...yeah. Still alive. Most of the people who have gotten hospitalized have come back also alive. Some haven't. This has been one hell of a year. I think I need to make myself an 'I Survived 2007' shirt on like Jan. 3 2008 or something.
Have also made an IJ in case of further epic lose on the part of LJ. Haven't populated it yet. Haven't got the brainpower to go around tracking everyone down twice. Don't want fandom to scatter to eight dozen different sites and never find each other again. Would massively suck. @_@
ANYHOW. In hopefully less depressing news: Fic madness ahoy. Hope to have more soon. (hope springs eternal... gotta learn to brace for them surprise attacks?)
Title: One Way
Theme: #18
Author:
chibirisuchan
Fandom: Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children
Pairing/Character: Kadaj and Loz
Rating: PG-13 to R?
Table of
contents of the 25 streetsigns fics
Warnings: None beyond Kadaj-style psychosis just yet. (Neeeext time,
though... ^_~)
Disclaimer: Totally not mine. Not even the core concept for this arc;
it was based on a fic that I shan't identify just yet, because I want to hear
the screams when the shoe drops.
Random
author's notes: At
some point I want to go back and write the triplets-devastate-the-Gold-Saucer
part (and maybe call it 'Caution: Children Playing'), but this has been a
horrible summer, and writing that kind of enthusiastic mayhem takes creative
energy I just haven't got at the moment. I'm writing this this weekend so that I can keep the claim alive. I really hope this doesn't suck? If it does, I'm sorry... maybe I'll have some kind of higher-energy brain juice back before the next deadline? I really REALLY want the next one to work in particular... anyhow.
(moondance)
Everything always came back to Midgar, in the end. They had tried
looking everywhere else first -- almost literally; despite the fact that their
weapons were there, Loz associated Midgar with death and with everything
falling apart, and so he'd done his best to come up with diversions to delay
the need to face Midgar again. Any distractions he could find: games, and
hunting, and sex, and the ridiculous prizes at the Gold Saucer--
"Look!" he'd crowed, delighted with himself. "Look
what I won! It's Eldest Brother's--"
Yazoo had taken one look and rolled his eyes; Kadaj had scowled,
and Loz had remembered too late about not mentioning the Chosen, but the two
and a half meters of shining steel wasn't something even Loz could hide
entirely behind his back.
"--and I'm sorry, I wasn't thinking, I'm so stupid, I'm
sorry, I'll give it back--"
"No," Kadaj had said, tired-voiced. "No, Loz. I'd
rather you have it than anyone else."
--but then, distractions, Kadaj thought, were inevitably an
inferior substitute for what should have been done to begin with.
"It's really weird," Loz said as he came in the door,
again holding the Masamune. "Maybe it likes me and came back to see me? It
used to do that for Eldest Brother too, but I don't know why it would want me;
it ought to want Kadaj--"
Then Loz looked back and forth between the Masamune he held and
the Masamune hanging on the wall, and his brows quirked together in
bewilderment. "Huh...?"
Kadaj had known from the first that it had been a fraud. It was
nothing but dead pot-metal; there was no ...resonance, nothing calling to him,
even dimly. Yazoo hadn't cared enough to look, and Loz had been too delighted.
But now that there were two of them, even Loz couldn't miss the implications.
"...it's a fake...?"
Kadaj wished that there were any comfort left in his soul to
offer, but he was empty. Hollowed out. It hurt to hear the distress in Loz's
voice and to have nothing to give him.
"...they're both fakes, aren't they...?"
Soon enough, the hurt and betrayal turned into rage; Loz took both
of the fraudulent swords, kicked the door out into the hallway without a hand
free for the doorknob, and set out for the game vendor -- straight through the
walls that lay between.
Loz had done his best; it had never been lack of effort that had
kept his distractions from being enough. Kadaj knew the fault was his own, and
always had been. He was the one who had lost Mother's guidance. They should
never have asked Loz to try to make up for Kadaj's lack, despite his
willingness to shoulder Kadaj's duty for love's sake. Strength and willingness
were not enough, no matter how badly they both had wanted it to be.
They'd needed to leave the Gold Saucer fairly quickly, after that.
Yazoo had pointed out that letting Loz destroy a quarter of the complex might
have been a bit excessive, because the desert surrounding the place was just as
inhospitable to them as to humans, and the humans were screaming and panicking
and bloodied and trying to escape -- and the humans were busily taking the best
methods of transportation with them.
On the bright side, the racing chocobos were all quite fast, and
each of them were strong enough to wrestle a bird down even around the panic.
But it left much of the desert around the Gold Saucer unsearched, and that
meant that they would need to leave the place alone for months to rebuild and
forget before they could complete the search.
If Kadaj had been who he once was, he would have chafed at the
delay. But he was no longer the leader, and so there was nothing to do but
accept it; he didn't understand why Loz kept flinching away, as though
expecting to be struck at any moment for his failure.
Kadaj had given up his duty, though; since he was no longer the
leader, he no longer needed to care whether the path was correct. If he was not
the leader, then all he needed to do was to follow. Loz was the leader, and so
Kadaj had no responsibility for their success or failure; all he needed to do was
to ...be.
Kadaj never should have believed them in the first place. He never
should have believed that it could have been as easy as Loz wanted it to be,
that he need only declare our new purpose is to find happiness and we follow Loz because he's the best at finding
emotion, and that would be that.
Nothing about true reformation was ever easy. Nothing.
Their rebirth was only easy for Loz because Loz was simple
himself. He was strength, and courage, and warmth, and he was not a leader. He
never had been.
It had been unfair to ask that much of him.
Kadaj could see that now, standing in the shattered hollow of
Midgar, looking at his death with contemplative eyes. He wished he could have
gone back to apologize for that, if he wasn't certain that Loz would try to
stop him from doing what he needed to do.
Loz never had liked the thought that the Vessel would have to be
sacrificed.
Over the months of searching, they'd both noticed that he'd
changed, that he no longer flew into rages or tears so easily. Loz had thought
it was a good sign, and Yazoo hadn't told him otherwise. Yazoo still had no
mercy, but he had the coldly practical sense to know that he couldn't afford
for both of his brothers to be broken at once.
So Yazoo had made certain to wait to face Kadaj until one evening
when Loz was miles away, trading months of their kills for a better weapon.
He'd tried to provoke a reaction. He'd been more badly startled
than Kadaj had ever seen him, when he couldn't provoke anything. No
frustration, no argument, no fury, no lust, no disgust -- nothing.
"What is wrong with you?" Yazoo had shouted -- him, the calm,
collected one, shouting; at another time Kadaj might have laughed at the
reversal, but it didn't seem funny, really.
"I'm still waiting for my purpose," Kadaj said. "I
don't know what I should do without one. I don't know what I should be. So I
wait, and I follow. ...That's enough, isn't it? Loz likes this better than the
way I used to be, you know. So isn't this good enough?"
Whatever Yazoo murmured under his breath didn't sound very
complimentary about Loz's judgement.
Really, Kadaj's path was as inevitable now as it ever had been.
He'd been a fool, a wish-distracted, willfully blind fool, to have deluded
himself into thinking otherwise. Loz's yearnings were strong enough to spill
over; he wanted things so badly that Kadaj had let himself be lulled for a
time. Loz loved him, loved showing it, loved sex and lust and breathing and life;
Kadaj made himself compliant and welcoming, the perfect recipient, the empty
vessel waiting to be filled. Loz always tried to fill him, and always fell
asleep hoping he'd succeeded, if only for a little while; and Kadaj held him
and closed his eyes and pretended that he'd succeeded too; and Yazoo watched
them both with something wary and almost disgusted in his eyes.
Yazoo and Loz had been screaming at each other, when Kadaj came
back with blankets earlier than they'd expected -- they'd sent him to trade gil
for them, and it was much faster and more practical to just take them from the
yard where someone had left a dozen of the things hanging unguarded. He'd been
a little bit proud of his discovery, and wanted to ask Yazoo if they could buy
some flavored ice with the gil he'd saved, because Loz loved flavored ice and
made entertaining little noises when he licked at it and it dripped on his
knuckles, and so the fact that they were screaming at each other -- Loz sounded
like he was crying; Yazoo was colder than ice and twice as venomous -- it was
all wrong.
They were family. They shouldn't be doing this to each other, not
anymore. Kadaj had given everything away -- Mother, Reunion, his path,
everything -- so that they wouldn't have to fight over anything; they could
just be, and that was supposed to be enough. Loz thought it was enough. Yazoo
-- why would Yazoo care? Yazoo never cared about anything, not enough to strike
out like this.
Yazoo did tend to hold his strikes until the most opportune
moments, but...
...It was hard to hear through the door, but somehow, some time,
he'd lost the courage to turn the knob and walk in. He wasn't the leader any
more, was he? He shouldn't have to deal with this; he shouldn't have to deal
with anything unpleasant, that was Loz's job now--
"Pathetic," Yazoo had hissed, and Kadaj flinched,
startled -- and only a moment too late did he realize Yazoo hadn't meant his
thoughts.
He did mean Kadaj, though -- he'd cut through Loz's ragged rumble
with something fierce and vicious, something about "sick of you fucking
him like some witless doll" and "how can you think he's happy like
this?" And Loz had snarled back, "you never wanted him to be happy --
you're jealous that he's happy, you want that for yourself -- " and then
there was a sound like leather striking flesh, and Yazoo had said,
"Jealous of that? Watching him shut down day by day, watching his passion
rot away because he thinks you prefer him like this -- without his drive,
without his heart-- I've always known you were an idiot but I never thought you
were that blind--"
He hadn't stayed for the rest of it. He'd dropped the blankets
outside the door, and then he ran.
He knew now what it was that had horrified Yazoo, though their
rational brother would never have put such an emotional name to it. He'd been
deceiving himself -- deceiving them both -- because he'd wanted so badly for
Loz to be right, for mindless pleasure to be enough, for sex and tickles and
sparring and breathless laughter to fill the void Mother had left behind. But
truth was colder than that, and it had never changed. He wished that Yazoo
would have explained it to him more clearly, or that he could have realized
sooner.
Mother had been crippled twice over, by the Cetra and then by the
humans. She had been driven out beyond the edges of the world, to where even
Her children could no longer sense her presence. Her first Ascension had needed
the sacrifice of the Chosen One. Her second had needed Kadaj's sacrifice, and
Kadaj had failed to fully sacrifice himself to the Chosen One through
resentment and jealousy and terror. But his purpose had never changed, whether
or not he stumbled around lost in a half-fulfilled haze of dreams.
In order to grant Mother the physical shell through which She
would change the world, She needed a living sacrifice. And he was still Her
Vessel. This time, he needed to truly surrender himself to Her will,
holding nothing back from fear or envy or love.
And he would have to seek Her in the Lifestream, because She was
nowhere in the world of the living.
They'd searched the world for any lingering scraps of Her physical
form, after all, and found nothing.
Loz had been relieved, the longer they searched and the less they
found, though he'd tried hard to hide it. Yazoo had been almost too neutral, as
though mentioning the thought that Mother could have died was too dangerous to
contemplate.
Months earlier, it might well have been. Months earlier, he hadn't
learned how to give up everything. But he'd spent months practicing surrender
to a dream; surely surrender to reality wouldn't be as hard, this time.
They of all the Planet's children knew that death of the flesh was
irrelevant; it was the soul that endured. If Mother had been too weakened by
the humans' assaults to reach beyond the barrier between life and Lifestream,
then it remained his duty as Her Vessel to seek Her out and bring Her back.
It was that simple; it had always been that simple. But it had
never been easy to face.
...he'd thought he'd been making them both happy. He hadn't been
shouting, he hadn't been demanding, he hadn't mentioned Mother for weeks --
he'd taught himself to surrender, to let Loz lead, and he'd thought Yazoo had
just been surprised by the difference.
This was wrong. They shouldn't be fighting about him. But he had
no right to intervene -- he'd given up his authority, he'd given up--
...he'd just given up.
But he hadn't given up enough, because he still couldn't give up
wanting happiness for them. And his current state was taking their happiness
away. It wasn't ...right.
He'd failed the first time because he'd always wanted a different
answer -- he wanted a world where he could still exist, a world where he could
hear Mother say I choose you, or I need you, or You are worthy
of me.
That world had never been real, and it shouldn't have been a
surprise that he still hadn't found it, even after death, where there was
supposed to be a Promised Land and wasn't. So the world that was real would
have to be enough, because it was all there was.
And he wasn't all that fond of this world anyway; maybe that would
make it easier to let it go.
Loz was the one who'd come looking for him, and his eyes were
red-rimmed and puffy, and his voice was hoarse, and he held on too tight when
he found Kadaj.
"You're happy, aren't you?" Loz asked, too desperate for
an answer to stop and listen for one. "Tell Yazoo you're happy. Tell Yazoo
I'm a good leader. I'm a good leader, aren't I? You don't shout anymore and you
don't have those horrible headaches and it's better now, it's all
better--"
And then he'd pushed Kadaj up against a wall and buried his face
in the crook of Kadaj's shoulder, shaking all over; Kadaj stroked his
fingertips through Loz's hair and let him take what he needed from Kadaj's
body, and when he was done, Kadaj kissed the salt-tracks from his cheeks.
"Are you really happy, Kadaj?" Loz had asked him.
He still wasn't sure he knew how to answer that question properly.
"If you're happy," he'd said, "then so am I."
Every other time, it had made Loz smile. This time, his brows
crooked together in distress. "But I don't think I'm happy, because I
don't know if you are, and I know Yazoo isn't. What do I do, Kadaj?"
It was the first thing that had shaken his calm in weeks. Months,
maybe. He could take whatever Yazoo flung at him with equanimity; he knew how
precisely Yazoo calculated everything, even sharp words thrown in anger. But
Loz--
Loz was their strength, and if he wasn't strong enough to keep
carrying this--
The sheer unreasoning panic that welled up was thick enough to
choke him.
'Don't you dare ask me what to do,' he'd wanted to shout, 'not
after you said you'd take it all -- you said you could take it! You promised
you'd take all this away from me so that I wouldn't have to lead without
Mother; you promised you'd be my Strength because I don't have enough of my
own--'
...it was irrational, it was blind and stupid and irrational and
he wanted to scream for the first time since...
...this was wrong. This was all wrong. It wasn't supposed to be
like this. Loz wasn't supposed to be asking him what to do. They'd changed their
path, they'd gone to look for happiness, and Loz was the one who knew how to
find it, and if Loz didn't know how to find it after all--
--he'd been silent too long; trembling, Loz picked him up and
clung to him again, too tight, so tightly his ribs twinged with sharp little
pains. He couldn't get enough of a breath to protest, couldn't move his hands
far enough to reassure; he could only wait until Loz relented a bit.
"What makes you happy, Kadaj?" Loz whispered, holding
tight enough to bruise.
Kadaj still didn't have an answer. But he'd finally realized that
it had never been the right question. Yazoo had known it from the first; he'd
told them all that Kadaj's happiness had always been irrelevant.
They didn't need him to be happy. They needed him to take his
place again. Loz wasn't happy leading, and Yazoo was disgusted by Kadaj's
carefully guarded passivity, and they didn't need a smiling puppet; they needed
their missing third. They needed someone to take charge.
And he had no authority of his own. In order to regain authority,
he needed Mother.
The first time, he hadn't been willing to surrender everything.
He'd wanted things for himself. He'd wanted to keep himself, wanted
happiness, wanted acceptance -- from Mother, from their golden brother, from
the world.
...He'd wanted things that he would never receive anyway.
This time, he knew better.
Happiness wasn't sufficient. He'd never really known happiness
before; he wasn't even sure he'd have recognized it if he'd found it. Happiness
wasn't enough; he wasn't enough; and his brothers deserved better than
this. His brothers needed him to succeed. And there was nothing left worth
holding back for, this time.
The lilies still bloomed thickly around the edges of the pool in
the ruined church; the scent of them was rich enough to nearly stagger him.
Kadaj smiled wryly at that thought; for once, he didn't mind. It would keep him
from losing his nerve, if there was no way out once he'd begun.
He knelt at the edge of the pool, head bowed, and made himself
empty again.
hollow.
waiting.
nothing but a web-silver wisp wrapped in black leather, open to
that power which had always been so many times greater than his pale imitation
--
--nothing--
--and nothing came to fill him.
There was nothing there but the silence and the chatter of doves
in the rafters.
He hadn't really expected it, not here in the heart of the enemy's
power, but he'd hoped that Her Chosen might have lent him enough strength to
succeed. No matter. The Eldest had earned his place in Mother's embrace; Kadaj
had not. Not yet, anyway.
So at the end, when there was nothing to rely upon but himself, he
was still a coward; Kadaj shut his eyes tight as he leapt toward his second
death.
The water was shockingly cold; it was shallow, though, and the
frantic flesh-instinct toward survival cried go, now, it hasn't killed you
yet, go before it starts to burn--
It hadn't hurt at the very end, though, when Mother held his hand
as the rain scoured through him.
This was the same witch-water that burned Mother's legacy out of
Her children; either he would die of it and find Her in the Lifestream, or he
would conquer it and call Her back. Pain was as irrelevant as happiness.
It had frightened him, before, watching his flesh dissolve into
luminous pyreflies that faded into the Lifestream; Mother's grasp was all that
had kept him intact, and She'd held him amid all the pale shining -- just for a
moment, though, just one breathless moment of peace, before She'd cast him out
again. He'd nearly hated Her for it then, but a failure didn't deserve peace,
and She'd granted him the opportunity to correct his failure. This time, he
would succeed.
...but surely it was supposed to go one way or the other a
bit faster than this.
He didn't want to watch himself disintegrate again, but the water
was awfully cold, and Mother hadn't responded to his calling even here, where
the dead witch-woman had made her strongest prison. Surely this would be where
Mother was held so tightly that She couldn't speak across the void; surely one
dead halfblooded witch couldn't have created two snares of such power.
He'd opened his eyes before he even realized it, staring down into
the ripples of water, his own cat-slit pupils staring back at him in
bewilderment...
...from perfectly clear water, untainted by any hint of the
Geostigma, even as he stood hip-deep and dripping.
...no. No. Damn it, NO!
Hitting water was one of the most useless, frustrating things in
the world, and yet here he was with nothing else he could do, splashing in
helpless frustration and choking on sobs. Apparently he hadn't emptied himself
of everything after all; he still had blind fury.
He took a breath at the wrong moment, coughed, gagged, and then
forced himself to exhale. His lungs were burning; when he forced himself down
to hands and knees, the same flesh-instinct to cough served what he hoped would
be his last demand of it. He breathed in water, and it took every last ounce of
control not to stand up, not to stagger over to the edge, not to cough until
there was air again. Drowning himself took more effort than he'd expected.
The halfblooded witch had gained the power to thwart Mother's will
through her death. If it took his own death to thwart her power, then so be it.
What, a terribly familiar voice said, am I going to do with you this
time?
His first thought was incredulity; his second, that he shouldn't
still be able to think. His third was that he shouldn't be able to hear either,
not so clearly, not underwater-- unless the dead witch had taken even that from
him. He lifted his head sharply, glanced around to orient himself amid the
ruins -- but the ruins weren't there. Nothing was, nothing but a vast endless
white.
Honestly, the woman said. And I thought Cloud was stubborn.
Kadaj took a breath, surprised and distantly frustrated that he could breathe, and asked, Mother?
The hesitation took a moment too long; he'd braced himself against
her words, shielded himself against her treachery, even before she said, You
called me that once.
Then you were the one who threw me out, Kadaj said, and didn't
know whether he was more angry or relieved. It wasn't Mother's fault after
all -- She wouldn't have abandoned us. You've been keeping Her from us, keeping
Her prisoner--
I was also, the witch-woman said gently, the one who held your hand.
I know, Kadaj answered, his thoughts spilling out too fast to censor. I
should have known you wouldn't be Mother. Mother was never kind. But I need
Her. My brothers need someone to lead them and I'm nothing but a shell. Give
Her back.
Oh, Kadaj, the witch-woman said.
For a dizzying moment Kadaj wished desperately that she could have
been Mother, because he'd wanted all his life to hear Mother speak his name
with such tender warmth. It was hard to shake himself free of that soft
embrace, that willingly-offered acceptance; but he had a purpose, and if his
happiness became a distraction, then happiness was dangerous.
Give Mother back, Kadaj said, steeling himself against that
dangerous lure. I am Her Vessel, and I have come for Her.
Can't you be your own vessel? she asked, smiling.
He'd wanted to be dramatic and stern of resolution. He'd wanted to
be like the Chosen One, who always knew something grand to say. But while he
was trying to form an imposing speech, the naked truth writhed in shame between
them.
I tried, and I failed that too. I've failed my brothers. I'm not
enough by myself. They need something I can't give them. I tried. I can't give
them happiness when I don't have it myself.
Her touch startled him; she laid her hands on the back of his
shoulders, rested her forehead between his shoulderblades, and said wistfully, You
and Cloud, honestly. Why do you both have such trouble believing that you're
enough just as you are?
Believing lies is dangerous, Kadaj said. Telling yourself lies and
believing them is beyond dangerous; it's pathetic.
And if it's not a lie?
The truth has already demonstrated itself, Kadaj answered, eyes
shut tight against what the white shining laid bare. I failed them all. I
failed Mother when I couldn't endure Her Chosen. I've failed my brothers -- I
hid myself in what Loz wanted, and they're tearing each other apart because of
it. I was born to be a shell, a chrysalis, to hold the life of something
greater than myself. Without Mother's gift, I'm nothing but an empty husk -- an
abandoned coffin, unfit to hold life, just waiting to be reburied. If you won't
give Mother back, then let me die.
Loz will cry, the witch-woman said, softly.
I know, Kadaj said, and it hurt. But I'm broken. They still have their
purpose. I don't, and it hurts them trying to make up for my lack. Either heal
me or kill me, because I can't keep living like this. And I'd rather be dead
than empty.
After a long silence, she said, I didn't send you back to
suffer. I thought you could be happier when the only life you had to live was
your own. I hoped you could find your own path...
This is my own path, Kadaj said wearily. This is the only way I
know how to live. Please. Give Mother back.
Why do you want her? the witch-woman cried out, and her voice hurt
like Loz's tears. She is nothing but pain and greed and suffering and
ravenous devouring hunger--
I know, Kadaj said again. But Mother's alone now. Mother made us all
so that there would be Reunion, so that She would never need to be alone again;
Mother made three of us so that we would never be as alone as the Eldest was--
Mother hates being alone. She has to be so frightened...
I won't set her free to devour my world, the witch-woman said,
and Kadaj felt her trembling against his back. We've all suffered too much
to end this. I won't set her free, not even for you.
Then take me, Kadaj said, even as his heart clenched in terror at the
thought of eternity with nothing but Mother's rage at his failures. Give me
to Her. So that She won't have to be alone.
Stubborn, she said, and her voice caught between laughter and tears. Silly,
stubborn, too-loyal child...
Will you take me or not? Kadaj asked.
She said nothing, for too long. He could feel his heart pounding
in his throat; it might have made him angry, that he couldn't even succeed at
dying, but he was too frightened to spare the strength for anger. To be sent
back alone, or to spend eternity as the only available target for Mother's
devouring rage -- neither of those were what he wanted.
But then, he still kept forgetting -- what he wanted had
never been relevant at all.
After all this time, Kadaj thought wearily, you'd think I would
have learned how to just give up.
He only remembered that his thoughts weren't private here when he
heard her sigh.
You're absolutely certain? she said, taking his hand between her own; her
hands were as gentle as he remembered, and he wished for a mad, futile moment
that she could have been Mother after all. Wishes had nothing to do with
reality, though. That lesson he had managed to learn.
Take me to Mother, Kadaj said.
She tugged on his hand; when he turned to follow, he was surprised
at how ...human she looked, even for a halfbreed witch. Her eyes were
summer-green, and her hair like autumn leaves, and she wore a dress the
delicate pink of spring flowers, with a ribbon in her hair; she smiled at him,
and for that one moment, he was sure he knew what happiness was, because he saw
it in her.
Now remember, she said with an impish sparkle in her eyes, you asked
for it.
Of course I asked, Kadaj said, a bit nettled. I need Mother,
and She needs me.
That's not what I mean, silly -- oh, you'll figure it out soon
enough.
There was water again; he felt the chill and the shifting pressure
through his leathers, heard it lapping against the stone that was still lost
amid the witchlight. There was stone beneath his knees, water dripping from his
hair; the witch-woman cupped water between her hands, and closed her eyes, and called.
And then he felt Mother screaming, for the first time since he'd
died. There were no words, just rage and need and starvation and terror thicker
than any of it, stark unreasoning terror that screamed so loudly he clutched at
his head in a futile attempt to mute the cries. There was something black
writhing in the witch-woman's hands; she grasped it firmly, crushing it in
light, and Mother's screams redoubled in panic.
Don't, he gasped. You're hurting Mother-- please, don't--
I told you I couldn't just set her free, the witch-woman said,
and her voice was still gentle despite her cruel white-burning hands. It
won't be the same this time, you know. But you won't be alone anymore.
Mother's screams were rising, fading even as they grew more
desperate, higher-pitched, a wordless gasping howl of fright. There wasn't even
rage left; all She had left was fear.
Despite the pain throbbing in his mind, Kadaj reached out for the
witch-woman's hands. Please, he said. Stop. Just let Her have me.
She's so afraid...
They always are at first, the woman replied, with an oddly indulgent
smile at the gray-clouded water cupped in her hands. She'll get used to it.
So will you.
Mother was still keening, high and frantic and thin. It was as if
the ability to scream was the only comfort She had left; if She could still
scream, then She still existed.
The water shivered in the witch's hands, fading from gray to
twilight-blue to a faint foxfire-green, Kadaj said again, helplessly, Please--
The witch smiled at him, tenderly, full of some quiet, rueful
affection; she held out her cupped hands to him.
He curved his hands around hers carefully, so as not to spill a
drop, and then bent to drink.
The next time he noticed that he still existed, there were
blankets.
Kadaj made an exasperated little noise. There weren't supposed to
be blankets at the bottom of a witch-prison of liquid power. But then,
he wasn't supposed to be breathing, either.
None of this had gone properly at all. He would have
complained about that, except that he suspected the witch-woman would just
laugh at him.
His hair wasn't even dripping. That was beyond strange. He lifted
a hand to touch his hair, then realized that there were no chains, no binding
-- not even a dream-binding. It was a little insulting to be considered so
powerless that he wasn't worth even the illusion of chains, in the prison of
the witch's mind.
"Kadaj?" Loz yelped, and then he was being hugged
tight enough that any thoughts of wait, how -- why -- when--? were lost
beneath wheezing mental protests of ow ow ouch OW. He thumped on Loz's
arm weakly.
Loz relented a bit, took him by the shoulders, peered into his
face from a handsbreadth away, and then hugged him a little more gently.
"You idiot," he said gruffly, his face buried in
Kadaj's hair. "You... you stopped. We couldn't feel you anywhere. And
then Mother came and said you needed us to be here. You idiot, don't ever just stop like that again! Mother said you were too stubborn for your
own good--"
"--Mother said what?" Kadaj caught Loz's
shoulders, pulling away until he could see again. "Mother spoke to you?
Where is She?"
"She went back into the water," Loz said. "She
said--"
"That wasn't Mother," Yazoo said.
"Yes she was!" Loz protested. "She was a good mother! She said to take better care of Kadaj because he's too stubborn to take
care of himself, she said he's just as stubborn as Nii-san, and she smiled--"
...she sent me back. Again.
Kadaj closed his eyes, and let his head drop forward to rest
against Loz's shoulder.
The earth-witch sent me back, and Mother--
He couldn't hear Mother screaming, and his heart wrenched at the
memory of Her fear. But...
But he wasn't empty inside anymore.
It wasn't the raging fire that had burned Her visions into him,
but when he listened, carefully, quietly, there was ...something. A tiny
spark of power, an ember instead of an inferno -- wavering, unsteady,
exhausted, but not extinguished.
Mother? he breathed softly, into the silence within, and the ember
throbbed in time with his heartbeat.
Good, he said, and knelt, and breathed his own life into the tiny
flame. We're not alone anymore, Mother. Isn't that good?
There were no words, not even anything as coherent as emotion;
Mother clung to her lifespark, without the strength to do more than merely
exist. But the silence was comforting this time, instead of empty-- and the
respite from Her screaming was a blessing he'd never thought he'd receive.
For once, for once, he hadn't failed.
Maybe this time Mother could forgive him for not being like Her
Chosen--
"--Kadaj!"
Loz was shaking him by the shoulders; so that was why his
neck had started aching, with his head snapping back and forth like that.
Caught somewhere between irritated, amused, and dizzy, Kadaj closed his hands
around Loz's wrists.
"Stop that," he said. "I'm fine."
"You were going somewhere," Loz accused, his
forehead all scrunched up in concern. "Don't do that. I don't want you to
stop again--"
"I promise, Loz," Kadaj said. "I'll be fine
now."
His tirade cut short, Loz tipped his head to one side and looked
at him suspiciously. "You really promise?"
"I'm not empty anymore," Kadaj said, and realized that
the names for what he felt were pleasant ones: relief, and contentment. "I
can be what you both need now, Loz. She gave Mother back."
The first thing that crossed Loz's too-expressive face was dismay,
before he managed to twist his lips into an imitation of a smile. "Which
one?" he asked, failing badly in the attempt to hide his concern.
"The Mother that made you hurt?"
The proper thing to do was to remind Loz that there had only ever
been one Mother, and that the dead witch-woman was dangerous with her smiles
and her lures of peace and kindness and temptation. But it was so easy to be
lulled, and Loz always had been weak against offers of pleasure; Kadaj had
nearly succumbed himself.
So instead Kadaj diverted him, with only a small twinge of guilt.
"I'm not hurting now, am I?" he asked. "And I promised you that
I'll be well. I always keep my promises."
Loz's face cleared: he stroked his fingers through Kadaj's hair,
and mumbled, "I'm glad."
"So am I," Kadaj said, and it was easier than he'd ever
thought it would be.
Happiness wasn't so difficult after all. He was the Vessel. All
he'd ever needed was to have his emptiness filled.
Now he had Mother to guide them all, and She was quiet in his mind,
quiet enough not to hurt him with Her needs; and Loz was holding him, and the
blanket was warm, and everything was going to be fine.
The memory of the witch-woman's half-laughing warnings still
unsettled him -- she was a Cetran witch, of course, and of course she'd wanted
him to find a path that led him away from Mother.
But Loz had wanted it too. He wouldn't have wished it for the
witch's sake, but for his brother, he could still regret, just a bit.
If he'd been able to be whole, if he hadn't needed Mother, his
brothers wouldn't have had to struggle all this time. He could have given them
what they needed, could have given them happiness and a clear path, could have
spared them--
...but that was still wishing, and wishing never made a
difference.
Besides -- right then, with Loz holding him close, listening
raptly to his chest to see if he could hear Mother speaking in Kadaj's heart...
right then it was impossible to be anything other than happy.