Seishuku Skuld
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Saidan no Hitsuji
Chapter Ten: Sosei (Rebirth)
By
Seishuku Skuld (skuldsai@magicgirl.com)
Edited by Tsukiyono Omi
(glowboy90@hotmail.com)
Another horrible chapter from Skuld-chan.
**sigh**
My brain is fried right now. O_O (Oro....)
Well, this is dug out
of the pits of my brain, but I hope it serves as an appropriate bridge
chapter.
You might look at the dialogue at the end of the chapter and
say, "Wait a minute, Auron didn't say that!" Well, he did. In the Japanese
version. I took some liberties and integrated the dialogue from both the
Japanese and the American versions. ^_^
This chapter is dedicated to Big
Hentai Mike (again) and Omi for their support and
inspiration.Saidan no Hitsuji Part 10
I watched over Tidus for ten years. Ten long
years in Zanarkand. After arriving, I spoke almost immediately with the boy and
his mother. I told them Jecht was dead, that much was true. Mireiyu didn't
question what I told her, she'd known already, had been trying to deny it. But
my words struck home, and she finally had to admit to herself that her husband
was dead, that she'd never see him again, and she sunk into a despair she never
emerged from.
I felt a pang of jealousy as I watched her weep, her dark
head bowed, erratic tears slipping from her cheeks to pool onto the floor. I
wondered what kind of love she had shared with Jecht, it was obvious she was
very devoted to him, and undoubtedly Jecht had loved her. She'd shared nearly
ten years with the man, he was an inevitable part of her life. She cried for a
long time on her knees while I did my best to comfort her, albeit awkwardly.
She thanked me when her tears finally dried, pulling herself up from the
floor. Now she had business to attend to, a funeral mourning for her husband.
She worked quietly, her hands and voice shaking as she spoke with friends and
neighbors. All the while, young Tidus watched his mother from behind the door to
his room, tears creeping down his face. They weren't for his father, but for the
pain caused his mother.
Mireiyu died a few days later, her body weakening
and wasting away. She fell ill, overcome by a fever she neither had the strength
nor will to fight. I put her to bed when I found her collapsed in the kitchen.
Tidus and I helped watch over her in her feverish delirium. She called me to her
room a few hours before she gave in, and entrusted Tidus in my care. She was an
open and honest woman, never questioning how I knew that Jecht died, how I had
come to know him. She accepted me at my word that I was a close friend. I
respected her for her character. I understood why Jecht had stayed with her. She
smiled at me before she died, squeezing my hand as she lay weakly in bed, her
face turned towards me.
"Promise me," she asked softly, "that you will
take care of my son. He's such a crybaby, he needs someone strong to hold his
hand."
I nodded. "I promised Jecht the same thing." I realized here that
Mireiyu and I were a lot alike. We both loved Jecht. We both lost
him.
"Thank you," she whispered, her voice barely audible. She sank into
a deep sleep, and never woke, her breathing growing more and more shallow until
it stopped altogether.
So I came to be Tidus' surrogate parent, a role I
was not prepared for. He had stayed small and silent during the funeral,
shedding his tears in quiet, withdrawing from the few people who had come to see
Mireiyu committed to the sea.
Tidus hated me at once, as soon I told him
I would be his caretaker. He scowled at me, told me how much he hated me, hated
his father, and anyone associated with him. He let drop that his father hadn't
been exactly kind to him, and proceeded to ignore my presence for several days.
It was childish display that I allowed him because he was still mourning his
mother. As the months went on, I made it clear to him I would not tolerate any
further childishness.
He opened up to me eventually, taking me as the
father he never really had. I was as kind as I could be to him, though somewhat
distant. I supported him quietly and comforted him when he cried. In truth, I
was a little afraid of Tidus. He was much too like Jecht for my liking, and
there were always little quirks that seemed to unmistakably speak of Jecht, and
that would always make my heart ache. But I ignored it, I willed myself against
the pain, and that soon became a stony exterior that I wore around the
boy.
Tidus was driven by the memories of hatred for his father. At a
young age, he was already the best blitzball player at his school, but he still
strove further. He wanted to be better than Jecht.
"He always told me
I'd never be as good as him," Tidus explained to me one night, curled up on the
couch with his textbook. He had one arm draped over the edge of the couch, the
book balanced precariously on his chest as he browsed through the
material.
I listened carefully, feeling a twinge in my chest as I noted
his position. It was so much like Jecht, the relaxed, cat-like position as he
reclined on the couch.
But he continued, reading forgotten, the flame of
determination burning in his youthful eyes, "I'll be better than him someday.
I'll be faster, stronger, and all of Zanarkand will know me, but not just as
Jecht's son." He paused, folding the book, deciding he had studied enough. "God,
Auron, I hate that old man," he confessed.
I knew, but I didn't say
thing. It hurt every time, when Tidus referred to Jecht in that manner. He had
been my lover, and I still loved him very much. I lived for him. I died for him,
I pulled myself out of death for him. Tidus was a daily reminder of my promise
to Jecht. My vow to him as he died, my vow to save Spira, to give meaning to the
lives and deaths of my two best friends. It was most certainly painful when the
full impact of my promise would hit me in the face. Ten years without Jecht. Ten
years in the dream of the fayth. Ten years watching over his son, and protecting
the boy with my life...or whatever mockery I was making of it.
Some days
were a terrible strain for me, and the end of my time in Zanarkand would seem so
far away. Age was beginning to show in my appearance, white streaks crawling
slowly through my dark hair, a sure indication of the effort it took to wait and
care for Tidus.
"Auron," Tidus had said suddenly, starting me out of my
reverie, "how well did you know my old man?"
"Well," I began. I couldn't
tell him the truth, but I couldn't deny my relationship with his father. I
couldn't deny my love for Jecht. It was still there, a rhythmic throbbing in the
back of my soul, calling my attention when I lay myself down to sleep alone in
my bed. "We were close friends."
"How long did you know him?"
"A
relatively short time, but we became fast friends." My answers were all the
truth.
"You haven't answered my first question yet."
"We knew
each other well." The boy asked more questions, but I refused to answer him. If
he wanted to know, the knowledge would come to him in good time.
I
continued to watch Tidus as he grew, blossoming into a gifted blitzball player.
He was fast and strong, his body limber and flexible. There was a certain grace
to his movements, a youthful enthusiasm and arrogance that I had seen many times
when Jecht was in the water. He had a boyish baby face, and I saw many girls of
his school fall prey to his cheerful smile.
I thought of my lover daily,
wondering how his battle with Yevon was progressing. Did he remember me? Did he
remember Tidus? Had Sin resurfaced in Spira yet? I would push these questions to
the back my mind every morning as I climbed out of my cold bed and faced another
morning. Tidus was the hope of Jecht and Braska, the hope of Spira, and my new
life. He was the one chosen by the fayth, he kept me going. He and my promise to
Jecht. He loved me as a father, and I loved him as a son.
****
I woke
up early one morning, my body drenched in cold sweat. I had another dream of
Jecht. They always happened, at least once a week. They were heaven when I
slept, but hell in the mornings. I could remember feeling his warm breath on my
neck as he kissed me softly, his hands wandering down my chest, to my navel and
beyond. I remembered leaning into his caress, draping my arms around his
shoulders and moving my hips closer to his body. I remembered his smile, his
loving touch, his words that he'd return for me. For sure. It always left me
bitter in the morning, hating the life I'd been forced to live, the destiny I
was forced to accept. But it reminded me also, that one day, he would come to
Zanarkand.
But this morning was a little different, and though I still
cursed my fate, I felt he had returned. I could feel his presence nearby. It had
been a bit over ten years since I'd first arrived in Zanarkand. Ten years that
passed surprisingly quickly, though not without its fair share of pain. I rolled
out of bed, walked to the bathroom. I looked at myself in the mirror and
couldn't suppress a wry smile. So much had changed, and yet so little. There
were three white streaks in my hair, and a few wrinkles beginning to form by my
mouth. I had permanent stubble, not matter how I shaved it seemed a constant
part of my appearance. I looked so different from the adventurous, naïve boy
that I had been when I first met Jecht. My expression was hardened, I had seen
love, life, sadness and death, they turned me to stone, except for the parts of
me that loved Jecht.
"Some things change, I guess, Auron," I spoke to my
reflection, and it echoed my words. But my feelings for Jecht never
would.
Tidus had already left the boat that served us as a home, there
was a big game for the Zanarkand Abes tonight. He had already gone to practice,
leaving a small, hastily scrawled note on the kitchen table. This would be his
last night in Zanarkand if my dream served me right.
The Jecht that I
felt that day was subtly different from the Jecht felt when he first transported
me to Zanarkand. Now there was something wild, something savage and murderous
about his aura, a part he hated but couldn't control. There was a part of him
that was Sin, that would destroy and kill and never be satiated, and there was a
part of him that wanted respite, wanted rest from the horrible thing he had
become, the terrible influence of Yu Yevon. And a part of him that was still
linked with me.
The people gathered at the Blitzball Sphere that night,
it was packed to the brim with screaming, jumping, cheering fans. Tidus was
glowing, reveling in his stardom, his love of the game. He had made a name for
himself, not as his father's son, but as his own character. Those that couldn't
get inside the Sphere lined the streets, watching eagerly at the screens which
broadcasted the game.
Everyone was watching, riveted to the spot, all
except for me. I was usually watching Tidus when he played, I felt that it was a
part of my duty as his father. I would sit in the very back, watching silently.
I never cheered, I never clapped or stood up. I never felt the need to. Unless
it was Jecht playing, nothing would excite me.
Jecht was coming, he was
going to destroy Zanarkand. He was going to take his son and I to Spira. I
climbed to a high tower, walking out onto the ledge, a heavy jar of sake in my
hand. Jecht promised never to drink again, but I thought I'd let him this time.
Just this once. I held the tokkuri high, watching Sin approach, hidden behind a
giant wave of shimmering water. "To the old times."
The people below me
ran from the spectre, screaming in terror, falling and stumbling in their panic.
I alone walked the opposite way, my arm tucked into my robe, the wind created by
Sin's appearance ruffling my white-streaked hair. It was good to see Jecht
again. I'd sorely missed his presence during the years I'd spent in Zanarkand.
But our reunion was to be short-lived, Jecht had come for only one reason, to
transport Tidus and I to Spira, where the boy would end the dreams of the fayth,
and the suffering of Spira. Or so we hoped. "It won't be long now, Jecht," I
promised him, "It won't be long until we can rest."
I took the boy
to the very mouth of Sin, it's huge gaping maw sucking in everything before it.
This was how we were going to go. Jecht was so close, I closed my eyes and
drowned in his feeling. I could still read him, I could feel his scattered
thoughts.
The bridge Tidus was standing broke beneath his feet, and he
made a jump to the ledge I was standing on, pieces of rubble flying about me as
Sin absorbed everything it could.
I looked up to Jecht, Tidus still
seemed so impossibly young. So naïve, perhaps not up to the colossal task before
him. "You are sure?" I glanced up at Jecht. There was an overwhelming sense of
affirmative. The decision was made then.
"This is it," I told him. The
boy stared up at me, then looked to past my shoulder at Sin and the bright
yellow light that surrounded us. Spira was close. I picked him up by the collar
of his shirt, speaking to him in earnest. He was going to save Spira. I didn't
know how, he didn't know how, Jecht didn't either. It was all up to him, and
whoever would help him. "Your fate is sealed. This is your story. And yours
alone. It all begins here."
And then Jecht had taken us, and I was in his
arms again. It was a moment of eternity as Jecht held me close, cradled me to
his chest. He held me with a determined fierceness, pressing his cheek against
my forehead. I wanted to sigh and give up right there, that was the place I
wanted to be forever.
"Just a little longer, Auron," he told me softly
before turning me around and pressing our lips together.
And then I lost
all consciousness.

Seishuku Skuld
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