Already Gone
Author's Notes- This is my first Animorphs piece, but
it's definitely not my first fanfiction. ^^ I love
writing, and have only really written for Final Fantasy. I hope to write here
more- I have another Animorphs fanfiction
on the way if I get enough reviews!
10-10-03- This story was uploaded over a year ago, but the symbols
were replaced with html and such (I'm no computer geek, so no bashing my
computer vocabulary. ^^)
so I've finally got around to replacing the old stories with
better versions. Enjoy!
Dedicated to my friend Rebecca, who has leukemia. Get
better soon!
~10-10-03- She finally recovered!
I'm already dead. Already gone. They're already
grieving. Already saying goodbye. Already
walking away. And God... I wish it weren't
true. I wish I wasn't here. Wish I wasn't dead. But inside, I knew. I knew. I
knew I'd be the one. Because if the war ended, I'd already be
gone. Either was my death. I've always known it- that's why I'm here.
That's why I'm already gone.
That day, three years ago, I was truthfully born. I awoke from the dream that
was life, and joined into the reality that was Yeerk.
The battles were my home, my blood, my life. And, ultimately,
my death. I realized that when I began to enjoy the battles. When the nightmares became dreams. When
the fears turned to hope. When I lost myself to the
glory of it all- to the killing itself.
He told me I fought well. A compliment of sorts, but in
entirety, a horrible suffering. That was what I would be known as from
now until eternity- the fighter. Not the human, but the machine. That was
enough death right there, just hearing that. I think the only thing still tying
me to this world are the eyes of the only one who cares. Cared.
He was doing me my last service, changing as I had always willed him to. But
only now, when it mattered, was he doing it. And it was more for him than me,
proving to himself that he could still be human and he
had it inside himself. He had said 'I love you', but I couldn't say it back. In
the course of death, it seemed so small, so indifferent, so
different... so changed. It was something a single lifetime held, yet death was
over eternity. But I understand.
The blow from the bear was irony smacking me alongside. My
favorite morph, my favorite animal, my favorite self. The bear was me,
but the bear was the one to kill me. I spent my life dreaming of the bear,
being the bear. Of staying too long in the bear morph. Of giving up this was,
and joining the war of survival. And yet it was stupid. The Yeerk
war was of survival. If they won, we would die. That was the fact of the
matter.
So this is what it's like to die. To be gone. The pain
isn't bad, actually... just a small twinge, then you're
gone. Or maybe it was just with me. Because death isn't the
endless sky that is before me now. It's darkness. The reason humans fear
death is because it isn't known- I live for the unknown. I live every day
dreaming of surprise, of new adventure, of life. So for me, this is an
adventure. A milestone in my so-called-life. I'm
close, I'm here. I should have known... the Ellimist.
He tells me his story, and allows me this one question. The one that every
warrior, every human, every being wants to be answered before they fade away.
Kind of a crutch, because this all seems so fake, like
I should wake up tomorrow from my little sister banging on the door... the last
three years have been like a dream. A dream to me, a
nightmare to others. Because I was different. Because I enjoyed it. So I asked him- did I matter? In the
world, in the universe, in anything did I make a difference? Because when you
are standing there, about to fade into the unknown, it doesn't matter the
answer. Because his story told me we were designed like that. That I was a happy mistake. That I didn't
belong with them. It shouldn't bother me, but a pang deep inside told me
it did. Because as much of nothing I was, I was still human. Still
aware. But the talk was near over. He merely wanted to honor me, to let
me have the answer. He finally was able to. He told me I mattered, that I made
a difference. And to a lost mind, one fading away from everything, it seemed so
pointless. The question would be lost, none remembered, pointless. But the pang
was gone.
I understood.
I understood why David had chosen me, and in time, why I had brought myself to
destroy him. Why Crayak had tormented, and ultimately
feared me. Why I was here. Because, had I lived, I would have
lost. I wouldn't be myself, ever again, without the war. It wasn't a
fault, it wasn't a defect, it wasn't even a
difference. I wasn't Rachel the Killer, but Rachel the Warrior. The one who lived.
And the one who lost.
And with that, the last wonder came to mind. The blackness of the unknown
enveloped me, leaving me no time to ask. No time to cry. No time to prepare. I
wondered if... but no, I didn't. I only wanted a way out, a way back, a way to
be with my friends for the celebration. I wondered if they would burn my body,
if Tobias would cry, if my dad would be there. I wondered if, when I left this
place, David would be there. If the other Animorphs
would be there. If they could really handle the planet
with the changes in the future. I wondered if my sister would grow up
like me, of if my mom would ever forgive herself. I wondered if Jake truly knew
that I would die, that there was no other choice. I only hope he can forgive himself,
like I have, for Tom's death. Because I love him too much, and I know he loves
me back. He knows, though, that no one could have known and no one could have
stopped it. I wondered if Cassie would ever marry Jake. I wondered if Tobias
would ever fly again. I wondered if Marco would ever crack a joke again. But
mostly, I wondered if I was ready.
But I knew that answer.
