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Unfeathered Angel
Children of Banishment
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He still uses it.
His gunblade.
The one that split her like a peach.
He keeps it on a wall in his office. Sheathed. Blood hidden from most eyes. He can still see it. Rationally, he knows there�s nothing there: the blade shines in all lights.
But he can still see the blood.
Streaked and gore-spattered.
He knows it�s there.
***
Not that they blamed him.
Dr. Odine, resident specialist on psychos and nut jobs, reassured everyone of his sanity. She made him do it, Odine said. It was her way of fighting off Ultemecia's powers.
Making him kill her.
Making him split open her ripe body like a fruit.
Like a fruit.
There was no trial. It was never his fault.
Fuck if.
A fruit.
***
It�s not like he meant to kill her.
Indifference was the only emotion he�d ever known.
Her long black hair, inexpertly highlighted by teenaged rebellion, tangled wetly in his lean hands. Her body curled and writhed beneath him, and her eyes, bluer than his own, filled with unshed tears. Her skin was porcelain-pale, and softer than seal-skin; entwined with her long limbs, his own flesh seemed dark, of a tint more olive and brown. Her toes curled when she laughed, and when she screamed. He loved her. He couldn�t stand to be near her.
But then, he�d never been able to bear being with anyone. This was nothing special.
They gave him sympathy, told him it wasn�t his fault, consigned the stranger wearing his skin to a prison of imagination. Insisting that the stranger did not exist, or was merely the result of her meddling.
Sorceresses are not to be trusted.
Edea came for the obscure funeral, a quiet affair, and watched him from three rows away in the near-empty auditorium, her eyes black and sad. Her hair ran free, flowing in a quiet way that didn�t call to mind the coiffed locks of a sorceress at all. He avoided her.
He wanted to crawl into her lap and have her tell him that everything would be okay.
His hands were still crimson.
He couldn�t touch her like this.
He couldn�t touch anything. He avoided everyone these days. He was tainted.
Tarnished.
Spoiled.
She�d spoiled him, ripped him open, torn him like an old ribbon or an out of favor children�s game. Like he didn�t matter, like all that mattered of him was his destruction.
Her eyes would glow pale when she was herself.
They went away together, after the war. He hadn�t wanted to leave, so perhaps it was more correct to say she drug him away, spirited him away, hauled him away criminal to court of justice. And they lived in the mountains, in a ski resort, in her father�s money, in his father�s money, in a land of ice and snow. Shiva�s realm.
But he was no Ice Prince.
Shiva had been left behind. His beloved. His always, discarded like some lower-class Ifrit, student-class, automatic junction, no! She was the first. And he left her for that. For a holiday. With her.
And she knew everyone. Everyone there was someone she knew.
And at first it was just skiing together, in the early days after she took his virginity -- the more usual sort, the sort not ripped away by Seifer in a grim prison cell -- and sometimes lunch, and their dinners were always their own.
But she liked to mingle. And he was occasionally left more than alone, with some beautiful woman or some beautiful man, who was inevitably invited back to their rooms for a drink, and later on a fuck.
He�d said no.
He was sure he remembered saying no, that first time.
But her skin was satin, it was silk, and somehow he could only taste her even when being fucked from behind like some sort of animal. She surrounded him. He was lost, and when it was more than he could handle, when it was women and men and occasional farm animals, she had her way.
She�d always had her way. Even in the beginning, even when he could have said no, she�d had her way.
And if he could barely remember most of those nights, though a few stood out in painful detail, it could hardly be blamed on drink. Drugs he would believe, but he never drank more than she told him to.
Was it something in her?
Was this his fault?
Would she have been normal and healthy and sane if he�d never agreed to take her little Forest Owls mission in the first place? If she�d never met him? Been possessed by Ultemecia?
Was any of this speculation even viable? He wouldn�t have turned down his first mission. Impossible. Couldn�t be done.
Of course, regretting all those times he�d saved her life was another matter.
It almost didn�t matter when he�d been tied to the bed, and his protests no longer mattered -- if they ever had. He almost felt guilty enough to think that the pain was deserved. That the humiliation was only his just punishment.
It was when she started killing people that he began to awaken.
This was keeping the sorceress under control?!
She bathed in their blood.
So he bathed in hers.
Eye for an eye, isn�t that how the saying goes? Seifer got his, imprisoned somewhere on Centra. Squall got his, imprisoned on a mountain north of Trabia. Rinoa got hers. Split like a peach.
She�d bled crimson, like a beast, just a fucking beast, all gore and struggle and streaks of flesh.
Fuzzy-soft skin, satiny, soft, easier than blasting Bite Bugs.
He killed them all. They�d helped. They�d held him down, and he didn�t want . . .
He didn�t want any reminders.
It was a long trek down through the snow, wading through Blue Dragons.
He carried her body, as proof, or souvenir, even when it froze solid enough to use as a sled, dismembered and leaking or no. It had proved troublesome when he reached warmer climes. Tried to enter a town, and board a train.
He was nearly unrecognizable, he would grant. They liked him thin. They all liked him thin, fed him on strawberries and champagne and chicken noodle soup. He�d never washed off her blood. It painted him black, faded to brown in the winds, streaked pale blue and violet with the blood of monsters.
His hair had grown long. His first day out of hospital he�s shaved it off. Zell had commented that he looked like a refugee. He was. His leathers had gone missing, for so long that he knew what it was to miss his skin. Quistis gave him a new set as a welcome-home present.
Sometimes he slept in them. Just to feel safe.
***
Did you ever want me?
A nation�s president watched him with sad blue eyes. Like you watch the starving children of other countries: sad, but unwilling to expend the effort.
You left so easily then, found so many reasons to stay away.
It wasn�t the hospital bed. He�d endured such before, been injured, been torn by foreign swords and native, been crackled by a stronger magic than his own. This was different. This was new.
Did I ever matter?
And what had he been before? She�d liked him this way, all bone and muscle and sinew, like a racehorse ready for the Winhill Cup, nervous and shaking and thrumming with her energy. Ready for her to ride him into the dust.
You never came for me. Threw money at me, paid for everything I could have wanted, but you . . .
Real food was a challenge. He staggered on his own two legs to the Cafeteria, and decorated the central fountain with his undigested meal. The students avoided him. His �friends� avoided him. He couldn�t sleep, he never slept anymore, so he had ample opportunity to watch their daily rounds. Without him.
You never wanted me.
The tests wore him into a world of needles and maybe-drugs, drugs for things that may never happen. She�d liked drugs, but he never . . . Glassy-eyed and smiling as never, he�d danced through the occasional haze. Drugs were sneaky. Drugs were to be slipped into champagne and injected after sixty-nine, when he couldn�t breathe.
So why do you care now?
His hair grew back into a dark fuzz, then a longer brush that felt like silk, like kitten-fur beneath his fingers. Quistis would run her fingers through it, but he dodged her questing fingers and hesitant apologies in favor of the Training Center. He�d killed everything else. A few beasts could not slake that bloodlust. But they helped.
Just leave. You weren�t here when I needed you. You�ve never been here. You shouldn�t be here.
Shiva was a comforting weight near his soul. Rescued from a younger cadet, she purred a line down his cortex, filling his arm with enough strength to say no. To ever say no. The weight of regret hung heavier behind his eyes, but he�d learned to say no. Learned irreparably.
You don�t care. I don�t care. Get out.
Lionheart hung on his office wall. He did paperwork in bandages, fingers typing busily through lengths of gauze. All was normal. All was normal. All was normal.
He killed every night instead of sleeping.
He tasted her blood in his throat.
Lionheart hung on his office wall. He didn�t need a blade to kill anymore.
***