Family Debts 4
Family Debts
By Janime
Part Four
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Mama now I'm coming home, I'm
not all you wished of me.
A mother's love for her son,
spoken, let me be.
I took your love for granted,
not a thing you said to me.
I need your arms to welcome
me, but a cold stone's all I see.
-Mama-
Metallica
------------------
Sekhmet sat
on the floor in his room, holding the picture of Chadih, his beloved daughter.
He held it close to his heart, fighting the tears that threatened to fall.
Chadih was with Kiyaa and Jinmin. Parz swore that they wouldn't be able
to break the spell that she put on Chadih, and if they did, Sekhmet could
take Parz's life. That would be the compensation for losing his daughter.
But Sekhmet
found it hard to even think of himself killing Parz for some reason. Maybe
it was because she knew his father, he wasn't really sure. He knew the
moment they met that he could trust Parz. But why did he know?
Damn
you, Essah. Sekhmet thought bitterly at his father. Why and how
do you know Parz? And why do I have this feeling that I'm connected to
her as much as you are? Possibly more than you.
"Sekhmet?"
He looked
up and saw Dayus standing by the doorway. Sekhmet looked at Chadih's picture
again. "How many times do I have to lose her?"
Dayus walked
over to his friend and looked at the picture. "At least she didn't die
by your hand," he said.
Sekhmet
was ready to kick himself. Chadih was still alive and there was a good
chance that he would be able to get his daughter back. But Dayus' daughter
was gone forever.
"You didn't
kill her, Dayus." Sekhmet looked at him. "You've been told that countless
times. It wasn't you."
"How come
I can't help but feel that it was me?" Dayus left the room.
Sekhmet
let out a long sigh, feeling guilty for acting so selfish. He looked at
the doorway again this time to see Parz standing there. She walked into
the room.
"You still
have the right to end my life if the spell doesn't work," said Parz.
"I know,"
Sekhmet said quietly. "There's one favor I have to ask of you. Dayus...
he was a prisoner to an Oni before Talpa sent me to bring him into the
Dynasty."
"What happened?"
"She forced
Dayus to kill his newborn daughter. He didn't even know she existed until
the day the Oni brought her there and she forced Dayus to slit his own
daughter's throat, so that he could become an Oni and be her mate."
"There weren't
many Oni left around the time you were born, I remember." Parz said. "They
tried to turn promising humans into Oni, to repopulate their species. One
tried making me into his next meal." She smiled. "He bit off more than
he could chew. They're all gone now."
"How do
you know for sure?" Sekhmet asked.
"From the
moment you kill an Oni," said Parz. "Somehow, you know how many are left
in the land. And Dayus killed the last one."
"I was there.
He told me everything that happened to him. His brother resented him because
he was favored among his clan, losing his family, and forced to kill his
daughter." Sekhmet drew in a deep breath and let it out slowly. "This is
where my favor comes in. I don't know why I'm asking you, but for Dayus.
I know somehow you can do this for me and for him."
"What do
you want me to do?" Parz asked.
"Ease his
mind," answered Sekhmet. "Give his heart peace. Let him know that his family
forgives him for what he has done in the past." Let him have something
I know I can't.
Parz looked
at him and nodded. "I'll see what I can do," she said and left.
Dayus was
lying on his side in bed, but couldn't fall asleep. Every time he closed
his eyes, Dayus saw his infant daughter with a large gash in her throat
and a bloody knife next to her head.
Dayus sat
up and rubbed his temples. It was going to be another sleepless night he
could tell already.
He felt
the air in the room become cooler and he tensed. Looking around the room
a small amount of mist gathered together in the center. Dayus reached for
the dagger he had hidden under the pillow. A small form appeared in the
mist and Dayus pulled the dagger out.
As the mist
cleared, Dayus could see that the small form was actually a child, a girl
to be precise, maybe around Chadih's age. Her hair was the same dark brown
that he once had, her eyes were the same hazel color that his mother had,
and the girl resembled his wife with a little bit of his mother in her
features.
She timidly
stepped forward. "Papa?"
Dayus gasped.
The dagger slipped from his fingers and he fell off the bed, landing on
his knees. Dayus looked at his hands. He could see his daughter's blood
stained on them. Tears welled in his eye and ran down his check. "My baby
girl..." he managed to choke out.
"Papa, don't
cry," she said. "It's not your fault. Mama said she forgives you and she
wants you to be happy. Uncle Mori says he's sorry for what he did."
Dayus looked
at his daughter's spirit. "Tell them I'm sorry, too. And I love all of
you." He reached out to her, the blood fading from his hands as she hugged
her father.
She began
to feel less tangible and Dayus quickly kissed her cheek, letting her go.
They smiled at each other, father and daughter. Then she faded away into
the night. Dayus leaned against the bed and cried. He wiped away his tears,
climbing back into bed, and falling asleep without seeing the nightmare
that had haunted him every night.
Parz stood
outside Dayus' room. She smiled as she heard his sobs quiet and went downstairs.
Calling
souls from the Spirit Realm was a bit tricky, as long as one did not mind
talking to whatever spirit appeared. Searching for a certain spirit was
very difficult. Parz had to use most of her power to find Dayus' daughter
and allow her to have a few moments with him as parent and child.
Parz sighed
as she walked into the living room. Why is it that she was able to find
the spirits that someone else loved, but not the ones she loved or tied
to her blood? Why couldn't she find her mother or any other member of her
human relatives? Or her husband and her son? Or-
"Every time
you enter the Spirit Realm you risk your own soul."
Parz looked
over by the fireplace. "I know, Essah," she answered the Snake-god.
"Why are
you doing this, Parz?" Essah asked. "You're putting your life on a very
thin line as you have done many times before. Why?"
"I can't
tell you."
"Oh yes,
you can."
"Not yet."
Parz's voice was beginning to rise. "When this over, Essah. That's what
you said. When this is over, then I will tell you why."
Essah looked
at her. "What exactly do you want, Parz?"
"At this
moment," she said. "I want you to act like a father to Sekhmet."
"How dare
you!" Essah hissed, trying to keep his voice down so that the rest of the
inhabitants wouldn't hear. "I did what I had to do when he was growing
up."
"And a fine
job you did, Essah." Parz said sarcastically. "You left your own son in
a hellhole, if you remember. You didn't mark him as a Snake-god until he
was twelve. Would you have marked Sekhmet if that Seer didn't find him?
And don't say that I don't know anything about being a parent. I was a
mother for seven years. He wasn't born from me, but that boy was my son.
I think I should let you know, Essah, that if it wasn't for me, Sekhmet
would never have survived through the winters when he was a child. I was
more of a parent to him than you were."
Essah glared
at her, the anger in his eyes was clear. He looked away from Parz and sighed.
"I know that I wasn't the best father to him. I admit, I didn't know what
to do."
"I told
you what would happen if you had a child with a human, especially a son,"
said Parz. "You wouldn't let me take him away. But why didn't you tell
Sekhmet the reason Talpa wanted him?"
The Snake-god
shook his head. "I don't know."
"Essah,"
Parz said quietly. "He is your son. Be his father."
"How?"
"Like you
were to me. Just act on your instincts."
Essah looked
at Parz and she smiled at him. He sighed again and headed upstairs. Essah
walked into Sekhmet's room. His son didn't bother looking at him.
"She'll
be all right, Sekhmet." Essah sat next to him. "Parz is good on her word."
"I know,"
Sekhmet said quietly. "Somehow I know." He started shaking and the tears
that he tried so hard to hold back finally started to fall.
Essah reached
out and held Sekhmet, hating to see his son like this. So much pain had
been caused in his son's life that could have been avoided. Why hadn't
he let Parz take Sekhmet away, Essah still couldn't figure out the reason
himself. He wanted to protect both of them from Talpa and he believed that
by keeping quiet about them and separate from each other was good enough.
Essah realized
now that he was wrong. He decided that he wouldn't make the path for Sekhmet
to travel, only guide him to the point where to make his decision. Essah
moved away from his son. Reaching into his pocket, Essah pulled out Rielvia's
pendant and placed into Sekhmet's palm, closing his son's fingers over
it.
"You've
grown up." Essah said. "I can't tell you what to do anymore. All I can
say is that you must do this on your own. You know where to go. And I'll
support whatever decision you make." He stood up and left, leaving Sekhmet
staring at the pendant.
Sekhmet arrived
at a small park just outside of Edo. He continued on, walking through the
picnic area into the woods. The river he used to live by was gone, however
there was a large stone water fountain in its place.
Sekhmet
remembered a long time ago that Essah had said that this was close to where
he had met Rielvia for the first time. He also remembered hearing rumors
about a ghost of a woman dressed in an old fashioned kimono with bruises
on her face wandering the area, singing a lullaby and looking very sad.
It's
a shot in the dark, Sekhmet decided, tightening his grip on the pendant
in his hand as he walked towards the fountain and stopped as he heard the
song Parz had sung to Chadih. The same song that Rielvia had sung to Jynavy.
Sekhmet began to walk again slowly around the fountain. He saw a translucent
figure of a woman wearing a kimono, with black hair that shielded her face.
Sekhmet
walked closer and the woman stopped singing. She turned her head, looking
up at Sekhmet with dark eyes. Her face was the same way he remembered when
he was almost five. The bruises were in the same place as if they never
healed, forever marking her from Viraz's beatings.
They stared
into each other's eyes, finding no hate within them. Sekhmet sat next to
Rielvia. She reached up, lightly touching his cheek. The only gentle expression
she had ever shown him in his life that he could remember. He put his hand
over hers and looked at his mother.
"Didn't
I deserve you?" Sekhmet asked as tears fell.
"No, Sekhmet,"
said Rielvia. "I didn't deserve you." She hugged him tightly and sobbed.
"My son..."
Sekhmet
hugged her back. This was all that he wanted from her while growing up,
a hug or a smile. Just a little inclination that she knew he was there
and not just a shadow that could be easily ignored. Sekhmet kissed her
cheek and the bruises disappeared. He held out the pendant. Rielvia took
the pendant and slipped it over her son's head, resting it around his neck.
"I shouldn't
have said those things to you," she said. "I should have listened to her
when I had the chance."
"Who?" Sekhmet
asked.
Rielvia
smiled. "She'll bring your daughter back, Sekhmet. She will."
"Parz..."
"I'm sorry,
Sekhmet." Tears fell from Rielvia's eyes.
"I'm sorry,
too, mother."
They hugged
again.
"I love
you." Rielvia whispered.
Sekhmet
released her. "Rest now, mother," he said. "May what Viraz had done to
you never haunt you again."
"Or you,
my son." Rielvia smiled at him then slowly vanished into the night.
Sekhmet
remained for a while, feeling that a lot of weight had been lifted from
him. Now he was at peace with his past. How soon would it be to see if
he would have peace in his future? He stood up and began to walk home.
Parz,
he thought, I have a lot of questions that you are going to answer.
"I talked
to him before," said Dayus. "But from the way he was, it didn't look like
he was going anywhere."
"Why would
he just leave without saying anything?" Cale asked, pacing back and forth
in the living room.
"Does anybody
know how long he's been gone?" asked Kayura.
Dayus had
contacted her after discovering that Sekhmet had left and she arrived at
the house giving the others a little hope that she might be able to locate
Sekhmet.
Essah
said something to him, no doubt. Parz thought. But where did he
go?
"I went
to go bring him some tea not too long ago," said Mia and shrugged. "Who
knows how long?"
"Is it possible
that he went after Jinmin and Kiyaa to retrieve Chadih?" Altyno spoke up.
"I don't
think so," said Parz. "If he did, he's very foolish. Sekhmet will get himself
killed if goes up against those two by himself. Especially now. They're
a lot more powerful than you may realize."
They heard
the back door open and closed.
"Sekhmet?"
called Dayus.
"Yes?" Sekhmet
walked into the living room.
"Where did
you go?" Mia asked. "We were worried about you."
"I went
to go search my soul." Sekhmet answered. "And I have quite a few questions
to ask you, Parz." He walked over to the young woman. "I won't say how
I found out, but my mother knew you as well. You were in my village."
Kayura,
Dayus, Cale, and Mia looked at each other. It was very rare of them to
hear Sekhmet speak of his mother.
"And?" Parz
asked, showing no sign that she had been caught.
"That song
is the key. How do you know it? You said it was sung to you when you were
a child."
"It was
sung to me when I was a child." Parz looked straight into Sekhmet's eyes.
There's
no point hiding it any more now, she thought and said, "Your mother
knew that song from her mother. The reason why you know it Sekhmet, is
because I was the one who sung it to you when you were sleeping as a child."
"What?"
Sekhmet asked.
"I kept
watch over you when you were growing up," said Parz. "Until you were thrown
out of your village. A debt that I owe your father and I still have to
repay it."
"What debt?
What are you talking about? How is it that you and Essah know each other?"
Sekhmet's patience was running thin and everyone could see it.
Parz walked
over to the window and leaned against the wall. "What does the name 'Goshiem'
mean to you?" she asked.
"Goshiem?"
asked Mia.
"He was
a demon that lived a very long time ago." Dayus started. "I think he died
about two hundred years before we were born."
"He wasn't
very popular, either." Cale said. "The way the legend goes, Goshiem raped
fifty women and killed them all except for the last one. It's said that
she had twins. Goshiem died about eight years later."
"He was
an Ahkrushian," Sekhmet finally spoke. "The Ahkrushians and the Snake-gods
were created at the same time by the Old Ones." He looked at them. "Or
so Essah told me. Ahkrushians are powerful and have crisscross line patterns
on them like Snake-gods have scales. Before the Snake-gods starting fighting
against each other, they fought against eleven Ahkrushian males. For some
reason the younger generation and all the female Ahkrushians died, except
for the Queen Mother. The remaining eleven males were imprisoned somewhere
by her.
"Goshiem
was the only one from the younger generation that was alive and free. The
Queen Mother died shortly after, but she prophesied that Goshiem would
father two children by a human woman - one boy, one girl. They were cut
from their mother, making them born at the same - one not older or younger
than the other. Unfortunately, the twins' mother died. And it's said that
depending how they're raised, both shall be salvation and destruction."
"Why were
they cut from their mother?" Kayura asked.
"Because
neither would be born first and she slit her own throat," said Parz. "That's
why she died."
Sekhmet
looked at her. "How do you know that?" he asked. "And what does Goshiem
have to do with you?"
Parz turned
and faced them. She pulled up her left sleeve, showing the crisscross pattern
on her arm.
Everyone
started in shock at Parz. Cale and Dayus jumped back. All Mia and Kayura
could do was stand there.
Sekhmet
remained calm. "You're Goshiem's daughter," he said. "And Jinmin is his
son."
"As I said
to the Snake-gods, not by choice." Parz pulled her sleeve down. "I hate
being what I am, Sekhmet. You're the only one in this room who can understand
that."
"I can,"
he admitted. "But what does Essah have to do with this?"
"Your father
is the one who cut Jinmin and me from our mother," said Parz. "We were
left with a woman who had a stillborn child a month before we were born.
She was able to take care of us. Just after Jinmin and I turned eight,
Goshiem came after us. He killed most of the people in the village - including
our foster mother - and he was killed in turn. An eye for an eye, I guess
you could say. Jinmin ran off and I didn't see him for about thirty years
- we haven't aged a day since our twentieth birthday. Essah was there and
he took me away, saving me a second time."
"Why does
Jinmin hate my father so much?" Sekhmet asked.
"He believes
that Essah killed Goshiem."
"Did he?"
"No."
Sekhmet
looked at Parz. He had that feeling again that she was telling the truth
and it was getting very annoying.
Essah
trusts her despite whose daughter she is, Sekhmet thought. You trust
her yourself and before you knew that Essah knew her, and you still don't
know why. Damn it! Sekhmet let out a stressed sigh. "I believe you
and I trust you. I just wish I knew exactly why."
"Sekhmet,"
said Dayus. "She's the daughter of a psychopathic demon. Her brother is
just as crazy as their father was. I think their sanity is a bit off."
"Thank you
very much." Parz snapped.
"It's not
that, Parz." Cale said. "It's just that after hearing all that Goshiem
did..." He didn't finish from the hurt look on Parz's face.
"I won't
let your blood get in the way of my judgement and opinion of you, Parz."
Sekhmet said. "All that you've done, I'm grateful." He looked at Cale and
Dayus, then back to Parz. "When will Jinmin contact you?"
"I don't
know," she said. "He likes to draw things out, that's the truth. He believes
all of this to be a game." Parz became very serious. "This is our final
game. I can promise you this, Sekhmet, I will bring Chadih back to you."
At three
o'clock in the morning, Cale was still awake. Too many things were running
through his head for him to fall asleep. Chadih's kidnapping, Sekhmet's
trust in Parz, Essah being so supportive of her, Jinmin and Parz's bloodline...
That one
scared him.
She hates
being what she is, Cale told himself. But still... oh come on, it's
not her fault who her father was. Parz won't even call Goshiem her father.
All she does is say that he's half the reason she exists.
Cale got
off his bed and went downstairs. Parz was in the living room, standing
guard as always. Altyno wasn't on the couch. She was probably sleeping
in the downstairs guest bedroom.
"Parz,"
said Cale. She turned form the window and looked at him. "I want to apologized
for what I said earlier."
She smiled.
"It's all right. I've had a lot worse reaction when people found out who
I am. You should have seen the expressions on the Snake-gods."
"I can imagine."
Cale laughed a little. He walked into the living room and sat on the couch.
"I couldn't sleep."
"It bothered
you that much?" Parz raised her eyebrow.
"Well..."
Cale stopped, not wanting to insult her anymore than he already had. "Yes,
and I want to talk to you."
"About what?"
Cale looked
at her. She was pretty; her gentle human features were beautiful. The dark
night eyes - he could be lost in them forever.
Just
spit it out, Cale thought. You're the Dark Warlord of Corruption.
What are you afraid of? He stood up and walked over to her, piecing
together in his mind what to say to her. He hadn't done this in four hundred
years - he was rusty.
"I don't
know how to say this exactly," Cale started. "But I've been worrying about
you the last couple weeks."
"Thank you."
Parz said quietly.
"In a way
more than a friend would care." Cale stopped, suddenly feeling like an
idiot. "Parz, I-"
He didn't
get a chance to finish. Parz kissed him. Cale was shocked at first, then
relaxed, enjoying the sensation. He put his arms around her waist, but
she pulled away from him.
"I can't..."
Parz whispered. "The one who dared to love me died because of me."
"Sekhmet
told us about your son," said Cale. "That doesn't mean-"
"You don't
understand, Cale." Parz said. "Before I found the boy I called my son,
I was married once to a good man... and Jinmin killed him to provoke me
to fight him." She looked at him sadly. "I can't allow someone I care about
die because of me again."
Cale watched
her leave the room. "I'll dare, Parz," he said quietly. "I dare."