Triangle: A Kaitou Kid Vignette
By Ysabet
It was one
of those nights when the wind sang. It
fluted its way across the peaks of buildings, howled in mezzo-soprano clarity
around eaves and shutters, rippled shogi walls with a staccato voice; cold and
clear, the air was its own instrument in the first week of winter. Clean whiteness blanketed the city in a rare
late-hour snowfall; and, as it was too far into the night for many human beings
to be abroad, the thin draperies of snow lay for the most part untouched
beneath the full moon.
The thief
stood on the very edge of the very sharpest corner of the very highest building
for a good distance; after all, it gave the very best view, clear as any jewel
in the ice-sharp air. His cloak
fluttered like wings in the strong wind, curling around him in mimicry of the
fine mare’s-tails of powder-dry snow that danced past. One white-gloved hand held the brim of his
hat tightly lest it be whipped away, a sacrifice to the season.
The night’s
work had proven good; it had brought him three beautiful, gaudy trinkets for
his pains—stones clear as water, aquamarine and emerald and amber. He held each one up, admiring the cold
moon’s light as it glittered off each facet; the stones might have been cut
simply to reflect the moon, rather than to adorn some petty human body. Moonlight was clean, moonlight was
pure—moonlight was as white as his cloak, his hat, his gloves. Moonlight, for the thief, would redeem his
thievery someday, making him innocent once again.
But not tonight.
No, tonight
the moonlight devalued each of the gems, reducing its beauty to mere stone and
not a thief’s redemption or a son’s revenge.
His whispered curse was lost to the wind, who accepted it without
comment.
He would lay
the stones in a pigeon’s nest, well-sheltered under an overhang; a cryptic note
(not too cryptic) would tell their location for a certain police inspector (not
too bright) tomorrow, after his show had ended. The careful waltz that their dance of wits had become went on
down the years, as it had before he had taken up his father’s mantle; it had
been more than a decade now, and somehow the inspector never quite caught the
thief—was it perhaps because he didn’t wish to see his daughter cry?
Or his
grandchildren, either? It had been ten years, after all…..
So the note
would be delivered via some clever scheme, paper airplane or balloon or some
such trick. Then on with the next show,
either the public ones for the audiences that never got enough of the
world-famous magician or the private ones that still went on every twenty-eight
days for the benefit of himself and the police and the moon.
Matinees, if
you will. Three of them, every month,
while the moon was full.
The thief
sighed, then laughed to himself; it was alright, really. So what if he hadn’t found the Pandora Gem
tonight, just like all the other nights?
There would always be more gems to target, more glittering triumphs to
hold up in front of the moon, his finest critic. He could hear her applause in the wind…..
So he bowed
to her, never once losing his balance in the slightest; gravity was an old
friend of his, after all—they were comfortable with each other.
In fact, he
was comfortable with a lot of things—content, one might even say: with the
strangeness and triumphs and even the dangers of his tripartite life. Magician, husband and thief—his coins all
had three sides. He had taken up
his father’s white cloak with little reluctance, ten years past; the regrets
had come later on, once he had time to think.
But they were gone, washed white in the moonlight, and none of the three
could exist without the other. Someday
he would take delight in teaching his children the Art—especially the eldest;
she was already showing an aptitude.
Stepping
back a bit, he furled his cloak around him against the cold and shivered just a
bit; the snow was beautiful but careless of its admirers. Time to head home to his warm bed and the
warmer embraces of his wife, who would be angry (as always) that he had gone
out on a heist, but who would want to know the details (as always) before she
allowed him to sleep. Interrogations
could never wait ‘til morning, no matter how weary one might be.
Must be her
ancestry, he thought with a wry grin.
One last
look down at the city, and he launched himself in a leap from the ledge to the
narrow rim of a metal sign six or seven feet below; rooftops weren’t really the
best place to glide down from, you were too visible against the empty sky when
you took off. Now, if one was going for
showmanship that was fine….. but not
tonight. Tonight he had been much more
stealthy than usual, advancing up with extreme punctuality as per his warning
to take the prizes but without the usual fanfare and flare. He wasn’t sure why—
--maybe he
just felt like giving a private performance tonight. For the moon, perhaps.
Why not?
He had three
audiences, really, the three sides of his existence: the public, the authorities, and the moon. Three sides to a triangle, three stages for
a performance, three-two-one, presto!
Three.
A press of a
button, an adjustment of a belt, and the thief was ready. Gravity accepted his slight weight (still
light and lithe even after a decade, though with decidedly more muscle)
gracefully, allowing him to move through the winds as he would. The fine, thin snow sang and whistled
against the struts and fibre of his man-made wings, burning in delicate firey
crystals against his skin.
Time to go
home. A good night, really; he had
attained his goal (even if the gems weren’t the ultimate prize) and the
inspector had had a rare run through the snow.
Yeah; a good night. His wife
would probably swat him one, but he had learned over the years to keep mops out
of the bedroom.
***
And as the high, sweet voice of the
wind sang in his ears, bearing him safely home, the single black object on his
moon-white person twisted and tangled in the breeze: an inheritance from his
father, the inch-wide triangular charm that hung from his monacle. Black as soot and marked with a gold 4-leaf
clover, one might wonder why it was not white to match the thief’s
clothing. A mark of sin, perhaps?
Or a last jest by a man about to
die? It had been his father’s,
after all.
Moonlight glittered on the golden
clover, on the black enamel of the face and the front; moonlight glimmered on
the three edges, which were not enameled but oddly glassy. And as it fluttered and spiraled in the wind
like a tiny triangular kite, a careful watcher might have seen the charm from
edge-to-edge, not frontwise.
In fact, they might have noticed
that, when seen from the edge, it was translucent.
And glowing, very, very slightly—a
scarlet glow from deep within, as rich and pure as the light of the full moon
that teased it forth.
Kuroba Toichi, master thief, had been
a very clever man….. clever enough to find and conceal the gem that his enemies
and ultimate murderers sought in a very clever place.
Somewhere a dead magician was
laughing at his killers.
After all, who said that the Pandora
Gem had to be large?
***
Landing
gently on a ledge two blocks from his dwelling, Kuroba Kaito smiled one last
time at the moon and tipped his hat in salute.
Somehow when it was full---
--- it
always looked to him as if it were laughing.
He laughed
back, sharing the joke (whatever it was), and took flight for home, and Aoko.
************************************************************************************************************
YSABET’S NOTES:
Okay, I don’t know what I was smoking when I wrote this one, but
it sort of sprang up from a conversation I had with Becky Tailweaver a while
ago about possible hiding places for the Pandora Gem. For those of you who don’t know the story behind it, go take a
look at http://www.kaitokid.esmartkid.com, where you’ll find the entire Kaitou
Kid story (Thank you, Jane!). I dunno;
think maybe I’ve been reading too much manga?
Nahhhhhh……. @_^