chair that Rohan had directed him to.

 

“Oh?” he asked, making his way over to where Tenmei-kun was sitting, opening the book that Heaven’s Door had created for him; flipping through the pages that had been revealed, Rohan eventually managed to track down the memory of a conversation that Tenmei-kun had had with his father, when the subject of Stands had come up the latest time that the pair of them had spoke on the subject. “Ah, it seems that a fellow Stand user by the name of Muhammad Avdol granted the names to your father’s and mother’s Stands.” Pausing for a moment, both to read up on anything Tenmei-kun might know about Avdol-san, and to determine if there had been anything concrete that Tenmei-kun’s father had told him about his Stand, Rohan eventually found that there wasn’t really anything else that would help.

 

It seemed as though Tenmei-kun’s father had elected to wait until Tenmei-kun either further developed his sight, or else developed a Stand of his own to tell him more about what Hierophant Green could do. Still, there was at least one thing that he could do, in this case. Taking the pen that he always kept with his notepad, Rohan quickly wrote another set of instructions on the newest page that Heaven’s Door had revealed to him: I will instinctively understand the workings of the Stand that the manga-ka Rohan Kishibe gave me.

 

“All right,” he said, standing back up and closing the book that Heaven’s Door had revealed to him. “You should be able to show me what your Stand is capable of now, Tenmei-kun.”

 

“Yes, boss,” Tenmei-kun nodded, half-closing his eyes as he began to move the arms and legs of his Stand, almost as though he was testing its limits.

 

It was a good habit to form, since even with the instinctive knowledge that Rohan had written into him, there were limits to the kinds of things that instinct could cover. Settling more comfortably into his chair, Rohan opened the notebook he’d brought with him once again. This would be a good chance for the both of them to truly discover what Tenmei-kun’s Stand was capable of.

 

=DiU=

 

Once the both of them had made their way back home, where Jotaro-san and the rest of the people he’d come to Japan – or at least to Morio, since it was pretty obvious that he’d lived in Japan for at least most of his life – with, Josuke found himself wondering again just what in the hell Nijimura-san had been getting at, when he’d talked about joining up with some kind of secret organization. Still, it was possible that Jotaro-san knew more than he did about that kind of thing, considering that Josuke himself hadn’t actually heard of the Speedwagon Foundation before Jotaro-san and his family had come back into their lives. He’d at least make a point of asking, since the worst that Jotaro-san could do was blow him off.

 

Even though Jotaro-san could be pretty scary when he put his mind to it.

 

When the pair of them made their way back into his house, pausing to take off their shoes, Josuke grabbed Nijimura-san’s arm, dragging him into the living room so that he could find Jotaro-san. Or else find out from Kakyoin-san where Jotaro-san had ended up. However, all he actually managed to find were Ichigo-chan and Jolyne-chan.

 

“Hey, kids,” he said, calling their attention to him as he made his way over to where the pair of them were sitting. “Do you guys know where your parents are?”

 

“Dad said that he was going to see how many Stand users he could find,” Jolyne-chan said, speaking first the way she always seemed to do.

 

Really, both she and Ichigo-chan both seemed to take after their respective parents more than a little; it was kind of funny.

 

“Did they tell you when they were going to be back?” he asked, turning slightly as he caught sight of Nijimura-san making his own way over to where Jolyne-chan and Ichigo-chan were both sitting.

 

=DiU=

 

“Your parents are both Stand users?” Keicho found himself asking, as he looked down at the two children Higashikata-san had brought him out to meet.

 

“Yeah,” the little girl said, standing up and seeming as though she was trying to size him up; it was more than a little interesting to see, on someone her age. “Dad and Uncle Nori work for the Speedwagon Foundation, and they came out here to see what was up with all of the Stand users who’d been reported coming from this place. Why’re you asking?”

 

The Speedwagon Foundation, Keicho mused, finding his interest in meeting Kujo-san growing slightly. The Speedwagon Foundation was, after all, one of the more public organizations that Blackwatch seemed to have ties to. Of course, there was also Treadstone and Blackwater, both of which seemed to fall under the vast umbrella of Brando International in the capacity of Treadstone Corporate Security, and Blackwater Dynamics, respectively.

 

It was the kind of setup that could only be deliberate, and such a thing naturally made him all the more eager to have the chance to meet Alicia Brando; she was, after all, the current, living descendant of the company’s founder, and would more than likely have been entrusted with the secrets that Alice Brando had been keeping.

 

“Have either of your parents informed you that Stand users are drawn to each other?” he asked, admiring the shrewd expression on Jolyne-chan’s face; if she truly did take after her father, Jotaro Kujo sounded like just the kind of person that Keicho would be most interested in meeting.

 

Aside from Alicia Brando, of course.

 

“Does that mean you’re a Stand user, too?” Ichigo-chan asked, drawing his attention for the first time since he and Higashikata had made their way into his home.

 

“I am,” he said, studying Ichigo-chan for a long moment.

 

The redhead seemed to be more of a follower, someone who would attach themselves to a person with more charisma – in this case, clearly Jolyne-chan – and devote himself to them. In that way, he reminded Keicho more than a little of Okuyasu, though Ichigo-chan did seem to be a great deal more intelligent than Okuyasu, which was rather pleasing to see.

 

“All right, that’s enough,” Higashikata said, grabbing his arm so he could pull him along. “We just need to know when your dads are going to be back, Jolyne-chan, Ichigo-chan. Did they tell you that or not?”

 

=DiU=

 

Smiling as he wrote down the information that he and Tenmei-kun had been able to gather from their experiments with the Stand that he had granted to his helpful assistant, Rohan Kishibe closed the notebook and set it aside once again. Learning about the Stand that he had granted to Tenmei-kun, and by extension the Stand that Tenmei-kun’s father possessed, did have to come second to the work that he still had to do on Pink Dark Boy. Of course, the knowledge that he was gaining about the members of Tenmei-kun’s family and their Stands – as well as the two vampires who seemed to have become a part of their family in the early days of the Joestars and the people they had gathered around them – provided him with ample amounts of both plots and characters that he could add to Pink Dark Boy, creating a manga that would be beloved by the world.

 

A manga that would enrich the lives of those who read it, and bring them happiness, as well.

 

=DiU=

 

After finding out that Jotaro-san and Kakyoin-san would be returning in a short time, Josuke led Nijimura-san to the living room so that the pair of them could wait the few minutes that it would take for the both of them to get home – well, back to his home, anyway – and he’d be able to speak with the both of them about the stupid shit that Nijimura-san had done with that bow and arrow that gave people Stands. Once the pair of them did make it back, Josuke quickly pulled Nijimura-san into the main room.

 

“Hey, Jotaro-san!” he called, as soon as the four of them had just about converged in the main room of the house where he, Mom, and Gramps all stayed together.

 

“Who’s that with you, Josuke-san?” Noriaki-san asked, as both he and Jotaro-san looked over at him and Nijimura-san as he dragged his fellow student into the room with them.

 

“And why the hell are you dragging him?” Jotaro-san asked.

 

“He’s been screwing around with some kind of bow and arrow that gives people Stands,” he said, making his way over to where Jotaro-san and Noriaki-san were standing.

 

That got Jotaro-san’s attention, and as Josuke dragged Nijimura-san along in his wake, he told his nephew – he still wasn’t quite over just how weird that kind of thing was, but that was just because Old Man Joestar couldn’t keep it in his pants the last time he was in Japan, so he wasn’t going to take it out on Jotaro-san or anything stupid like that – all about the stupid, bone-headed shit that Nijimura-san had been getting up to.

 

“You were actually stupid enough to go around creating Stand users, just so you could find someone to look after your little brother?” Jotaro-san demanded, narrowing his eyes as he stared down at Nijimura-san.

 

“There are certain matters that I wish to have taken care of,” Nijimura-san said, folding his arms and actually glaring at Jotaro-san. “Matters that Okuyasu would only prove a hindrance to, and so I needed someone to act as a companion and to look after him.”

 

“He said that he wants to join up with some kind of organization called Blackwatch,” he said, folding his own arms and glaring at Nijimura-san, himself.

 

“You want to join up with Blackwatch?” Jotaro-san asked, his attention settling back on Nijimura-san.

 

“Wait, you know about that?” Josuke found himself demanding, feeling more than a little strange.

 

If there was one thing he hadn’t been expecting, it was finding out that Jotaro-san actually knew about Blackwatch.

 

You’re aware of the organization?” Nijimura-san asked, turning to Jotaro-san with an expression of the most subdued kind of interest that Josuke had ever seen on anyone’s face.

 

“We can talk about that later,” Jotaro-san said, narrowing his eyes as he sat down on the couch. “First, we need to know the names of all the people you shot with the Stand Arrow.”

 

Settling down in a nearby chair, Josuke found himself wondering just how many of those Stand users would end up being dangerous.

Chapter 60: Mad About You

Chapter Text

Getting the full list of Stand users that Keicho Nijimura had created during the course of his time with the Bow and Arrow that his pain-in-the-ass Uncle had given to Nijimura’s old man for some kind of services rendered was enough of a pain in the ass, but finding out that Nijimura had been careless enough to lose track of them after he’d shot them with the Arrow made him more than a bit tempted to call out Star Platinum to throttle him, just a bit. Still, for all that something like that would make him feel better in more than a few ways, it wouldn’t have been beneficial to their future working relationship at all.

 

He’d learned at least that much from Aunt Alice.

 

Narrowing his eyes, as he watched Nijimura making his way into the living room where he, Kakyoin, and Josuke were all gathered together, Jotaro directed him to sit down.

 

=DiU=

 

Listening to Jotaro-san as he interrogated Nijimura-san about the Stand users he’d made with that bow and arrow of his, Josuke found himself learning a lot more about Stands, their users, and just where all of this weird shit had come from. Apparently, the Arrows that gave people Stands had been brought to their old uncle – a man named Dio Brando, the brother of the founder of Brando International, something that’d confused him until he found out that the pair of them were actually vampires and had lived since the 1800s or so – by some old lady named Enya. Jotaro-san didn’t seem to know where she had gotten the Arrows in the first place, though.

 

Nijimura-san seemed to have absorbed the fact that Alice Brando – who he’d been calling Alicia, up until Jotaro-san had revealed how old she really was, as well as the fact that she was a vampire – wasn’t really human a lot better than he’d have expected anyone to, but then nothing had really seemed to get to him for as long as Josuke had known him.

 

“So, this Yukako Yamagishi is one of the people you shot with the Arrow?” Jotaro-san asked, narrowing his eyes as he continued his interrogation.

 

“Yes, she was,” Nijimura-san said, a stoic look on his face to match the one on Jotaro-san’s own.

 

Josuke wondered just how in the hell Nijimura-san could manage to face the sheer weight of Jotaro-san’s displeasure, since Josuke didn’t think even he would have been able to stand up against that kind of thing.

 

=DiU=

 

After he’d gotten Keicho to stop fucking around and tell him what he knew about Yukako Yamagishi and the Stand she’d gotten when he’d shot her with the Arrow, Jotaro had found himself wanting to punch the idiot all over again. Still, knowing that the only thing Yamagishi’s Stand could really do was make her hair move – the same thing that Aunt Alice and his bastard uncle could do without the aid of their Stands, since the both of them were Vampires and all – gave him at least something to go on. He’d met with Josuke and the rest of his family, and they’d mutually decided to invite Yamagishi to dinner.

 

Both so that they could find out what kind of person she was, and also so that she wouldn’t be too confused when whatever strange force that drew Stand users together – Pucci called it fate, but Jotaro wasn’t sure he was prepared to give such credence to something that Pucci so enthusiastic about, considering how enamored he was with Dio and how obsessed Uncle Dio was with fate and all that kind of bullshit – began drawing her toward their group.

 

The fact that the end of the school day was coming up fast brought a sense of at least some relief, considering that he would be able to meet the girl and take her measure himself. Keicho didn’t really seem to be the type to pay attention to anyone when he didn’t have a use for them, and since Yamagishi’s Stand just seemed to give her the power to move her hair in the same way that a Vampire could, he didn’t seem to be interested in her anymore. Of course, there was still the girl’s personality to consider.

 

It was possible that Keicho had other reasons for losing interest in Yamagishi the way he had; time would tell.

 

=DiU=

 

When they’d invited Yamagishi-chan to have dinner with them, Josuke couldn’t help but feel a bit unsettled at the look in her eyes when she found out that Koichi was going to be there; it almost looked like she was more interested in talking to Koichi than about finding out just what in the hell was going on with her hair. It didn’t make a hell of a lot of sense, so far as Josuke was concerned, but he couldn’t really say anything more than that it was kind of unsettling.

 

He didn’t know what to make of someone who wasn’t curious about the kind of weird shit that Stands could do, especially when she had one.

 

=DiU=

 

She’d really only gone along with this whole dinner thing Josuke had suggested because Koichi-kun was going to be there, but when she walked in, the first person Yukako caught sight of was the fantastically, almost ethereally handsome man sitting at the head of the near the middle of the table. Finding herself smiling widely as she settled down at the table, as close to him as she possibly could, Yukako glanced down at his right hand.

 

It turned out that he was married, but since he was a bit too old for her, Yukako found that she really didn’t mind.

 

After the man had introduced himself as Noriaki Kakyoin – and his wife, who looked just as beautiful as he did, as Loreena McKennitt-Kakyoin – Yukako found herself wishing that she could meet someone who made her just as happy as he seemed to be with his married life. And, when she met up with little Ichigo-chan, Yukako found that she couldn’t imagine meeting a cuter, more adorable little boy.

 

She was curious about meeting Tenmei-chan, but it sounded like he was working with someone, and it didn’t sound like he was going to be back anytime soon.

 

Still, talking to little Ichigo-chan about his older brother gave her a good enough picture of little Tenmei-chan that Yukako was sure she would love him just as soon as the pair of them had the chance to meet for the first time. It also made her all the more certain that she wanted to have a little boy of her own; one who would be just as sweet as Ichigo-chan and Tenmei-chan. Now, all she had to do was convince Koichi-kun to be her boyfriend.

 

Then, she could begin shaping him into the ideal man; someone who would be just as perfect a husband and father as Kakyoin-san, and then she could be just as perfect a wife and mother as Loreena-san clearly already was.

 

=DiU=

 

When they’d finished their meeting with Yamagishi-san, Josuke couldn’t quite help the thought that there was something up with the girl. It was just the way she’d been watching Koichi; almost like she wanted to take a bite out of him, or something. There’d been the creepiest hungry look on her face, when she thought no one else was looking.

 

Josuke didn’t like it, but he also didn’t want to freak Koichi out by bringing up weird shit like that, so he’d try to deal with it himself, before he tried to bring anyone else in on this.

 

The next day, once all of them had met up again, Josuke made sure to keep an eye out for whatever Yamagishi-san might have been thinking. She had to be thinking something weird, given the look on her face. Still, Koichi seemed to be interested in her – or else he was just desperate enough not to notice the weird vibes she was giving off; Koichi was pretty shy, when it came right down to it – so Josuke was just going to make sure to keep an eye on the pair of them.

 

If anything started getting too weird – even for Stand users – Josuke was going to step in.

 

=DiU=

 

Tenmei-kun had been doing such good work for him – giving him so many new ideas that he would be able to use to make Pink Dark Boy the best manga that it could possibly be – but he’d also noticed that his assistant, for all his skill at drawing and painting backgrounds, didn’t have either the skill or the confidence to draw people. And yes, he could have written the skill for figure-drawing into Tenmei-kun’s book, but then the skill would have been artificial.

 

It wouldn’t have meant anything; Tenmei-kun would be better off if he developed that kind of skill for himself.

 

“Make sure you observe the people around here carefully, Tenmei-kun,” he said, turning to look at his helpful assistant, all prepared with his sketchpad and mechanical pencils.

 

It was something that the both of them had in common, which was rather pleasing: both he and Tenmei-kun preferred the control and precision that mechanical pencils gave their work. Smiling softly as Tenmei-kun observed the people passing by in front of the quaint little café where the pair of them were sitting, Rohan turned as his assistant sighed.

 

“Sorry, boss, I just don’t know if I can capture the feelings of these people without getting a closer look at them,” Tenmei-kun said, gaze falling to his sketchpad where it lay on the table for a long moment. “And, every time I try to ask someone to let me observe them closely enough to capture them that way, they always look at me like I’m creepy.”

 

“That’s why I don’t put any stock in what people say,” Rohan said, resting a gentle hand on his assistant’s narrow left shoulder. “And you shouldn’t either, Tenmei-kun.”

 

“Yes, boss,” Tenmei-kun said, sitting back up in his seat, face settling into an expression of calm once more.

 

Another figure caught his eye, then; someone who matched the description that Tenmei-kun’s father that he’d found within his book, and Rohan found himself both pleased and slightly surprised to see that Tenmei-kun’s father was here in Morioh.

 

“Tenmei-kun,” he called, glancing over at his assistant, finding himself smiling softly as he watched Tenmei-kun taking notes. “If you’re still concerned about asking a stranger to model for you, I’m certain that your father would be willing to help you out. Call him over,” he said, then paused for a moment to consider just what he’d said. “Ask him to meet you at work.”

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of Tenmei’s voice, calling out to him from a table at the café he’d been just about to pass by, brought a smile to Noriaki’s face as he turned to make his way over to the table. Tenmei and someone else – someone who seemed to be an artist, just like his eldest, which was probably why the two of them had seemed to connect well enough that Tenmei had been willing to stay with him as long as he had – were both sitting at one of the tables.

 

“Good morning, Tenmei-chan,” he said, reaching out to pat Tenmei-chan’s head and gently petting his ponytail, as well. “It’s good to see you again. Is this the artist you were trying to get a job with?”

 

“His name is Rohan Kishibe,” Tenmei said, after looking over at the man he was sitting next to. “I like working for him.”

 

There was a look on Tenmei’s face, however… Noriaki found that he couldn’t get it out of his head; really, it seemed to be the same kind of expression that Jotaro-san had described as being on his own face – and Loreena-chan’s too, for that matter – when Brando-san had held them under his thrall at his resort in Egypt. Glancing over at Kishibe-san as subtly as he could, Noriaki saw the pleased expression on his face and had to force himself not to shudder. It seemed as though his eldest son had ended up stumbling into the same kind of situation that he and Loreena-chan had ended up in before he was born.

 

“Would you like to come model for me, so I can practice drawing people?” Tenmei asked, looking up at him with a distant, pleading sort of look on his face.

 

“Yes, I think that would make Tenmei-kun very happy,” Kishibe-san said, smiling in a way that looked more than a bit smug to Noriaki.

 

“Give me some time to set things up,” he said, hoping that Kishibe-san wouldn’t suspect just what it was that he was truly attempting to do.

 

“And then you’ll come back?” Kishibe-san asked, an eager expression on his face.

 

“Enjoy the rest of your day,” he said, sketching a shallow bow and then quickly turning to leave the café.

 

Before he did anything else, he was going to need to speak to Jotaro-san.

 

=DiU=

 

 

Raising an eyebrow as Kakyoin-san departed, Rohan turned to look over at Tenmei-kun again.

 

“Come on, Tenmei-kun,” he said, tugging Tenmei-kun along on the way back to his car.

 

There was something about the meeting he’d just had with Kakyoin-san, something that stuck in his mind from when he’d first gotten access to the memories that Tenmei-kun had carried all of his life. There was something that stuck in his mind about the interaction that the pair of them had just had that stuck in his mind, and so the only real answer was for him to head back to his studio and attempt to determine just what it was about that particular interaction that had stood out to him.

 

Once he’d returned to his studio with Tenmei-kun, Rohan guided his assistant back up to the room where he spent so much of his time while he worked on Pink Dark Boy. Settling Tenmei-kun down in the chair he’d brought in when he’d first decided to make Tenmei-kun his assistant, Rohan took a moment to make sure that his assistant was comfortable. Pulling open the book that Heaven’s Door had created for him, Rohan flipped through the pages in Tenmei-kun’s chest, looking for anything that his assistant’s memories would be able to tell him about Kakyoin-san.

 

=DiU=

 

Keeping an eye on Yamagishi-san, when she seemed bound and determined to lose him, wasn’t the easiest thing he’d ever done. But, given the kind of person she seemed to be, Josuke was determined to at least make sure that she didn’t try anything too weird. Following the pair of them whenever Yamagishi-san would try to corner Koichi, Josuke would be there to gently ward her off.

 

She wasn’t happy about that, clearly, but as long as Koichi – oblivious as he could be, sometimes – wouldn’t end up getting into any more trouble than he could handle on his own. Still, the way Yamagishi-san was staring at him, those times when she clearly thought that Koichi wasn’t looking… Yeah, she already knew he was a Stand user, so she probably wouldn’t end up doing anything too crazy, but under the circumstances it was probably better that he had backup.

 

That was how he’d ended up back at the Nijimura house, looking to have a talk with Keicho-san.

 

“So, you want me to dispatch a force of Bad Company to keep an eye on your friend?” Keicho-san asked, frowning in a way that really looked more annoyed than anything.

 

“Yeah,” he said, folding his arms and glaring right back. “You said you wanted to join up with some kind of secret organization that protects people from the shadows,” he continued. “So, here’s your chance to get started.”

 

“Why are you so interested in using Bad Company for this?” Nijimura-san asked, still seeming unimpressed by what he was hearing.

 

“Because the creepy girl who’s been stalking my friend Koichi has a Stand of her own, so if I tried to use Crazy Diamond for anything, she’d know someone was following her, and considering the way she met me, she’d know just who it was since I showed her Crazy Diamond when we met,” he said, folding his arms as he found himself wondering just what in the hell that crazy girl was doing, considering he wasn’t around to keep her from doing something to Koichi.

 

He could only hope that he’d be able to keep Koichi safe, with or without Nijimura-san’s help.

 

=DiU=

 

Once he’d managed to meet up with Jotaro again, Noriaki quickly explained what he’d seen with regards to Tenmei-chan and the man he was working for.

 

“Damn it, it’s the same shit that my bastard uncle tried with you,” Jotaro growled, leaving unspoken the fact that it had worked out, in the case of him and Loreena-chan.

 

Well, he supposed that anyone else wouldn’t have been so easy to forgive Mr. Brando for what he’d done, but he and Loreena-chan had been making tentative plans to start a family of their own; true, Tenmei-chan had been born a long time before either of them had been planning to have any of the children that Noriaki had begun to envision when he thought about the future that he and Loreena-chan were trying to make together, but Tenmei-chan was sweet enough to make up for that. Still, knowing that Tenmei-chan might be in danger

 

“Do you think we could call Alice?” he asked, knowing that he would feel just what much better, knowing that they had an untouchable Stand on their side.

 

“Yeah, I’ll take care of that,” Jotaro said, eyes still narrowed as he made his way over to the phone in the room where he was staying.

 

Settling down in a chair near the desk that Jotaro seemed to making more than a bit of use of while the pair of them were staying in Morioh to document the lives and interactions of all the Stand users who lived there, Noriaki waited while Jotaro spoke to his aunt about what had been going on while the pair of them had been trying to work out a way to meet up with the Stand users who lived in this place. He wondered if she would inform the Speedwagon Foundation, or if Jotaro would do that himself. Or really, if either of them was going to inform anyone else in the first place.

 

Really, none of them had enough information about the Stand or its user to inform the Speedwagon Foundation of anything more than the fact that he existed; they would need more information, before they could determine just what kind of a threat he was or could be.

 

When Stardust appeared in Jotaro’s hotel room, Noriaki sighed, relived to know that they were going to have the help of one of the most powerful Stands that he had ever had the chance to encounter; to say nothing of Jotaro’s aunt, since there was obviously something about her that had given Stardust the unstoppable ability to both teleport and to phase through solid matter.

 

=DiU=

 

Settling back in his chair, Keicho turned at the sound of White Rabbit making its way into his room. The long-distance Stand looked up at him for a long moment, and Keicho found himself wondering just what thoughts were going through the mind of the Stand user; he wondered what Jack Harper could have been thinking, deep within whatever Blackwatch compound he was staying in.

 

Have you been meeting up with any other Stand users? White Rabbit asked, beginning their conversation with a topic that Keicho honestly hadn’t been expecting.

 

This town has a small population of them, but until today, I’d never had any reason to speak with any of them, he wrote, displaying the notepad he was using for a moment, before removing the page and having a few iterations of Bad Company incinerate it.

 

I take it you’ve found one, White Rabbit wrote back, tilting its head curiously, blinking those catlike, purple eyes at him.

 

Yes, but not in the way you might think, he explained, narrowing his eyes as he contemplated just how much information he was going to share with Harper-san. Are you aware of the existence of a group called the Speedwagon Foundation?

 

White Rabbit tilted its head, catlike purple eyes fixing on him for a long moment; Keicho once again found himself wondering what manner of thoughts were going through the mind of Harper-san, to give the man’s Stand that look on its face. Some of my people have had dealings with them through Blackwater, since they’re the ones that act as intermediaries between us and the world at large.

 

I suppose that makes sense, he wrote back, narrowing his eyes slightly as he considered what else he was going to say. I met up with a pair of agents of the Speedwagon Foundation; two men, by the name of Jotaro Kujo and Noriaki Kakyoin. Kujo seems to be related in some way to Josuke Higashikata, though I haven’t managed to determine the precise nature of their relation.

 

White Rabbit nodded. Those two have done good work for the Foundation, or so I’ve heard.

 

I suppose I should keep that in mind, he wrote back, once it had become clear that Harper-san had nothing else to say on the subject.

 

White Rabbit left then, nodding to Keicho just before it departed from the house where he and Okuyasu had lived all of their lives. Summoning a handful of iterations of Bad Company, these ones equipped with flamethrowers, Keicho considered his next course of action while Bad Company disposed of the pages he’d used to communicate with White Rabbit. Considering everything that had previously occurred, his next course of action seemed clear.

 

=DiU=

 

Without knowing if he was going to be able to count on Nijimura-san’s help, Josuke had taken to escorting Koichi-kun whenever he could, stopping just short of asking Hirose-san if he could stay over at her house, just so that he would be able to make sure that Yamagishi-san wouldn’t have the chance to do… Whatever it was that she wanted to do to him. He didn’t like the look in her eyes, and Koichi-kun… he was just a bit too nice to tell the crazy girl off when she inevitably started doing weird things to him.

 

When he’d made his way to Koichi-kun’s house to escort him to school on this particular morning, however, the only thing he found was the worried presence of Hirose-san and her husband.

 

Finding out that Koichi-kun had seemingly vanished from his own bed, Josuke couldn’t help but be furious with himself, just a little, for not insisting that he stay over at Koichi-kun’s house. No matter how uncomfortable he might have made the other boy by doing it, it obviously would have been better than whatever had happened to him, either this morning or some time during the night. Making his way back to his house, knowing that he’d have a better chance of finding his old friend of he was able to recruit Jotaro-san and Kakyoin-san.

 

He might not have known the pair of them for all that long, but it was clear that the both of them had come to Morioh for just this kind of thing; the handling dangerous Stand users, not keeping creepy girls from taking people and doing… stuff to them, but since Yamagishi-san had revealed herself as a Stand user, that meant that the pair of them would probably help him once he’d explained everything that was going on.

 

Once he’d made it back home, where his nephew – the both of them had agreed that they weren’t going to think about that too much, since it was entirely too fucking weird – and the guy’s partner were both sitting down to what seemed to be a meeting of their own.

Chapter 61: All That She Wants

Chapter Text

The sound of Josuke’s voice drew Noriaki’s attention, and since there’d been a lull in their planning – given that they didn’t know just how it was that Rohan Kishibe’s Stand actually worked, and hence couldn’t really make plans to work around an ability they had basically no ideas about – he and Jotaro had invited Josuke to sit down with them. And then, hearing just what it was that Josuke had come to meet with them about, Noriaki found himself more than slightly unsettled to find that there were two people in Morioh that seemed to have such little regard for the thoughts and opinions of the people around them.

 

Yare yare daze, so we have to deal with two kidnappings, and what sounds like someone with a mind-control Stand,” Jotaro grumbled, slouching in his seat with what looked like merely a more pronounced version of his usual, annoyed scowl.

 

“Sounds like it,” he said, sighing as he found himself wondering just how it was that Tenmei-chan had been unfortunate enough to run headlong into the same kind of situation that he and Loreena-chan had ended up in. However, it was the same kind of situation that had ultimately led to Tenmei-chan’s conception in the first place, so maybe there was something to that. Maybe it was some kind of fate, after all…

 

When Stardust arrived again, after having gone to pick up Alice Brando’s secondary Stand – the shape shifting, pure white Stand that for some reason Alice had named The Duke – Noriaki settled back down into his seat. If they were going to go after Kishibe-san, the Stand user who had done something that was entirely too much like what Mr. Brando had done; the very thing that had resulted in Tenmei-chan being born at all, so maybe it was some kind of fate that had brought Tenmei-chan to Kishibe-san’s attention.

 

Noriaki didn’t like to think about that kind of thing, but it did seem like the most likely reason for this kind of thing to be happening.

 

“Jotaro told me about everything that’s been going on,” Alice said, speaking through the mouth of the white, currently cat-shaped Stand that had come back to them alongside Stardust. “I’m glad to know that you and this nephew of yours are getting along so well,” Alice continued, as Stardust leaned lightly against the couch in the living room of the home that Josuke-chan had invited all of them to stay while they were trying to get a bead on what a town full of Stand users was truly like.

 

“Hold on, is there something else going on here?” Josuke-chan asked, standing up with kind of a confused look on his own face. “I thought we were all here to talk about how to keep that crazy girl from holding Koichi prisoner. But, it sounds like you guys are talking about something else.”

 

Sighing, since it looked like there was someone else who needed their help to escape from the control of someone who didn’t seem to have their best interests at heart, Noriaki folded his arms as he sat up in his chair. “My eldest, Tenmei, seems to have attracted the attention of a Stand user by the name of Rohan Kishibe,” narrowing his eyes, Noriaki forced himself to continue. “It sounds as though Kishibe-san has some kind of mind-controlling Stand, since not only did Tenmei-chan seem to be waiting to be prompted by Kishibe-san before he spoke, but there was a look on his face…”

 

Biting his lip as he found himself reminded of the fact that only Jotaro-san – and Alice, but she wasn’t exactly here with the rest of them – really knew what had happened to him, just why it was that Tenmei-chan existed in the first place. And also the fact that he wasn’t truly in any kind of shape to tell Josuke-chan those kinds of things, particularly considering how young Josuke-chan really was. He might have come to them with news about a girl that seemed to have kidnapped one of his friends, but it seemed like he was more worried about how his friend might feel, rather than anything that might end up happening to him.

 

It was really something that people didn’t think about until it happened to them or someone they knew; Noriaki didn’t like thinking about that kind of thing, but that was the way it seemed to be.

 

=DiU=

 

Finding himself with his arms full of The Duke – Josuke wondered what it was about Brando-chan, the vampire lady who seemed to have kind of adopted Jotaro and everyone else in their family, and Nijimura-san that had seemed to give the both of them more than one Stand – and sent out to spot people who might have had a Stand that Jotaro-san and Kakyoin-san hadn’t found out about yet, while at the same time searching for Yamagishi-san so that he would able able to track her back to wherever it was that she was keeping Koichi.

 

He wanted to know just what that crazy girl thought she was doing, pulling Koichi out of his bed and stuffing him wherever she had while she was doing whatever the hell she was trying to do to him.

 

Thinking of what might be going on with Koichi led, almost too naturally, to Josuke wondering what had happened to Tenmei-chan. It sounded like Tenmei-chan had run into the same kind of trouble that Koichi had, only Kakyoin-san knew just where he was, rather than being forced to look everywhere in Morioh to find out just where in the hell it was that she was hiding. Once the pair of them had made it through a crowd, made up of what had to be a bunch of average people given the fact that not one of them had reacted to The Duke in the slightest, Josuke heard Brando-chan sigh.

 

“This is going to take forever,” Brando-chan muttered. “Particularly if we’re looking for a place where that girl you talked about is holding your friend captive, considering that she’d probably want to stay somewhere out of the way; somewhere she could could have the privacy she wants to do… Whatever she’s planning.”

 

He was just about to ask Brando-chan what she had in mind, when the white cat in his arms suddenly changed into some kind of bird, flapping its wings once they had fully formed.

 

“You’re going to try searching from the air?” he asked, though it was pretty obvious what Brando-chan was intending to do.

 

“It’ll certainly be faster than anything the pair of us could manage on the ground,” she said, as the pair of them began making their way up to another group of people. “I’ll stay in touch as much as I can,” Brando-chan continued, leaping off of his right shoulder and quickly vanishing into the sky.

 

=DiU=

 

Shuddering as he sat, slumped in the chair where Yukako-chan had dumped him after he’d… Shying away from the thought of what had happened to him, Koichi bit his lower lip as he forced himself to stand back up again. It didn’t look like there was anyone coming to save him, so he was going to have to find a way out of this place on his own.

 

He was going to have to find a way to escape from this place, and from whatever strange powers that Yukako-chan possessed, without any kind of powers of his own. It was insane enough to think about, especially considering what else had happened – the thing he was trying as hard as he could not to think about – but that was what he had to deal with now.

 

The sight of something fluttering, just outside the large window behind his head, drew his attention, but it turned out to be just the bushes outside the house rustling in the wind. Or, at least that was what he thought, before the window exploded inward and something jumped into the room with him. There seemed to be some kind of invisible creature standing in front of him; something with dainty-looking hooves, if the imprints he was seeing in the carpet were any indication.

 

When that same, invisible creature nudged him, Koichi reached out to see if he could find out what he could find out about the invisible creature who seemed to have come to save him. The face that he was feeling under his hands did seem to be some kind of a deer or something, given the antlers and the large, wide ears that he could feel. When something small, fast, and black erupted from the top of his head, wrapping tightly around what seemed to be the legs of whatever kind of invisible deer had tried to come save him, Koichi tensed.

 

But, when he saw what seemed to be ropes made of hair, and more than that when he saw them straining and then snapping as they tried to keep hold of whatever the invisible deer was turning into, Koichi looked down at the carpet to see if he could tell what the invisible deer was becoming. Narrowing his eyes as he watched the previously light, dainty hoof prints rounding out and deepening into…

 

Before he could spend more than a few seconds wondering about what kind of invisible animal could be making those kinds of tracks, Koichi yelped in surprise as he felt an elephant’s trunk winding around his waist, tucking him in close to what felt like a wide, flapping left ear, and then a sudden lurch as the invisible elephant smashed through the wall in front of them.

 

=DiU=

 

The sight of the front wall of the house being smashed open by the charging form of The Duke – this time transformed into a fucking elephant, which kind of begged the question of just how many things Brando-chan’s other Stand could actually transform into – drew Josuke’s attention, and he breathed more easily as Nijimura-san launched a force of planes and helicopters to guard Koichi as The Duke brought him back to them.

 

“Thanks,” he said, reaching out to help Koichi down as The Duke set him on the ground and unwound its trunk.

 

As the three of them all hurried back to Jotaro-san’s car, driving off before Yukako-san could come back and do… Whatever crazy thing that a stalker Stand user would do when she found out that the guy she’d captured had been freed from her the house where she’d been keeping him for whatever kind of weird reason that she’d gotten into her head to want him for… whatever. Shaking his head, Josuke made up his mind to ask Nijimura-san for the Stand Arrow.

 

If that crazy girl was going to keep stalking Koichi, he was at least going to make sure that his friend had some way to protect himself.

 

=DiU=

 

Once they’d solved Josuke’s problem with that crazy stalker girl, Jotaro could feel more comfortable focusing his attention on whatever the hell was going on with Tenmei and that bastard Kishibe. When they all made it back to Josuke’s house, getting Koichi and the rest of the kids settled, he flagged down Stardust and he and Kakyoin made their way back to the room he’d been given for however long all of them were going to need to stay in Morioh.

 

“So, did you manage to find out where Tenmei-chan is?” Kakyoin asked, as Stardust settled down with The Duke in it lap; The Duke was wearing the form of a white cat again, which seemed to be its new default.

 

It was a hell of a lot different from the thin, white bracelet that The Duke had looked like, back when Aunt Alice had gained Stardust in the first place, but it could’ve been just because The Duke’s powers were growing stronger; at least insofar as any Stand’s power could be said to be strong or weak at all.

 

“It looks like he’s living in Kishibe’s house, though he clearly has his own room,” Aunt Alice said, speaking through The Duke’s mouth.

 

It was something that all of them had learned to do, during the time all of them had possessed their Stands, living and working with them; at least after Jotaro’s bastard uncle had given them all Stands in the first place.

 

“That’s good to hear,” Kakyoin said, shuddering briefly. “Can you lead us to him?”

 

“Of course,” Aunt Alice said, The Duke nodding as it shifted into a bird and Stardust lifted it up on its arm.

 

Piling into the car with Kakyoin, the pair of them followed The Duke as it led them to Kishibe’s house so that they could deal with the bastard who had kidnapped Kakyoin’s first kid. Before he could call Star out, Kakyoin had torn the door off of its hinges with Hierophant Green. Chuckling under his breath, since that was just the kind of thing that he would do if anyone had tried to fuck with Jolyne, Jotaro looked up as he heard the sound of running feet approaching them.

 

=DiU=

 

Running for his living room at the sound of his door being torn open, Rohan found himself all the more excited. He’d known that this kind of thing was likely, ever since he’d seen the unsettled look on Noriaki Kakyoin’s face when he and his assistant Tenmei-kun had encountered him, back at the café where the pair of them had had lunch. And now, he was going to have the chance to find out what Noriaki would actually do.

 

Sure, he could make a guess about that kind of thing given everything he’d read in Tenmei-kun’s book, but it was always better to observe the true reality of a situation than to just make guesses about it.

 

“Tenmei-kun, come here,” he called, waving to his assistant, then looking back down over his balcony at the two men – Jotaro Kujo and Noriaki Kakyoin; both of whom seemed to be Stand users, according to what he had read in Tenmei-kun’s book – who’d just stormed into his house.

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

Draping his left arm over Tenmei-kun’s left shoulder, Rohan watched as Jotaro and Noriaki looked around for a moment, before both of their gazes turned to him at nearly the same moment.

 

“What are you doing to my son?” Noriaki-san asked, a plaintive expression on his face.

 

“Are you going to punch me?” he asked, his arm still resting on Tenmei-kun’s shoulder. “I’ve always been curious about that.”

 

“We’ll kick your ass if you don’t bring him down here!” Jotaro snarled up at him, but for the most part Rohan found himself curious about what the Stand who seemed to be made out stars – really, it looked like someone had taken a picture of space, cut it out in the shape of a person who looked like they were wearing some kind of a mid-brimmed hat pulled down just over their eyes – who was standing between Jotaro and Noriaki.

 

It didn’t fit the description that he’d read of either Jotaro’s Stand Star Platinum, or Noriaki’s Stand Hierophant Green.

 

“Look, we could probably work all this out without anyone having to get hurt,” Noriaki said, looking between Rohan himself and Jotaro. “It doesn’t look like you’ve been hurting Tenmei-chan, and ever since he heard about you and what you did, he’s wanted to work with you in at least some capacity. So, if you just bring him down here, I’m sure we could find a way to resolve this without anyone getting hurt.”

 

“Come on, Tenmei-kun,” he said, leading his assistant down to the main floor of the house where the both of them lived and worked.

 

“Yes, boss.”

 

“What in the hell did you do to him?” Jotaro demanded, the glare on his face just like the one that Rohan had seen described within the pages of Tenmei-kun’s book; the one that had been described as looking like he was interrogating someone without even saying a word.

 

“Whatever you’ve done, can you reverse it?” Noriaki asked, the worry for his son plain on his face; Rohan looked closely, absorbing the nuances of such a thing.

 

The expression that Noriaki Kakyoin wore on his face was the epitome of what might be properly called fatherly concern, and if Rohan truly desired to capture all the nuances of reality within the pages of Pink Dark Boy, he was going to need to watch and learn from everything that he was seeing here. The plot he was bearing witness to at this very moment truly did seem like something his readers would enjoy. A tale of fatherly love, brotherly concern, and the gentle boy both of those feelings were concentrated on.

 

After all, a few slice-of-life chapters would be a welcome contrast to the action he had been writing for the last month.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes, as he found himself face to face with Tenmei-chan for the first time since the kid had gone off to work for Kishibe in the first place, Jotaro turned to watch as Stardust made its own way over to where Tenmei-chan and Kishibe were standing.

 

“Why would I want to do something like that?” Kishibe asked, looking as though he was genuinely confused, rather than trying to mock them or any of that kind of shit. “All of this was to help him become the best assistant he could possibly be.”

 

Before any of them could say another word, Stardust had moved to reach into Tenmei-chan’s chest, searching around briefly, before pulling out what looked like a strip of paper. It almost seemed like Aunt Alice’s Stand was reading the thing, and Jotaro found himself wondering how that was possible considering the way the Indiana Jones hat it seemed to be wearing came down over its eyes. But, after a few seconds or so, Stardust came over to hand him the paper it’d extracted from Tenmei-chan.

 

“Prepared to die?” he demanded, Star emerging as he clenched his fists and stomping over to where Kishibe was standing, his arm still draped around Tenmei-chan’s left shoulder.

 

“It’s the one rule that every manga-ka should follow,” Kishibe said, though he seemed to be a lot more focused on what Stardust was doing.

 

“I don’t care what you do with your life, but don’t fuck around with one of our kids, all right?” he demanded, making his way over to pull Tenmei-chan away from Kishibe. “Stardust, you mind getting rid of the rest of that shit?”

 

Aunt Alice’s Stand gave him a sharp nod, reaching back into Tenmei-chan’s chest, pulling out another strip of paper. Tenmei-chan, blinking in surprise, looked around at the room they were all standing in like he didn’t quite know where he was. Jotaro could only hope that he’d been aware enough of what was going on around him that ending up in this place wouldn’t end up being too disorienting for him. But, just as Stardust was about to remove another scrap of paper from Tenmei-chan’s chest, the kid slapped his right hand over his chest, and tried to push back against Stardust with his left.

 

The sight of another Stand – a Stand that looked just like Kakyoin’s – leaping out of Tenmei-chan’s body to take up position behind him, brought Jotaro up short for a long moment.

 

“Wait!” Tenmei-chan exclaimed, moving back, hands over his chest almost protectively. “I’d- I’d really like to keep that one, please.”

 

“Tenmei-chan,” Kakyoin said, making his way over to put his right hand on Tenmei-chan’s head. “Are you sure about this? You’re sure it’s not hurting you?”

 

“No, this one is all right,” Tenmei-chan said, right hand still on his chest, as though he was still worried about Stardust reaching for it; Aunt Alice wouldn’t do that kind of thing, of course, but if there was one thing that Tenmei-chan and Kakyoin had in common, it was worrying about shit that either didn’t matter or wasn’t going to happen. Tenmei-chan was just a kid, though, so that made dealing with him less annoying than it could’ve been.

 

Less annoying than dealing with Kakyoin could be, sometimes.

 

“All right, we’ll let you keep that Stand of yours, if you’re sure about it,” he said, feeling more than a bit strange about the whole thing.

 

First it’d been the way that his bastard uncle had given him and the rest of his family Stands with that Arrow he’d found somewhere or other, and now it was Kishibe doing this kind of shit to Tenmei-chan. Sure, he’d heard that Stand users were drawn to each other, but all of this was too much. Tenmei-chan hadn’t even been a Stand user before he’d met up with Kishibe for the first time.

 

It was frustrating, but then that was what had happened, and now they would have to deal with it.

 

=DiU=

 

Having Dad and Uncle Jotaro there with him wasn’t something Tenmei had been expecting, even when Dad had looked so worried seeing him at the café with Rohan-sensei, but now that he could actually talk on his own…

 

“Rohan-sensei, did you want to keep me from talking because you don’t really take good care of yourself?” he asked, turning to Rohan-sensei, who didn’t quite seem to know quite what to say in response.

 

“He works himself that hard, huh?” Uncle Jotaro asked, folding his arms and glaring at Rohan-sensei for a long moment, before turning back to him again. “He didn’t make you do any of that shit, did he, Tenmei-chan?”

 

“Of course not,” Rohan-sensei snapped, before Tenmei could say a single word in response. “Tenmei-kun needs his sleep to paint; his book even says that he does his best work when he’s calm and well-rested.”

 

“His book?” Dad asked, looking from Rohan-sensei to him and then back again.

 

“It’s something to do with how his Stand works,” Tenmei said, looking back at Rohan-sensei; he didn’t know if he should try to explain anything else, since it wasn’t his Stand they were all talking about.

 

That was still something he was getting used to: the thought that he had a Stand of his very own, one just like Dad’s, even.

 

“That’s enough, Tenmei-kun,” Rohan-sensei said, a bit more sharply than Tenmei had ever heard him speak; he wondered if that was because Tenmei could speak for himself now.

 

“No, let’s hear about that,” Uncle Jotaro demanded, turning narrowed eyes on Rohan-sensei as the four of them all stared each other down. “What does your Stand do to people, Kishibe?”

 

“You could always come up to office, and I could show you,” Rohan-sensei said, sounding all enthusiastic again.

 

Then he yelped, as Aunt Alice’s Stand slapped the back of his head.

 

“Thanks, Stardust,” Uncle Jotaro said, glancing briefly at Aunt Alice’s Stand, before turning his attention back to Rohan-sensei. “Now, just what in the hell does your Stand do to people?”

 

“Is it some kind of mind-control?” Dad asked, and Tenmei leaned back into his embrace as he came to stand behind and a bit beside him. “Tenmei, are you really sure he didn’t hurt you?”

 

“I’m all right, Dad,” he assured his father, feeling his Stand reaching out to tug on his father’s ponytail.

 

“Yeah, I’m starting to get that,” Dad said, his own Stand emerging from his body, pulling his hair out of Tenmei’s Stand’s – he was going to need a name for it; Dad’s Stand was named Hierophant Green, so Tenmei was going to try looking for a name that sounded kind of like that – grip, and chuckled softly.

 

Tenmei laughed, leaning his head under Dad’s chin; this was nice, even though things had gotten pretty weird.

 

=DiU=

 

Once all of them had managed to set some proper boundaries with Kishibe-san and Tenmei – as excitable as the pair of them were; really, there were moments when Tenmei actually seemed to be more mature than the man who was presumably a lot older than him – Noriaki let himself relax. He was glad that none of them had been forced into a Stand fight, both since his son was new to having a Stand at all, and because he still didn’t know what Kishibe-san’s Stand was capable of. Given how long Tenmei had been away, Jotaro had flatly informed Kishibe-san that Tenmei was going to be staying with them for the rest of the day.

Chapter 62: Round Here

Chapter Text

“We’re going to have to find a name for your Stand, Tenmei-chan,” he said, smiling down at his eldest son as the pair of them continued on their way to Jotaro’s company car.

 

“I was kind of thinking about calling it Echoing Green, Dad,” Tenmei said, smiling up at him as the pair of them settled down in the back of the car together.

 

“Oh?” he asked, chuckling softly as Tenmei-chan leaned in close to him, at least as much as his seatbelt would allow. “You really want to follow that closely in my footsteps, Tenmei?”

 

“Yeah, I really would,” Tenmei said, smiling up at him as the pair of them held each other.

 

“All right, Tenmei-chan,” he said, leaning over to kiss the top of Tenmei’s head, before turning his attention to Jotaro. “Where are we headed next?”

 

“According to the reports, there’s another Stand user around here, one that seems to either work in a restaurant or own one,” Jotaro said, as he guided the three of them through the streets of Morioh, making his way to the quaint little restaurant that Jotaro seemed to have been talking about.

 

It did seem like the kind of place that could be owned and run by a single person – or two, depending on what kind of Stand this new person had – and Noriaki found himself wondering just what kind of person would be in charge of this kind of place.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming as she made her way through the park that Cousin Josuke had taken her to, once she’d managed to wear him down enough that he agreed to take her there with that friend of his, Jolyne caught sight of a guitar sitting on a bench.

 

“Cool,” she said, hurrying over to pick up the guitar.

 

Humming as she strummed the thing, Jolyne heard the rustling of someone making their way back toward the bench.

 

“Oi, tyke,” the man with really cool purple hair said, making his way over to the bench where she’d found the guitar she was playing. “What’re you up to?”

 

“Is this your guitar, mister?” she asked, looking up at him; he didn’t just have really cool, purple hair, he had a cool, flashy jacket, too.

 

“Yeah, that’s mine,” he said, plopping down on the bench beside her. “You thinking about becoming a musician, tyke?”

 

“Maybe,” she said, letting the guy take back his guitar, listening as he strummed it. “Grandpa plays jazz, but Dad works with dolphins and stuff.”

 

“Oh? Who’s your Grandpa, tyke?” the purple-haired man asked, turning back to her with an interested expression, even as he kept strumming.

 

“Sadao Kujo. And my Dad’s name is Jotaro,” she said, folding her arms as she listened to him strumming.

 

Though, when he suddenly stopped, Jolyne turned to frown at him. “Hold on, did you say Sadao Kujo?!”

 

“Yeah, that’s Grandpa’s name,” she said, tilting her head curiously; there was a weird sort of smile on his face, before he reached down to strum his guitar really, really fast.

 

“Oh, yeah! Sadao Kujo plays Jazz with the soul of Rock!”

 

Jolyne laughed, as the purple-haired guy went all crazy with the strumming, throwing his head back and cheering; Dad was going to hate him.

 

=DiU=

 

“You take really good care of your hands, Tenmei-chan,” Tonio Trussardi – the Stand user who apparently owned and operated the restaurant they’d come to investigate – said, as the chef looked down at his son’s hands.

 

Noriaki couldn’t help but wonder what he was doing, but the way Trussardi-san examined his and then Jotaro’s hands in turn, and then offered to fix them food, even though they’d just come to this place to meet up with him and find out just what kind of changes his Stand had made in his life. Trussardi-san didn’t quite seem to know what Stands were, however, considering how he’d been acting around them. Jotaro suggested that the three of them – a concept that Noriaki was still kind of struggling to get used to: his first son, little Tenmei-chan, being an actual Stand user – show Trussardi-san their Stands, and then begin explaining their situation from there.

 

Noriaki couldn’t find any reason to object, so he agreed.

 

Once Trussardi-san had made his way back into the main room of the restaurant, Noriaki called out Hierophant Green, Tenmei called out Echoing Green, and Jotaro called out Star Platinum. Trussardi-san’s clear surprise indicated that he truly wasn’t aware of the existence of Stands or their true nature, so it took him a bit of time to establish the groundwork, though Jotaro knew just as much about the subject as he did. Jotaro had never really been good with people, though, so that was why the pair of them had been assigned together.

 

Unofficially, in any case.

 

Once he’d explained just what was going on, Trussardi-san was able to introduce the three of them to his own Stand – which he chose to name Pearl Jam; a Stand that looked like a small swarm of flying tomatoes, of all things, which Tenmei seemed to think was kind of funny – and the four of them all settled down at the table together. Given how Trussardi-san acted, it seemed as though he’d just wanted to help people with the food he made. It also seemed that his Stand possessed at least some kind of healing properties.

 

It seemed that he and Josuke-chan had some kind of fundamental, essential quality in common, in spite of the clear differences he’d come to know of their respective personalities.

 

When the three of them left Trussardi-san and his restaurant, Noriaki wasn’t entirely certain if he was comfortable with the methods that Trussardi-san’s Stand used to repair. Seeing Tenmei’s body being broken down like that… It was only the fact that the process had been completely painless, if not a little shocking, that had kept Noriaki from setting Hierophant Green on Trussardi-san,

 

=DiU=

 

Kakyoin still seemed tense, but given what’d been happening to Tenmei-chan, Jotaro could more than understand what the man was feeling. Hell, he’d have been pissed if he’d had to watch while Jolyne had been broken down and rebuilt by some bastard’s Stand, even if it didn’t seem to hurt, and even if they all had seemed to come out better after it. He was going to make a point of checking up on Jolyne, both since she would have probably gotten bored just hanging around Josuke’s house with Ichigo-chan, and because he’d found himself getting more than a little antsy, seeing what’d happened to Tenmei-chan.

 

Once they all made it back to Josuke’s family home, Jotaro found Ichigo-chan there to meet them at the door.

 

“Jolyne invited a rock star over for dinner,” Ichigo-chan said, as soon as Jotaro had finished opening the door and was about to take his first steps past the threshold.

 

“The hell?” was all he got the chance to say, before the sound of someone playing an electric guitar caught his attention.

 

Making his way into the living room, following the sounds of someone playing what sounded like practice scales, Jotaro found not only Jolyne but also the presumed rock star that she’d invited over for dinner.

 

“Hi, Dad!” Jolyne called, grinning widely at him from behind what seemed to be an adult-sized pair of sunglasses. “Akira-san says he’s a big fan of Granpa Sadao’s music, so I told him you could get him some autographs or something.”

 

Yare, yare daze,” he said, rolling his eyes as the rock star fanboy – something he’d never expected to encounter, and something he could have happily gone the rest of his life without encountering – turning to look at him with that same kind of annoying, starry-eyed expression that he’d seen on the most vapid of his coworkers. Or even those annoying bitches back in high school, though he’d been trying as hard as he could not to think about that.

 

The sound of Kakyoin all but cackling under his breath prompted Jotaro to call out Star so that he could glare at Tenmei-chan’s annoying father while at the same time as he himself glared at the pain in the ass rock star fanboy he was dealing with out of his own eyes.

 

=DiU=

 

Even with the full force of Star Platinum’s glare on him, Noriaki found that he couldn’t quite manage to stop himself from laughing at the sheer frustration in every line of Jotaro’s face and body; even the way Star Platinum made an “I’m watching you” gesture served to communicate the annoyance that Noriaki couldn’t help but find hilarious. Still, the fact that Jolyne seemed to have met up with another of the Stand users that Nijimura-san had created – Akira Otoishi, who was apparently an aspiring musician, for all that his Stand allowed him to either control or channel electrical currents – was kind of unsettling. Jolyne wasn’t even a Stand user, and she’d been drawn to Otoishi-san, or he had been drawn to her.

 

It was almost the same thing that had happened to Tenmei, with the obvious exception that Jolyne hadn’t come out of the situation a Stand user, herself. It wasn’t a comforting thought, that even the families of Stand users seemed to possess the same kind of fate-drawn magnetism that drew Stand users together. Pucci would have probably been able to tell him more about that kind of thing, but Noriaki had never been particularly close to the man.

 

Really, he couldn’t have said that anyone but Dio was close to Pucci at all.

 

As Jotaro’s meeting with Otoishi-san wound down, with his cantankerous old friend reluctantly promising to send Otoishi-san some of his father’s memorabilia, Noriaki chuckled under his breath. Even if their kids were going to end up attracting various Stand users, it didn’t seem like there was anyone in town who would actually hurt them. In fact, given the way all the people they’d met in Morioh seemed to have been just ordinary citizens with ordinary desires, Noriaki supposed that this was really the best way for them to learn about that kind of thing.

 

He wouldn’t have wanted to find out anything that potentially dangerous while they were being forced to deal with Stand users who actually wanted to hurt them; that kind of thing would have been too easy, considering how close they all were to their family.

 

Once Jotaro had managed to get Otoishi-san to leave them alone, notably without attacking or threatening him with his Stand, Noriaki allowed himself to relax. Sure, there seemed to be some remaining Stand users that he and Jotaro hadn’t encountered yet – Jotaro had gone to speak with Nijimura-san about that, and Noriaki was waiting to hear back from him – but Morioh in general seemed to be one of the more pleasant places he’d ever been. Especially considering it was summer at the moment.

 

Looking up for a long moment, Noriaki caught sight of Brando-chan’s secondary Stand, The Duke, folding its wings and diving.

 

Turning to follow the path that The Duke had taken, Noriaki found himself confronted by what seemed to be the flailing form of an invisible baby, of all things. The Duke landed next to what seemed to be the baby’s head, shifting back into a housecat and leaning over the baby.

 

“Looks like we found another Stand user,” Brando-chan said, as The Duke reached out its right, front paw to gently tap the invisible baby they were standing over.

 

“Seems that way,” Noriaki said, feeling strangely detached from the whole situation; Nijimura-san hadn’t mentioned anything like this, and even beyond that he hadn’t seemed to be the kind of man who would shoot a baby to study the effects of the Stand Arrow.

 

Once the pair of them had managed to get the baby settled – since while its Stand didn’t seem to be outright killing it, it was more than obvious that the baby was really too young to gain any kind of control over the Stand they seemed to have been born with – with The Duke shifting into a kangaroo so that it would be able to carry the invisible baby in its pouch. It was more than a little familiar, considering the way that Noriaki himself had grown up, and he found himself wanting to do everything he could for the baby that he and Brando-chan had just found.

 

He didn’t want them – whoever they were – to suffer the same kind of empty, lonely life that Noriaki himself had had, before he’d met Loreena-chan, and then Jotaro and his family.

 

Still, there would be more than enough things to do while they were here in Morioh, searching for the other Stand users that lived in the town. When they made it back to Josuke-chan’s house again, after passing through the bustling crowds that seemed to be a fixture of even small, sleepy town like this, Noriaki allowed himself to relax, at least a bit. However, it seemed as though Jotaro had been waiting for them.

 

=DiU=

 

“Where were you two?” he asked, narrowing his eyes as he watched The Duke hop off toward the bathroom in the form of a kangaroo.

 

“We found a baby,” Kakyoin said, looking over the way that The Duke had gone for a long moment – Jotaro had the feeling he knew why Aunt Alice’s secondary Stand had taken that particular shape, considering what he’d just learned from Kakyoin – before returning his attention to Jotaro. “It seems like the Stand they have makes them invisible, and they’re too young to control it.”

 

“Hmm,” he said, nodding as The Duke made its way back into the room with them.

 

“It looks like that baby we found is a girl,” Aunt Alice said, speaking through The Duke’s mouth as usual. “She’s going to need clothes and food soon, if you want to keep her healthy,” she continued, turning to speak to Kakyoin for a moment, before turning back to him. “What was it you wanted to talk about, Jotaro?”

 

“Nijimura told us about another of the Stand users he created with that damned Arrow,” he growled, narrowing his eyes as he found himself recalling just what kind of an idiot Nijimura had been; he kept talking about how much of a moron his little brother was, and how much he’d needed to find a babysitter for him, but that sounded more and more like bullshit the more he was forced to interact with Nijimura. “He tested the Arrow on a rat,” he continued, not quite able to keep himself from snarling, he was so irritated. “So Josuke and I were going to deal with it. I’d like to have your help, though,” he continued, turning to The Duke.

 

“That does sound like a good idea,” Aunt Alice said, The Duke making its way over to them in the form of a cat, before leaping into his pocket, shifting into a snake as it did so.

 

“Well, I guess a snake would be the best thing for hunting a rat,” Josuke said, looking about as awkward as the kid ever had.

 

He’d get used to things in his own time, but it was kind of annoying to deal with. Still, if nothing else, dealing with so many Stand users would be a good way of getting Josuke used to this kind of thing. Still, a rat… Dealing with that mutt that’d attached itself to Aunt Alice was annoying enough, and Jotaro had never been forced to fight the mutt.

 

Dealing with this rat, on the other hand, could easily be a different story.

 

Once he, Josuke, and The Duke had made their way out to the location that some of his fellow agents had described to him when he’d told them what he was looking for, Jotaro reached into his pocket once he was out the door, stroking The Duke’s snake-form for luck. He got the feeling they were going to need it.

 

“So, a damn rat with a Stand, huh,” Josuke said, folding his arms as the pair of them made their way out of the car.

 

They’d need to leave it behind, since they didn’t know what kind of abilities the rat’s Stand had, and there was always the possibility that this rat would be able to use the car – either against them directly, or else through some other means that Jotaro couldn’t think of at the moment – with whatever kind of abilities its Stand granted to it.

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of Tomoko-chan coming back home drew his attention, and Noriaki smiled gently as she made her way over to the chair where he was sitting with the invisible baby in his lap.

 

“So, it’s an invisible baby, this time, huh?” Tomoko-chan said, a wry sort of smile on her face as she watched what he was doing.

 

“Yes, this time it was an invisible baby,” Noriaki said, chuckling softly as he looked up at Tomoko-chan for a long moment, before returning his attention to the baby resting in his arms. “Jotaro and Josuke-chan are looking for another Stand user, though,” he said, wondering for a moment if he should tell her just what kind of Stand user her son was helping to hunt for.

 

Still, that kind of thing would take a lot of time to explain, and for the moment the baby he was taking care of needed his full attention; just like any baby, really.

 

Tomoko-chan left to get back to her work soon enough, and Noriaki turned his own attention back to the invisible baby in his arms. There would be a lot more he’d need to do, even if he wasn’t going to have the chance to adopt the baby that he and Brando-chan had found, but there would be time for that kind of thing later. For the moment, in deference to everything that had already happened between the time that he and Jotaro had come to this place, Noriaki was going to take what time he could to rest.

 

There was no way of knowing just how much, or how little, time he was going to have to rest and recover from everything that seemed to be determined to happen to them.

 

=DiU=

 

Lightly tossing The Duke into the grass of the field they’d tracked the rat that Nijimura had been stupid enough to give a Stand to while he was testing out the Arrow he’d somehow managed to get his hands on – really, that was the next thing he was going to have to kick his ass and demand some answers over – Jotaro watched for a long moment as the long, sinuous, white snake vanished into the grass.

 

“That doesn’t make sense,” Josuke muttered, looking out into the field where they were both standing. “I mean, I’ve never heard of a rat with a Stand, before,” he continued, at a prompting look from Jotaro.

 

“There’s a Stand using dog who hangs out around Aunt Alice, and Uncle Dio has that falcon of his,” he said, continuing to scan the field with his binoculars, looking for anything that might tell him where that Stand using rat might be hiding; he also wondered if there were any more animals that’d been granted Stands while Nijimura had been fucking around with the Bow and Arrow.

 

He already had the cage prepared – a specialty device, prepared by a joint effort on the parts of both the Speedwagon Foundation, and Brando International; the former assembling the device with the aid of materials supplied by the latter – resting in his off-hand for when The Duke would come back after fetching the rat with the Stand. Narrowing his eyes, even as he adjusted the binoculars he’d been using, Jotaro watched as The Duke reared back, launching itself into the air by way of shifting into a compressed spring, and then crashing back down as an anvil.

 

When The Duke shifted again, this time into what looked like some kind of extinct, man-sized Terror Bird, Jotaro watched with some satisfaction as The Duke brought the Stand using rat back over to where the pair of them were standing. Quickly fetching the transport cage from the back seat of the car, Jotaro opened the top and allowed The Duke to deposit the Stand using rat into the cage he’d carried with them, sealing the top so it wouldn’t be able to get out.

 

At least, not without access to the same kind of dual-powered Stand as Stardust.

 

Strapping the cage into the back seat, Jotaro found himself surprised when The Duke blocked his path back into the car.

 

“While I was tracking the rat, I caught sight of what looked like an empty farmhouse, on the other side of this field,” Aunt Alice reported, once he’d stepped back far enough that she probably felt like he was listening to her properly.

 

Taking out the binoculars he’d been using to study the terrain for any signs of the Stand using rat that the both of them were hunting.

 

“Yeah, I see it,” he reported, narrowing his eyes as he caught sight of the open door leading into the farmhouse. “You think there might be people in there?”

 

“It’s possible,” Aunt Alice said, looking out toward the farmhouse for a long moment. “Still, if they did end up encountering the rat we just captured, they’re going to need the kind of treatment that the Speedwagon Foundation would be best-suited to provide for them.”

 

=DiU=

 

As Jotaro and his aunt – he was still having a bit of trouble wrapping his head around the thought that their family was closely associated with Alice freaking Brando, head of Brando International and hence one of the richest people on the planet – discussed what they were going to do next, Josuke found himself wondering just why in the hell he’d volunteered to come in the first place. Finding himself at these kinds of loose-ends wasn’t what he’d been expecting when Jotaro had first asked him if he wanted to come out to help with his hunt for the rat with the Stand.

 

Sure, it wasn’t like he’d actually wanted to go out hunting rats or anything, but just sitting in the car was starting to get to him.

 

So, when The Duke shifted into a horse, Josuke jumped right up onto the Stand’s back, just before it could turn and make a run for the farmhouse they’d all been watching. After he’d assured both Jotaro and Alice that he was perfectly fine, that he wanted to help, he gripped The Duke’s mane as it galloped up to the farmhouse. There was an eerie sense of emptiness hanging over the place, something that Josuke only became fully aware of when he and The Duke had arrived.

 

“Those people aren’t going to be dead, are they?” he couldn’t help but ask, once the pair of them had arrived.

 

“That really might be the best thing for them,” Alice said, as The Duke nudged the door farther open with its head, shifting into what looked like a really big cat.

 

Shuddering, remembering the kind of things Crazy Diamond could do when he was really pissed at someone, Josuke tried not to freak out. The sight of another rat, darting out from under the kitchen table, startled a yelp out of him as he fell backwards. The Duke darted under the table, grabbing the rat out from under the table with its mouth and dragging it out. The sight of Jotaro and Stardust, both appearing together, allowed him to relax after all of the weird stuff that’d just gone on in front of him.

 

He was just glad that he wasn’t going to have to be dealing with anything too gross.

Chapter 63: Don’t Turn Around

Chapter Text

Sighing softly as he lay, stomach pressed against the warm, grassy field that he’d found – there were a lot of parks in Morioh, and the weather was a lot milder than it was in Cardiff – Tenmei reached out to pick up one of the ladybugs crawling around on the long grass that he’d managed to find a patch of. Ladybugs were almost the prettiest kind of bugs that he’d seen, and certainly the prettiest that he could manage to find easily. Picking up one of the ladybugs on his right pointer-finger, Tenmei yelped as he suddenly found it swatted firmly off.

 

Turning to look up at whoever it was that had just swatted the ladybug he’d been studying off of his hand, Tenmei found himself looking up at a blond man in a pale lilac suit.

 

“Um, hi,” he said, feeling more than a little strange; he hadn’t been expecting to meet anyone in the park, especially not like this.

 

“You should take better care of your hands,” the man said, leaning down and actually picking him up, shifting him until he was sitting on the grass, rather than laying down on it. “Someone your age shouldn’t be playing in the dirt like this,” he continued, laying his large right hand on Tenmei’s head in a way that was clearly meant to be comforting.

 

The whole situation was strange enough that it really just came off as unsettling, though.

 

The man left without saying another word, though, and given the way he was hurrying, Tenmei got the feeling that the man he’d just met wasn’t even sure himself why he’d stopped over to do what he just did. Looking out down the path that the strange man had taken out of the park where they’d both met for a long moment, Tenmei shook his head and turned his attention back to his work. He’d met his share of strange and eccentric people, both in this town and before he’d come here, after all.

 

And really, Rohan-sensei wouldn’t be happy with him if he let something like that distract him from the work he was doing.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way back to his car, Yoshikage Kira found that he couldn’t get the sight of those tiny, perfect hands out of his mind. The nails were perfectly clipped, and even filed, and as he’d picked the boy up, Yoshikage had caught sight of what looked like a nail file in the boy’s left pocket. It seemed like he could take care of his hands, only it seemed that he wasn’t entirely willing to.

 

Finding himself biting his own nails at the thought of those lovely, perfect hands not getting the kind of proper care that they would need to maintain the beauty he had seen…

 

Pulling his finger free from his mouth, Yoshikage climbed into his car. There were things he was going to need, before fate led him back to that boy and his perfect hands, so he would need to collect them.

 

“Don’t worry, dear,” he said, reaching up to gently stroke his latest girlfriend where she rested in his pocket. “I won’t let our son go on like this forever.”

 

=DiU=

 

Sitting down with Aunt Alice and their contact from the Speedwagon Foundation, Jotaro folded his arms and glared down at the cage.

 

“So, you figure that these rats aren’t as smart as Pet Shop or Iggy?” he asked, folding his arms as he looked back up from the cage at the man they were meeting with.

 

“From what we’ve been able to determine, the Arrow’s effect on animals is to just enhance their native intelligence,” the man said, looking from the notebook he’d been writing in to study the rats that’d been dumped in the cage together. “So, considering the previously extant differences in intelligence between the three animals, the Arrow would only be able to do so much.”

 

“Would you like my aid in setting up some kind of testing facility for these two?” Aunt Alice asked through The Duke, tilting the ears of the Serval whose shape The Duke was currently wearing forward, presumably so that she would be able to hear him better.

 

“Thanks for the offer, ma’am, but we’ve previously taken care of that,” their contact said, smiling widely at The Duke. “We’ve always been pleased to have the assistance of you and your company, ma’am.”

 

Their contact spoke with Aunt Alice a bit more, both of them exchanging their goodbyes, while Jotaro kept an eye on the rats they’d captured. Checking the list of remaining Stand users that Nijimura had created in his idiotic efforts to find some kind of babysitter for his kid brother, or just to test the capabilities of that damned Arrow, Jotaro looked up just in time to shake the hand of their contact, before the man turned and left with the cage holding the rats.

 

“So, what’s up next on the agenda, Jotaro?” Aunt Alice asked, once the pair of them were alone in the room that Josuke’s family had let them use for however long they were going to be in Morioh for their research.

 

And now, their hunt for the remaining Stand users that Nijimura had created.

 

“Looks like the only one we have left to find is a cat,” he said, finding himself a bit amused; after all, when The Duke wasn’t traveling as a bracelet on Stardust’s arm, it seemed to take the form of a cat over any of the other animals it could possibly be.

 

“Well, isn’t that something,” Aunt Alice said, sounding more than a little amused by the whole situation.

 

=DiU=

 

Smiling as he saw the sun just beginning to touch the tops of the trees all around him, Tenmei stopped to lean against a fence while he sketched the sight and shadows as they slanted across the trees. It wasn’t quite sunset, but it didn’t look like it was that far off, either. Tenmei almost thought it might have been the time of day that he’d heard called either the Golden Hour or the Magic Hour, since the entire world seemed to be bathed in buttery, golden sunlight. For a moment, even as he continued his sketching, Tenmei found himself wishing that he’d brought at least some of his coloring supplies.

 

Before he could think too much about that kind of thing, however, Tenmei felt a rough, wet cloth pressed against the lower half of his face, firmly covering his mouth and nose. Vaguely, as he saw the world fading away all around him, Tenmei wondered whose arms had locked around his head and waist…

 

=DiU=

 

As his new son’s body relaxed in his arms, the chloroform doing its proper work, Yoshikage Kira caught sight of something white fluttering to the ground. Narrowing his eyes, even as he called out Killer Queen to destroy whatever it was that his new son had been holding so that he would leave no trace of having adopted the boy behind, Yoshikage carried the boy back to where his car was waiting to take the three of them home. Once he’d made it back to his car, Yoshikage tucked his new son’s tiny body carefully into the back of the vehicle.

 

He’d previously gone shopping, both to be certain that he would have everything he needed to care for his new son, and also so that he would have a better chance of concealing him from anyone who might have taken too much of an interest in what he was doing. He’d never truly acted on impulse before, but the indefinable feeling that had drawn Yoshikage to his new son – even before he’d managed to adopt the boy and begin making provisions to bring him home – had been more than he’d been prepared for.

 

Aside from that, fate had never truly denied Yoshikage Kira something he wanted.

 

Once he had made it back home, his girlfriend tucked safely into an inner pocket of his coat and his new son resting in the back seat of his car, Yoshikage Kira made certain to conceal himself completely within his garage before he began unloading his groceries. As well as his new, far more precious cargo.

 

“Isn’t he lovely, dear?” he asked, once he’d managed to bring his new son into the room he was going to prepare for him to stay in.

 

Reaching down to pick up his new son’s right hand – though with the child’s long hair, soft skin, and full lips, he was cute enough to be a daughter, sometimes – Yoshikage smiled as he placed a gentle kiss on the palm of his hand. Tucking his latest girlfriend between his new son’s hands, Yoshikage gently wove their fingers together, and then fetched the sleeping medicine he’d bought to keep him docile. After measuring out the proper dose for someone his son’s age, Yoshikage propped him up in bed so that he could drink it.

 

“What a sweet family we have,” he said, smiling gently at his son, holding his latest girlfriend in his tiny, perfect hands.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way back into his house, his mind and his notebook both filled with new and unsettling information that he and Koichi-kun had learned about Morioh’s history. Apparently, there was a killer hiding in the shadows, and yes, that kind of thing would have made an interesting plot, but there were some things in fiction that should stay fictional.

 

“Tenmei-kun, I need to talk to you,” he said, shoving his way through the door to his assistant’s room.

 

There was no one there, but the sight of the cracked cup and scattered pens let Rohan know that something had gone wrong.

 

Turning at the sound of Koichi-kun gasping, Rohan narrowed his eyes.

 

“Something happened to Tenmei-kun,” Rohan said, casting a brief glance back at the boy who was friends with the one that seemed to be in the process of becoming a part of the fascinating family – either Joestar or Brando, Rohan hadn’t been paying enough attention to determine which of those was the case – before he made his way over to the desk to clean up the spilled pencils and the cracked cup.

 

“We have to tell Jotaro-san and the others!” Koichi-kun said, a worried look on his face.

 

“Yes, I suppose we do,” Rohan said, narrowing his eyes.

 

He wondered if Jotaro would actually punch him in the face this time, or if there was going to be something else. Maybe he and Tenmei-kun’s father would be more interested about what had actually happened to him, rather than the fact that Rohan hadn’t been looking after him so well as he otherwise might. Still, the fact was that no one could have really predicted that something was going to happen to Tenmei-kun. He could probably explain that to Kakyoin-san, at least.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming softly as he shopped, Yoshikage bit his lower lip as he controlled himself. It would hardly do if he gave himself away by being too pleased about things. He’d also have to think of a way to explain himself in a simple way to anyone who asked, since he couldn’t allow himself to be unsociable. At least not in a way that people would notice.

 

Perhaps he could just say that his son was the little sibling of his girlfriends; a little sister or little brother, depending on what he was in the mood for when anyone happened to ask.

 

Once he’d finished purchasing a pair of house slippers and some sleepwear in his new son’s size, Yoshikage made his way back to his car. Turning back into the street that would take him home, Yoshikage found himself stopped at a crosswalk for long enough to be annoying. The red-haired man in the bottle-green coat shuffled halfway across the street, slumped in a way that made him look drunk, before the other man in the white coat and hat hurried to pull him the rest of the way.

 

“Now, now, dear, it takes all kinds to make a town,” Yoshikage said, not wishing for those kinds of ugly feelings to start taking root in his girlfriend.

 

The time would come when he would need to get rid of her, of course, but he’d no desire to make it any sooner than it had to be.

 

Arriving back at home once again, Yoshikage allowed himself to smile, humming softly as he made his way to the room he’d set up for his new son. The sight of his father, leaning over his new son, brought Yoshikage up short for a moment, before Father turned and he got a look at the man’s face.

 

“Where did you find him, Yoshikage? He’s so cute,” Father cooed, smoothing down his new son’s hair, pulling it out of the well-brushed tail it had been bound in when Yoshikage had brought the boy home, but notably leaving in the silver clips that held back the short, softly curled fringes of his hair.

 

“I found him when I was on a date,” Yoshikage said, making his way into the room so that he could lay out the clothes he’d bought for his new son. “I know that you and mother spoke about wanting grand-children, before she died.”

 

Father chuckled softly. “You’ve always been such a dutiful son, Yoshikage.”

 

Smiling softly, as he made his way over to where his new son was laid out so neatly, Yoshikage found himself pleased to note that Father had already taken the liberty of undressing him for bed. Setting his new son’s house slippers down next to the bed, close enough that Yoshikage would be able to fetch them easily when it was time to wake him up in the morning, he folded back the blankets and proceeded to dress his new son in the sleeping clothes he’d purchased for the boy, smiling softly as he tucked his new son back into bed.

 

Yoshikage truly couldn’t think of anything that would make him happier, right at this moment.

 

=DiU=

 

Seeing Kakyoin so defeated like this… Jotaro could say with absolute certainty that it pissed him off. Not even knowing where Tenmei-chan had been taken, and with no other ways of finding out just where he was other than sending out Stardust to spy on everyone in the town, they’d decided to bring in the Old Man to see if he could tell them just where Tenmei Kakyoin had ended up after he’d vanished on his way back to that Kishibe bastard’s house. They all suspected that it was probably another Stand user who’d grabbed the kid, so there was too much of a chance that Stardust would be spotted if they sent it to try to find Tenmei or the bastard who’d kidnapped him.

 

That was why he’d contacted the Old Man and asked him to come to Morioh: so that he could use Hermit Purple to find the bastard who’d kidnapped Tenmei and just where he was hiding himself, so that they could find said bastard and kick his ass. Stardust, who’d gone to fetch the Old Man since the Stand’s range had been growing steadily ever since their pain-in-the-ass Uncle Dio had struck the both of them with that pain-in-the-ass Stand Arrow, quickly arrived with the Old Man in tow.

 

“Alice told me what happened,” the Old Man said, a suitcase that was probably full of the Polaroid cameras he used when he brought Hermit Purple out for something besides fighting clenched firmly in his right hand.

 

“Good,” he said, nodding sharply as he made his way to the room where the rest of their family – both immediate and extended – had all gathered in when he and Kakyoin had come back with news about what had happened to Tenmei. “Let’s get everyone together and find out what the hell’s going on.”

 

Now that they had a concrete plan about what to do, as well as the means to carry it out, that made him feel a little better about things, at least.

 

When they had all settled down around the table and the Old Man had started bringing out the Polaroid cameras he used to track people with Hermit Purple, however, he noticed that Kakyoin seemed to be getting more – not less – tense as the Old Man prepared himself.

 

“Hey,” he called, leaning in so he could get a better look at the expression on Kakyoin’s face. “What’s wrong?”

 

“It’s just… We’re pretty sure the one who kidnapped Tenmei is a Stand user,” Kakyoin said, hands clenching on his pants, seeming like he was trying to hold himself together with everything he had left. “So… What if they can tell that they’re being watched? What if they find out how much Tenmei means to all of us? What if-”

 

Yare yare daze,” he muttered, reaching out to slap a hand over Kakyoin’s mouth. “Stardust, you mind getting Avdol?” he asked, knowing that the quickest way to stop Kakyoin from freaking out was to bring the reader to them.

 

Stardust gave a short, sharp nod, vanishing for a long moment, before returning with Muhammad Avdol in tow. As the Old Man explained just what it was that had happened – why Stardust had been sent to fetch him, what had happened to one of their kids, and why they’d brought him in when they clearly had the Old Man and Hermit Purple right with them – Jotaro found himself looking back at Stardust again. Aunt Alice’s primary Stand did seem to be steadily increasing the range of its teleportation.

 

At first, it’d just been able to teleport between different rooms in a house, then houses in a neighborhood, then between cities, and now countries; he couldn’t help wondering just what kind of a range Stardust was ultimately going to develop. It was a hell of a thing, though, since long-range Stands like Stardust always seemed to be physically weak; Stardust’s secondary ability, phasing through solid matter, meant that physical strength meant pretty much fuck-all, though. And, while it was good to know that Aunt Alice would be able to take care of herself if she ended up on the wrong side of an enemy Stand user, thinking about what that meant

 

No one would be able to escape Aunt Alice, if she was determined to hunt them down.

 

Turning back to watch Avdol as he shuffled the cards in his deck, Jotaro narrowed his eyes as he watched the fortune teller set them out.

 

“The Three of Wands,” Avdol said, laying out the first of his cards. “Your son is still alive,” he drew a pair of cards, though he seemed curious about having drawn two at once. “The Empress, and the King of Swords, both reversed; the man who kidnapped Tenmei has little impulse control, and has a distorted idea of himself and the world around him,” Avdol drew again, a single card this time. “Eight of Swords, reversed; Tenmei was kidnapped for the man’s own selfish, petty reasons,” Avdol took a breath, narrowing his eyes as he returned his attention to the cards again. “The Sun, reversed; the man who kidnapped your son wishes to create a family of his own by force.”

 

“How-” Kakyoin shuddered, folding in on himself briefly, before sitting back down, clenching his fists in his lap in a clear effort to compose himself again. “How can we save him?”

 

Avdol brushed his long fingers over the cards, a look of concentration on his face. “Eight of Wands, reversed; we will need to operate carefully, if we wish to take Tenmei back without a violent confrontation.”

 

“That’s good to know,” Kakyoin said, slumping back down on the couch, clearly relived.

 

“Well, we at least know he’s still in the city,” he muttered, folding his arms.

 

“Yes,” Avdol said, nodding. “With this many Stand users in a single place, fate would certainly keep the kidnapper within Morioh. However, I suspect that such a man would confine himself to the outskirts of the town, if only to keep his activities a secret.”

 

“Yeah, we’re probably going to need Nijimura for this,” he grumbled, not entirely fond of the idea that he was going to need the help of the idiot who’d been responsible for fuck knew how many Stand users wandering around the city, but knowing that a long-range colony-type Stand like Bad Company would be best suited for searching the outskirts of Morioh for anyone who fit the profile they’d been able to piece together.

 

“It does sound like that would be best,” Kakyoin said, sounding more settled now, now that they had something resembling a plan.

 

“I’m glad that I was able to aid you in your search,” Avdol said, rising back to his feet as he tucked away the Tarot cards he’d been using. “Still, if that is all you needed from me, I think it would be best that I return to my shop.”

 

“Yeah,” he said, nodding. “Thanks for being so willing to do this. I know it couldn’t be easy, with time-zones and all.”

 

“Yes,” Avdol said, a wry sort of smile on his face. “Even Stardust’s abilities cannot entirely conquer time.”

 

Aunt Alice’s Stand smirked briefly, sauntering over to flick Avdol on the forehead, before teleporting the both of them back to Egypt, returning in what seemed to be the blink of an eye. It was always more than a little strange, seeing that. At the moment, however, there were a lot of other things they were going to have to do; starting with getting back in contact with Nijimura, which probably meant getting back into contact with Josuke and the rest of his group again.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming softly to himself, having returned home from St. Gentlemen so that he could have lunch with his cute son, Yoshikage Kira made his way over to the dining table to set the bag down, then to the cupboard so that he could fetch a pair of plates. Once he’d finished setting out the chicken katsu sandwiches for himself and his cute little son, Yoshikage made his way back to the room he’d given to the boy.

 

Smiling as he leaned down over the cute little boy he’d adopted just about half a day ago, Yoshikage leaned down to lift him up out of the bed he was laid out on.

 

“I hope you enjoy having dinner with us,” he said, still considering just what he was going to name his sweet little boy with the lovely hands. “I managed to find two sandwiches for us; they’re chicken katsu, so I’m sure you’ll enjoy them. Don’t worry about washing your hands; I’ll take care of that for you,” he said, stopping off at the sink, bracing the little boy’s body against his own so he could help him stand up.

 

Lathering up both of their hands with lemon-scented soap, Yoshikage smiled as he felt the boy’s tiny fingers between his own.

 

“I’m so glad to have met you,” he said, gently settling his cute little son down in a chair next to him, settling his girlfriend down on the table between them. “You’re a wonderful addition to our family.”

 

After taking two bites of his own sandwich, Yoshikage moved to settle down next to his cute little son. Picking up the sandwich he’d set out for the boy, Yoshikage pressed it against his son’s lips and gently helped him to eat it. He’d had to drug the boy, to keep him calm since he’d been so startled when he woke up in his new home, so it was no surprise that he wasn’t able to eat for himself.

 

Yoshikage didn’t mind; whether it was one of his girlfriends or his adorable new son, Yoshikage could hardly complain about taking care of the people he’d chosen to be his family.

Chapter 64: Sleepwalk

Chapter Text

When they’d managed to make contact with Josuke again, Jotaro quickly explained just what in the hell had happened during the time he’d been at school with the rest of his friends, and he’d soon enough managed to secure the cooperation of Keicho Nijimura – short-sighted pain in the ass that he was – and the colony Stand Bad Company.

 

“I can’t believe Tenmei-chan ended up like this,” Josuke said, fidgeting on the couch as he folded his arms across his chest.

 

“Yeah,” he said, looking over at where Avdol had been sitting.

 

He didn’t like it, but there really had been no way for them to tell just what kind of Stand the bastard who’d kidnapped Tenmei-chan possessed; it could have been something that’d let whoever the hell it was know that they were being watched when the Old Man tried to look in on them with Hermit Purple.

 

“Here.”

 

“Huh?” he asked, looking down at the cup of tea that’d been pressed into his right hand.

 

“You all looked like you could use some tea,” Tomoko-san said, looking like she’d been looking in on them for long enough to see the way Avdol had come and gone so suddenly; he wondered if she had questions, or if she’d gotten used to the kind of weird shit Stands brought into peoples’ lives.

 

Josuke had one, so there was the chance she’d known what she was getting into.

 

=DiU=

 

She and Jotaro had agreed that Dio – with his penchant for grandiose gestures and his complete lack of anything even resembling subtlety – wasn’t to be told what was going on in Morioh. None of them wanted to see the sleepy town razed to its foundations, which was bound to happen if Dio found out what had happened to Tenmei. Still, the fact that her own investigations into the shadow-faction within Passione – a faction that seemed to be under the command of someone who went by the name of “Solido Nazo”,  a name which could have easily have been every bit as fake a name as “Jack Harper” – were finally starting to bear some kind of fruit meant that she couldn’t easily abandon it.

 

No matter how much she wanted to take a more direct hand in the investigation her family was engaging in, there were still people looking to “Jack Harper” to guide them and unite them in common cause.

 

“So, that’s how many of our cells seem to be infiltrated by that bastard’s people, Capo.”

 

“Thank you for keeping me posted, Bruno,” she said, feeling again the odd resonance in her throat as she spoke with Jack Harper’s voice. “Is there something else you have to report?” she asked, since Bruno was still standing in the room, seeming as though he had something else on his mind.

 

“I don’t mean to intrude, Capo, but you seemed distracted by something while we were speaking,” Bruno said, drawing himself up to his full height.

 

Bruno Buccellati had always been a protective sort, it was what had led him to join up with Passione in the first place, and further to stand with “Jack Harper’s” faction within the gang. And now, it seemed, it was leading him to want to take a hand in the search for Tenmei Kakyoin. Not that he knew there was a search for anyone, at least not currently, but there was more than a slight chance that Bruno would insist on finding out.

 

That was just the kind of person he was.

 

“A friend of mine has been having some family troubles, but it’s nothing you need to concern yourself with, Bruno,” she said, suspecting that such would hardly be the end of things.

 

“If it’s family, Capo, you should know that it can’t be nothing,” Bruno said, folding his arms.

 

“I hardly said it was nothing, Bruno, but the situation is taking place in Japan, and we have our own problems here,” she said, watching as Bruno’s expression grew steadily more determined. “And, even if you did insist on going there yourself, you’d spend most of your first day there essentially recovering from jet lag. There’d also be the language barrier to deal with, since you’ve never given me the impression that you can speak Japanese, Bruno.”

 

=DiU=

 

“I’ll find a way to say what I need to, but if these people are famiglia and they’re suffering, then I should be there to help them,” he said.

 

Harper wasn’t the kind of person who would doubt his resolve, Bruno knew, but the man had always been a meticulous sort; Harper wouldn’t about to allow any of their people to walk blithely into a situation they weren’t prepared for. It was one of the reasons Bruno admired the man so much, but sometimes Harper could worry too much about the small details. After he’d gotten Harper to to tell him the details, that a family friend of Alice Brando’s had had their son kidnapped by some jumped-up bastard, and when he’d managed to convince Harper that he could help even in spite of the language-barrier and the jet lag, Harper made a call.

 

Alice Brando’s Stand, a strange figure with hidden eyes that apparently went by the name Stardust, appeared in front of him, and before he had the time to so much as blink, Bruno found himself in another place. Giving him a last pat on the right shoulder, and directing his gaze to an empty sofa, Stardust vanished nearly before Bruno had had a chance to call out his thanks. Looking around at the room he had ended up in, Bruno found that he was standing in what seemed to be the salon of a quaint little house.

 

Not tiny; not like the one where he, his father, and the mother who had left them when Bruno was just a boy had once lived, but just small enough to be cozy for a family their size.

 

Finding a sheet of paper, Bruno wrote a note to the people who lived in this place, before settling himself down on the sofa to sleep. His meeting with Harper had been late in the night, around ten ‘o’clock, but the Capo had seemed particularly concerned with the time difference between their home in Italy and this place in Japan. Once he’d finished with the letter, Bruno looked around for a blanket.

 

He’d get some sleep, and then speak to whoever it was that needed help to find the lost member of their family.

 

=DiU=

 

After he’d gotten what sleep he could, with Tenmei-chan missing and no concrete direction to begin looking for the kidnapper, Noriaki made his way to the dining room so he could have breakfast with Ichigo-chan and the remainder of their friends and family. Noriaki had no sooner made his way to the dining room than he found Jotaro and Gio Brando, looking down at what seemed to be a letter.

 

“Who’s that from?” he asked, still feeling a bit too tense to be as formal as he usually was.

 

“Don’t know; I brought Gio in here since he’s the only one who actually knows how to read Italian,” Jotaro said, turning to glance at him, before returning his attention to Gio where he was sitting with the letter in his hands.

 

“His name is Bruno Buccellati, so good luck pronouncing that,” Gio said, the grin on his face making him look even more like his father than usual.

 

“Funny, kid,” Jotaro grumbled, stern expression deepening in the face of Gio Brando’s unrepentant grin. “What’s he want?”

 

“He came over because he found out about what happened to Tenmei, and he wanted to help however he could,” Gio said, glancing back down at the letter.

 

Jotaro grunted, not seeming particularly impressed. “If he doesn’t have a Stand, all he’s going to be good for is moral support.”

 

“Given what he wrote, I don’t think he’ll mind that,” Gio said, orange-red eyes flickering as he read the letter over again.

 

Finding himself more than little curious about the kind of person who would come all the way to Japan from Italy just for the chance to help people he didn’t even know, Noriaki found that he did feel a bit better just knowing that there was someone else so kind out there who wanted to help them.

 

=DiU=

 

“It’s all right, dear, I know you’re concerned about your little brother,” Yoshikage said, smiling softly as he patted the inside pocket where he’d stored his girlfriend. “I’ll be sure to pick up something nice for him, too.”

 

Making his way through the store, Yoshikage found himself considering just what kind of nice present he would pick up for his son. He also found himself considering just how and where he was going to be able to replace this girlfriend of his. She was starting to smell, and even though he did keep her sprayed as well as he could, he’d been starting to notice it.

 

There was too much of a chance, if he let things go on from here, that other people would start to notice her, too.

 

So, keeping an eye out for both a gift for the sweet child with the perfect little hands he’d adopted not so long ago, as well as somewhere he might be able to find a new girlfriend, Yoshikage continued on his way through the shop. Once he’d managed to find a pair of nail clippers that were nice enough to be cute for either a boy or a girl, Yoshikage made his way out of the store. He hadn’t managed to find a new girlfriend inside the store, so he’d have to find another one before he got home.

 

Running his thumb over the nail clippers he’d purchased for his cute little son, Yoshikage spotted something odd out of the corner of his left eye. It seemed to be some kind of remote-controlled toy; a small helicopter, roughly the size of his lower arm, flying just above the heads of the crowd. No one seemed to notice it, so Yoshikage knew that pointing it out would have only served to draw unwanted attention to him. Turning his eyes firmly back to the path he was walking on, Yoshikage continued on his way down the path back to his car.

 

There would be time for him to find a new girlfriend on the way there, Yoshikage would make sure of it.

 

=DiU=

 

Stopping off at the open-air café table, Josuke sighed as he set The Duke’s cat form down on the table in front of him.

 

That didn’t work,” he grumbled, beginning to wonder if they were ever going to be able to find Tenmei-chan.

 

“It’s only been a day,” Alice Brando said, gently setting her Stand’s right, front paw on his folded arms; he hadn’t met the woman in person, but had heard a lot about from Jotaro and the other members of their family. “For the moment, we have to concentrate on putting out feelers. Searching an entire town with these methods was never going to be easy, Josuke.”

 

“Yeah, I guess,” he said, not particularly happy about how things were going, but not having much of anything he could say in response.

 

From what he’d heard, Alice Brando was old enough to know just how these kinds of things worked. After the pair of them had waited to see if they’d encounter any more of Morioh’s wandering Stand users, and in his case to have an early lunch, he made his way back home with The Duke on his right shoulder in the shape of some kind of a bird. He didn’t know just what to make of Alice Brando and her two stands.

 

Sure, Keicho Nijimura and his Bad Company was an entire army unto itself, but Bad Company did clearly have a theme. There wasn’t the same kind of theme uniting The Duke with Stardust, at least not that Josuke could tell, since The Duke could shape shift into all kinds of animals, and Stardust could walk through solid objects and teleport. There wasn’t nearly the same kind of connection between the two of them that there was between every member of Bad Company.

 

It was weird, but it was hardly the weirdest thing Josuke had found himself dealing with lately.

 

Once he’d managed to make it back home, back to where Jolyne-chan, Ichigo-chan, their dads, and those new kids Gio-kun and Bruno-kun. Gio-kun and Bruno-kun were both a few years older than the other three kids they’d met, being young teenagers rather than little kids, but Bruno-kun didn’t seem to speak Japanese at all. Josuke didn’t quite understand why someone who didn’t speak the language would have come into the country, but he’d heard it had something to do with helping them to look for Tenmei-chan.

 

And sure, it was nice of Bruno-kun to think of them like that, but there wasn’t much someone could do when they were constantly on the other side of a language-barrier.

 

=DiU=

 

Sitting on the bench, kicking her legs, Jolyne dug in her right pocket to find the picture that she carried around with her. Chewing her lower lip as she looked down at Tenmei and the dummy, both of them gathered around her to celebrate her last birthday, Jolyne tucked her right leg up against her chest.

 

“Hey, you look down.”

 

Turning at the sound of a familiar voice, Jolyne saw Akira Otoishi making his way over to the bench where she was sitting.

 

“Oh, hey guitar guy,” she said, turning back to look at the guy with the cool, purple hair for a little bit, before turning her attention back to the picture.

 

“Something bad happen to your friends?”

 

“Some bastard kidnapped Tenmei-kun,” she said, pointing him out in the picture she was holding. “We haven’t been able to find him, even though we have everyone looking.”

 

“Ah, so that’s what’s been getting to you,” the rocker guy said, plucking a few notes on that electric guitar of his. “You know, whenever I feel bad about something, I strum out a tune on my axe here,” he said, offering it to her. “Why don’t you try it out yourself, tyke?”

 

Biting the tip of her tongue, Jolyne let the rocker guy set his guitar down in her lap, Jolyne started plucking out a tune on it. Thinking about how angry she was about that bastard who’d kidnapped Tenmei-kun, whoever and wherever they were, Jolyne started strumming her own tune on the guitar that the rocker guy had let her borrow today.

 

=DiU=

 

Sighing as he continued on his way through Morioh, pausing for a moment to hang up another “Missing Person” poster for Tenmei-chan, Noriaki took a deep breath and gathered his composure again. He wasn’t going to be able to make any progress toward finding Tenmei-chan if he let himself wallow in sadness the way he’d been doing since Tenmei-chan had been kidnapped to begin with.

 

The sight of what looked like a small bug, running by his feet drew Noriaki’s attention for a moment, before he turned his attention back to the posters he was hanging; he wasn’t going to let himself be distracted now of all times.

 

“Hey, what’re you putting up all those pictures for?” asked the voice of what had to be the user of the Stand that Noriaki had just encountered. “Did something bad happen?”

 

“My eldest son was kidnapped,” he said, glancing down at the small, insectile Stand – roughly half the size of any one of the soldiers that made up Keicho Nijimura’s Bad Company – that seemed to be so interested in what he was doing. “We’ve been looking for him on our own for a long time, but we haven’t managed to find anything on our own yet. So, I had these made up,” he said, taking another piece of tape and attaching it to the phone pole in front of him.

 

“What, you mean he’s somewhere far away from you, separated from his mommy and daddy?” the Stand user, who seemed to be a child around the same age as Tenmei-chan, asked with what sounded like a quaver in his voice.

 

Seconds later, a massive crowd of those same, insectile Stands appeared all around him, descending on the stack of posters Noriaki had been carrying around. Each one of them grabbed a poster, then hurried over to take a piece of tape, before vanishing into the distance carrying their prizes.

 

“Wait a second,” he said, sending out Hierophant Green to pick one of them up before it could grab one of the remaining posters and run off with the rest of them. “Thank you for helping me with this, but who are you? I mean, what’s the name of your Stand?”

 

“I’m Shigekiyo Yangyu, and this is my Harvest,” the user, Shigekiyo-kun apparently, said though the tiny Stand in Hierophant Green’s right hand. “But, I didn’t know that anyone else could see these. You said they’re called Stands. mister?”

 

“Yes, that’s what they’re called,” he said, as more iterations of Harvest reached out to take the last few posters he’d been holding, then came up to grab more tape from him so that they could hang them up. “They also have names of their own; mine is Hierophant Green. And you called yours Harvest, right?”

 

“Yeah, my Stand is called Harvest,” Shigekiyo-kun said, sounding earnest and more than a little curious. “Are you going to be okay, mister? My mommy and daddy would be really sad if I went missing, so do you want me to do anything else for you?”

 

“Thank you, Yangyu-kun, but that’s all,” he said, finding himself smiling almost involuntarily; it really helped to have someone here to help, not only with the posters, but also someone to talk to. “Thank you for your help.”

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way into the beauty salon, Yoshikage looked around, quickly finding the woman that seemed to be in charge of the salon.

 

“I’m looking for a gift for my girlfriend’s little sister,” he said, making his way over to the desk she was standing behind. “Do you have any suggestions?”

 

“Well, if she’s looking for luck in love, you can bring her this lipstick,” the woman working the counter said, picking out a tube of bright, pink lipstick from a holder with a great many other colors.

 

Yoshikage chuckled. “She’s a bit young to be thinking about love. Do you have something else?”

 

The woman at the counter – Yoshikage was trying not to think about her hands, since there was too much attention on her as the owner of this salon for him to go back to his quiet life if he acted against her – turned to the small rack of lipstick again, picking out a paler, powder pink.

 

“Well, if you want something for a young girl, this lipstick will bring her happiness if she wears it every day,” the woman said, handing over the tube to him.

 

“Yes, thank you,” he said, paying for the lipstick and then turning to leave.

 

He’d found a new girlfriend on his way home, and the little boy he’d adopted was cute enough to be a girl when Yoshikage found himself in the mood for that, so after he’d paid for the lipstick and some cute hair ties he’d spotted Yoshikage left for home again. Smiling as he climbed back into his car, Yoshikage patted the front pocket of his jacket.

 

“Don’t worry, dear,” he said, taking the last turn that would lead him to the house that his family had owned since before Japan had been a united country. “Your little sister is going to love the gifts I’ve picked up for her.”

 

Parking his car in the driveway, Yoshikage made his way back into his house for the night. He was pleased, at least, to have managed to find something to bring home for the child he’d adopted. Something cute for the little girl she was going to be for as long as this current girlfriend of his was around. She always had enjoyed cute things, and Yoshikage was certain that she would love how cute her new little sister looked when he brought her into their new home.

 

Making his way deeper into his house, into the room where he’d left the child he’d adopted not so long ago, Yoshikage smiled all the wider as he made his way over to the large bed.

 

“Here she is, dear,” he said, making his way over to the bed where he’d laid the sleeping child out. “Her name is Yoshiko,” he said, having finally decided on a name that could be easily changed depending on whether his next girlfriend wanted a little brother or a little sister. “Isn’t she cute? Oh, that reminds me,” he said, taking out the lipstick he’d bought earlier.

 

Smiling as he gently braced the back of Yoshiko’s head against his left hand, Yoshikage carefully applied the pale pink lipstick that he’d bought to Yoshiko’s soft, full lips. She really did look cute in the lipstick he’d bought for her. Yoshikage didn’t quite know if it would bring the kind of happiness that the woman working at the salon had implied, but it was cute, all the same.

 

=DiU=

 

Glancing down at the form of the fate-reading manga that Oingo had shown to him when he and his brother Boingo had come to the Desert Rose in search of answers as to just what or who the mysterious figure that seemed to be steadily revealing itself at the back of the manga that Oingo carried with him. As of yet he, Dio, hadn’t managed to determine anything but the most basic appearance of the figure. He, Dio, knew that it possessed four arms, two legs, and held the same pose as one of the Shiva statues that he, Dio, had come across during his travels.

 

However, it was not the mysterious figure steadily appearing on the back cover of Oingo’s fate-reading manga that held his attention at the moment, it was the smaller figure in the bed. The one that looked more than a little like his sweet little Tenmei Kakyoin.

 

“When did this appear?” he, Dio, asked, narrowing his eyes as he looked down at the page open in front of the three of them.

 

“Just a few minutes before we came out here to tell you about it, Mr. Dio, yes!” Oingo exclaimed, looking up at him, Dio, with enough earnestness that he doubted the boy was lying to him.

 

Oingo had always been a rather interesting mix of excitable and shy, but one thing the boy firmly was not was deceptive. He’d no talent for it, for one thing, and he lacked the confidence for another. So, there was little chance that the image they were looking at could be anything but what it seemed.

 

No chance that it could be anything but an image of his sweet little Tenmei Kakyoin, with some interloper hovering over him as he slept.

 

“Have you managed to determine where this is taking place, Oingo?” he, Dio, asked; there would be little that he, Dio, could manage personally if he didn’t find out just where it was that his little Tenmei Kakyoin was being held.

 

And just who he was being held by, but that could come once he knew where the interloper had hidden himself; there was no question that sweet Noriaki would have already ripped the room he’d glimpsed in the comic to absolute ribbons with his Hierophant Green if he’d known just where his dear firstborn was currently being held.

 

“Unfortunately not,” Oingo said, sagging slightly into his seat. “I don’t recognize anything in the room, and none of the pictures in my comic have been of the outside.”

 

“Troublesome,” he, Dio, muttered as he picked up the comic, flipping through it in an effort to determine if there was anything that he, Dio, could recognize.

 

He saw pictures of his Littlest Jojo, his sweet Noriaki, Little Lori, and some other boy they seemed to have just met. The entirely-too stylized illustrations of the comic made it difficult to tell, but there seemed to be some kind of familiarity between the pair of them.

Chapter 65: Through The Fire And Flames

Chapter Text

Still, there was little that he, Dio, could determine from the inside of rooms where people appeared to be having either conversations or dinner – most of them unfamiliar even through the layer of stylization – and even taking a closer look at the pages made little difference.

 

“Yes, I suppose it wouldn’t do any good to go haring off without even a destination,” he, Dio, muttered thoughtfully, setting the comic back down on the table and firmly shutting it.

 

It was a troublesome thing to think about, but there were ways that he, Dio, would be able to act in defense of his sweet family. He’d have to make contact with the Speedwagon Foundation, since they were the most likely to know where his Littlest Jojo had gone, if he hadn’t been sent there on their orders, anyway. His Littlest Jojo was a willful sort, and since he’d managed to negotiate a freelance position for himself there was the chance that he’d gone to wherever Oingo’s comic was displaying on his free time.

 

In which case, the Speedwagon Foundation would have no reason to monitor his whereabouts, and it would be all the more troublesome to determine just where his Littlest Jojo and the rest of his sweet family had ended up.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as one of his soldiers zip-lined down the side of a window on the far side of a house in Morioh’s villa section – to the northeast – Keicho Nijimura found himself looking down at the top of a head of strawberry blonde hair. Since that was the exact color of Tenmei Kakyoin’s hair, Keicho ordered his soldier to mark the windowsill so that he would be able to more easily pick his particular villa out from the rest of them. Leading the soldier up to the roof of the building and then ordering them to transform into a jet, Keicho allowed his attention to leave that particular instance of Bad Company.

 

Turning to the map he’d been marking off as his forces ran their various searches of Morioh and its surrounding environs, Keicho circled the villa and then set the map down. He’d been working on his part of their search for most of the day, at least after he’d returned home from school. And, while Keicho knew that it was important for him to attend to his studies, at the moment he wished that he could have avoided the hassle of attending classes.

 

This was the kind of work he’d be doing once he had become a member of Blackwatch, and so Keicho thought it would be best if he used the opportunity he was being provided to practice the skills he was going to need to make himself useful to the organization.

 

Looking down at the map he’d marked for further, more in-depth searching, Keicho rose from his desk and gathered his supplies for school. For the moment this interruption to his daily routine had to be tolerated, and in that way Keicho found himself all the more eager to be done with it. Dropping out would hardly do, of course, since he still had to set at least some kind of an example for Okuyasu.

 

Still, perhaps this task would serve to prove his resolve to those members of Alice Brando’s family who had come to Morioh, and they in turn would pass the word on to the vampire herself.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming softly as he made his way into the kitchen with his new girlfriend in his pocket, Yoshikage tugged Yoshiko’s unresisting form over to the table so that he could get her settled for their morning breakfast. Dishing out breakfast for himself, Yoshikage served little Yoshiko porridge, which would be an easy meal for her to take her pill with. Pinching her cute little nose shut, Yoshikage waited for her to open her mouth so that he could pop the sleeping pill he’d cut in half to keep Yoshiko from panicking or running away the way she might have otherwise done.

 

With his right hand over her mouth, Yoshikage rubbed her throat to encourage her to swallow the half pill, then did the same with the porridge that he’d prepared for her to have for breakfast.

 

Once their little family had finished eating breakfast, and it was nearly time for him to leave for the day, Yoshikage carried little Yoshiko back to her room so that he could tuck her back into bed. Looking down at her nails for a moment, Yoshikage noted that they were starting to grow long enough that they would need to be trimmed. Making a note of it, he fixed the covers and made his way out of the house for the morning.

 

=DiU=

 

When his old friend had called upon him, Enrico found himself with far more questions than could be answered during the short time the pair of them had been able to speak with each other. Though apparently, Noriaki Kakyoin’s eldest son had been kidnapped, so he would need the comfort that Enrico was best-suited to give at such a moment. And so, after making contact with the Speedwagon Foundation, Enrico said his farewells and made his final preparations to depart.

 

Dio embraced him for a long moment, and Enrico kissed his old friend’s brow the way he’d done so many times when their respective duties had called them away from the others’ company. When they parted fully, Enrico making his way over to a nearby phone so that he could contact the Speedwagon Foundation and see if Jotaro Joestar and his partner Noriaki Kakyoin had been dispatched to wherever they were currently staying on some manner of assignment, or if the pair of them were simply on vacation.

 

The former would be simpler to track, of course, since Enrico would only need to ask them where the pair of them had been dispatched to.

 

Once he’d managed to find out that Jotaro and Noriaki had been dispatched on the Foundation’s business. Dispatched to a small town by the name of Morioh, a small town that seemed to possess a disproportionate amount of Stand users, with the apparent aim of finding out just what kind of effects that so many Stand users living in such close proximity had on the ordinary people living there. It was a rather interesting thought, but it appeared as though something had gone wrong.

 

Once he’d managed to arrange transport for himself to Morioh, Enrico found himself wondering just what kind of situation he would find when he arrived.

 

=DiU=

 

The idea of tracking down that Yangyu kid who’d helped Kakyoin-san with hanging up those posters that were meant to help him find his kid had come to Josuke as at least some way to help the old man feel better while they kept looking for Tenmei-chan. So, after he’d had breakfast, Josuke headed off to school to talk to that Nijimura guy. He’d been all around Morioh looking for signs of where Kakyoin-san’s older kid might be, so he’d be the best chance to find out if he’d seen the kid who’d helped Jotaro’s friend hang up those posters he’d been printing out.

 

Josuke thought there were enough of them that even someone without a Stand would have a good chance of finding Tenmei-chan, but Kakyoin-san clearly needed something to do to stop himself from going crazy with worry about his kid. Sure, Ichigo-chan was right there with him, but he was worried about what could be happening to his big brother, too. Aside from that, it wasn’t fair for a little kid like Ichigo-chan to have to look after their parents when they were as worried about their kid as Kakyoin-san as his wife were.

 

Once he’d made it through the first half of the day, Josuke kept his eyes open for a place where he would be able to speak with Nijimura-san. After he’d caught up with with Nijimura-san, he caught up on everything Nijimura-san had been keeping his Stand colony looking out for, and then he asked him if he’d seen the kid Kakyoin-san had been talking to. As it turned out, he hadn’t been in that area of the town, but he was at least curious enough about someone else with a Colony-type Stand like his own Bad Company to look into it.

 

So, even if it was just for his own reasons, Josuke had managed to get Nijimura-san to look in on that Yangyu kid, to try to catch up with him so that he could see if the kid would be willing to come back to meet Kakyoin-san; after he’d done so much to help the man, it was only right that he get the chance to be thanked in person. By both of Tenmei-chan’s parents.

 

=DiU=

 

Finding himself smiling, as he made his way back into the cozy home that he had made for himself, his many girlfriends, and now his cute little daughter, Yoshikage Kira made his way to little Yoshiko’s room. Her nails had been growing longer just like his would, and as he set his latest girlfriend down on the small table near her bed, Yoshikage glanced out the window. For a moment, he thought he’d spotted some kind of small animal or something outside, near the sill of Yoshiko’s window.

 

There was nothing presently there, so Yoshikage supposed that it must have been either a squirrel or a small bird, and hence had scampered or fluttered off somewhere.

 

Taking out the four bottles he’d brought with him, Yoshikage set them down neatly on the tatami mats before making his way over to fetch Yoshiko-chan out of her bed. Taking off the cute socks he’d bought for her, Yoshikage clipped her delicate nails sorting those from each hand and foot into their corresponding jars, then sealing up and labeling them. These were only the first of the collection that she was going to have, true, so Yoshikage had labeled them accordingly.

 

Once he’d finished trimming Yoshiko’s nails, Yoshikage carefully filed them with the nail file he’d found in her pocket when they’d first met.

 

Before he could carry her back to bed, however, the window burst inward, almost sounding as though it had been destroyed by Killer Queen’s First Bomb. However as what seemed to be a trio of jets, accompanied by a quartet of helicopters, flew in through the space that had previously been occupied by the window of his sweet little Yoshiko-chan’s room, Yoshikage realized that it had been something akin to Killer Queen’s First Bomb.

 

Calling his Killer Queen back to his side, Yoshikage narrowed his eyes as he saw the seven aircraft skimming through the cloud of debris and shrapnel that the side of his family home had been reduced to. It was infuriating, being forced to fight in his own home, being hounded like this, when all he’d ever wished to do was live a happy, quiet life with his little family. Still, the fact that this invader seemed to have both a many, many iterations of itself and fully capable of taking to the air made things rather more troublesome than they could have been otherwise.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he gave the orders to Bad Company’s air forces, Keicho Nijimura directed a force of soldiers and flatbed trucks to retrieve Tenmei Kakyoin. As his Bad Company leaped down from the trucks they had been riding, splitting up into smaller groups to lift each of Kakyoin-chan’s limbs, while a larger force made their way over to his main body to lift him up and set him down on the backs of the convoy gathered around him. With a single thought, Keicho directed a single soldier to check Kakyoin-chan’s eyes.

 

Unresponsive, dilated… Clearly, Kakyoin-chan had been drugged, while this kidnapper had had him in his possession. It was a troublesome thing, and would likely cause Kakyoin-san and his wife a great deal of distress when they managed to recover him, but for the moment that was a concern for later.

 

For the moment, Keicho gave a modicum of his attention to the seven Bad Company aircraft on harassment duty for the blond man who had been keeping Kakyoin-chan prisoner in his house, memorizing the lines of his face as the fact that he seemed to have a Stand of his own. It seemed to be a rather short-range type, though given the explosions that the Stand seemed to be able to create, getting within its range would hardly be advisable. So Keicho ordered Bad Company to keep the blond’s attention from falling on Kakyoin-chan while he was evacuating the boy.

 

Once he’d managed to move Kakyoin-chan out into the yard, under the open sky where Alice Brando’s secondary Stand White Rabbit was able to land, transform into what looked like some kind of enormous deer with a blunt face, a flap under its neck, and a truly massive rack of antlers, allowing the Bad Company soldiers to climb up onto the Stand’s back. Strapping Kakyoin-chan to the enormous deer’s back, Keicho directed his soldiers to climb up onto the antlers of the enormous deer, emplacing artillery there, just in case his aircraft were not able to hold the man back.

 

White Rabbit set off, his small group of Bad Company soldiers strapped firmly to the shape-shifting Stand’s back, and Keicho turned his attention back to the man who had taken Kakyoin-chan captive not so long ago.

 

 

The sound of galloping hooves drew his attention, just as Noriaki had found himself wondering where he and Jotaro were going to be able to search for Tenmei-chan. Looking out the front window, Noriaki leaped to his feet as he saw White Rabbit, Stardust, a group of Bad Company soldiers, and Tenmei-chan all coming toward the front of Josuke-kun’s house, where all of them were staying.

 

“Looks like Nijimura managed to find our kid,” Jotaro said, tugging at the brim of his hat as he settled back down on the sofa that the pair of them had settled down on, during the time they’d spent looking for Tenmei-chan with the other Stand users they’d met in Morioh.

 

“I’m glad we managed to find him,” Josuke-kun said, smiling at the both of them as the three of them waited for White Rabbit and its passengers to arrive at the house.

 

“Yes,” Noriaki said, squeezing his hands together, before he rose from his seat to open the door, allowing White Rabbit to make its way inside. “It’s good to have you back,” he said, reaching out to help Tenmei-chan down from the currently moose-shaped Stand, as the Bad Company soldiers who had been sitting on White Rabbit’s antlers climbed down, helping him to bring Tenmei-chan back down to the carpeted floor.

 

“It looks like he’s been drugged,” one of the soldiers said, speaking in Keicho Nijimura’s voice, the same way White Rabbit would do, when it chose to speak to someone.

 

“I can help with that,” Josuke-kun said, quickly hopping up from the couch where he’d been sitting, Crazy Diamond appearing at his side in an instant. “Crazy Diamond!”

 

Stepping back as Josuke-kun’s Stand quickly healed Tenmei-chan of whatever kinds of drugs had been forced on him by whoever had kidnapped him in the first place, Noriaki sat back on his heels as he watched Tenmei-chan reviving. As he was helping Tenmei-chan to sit back up again, the sound of someone at the door drew his attention. He had more than a little suspicion about just who it was at the door, and sure enough when Jotaro got up to let Kishibe-san in, as soon as the man caught sight of Tenmei-chan he hurried over to their side.

 

“Tenmei-kun,” he said, and Noriaki reached out to catch his wrist before he could touch Tenmei-chan’s chest, getting the man’s attention. “What is it, Kakyoin-san?”

 

“You shouldn’t disturb him,” Noriaki said, lightly gripping the man’s right wrist, keeping him from doing anything to Tenmei-chan. “He needs to recover before he can start working again.”

 

“Maybe I should let him look inside,” Tenmei-chan said, sitting up, looking just as lucid as Noriaki had ever seen him, though he was still dressed in those strange clothes; his hair was also down, and with his hairclips missing, Tenmei-chan looked like he’d been getting ready for bed.

 

Noriaki supposed it fit, since Nijimura-san had reported that Tenmei-chan had been sleeping when he’d first caught sight of him; a drugged sleep, it seemed, but there was a skewed sort of familiarity to how Tenmei-chan was dressed. Still, that made things even worse, since Tenmei-chan probably wouldn’t be able to identify him.

 

“What do you mean, Tenmei-chan?” he asked. “You don’t have to let him do anything like that to you so soon.”

 

“I don’t know, maybe I saw something I don’t remember right now,” Tenmei-chan said, tucking his legs under himself as he sat back up.

 

“Yes!” Kishibe-san exclaimed, grinning widely. “That’s a wonderful idea, Tenmei-kun! I knew there was a reason I let you work for me. Heaven’s Door!”

 

Watching as Kishibe-san’s Stand emerged, pulling Tenmei-chan’s chest open to reveal what looked like some kind of book, Noriaki found himself leaning in closer to get a better look at what it said. Kishibe-san flipped backwards through the pages, searching through Tenmei-chan’s blurry recollections to find at least something that they would be able to make use of, when they were searching for the bastard who had kidnapped his firstborn son.

 

“Ah, it looks like their first meeting was the one that drew the kidnapper’s attention to him,” Kishibe-san said, stopping on a page that held a description of the man that Tenmei-chan had been kidnapped by; the man whose description he was already in the process of writing down, so that he could hand it over to Jotaro and the pair of them would be able to find and punish the man who had kidnapped Tenmei-chan.

 

=DiU=

 

Finding himself sitting in the remains of his destroyed home, a hole opened to the outside where he had been forced to deploy Sheer Heart Attack to counter the threat of those aircraft that had been attempting to bomb him, Yoshikage Kira forced himself back to his feet. Making his way back into the house that was clearly no longer a safe place for him, Yoshikage made his way into the room that his father had claimed as his own for the time being. He would need to speak to the man, both since he would need to make plans to get his sweet Yoshiko-chan back and since he would need to find a new place to live.

 

The aircraft had clearly seen his face while they were shooting at him and attempting to bomb him, so he would also have to find a way to disguise himself well enough to settle back into the quiet life he had craved for so long.

 

“Father,” he called, after checking to make sure no one else was present in the room with them. “I need to speak with you.”

 

“What is it, Yoshikage?”

 

“Yoshiko was kidnapped,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he thought back on what those intruders had done, not only to his home but to the family that he had been building for himself.

 

“What?!”

 

“Someone broke into my home, stole my child, and ran away with the aid of what seems to be another person,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he considered just who might have been responsible for the attack on him, his home, and his family.

 

Whoever might have been commanding those soldiers and aircraft, and whoever it was that might have been in command of whatever had been responsible for taking his cute little Yoshiko away from him in the first place.

 

=DiU=

 

Once they’d managed to determine just where it was that the bastard who’d kidnapped Kakyoin’s first kid actually lived, Jotaro only paused long enough for Nijimura to tell him the capabilities that the bastard’s Stand had demonstrated to them while he and Aunt Alice were rescuing Tenmei-chan from his house and bringing the kid back to Josuke’s house where the rest of them were all staying together. It looked like the bastard’s Stand could explode things, but just like his own Star Platinum it was a short-range power-type. On the other hand, Nijimura had also observed that the Stand – which seemed to have the name Killer Queen, if the way the bastard had been commanding the thing was any indication – had some kind of an independent sub-Stand that he could sent out as a scout.

 

It didn’t sound like it had even a bit of the sheer versatility of The Duke, but it was still something that he and Kakyoin would have to deal with when they went after the bastard.

 

Climbing up onto The Duke’s back by grabbing onto the large antler on the right side of The Duke’s head – Aunt Alice’s sub-Stand was still in the form of the moose that it’d used to carry Tenmei-chan away from the bastard’s house in the first place – Jotaro got himself settled, paused to wait for Kakyoin to climb on himself, and then nodded to Stardust so that Aunt Alice’s main Stand could teleport them to the house where Tenmei-chan’s kidnapper lived.

 

When the four of them arrived at the remains of the house where the bastard lived, however, it didn’t seem like anyone was actually there. No one came out to confront them, and not even the blond who’d been described by Tenmei-chan’s book when Kishibe had opened him up with that weird Stand of his was present to pay for his crimes.

 

“This doesn’t feel right,” Kakyoin said, as The Duke began to carefully circle around the blasted-open part of the house, moving closer when it seemed as though there was no one there to try to attack them while they were here.

 

“I don’t like it, either,” he said, narrowing his eyes as The Duke brought them closer to the hole that Bad Company had blown in the wall near the window of the room the kidnapper had kept Tenmei-chan in while he’d been drugging their kid. “But we should probably try to get a look inside.”

 

Pressing down lightly on The Duke’s right antler, letting the Stand know that at least he was going to be getting off soon, Jotaro made his way over to the hole in the wall, and took a look around inside the house. The sounds of The Duke’s heavy hooves coming up from behind him drew his attention, and Jotaro turned to see The Duke leaping lightly into the room with him, and allowing Kakyoin to climb down before it shifted shape into some kind of large, maneless cat. Without any kind of markings, Jotaro couldn’t tell quite what kind of big cat it was, but that wasn’t important.

 

As he and Kakyoin searched through the house, Jotaro found himself wondering just what in the hell the bastard who’d kidnapped Tenmei-chan was actually going to do, now that they were all here. Nijimura had said that the man possessed a Stand of his own, short-ranged as it was, that could have tried to attack them while he himself stood behind one of the walls. Or else he could have sent out that sub-Stand of his, whatever its name was.

 

Still, as he and Kakyoin made their way through the house, nothing and no one jumped out at them, and so he, Kakyoin, and Stardust began exploring the house, with The Duke, Star Platinum, and Hierophant Green guarding them from anything that might have been staying in the house to wait for them. Searching through the drawers, cupboards, and desks in the house around them, he and Kakyoin found that the bastard’s name was Yoshikage Kira, and he seemed to live alone in this house.

 

That explained why Avdol had said that Kira was trying to form a family by force.

 

Chapter 66: Who Will You Run To

Chapter Text

Having chewed his fingernails down to the quick, Yoshikage forced himself to keep moving on, avoiding the gaze of anyone who might have been searching for him. Father had stayed behind, wanting to know just who it was that had invaded Yoshikage’s home and taken Yoshiko-chan from them, while he had left his old life behind in an effort to escape them. He hated it, but he’d been making a plan that would allow him to escape even in a situation such as this.

 

Making his way back through the city, back in the direction of the shop he’d previously found, Yoshikage searched for the shop where he’d first met up with that woman. He would need to make use of the powers he had observed her using, replacing his own face with that of someone who had not been sighted by the invaders into his home. He’d a few candidates in mind, those whose lives seemed to match his own preferences well enough that Yoshikage would have little trouble fitting himself into them.

 

It only remained to see which of them he would encounter first, as he made his way to the shop where the woman he needed for this contingency plan of his worked.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way into cousin Tenmei’s room, Gio bit his lower lip as he caught sight of his oldest cousin sitting up in bed, seeming to be thinking about something. Sure, it didn’t seem like he was actually worried about what had happened to him, but Gio was still determined to give his cousin some company after everything that had happened to him.

 

“Hey,” he called, making his way over to the bed where cousin Tenmei was sitting. “How are you doing, cousin Tenmei?”

 

“Things have been a bit strange, but I’m all right, cousin Gio,” Tenmei said, offering the kind of smile that Aunt Alice always seemed to wear when she thought people were being silly. “I don’t remember much of what happened, anyway.”

 

“Yeah, because you were drugged for the whole thing,” he grumbled, reaching over to grab one of the pillows on cousin Tenmei’s bed, then using Gold Experience to turn it into a fluffy bunny that cousin Tenmei could hold while the pair of them talked.

 

“Yeah, but that means that I didn’t actually get hurt by anything,” cousin Tenmei said, looking down at the bunny Gio had handed to him, before cuddling it to his chest with a concerned look on his face. “It was everyone else who got hurt, really.”

 

The sound of someone else making their way into the room distracted him, before Gio could tell him just how dumb he was being. Bruno Buccellati made his way into cousin Tenmei’s room with the pair of them, looking like there was something on his mind.

 

“It’s good that you’re so concerned about how your family was affected by you being kidnapped by that man, Tenmei,” Bruno said, making his way over to sit in a chair near the head of cousin Tenmei’s bed.

 

“Yeah, it’s nice that you’re so worried about everyone else, but you should also worry about yourself, too,” Gio said, giving Bruno a disapproving look; he didn’t know how the other boy had been raised, but Gio didn’t like the thought of cousin Tenmei thinking that his feelings weren’t important.

 

In this or any other case, really.

 

“I know, but it’s…” cousin Tenmei paused for a long moment, chewing his lower lip and looking like he was thinking deeply about something or other. “I mean, the only thing that really happened to me was that I ended up falling asleep in that weird guy’s house. He didn’t really hurt me, or anything.”

 

Sighing, Gio shook his head; it looked like cousin Tenmei was determine not to see the ways that he had suffered during his kidnapping by that man who had kidnapped him earlier this same day. It wasn’t a good thing, but it was clearly what Gio was going to have to work with.

 

=DiU=

 

After Yoshikage had dragged away the man whose life he had chosen to be his own after the loss of his home and everything he had owned, he quickly had the woman who worked their exchange his face for the man’s, and then quickly disposed of her. Though he did keep one of her hands, since he’d been fond of them ever since he’d first caught a glimpse of them while familiarizing himself with the shop and the capabilities of the woman who had worked there.

 

Leaving the empty shop behind, Yoshikage quickly blended back into the crowds, watching for some place where he would be able to check the address on the ID documents that had come with the new face he had been forced to find; he would need that if he was going to be able to find a way to the house where he could start his new life.

 

Once he’d managed to find an out of the way alcove that none of the crowd was paying attention to, Yoshikage leaned lightly against the wall so that he could see just where it was that he was going to be living; what new name he was going to need to use. Once he’d determined just where it was that Kosaku Kawajiri lived, where he was going to have to go to fit himself into the man’s life, Yoshikage turned his path in that direction.

 

On the one hand, it was good that he lived so far away from where he’d been attacked, and on the other being so far away from where he might be able to find Yoshiko-chan again was troublesome; he was still going to find his way back to her, of course, since fate had to have led them together for a reason, but it would clearly take time.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he looked at the house that bastard Yoshikage Kira and his bastard father both used as their base – he couldn’t actually say the both of them lived there, since the old bastard was a ghost clinging to a Stand that allowed him to use something uncomfortably like the Spirit Photography the Old Man could use – he turned to Stardust.

 

“Thanks,” he said, knowing that it would be best to keep the bastard from learning any more of their names than he might have already known; particularly Aunt Alice, since she was already such a public figure.

 

Stardust nodded, and quickly reached out to teleport the both of them back to Josuke’s house so that they could rest and recover before anything else happened.

 

Stardust’s teleportation might very well have been the only thing that’d got them out of the house, since Kira’s bastard father had been able to seal off individual rooms with that Stand he had; the one that had probably kept him from dying once his body had worn out. Still, Jotaro had yet to meet the Stand that could hold Stardust in place, since Aunt Alice’s Stand could phase through any solid obstacle in its path, in addition to being able to teleport across greater and greater distances. Someone else might have worried, about a Stand that couldn’t be held and was basically impossible to escape, but given how well he knew Aunt Alice, Jotaro found that he couldn’t worry about it.

 

There were plenty of other things he had to think about, considering the fact that they hadn’t managed to pin down that kidnapping bastard after he’d escaped from his house with that damned explosive Stand of his.

 

=DiU=

 

The next morning, after he’d gotten a full night’s sleep, Tenmei sat up in his bed and stretched for a long moment. Climbing up and out of the bed he’d been given by big cousin Josuke’s Mom when he, Dad, and Uncle Jotaro had come to this place on… Well, it was a vacation for him, Ichigo, and Jolyne, but it was just more work for Dad and Uncle Jotaro. The both of them had been searching for the Stand users that had been reported as living in and around the city, and according to what Mr. Avdol had said, the more Stand users that gathered together in an area, the more Stand users who would be drawn to them.

 

It was kind of weird to think about, but it still seemed to be true, at least as far as he could tell.

 

Dad wasn’t particularly eager for him to go back to work so soon after what had happened to him, of course, and the pair of them were eventually able to talk Rohan-sensei into staying around the house while Dad fussed over him and Jolyne tried to act like she hadn’t missed him while he’d been gone. That was the same kind of thing that Uncle Jotaro did when someone he liked had gone missing, though, so Tenmei didn’t take it personally or anything.

 

Sitting in Dad’s lap, since his father had wanted to be close ever since he’d gotten back from being kidnapped, Tenmei listened as Rohan-sensei talked to Dad about Stands, the Speedwagon Foundation, and all of the people he’d met during the course of his and Uncle Jotaro’s work with the Foundation. Rohan-sensei was interested in all of it, which fit with everything that Tenmei had learned about the manga-ka ever since the pair of them had met for the first time.

 

The day Tenmei had come to search for him.

 

=DiU=

 

It was troublesome, but it seemed as though the man whose life he had chosen to make his own apparently possessed family of his own, and while his wife was tolerable enough and she did possess rather beautiful hands, the child Yoshikage found himself forced to cohabitate with was far more troublesome than his cute little Yoshiko had ever been. As well, since the pair of them were already familiar with each other, he could hardly expect to be able to handle the child the same way he’d handled little Yoshiko-chan.

 

He wanted her back, his little Yoshiko-chan, but he also knew that it would take time before he was settled enough into this new life of his to make contact with her again.

 

The life that Kosaku Kawajiri-san had built for himself was similar enough to his own in enough ways for Yoshikage to settle in at least somewhat comfortably, at least, and as he made his way to the place where Kawajiri had once worked, Yoshikage kept an eye out for someplace where he might be able to make contact with his sweet little Yoshiko-chan. There was the same park where the pair of them had first met, of course, but he didn’t truly know if he would have the chance to meet up with her there again.

 

He would have to see what happened, once he had settled into Kawajiri’s life as well as he truly could.

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of someone knocking at cousin Josuke’s door brought Dad out of the kitchen where all of them had been having lunch together, and Jolyne followed Dad as he made his way up to the front door, watching from behind cousin Josuke’s Mom as she opened the door. Dad probably had that Stand of his out, since someone had already kidnapped Cousin Tenmei once, and they might be stupid enough to try again, even when Cousin Tenmei was here with so much of their family to protect him. It would be dumb, but there was still a chance that the kidnapper might try it.

 

“Hey, you’re that rocker guy,” she said, once the front door was open and all of them could see the guy on the other side.

 

“Glad to see I managed to find the right house,” the rocker guy with the cool, long, purple hair said, grinning at her, Dad, and cousin Josuke’s mom.

 

“Otoishi,” Dad said, and Jolyne covered her mouth; Dad really hadn’t been happy to know that Granddad’s weird fan lived in the same town as cousin Josuke. “What’re you doing here?”

 

“I heard your kids weren’t doing too well, missing their friend and all,” the rocker guy said, holding up his guitar and grinning. “So, I thought I’d come over. See what I could do to help.”

 

“We’ve already got our kid back,” Dad said, not looking particularly pleased to have the rocker guy standing in the door of cousin Josuke’s Mom’s house, making his way over to the door and looking like he was just about to slam it shut.

 

“That’s great!” the rocker guy exclaimed, jamming a foot in the door so Dad couldn’t slam it shut on him; not without smashing his foot, at least. “Why don’t we celebrate you guys getting your kid back?”

 

“You’re not going to leave, are you?” Dad grumbled, folding his arms across his chest, still glaring at the rocker guy as he stood in the door

 

“Come on!” the rocker guy said, adjusting the strap of his guitar case. “You have to admit that this is a great time to celebrate! You guys got your kid back! This is a great day for all of you!”

 

Laughing, even as Dad turned that annoyed glare on her, Jolyne grinned right back at him.

 

“You guys are weird,” she said, grinning right back at the both of them.

 

=DiU=

 

Looking over at cousin Gio, as the pair of them continued through the park with all of the ladybugs that the pair of them had had such fun in the last time they’d been here, Tenmei raised an eyebrow.

 

“So, we’re looking for crop circles?” he asked, as the pair of them continued on their way through the field.

 

“Yeah, I saw it yesterday, but I didn’t have enough time to get a look at what was in the middle of it,” cousin Gio said, pushing his way through the long grasses all around them, clearly looking for whatever it was that he’d seen yesterday.

 

“What was it?” he asked, then reconsidered. “I mean, what did it look like?”

 

“It was buried under all the grass, so I didn’t really see what it was, but it looked big enough to be about the size of a person,” cousin Gio said, narrowing his eyes as the both of them continued on their way through the long grass in front of them.

 

“That’s weird,” Tenmei said, just as he began hearing the sounds of someone else making their own way through the grass all around them.

 

Whoever it was nearly ended up walking right into cousin Gio, and it almost seemed as though they’d been focused just as much on getting out as cousin Gio was at getting in, so it was kind of funny.

 

“You’re rather tiny, for humans,” the new guy – who had long, nearly white-blond hair, pointed ears that were just that much larger than anyone Tenmei had seen before, and bright, pale green eyes, with a gold nose ring attached by a chain to a ring through his left ear – said, kneeling down in front of him and cousin Gio. “Have I truly made it to Earth?”

 

“Why do you ask, mister? Did you come here from the Moon base, or something?” Tenmei asked, tilting his head and blinking.

 

“No. My space ship is currently on standby, 1,500,000 kilometers away,” the new guy said, and Tenmei wondered just what was out that far; his right hand twitched toward his pocket, where he kept his sketchbook, wanting to write that number down so that he could ask Aunt Alice about it later.

 

Still, it might be rude to ignore someone who was actively talking to them, just because something they’d said might be interesting to know for later.

 

“I saw your Moon base on my way here,” the man said, smiling at the pair of them. “However, I wished to explore the planet itself, before I set foot on such an outpost.”

 

“So, you’re from outer space?” cousin Gio asked, tilting his head as he looked over the man with all the piercings.

 

“My own world was destroyed, so in essence, yes I am,” the man said, the smile he’d been wearing turning more than a little sad.

 

Before any of them could say anything else, though, some kind of loud siren started going off, and the guy they’d been talking to dropped to the grassy ground. He was screaming almost as loud as the siren going off, and Tenmei quickly jumped forward to cover their pointed ears, looking over at cousin Gio as he felt another pair of hands settling over his own. Looking back over his right shoulder, Tenmei saw the lights accompanying the siren.

 

They were only flashing red, so he didn’t think the Police were out doing anything; it could have been a fire, or someone needing an ambulance, or something like that.

 

Looking back down at the guy they were trying to help, Tenmei saw that he seemed to be doing a lot better than he had been when he’d been able to hear the siren. Breathing easier once the maybe-ambulance maybe-fire truck had passed, and the siren was far enough away not to bother any of them, Tenmei looked down at the guy he and cousin Gio were trying to help.

 

He looked better, though he still seemed a bit pale.

 

“Thank you, little humans,” the guy said, smiling at them as he and cousin Gio let go of his ears, wrapping his arms around both of them and lifting them up as he stood again, setting him and cousin Gio back down as he dug into the square bag the guy had been carrying when he and cousin Gio had first met up with him. “Here, you can have these as thanks,” he said, handing over what looked like a pair of plastic-wrapped ice cream cones.

 

“Thank you, mister,” he said, as cousin Gio added his own thanks.

 

“Is this mint flavored?” cousin Gio asked, looking down at the speckled, white ice cream he was currently holding.

 

“Would you like it to be?” the guy they’d just helped asked.

 

“I’d actually prefer a strawberry cone,” cousin Gio said seriously. “Cousin Tenmei is the one who likes mint chocolate chip ice cream.”

 

“I apologize, then,” the guy said, reaching down to gently pluck the ice cream cones out of their hands, putting the both of them back into the bag he’d been carrying, and then taking out a mint chocolate chip cone, and a strawberry cone for cousin Gio.

 

“Thanks again, mister,” he said, smiling.

 

“Yes, this is much better,” cousin Gio said, opening up the cone even as Tenmei did the same. “So, what did you come here for?”

 

“I came here to explore this planet,” the guy said, as the three of them began making their way out and away from the grass cousin Gio had lead them into to begin with.

 

“Were you hoping to find anything? Or did you just come here to play tourist?” Tenmei asked, wondering just what kinds of things an alien tourist would want to do in the first place.

 

“Tourist? What do you mean by that?”

 

“A tourist is someone who goes to different places because they’re interested in seeing what’s there,” cousin Gio said, as the three of them made their way out of the grassy field at last.

 

“Then yes, I suppose that is what I am,” the guy said, as they made their way back out onto the sidewalk bordering the park where they’d found him. “I am a space alien, and I am a tourist, as well.”

 

“Mikitaka! Mikitaka, where are you?” a woman called, and Tenmei turned to see a woman making her way over to where the three of them were standing. “Mikitaka, have you been making up stories again?” the woman asked, a disapproving look on her face as she made her way over to the three of them. “I’m sorry, children; my son likes to make things up, and he sometimes takes things too far.”

 

“I’ve brainwashed this woman into thinking I’m her son,” the alien guy, whose name may or may not have been Mikitaka, said, crouching down so he could whisper to the both of them. “I’ve been staying at her house ever since.”

 

“You aren’t hurting her, are you?” cousin Gio asked, looking back at the woman wearing the plaid scarf on her head.

 

“Of course not,” the alien said, a slight smile on his face; he either approved of the question, or else he just liked talking to them. “She’s just a bit confused, sometimes.”

 

“As long as she’s all right. Enjoy the rest of your stay here,” cousin Gio said, as Tenmei continued eating his mint chocolate chip ice cream cone, watching as the woman and maybe-Mikitaka both left.

 

“That was interesting,” he said, once he’d finished enough of his ice cream that it wouldn’t drip onto his hand as it started melting.

 

“Yes,” cousin Gio said, as the pair of them started walking again. “We should try to keep in contact with him; I know Aunt Alice would be curious about him, at least.”

 

“Rohan-sensei would probably really enjoy meeting him, too,” Tenmei said, biting into his ice cream cone as he and cousin Gio continued on their way down the sidewalk.

 

“Yeah, he does sound like the kind of person who’d enjoy that,” cousin Gio said, licking his own ice cream cone as the pair of them made their way back to cousin Josuke’s house again.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he kept watching the videos he’d recorded of the man he’d begun suspecting wasn’t his father at all, Hayato listened to what the man had been saying. It sounded like he’d been fighting people who’d invaded their house and tried to hurt him, but no one had invaded their house. And no one would go out of their way to attack someone as boring as Mom’s husband in the first place.

 

It didn’t make sense, and really it was just one more reason that Mom’s husband couldn’t have been the man who’d first married her at all.

 

Given all of that, it was up to Hayato to find out who had taken the place of Mom’s husband, since t wasn’t like Mom was going to study him as closely as Hayato would. It looked like she was actually starting to like him, which was weird, but then she wasn’t seeing what he’d seen. She didn’t know what he knew.

 

There was also something else that Mom’s husband seemed to be doing, but Hayato didn’t quite know what it was. He’d been looking through the house when he clearly didn’t think anyone was watching him, even going down into the basement and up into the attic. Hayato didn’t know just what Mom’s husband was looking for, but he was going to find out.

 

He was going to check those rooms once Mom’s husband had left the house, to see what Mom’s husband might have left in them, or what he might be looking for.

 

=DiU=

 

Laughing as the rocker guy set up, though mostly at the way Dad was still glaring at him even as he pulled out a microphone and hooked it up to the TV speakers in the living room of cousin Josuke’s Mom’s house, Jolyne stepped over to watch him more closely. Dad left to get the door with cousin Josuke’s Mom, and Jolyne looked up for a little bit, before turning back to the rocker guy as he kept setting up.

 

“Is this karaoke?” she asked, smiling as she looked from the rocker guy to the stuff he was setting up and then back again.

 

“Yeah, kiddo,” the rocker guy said, turning to look at her again. “What’s so funny?”

 

“Dad hates karaoke,” she said, grinning. “Do you know Journey?” she asked, smiling wider as Dad and cousin Josuke’s Mom came back into the room, leading cousin Tenmei and cousin Gio.

 

“Yeah!” the rocker guy exclaimed, playing on his guitar. “You like them, too?”

 

“They do have a lot of great songs,” cousin Tenmei said, smiling as he came up to where the rocker guy was working.

Chapter 67: The Nature Of Evil

Chapter Text

Yare yare daze,” he muttered, sitting down on Tomoko Higashikata’s couch as their kids and Akira Otoishi set up for a karaoke session – of all the annoying things they could possibly be doing with their time – with Tomoko herself plopping down next to him.

 

“Come on, I think it’s cute,” Tomoko said, grinning at him as their kids started singing, accompanied by Otoishi on that guitar of his. “The kids are having fun, at least.”

 

Not bothering with a response, Jotaro returned his attention to the list of Stand users that Nijimura had given to him. There seemed to be only a couple of them left, exactly two: a cat, and a boy around Josuke’s age by the name of Yuya Fungami. The cat would likely be an easy find, with The Duke around to search the places where even a Stand using cat might go, but Fungami would likely be even simpler. Fungami had been injured in a motorcycle crash some time earlier.

 

He was currently in a nearby hospital recovering, so Jotaro thought that it might be best if he brought Josuke along with him, since his Crazy Diamond would be able to heal Fungami, likely giving the kid some more motivation to speak to them, at least. Once the kids had finished their amateur karaoke, Jotaro huffed a chuckle, then rose back to his feet to talk to Josuke.

 

“What, you mean this guy in the hospital is one of those Stand users you’ve been looking for?” Josuke asked, looking more than a little surprised at the prospect.

 

“According to the list that Nijimura gave me, he is,” Jotaro said, folding his arms. “He was injured in some kind of motorcycle accident awhile ago, so I thought that you might be interested in paying him a visit when I go to talk to him.”

 

“Yeah, sure,” Josuke said. “When are we going to head out?”

 

“Now,” Jotaro said, making his way through the house where he, Kakyoin, and their respective families were currently staying.

 

Once the pair of them had made their way out of the house, down from the driveway and onto the road with Jotaro’s car, he forced all thoughts of the bastard who’d kidnapped Tenmei-chan out of his mind so that he could focus on what he and Josuke were going to be doing.

 

=DiU=

 

Once he and his nephew – it was still weird to think of the huge man that way; a man who was actually old enough to be married with a little kid of his own just did not fit the kind of thing Josuke had on his mind when he thought about someone’s nephew – had made it into the hospital and started asking around for Yuya Fungami, Josuke found himself wondering just what this new guy was going to be like when they met. He probably wouldn’t be too happy, since he had gotten into an accident beforehand,  but once Josuke had healed him he’d probably be happier.

 

He just wondered what kind of person Yuya Fungami was ultimately going to be.

 

Once Jotaro had managed to get the room number where Fungami-san was staying, number 525, though he’d ended up having to flash what seemed to be some kind of an ID at the reception lady to get the both of them that far, Josuke went back to wondering just what kind of person he and Jotaro were going to end up meeting when they found Fungami-san. Hanging back a step as Jotaro opened the door and let the pair of them in, Josuke raised an eyebrow as he caught sight of the three girls standing around the bed that Fungami-san was laying in.

 

“So, what brings you two here?” Fungami-san asked, as he and Jotaro made their way inside.

 

“How’d you know there were two of us?” he asked, confused.

 

Fungami-san smiled, though not in a way Josuke could say he really liked. “I could smell the two of you before you got here.”

 

Josuke raised an eyebrow, even as he heard the three girls staying in the room with Fungami-san cooing over Jotaro as he stood in the back of the room watching over all of them, and made his way over to the bed where Fungami-san had been laid out for… Well, for however long it’d been since he’d crashed outside that highway tunnel, really.

 

“Hey, do you really want to stay in here until you heal up, or would you like me to heal you so you can get out of here?” he asked, making his way over to the side of Fungami-san’s bed so that he could talk to him without having to yell across the room or something.

 

“You can do that?” Fungami-san asked, perking right up as he turned to look up at Josuke where he was standing.

 

“Yeah, my Stand can heal people, and restore things and stuff,” he said, feeling more than a little sheepish, what with the way pretty much everyone in the room was looking at him; except for Jotaro, who was looking at the door to make sure no one else came into the room with them.

 

“Well, sure, that sounds great,” Fungami-san said, grinning widely as he held out his right arm. “What do you need me to do? Or should we introduce ourselves first? I’m Yuya Fungami, by the way,” he said, before Josuke could say or do anything in response.

 

“Yeah, I’m Josuke Higashikata,” he said, figuring he could at least reciprocate, if Fungami-san was going to offer him that kind of courtesy. “And, you don’t have to do anything; Crazy Diamond can handle it from here.”

 

“Crazy Diamond is your Stand’s name, huh?” Fungami-san asked, grinning slightly. “Well, my Stand’s name is Highway Star. It’s nice to have you here, Higashikata-san.”

 

“It’s good to meet you, too, Fungami-san,” he said, offering a smile even as he called out Crazy Diamond to heal Fungami-san so he could leave the hospital room where he’d been confined.

 

It couldn’t have been comfortable, for someone who seemed to have as much energy as Fungami-san seemed to have, to be confined in one place for so long.

 

=DiU=

 

As she continued searching for the Stand using cat that had been listed as one of the last of the two that Keicho Nijimura had created while he’d been in possession of the Stand arrow that either he or someone else had given to him, Alice found herself wondering all over again just where Keicho had received the Arrow from in the first place. The relics themselves seemed to be a rare object, or at least she hadn’t seen many of them even during her searches of the world, and even her contacts inside the Speedwagon Foundation hadn’t seemed to see many of them.

 

It was just one more interesting thing that this particularly interesting world had shown to her.

 

Finding the cat that’d been described to her when she’d pressed for more information from Keicho than just the simple description of “Stand using cat”, Alice narrowed the eyes of her Stand as she saw said cat being accosted by what seemed to be an alley cat that had some sort of a problem with the Stand using cat she’d been looking for for such a long time. Directing The Duke to interpose itself between the pair of them, Alice picked the alley cat up by the scruff of its neck, transforming The Duke into the form of a bear – one of the two forms that she used when she was operating as Jack Harper’s Stand White Rabbit – Alice tossed the alley cat away and quickly returned to the side of the Stand using cat.

 

Like Iggy, the cat in front of her seemed wary, but also curious in the way that all cats could be.

 

Transforming The Duke back into the form of the cat she’d been traveling as, Alice bumped noses with the cat, curious to know just what the cat would make of the Stand she had sent out to meet with them. The cat, for their part, sniffed The Duke in turn. Beckoning for the cat to follow The Duke out of the alley where the pair of them had met.

 

The pair of them, The Duke and the cat with whatever name their Stand would end up going by, left the alley behind, making their way back out onto the sidewalk and past the people living their many and varied lives within Morioh.

 

When the pair of them made it back to Josuke’s house again, the place where all of them had been operating out of since Jotaro and Noriaki had been sent out by the Speedwagon Foundation, Alice transformed The Duke into a deer so that she would better be able to knock on the door. Noriaki was the one to open it, since it seemed that Jotaro and Josuke were still at the hospital with Yuya Fungami.

 

“So, it looks like you found what you were looking for, too,” Noriaki said, stepping out of the way so that she and the Stand using cat she’d brought to their home could make their way inside at last. “Jotaro just called me; he and Josuke have finished up with Fungami-san; Josuke healed him, and the both of them seem to be getting along well.”

 

“That’s good to hear,” she said, glancing back at the Stand using cat as they looked around at the living room they’d found themself standing in. “It’ll be interesting, hearing what the both of them have to say about that.”

 

=DiU=

 

It was the first time that he’d actually been able to leave the house, at least since everything had happened, and Tenmei could only be aware of both cousin Gio and Bruno Buccellati following in his footsteps while he made his way into the nearby park. It wasn’t the place he’d been kidnapped from, of course, but the both of them seemed to be particularly on their toes while he was out there among them. Tenmei was starting to think that he shouldn’t have asked in the first place.

 

He hadn’t wanted to be this much trouble to anyone; really, all he’d wanted was to see something besides the four walls of whatever room he’d ended up staying in.

 

“I’m sorry for being so much trouble,” he said, sighing as he tapped his favorite mechanical pencil against the new pad of sketch paper he’d brought out to this park.

 

“Don’t keep saying that, Tenmei,” cousin Gio said, glaring at him. “You needed to get the fresh air; we’re just here to make sure nothing happens to you.”

 

“You shouldn’t worry about things like that, anyway,” Bruno said, folding his arms as he looked around the park the three of them were all sitting in together. “You’re not the one being a problem; it’s the bastard who kidnapped you who caused all of this in the first place.”

 

“I guess,” he said, forcing himself to settle back down as he went back to sketching again.

 

He still wondered what had happened to his old sketch pad, since no one had been able to find it, or at least they hadn’t returned it if they had. He didn’t enjoy the thought that he would never get the work he’d done in that last sketch pad back again, but it was starting to seem that that was going to end up being the case. Tenmei didn’t like it, but that did seem to be what happened.

 

Sighing as he went back to work again, Tenmei wondered what could have happened to his old sketch pad.

 

=DiU=

 

Once Mom’s husband had left for the day, Hayato took a last look in on Mom, just to make sure that she wasn’t going to find out about what he was going to be doing. She’d probably tell her husband, and Hayato didn’t want to know what would happen to him if he found out about what Hayato was doing. Once Mom was far enough away that she wasn’t likely to hear what he was doing, Hayato went down into the basement to look around.

 

Mom had clearly cleaned up since the last time her husband had been down there, but Hayato looked around all the same; there was a chance that he’d be able to find out what Mom’s husband had been looking for down there.

 

Still, after searching as carefully as he could – since he didn’t want to let Mom or especially her husband know what he’d been doing – the only thing Hayato actually found was that someone had cleaned up the shelves and cleared off the floor. Leaving the basement, once he could be sure that Mom wasn’t looking for him, Hayato made his way back to his own room to see where Mom currently was. He didn’t want to risk running into her while he was searching the attic, either.

 

Once he’d managed to determine that Mom wasn’t close enough to see him or hear him, Hayato made his way to the room that Mom shared with her husband. Ducking into the closet before Mom could get the idea to come back into the room, Hayato pulled the chord that would open the attic door and made his way up. After checking the basement and finding nothing, Hayato didn’t know what he was expecting to find.

 

Whatever he had been expecting to find, it hadn’t been a bed, and a side table, both of them tucked neatly in the back corner of the attic, just where the roof started to slope down. Sure, there was no one currently in the bed, but it was obvious that Mom’s husband intended to put someone in the bed. The bed itself was too small for someone the size of either Mom or her husband to sleep in comfortably, so Hayato suspected that the bed was meant for someone else; someone smaller.

 

Hayato suspected that it wasn’t going to be him, since the only reason he knew about the bed in the first place was the fact that he’d looked for it in the first place, but he didn’t know just who the bed was going to end up being for at all.

 

Making his way out of the attic, Hayato peeked out through the closet door, making sure that Mom wasn’t in the room to see him before he left. Pausing for a second time, to make sure that Mom wasn’t standing outside the door or anything like that, before heading back to his room to think about what he’d just learned. He didn’t quite know what Mom’s husband could have been planning, but it seemed to involve someone about Hayato’s size or just a bit bigger. He also seemed to want to keep it a secret from Mom, so it didn’t seem like he wanted anything good.

 

Hayato wished he had more hidden cameras, so he could set them up around the bed and find out who Mom’s husband wanted to put in that bed when he’d set it up, but he only had his camcorder left, and that would have been much too easy to find if he left it out.

 

=DiU=

 

Narrowing his eyes as he watched the two boys who seemed to be guarding Yoshiko-chan as she sat the in middle of a park very much like the one where fate had first led them together, Yoshikage forced his hands away from his mouth for yet another time. She was here, so close that he could have almost touched her tiny, perfect hands, but still out of his reach with those two boys around her. Waiting and watching, which he could do though he wasn’t particularly fond of the inactivity, Yoshikage watched as the three of them prepared to leave the park at last.

 

Moving as inconspicuously as he could, Yoshikage sent out Killer Queen to turn the trees around them into bombs, just above their heads so that he wouldn’t risk damaging Yoshiko-chan’s precious hands. And, as he lunged forward to grab the convenient hand-hold that Yoshiko-chan’s ponytail made, Yoshikage had Killer Queen kick up enough dust that he would be able to move under cover to take Yoshiko-chan into his arms without being seen by either of the children who had been accompanying her. And, even though one of them did seem to have a comparable sort of ability as Killer Queen, Yoshikage was able to grab Yoshiko-chan and cover her mouth and nose with the chloroform soaked cloth that he’d prepared beforehand.

 

Yoshiko-chan reached out weakly with her right arm, sending out an odd looking green figure that flickered for a moment, before stumbling and vanishing as she fell limp in his arms. Yoshikage wondered for a moment if she had the same kind of ability as he did, but he could worry about that kind of thing later. He just had to get Yoshiko-chan back home.

 

Making his way back to his car, since he’d come out to this place on his lunch break, Yoshikage paused for a moment to make sure no one was watching him, before opening his trunk so he could fetch the blanket he’d brought to hide Yoshiko-chan under while she had to stay in his car. Tucking her in as well as he could, Yoshikage tied her wrists and ankles so that even if she did wake up while he was bringing her home, she wouldn’t be able to leave him before he’d gotten her back home.

 

Pausing for a moment, even as he drove back to his current workplace almost as if by rote, Yoshikage called out Killer Queen. He wasn’t about to turn his sweet little Yoshiko-chan into a bomb, of course, but since it did seem as though she had the same kind of ability as he did, he wanted to be certain that she wouldn’t be able to escape even if she did use whatever her particular ability was. And also so that he could keep an eye on her while he was at work.

 

The rest of the day passed as usual for him, and Yoshikage soon found himself able to return to the home he had established for himself, making certain that he was fully parked within his garage with both doors firmly closed before Yoshikage made his way to the back of his car. Opening the door, Yoshikage allowed Killer Queen to climb out of the car with Yoshiko-chan cradled gently in the blanket he’d draped carefully over her when he’d taken her back.

 

The sight of the bundled blanket in Killer Queen’s arms squirming brought a small smile to Yoshikage’s face, and he pulled the blanket down off of Yoshiko-chan’s head even as he covered her mouth with Killer Queen’s right hand.

 

He hadn’t truly had the chance to appreciate the soft, lavender color of Yoshiko-chan’s eyes, given the way they had always been half-closed when he’d had her in his home. After a long moment spent appreciating them, Yoshikage forced her mouth open so that he could give her one of the sleeping pills he had bought to keep her docile while he got her settled in her new home. Pausing for a moment in the doorway, making certain that that woman he was living with wouldn’t see him while he was bringing Yoshiko-chan to her new room, Yoshikage continued on with Killer Queen close behind him.

 

Making his way back into the room he shared with that woman, Yoshikage pulled open the attic door, proceeding Killer Queen up into the room he’d set up for Yoshiko-chan to stay in. Unwrapping her from the blanket he’d used to hide Yoshiko-chan from the prying eyes of people who wouldn’t understand, he sat her down on the bed so that he could take off her shoes and the clothes she’d been wearing in that park. Changing Yoshiko-chan into the sleeping clothes he’d picked up for her, Yoshikage tucked her into her new bed.

 

The sleeping pill he’d given her was already making Yoshiko-chan drowsy, so it was best she was comfortable while she slept.

 

=DiU=

 

Coughing out the last of the dust in his throat, Gio Brando looked around as the dust and scattered wood shrapnel settled back to the ground. Bruno was just getting back to his feet, but cousin Tenmei was nowhere in sight.

 

“What happened?” Bruno asked, pulling himself back to his feet, dusting himself off and brushing leaves and twigs out of his severely-cut hair.

 

“I think we were attacked by that same Stand user,” Gio said, calling out Gold Experience so that he could turn the larger pieces of shrapnel into birds to both give him and Bruno cover while they worked, and to search for anything that might be able to help them find cousin Tenmei faster. “They kidnapped cousin Tenmei again.”

 

Bruno cursed fluently in Italian, and Gio found himself chuckling as he took note of what the young Italian had said. Something to remember when he and Dad took another vacation to Italy. Still, there didn’t seem to be anything that would lead him to cousin Tenmei, nothing he could bring to Uncle Jotaro or Uncle Noriaki to help them search for cousin Tenmei faster.

 

He and Bruno quickly made their way back to cousin Josuke’s house, so they could tell everyone what had happened, and they all could get started looking for cousin Tenmei again.

 

Once he and Bruno had made it back, Gio took the lead in explaining what had happened to cousin Tenmei, biting his lip as he saw the anguish spreading over Uncle Noriaki’s face as he talked. Uncle Jotaro just looked angrier and angrier as he continued on.

 

“We should’ve killed that bastard when we had the chance,” Uncle Jotaro growled, glaring furiously as Star Platinum emerging from behind him.

 

“I’m starting to agree with you,” Uncle Noriaki said, sighing deeply as he rubbed his face with both hands.

 

The sound of someone wearing a long robe making their way into the room drew Gio’s attention, and he looked over to see Dad’s best friend – though he’d never heard the pair of them actually admit it, he’d long since been able to tell how the both of them felt – Enrico Pucci making his way into the living room of cousin Josuke’s house to sit with the rest of them.

 

“Is there some trouble?” Enrico asked, looking around at everyone who had gathered in the room all around them.

 

“It’s the same we were dealing with before,” Uncle Jotaro said, and Gio couldn’t help but smile as he noticed the way Uncle Jotaro wasn’t cursing; it seemed like Enrico’s lectures about not swearing in front of him had had some sort of impact.

 

Even if it was just because he didn’t want to hear any more of them.

 

“Young Tenmei Kakyoin was kidnapped once more?” Enrico asked, a clearly worried expression on his face.

 

“Yeah, and it sounds like it was by the same guy who came after him the last time,”  Uncle Jotaro growled, fists clenching on his pants as Star Platinum paced the length of the living room, the rigid tension in the Stand’s frame clearly displayed, even as Uncle Jotaro concealed his own under the hat and jacket he always seemed to be wearing.

 

It was always something Gio noticed, every time he had the chance to spend time with Uncle Jotaro; really, Uncle Jotaro and Uncle Noriaki were such different people, and maybe that was why the pair of them had become such good friends during the time they’d spent in school together.

 

“Kira, that was the name we found on his house’s front gate,” Uncle Noriaki said, sitting up straighter, as though the conversation going on all around him had brought him back to himself. “That’s at least one way we have to track him.”

 

Chapter 68: Protector Of The Common Folk

Chapter Text

As soon as Mom’s husband had come back to the house, Hayato had turned on all of his cameras, watching as the man came back inside. There was a strange bundle behind him, one that actually seemed to be floating, and as Hayato continued to watch, Mom’s husband took the bundle into the room he shared with her. When the man made his way into their shared closet, Hayato had the feeling that the bed in the attic wasn’t going to be empty for much longer.

 

Sighing, Hayato decided that he was going to have to check in on whoever it was, just to make sure that they knew they weren’t alone; whoever they were, they probably weren’t happy to be stuck in a musty old attic.

 

Still, he’d have to wait until Mom’s husband left for the day, and probably Mom too, since she would probably tell him where Hayato had been if she saw him looking around up there. He’d have to wait until school came around tomorrow, since Mom wouldn’t expect him to be at home and he could move around if he was careful about things. So, shutting down the video screen he’d been watching, Hayato left to go have dinner with Mom and her husband.

 

There still might be something he could find out there.

 

=DiU=

 

Having Tenmei taken from him again, after he’d had his son back for what felt like only a handful of hours, made Noriaki less depressed and more angry, considering everything that had happened. Jotaro was furious, of course, which ended up drawing Mr. Brando’s old friend Enrico Pucci into long conversations where he made at least some effort to try to calm Jotaro down.

 

Still, with all Mr. Pucci’s talk about God, fate, gravity, and how the world was meant to work out, those usually only succeeded in riling Jotaro up.

 

Noriaki had been forced to intervene a couple times, to keep Jotaro from punching Mr. Pucci in the face, or at least from yelling at him the way he probably would have otherwise. A stranger part of dealing with Mr. Pucci was his Stand, Whitesnake, who seemed to have a mind of his own. The Stand even had a voice, and not just Mr. Pucci speaking through his Stand.

 

Though Whitesnake’s voice did sound more than a bit like Mr. Pucci’s.

 

Whitesnake didn’t seem to agree with everything Mr. Pucci did, if the way he’d covered Mr. Pucci’s mouth when he’d seen that Jotaro had been getting annoyed, which was more than a little strange to think about. It also said something about Mr. Pucci’s mental state, that he had a Stand able to disagree with him. It was still a strange thing, meeting someone like that.

 

He wondered if that was one of the things that had drawn Mr. Brando’s attention, since Jotaro’s uncle – the one who wasn’t younger than him, at least, which was still strange when he thought about it – was a fairly eccentric person.

 

Still, at least all of that had served to distract him from the thought that Tenmei was missing again, and that he seemed to have been taken by the same person that had kidnapped him the last time. Someone with the last name “Kira”; someone who seemed to think that he could form a family of his own by force, if what Mr. Avdol had found out from his tarot reading was any indication. He was starting to agree with Jotaro: they should have tried to hunt the man down when they found that he wasn’t in the house the pair of them had broken into.

 

That was why he and Jotaro planned to go back to the Kira household: to search through the house, and see if there was anything that would lead them to wherever it was that Kira was hiding.

 

After making sure that Josuke knew where they were going to be going and what they were going to be doing, he and Jotaro left for the district where Kira’s house had been located. Noriaki could only hope that they would be able to find something that would help lead them to wherever it was that Kira had run to when he and Jotaro had gone into the empty shell of a house they’d left behind when they rescued Tenmei from him. Though he’d only expected to need to do it once.

 

Still, maybe the fact that neither of them had encountered Kira in his house when they’d broken in to rescue Tenmei should have served as a warning: since the man himself had managed to escape him, there was always the chance that he would attack their family again.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way up into the attic where his cute little Yoshiko-chan was waiting for him, once the woman he was living with and her child had gone to sleep, Yoshikage smiled. He’d managed to find a new girlfriend, one who enjoyed having a cute little sister of her own, and now his family was whole and happy once more. Leaning down over Yoshiko-chan’s sleeping face, he turned on the small light he’d set up by the side of her bed, spilling soft light over her slumbering form and letting him see the soft rise and fall of her chest as she breathed. He’d given her her half-pill before she’d gone to sleep, so she’d have a peaceful night while he and the rest of the family he’d moved in with slept for the night.

 

She was so cute, and as he leaned down to take her tiny, perfect hands, tucking his new girlfriend neatly between them, Yoshikage hummed softly in pleasure. It was nice not to have any troubles with people who didn’t understand him, but lately he’d been noticing that the child he’d been living with seemed to be unsettled by his presence. It was troublesome, but it seemed that his troubles weren’t entirely over.

 

He’d have to find out just what it was that the child knew about him; just what it was that the boy had spotted that had unsettled him. Still, for the moment Yoshikage could afford to rest, he could afford to refresh himself while he searched for whatever it was that had made the boy suspicious about who he was. Searched for whatever mistake he’d made that had drawn the child’s attention.

 

Still, right now, in this hidden room with his new girlfriend and his cute little Yoshiko-chan, Yoshikage Kira was happy.

 

=DiU=

 

The next morning, Hayato couldn’t help but notice the way that Mom’s husband seemed to be watching him more closely than he ever had been before. It wasn’t a good thing, since he was going to try to stay home so that he could find out just what that bundle was that Mom’s husband had brought up into the attic to hide. It also wasn’t good, since it looked like the man was going to be paying even more attention to him than Hayato ever would have wanted.

 

“Hayato-kun, I’ll be driving you to school today,” Mom’s husband said, looking directly at him with a cold gaze that Hayato had to force himself not to shudder under.

 

“That’s so kind of you, dear,” Mom said, that same, oblivious smile on her face that he’d seen more and more often, lately.

 

“Yeah, thanks,” he said, as Mom turned a reproachful look on him and her husband turned those eerie, cold eyes in his direction.

 

School passed in a haze, almost as though he was on some kind of auto-pilot or something, and when he made his way back to the house where he lived with Mom and her husband, Hayato tried as hard as he could to stay out of sight of Mom and her husband. He still needed to find out just what was going on with the bundle in the attic, and he wasn’t going to be able to do it while Mom and her husband were both at home. However, as he made his way down the hall to his room, Hayato caught sight of the door to the bath room.

 

It was mostly closed, but when Hayato made his way over to it to peek inside, he saw someone he didn’t recognize at all.

 

Whoever they were, it looked like they were trying to climb their way up and out of the bath, and when Hayato made his way into the room he found himself faced with a long-haired kid who looked a bit older than him; or maybe they were just taller. And they were certainly taller, with long hair and pretty purple eyes. Hayato didn’t quite know if they were a boy or a younger girl, but he could see that they needed help.

 

Making his way over to the bathtub, Hayato braced himself as the new kid reached out for his left shoulder, trying to help them get out of the water-filled tub where Mom’s husband had clearly been attempting to give them a bath.

 

=DiU=

 

When he’d finished gathering up a new bathrobe and a hairbrush for his cute little Yoshiko-chan, once he’d managed to clean her up before he put her to bed again, Yoshikage narrowed his eyes as he saw the open door of the bathing room. He could only hope that it wasn’t the woman who had managed to discover his cute little Yoshiko-chan, since he’d been starting to feel more and more like he was connecting with her. More and more, Yoshikage felt as though he wanted to share himself with her; more and more, Yoshikage wanted to show the woman his girlfriend, show her his cute little Yoshiko-chan. And then, he wanted to wrap his hands around her slender neck and squeeze

 

None of which would help with maintaining the cover that he’d built for himself with this new life of his, of course, so Yoshikage could only hope that the woman hadn’t been the one to discover his cute little Yoshiko-chan; the boy would be easier to deal with.

 

Fate was once again on Yoshikage’s side, since the boy was the one who had found little Yoshiko-chan and was attempting to pull her out of the warm bath that he had drawn for her. The boy’s eyes fixed on him, glaring even as his cute little Yoshiko-chan’s hazy eyes landed on him as well. The sight of a figure, both alike and very much unlike his Killer Queen, with its green arms wrapped around little Yoshiko-chan’s upper-body as it tried to pull her out of the water, made itself known then.

 

Stepping forward, narrowing his eyes as he saw the boy clenching his tiny fists, almost as though he was actually going to attempt to fight Yoshikage, he raised his right arm to swat the boy aside.

 

The sight of green tendrils coiling around his right arm, drew Yoshikage’s attention back to the child who had been attempting to pull his sweet little Yoshiko-chan out of her bath. He seemed to be confused, actually bracing himself as though he expected to be struck. Turning slightly, Yoshikage saw Yoshiko-chan reaching out her own, slender right arm, lovely fingers curled almost as though she was the one directing the green figure with its tendril arms.

 

Calling Killer Queen out again, Yoshikage ordered it to wrap its hands around the neck of the green figure, squeezing tightly. When Yoshiko-chan reacted as though she was the one being strangled, gasping cutely with her lovely lavender eyes beginning to roll up, Yoshikage reached out to catch her before she hit her head on the edge of the cleaning area. Settling Yoshiko-chan down more comfortably, he turned back to deal with the boy who had been haunting his footsteps ever since he’d been forced to take shelter in this house with these people in the first place.

 

Swatting him aside, Yoshikage narrowed his eyes as the boy scrabbled on the ground.

 

“So, this is what you’ve been hiding!” the boy snapped, pointing at him.

 

“So, you’ve managed to find out,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he looked down at the boy; it’d been troublesome enough to bring Yoshiko-chan here in the first place, but now that this boy knew about her, things were going to be even more troublesome. “What do you want?”

 

=DiU=

 

“What do you mean?” Hayato asked, shuddering as he found himself under the cold, dead eyes of the man who had done something to Mom’s husband; he’d also done something to the new kid that Hayato had found in the bathroom.

 

“Are you planning to tell your mother about her?” the man who was pretending to be Mom’s husband – Hayato knew his Dad, and he would have never done anything like this – demanded, cold, dead eyes narrowing as he focused on Hayato’s face.

 

Hayato almost wanted to ask the man what would happen if he did, but looking into the man’s eyes was all the answer he needed. “No,” he said, forcing himself not to shudder; he didn’t even know the girl in the bath, but she looked like she was safe enough for now. He and Mom weren’t; Hayato had to remember that.

 

“Good,” the man pretending to be Mom’s husband said. “I’ll know if you do.”

 

“Yeah,” he said, turning to leave the room, shaking as he got through the door and closed it behind him.

 

Hurrying back to his room, Hayato closed the door as quietly and as tightly as he could manage. He couldn’t get that girl out of his mind; he knew she’d tried to save him somehow, since the man pretending to be Mom’s husband had been about to hit him that first time he’d been stopped. After that, the man had done something to her that made it look like she was being strangled as she passed out.

 

Hayato might not have known the girl at all, but he was already on her side: the both of them were in danger from the same man, after all.

 

=DiU=

 

When the pair of them had made it back to the Kira residence, he and Jotaro had quickly split up to search for anything that might point them to where the man who’d kidnapped his eldest son had run off to when he escaped their initial search. Yoshikage Kira might have lived alone in this house, but he would have had to leave something behind. Something that might give him and Jotaro an insight into how the man thought; something that might allow them to track him to wherever it was that he was staying.

 

As Noriaki made his way deeper into the Kira residence, searching for something that might tell him where it was that Yoshikage Kira had run off to, he kept Hierophant Green close at hand so that he’d be able to deal with anything that needed the power of a Stand to deal with. Having Hierophant with him also allowed Noriaki to look in more than one direction at once, so he could search the rooms faster. However, there seemed to be something odd about this room in particular.

 

“So, you’re one of the men who forced my Yoshikage-chan to go on the run,” an old man’s voice echoed through the room, before Noriaki could wonder too long about what set this room apart from all of the others in the house.

 

“So, you’re his father, then?” he demanded, fists clenching. “Do you even know what he did?”

 

“My Yoshikage-chan just wants to live quietly in this little town,” the old man – Kira’s father, clearly – snapped, actually having the nerve to sound indignant.

 

“Well then, maybe he should have thought of that before he decided to kidnap my son,” Noriaki snapped, glaring furiously at the room in general, since the old man’s voice seemed to be coming from the air all around him, rather than from a singular, defined place.

 

He didn’t know just what kind of Stand Kira’s father had, but the simple fact that he possessed one was more than obvious.

 

“Oh?”

 

“He’s my eldest,” Noriaki snapped, narrowing his eyes as he continued searching for whatever Stand user was currently talking to; he wanted to know just who this man was.

 

Who Yoshikage Kira’s father might have truly been.

 

“Well, you’re being very selfish,” Kira’s father snapped.

 

Noriaki glared. “What’re you talking about?” he demanded.

 

“You have at least two children, so I hardly see why you can’t allow my Yoshikage-chan to have just one of them,” Kira’s father said, sounding like he didn’t even understand why Noriaki would be searching for Tenmei-kun.

 

Noriaki snarled. “You don’t even know what you’re talking about. I’m going to find my son, and if yours tries to stop me, I’ll make sure he faces justice.”

 

=DiU=

 

Things almost returned to normal, or at least as normal as they could be, when Hayato knew that there was an innocent girl hidden away in the attic. He couldn’t remember much of his day at school, since most of his attention had been on the girl in the attic; he’d been thinking of ways that he might have been able to help her, or at least get into contact with her so he could let her know that she wasn’t alone.  He’d been glad, in a perverse sort of way, to know that there was someone else trapped in this house with him and Mom.

 

And even Mom wasn’t really trapped, since the man who was pretending to be her husband actually seemed to care about her, in a weird sort of way.

 

When he made it back to his room, still under the eyes of the man pretending to be Mom’s husband, Hayato shuddered as he sat down at his desk. Looking over as one of his pens twitched, almost as though someone invisible was touching it, Hayato recoiled as the pen lifted itself off of the desk, then recoiled further as one of the blank papers on his desk lifted up and settled itself in the middle of the writing surface Hayato used for his homework. The floating pen settled itself down on the paper, twitching slightly.

 

Hello? Are you okay?

 

Hayato, still feeling more than a little dubious about everything that was going on, made his way back over to his desk.

 

Yeah, I’m fine. Who are you? How are you doing this? He wrote down on the same paper, looking down as the pen being used by… whoever the invisible person using one of his pens actually was.

 

My name is Tenmei Kakyoin, the pen wrote out, pausing for a moment as though Kakyoin-san was trying to think about what to write next. I think I’m stuck in your house.

 

Yeah, it looks like you were the one he brought in, Hayato wrote back, chewing his lower lip as he thought of what to write next. I’m sorry that ended up happening to you.

 

Really, I’m more worried about the rest of my family, Kakyoin-san wrote back. I haven’t really had much more happen to me than just being dropped in this bed in your house, here. Dad and all of the others were worried enough the last time this happened. I don’t even want to think about what they’re going through right now.

 

Turning at the sound of someone coming up to his room, Hayato only had enough time to glance down at the paper, before the entire thing was picked up and shredded by what seemed to be the same kind of invisible force that had been holding the pen. The mess of shredded paper was quickly dumped into the trash can by his desk, and Hayato turned to watch as his door opened. Letting out the breath he hadn’t even been aware of holding when he’d seen the door moving as Mom came into the room with him, Hayato twitched as he felt a light touch to the middle of his back.

 

He didn’t have time to do much more than wonder how Kakyoin-san was doing that – how she’d held the pen, how she’d been able to read what he’d been writing, and how she’d ended up having the bad luck to run into the man pretending to be Mom’s husband in the first place – before Mom came over to his desk.

 

“Hayato-chan, your father tells me that you were spying on him in the bath!” Mom exclaimed, and Hayato found himself wondering if there was anything she wouldn’t believe when That Man told it to her.

 

“I just wondered who left the door open,” he said, glancing down at the pens and papers on his desk; more than anything, he wanted to get back to the conversation he’d been having with Kakyoin-san.

 

“Well, just make sure you ask, before going inside,” Mom said, though she still sounded kind of mad at him; he wondered just what it would take to wake her up to who That Man really was.

 

At this point, he didn’t know if even showing her Kakyoin-san would stop her from trusting the man pretending to be her husband; it was frustrating, but Hayato didn’t know if there was anything he could actually do about it.

 

Once Mom had left again, Hayato grabbed a clean sheet of paper and the pen he’d been using. Kakyoin-san, are you still here?

 

Yeah. Your mom really seems to care about that man, Kakyoin-san wrote back, and Hayato had the feeling that she was just as worried about that as Hayato had been for so long.

 

Yeah. I don’t know what he’s been doing to her, but she cares about home for some reason or another, he wrote back, narrowing his eyes as he looked down at the paper that the pair of them were using to communicate with one another. How are you doing this, anyway? I meant to ask before, but then Mom showed up.

 

I’ve been using my Stand; explaining it would take a longer time than I think either of us have to explain things, Kakyoin-san wrote, and Hayato had the feeling she would have explained things if there had been more time, or if there wasn’t a risk of That Man coming into his room and seeing what was happening.

 

We’ll talk more once I get you out of here, he wrote back, making a promise to the both of them that he would.

 

I’ll keep that in mind. What’s your name, by the way? I just realized I forgot to ask, Kakyoin-san wrote back.

 

My name is Hayato Kawajiri. I look forward to actually meeting you, Kakyoin-san, he wrote back.

 

Grabbing the paper, Hayato tore it up, making sure that neither That Man or Mom would be able to read what he and Kakyoin-san had wrote to each other. He’d been getting more and more worried about the time he and Kakyoin-san had spent writing back and forth to each other, since That Man and Mom were still here where one of them could just walk right into his room and see what he and Kakyoin-san were writing to each other. He didn’t want Mom to know because she would have just told That Man.

 

Kakyoin-san was counting on him, now, as well.

 

=DiU=

 

This was the first time that he, Rohan Kishibe, had been asked for help by either one of the men who had come to Morioh on the trail of the Stand users that lived here, and he could safely say that it was more interesting than he’d been expecting.

 

“Koichi told me that you managed to make contact with one of Yoshikage Kira’s victims,” Jotaro said, cutting right to the point the way he always seemed to do.

 

“Yes; she was someone I knew from the past,” he said, choosing not to bring up the fact that even he had forgotten her. “So, that might be why I was able to remember her.”

 

Chapter 69: Man’s Road

Chapter Text

“That’s possible,” Noriaki – the man who had lost his first son; it would make a good plot for Pink Dark Boy, once the story was finished and he could read it as a complete work – said, eyes narrowed in thought as he sat back on the chair he’d taken for himself. “According to Koichi, she was your old babysitter, and her name is Reimi Sugimoto?”

 

“That’s correct,” he said, fingers itching momentarily for a pad and paper; Jotaro probably would have tried to punch him if he did, though, since he wasn’t the type to understand an artist’s needs. “Did you want me to take you to her?”

 

“Yes, I think it would be best if we spoke to her,” Noriaki said, the worried look on his face something else that Rohan found himself wishing that he could have captured on paper for use in Pink Dark Boy. “She might have some insight into where Kira might have gone.”

 

“I suppose I could show you where she’s staying,” Rohan said, rising from his chair so that he could gather his supplies; he might not have had the time to fully write or draw what it was that he’d been wanting to for so long, but he could at least sketch and take notes while he was away.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming softly to himself, carefully brushing out the few tangles in Yoshiko-chan’s long, soft hair, Yoshikage carefully tucked her back into the bed he’d set up for her in the attic of the house he’d been driven to when those troublesome intruders had come into his home. He didn’t know just how they had managed to track him to the Kira residence, but this place was at least safe from them. The child was still trouble, though.

 

However, having both that woman and Yoshiko-chan under the same roof went some way toward making up for that, at least.

 

Kosaku Kawajiri had at least lived the kind of life that Yoshikage could appreciate, if not admire, considering how quiet he seemed to have kept things in his own life. Yoshikage could easily have done without the woman and her troublesome child, of course, but at least the woman was simple enough to tolerate. Still, the child seemed to be growing less troublesome ever since he’d met up with Yoshiko-chan, so perhaps she was having a good influence on the boy.

 

Perhaps he would introduce the pair of them properly, as opposed to such an impromptu meeting as they’d previously had.

 

However, he could consider such a thing once morning had properly come; he still had work, and the boy still had school to attend. Settling Yoshiko-chan back down in her bed, he smoothed down her soft hair, smiling as he gathered up her tiny, perfect hands for a gentle kiss. After he finishes school, Yoshiko-chan, I’ll bring that boy up to meet you; I think you’ll get along well.

 

And perhaps having a gentle girl like Yoshiko-chan in his life would give the boy the same stability that Yoshikage had found with all of his girlfriends.

 

=DiU=

 

That Man seemed to be planning something, and Hayato didn’t know just how worried he should be. That day he’d seen Kakyoin-san in the bath was still stuck in his mind; the cold, dead eyes of That Man following him even when he was at school, and he really didn’t want to spend any more time with That Man than he had to.  On the other hand, That Man had never specifically been interested in him before, and for all that Hayato had learned to be wary of him, he was also curious.

 

Mom would have gone along with That Man without a second thought, of course, which was really just one more reason for Hayato to worry about what he might be planning.

 

Once he got back from school, Hayato tensed as he realized that That Man was waiting for him in the living room. Mom seemed to be happy to see him, as usual, but Hayato found himself all the more worried at the thought of what That Man might have had in mind.

 

“Hayato-chan, your father wants to show you something special! Isn’t that great?” Mom asked, the wide, oblivious smile that never seemed to leave her face these days firmly back in place once again.

 

“Once we finish dinner, come with me,” That Man said, cold eyes pinning him in place for a long moment, before turning back to the meal that Mom had fixed for all of them.

 

Hayato shuddered, wondering again just what That Man wanted with him, of all people.

 

Once they’d all finished with dinner, Mom took his dishes and pushed him off to go with That Man, and Hayato bit his lower lip as he stuck his hands in his pockets and followed in That Man’s wake. Mom wouldn’t have understood his objections, and she probably wouldn’t have listened to him anyway, so Hayato didn’t say anything as he followed in That Man’s wake. Finding himself lead into the room that That Man shared with Mom, Hayato bit his lip as he followed That Man into the closet.

 

Hiding his clenched fists in his pockets, if only so That Man wouldn’t know how tense he really was, Hayato followed him… up into the attic.

 

That Man glanced back at him, and Hayato chewed his lower lip as he found himself following him over to the side of a small bed that had been set up. Kakyoin-san had been laid out on the bed, and while Hayato was happy to know that she was at least as comfortable as anyone could be when they’d been separated from their families for however long Kakyoin-san had been, he still didn’t know what That Man could be thinking.

 

He wasn’t sure if he wanted to know anymore, either, given the way That Man was looking at him.

 

“This is Yoshiko-chan,” That Man said, leaning down over Kakyoin-san in a way that Hayato didn’t think she’d enjoy if she’d been conscious to see it.

 

“Why are you showing me this?” he asked, deciding to take a chance; if That Man was actually willing to introduce him to Kakyoin-san – even if he didn’t seem to know her name, or even care, given the name he was actually calling her – Hayato thought that he should at least take advantage of the meeting.

 

“I think the two of you will get along,” That Man said, narrowing his cold, dead eyes. “However, I expect you to keep her a secret from your mother, otherwise I’ll have to kill both of you.”

 

Forcing himself not to flinch at the sheer coldness in That Man’s voice, Hayato couldn’t quite manage to keep himself from shuddering, even as he made his way over to where Kakyoin-san had been laid out. He didn’t know just how he was going to help her, or if she was even conscious for him to let her know that he was going to help her, but at least he knew where she was, now. That would have to be enough.

 

=DiU=

 

Having Kishibe lead them to the alleyway where that ghost girl Sugimoto was waiting for them ended up being only half the problem, since that left them with the difficulty of getting back out of the alleyway she was haunting. An alleyway where no one who came in could look back, once they’d gotten what they needed and were trying to make their way out. It was annoying, but learning more about how long that kidnapping bastard had been operating, as well as the fact that he’d been killing people for nearly as long as he’d lived in Morioh was at least something.

 

It wasn’t anything good, but Jotaro had hardly gone into the shitshow they were all currently in expecting good news.

 

“Well, at least we know he’s been operating in the same place for a long time,” Kakyoin said, as the pair of them finally made their way out of the alleyway. “Not that that’s a good thing.”

 

“The cops here might just be a bunch of useless idiots,” he muttered, as the pair of them kept walking.

 

“That’s a possibility,” Kakyoin said, sighing softly. “Still, if that doesn’t end up being the case, it means that Yoshikage Kira has been able to live quietly in Morioh for his entire life, even though he’s been killing people for what sounds like a great deal of that life.”

 

Yare yare daze,” he muttered, rolling his eyes. “I’m starting to wish things could actually be simple, for once.”

 

“You’re not the only one,” Kakyoin muttered, rubbing his arms in that way people did when they were either cold, uncomfortable, or both.

 

Given that it was the middle of summer, Jotaro could easily tell which it was. Wrapping his right arm around Kakyoin’s shoulders, Jotaro tried to think of anything else that the pair of them could do on their own. Even with Pucci around, essentially meaning that Uncle Dio had eyes in the area, he still had no desire to bring his capricious uncle in on all of this. The peaceful nature of Morioh was clearly why that bastard Kira had stayed in the area to begin with, and if something as basic as that changed, he was likely to run.

 

They’d be forced to hunt him down again, and that would just be a pain in the ass; not to mention how dangerous it would be for Tenmei-chan.

 

When the pair of them came back to Josuke-kun’s house, Jotaro raised an eyebrow as he found that rocker guy who seemed to have taken some kind of a friendly liking to his only daughter hanging out with her in the living room of the house again. She had his guitar in her lap, making her look even smaller than she usually did.

 

“Ah, is he your music teacher now?” Kakyoin said, smiling as he crouched down beside Jolyne.

 

The way Kakyoin always seemed to brighten up in their presence was really the only reason that he hadn’t told Otoishi to piss off, already. That, and Jolyne seemed to enjoy learning music; she seemed to take more after his father, Sadao Kujo, at least as far as music was concerned. He guessed it wouldn’t be too bad, having another musician in the family.

 

Putting up with Otoishi’s near-constant fanboying was still a pain in the ass, though.

 

=DiU=

 

The sound of something tapping at his window drew Hayato’s attention, breaking him out of the helpless melancholy he’d been feeling ever since That Man had introduced him to Kakyoin-san; who he’d kept calling Yoshiko-chan. Hayato didn’t know why that was, but as he made his way over to the window to open it up, Hayato felt something brush against his right shoulder.

 

“Kakyoin-san?” he called, whispering so that even if That Man was listening right outside his door, he wouldn’t hear him talking to Kakyoin-san; or at least Kakyoin-san’s Stand, since that was really the only way that the pair of them could actually talk, considering where Kakyoin-san actually was.

 

The feel of that same, invisible hand resting on his right shoulder brought a small smile to his face, and Hayato made his way over to his desk to get more paper so that he and Kakyoin-san could continue their conversation.

 

All right, we should have at least a bit more time to talk this time, he wrote, then bit his lip. I don’t think we’ll have enough time to talk about Stands, though.

 

That’s all right, it’s a pretty involved subject, anyway, Kakyoin-san wrote back, the pen in her Stand’s hand tapping on the paper for a long moment, before she started writing again. Anyway, that’s not a pressing issue right now, anyway.

 

Hayato had to agree with her, but he only had a moment to wonder just what she had come out here to talk to him about, before another piece of paper fluttered over – clearly grabbed by her Stand – and slapped itself down on another, clear patch of his desk, while another pen lifted itself out of his holder. And then, as Hayato watched in startled surprise, he found himself looking at a picture that actually seemed to be drawing itself right in front of him. Sure after meeting Kakyoin-san and learning about her Stand, he knew that she was the one drawing the picture he was looking at, but it was still a strange thing to watch, all the same.

 

The two men in the picture looked about the same age as That Man, sure, but given how much clear love and care Kakyoin-san was putting into the two portraits on the page, he knew that the both of them were nothing like him. Leaning in closer as Kakyoin-san labeled the portraits, Hayato found that the name “Noriaki Kakyoin” stood out immediately.

 

Is that your father?

 

Yes. And the other one is my uncle, Kakyoin-san wrote, and Hayato had the feeling that she was probably smiling while she did it; at least, if That Man wasn’t in the attic with her to see it. Have you seen either of them?

 

No, but I’ll make sure to keep an eye out for either of them, from now on, he wrote back, feeling a new sense of resolve, since at least he and Kakyoin-san weren’t truly alone, as long as Kakyoin-san’s father was out there waiting for her.

 

Thank you. Do you mind if I have my Stand stay with you? Kakyoin-san asked, and Hayato found himself briefly surprised, before realizing that he would have wanted to get as far away from That Man as he possibly could; especially if he’d been trapped in one place, the way she had.

 

No, that’s all right, he wrote. Just, be careful, he added, after a moment spent thinking about just what That Man might do to either of them if he managed to find out what they were doing.

 

I will be. Thank you, Hayato-kun, Kakyoin-chan wrote back, and Hayato could almost see her smiling at him.

 

It was a nice feeling.

 

=DiU=

 

Humming softly in thought as he spread out the map that he and Avdol were looking at, Joseph wrapped a strand of Hermit Purple around the pendulum and sighed.

 

“Are you really sure this dowsing thing is going to work?” he asked, wanting more than anything to have their sweet little Tenmei back, but not quite sure about the setup that Avdol had proposed.

 

“Yes,” the fortune teller said, nodding and folding his wide-sleeved arms. “We already know the character of the man we’re seeking, and as none of us wish to risk Tenmei’s life in the event that he could become aware of Hermit Purple’s ability if it were used directly upon him, this remains the best option open to us.”

 

“I guess you’re right,” Joseph grumbled, looking down at the pendulum in his hand. “I’ll just have to get used to this.”

 

Starting the pendulum swinging, Joseph began methodically moving it over the map Avdol had spread out for the pair of them to use while they were searching for some sign of where that bastard kidnapper had hidden himself this time. The feel of the string, wrapped in Hermit Purple as it was, was kind of weird, but Joseph forced himself to think beyond it. He just needed to concentrate; he just needed to find the place where that bastard kidnapper had taken Tenmei, that second time he’d gotten away from Jotaro and Kakyoin.

 

Blinking in surprise as he found himself staring down at an intersection as the pendulum started spinning in a tight circle around it, Joseph wondered just what could have been so important about that place in particular.

 

=DiU=

 

I think this might be the best place for us to meet up with anyone who might still be looking for me, Kakyoin-san wrote, tapping another pen from the cup on Hayato’s desk against an intersection a couple streets down from the house where he and his mom were still trapped with That Man. It’s far enough away from your house that he probably wouldn’t think to try looking for us there, but it’s at least close enough that you wouldn’t spend all day walking there.

 

Yeah, that sounds good, he wrote back, stroking his chin as he looked down at the map, picking out the route he was going to have to take to get to the intersection without being spotted by Mom, or especially That Man while he was leaving the house. We should probably get going now, he continued, blinking as a thought came to him. How are you going to keep That Man from seeing you? You told me that Stand users can see Stands, like you.

 

That’s not going to be too much of a problem, as long as you have a coat for my Stand to hide in, Kakyoin-san wrote back, and for a moment Hayato found himself wondering what kind of look Kakyoin-san had on her face while she was writing to him.

 

All right, if you’re sure, he wrote back; the both of them had agreed that they would try to avoid using the others’ name when they didn’t strictly need to, so that if one of them did end up forgetting to destroy any one message, That Man wouldn’t know quite who was writing to who. I think we should get going quickly.

 

Making his way over to his closet, Hayato sighed in relief as he heard the sound of Kakyoin-san’s Stand destroying the messages the pair of them had been exchanging during this particular conversation. There would be no reason for That Man to look for them, since Kakyoin-san had been careful to keep That Man from seeing her Stand while the both of them were talking. It wasn’t great, the way that That Man knew she had a Stand to begin with – he and Kakyoin-san had agreed on that, at least – but it was at least not as bad as it could be.

 

Putting on his coat, Hayato paused for a moment as he felt something sliding into his coat, Hayato sighed softly as he felt a hand press gently into the center of his back. Hayato wished, even as he checked to make sure that neither That Man nor Mom were watching him as he made his way out, that he had a Stand of his own. He’d be able to talk to Kakyoin-san without the risk of leaving messages behind, and he also might be able to actually do something about That Man before he hurt Mom.

 

Still, the fact that he didn’t know much about Stands other than the fact that Kakyoin-san had one and That Man did too, made him a bit uneasy about the idea; it was a strange thing to think about, but under the circumstances that was how he felt.

 

=DiU=

 

When he and Avdol had made their way to the intersection that the pendulum he’d been using in conjunction with Hermit Purple had pointed them to, Joseph had found himself wondering just what it was that the pair of them were waiting for. Avdol had told him to be patient, but Joseph still found himself pacing as the pair of them stood waiting at the intersection. The sound of light, running footsteps making their way toward where he and Avdol were standing drew his attention, and Joseph turned.

 

Finally,” he muttered, sighing with more than a bit of annoyance.

 

“Didn’t I tell you that waiting here would provide us more information, Mr. Joestar?” Avdol asked, his usual, calm smile firmly in place.

 

“Yeah, I guess,” he said, folding his arms. “I’m just not fond of waiting, for things like this.”

 

When a kid, little and with just-short-of-shoulder-length hair, came around the corner, Joseph was just about to say something when Echoing Green burst out of the kid’s coat to throw itself at him.

 

“Uncle Joseph! I’m so happy to see you!” the Stand said, in little Tenmei’s voice.

 

“It’s good to know you’re doing all right,” he said, knowing that Tenmei wouldn’t have risked sending his Stand this far away if he wasn’t sure he’d be safe without it. “Who’s your new friend?”

 

“My name is Hayato Kawajiri,” the kid said, making his way over to where he and Avdol were standing. “Are you friends with Kakyoin-san, too?”

 

“Tenmei’s the son of one of my grandson’s best friends,” he said, smiling as he wrapped his left arm around Echoing Green’s shoulders. “He’s one of the family, really.”

 

Hayato looked confused for a moment, and Joseph found himself wondering just what the little boy was thinking about.

 

“Okay, okay,” Hayato said, shaking his head as though he was trying to shake off some kind of unhelpful thought or other. “My mom and I have been trapped in our house with the same man who kidnapped Kakyoin-san,” little Hayato stopped, panting and looking back toward what was presumably the house where he and his mother lived.

 

“So, that’s where that bastard Yoshikage Kira is trying to take shelter,” Joseph growled, glaring even as he felt Echoing Green holding onto him more tightly; he wasn’t surprised that little Tenmei needed the comfort, considering what they were all talking about.

 

“It’s rather surprising that we haven’t been able to find him, considering how close he seems to be living,” Avdol said, stepping closer and gently taking Echoing Green’s left hand.

 

“I think that Kira guy must have stolen my father’s face,” little Hayato said, then bit his lip, as though he expected the pair of them would laugh at him for saying something like that.

 

“That would explain why we haven’t been able to track him down since we lost him at the Kira household,” Avdol said, stroking his chin.

 

“What, you mean you believe me?” little Hayato demanded, not seeming to know quite how to react to something like that.

 

“There’s a lady with a Stand that could swap peoples’ faces, and according to Josuke their fates,” he said, narrowing his eyes as he considered just how that bastard had managed to escape from the net they’d been spreading around to capture him. “She died not long ago, and I think I know why, now.”

 

“Yes, Kira likely murdered her in an effort to cover his tracks,” Avdol said, hand on his chin as he came to the only real conclusion that anyone in possession of the full facts would have.

 

“Is there anything more you can tell us, kid? Have you seen Kira’s Stand in action?” he asked, wanting all the information he could possibly get, even if he did kind of have to interrogate a little kid to get at it.

 

“Sorry, but I didn’t even know what a Stand was until I met Kakyoin-san,” little Hayato said, looking more than a little insecure about what he was saying.

 

“Wait, how did you manage to get here with Echoing Green if you don’t even know what Stands are?” he asked, confused.

 

“Kakyoin-san wrote about them,” little Hayato said, biting his lower lip for a long moment. “Then, I guess he helped me find my way to you guys.”

 

“Well, I guess that’s one way to talk to someone who has a Stand if you don’t have one of your own,” he said, chuckling softly, then becoming serious again. “Still, we don’t know what Kira’s Stand is capable of, so there’s still the problem of just what we’re going to be able to do once we move to confront the bastard.”

 

“Yes, this is a rather troublesome situation,” Avdol said, folding his arms and narrowing his eyes.

 

“Are you guys going to help save my mom and me from that man?” little Hayato asked, starting to look worried about what might be happening; or not happening.

 

“It’d help if we knew what we were facing, but if you and your mother are in danger right now, I’ll let my grandson know, and we’ll come to rescue you.”

Chapter 70: Crazy On You

Chapter Text

Chewing his lower lip, as the nice old man he’d been talking to made an offer that Hayato had honestly been waiting to hear since That Man had come into his and Mom’s lives, Hayato found that it wasn’t quite as simple as he’d thought it would be. The old man had said that they didn’t know what That Man’s Stand could actually do, but it sounded like the both of them were worried that it might be something dangerous.

 

“If you guys would feel safer knowing what Kira’s Stand can do, I think Kakyoin-san and I could manage to keep ourselves out of trouble for awhile longer,” Hayato said, trying to sound more confident than he felt.

 

The truth was that he didn’t know just what else Kira might be planning, what he really wanted, and so he couldn’t make any real kind of promise to Kakyoin-san’s family. As much as he might have wanted to.

 

“Are you certain you would feel safe staying in a house with that man?” Kakyoin-san’s grandpa’s friend asked, a kind look on his face.

 

Hayato drew himself up, feeling more determined than he ever had before coming to meet with Kakyoin-san’s family; since being away from Kira. “Kakyoin-san and I have managed to keep ourselves out of trouble long enough to get to you, so I think we’ll be okay for at least a little longer.”

 

“All right, kid, if you’re sure,” the old man said, crouching down to pat him on the head.

 

“Yeah, Kakyoin-san and I can handle things for now,” he said, nodding as he felt a new kind of resolve settling on him; there were pictures he could find of the body that Kira was using – the one he’d stolen from Hayato’s actual father; the one that Mom had originally lived with, if not really loved – and since Kakyoin-san could already draw so well, he wouldn’t even need to risk taking them out.

 

He would have to risk Kira seeing them out of place.

 

Feeling Kakyoin-san’s Stand lightly touching his right shoulder, and he got out the paper he’d carried with him for just this kind of thing. What is it, Kakyoin-san?

 

You should probably stop off at a nearby store and buy something. It would make a better explanation than just having left the house for no reason, Kakyoin-san wrote, and Hayato laughed softly.

 

I could probably buy some candy for the both of us, he wrote, feeling at least some of the weight he’d been carrying for so long coming down off of his shoulders; it was good to know that he had at least someone to help him if he needed it, even if he did still worry about Kakyoin-san’s family.

 

Kira sounded more dangerous than even he’d suspected; he hadn’t even known what Stands were, before he’d met Kakyoin-san and the rest of his family. And now, with their offer to protect him and Mom if he needed them, Hayato felt a lot better, even when he left the store and made his way back to the house that he and Mom were sharing with Kira. And Kakyoin-san, but the both of them were on the same side, now.

 

They had been for awhile, even when Hayato hadn’t known quite who he was dealing with.

 

=DiU=

 

When they’d finally gotten Otoishi to go the fuck away already, Jotaro heaved a massive sigh once he found himself alone in the room that Tomoko Higashikata was lending him for however long it was going to take for the rest of their family to find that bastard kidnapper and finally kick his ass. A knock on his door drew Jotaro’s attention, just as he’d been starting to take off his coat and relax a bit. So, he got off out of his chair and headed over.

 

“What is it, Old Man?” he asked, opening the door on the unreadable face of his habitually-boisterous maternal grandfather.

 

That look, in itself, told Jotaro that there was something going on.

 

“This is something that the whole family needs to hear,” the Old Man said, the expression on his face smoothing out and becoming serious again. “Avdol’s getting everyone on his side of the house up for the meeting, and I said I’d get the people on my side up.”

 

“All right,” he said, following the Old Man as their family began gathering in the Higashikata living room.

 

Josuke, his mother, and her old man were already making their way into the living room with the rest of them. Jotaro didn’t know if any of them really knew what was going on any better than he did, but given the way the rest of the family had all gathered together, Jotaro knew that he was about to find out.

 

“We managed to track down Kira again,” the Old Man reported, holding up a hand as the room all around him erupted into the kind of annoying chatter that had always made Jotaro want to punch someone. “Only, it sounds like he’s not alone. Avdol and I met up with the kid from the Kawajiri family. It looks like that bastard Kira managed to hide himself with their family.”

 

“That would explain why none of us have managed to find him, even after all the time we spent searching,” Kakyoin said, sighing as he slumped deeper into the chair he’d sat down on when they’d all gathered together.

 

“It also seems as though he was the one to kill Aya Tsuji, as well,” Avdol said, shuffling the Tarot cards he always seemed to be carrying around with him.

 

“All right, so how do we do this?” Jotaro asked, narrowing his eyes as Star leaped out of his body, fists clenched, just as Jotaro clenched his own.

 

=DiU=

 

When he’d made it back home, back to where Mom and That Man were waiting for them, Hayato sighed as he made his way back into the house. Biting the inside of his cheeks to hold back a smile as he felt Kakyoin-san’s Stand gently squeezing his right shoulder, Hayato kept heading for his room. Knowing that there were at least some people out there working to help him, Mom, and Kakyoin-san made him feel at least a bit better.

 

Still, the three of them were still trapped in the house with That Man, so he couldn’t relax all the way, but when he made it back inside his room and closed the door, Hayato couldn’t quite manage to keep himself from laughing. He made sure to be as quiet as he could, sure, but he could only hope that That Man wouldn’t come into his room anytime soon.

 

Hayato, I’m going to need your help for this.

 

What do you mean? he wrote back.

 

No one knows about the new face Kira has, I don’t think, Kakyoin-san wrote back. It would really be best if they knew what they were looking for.

 

Right, he wrote back, looking back at the door, making sure that no one was about to come through.

 

Mom would be bad, but That Man would be worse.

 

When a pair of pens and a stack of papers all started moving on their own, Hayato made his way over to the door, blocking it as well as he could, considering everything he had in his room. Do you have any pictures of your Dad? I mean, can you get to them?

 

I’ll get them for you, he wrote back, making his way back over to his desk, so he could get the photo collection he’d been working on.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way back home, Kira smiled softly as he considered just what he and his cute little Yoshiko-chan were going to do together. He’d managed to find another shop that sold things for little girls like her, so he’d gotten her a cute ribbon for her soft hair, and managed to find another girlfriend to replace the one who had been starting to smell. The woman’s son had even been less of an annoyance than usual, so Kira knew that introducing him to Yoshiko-chan had been the right course of action.

 

He was more than pleased to return to the quiet life he’d spent so much time building for himself, now that all of his problems had been taken care of.

 

=DiU=

 

Watching as Kakyoin-san continued drawing, Hayato found himself worried about the possibility about either Mom or That Man walking into the room where Kakyoin-san was working. The flying pens and papers would have startled Mom if she saw them, and the fact that Kakyoin-san had to use his Stand to write and draw meant that That Man would have spotted Kakyoin-san’s Stand right away. So, Hayato was keeping an eye on the door as well as he could, making sure that he’d be in position to warn Kakyoin-san as soon as someone started to try opening it.

 

He was a bit too far away to see what Kakyoin-san was drawing, but with Mom and especially That Man in the same house, Hayato was honestly more concerned with keeping anyone who might try to hurt Kakyoin-san from seeing what he was doing. So he kept standing by the door, almost wishing that he could have blocked the door with something. But then, there would be more of a risk of Mom trying to barge in.

 

Not to mention That Man breaking down the door, so it was probably best that he was left to stand at the door, watching over Kakyoin-san as well as he could.

 

=DiU=

 

The Old Man had gotten his dowsing setup out again, now that they knew there was another kid in the hands of that murdering bastard, and had Hermit Purple wrapped around the string to make the search go faster. Narrowing his eyes as he watched the Old Man’s dowsing swing over the map he’d spread out on the kitchen table, Jotaro felt Star almost involuntarily emerging from his back. The pair of them glared down at the map, as the Old Man’s dowsing pendant swung over it, the look of concentration on the Old Man’s face deepening steadily as he tried to pin down just where those kids of theirs had ended up.

 

“It looks like the pair of them have split up,” the Old Man said, after a long moment of searching out their kids on the map he’d laid out on the table in the middle of their group.

 

“I wonder why that happened,” Kakyoin muttered, narrowing his eyes.

 

Before anyone else could say anything, however, Kishibe barged into the room.

 

“Look at this!” the annoying artist yelled, slapping a large manila folder down on the same table where the Old Man had spread out his map. “Tenmei-kun’s skills have developed so well!” he continued, pulling out a small sheaf of papers from the envelope.

 

Jotaro was just about to shout at the idiot manga artist to piss off, when the name he’d said registered in his mind. “You’ve been in contact with him?”

 

“Not directly,” Kishibe said, off-handedly enough that Jotaro felt his and Star’s fists clenching. “Someone he seems to be friends with delivered them to me.”

 

Yare yare daze,” Jotaro muttered, adjusting his hat as he looked down at the pictures now resting on the table by the Old Man and his map.

 

It really did look like Kakyoin’s kid had improved his figure drawing, but it was what he’d actually drawn that held Jotaro’s attention: that bastard kidnapper was reflected in a mirror, and the reflection was drawn as being cast by someone else. Jotaro had seen enough manga to know just what it meant to see that bastard serial killer reflected in the windows and mirrors that a man he was sure that none of the people sitting around the table knew the face of.

 

“So, Tenmei has discovered the new face that Yoshikage Kira is attempting to hide himself behind,” Avdol said, eyes narrowing as he studied the drawings that Kishibe had laid out on the table, alongside the Old Man’s map.

 

“All right, we’ve got a solid lead,” Jotaro said, narrowing his eyes as he turned his attention back to the Old Man and his map. “Did you manage to find where that bastard’s been hiding himself?”

 

“Right here,” the Old Man said, grinning fiercely as the pendulum he’d been swinging in a grid pattern over the map started to spin in tight circles around a certain point.

 

“I’ll have Bad Company surround the house,” Nijimura said, rising smoothly to his feet.

 

Just as Jotaro was about to demand to know just how in the hell Nijimura thought he was going to get there without being spotted by that bastard serial killer, Stardust put a hand on Nijimura’s shoulder, and the pair of them vanished in the teleportation that had always made Jotaro think of a single frame being cut out of reality itself. It was always eerie to watch, but in a way it had always reminded him of Aunt Alice. And not just because Stardust was one of her Stands, either.

 

=DiU=

 

When he and Stardust landed in the bushes, far enough away from the house that the serial killer and kidnapper they were hunting, Keicho narrowed his eyes as he began sending out groups of Bad Company to surround and observe the house where the serial killer had been taking shelter. Glancing over at Stardust for a moment, he saw that the Stand seemed to be readying itself to fight, as well. Keicho wondered for a moment just what kind of capabilities that such a clearly long-ranged Stand could even possess.

 

Still, he doubted that such a sensible person as Alice Brando would have been willing to leave her Stand close enough to be spotted by the Stand using serial killer they were pursuing if it wasn’t capable of handling itself.

 

Settling in close to where Stardust was crouched, Keicho raised an eyebrow as he noticed that Stardust was phasing itself through the tangled branches of the bush it was crouching in. Yes, that was one way to avoid the annoyance of constantly being poked by sharp branches, but Keicho hadn’t expected Alice Brando to be using the esoteric abilities of her long-ranging Stand on something so mundane. Then again, given everything he’d learned about her during the course of his time working beside her Stand and the people she was closest to, it seemed that Alice Brando was a supremely practical woman.

 

=DiU=

 

Making his way down into the kitchen, Yoshikage smiled. He’d just checked in with Yoshiko-chan; he’d given her her medicine and made sure that she would sleep comfortably for the rest of the day, and now he was ready to start his own day.

 

“Good morning, dear!” the woman said, looking as pleased to see him as usual. “Hayato-chan decided to walk to school today, so we pretty much have the whole house to ourselves this morning.”

 

Yoshikage was just about to pick up the pot of coffee that he’d been smelling since he’d come into the room, when something blew open the window closest to his head. Turning at the sound of rotors – of all things – Yoshikage found himself confronted by a small group of miniature helicopters. This had to be the work of someone, but he’d seen the green-figure that accompanied Yoshiko-chan, and the miniature army Yoshikage now found himself faced with was about as different from that as something could possibly be.

 

The fact that the woman seemed just as blind to these strange soldiers as she had been to Killer Queen – those few times when Yoshikage had called it out just to see if she would react to it the same way that Yoshiko-chan had; her eyes had always passed over Killer Queen all unknowing, so unlike the way that even Yoshiko-chan’s clouded eyes would try to follow Killer Queen when he would show it to her – was troublesome. Thoughts of how he would softly touch Yoshiko-chan’s lips with Killer Queen’s right hand, in just the same way as he would when he needed to rid himself of something troublesome, crept up on him even as the tiny soldiers surrounded the pair of them.

 

Yoshiko-chan was as far from troublesome as it was possible to be, but there were times when Yoshikage would find himself toying with turning her into a bomb. Yoshiko-chan, after all, had the same kind of spirit following in her footsteps as Yoshikage himself. She could understand him in a way that no one else ever truly could, and that made Yoshikage all the more eager to show all of himself to Yoshiko-chan.

 

Still, Yoshikage knew that if he ever did go through with turning Yoshiko-chan into a bomb, he would only end up losing what made her so special to him in the first place.

 

The feel of tiny, needlelike impacts in his right foot forced Yoshikage’s attention back to the house, back to the invasion that still seemed to be in progress, and Yoshikage glared down at the tiny soldiers that had arranged themselves all around him and the woman whose house he had taken shelter in. It was infuriating, finding himself deprived of the quiet life he had worked so hard to reestablish for himself – deprived a second time – and as Yoshikage called out Killer Queen once again, he vowed that this would be the last time.

 

This time would be the last that he was forced to run from his peaceful life by whatever interlopers had been chasing him.

 

=DiU=

 

With Keicho making the first approach beside Aunt Alice’s long-range Stand, Stardust, Jotaro and the rest of what he could reasonably call their forces were free to pile into Jotaro’s car to make their own approach.

 

“I hope they’re not having too much trouble dealing with that bastard,” Josuke muttered, and Jotaro glanced at the rear-view mirror for a moment to see his young uncle – bizarre as that thought still was – clenching both fists in his lap.

 

“They’ll be all right,” he said, catching the kid’s eyes in the mirror. “The both of them can hold their own in a fight, and we’re not that far away from that bastard’s new house.”

 

“Yeah, I guess,” Josuke said, though he still seemed uncomfortable with how things were currently going.

 

Maybe it was just because he’d never met Aunt Alice, or maybe Josuke was the kind of chronic fretter that Uncle Dio liked to pretend he wasn’t, but for the moment Jotaro couldn’t let those kinds of thoughts distract him. The Old Man and Avdol were going to be making their own approach from the opposite side from the past that he and Josuke were approaching from, since the Old Man’s Stand was the best suited to save Kakyoin’s kidnapped kid.

 

Kakyoin himself was naturally in the lead car with them, but Jotaro could see that his old friend’s mind was wherever that kid of his had ended up; Jotaro could tell that he’d have sent his Stand out to be with Tenmei, but the both of them still understood that he’d probably want to have Hierophant Green close. If only so that he’d be able to get his own licks in on that bastard kidnapper before they put him down for good.

 

Smirking slightly as he caught sight of Bad Company laying absolute siege to that bastard kidnapper’s house, Jotaro glanced back for a moment as he, Josuke, and the silent, looming form of a pissed off Kakyoin erupted from the car.

 

=DiU=

 

“Emerald Splash!” the war cry all but tore itself from his throat, as Noriaki finally found himself standing before the absolute, unforgivable bastard who had stolen Tenmei from him. Even the presence of Keicho Nijimura’s colony Stand Bad Company wasn’t nearly as important as the face he’d memorized from Tenmei-chan’s artwork. The face of the man that was standing before him even now.

 

The man whose gaze he was going to hold, until Mr. Joestar had managed to rescue Tenmei from wherever he was being held; until Mr. Joestar and Tenmei-chan had returned to the sunlight, where the both of them belonged.

 

Pausing for a moment, as Bad Company evacuated what seemed to be Hayato-chan’s mother from the house, pulling back to the car that Mr. Joestar and Avdol had used to come to this place, Noriaki turned his attention back to the kidnapper. Back to the man who had caused so much anguish not only to him, but to all of the innocent people of Morioh he’d been tormenting with his poisonous presence. As the bastard tried to break and run, Noriaki moved to intercept him, but Stardust was just that much faster.

 

For a moment, Noriaki found himself wondering what Stardust – an extremely long-ranged Stand, which seemed to have at least some kind of capacity to act for itself – would do, what it could do, to stop the man who had spent so much of his life murdering people. The sight of Stardust shoving its hands into the kidnapper’s thighs, then pulling them out as he went sprawling to the ground. For a moment, Noriaki wondered if Stardust had tripped him, then he noticed the oblong pair of… things Stardust was holding.

 

He barely had time to wonder what they might have been, before his attention was forced back to the kidnapper when Josuke fell upon him with Crazy Diamond. The way that the kidnapper’s thighs didn’t so much bend as outright twist in response to the younger boy’s attack-rush suggested that Stardust had actually managed to remove the kidnapper’s bones from his legs when it had made the attack that Kakyoin had only just been able to notice before his attention had been carried away by the tide of battle.

 

“Hey, bastard!” Josuke shouted, drawing the attention of the kidnapper, just as he’d called out that strange, catlike Stand of his.

 

Before the kidnapper could send his Stand after them, however, Whitesnake extracted that same Stand, then turned and kicked him in the gut in passing.

 

Waving his thanks to Father Pucci’s oddly independent Stand – honestly, the only thing that seemed to truly distinguish Whitesnake from Stardust was the fact that Whitesnake didn’t have any issues with speaking, though Stardust seemed perfectly able to make itself understood without words – Noriaki turned his attention back to the kidnapper – the serial killer – all of them were fighting at the moment. He blinked once, and Jotaro appeared next to him, eyes narrowed and attention focused on the bastard who’d been haunting Morioh for entirely too long.

 

Attacking along with Jotaro, Noriaki noticed that Josuke seemed to be doing something with the driveway they were standing on. Still, since Josuke didn’t seem to be getting in their way, Noriaki was perfectly pleased to leave the younger Stand user to whatever it was that he was doing.

 

“Emerald Splash!” he shouted again, battering the kidnapper’s body in the same way he’d battered down the man’s door, even as Jotaro fell upon the bastard with another attack-rush.

 

Pausing for a moment, Noriaki watched in surprise as Crazy Diamond dragged the kidnapper back to the shattered concrete slabs that had been piled up on the driveway, either by Josuke’s own efforts or all of theirs as a whole. Noriaki wasn’t quite sure, considering everything that had happened.

 

Finding himself smiling almost involuntarily, as Josuke forcibly reassembled the shattered concrete of the driveway with the kidnapper firmly inside them, Noriaki grinned fiercely at the bastard as their eyes met for the last time. The last time that kidnapping, murdering bastard would meet anyone’s eyes, Noriaki allowed himself to breathe for what felt like the first time in entirely too long.

 

“Good thinking, Josuke-chan,” he said, making his way over to wrap his right arm around the younger Stand user’s shoulders.

 

“Thanks,” Josuke said, sighing softly as the pair of them watched Crazy Diamond at work. “This bastard doesn’t deserve to rot in jail, and he sure as hell doesn’t deserve the chance to ever be pardoned.”

 

“True,” Noriaki said, squeezing Josuke’s shoulders for a long moment. “That’s true.”