Seishuku Skuld
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Saidan no Hitsuji
Chapter Four: Descoberta
(Discovery)
By Seishuku Skuld (skuldsai@magicgirl.com)
Music makes my fingers go:
Malice Mizer - Illuminati
Hamasaki Ayumi - M
Goo Goo Dolls - Black
Balloon
Escaflowne - Yubiwa
~*~*~*~*~
namida ga ato kara
afuredashite
saigo no egao ga nijinde mienai no
ikanaide ikanaide koko ni
ite
As my tears keep overflowing one after another,
I can't see your
last smile through their blur.
Please don't go, please don't go... Stay
here.
-Escaflowne: Yubiwa (Ring)Saidan no Hitsuji Part 4
I awoke last the next
morning, Jecht and Braska had risen before me. It was near noon already, and
Braska smiled kindly at me when I opened my eyes.
"Sleep well?" he
asked.
"Fairly," I replied, before realizing what time it was. "Oh no," I
groaned, "I'm sorry, Braska, I didn't mean to sleep in this
late."
"That's all right," my summoner answered with a smile. "I wasn't
planning to leave until tomorrow anyway." I heaved a sigh of relief.
"You
sleep like a log, Auron," Jecht commented, standing over me with his arms
crossed and a smug grin.
I resisted the urge to retort, but instead
grinned wanly and said in return, "I was tossing and turning all
night."
"Hmph, I told you, you need to relax more. But that's what this
little vacation is for, ain't it Braska?"
Braska nodded and winked at me,
a sign that I shouldn't take offense at Jecht's offhand words.
For the
first time, I found I didn't, and just smiled back.
***
We stayed for
the last time at the Travel Agency, and once again Jecht left the room in the
middle of the night. I followed him out soon after, looking for a quiet place to
talk perhaps, hoping he wasn't recording another sphere.
I found him
sitting on the edge of the river, head raised to the sky, watching the moon and
the colors of Macalania play over a darkness pinpointed with stars. He glanced
at me suspiciously as I sat down next to him, keeping my eyes averted from his
face and focused along the rippling reflection of the water.
There was a
long period of silence before I said anything, I tried to gather my thoughts of
what exactly I would say.
"Couldn't sleep?" I asked finally, hoping to
break it to him after talking him up a bit.
"No."
"Neither can
I."
"Look Auron," he spoke so quickly he almost clipped the end of my
sentence, "stop beating around the bush. If you're going to yell at me for going
out here at night, then do it. At least you have the sense to come out here
where Braska isn't going to hear you."
I frowned quickly, pursing my
lips. He had mistaken my intention entirely, and I was about to meet his
suspicion with some of my own, but then I remembered that I was out here to
apologize and not give him another one of my lectures. I took a deep breath,
finding that it calmed me much.
"I'm not out here to yell at you," I
replied, laying onto my back to enjoy the stargazing. "I just wanted to
apologize."
Jecht looked at me for a moment, a confused look on his face,
and then he burst out laughing, scaring a flock of birds into disturbed flight.
I watched their shadows flit over the lamps of Macalania's trees.
"Don't
make me laugh, Auron," he said harshly when he finished laughing. "What's made
you want to apologize? Braska finally talked you into it?"
"No," I
responded calmly, closing my eyes and inhaling the fresh scent of the river, "I
came to apologize because...I saw your sphere."
"You what?!"
"I
heard you leave the room." I met his look of incredulity, and tried to look my
sincerest. I hoped I wouldn't hurt his feelings anymore by telling him this, but
if he hated me after this, I probably deserved it. For being such a bastard to
him. "I wanted to see what you were up to, because you were sneaking away. I
thought you were going out to drink or something."
"Don't trust me do
you," Jecht frowned, more a statement than a question.
"I found you by
the river," I continued, ignoring his comment. His comment I didn't have an
answer to. "I heard you recording the sphere. I'm sorry. I shouldn't have." I
paused, thinking of the best thing to say. "And I'm sorry you miss your family."
That sounded lame, but I couldn't do anything about it.
I wondered what
he thought of me now, now that he knew I'd spied on him during something
intimate and private. I wondered if he hated me, if he hated me already. There
was a sudden twinge of sadness that I felt if he would never forgive me. I
wanted his forgiveness, it would at least put me at peace with myself. It would
set everything right.
"It's okay," Jecht finally said, and I found myself
exhaling the breath I'd been holding, awaiting his answer. "I mean...I guess I
haven't been exactly the most trustworthy on this mission," he chuckled a little
bit, and let his head hang, staring at the sand below his feet. "Yeah, I've
screwed up a couple of times."
"You have," I said, sitting up next to
him, "but it's all right." I smiled a bit. I was glad he was able to admit he'd
been wrong and could joke around a little about it. It was a great feeling of
relief. "It's nothing we can't fix."
We sat there in silence, hugging our
knees and looking into the sparkling water, wondering what it would be like to
swim in it. I was by no means a great swimmer, and I could not hold my breath
near as long as the blitzball players, but the thought of the cool, dazzling
water running over my skin brought a small smile to my face.
"You know,
I really miss my wife, and son."
"I know," I nodded, though knowing
wasn't enough. "It's...painful isn't it?" I had no family, I grew up an orphan
in the Temple; Braska was the closest thing to family that I ever
had.
"Yeah," Jecht admitted, "it hurts. It's hard to say that, but...you
never know how much you love 'em until they're gone, and you'll never see 'em
again."
I nodded, imagining what would happen if I ever lost Braska. I
closed my eyes, trying to shut out the pain of that thought. The worst part was
that I really was going to lose Braska. So soon. Too soon.
"I can't say I
know how it feels," I murmured, "I never had family. Braska's the closest I'll
ever get...but when I think about losing him..." I nearly choked on the words,
sudden unbidden tears springing to my eyes as I thought about Braska sacrificing
himself for Spira, his life draining away before my eyes as he summoned the
Final Aeon.
"Hey hey," Jecht said softly, "who says you're going to lose
Braska? Aren't we here to protect him?"
"No," I shook my head, "You don't
understand." I tried my best not to cry, I had to remain strong for Braska and
Jecht. Right now, they needed someone to lean on, and it had to be me. I
couldn't drown in despair, not now. I would never let myself. But I couldn't get
the image of Braska dying out of my head. In the end, there wouldn't even be his
body left, just a handful of pyreflies flitting off to the Farplane. And me all
alone...without the man I loved all of my life.
"What's there to get?"
Jecht asked, with a shrug, his arm coming about his neck as he cocked his head.
"I mean, Braska's just gonna get the Final Aeon and summon it right? Then we
fight Sin, and every problem is solved."
I was unable to stop a bitter
smile from spreading about my face. "You're really clueless aren't you?" I
buried my head in my knees, so he couldn't the hot tears beginning to spill over
onto my cheeks, "Braska is going to die. Summoning the Final Aeon drains all the
life from the summoner. After it kills Sin, Braska's going to die." I choked
then, my throat constricting and cutting my words short. My breath was coming
quicker, and it was becoming harder to breathe. Pyreflies taking flight.
"Braska's going to die!" I couldn't hold it back anymore, and all the
tears I'd kept hidden the entire journey spilled out of me at once, a torrent
river overrunning the pitiful floodgates of my pride and strength.
"Oh
Yevon," I hugged myself closer as I tried to speak, gasping for breath, trying
to shut out the images of Braska dying and disappearing in my arms, "Oh Yevon,
Braska's going to die! He's going to...sacrifice himself for Spira...and he's
going to leave me...and..." I stopped there, unable to continue the thought.
What would happen to me if Braska died? I didn't know. There really
wasn't anybody else left in my life if he disappeared. Sure, I'd had a few
lovers back in Bevelle, but none of them ever equaled the passion I had for
Braska. There was nothing after him.
I wondered what Jecht was thinking,
he seemed the strong type of fellow, and I could have bet he was thinking about
how weak I was, a grown man on a pilgrimage, crying for the death of his
summoner.
"I..." Jecht began, and then I heard him sigh. "I never knew
that."
I sniffled a bit, and looked up, wiping the tears from my face
with the back of my hand.
"You didn't tell me, because you didn't have
the heart to."
I nodded. Maybe he wasn't as dense as I thought he
was.
"That's why you're so overprotective of him. You love him very much,
don't you?"
"He's all I ever had," I replied quietly. "I can't remember a
time when I wasn't friends with Braska."
"I see. You're lucky, you know,"
he sighed, laying back on the sand, "you'll get to say goodbye to him. I never
got that chance with her, or Tidus."
"Tidus?"
"My son," Jecht
smiled dreamily, his mind lots in the nostalgia of far away memories. "He likes
to cry, but I think he'll be fine. He hates me, I'm kind of mean to him. But I
miss him, and Mireiyu. She's a wonderful woman. There's so much we wanted to do
together."
Mireiyu and Tidus. Those were their names. I committed them to
memory; Jecht's wife and son.
"But that'll never happen now. I don't
think I'll ever be able to see my Zanarkand again. That's one thousand years
ago, isn't it? It's all just ruins now. I wonder if my house is still there.
Probably not."
"Maybe we can look for it while we're there," I suggested,
breathing deeply to calm myself.
"It won't be there," Jecht sighed. "It's
been too long."
He was right, but I shouldn't tell him that. So we just
sat there at the shore of the Moonflow, watching the mysterious lights of
Macalania hover above the water and float up into the sky.
Jecht and I
sat and talked until dawn, we talked of our pasts, he of his wife and child, how
he first started blitzball, how he first met Mireiyu and fell in love with her.
I talked about my childhood with Braska and our numerous adventures in the great
tower that was the temple of Bevelle.
"You're pretty close to Braska," he
commented once when I told him of how I rejected the hand of that priest's
daughter in marriage. "Are you glad you didn't marry?"
"Glad?" I nodded.
"Yes. I live for Braska. He's the only one who stood up for me and protected me
when we were children."
"I see," Jecht said. "Have you two always
been...you know...this close?"
"You mean, our game?"
"Yeah," Jecht
replied, a little hesistant. I wondered if my preferences made him
nervous.
"We've been playing it for as long as I can remember, but it's
never really been serious, I don't think."
"Though you'd like it to
be."
"I think in the end...Braska loves Reiu. I got to know her in the
years she was married to Braska, and she's a wonderful woman. She's his wife,
and I'll always be second to that."
"But you don't seem to mind." I
looked at Jecht closely, and wondered how he could be reading my feelings so
easily. How in the world did he understand me so well?
"Not at all. I
love Braska and being..."
"...close to him is enough for you," Jecht
finished. I looked at him again, quizzically. Had he been talking to Braska? Was
Braska telling him all this? Or was there something in the man that could read
me like a book? It confused me, and I could feel my heart pounding faster as I
regarded him. It was a disquieting feeling, but also a comforting one. I didn't
have to explain my emotions to him, he understood without words.
"Well,"
Jecht rose, stretching his long limbs, his joints cracking, "we'd better get
back to the Travel Agency before Braska wakes up and finds we're
gone."
"Sounds good," I agreed, noting the dawn beginning to creep up
over the canopy of leaves.
We walked back to the inn together, talking in
low whispers, the lights of Macalania hanging above us like watchful angels. Not
a single argument passed between us the whole way back.

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