The Treason Of Time.

By Clive May (clive@cj4386.demon.co.uk)


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The copy right of all things pertaining to the concept and characters of
Dr Who is the property of the BBC.  This story is a work of fan fiction;
it has been written simply for the pleasure it gave me in writing it; and
no money has or will change hands with respect to the story.

The copy right of all things pertaining to the concept and characters of
Sailor Moon is the property of Naoko Takeuchi and various corporations.
This story is a work of fan fiction; it has been written simply for the
pleasure it gave me in writing it; and no money has or will change hands
with respect to the story.

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The insistent beeping of the TARDIS alarm filled the corridors.  Tegan
hurried to the console room in search of the Doctor, and an explanation.
He was at the console, carefully adjusting a knob, while watching the
scanner screen over his half lenses.  At each tweak, a different aerial
view of a large city stabalised for a moment before being replaced.

"Doctor, what is it?  What's happening?" Tegan asked.  She watched the
jerk of views across the screen a moment then added, "hey!  Isn't that
Saint Pauls Cathedral?"

"Yes," the Doctor muttered; "but it's not there...  Somewhere close, but
not quite there."

Tegan moved closer to the scanner, studying the screen.  "What's not
there?" she asked.

"Got it!" exclaimed the Doctor.  The screen stopped its crazy flickering
procession of images to freeze on a small City church dwarfed by towering
piles of steel an glass to either side.

The Doctor flipped a switch.  The alarm was replaced by the usual quiet
hum of the TARDIS.  He spared Tegan a glance of speculative amusement over
his half lenses.  He said, "an organic focus for the Manna Energy trapped
at the base reality, upper sub-strata quantum layer interface."

Tegan put hands on hips.  "Right," she said.  "So that would be what...
exactly?"

"Oh, I think you'd probably call it a user of magic," The Doctor replied
with an affected casualness.

"Magic!" Tegan snorted; "there's no such thing."

"Really?" the doctor responded.  He peered over his half lenses to
something behind Tegan.  She glanced around to see Nyssa looking on from
near the inner door.  Nyssa frowned at the Doctor.  She seemed a little
irritated at some unspoken request which hung in the air between them.
Then she shrugged and held out a hand, palm up.

A pink rabbit popped into being on her palm.  It stood up on its back legs
and began to juggle five glittering stars using its ears.  Tegan's jaw hit
the floor.  Nyssa gave her an apologetic smile.  She flicked the juggling
rabbit into the air, where it exploded into a pink cloud, which faded
away.

"Actually," she said, "Adric's much better than I could ever be at
manipulating the raw material of reality.  I don't have any of his talent
for block transfer computations.  I have to work it the hard way, by
reaching through the interface and dipping my hands into the Manna Pool to
be able to mould reality in any meaningful way."

"Now, that's odd," said the Doctor.  Tegan turned to see him peering at
the scanner screen.  It now showed a pretty Asian woman with a great mane
of black hair.  She was dressed in some sort of red and white uniform.
"They don't usually stray this far from Tokyo.  There must be some trouble
brewing?"

"Who is she?" Tegan asked.

"Her name is Rei Hino.  She is a Miko, a Shrine Maiden at the Hikawa
Jinja."

"Jinja?  Isn't that what they call a temple, or shrine or something in
Japan?" Tegan asked.

The Doctor nodded.  "Yes.  The Hikawa Jinja is a beautiful little Shinto
Shrine dedicated to the Fire Spirits in central Tokyo...  And far more
important in world affairs than most people would suspect.  Rei Hino's
family owns the shrine...  And she is one of the bodyguards of a future
ruler of the Earth."

Nyssa moved nearer the screen to study the Asian woman.  "She looks very
unhappy," she said.

"Hmmm?" the Doctor mused.  "I wonder if I can get a look inside that
church..." He began fiddling with the knobs.  The picture of the young
asian woman blurred, her Miko robes changing to ordinary clothing as a
view of the interior of the little church formed around her.

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Setsuna had betrayed them all.

Rei had known for a whole year and done nothing, partly because she could
not see what to do for the best, partly because Setsuna's betrayal had
provided a focus for her discontent with the world in general, and anger
at the cruelty of fate, in particular.

The air in the old city church, where Rei now sat, was cool and still,
hardly disturbed by the roar of the London traffic outside.  The thick
stone walls muted the noise to a distant rumble.  It barely covered the
low murmur of voices from a party of American tourists as they exclaimed
in awe over the exquisite workmanship of the Rood Screen.  Occasionally,
the air shivered with echoes from the sharp rap of a footfall on the
stone.

Three rows back from the front, Hino Rei sat in the pews to the left of
the aisle, her clasped hands resting on the back of the pew in front.  She
wore a red, fleece style jacket over a simple white blouse and black,
pleated skirt.  Her pretty Asian features were framed by a mane of black
hair, which had been gathered into a loose pony tail, and fixed with a
silver grip.

The Japanese girl was lost in contemplation of the last year.  It had
taken that whole year for her to come to terms with Setsuna's betrayal and
the realisation that because of that betrayal, right from her birth, all
her dreams of a life with Mamoru had been utterly futile.  She had
struggled mightily during that year to slay the dragon of her anger and
regain some tranquillity of spirit.

The light coming in through the stained glass from the drizzling grey
afternoon did not quite penetrate the darkest corners of the nave.
Menacing shadows lurked behind the carven columns.  Despite her
preoccupation, Rei kept darting glances at the shadows.  She knew that no
danger lurked there; her Senshi enhanced senses told her that; but habits
learned in life and death situations were hard to break.

Those same acute senses enabled her to separate out the myriad aromas
making up that particular musty smell which always clung to the abodes of
the Gods.  Rei had, as far back as she could recall, associated that smell
with a sense of "holiness" and the nearness of the Kami.  That smell was
the same, and just as soothing, even here in this dwelling house of a God
she barely acknowledged, despite her formal education in a select Catholic
academy.

She was a long way from home, a long way from the familiar environs of the
Hikawa Jinja, where she had lived all her life until recently.  The young
Miko had been driven out of her home by unrequited longings for her
Princess's predestined love.

Unable to bear the unfairness of her enforced destiny, Rei had fled to
this alien land of pale skinned, round eyed people, whose hissing language
she could barely understand.  Her passion had pursued her, even here in
this far country.  The distance had only served to intensify that longing;
but Rei was determined not to return until she had mastered her feelings
for Mamoru.

A woman slid into the pew beside her.  Rei continued to stare into the
middle distance, showing none of her surprise that the woman had managed
to approach unobserved.  The scent of the person identified her.  Rei did
not need that subtle tingle in her nerves to tell her she was in the
presence of another Senshi.  From the corner of an eye, Rei watched
Setsuna clasp her hands in prayer - and was astonished to sense that
Setsuna was truly praying - not just going through the motions.

The tall, graceful woman was dressed in a smart business suit, dark purple
in colour, and looked as effortlessly elegant as ever.  Her long hair had
lost its disturbing green sheen in the bosky light, her dark complexioned
face looking even more exotic.  At last, finished with her prayers, she
sat back and turned those timeless red eyes upon the raven tressed Miko.

Rei continued to stare forward, unwilling to acknowledge the presence of
the elder Senshi.

"They are all missing you back home," Setsuna said by way of an opening
gambit to what she already knew was going to be a difficult conversation.

Rei sighed, and sat back.  She drew the red fleece closed over her shirt,
fussing with the blue bow tied at her throat, before folding her hands in
her lap.  They looked like a complicated knot, fingers tangled together,
pale against the pleated skirt.  "Is this official?" she asked, staring at
her hands.

"Official?" Setsuna blinked, and seemed almost to be taken aback by the
question; but, Rei thought, that was silly, this was after all Meiou
Setsuna, Senshi Pluto, the so-called Guardian of Time.  She knew
everything...  Didn't she?

Rei glanced at the tourists, who were listening to the guide with rapt
attention.  In a low voice, she said, "Senshi business?  Is there another
threat to the Princess?"

"Would it make a difference if there was?"

Rei grabbed onto her temper and held it down.  She had long ago discovered
that a straight answer to a straight question was never going to be an
option where Setsuna was concerned.  Being enigmatic was what Setsuna was
all about.  Even outright lying to a friend, Rei suspected, came far too
easily to the ancient woman.  Worse than that though was the knowledge of
Setsuna's betrayal...  And the resulting peril and hardships the Senshi
had endured in the name of Setsuna's dream of Crystal Tokyo.

"You know damn well it would!" Rei snapped.  "If the Princess is in
danger, there could be no question of me continuing my studies here in
England.  Despite everything, whatever I might feel personally, I remain
her loyal bodyguard.  It's...  Destiny, after all."

Rei was appalled at the amount of sarcasm tainting her voice at that last
remark.  With the others, she might have maintained her fiction that she
was here in England to study comparative religion as part of her Miko
training; but it wouldn't wash with Senshi Pluto.  She knew why Rei was
here, and Rei knew that she knew and Pluto knew that Rei knew and...

A bitter little chuckle bubbled up in Rei's throat.  She was aware of
Setsuna's eyes upon her, full of that infuriating implication that "I know
something you don't" which never failed to feed the fires of rei's temper.

At last, Setsuna gave a tiny sidewise motion of her head.  "No, Usagi-
Chan is quite safe.  There is no immediate threat to the Princess."

"If you haven't come to call me back to my...  Destiny, then what do you
want, Setsuna?" Rei pointedly omitted the "San" honorific.  "Why have you
come all this way to see me?"

"I was in town," Setsuna began; "Michiru and Haruka are here on a concert
tour, and I came along to organise their itinerary for them.  It seemed a
good opportunity for us to have that private talk you've been avoiding for
this last year without the other Inner Senshi around."

Amazingly, Rei fancied she detected the slightest trace of a defensive
tone in Setsuna's usually neutral voice.  Such a thing, under any other
circumstances, would have sent a frisson of fear down Rei's spine.  The
spectacle of Setsuna other than completely at ease was something Rei had
only ever experienced once before.  Now though, Rei's heart just sank in
her chest.

She had known this moment would come, ever since that dreadful evening
last year.  She had been spending a quiet evening in the fire room
meditating and doing half-hearted fire readings, when she had experienced
a powerful vision.  It had been of Senshi Pluto on the Moon.  With the
visions granted by the Fire, understanding was not always an integral part
of the experience; but this vision admitted of only one interpretation;
and the implications of what Senshi Pluto was about had sent a cold chill
down Rei's spine.

Hardly had she time to realise the fact of the Time Guardian's betrayal of
the millennia old dream of a Moon Kingdom resurrected, when Rei had felt a
powerful presence in the room.  Looking round, she had seen the figure of
Senshi Pluto standing close at her back.

Pluto had looked demonic, painted in ever-changing patterns of red and
black by the leaping flames of the Holy Fire.  There was an expression on
the Senshi's face which Rei, in all the year which had elapsed between
then and now, still could not define to her satisfaction.  She was not
sure she ever wished to name the emotion behind that expression.

Even now, the recalling of the set of Pluto's features sent a tingle of
goose-flesh all over her skin.  She had only ever experience such an
intense reaction once before, at D-Point, when she had realised that she
was going to die.

Pluto had raised the Time Staff.  There had been a long, tense moment
while Senshi Pluto seemed to be struggling with some inner conflict.  Then
she had lowered the Time Staff, spun on her heel, and left without a word.

Rei said, "I might never be able to forgive you for what you did, Setsuna-
San; but I could never tell the others.  It would destroy their faith in
the sanctity of our Destinies - like you have destroyed mine, along with
any chance I had for happiness with Mamoru.  You know this."

Setsuna nodded.  "I know," she said.

"Then what do you want of me, Setsuna-San?"

For a long time, the air inside the old church was disturbed solely by the
muted traffic noise and the voices of the tourists.  Rei waited patiently
for Setsuna to answer.  At last, Setsuna spoke.

"I didn't want to be alone any more," she said in a low voice.

For Rei it was a moment of startling insight.  Suddenly, she caught a
glimpse of the reasons why Setsuna had gone against her sacred duty to the
memory of the Moon Kingdom and her Queen, and committed the treason for
which all the Senshi had paid for in fear and hardship, and finally with
their lives at D-Point.

"The loneliness of it all just became too much to bear," Setsuna went on
in a quiet voice.  "The centuries of the vigil broke something in my soul.
I did it knowing that the rest of the Senshi must be awakened, that I
might have the companionship of all the people who share my Destiny...
Especially the companionship of Serenity's daughter...  My Princess."

There was a lengthy pause while Rei grappled with the implications of
Setsuna's confession.  Then Rei said hesitantly, "I, I think you did the
right thing, Setsuna-San...  Even with D-Point and, and everything.  The
threat from the Dark Kingdom would have had to have been faced at some
point for the dream of Crystal Tokyo to be realised; but I cannot forgive
you for robbing me of any chance with Mamoru.  I am not the Moon Princess,
Setsuna-San.  My heart is simply not that big."

For the first time since Setsuna's arrival, Rei turned to look directly at
her.  "I am resolved to keep your secret from the others, Setsuna-San; but
if you want forgiveness, you must go to the Princess.  After Usagi-Chan
gets over her disappointment at your betrayal, I am certain she will
forgive you."

In the dim light of the old church, it was hard to tell, but Rei felt
certain that Setsuna paled.  The ancient woman sat back in the pew and
folded her shapely hands in her lap.  They stood out starkly against the
dark skirt of the business suit.  "I know she would," Setsuna admitted.
"That is what being the Moon Princess is all about; but I could not endure
her forgiveness after what I have done.  I did it out of purely selfish
motives.  I will not lie to you, Rei-San; and in all the millennia of my
vigil, I never learned the knack of lying to myself.  Nor do I appear able
to forgive myself for my weakness in risking the Destiny of the heirs to
the coming era of Crystal Tokyo for which I have laboured so long to bring
about." Setsuna shook her head in bewilderment.  "How could I have been so
selfish, so weak willed, so foolish?  How could I have dared such a
thing?"

It suddenly made sense to Rei why Setsuna had kept her distance from the
Inner Senshi, why Setsuna had chosen to stick with the Outers, and why,
even after the reconciliation between the two groups, there had always
been that not so subtle tension between them.

The ancient woman had been unable to bring herself to taste the fruits of
her betrayal, to have enjoyed the longed for companionship of her beloved
Princess.  So near...  So near, and yet so far - it must have been agony
for Setsuna.

Setsuna said nothing for a long time, composing herself.  When she spoke
again, the mask was firmly back in place.  Her voice was neutral, her
demeanour aloof and assured.  "I know you think I cheated you out of your
chance for happiness, Rei-San," she said; "but that is not true, you know.
There's no guarantee that you would have even met Mamoru-San if I had not
done what I did."

"Really?" said Rei, unwilling to concede such a damning point.  "We lived
within a mile of each other in Minato-Ku.  The Hikawa Jinja is very well
known in the district.  Mamoru-San would have come to pray there at some
time, I am sure of that.  We would have met, and..."

"No," Setsuna interrupted firmly.

"It's possible," rei countered.  She turned a look of almost pleading upon
Setsuna.  "You are always saying that the future is not written in stone."

"Nor is it, Rei-San; but this changes nothing.  You still could not have
met Mamoru-San at the Hikawa Jinja."

Rei glared at her.  "Why not?" she demanded.

"Because without my forcing of destiny, you could never have been there to
meet him.  Besides which, without what I did, there would have been no
Mamoru-San either to come to the shrine to pray." At the look of anguished
puzzlement on Rei's face, Setsuna went on, "oh, I am not saying that a
young Miko called Hino Rei would never have lived there, nor that a
college student called Chiba Mamoru would never have come to honour the Kami
there; but neither of them would have been the people you are now."

"What do you mean?" asked Rei, fighting of a dreadful sinking feeling in
the pit of her stomach, because she knew where Setsuna was going with
this.

Setsuna took a moment to look around at the gloom filling up the church.
The tourists had moved on from the Rood Screen, and were clustered around
a small marble tomb in a far corner.  The voice of the guide whispered
words barely audible against the hum of traffic, even to her Senshi
enhanced hearing.  Finally, Setsuna turned her gaze back to Rei.  The girl
was watching her, the realisation of all her worst fears showing in her
face.

"In a way, Rei-San, you are my child.  In a sense, all the reborn Inner
Senshi are my children, since my act of betrayal created you all.  Without
the threat of the Dark Kingdom resurrected, Prince Endymion of the Earth,
Princess Serenity of the Moon, and all her Inner Senshi, would have slept
on in the genetic inheritance of the survivors of the Moon Kingdom until
they were needed.  You would never have been awakened to your powers,
continued to be just an ordinary girl, not the elemental creature you are
now.  You would have lived out your ordinary life, married, had children
and finally grown old and died."

"An ordinary life," Rei murmured.  She shook her head sadly.  "You know,
that was all Usagi-Chan ever wanted - just to be an ordinary girl living
an ordinary life.  And you took that away from her.  You took that away
from all of us, put the Moon Princess in mortal peril, put us all in
danger and put at risk the dream of Crystal Tokyo.  I find it hard to
believe that you, of all our Princess's loyal bodyguard, should give in to
despair.  What happened, Setsuna-San?  It must have been something
terrible to make you break faith with the dream of Crystal Tokyo?"

Stillness settled like dust in the old church.  The tourists had gone
elsewhere.  Silence lengthened between the two women.  Rei waited.  At
last, the ancient woman began speaking.

"It happened like this..."

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The picture on the scanner screen wrinkled, as though painted on cloth
which has been suddenly crumpled.  The two women's voices broke up into a
complex tangle of tones and undertones.  It almost sounded like mocking
laughter.  The Doctor frowned.  He fiddled with the controls a moment; but
it only made things worse.  At last the picture broke up entirely into
static.

"Hey!" cried Tegan, "I was watching that."

"Tegan!" Nyssa exclaimed reprovingly.  "It's not polite to listen in on
other people's private conversations."

"Really," Tegan said, "I didn't see you hurrying to leave." This got her a
hurt look from the Traken girl, and a sharp look from the Doctor.  Tegan
ignored both and asked, "can you get the picture back?"

The Doctor fiddled with some knobs.  He sniffed the air.  His expression
changed to one of chagrin.  "No," he admitted.

"Why not?" Tegan demanded.

"The signal's being blocked...  Meiou Setsuna isn't called the Guardian of
Time for nothing, you know."

"Can anyone smell flowers?" Nyssa asked.

The Doctor and Tegan ignored her question.

"So you can't get it back?" Tegan asked.

"No, I 'm afraid not."

Nyssa said.  "Should you be trying?  I mean, it sounds like something
really rather private and personal to me."

"Ordinarily, I'd agree," the Doctor said; "but when not one, but four of
the Senshi are here in London...  And one of them Senshi Pluto, I really
think it would be wise to learn what's going on here."

The Doctor moved around the console setting the controls.  The central
column began to rise and fall as the TARDIS took flight.

"I CAN smell flowers," Nyssa said again.

"It's sakura."

"Sakura?  What sort of flower is that?" asked Nyssa.

"Cherry blossom," the Doctor told her, adjusting the angle of his hat as
he headed for the opening doors.  "Come along, you two - time is precious,
you know."

"Where are we going?" Tegan asked, hurrying to catch up.

"To a funeral."

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A pale October sun shone through the skeletal branches of the trees
fringing the little cemetery.  Its cold light flashed off the polished
sides of a casket as it was lowered to the ground beside the waiting
grave.  The pall bearers stepped back, and shuffled away to a discrete
distance.  Their involvement in this sad occasion was purely professional;
they were the undertakers men.

There were only five mourners.  A family group of husband, wife and two
teenage daughters, all dressed in black, stood well back from the only
other mourner.

The elderly woman by the grave, draped in black, wore a veil covering her
face.  She was leaning heavily upon a cane with a curious crescent moon
device in silver just under the handle.  The priest droned out the
service, his voice almost drowned by the roar of the Roman traffic dashing
along the Via Tempore beyond the skeletal trees.  Nothing stirred in the
cemetery save the wind blown leaves hustling along the paths, and the veil
of the mourner.

The gauzy black material rippled in the breeze; and yet, it seemed almost
that it was the face hidden behind it which was shimmering as the wan
sunlight fell across the wasted flesh.

The ceremony was soon over.  The elderly woman held up a pale flower to
her lips and kissed it, before dropping the exotic bloom into the grave.
As she hobbled away towards the waiting family, the undertaker's men took
up shovels to finish their part in this endless round of birth, life an
death.

The old woman paused by the little family group to address the man.
"Marco, I would count it a great honour if you and your family would ride
with me back to La Luna," she said.  "There are some matters of business
which must be attended to promptly."

Marco was dark skinned, and looked exactly what he was, an Italian man in
late middle age, running somewhat to fat.  Though he was a servant, the
grief in his dark eyes was genuine.  "Si, Seiniora," he said.

Marco bobbed his head, replaced his hat and put out an arm for La Domina.
She took it, and gave the family retainer a smile of genuine affection.
Slowly, they progressed along the path among the crowding monuments of
time worn marble towards a dark blue limousine parked at the gates.

Twenty minutes later, the car turned in through a set of grand gates.  It
purred up a gravelled drive lined with neat Cypress trees to a hill-top
villa.  The look of the house betrayed an interesting architectural
lineage.  There was something indefinably classical about its form, mixed
in with echoes of a more eastern influence suggestive of the Taj Mahal.

The car swung into position before the front steps, and pulled up.  The
young agency chauffeur leapt out and got the doors.  Normally, this would
have been one of Marco's duties; but La Domina had insisted that it would
not be fitting on such a day, for Marco had been as much a friend to
Roberto and herself as he had been a faithful servant.

Again, he offered an arm to La Domina.  The elderly lady took it with a
grateful smile; and the party entered the house.  Marco's children were
sent off to change from their funeral garb, while La Domina required Marco
and his wife, Julietta to attend her in the library.

Once La Domina was settled on a comfortable sofa in the book-lined room,
she sat back and lifted her veil, the better to study the pair.  Early
afternoon sunlight, striking through one of the large windows, fell across
the sofa from one side.  The pale illumination cast La Domina half in
light and half in shadow.

Marco, gazing fondly upon the deeply lined features of La Domina's aged
face, experienced one of those sudden moments of surreality which overtook
him from time to time.  Though every line and wrinkle of her face was
familiar to him, sometimes, when he caught La Domina's face in
three-quarters profile from the corner of an eye, or as now half in light
and half in shadow, for an instant, he thought that he was seeing a young
woman of no more than twenty or so.  Though this woman, with a great mane
of black hair flowing down her back, was a complete stranger, her eyes
were always unmistakably the red eyes of his La Domina.  That red colour
of her eyes had always disturbed him, as much for their colour as for the
world weariness with which they seemed forever clouded.

La Domina broke the spell by setting aside the cane, and reaching over to
a table from which she took a fat, brown envelope.  "Marco, Julietta," she
addressed the pair gravely; "I am afraid that I have some bad news.  I am
going to have to release you from my service."

"La Domina!" Marco exclaimed in shock.  Whatever he had thought was to
happen, it had not been this.  His eyes full of bewilderment, he asked,
"La Domina...  Why?  Have I am my wife not given good service to your
family?"

"Excellent service, Marco," the elderly lady assured him.  "The reason I
must let you go has nothing to do with anything that you have done.  You
and your family have served my household faithfully; and we, Roberto
especially, considered you more a friend than a servant."

"Then why, La Domina?" Marco asked again, dismay and puzzlement clear in
his voice.  His wife stood silent at his side, still reeling from the
shock of this most unexpected catastrophe.

La Domina toyed with the envelope, turning it over and over in thin
fingers, while she smiled encouragingly up at the distraught pair.  At
length, she said, "now that Roberto has...  left me behind, I, too, must
go away from here."

Marco started to exclaim again, insisting that she must stay, that his
existence would be meaningless without being able to serve his La Domina;
but the elderly lady held up a hand to forestall him.  "I have no choice
in this, Marco, Julietta.  I am compelled by circumstance to go, whether I
wish it or not."

"La Domina!" they exclaimed in unison.  It was evident from their
reactions that this was to them a far greater disaster than the loss of
their livelihood.

"But why La Domina?" Marco cried.

"That I am afraid I am not at liberty to say, Marco," the woman replied.
The smile faded from her lined features.  The old woman sitting before
them became suddenly distant.  The change was so profound that Marco had
difficulty reconciling this aloof woman with his beloved La Domina.  The
atmosphere in the library actually seemed to grow chilly.

Then the stranger smiled; and it was his beloved La Domina back again.
She said, "what is of importance to me is what is to happen to the two of
you.  Therefore, I have made some provisions for your future.  From
tomorrow at noon, La Luna will be yours.  I am giving you the estate, the
house and all the contents which I shall leave for you..."

Shocked, both Marco and Julietta made to exclaim once more; but La Domina
ploughed on.  "You shall also have the house in Tuscany to do with as you
please.  Plus, I have set up a trust fund to meet all the costs and
expenses of the two properties.  I have done this in recognition of your
many years of loyal service to both myself and especially to Roberto.  We
were particularly obliged to you both for your devotion during Roberto's
final illness; and this is but a small recompense for your devotion."

Marco was shaking his head slowly and muttering, "it's too much, La
Domina.  It's far too much," while Julietta clung to his arm looking pale.

La Domina sat quietly watching the pair work through the shock, waiting
for Marco to collect himself.  She knew that he would find the strength,
for he was a capable man, even more than he was a good man; and the Moon
Kingdom inheritance was strong within him.  She had, in truth, grown very
fond of him over the years.  At last, Marco was able to compose himself
sufficiently in order to make her a dignified and heart- felt thanks for
her beneficence.

After giving the two servants such a shock, La Domina bade them sit while
she served them wine with her own hand, much against Marco's outraged
sense of propriety.  His protests, though, were only for the look of the
thing, as he had never been able to deny his La Domina anything.

While they sat sipping the wine, La Domina went through the packet of
papers explaining the arrangements for the transfer of the properties.
With the business out of the way, they were joined by Marco's two
daughters; and they spent some considerable time fondly recalling memories
of Roberto.  There was much to recall; but eventually a reflective quiet
settled in the library as the re-telling of stories about Roberto wound
down to a natural conclusion.  Soon thereafter, Marco and his family were
ushered out.

La Domina closed the door behind them with a sense of deep sadness,
because she would never see them again.  She stood in the quiet hall for a
long time, aware of the emptiness of the old house closing in about her.
Roberto was gone.  Without him, the house and all the things within meant
nothing at all to La Domina.  It was time now for La Domina to go, to walk
away, to vanish from the ken of the people here, and begin again in
another place, as she had done so many, many times before.  This final act
was no easier now than it had been the first time.  It would get no easier
in the future.

For a horrible moment, La Domina hovered on the abyss of despair.  Then,
with a little shrug and a stiffening of her back, she marched from the
hall.  The temptation to self-pity was left behind to fester in the
silence.

As she ascended the grand staircase, her steps became firmer.  The fiction
of an elderly lady was shed like a snake sloughing off a worn-out skin.
Though she still had the body of an old woman, there was now a new
vitality about La Domina.

The remains of the day were spent in wandering from room to room,
recalling her life here with Roberto.  She touched nothing; the objects in
themselves were meaningless; it was the memories they evoked which had
power to move her.  Finally, she arrived at the tastefully furnished
master bedroom.

For a long time, she stood beside the bed, while a powerful tide of
emotions washed through her.  This place in particular held a special
place in her heart.  It was here where they had given physical expression
to their love.  A fond smile tugged at her faded lips.  The old woman
nodded - this had to be the right place for the final act in the
fore-doomed tragedy of the marriage of Roberto and La Domina.

Quickly, she stripped out of the black dress of mourning, and laid it on
the bed.  She removed her other clothing.  She took a last, long look at
the wrinkled and age-battered form reflected in the full-length mirror on
the closet door - just to remind herself.  Then she thrust out her right
hand as though grasping something in mid-air.

A tall staff with a garnet orb at the top came to her hand.  She lifted it
up towards the moulded plaster ceiling and cried out...

"PLUTO PLANET POWER MAKE UP!"

Neither the summoning phrase, nor the gaudy light show were strictly
necessary; but Meiou Setsuna felt it only fitting for this particular
transformation, as a tribute to mark this final farewell to Roberto; and
to mark the beginning of a new chapter in her life.

When the light show subsided, a young woman in the formal ceremonial
uniform of Queen Serenity's Senshi, replete with gloves, boots, bows and
tiara stood tall and youthful in place of the stooped, elderly lady.

Senshi Pluto held the pose for a long heart-beat, before she let the
transformation fade.  In place of the grey-haired La Domina , there now
stood a young woman with a dark olive complexion and a mane of black hair
which possessed a greenish sheen.

Setsuna let out a long breath, and dropped the formal pose.  She moved to
stand in the wash of sunlight coming through the window.  The sun was
setting.  The view of Rome was spectacular.  The eternal city appeared to
be floating in mid air, buoyed up on an ethereal orange haze.  She and
Roberto had loved this view; it was why they had chosen to live in this
particular house.  In years gone by, the pair of them would stand for
hours at the window as the sun set over this ancient city, just holding
hands, enjoying being together.

He knew of course, she had never deceived him on how long she expected to
live, and how short his own span would be by comparison.  He had never
once reproached her with it in all their sixty three years of marriage.
Somehow, that made it worse, made the unfairness of it all the more
hurtful.  It left her with no negative memories with which she might turn
aside the hurt by hating him.

Beyond the window, the people of Rome, of the entire earth, were going
about their little lives surrounded by their friends and families.
Setsuna had never felt so alone, so far removed from the people of the
Earth as she did at this moment in time.

Tears sparkled at the corners of her eyes.  "Damn!" she whispered.  She
had promised Roberto she would not cry; and here she was already breaking
her promise to her love with him not two hours buried.  She raised a hand,
and touched the wetness at her cheeks.  She stared at the moisture on her
brown fingers for a long moment, while the old and oft times considered
treason gestated in her soul.

"Why not?  Surely now would be a good time?"

A few years ago, something had blundered into one of the many dead- falls
she had set at the outer edge to give early warning of a threat from
beyond.  Because of the sensitivity of the traps, and the way she had tied
them to the Great Node at the Mugen Gakkuen in the heart of Tokyo, Setsuna
knew that the Outer Senshi would have been re- incarnated.  She had not
sensed their re-birth directly, living in Italy as she had been for the
last seventy years; but it would have been so.  She had planned to see out
the last few years left to her and Roberto before returning to Tokyo to
seek out and protect the Outer Senshi while they grew to adulthood.  In
the meantime, she had intended to spend the time planning the defence of
Earth against the impending incursion from Beyond.

It was the right time, she told herself again.  Now would certainly be a
propitious moment to assemble the complete team as it had been in the
glory days of the Silver Millennium.  It was the perfect opportunity to
lay to rest the old business of the Dark Kingdom, before moving to counter
the new threat posed by the things from beyond.

And yet...

And yet, deep down, Setsuna knew that she was deceiving herself, that it
was all merely justification.  In her heart she knew the real reason...

"I can't go on like this any more," she said to the empty room.

She stared at her reflection on the glass.  The ghost-like image was
almost lost in the orange glare.

"My Queen...  Serenity...  Forgive me - but I cannot go on like this any
more."

The image in the glass appeared to lift a hand to her shoulder.  It was a
familiar gesture of Queen Serenity's, intended to give comfort to her
loyal Counsellor as she had cause to do so many times in the days of the
Silver Millennium.  Setsuna could swear she could feel the hand, gentle
upon her shoulder, swear she could hear that silken voice saying, "follow
your heart, Setsuna, follow your heart.  I trust you with the future of
mankind.  Do what your heart decrees."

It was, of course, nothing more than a memory of the distant past playing
itself out in her mind; but why, Setsuna wondered, this particular memory-
and why now?  Was it the working of the harsh Destiny laid upon her by the
hand of her Queen, and under which she had laboured so diligently these
many millennia?

Struggling with temptation, Setsuna remained at the window while the sun
set over the city.  She watched the growing shadows of the Cypress trees
reach out across the lawns to darken the small grove of Flowering
Cherries.  Roberto and she had planted them together many years ago.  The
beautiful blossom of the spring time trees was now only a fading memory.
The trees looked dead.  Even the leaves had withered and fallen, leaving a
web-work of skeletal branches, stark against the backdrop of evergreens.

The symbolism of the evergreens overshadowing the bare trees struck deep
into Setsuna's soul.  It was almost like a sign, a sign from Queen
Serenity.

In that moment, Setsuna decided...

She would commit the long considered treason.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

"That's a really weird hairdo," Tegan commented.

Nyssa, after a thoughtful perusal said, "but it really does suits her."

"It's ridiculous.  Those two pony tails make her look like a lop-eared
rabbit," Tegan pointed out.  She turned to the Doctor.  "You can't
seriously expect me to believe she was a Queen with a crazy hairdo like
that?"

The Doctor, standing by the console glanced up at the scanner.  Centred in
the screen was a statue of a woman in flowing robes, rendered in a
delicate pink marble.  She looked every inch a queen.  The strange odango
hair-style with the two flaring pony tails did, indeed, make her look like
a lop-eared rabbit; but somehow it added, rather than detracted, from her
regal bearing.  "Yes," he answered Tegan.  "A very great Queen.  Her name
was Serenity.  She was Queen of the Moon Kingdom when it fell to the Demon
Goddess Metallia.  By an act of self-sacrifice, Serenity single handed
saved the remnants of mankind from total annihilation by creating a shield
to protect Earth from its enemies."

"And you expect me to believe that this all happened thousands and
thousands of years ago?" Tegan asked.  It was clear that even with all the
wonders she had experienced in her travels in the TARDIS, she was still
having difficulty with the concept of a Solar System wide civilisation
maintained by "magic" and ruled from the Moon in ancient times.

"It's not such a strange idea to me," Nyssa said.  "I was brought up in
just such a civilisation.  The Silver Millennium sounds very much like the
Traken Union as it was in the days of its greatness before, before..." She
looked away from Tegan's doubting gaze to stare at the statue of Queen
Serenity to hide the sudden tears which promised.  She felt comforted just
by looking upon the image of the great Queen.  "From your description,
Doctor, it sounds very much like Queen Serenity functioned much like the
Keeper in our Union?"

"Very much so, Nyssa," the Doctor said gently.  "Her family was possessed
by the Silver Imperium Crystal, the focus through which all the Manna
Energy flowed to make the worlds habitable, even the moons of Jupiter and
Saturn."

"And when she died," Nyssa said, a vast sadness in her voice, "it all fell
into ruin, and all the people died with her."

"Not all the people died," the Doctor said; "but all the works of magic
faded without the energy to support them."

"And that's why we've not found any evidence of this fabulous
civilisation, I suppose," Tegan said.  "That's very convenient."

The Doctor chose to ignore Tegan's sarcasm.  "Actually, Tegan, the reason
why you've not found any traces of the Silver Millennium is that you have
not been looking in the right places...  Or in the right ways."

"So where do you suggest we look?" Tegan shot back.

Unexpectedly, it was Nyssa who answered.  "In your heart, Tegan, in your
soul and above all, in your imagination."

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Pluto walked between the cobwebbed wine racks to the back of the cellar.
She paused before a patch of wall beaded with moisture.  The grey rock
looked no different from any other section of wall; and indeed, it truly
was solid rock.  Yet to any person whose genes were inter-woven with the
Moon Inheritance, and if the power had awakened in them, and they knew how
to work the trick, the wall would prove to be no barrier.  Pluto had the
Moon Inheritance threaded through and through her DNA; she had been awake
to her powers for millennia; and Pluto knew all the tricks there were to
know about being a Senshi.

She raised the Time Staff and touched the Garnet Orb to the wall.  The
jewel glowed.  There was the scent of sakura sweetening the musty air for
a moment.  Nothing else changed; the wall remained solid; but when Pluto
stepped forward, she passed into the wall as though it were made of mist.

There was a momentary discomfort on penetrating the surface tension of the
sub-space artefact.  The sensation was reminiscent of when she sent and
retrieved the Time Staff.  This time, it was felt all over her skin,
instead of just her hand and arm.

Everything beyond the wall was a single-sided sub- space artefact.  Its
inner dimensions simply did not exist in real space-time if approached
from any other angle than through this section of wall.  The tunnel in
which Pluto now stood was lit by the soft reddish radiance of the Orb.
The way sloped down and curved out of sight to the left.  Holding the Time
Staff out before her, Pluto began walking.  One minute later, she emerged
into a circular chamber.  The ceiling had been painted to represent the
night sky.  A full Moon sailed serenely among the stars, bathing the
chamber in moonlight.

Directly beneath the Moon, on a three tiered plinth, stood a life-sized
statue in pink marble of Queen Serenity.  Pluto paused a long moment to
consider the two streams of hair falling in elegant curves from the
odangos.  The Royal Hair Style had been worn by all the Serenities.  It
ought to have looked silly; but somehow it had suited them all.  The style
had become the "trademark " of the Ruling House of the Silver Millenium.
Its importance could be judged in the care the long-dead sculptor had
taken over his art to create the impression that, if one so desired, one
might appreciate every individual hair in those two pony tails.

Pluto went down on one knee before this likeness of her long dead Queen.
She remained there with head bowed for a long moment, before she rose and
moved to the right wall.  Raising the Time Staff, Pluto touched the Garnet
Orb to the rock.  Once more, the scent of Sakura sweetened the air; and
she stepped through.

The chamber was just meant to fool anyone able to penetrate this far into
thinking they had discovered all there was to be found here.  It had
occurred to her that anyone able to penetrate this far would probably not
be fooled by such a simple deception; but she had set it up anyway.

The new section of tunnel ran straight for about ten yards, ending in
another wall.  She touched the staff to it, and stepped through into
another chamber.

This one was also circular.  The room was lit by a shining blue-white
earth hanging unsupported high up under the domed ceiling.  The vault had
been painted to represent the night time sky, with thousands of realistic
looking stars, seen as they would appear from the Moon Palace in the Mare
Serenetatis.  Directly beneath the shining globe of the earth, was a white
chest freezer.  Luminous crescent moons had been painted on each surface.

Pluto stepped to the box, and touched the Time Staff to the moon on the
top surface.  Again the stale air was sweetened with a momentary smell of
Sakura.  Senshi Pluto smiled.  It was a good sign.  She lay the Time Staff
on the floor and took a hold of the lid.  It lifted easily with a little
crackle of energy.

The box was full to the brim with shredded paper.  She brushed it aside to
reveal a globe made of frozen moonlight.  Just visible under the
shimmering surface was the curled up form of a black cat.  The tiny
crescent mark on its forehead glowed softly.  There was a second globe of
frozen moon light in the chest; this one contained a white cat similarly
marked with a crescent moon.

Pluto drew off her right glove.  She brushed her fingers lovingly over the
spheres, first the one containing the black cat, then the one in which the
white cat slept.  "Luna...  Artemis," she called softly, and smiled to see
the ears twitch in unconscious recognition of their names.  She let her
fingers linger a long while on the spheres of Moonlight, lost in
remembrance of these two old friends.  After the deed was done, Pluto
hoped fervently that they would be able to resume their old friendship
from where it had been interrupted by the mad ambitions of Beryl.

Pluto drew on her glove and, with great reverence, lifted out the two
Guardian Cats snug in their stasis cradles.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Setsuna settled back into the seat as the taxi sped off towards the
airport.  To distract herself from the horrors of the journey as the taxi
wove in and out of the Roman traffic at break-neck speed, she considered
her plans.

She had chosen the British Isles for two main reasons.  Firstly, it was
half a world removed from the location of the former capital city of the
Crystal Kingdom of the Earth.  Secondly, it had a Lessor Node which she
had used many times during the Silver Millennium, so she felt confident
that it would remember her and permit her to pass.

It might only be one of the Lesser Nodes, but it would be powerful enough,
with a little extra effort on her part, for the short step she needed to
make.  When Beryl traced her path back to earth, as she undoubtedly would,
there would be nothing to discover save an isolated Lesser Node.  Beryl
would know that it was not powerful enough to be a threat to her
ambitions; but she would certainly be distracted.  Doubts would be planted
in the fertile soil of her suspicious mind.  With those fears preying on
her mind, it would be more likely that she would swallow the bait later,
when it became critical to draw her attention away from Tokyo.

When the reborn Senshi reached puberty, and awakened to their powers, it
would be a critical time for mankind.  The young girls would be at their
most vulnerable during the transition.  What was needed was a decoy.
Hence this trip to England to make certain preparations for the future.

Not that any decoy was going to fool Metallia for very long.  The Demon
Goddess would soon become aware of the threat of the Senshi reborn, and
move against them.  She understood, as did Setsuna, that only the Great
Node of the once Crystal Kingdom could furnish an environment suitable for
the rebirth of the Senshi in this mechanistic age, and thus centre her
activities on Tokyo.  The fact that Metallia would have to work through
Beryl might buy them some time; but Setsuna did not intend to rely on
that.

She laid a hand protectively on the back pack on the seat at her side.
It's precious contents were a pivotal part of her plans to divert Beryl's
attention from Tokyo.  Setsuna dared not leave Tokyo undefended at such a
fraught time as the awakening, so she would not be able to be on hand to
guard the decoy.  Therefore, it had to be someone bonded to one of the
Guardian Cats.  There were only two possibilities; and even were it
practical, it was quite unthinkable to put the Princess in the way of such
a hideous peril.  Venus would have to be the decoy.  As leader of the
Inner Senshi, it was not only her duty to run the risk, but it had been
arranged that she should be the first reborn and reawakened when the time
came for the Inner Senshi to be reincarnated.

Venus was the only choice.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Flight 102, inbound to Heathrow from Rome's Fiumicino Airport, sank out of
the layer of strato- cumulus into a drizzling gloom over London.  Setsuna
set down the partially unfolded street map of London she had been perusing
to peer out the window at the grey afternoon.  Even with her enhanced
vision, it was hard to make out any details of the great sprawling
metropolis.  Looking out to the north, the world faded into a grey
obscurity.

The Minor Node in the northern suburb where she intended to secret the
bundle stashed in the overhead locker was the only one in the London area.
It was quite a way out from the centre.  Not that the location was vital;
anywhere in the Greater London area ought to suffice.  The bond between
Senshi Venus and her guardian cat, Artemis, which was to be reactivated
had been a truly powerful one.  A few dozen miles would make no difference
one way or the other.

Setsuna drew her gaze from the view outside and began to fold up the
street map.  They would be landing at heathrow in a few minutes.  With any
luck she would be at the house she maintained in Knightsbridge by six
o'clock.  Tomorrow she would retrieve the car from storage and drive up to
north London.  That should only take a couple of hours.  Then she'd spend
the rest of the day shopping in the West End.  She really needed to relax,
because the day after would be D-day.  After that, there could be no going
back.

The "seat belt" sign came on.  Setsuna reached for the straps.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

The midnight-blue Jaguar turned into Endymion Road.  As the sporty car
accelerated along the quiet residential street, a tiny smile crept onto
Setsuna's face.  That name was a good omen.  Perhaps it was the result of
some dim racial memory stirred by the proximity of the Minor Node?

She guided the car across the bridge over the main line railway out of
King's Cross, and immediately swung the car into a road parallel to the
railway.  The road ran straight, climbing the rising ground in a gentle
swoop.  It was lined down both sides by an avenue of mature trees, decked
out in autumnal golds and browns.

Half way up the hill, Setsuna pulled into the kerb.  She switched off,
gathered a back pack from the passenger seat, and climbed out.

A narrow footpath between two of the detached villas led to a footbridge
over the railway.  Setsuna strolled down this path.  A cold, bright sun
was shining full in her face from the pale October sky.

At the footbridge, Setsuna turned into an unpaved alley running between
the railway and the backs of the villas.  She wandered slowly along,
listening for the beauty of the Great Song to which her Senshi enhanced
hearing was attuned.  Here, in this far country, it was but a faint echo
of the mighty chorus it was at the centre of the former Crystal Kingdom in
Tokyo.  She strolled on until she was certain that the song was
diminishing; then she turned and began a slow stroll back down the path.
She did this several times, each time travelling a shorter distance, until
she was certain she had pinpointed the Minor Node.  It appeared to be in
the railway cutting.  She went to the chain-link fence and peered down the
overgrown bank.

An Inter-City train in the blue and white livery of British Rail was
accelerating up the track out of King's Cross.  It raced past with a loud
roaring of the diesel engine and a clatter of wheel noise.  As it passed,
it gave a ferocious blast of the horn in unknowing salute to the holiness
of the spot it was just then passing.  Seconds later, the train was away
down the track on it journey into the north, the noise of it passage
fading quickly back into the general hum of London.

Half way down the cutting, almost lost among the tangle of brambles,
nettles and weeds, was a small hut made of tarred boards.  It looked
dilapidated and abandoned; but it was definitely the right place.  Of
course, there would be something to mark the spot, Setsuna mused, even
hear in this heathen land so far from the centre.  Here it was a workman's
hut; but in Tokyo, there would have been at the very least a little
wayside shrine to honour the Kami of the place, if not a full-blown
Temple.

Setsuna made a quiet transformation.  She brought out the full body
armour, the matte black set which fit like a leotard.  The only markings
were the symbol in silver of Pluto which was cradled in a golden crescent
moon over the left breast.  For such an historical moment as this, she
ought to have been decked out in the full formal armour of boots, gloves,
tiara, bows and short skirt; but she really didn't like the look of those
brambles and nettles, even faded as they were by the lateness of the
season.

Pluto took a standing jump over the fence.  She made a perfect touch- down
beside the rickety structure.  The faint whispering of the Minor Node
swelled into a mighty chorus of sound.  Pluto's spirits soared.  Her heart
thudded wildly in time to the ageless rhythm as the music threatened to
sweep her senses away.  Yes, Pluto nodded to herself, this was indeed the
place she sought.  The package could be hidden in safety here until the
right moment.  The Kami which resided in this place would stand guard over
it until the moment when the call came.

She took the bundle from the backpack.  The sphere of frozen moonlight
gleamed, overshadowing the sunlight, shining like a beacon to light the
path to a glorious future.  The curled form of the pure white cat nestling
inside the egg of moonlight was obscured entirely by the shining surface.

Pluto stroked a hand over the sphere.  "Sleep on, old friend," she
whispered.  "We will all be reunited soon now, very soon."

Stooping, she set the sphere into the gap underneath the floor of the hut.
As the Minor Node became aware of the stasis field, a sub- space pocket
opened to receive the precious jewel.  The air under the hut rippled for a
moment, then the gleam of light dimmed as the sphere faded away.

It was done.

Senshi Pluto straightened, and regarded the tumble-down hut.  It was
certainly not a fit monument to mark the spot wherein much of the hope for
mankind's future was to lay concealed; but knowing the one whom it
concealed, she was certain he would have enjoyed the joke.  However, on
closer inspection, she noted that the spot had indeed been appropriately
marked.

Someone had chalked a crescent moon on the side of the hut.  It had faded
over time; but there was evidence to show that it had been re-drawn at
intervals.  Pluto smiled.  Even in this far outpost of the former Crystal
Kingdom, in this heathen land, and removed in time by many millennia, one
person at least still recalled and revered the glory that had been the
Moon Kingdom.

Pluto took up a sharp piece of flint.  She carefully scratched the sign of
Pluto in the concavity between the points of the crescent moon, adding her
own personal mark to the faded sign.  Then she turned, and with a single
bound, gained the path.

As Pluto walked away, she let the transformation fade; the body armour
went away to be replaced by Setsuna's somewhat frumpy clothing.  She was
well pleased with the morning's work.  It was time for a little
relaxation.  She would go shopping in Oxford Street for some new clothes
more suited to her present apparent age.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

The light of dawn was reflecting in the rear-view mirror as Setsuna turned
off the main road.  Slowing to a crawl, she guided the midnight blue
Jaguar down a rutted track between overgrown banks.  For a couple of
hundred yards, Setsuna followed the farm track as it wound its way into
the wilderness of Salisbury Plain.  Then she parked the car and slid out.
For half a minute she stood by the car, considering.  This was a special
moment; the future of human-kind balanced on this pivotal moment of time.
There could be no more important occasion in human history.  She did not
feel that discrete would be quite appropriate for such a moment of the
Destiny as this.  Only the full Ceremonial Transformation would suffice,
complete with the shouted summoning phrase and the full light show.
Besides, what did it matter who witnessed her transformation in this
lonely spot?

With resolution, Setsuna turned to face the dawn.

The Time Staff came to her hand.  She held it on high.

"PLUTO PLANET POWER MAKE UP!" she screamed.

The transformation came in a great surge of light and power.

It felt really good.

All too soon, the light show faded to leave Senshi Pluto standing by the
car in the full ceremonial dress uniform of Queen Serenity's loyal
bodyguard, which was so reminiscent of the prevalent dress code of the
Japanese school system.

Pluto chuckled.  She really ought not to have done that.  With a little of
her particular brand of speculation, she might have easily devined that
the Sailor Fuku she had introduced would catch the imagination.  In the
century or so since, the dress code had spread to almost every school in
the Japan Islands.  Perhaps it was some sort of racial memory?  Japan had
been, after all, the capital of the Crystal Kingdom of Earth.

Transformed, and the Eternal Song of the Lessor Node rolled over Senshi
Pluto, un-dulled by human perceptions.  The Lessor Node did remember her;
it sang now only for her, calling to the Senshi within to come.  The great
composers, Pluto mused, must have caught a faint echo of the Great Song
and been driven on by its magical beauty to magnificent feats of
composition in an attempt to capture that beauty.  In that moment, Pluto
felt sorry for them all, for their labour of love had to be in vain.  This
was the heart-song of the universe herself and even the greatest composer
could never hope to emulate even a faint echo of that great and wondrous
composition of creation.

Hardly able to contain herself, Senshi Pluto began to run.

Soon she was sprinting wildly, intoxicated by the power bleeding from the
Lessor Node.  Black mane streaming, bows fluttering, Senshi Pluto cleared
fences and ditches without breaking stride as she powered over the grassy
plain.  Dark clouds, looming over the western horizon, appeared to rise up
in pursuit.  The just risen sun, reflecting from the tiara, crowned her
brow with a spark of golden fire as she raced the dark to claim the new
day.

Many a local abroad in the dawn, who caught sight of the fey apparition,
were gifted with a precious insight.  Their belief in the magic and the
mysteries, which had abounded in the world when they were children, were
rekindled anew in their jaded imaginations.  They went on their way, more
alive than they had been in years.

Senshi Pluto slowed her headlong pace as she neared the great Henge.  Some
of the last survivors of the destruction of the Crystal Kingdom had
clustered about this Lessor Node for protection in the centuries of
darkness which followed the fall.  In time, this ragged remnant of mankind
forgot that they were the heirs of a civilisation which, by the power of
their will, had stepped among the stars; but they never forgot the special
nature of this place.  In time, the power which resided here became
revered as holy; and much, much later still, they had raised these great
stones to mark the spot.

Pluto advanced to one of the portals.  It did not matter which she chose.
There was nothing special about the stones themselves.  The portal would
merely act as a focus for her will.  She touched the Garnet Orb to first
the left stone, then the right.  She stepped between the two great
megaliths; and her boot sank to the ankle in grey dust.

She was on the Moon.

Sudden panic gripped her at the thought of hard vacuum against her exposed
skin.  Then she forced herself to relax.  The tingling over her body was
just the shell of the sub-space artefact through which she had stepped
onto the Moon.  It now formed a second skin about her body, which
shimmered slightly.  Outside was the hard vacuum.  The interior space of
the artefact was still on earth.  The shimmering effect was caused by the
difference in strength of radiation falling upon this spot in the Mare
Serenetatis, and the spot on Salisbury Plain occupied by the inside of the
artefact.  Pluto drew in a deep breath, and was relieved to taste the damp
grass and stones of the Henge.

The sky overhead was a velvety black, sprinkled with diamond bright stars.
High up hung the Earth, a blue green crescent.  Before her stretched a
waste of grey dust, dry as death, dotted with the occasional boulder.
Jagged peaks glared at her over the near horizon.

There was nothing left to show that here once stood the beautiful Palace
of the Moon Kingdom, that before her was the spot in space where the Great
Shield had been forged by Serenity's last act of defiance in surrendering
her life-force to seal away the enemies of mankind.  Pluto could still
sense the last lingering essence of her Queen.  It was here that the Great
Shield intruded deepest into sidereal space.

Pluto gripped the Time Staff with both hands and raised it.  She gave a
great shout, which went unheard in the vacuum, and struck the sky a mighty
blow.  The garnet orb flashed.  The universe rang with a flat note, as
though some fundamental harmony had been disrupted.  A thread thin crack
opened in the sky; and a jet of darkness spurted forth to quickly
dissipate in the vacuum.

Senshi Pluto lowered the Time Staff.  She set the but in the moon dust,
her expression grave.  Serenity's Seal was broken.  The Great Shield was
fatally flawed; in time the tiny fracture would grow into a gaping wound.
>From it would bleed Beryl's lunatic ambitions to poison anew an
unsuspecting world.

For better or worse, the last battle of Serenity's war with the Demon
Goddess Metallia was begun.

The date was Saturday 22 October 1977.  On Earth, in a select suburb of
Tokyo, a newborn baby drew in its first breath....  And screamed.  The
ecstatic parents had already decided on a name for their daughter...


Her name would be Aino Minako.

Fourteen years later she was destined to accompany her parents to England,
where she would meet a white cat with a curious crescent moon shaped mark
on his forehead.  He would explain to her that she was Senshi Venus...
and change her life forever.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Setsuna stood on the steps of the little City church, pulling on gloves
and watching Rei walk away into the drizzling afternoon.  The red fleece
jacket the young Miko wore and the brightly patterned umbrella seemed
almost to glow in the grey light.  Cars crept up the narrow, one-way
street, their tyres making a frying bacon sound on the wet surface.  The
noise was disorientating, seeming to come from everywhere at once.  It
produced a sensation in Setsuna rather like the feeling of falling that
preceded a deep-time memory flash.

She had been getting more and more of them of late.  There was a fair mix
of the mundane, like a meal she had eaten one quiet "night" in the Palace
on the Moon, with more exciting flashes at times like a trip she took once
into one of the Elven inner realms which that enigmatic race of elder folk
had set up beneath the sub-space interface.  Becoming progressively more
common, and here Setsuna's face darkened, were the ones ranging from
unpleasant to the down right horrific, culminating in mind numbing
memories of the Fall.  Setsuna shuddered and made a conscious effort to
shunt aside the memory of the terrible day the Moon Kingdom fell under
Metallia's demonic onslaught.

With a sigh, Setsuna smoothed gloves over her slender fingers.  She
settled a shoulder bag more comfortably, and began to stroll in the
opposite direction from Rei.  Their parting had been somewhat awkward, to
say the least.  Confession, one of the many lately arisen religious creeds
had it, was good for the soul.  Setsuna supposed you were meant to feel
better afterwards; but she felt no better now about what she had done or
how it had signed the death warrant for any of Rei's hopes of her and
Mamoru.  Not that there had been much chance of a successful relationship
between them.  Their personalities would be simply incompatible in the
long run.  Setsuna knew about these things.  Soon after the first flush of
attraction had faded, things would have gone sour very quickly on them.

No, Rei's dreams of love and a lifelong happiness with Mamoru had always
been a non-starter; but that did not make Setsuna feel any better about
her actions.

With an effort she shrugged off the feelings of guilt.  The confrontation
with Rei had had to b worked through, and that was that.  The clearing of
the decks for the next battle was an absolute requirement and to hell with
what anyone thought or felt about it, least of all herself.

She was an instrument wielded in an aeons old war against the dark.
Setsuna did not resent that fact; she just wished it did not have to have
such disagreeable consequences all the time.

Time?

Yes, time was at the crux of all this suffering the world had to endure
for the sake of a dream of a better tomorrow.  Time...  she had both
entirely too much of it herself...  And not nearly enough for all the
things she must accomplish to see the dream realised of Crystal Tokyo and
Tsukino Usagi, the Moon Princess Serenity, installed as the Neo-Queen
Serenity; but first...

Setsuna turned with resolution towards a blue police box standing quietly
in a side street.  It was time to deliver another stern warning about
meddling in other people's concerns.


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

The end.