[X] Head to Keine's for the night, you'll think about the tough stuff tomorrow when you have had more time to digest what you've seen today.
The sun has slowly begun creeping over the horizon by the time you make it to back to Keine's place, the red light of the setting sun gradually darkening to blue and black as the color slowly drains from the world. You return to Keine's house soon enough - now that you have a destination in mind, the dense maze of alleyways doesn't prove difficult to navigate.
Not that it'd be difficult to find in the first place, of course. Even from a distance, her house is brightly illuminated by the bright lights shining from inside, a sole blazing beacon in the middle of a sea of darkness.
Keine ushers you inside quickly when you arrive at her door. There's a half-eaten meal on the table next to a pen and a thick stack of what looks to be half-graded homework sitting on the ground nearby, illuminated by a bright kerosene lantern.
"Akyuu came by earlier and told me you'd likely be staying with her for the time being," Keine tells you apologetically. "I had not anticipated your arrival. I'm afraid I do not have anything prepared for you at the moment, but give me a few minutes, and I can get something simple for you for dinner."
"Food can wait until later," you tell her, looking at the papers by the table. "You seem to be busy at the moment, and I'd hate to interrupt you in the middle of something important." If you'd known that Keine had this much work to take care of, you might've taken up Akyuu on her offer instead.
"No, not at all," Keine tells you. "You're my guest right now, and it is my duty as a host to make sure that everything you need is taken care of."
"Are you sure?" you ask. "I'd hate to impose-"
"Nonsense," she says firmly. "It will not be any trouble at all."
It's not long before you find yourself sitting in front of bowl of rice and some pickled vegetables of unknown description. Keine really wasn't kidding when she'd said it would be 'simple,' was she? Not that you're complaining, of course.
"I will not ask you whether you found what you were looking for or not," Keine says, once you're done eating. "That's your own business, and I have no intention of prying." She glances down at the homework she's grading, making a few final marks before tossing it on top of the pile with the rest. You glance at it and the student in you gives a pained wince. That's quite a bit of red there.
"However," she continues, "I'd like to know if you're planning on staying here or heading back Outside. If you do not intend to stay, then it would be for the best if you left promptly. Either way, there are arrangements I will need to make, and the sooner I have an answer, the better." She takes in a deep breath. "I understand that this may seem sudden, but p-"
"It's all right," you say softly, cutting her off. "I understand."
You've made up your mind on this already, haven't you? You've known what your answer to this question would be ever since that day those years ago, that day when everything changed. And really, when there's nothing at all for you to return to, isn't the answer obvious?
"I..." The words you're trying to say seem to swell up in your throat, gathering there in a thick lump that refuses to go away. You grimace and swallow thickly.
Why? You made this decision before, didn't you? You'd told yourself once that there was nothing worth living for, almost - but not quite - managed to convince yourself of that. So why is it so difficult to renounce your past? This is what you want. You're sure. You're sure of it.
"I... I want to stay," you manage to choke out. "There- There's nothing left for me out there..." You trail off.
Keine gives you a faint nod and a weak smile. "If that is what you wish," she says gently. When you first met her, you thought Keine was only a few years older than you at most. But right now, she looks as if she bears the weight of the ages upon her shoulders. In this very moment, when you look at her, you see not the young schoolteacher you saw when you first met her, but someone impossibly, unfathomably old. And when her gaze falls upon you, it feels almost as if she can see you. It feels like she can see the very core of your being. It scares you.
"Why?" you ask quietly.
She lets out a sigh, and that moment is over, gone as quickly as it had come. "Why am I helping you?" You nod, and she takes that as a cue to continue. "It is my job," she tells you simply. "Suffice it to say that no one else wanted the responsibility, and so it fell to me."
That's... Not a very good explanation, is it?
Keine smiles again. "It grows late," she says. "If you have any more questions, perhaps they can wait until the morning, yes?"
"All right, then." While you're not exactly tired at the moment, you'd be a poor guest if you forced her to stay up with you.
It takes you a long time to fall asleep, and when you finally do, you sleep fitfully, your slumber interrupted by strange nightmares that flee your mind as soon as you awaken, sheets drenched with cold sweat.
Keine's already up and about by the time you finally awaken, breakfast already laid out at the table.
"So," she says, once you're done eating. "Do you feel a bit better today?" You nod weakly. You're tired, and you really didn't sleep well last night, but you do feel a lot better about yourself. Maybe it's the finality, but now that you've made the decision, it sits a lot better with you.
"That's good," she says brightly. "I have some free time today, so if there's anything you need help with, don't hesistate to let me know." Keine sits back for a moment and frowns. "Of course, since you're planning to stay, we need to meet with the Hakurei shrine maiden."
She sighs, all of her earlier enthusiasm vanished as quickly as it had appeared. "Yes, it's probably best to get that done and over with as soon as possible." Keine cracks open the door and glances outside. "Overcast today," she mutters to herself. "Likely to rain later, I think."
"Where are we going?" you ask after a moment, as Keine rummages around in a closet, eventually producing two battered-looking umbrellas.
"The Hakurei Shrine," she says, handing you an umbrella. "It's far enough away from the Village proper that I'm not comfortable sending you there without an escort of some kind."
"This is for that ritual that breaks off any contact with the Outside?" You remember that shrine maiden on the mountain telling you about it. What was her name again? Sanae?
Keine turns to you and nods. "Yes, it is." She looks at you curiously before shaking her head. "The less we have to deal with that woman the better."
The road to the Hakurei Shrine is an crumbling stone path. The pitted surface of the cobblestone seem almost to fracture beneath your feet, the old pavement weathering away step by lonely step.
Keine walks quickly, as if driven by some unseen pressure, pushed on by some urgent task that requires the utmost haste. It's a fast, unrelenting pace that leaves no energy for talking, no time for sightseeing, only the muffled crunch of gravel underneath your feet.
Even with the speed at which you're walking, it takes almost an hour to reach the shrine. Even from a distance, you can tell that the red gates that mark the entrance are dilapidated, patches of paint chipped and fading, leaving the torii with a sickly, patchy appereance. Just from that, you would've expected a poorly maintained shrine, the courtyard choked with weeds, perhaps, and the shrine building itself badly in need of repair.
But the steps that lead up the hill that the shrine is built on are clean and smooth, with none of the signs of decay of that the road that leads up to them so clearly exhibits. Keine takes the steps two or three at a time, and very quickly, you find yourself at the top, only to find a shrine like any other. A bit old, perhaps, but clean, and very evidently in good repair.
It's also deserted. Hesitantly, you follow Keine forward to the donation box. You watch as she almost casually tosses a few copper coins inside, and then proceeds to glare at the doors to the shrine proper.
A few minutes pass, and the silence begins to grow uncomfortable. Maybe she's not in at the moment? You're about suggest that you return another day when the entrance to the shrine building slams open, revealing... a little girl with horns? You blink. Is this the shrine maiden that Keine was telling you about?
"Oh," she mutters. "It's you."
"Yes, it's me," Keine says frostily. "Is Hakurei Reimu here?"
The girl looks at you for a moment, then back at Keine. "Yeah, I'll go wake her up, I guess," she says, disappearing back into the building. After a moment, you can hear shouting and a few crashes from inside, and at long last, a woman about your age dressed in red and white stumbles out, yawning as she walks.
"Keine," she says flatly, "what a pleasure to see you here."
Keine gives her a withering look. "This is," she says, a look of disapproval etched into her features, "Usami Renko. Renko, this is Hakurei Reimu, resident shrine maiden here at the Hakurei Shrine, and the one who will be conducting the ceremony for you today."
Reimu looks blankly at Keine for a moment. "Oh," she says, turning to you. "Pleased to meet you," she says, sounding much more sincere.
You nod. "Likewise."
"Before we begin," Reimu continues, "if there's anything you want to get from your home, any personal effects or things like that, now's the time."
Well, now that you think about it, there's a few items that you'd like to get. It would be nice to be able to have your textbooks with you, or maybe a computer, if that's possible. There was electric lighting in that other shrine, wasn't there? But beyond that, having a some extra sets of clothes would be nice, on top of a few other things that would make your life a lot easier.
"There's a few things," you say.
Reimu nods. "Just think of where you want to go, and walk through that door over there," she says, pointing to what looks like a small shed on the edge of the shrine grounds, "and it'll take you there."
You nod and walk towards it, thinking intently of that small apartment you lived in.
"One person only!" Reimu snaps, from behind you.
"I refuse to let anyone get stranded Outside on my watch," Keine says flatly. "I've heard stories about some of the things you've done."
It seems like this argument isn't going to resolve anytime soon. Maybe it should be up to you to make a decision?
[ ] What do you do?