Immortal Rain



"Take me with you into the distant future."

A manga series written by Kaori Ozaki, called Meteor Methuselah in the original Japanese.

When Machika takes up her grandfather's legacy as Zol the Grim Reaper, she swears to take down the one bounty he couldn't: The immortal Methuselah. Upon finding him, she discovers the first of many problems with immortality: namely, such bounties are somewhat hard to cash in. Rather than let that stop her, she decides to follow Methuselah until she's able to achieve her goal. Methuselah, or Rain as he calls himself, appears at first to be nothing more than a clueless trouble magnet who can't play the broken violin he carries and thinks that letting himself get arrested is a valid form of transportation. But as time passes, and Machika finds herself drawn to Rain for more reasons than her grandfather's honor, the pair is caught up in a dangerous fight with a mysterious group looking for military technology long lost, and for creatures called Angels that Rain somehow knows how to kill. And she learns that Rain isn't just wandering the earth - he's waiting for something. Or someone.

There are currently eight volumes available in English through Tokyopop. The ninth and final volumes is available in English online and will be released through Tokyopop sometime in January. The Japanese version runs in Wings comics, and the tenth volume was recently released.

This series provides examples of:
"Jilleena: "I won't lose to a boy!"
 * Absurdly Sharp Blade: Machika's scythe, it easily cuts through anything she swings it at.
 * Action Girl: Machika. Sharem also counts as an action woman, as well as Jilleena, one of her adopted children.
 * A God Am I: Dora Folk
 * Anguished Declaration of Love: Freya to Yuca, Machika to Rain.
 * Ax Crazy: Dora Folk. He takes a bit too much delight in the idea of cutting Ys up into pieces while anticipating that Ys will scream. And don't even get into the whole impregnating womens with hell spawn thing...
 * Back From the Dead: Yuca through Reincarnation,.
 * As of Volume 10,.
 * Beat Still My Heart: the chest-ripping variant to Rain.
 * Bifauxnen: At one point Machika's hired to be a young woman's chaperone - tuxedo and all. She is promptly mobbed by pretty girls.
 * During her subsequent fight with Jilleena:

Machika: "I've got some great news for you...""

"Folk: (talking about someone who looks about eight, with a faint smile on his face) "How cute."
 * Another time, Machika's mistaken for a boy, even though she's wearing her dress at the time.
 * It would probably help if Machika didn't refer to herself with masculine pronouns.
 * It even happens to some fans.
 * Blessed With Suck: Aside from Rain's desire to just be human again, the immortality and accompanying powers he's gained are just not worth everything else he's lost.
 * It doesn't help that he's constantly being hunted by people seeking immortality for themselves.
 * Yuka too can be considered Blessed With Suck  too bad this had driven him crazy
 * Bounty Hunter: The Grim Reaper Zol, and his granddaughter Machika. Also some thugs in Machika's hometown.
 * Break the Cutie: Oh, lord, it'd probably be a shorter list to mention the unbroken characters. Rain, Machika, Freya, Sharem to a degree, Ayla, Yuca somewhere along the line though we don't see it...
 * Christianity Is Catholic
 * Complete Monster: Dora Folk
 * Yuca is debatable, as while he does horrific things, he's still a very sympathetic character.
 * Creepy Child: Yuca (as Ys) is very good at this, as he's physically 9 or so, but has lifetimes of knowledge and experience. Except when he tries to glare and reverts to a pouting prepubescent.
 * Crouching Moron Hidden Badass: Rain
 * Death By Childbirth: Yuca's poor mother.
 * Death By Despair: Freya attempts this..
 * Despair Event Horizon: Freya crossed it after one of the orphans died, and stopped eating.
 * Sharem has also crossed this. The shoving-point was most likely when her husband accidentally ran over their son, but she's gotten to the point where
 * Yuca crossed this a long, long time ago. Hence his elaborate plan to die and stay dead.
 * Determinator: Rain and Machika. Too many examples to sum up here, but Machika spent an entire year wandering around the world looking for Rain.
 * Doom Magnet: Rain. So much.
 * Empathy Doll Shot: Subverted, because finding Mayu's teddybear abandoned on the floor leads Freya to go looking for the wayward girl, and see her get struck by a incoming missile.
 * Enfant Terrible: Yuca aka Ys. Though he's not technically a child, he does wish to Kill All Humans.
 * Evilutionary Biologist: Dora Folk, among others. Yuca has the knowledge, but he's not doing it For the Evulz.
 * Express Delivery: Yuca's, which ends up being massive Nightmare Fuel.
 * Face Heel Turn:.
 * Fetus Terrible: the time between Yuca's conception and birth is about two months, in which time he grows to the form of a prepubescent boy in utero. Needless to say his mother doesn't survive.
 * While he's still in the womb, his mother can feel him writing Rain's name over and over on the uterus wall. Eek.
 * The woman Folk impregnated with an angel. Gah.
 * Flying Dutchman: Rain is either this or Wandering the Earth.
 * Free Fall Romance Chapter 30 - Rain and Machika reunite after, he leaps high (like, hundreds of feet!?! into the air with her. It's very sweet and picturesque. But how do they land? Or at least why isnt Machika squished? Must be the power of LOVE. Part of a larger Not the Fall That Kills You recurring trope in this work.
 * Get a Hold of Yourself Man: Machika has done this a couple times so far, first to calm a panicked civilian during a fight with an Angel, and later.
 * Handsome Lech: Eury Evans. The moment he realizes one of the people he's fighting against is, despite his initial impression, not a guy, he drops what he's doing and attempts to ask her out.
 * Hot Scientist: Dr. Dora Folk. Heck, look at the character sketch - he looks like one of those models in advertisements for men's clothing.
 * Hot Shoujo Dad: Zol is a Hot Shoujo grandfather. Kinda makes you wonder.
 * It's explained in a side chapter that
 * Ho Yay / Foe Yay: Rain and Yuca were incredibly close friends, so much that . But.
 * Also, in flashbacks, Yuca seems to enjoy suddenly appearing next to Rain or randomly stroking his face while talking to him. Admittedly, he does this to multiple characters, at least two of whom are female, but still.
 * Important Haircut: Machika in a bonus chapter.
 * Incurable Cough of Death: Rain before immortality.
 * It Got Worse: Rain's backstory.
 * I Want My Beloved to Be Happy: Rain for Freya, though it didn't so much work out.
 * I Will Find You: Rain promises this to Machika when telling her . And when, she pledges the same to him.
 * Kick the Dog: Yuca stepping on the fallen baby bird. Considering that up until this point, he's seen as too cheerful and buddy-buddy with Rain to really be the same monster we've heard about, this moment is also good Foreshadowing.
 * Also, Folk. His description of how he made one of the angels in Volume 6 is a hit of Nightmare Fuel liberally spiced with Fetus Terrible. Our first introduction to him gives us this little gem:

Nurse: (smiles)

Folk: (facial expression exactly the same) "I wanna make him cry."

Nurse: (looks horrified)"


 * Love Triangle: Type 2. Freya loves Yuca, who doesn't love her. He's fascinated by Rain, who loves Freya. Freya thinks Rain is a dork.
 * Another Love Triangle: Type 8. Rain, Machika and Yuca. Their friendship is so strong that it screams of this trope.
 * The Messiah: Rain, complete with Martyr complex.
 * Mama Bear: Sharem. Her only natural child might have died, but don't mess with any of the orphans in her care.
 * Mayfly December Romance
 * Mind Rape: This is how Yuca shows affection towards the only person he's ever cared about.
 * "Because you and I are friends."
 * Murder the Hypotenuse: arguable motivation for.
 * Nigh Invulnerable: Rain can get a large boat thrown at him, and he just responds by throwing back a freighter.
 * also Yuca via Reincarnation (to his eternal dismay), and the Angels.
 * Nightmare Fuel: Frequent.
 * Not the Fall That Kills You: Lucky for Rain, Machika, Yuca, and others, because they all fall or jump to what should be their death at least once.
 * To the credit of the series, the 'being saved at the last minute from falling' thing is usually less being caught, and more the immortal jumping after the falling person and acting as a human shield. But still.
 * Obfuscating Stupidity: Subversion: Rain attempts this, but fails, as he actually is something of a spazz. Wonderfully demonstrated in several scenes where he attempts to claim he isn't Methuselah while accidentally breaking all the steel chains wrapped around him.
 * Our Angels Are Different: And HOW.
 * Parental Abandonment: The entire cast seems to consist of orphans. In fact, the only parents we encounter are trying to cope with the death of their child.
 * Perma Stubble: Dora Folk
 * Physical God: Rain has Super Strength, is damned hard to kill, doesn't age, and.
 * Posthumous Character: Freya and all the orphans, Zol.
 * Power of Love: Machika combines this with Determinator to do anything possible to, including killing an Angel barehanded.
 * Whether it plays any role in resolving things with Yuca remains to be seen.
 * It
 * Put Down Your Gun and Step Away: Awesomely subverted by Eury when Folk takes Ayla hostage. He tosses the gun up, turns away, then grabs the gun out of the air behind him and shoots Folk right in the heart.
 * Real Women Never Wear Dresses: subverted with Sharem in her first fight, and averted by Machika's 'dress with shorts' bounty hunting outfit.
 * Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Rain is 624, but looks in his late teens, early twenties. Yuca (who's been reincarnated for millenia but looks like a little kid) is an even better example.
 * Red Eyes Take Warning: Though the official art can't decide on the protagonists' hair colors, Yuca almost consistently has blood-red eyes.
 * Reincarnation: Yuca, . He's rather tired of it.
 * Replacement Goldfish: Ys for Sharem.
 * Sadistic Choice: Yuca's bet with Rain is a variation. Essentially,.
 * Yuca actually hopes he'll Take a Third Option;.
 * Second Love: Rain lost Freya, but gained Machika. The way the plot is going,  is probably going to wind up being this for  . Just don't mention that to either of them.
 * Series Continuity Error: The gender of the small fuzzy creature named Kiki is not mentioned in the original Japanese until around volume five or so, hence the confusion English translators had when it turned out Kiki was male.
 * Snow Means Death: subverted, in that the field of snow flowers Rain grows for Freya succeed in making her want to live again. Played straight with Machika charging into a blizzard.
 * Suicidal Cosmic Temper Tantrum: Yuca's goal. Partly justified in that.
 * Waif Fu: Machika is tiny, but also a Badass Bounty Hunter.
 * Walking the Earth: Rain, when he's not tired enough to consider the imprisonment-and-escape method.
 * Was It All a Lie: Rain asks Yuca about their childhood together in the orphanage. He has not yet given an answer.
 * What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic Lord, where to begin. Rain wears a priests uniform, the immortal monsters that show up are referred to as angels, the metal plaque on Rain's chest is cross-shaped, Rain stabs an angel in the chest in the first volume with a cross-shaped branch, the way 's body is hung... I could go on.
 * Also, the drug used to suppress angel blood is called ichor.
 * Who Wants to Live Forever: Certainly not Yuca or Rain.
 * Woobie: Rain and Yuca, for different reasons. Also Ayla, and Machika gets their moments.
 * Woobie Destroyer of Worlds: Yuca. Oh Good God, Yuca.
 * World of No Grandparents: Given an odd sort of subversion. Machika calls Zoll Grandfather despite the fact he's clearly not old enough to have grandchildren.
 * You Can't Go Home Again: This applies to Rain after
 * Machika is on the run after attacking the thugs who killed her grandfather and fleeing with the bounty Methuselah. Though admittedly, after her grandfather died there wasn't much holding her there.
 * Ayla is one of many refugees kicked out of her homeland after the death of their King.