Sephiroth
fled across the Great Glacier and we followed, Cloud, Tifa, and myself. I remember the Glacier well, that icy,
barren waste where nothing survived except for the oddly silent snow monsters
that hunted us from the moment they smelled warm blood enter their
territory. They never made a sound,
even as they were killed, something I think that was ingrained in them and
their ancestors for so long surviving in a place where it seemed the slightest
breath carried for miles. It was for
this reason I was loathe to use my gun, but I had no choice. It was either use my gun and attract every
monster in a what must have been a ten-mile radius or allow It to take me. I knew It would get me through all
right. It was a hunter, It could move
as silently as Death if It so pleased.
If I let It take control, I would have a much easier time. We faced many monsters on the Glacier.
Looking
back I realize crossing the Glacier was more of a foolish move than I had
previously thought. We had no extra
food or water, no proper clothing (although I admit that proper clothing would
have restricted movement, leaving us easy prey for the monsters I inadvertantly
summoned), and we probably would have found a safer alternative route if we had
looked. But most of all we had a leader
who could not think rationally.
No.
He
could think rationally, but he chose not to, which was worse in a way. I had seen situations such as these, when a
strong man is taken with emotion, not overwhelmed, no, he is too strong for
that, but chooses to be blind anyway, because it was easier than seeing what
was and doing what needed to be done.
It usually ended up with the man failing to accomplish his goal, but not
before reality crashes down on him in the last moments like an avalanche, illuminating
in a harsh light everything he chose to ignore. He reminded me of myself that fateful night in Nibelheim, when I
lost the woman most dear to me and what was left of my humanity. Even as I watched him, trudging on with
brutal relentlessness through the icy stillness as Tifa collapsed to the
ground, I realized how eerily similar our situations were. I thought I should hope that he did not
become what I had become. But truth be
told, I did not care.
I think
it was then that I decided I would let reality destroy him. From the moment I met him I believed he
would be the one to take me to Hojo.
There was something about him, a strength that came from much deeper
than the Jenova in his body. Yes I
thought he would be the one, but apparently I was wrong. He was a liability, like the people Richard,
had me kill all those many years ago were liabilities, and he needed to be
eliminated. This time I wouldn't drag
him out of the snow. I would leave him
to the cold and the monsters, crying tears of frustration as he realized the
futility of his actions or for Aeris or perhaps calling for help while I passed
him. Calling like the little girl I
found that winter day in the dark mountains above Nibelheim, the one I stopped
to help because I must have been half delirious from the cold and I wanted to
die because Lucrecia left me for her husband, and I almost did die, holding her
naked, freezing body against mine, trying to get her warm, whispering to her
about nonsense things, about Freddy the Frozen Frost Fucker, the man I helped
kill with the other deeves when I was young, as young as her, and then she
pissed all over me because she was unconscious and couldn't control her bladder
and I laughed and told her she was getting heavy, that one of us could probably
make it without the other, that she wasn't helping her case at all by peeing
all over my favorite shirt... Today is
a hard day to find.
I
called for Cloud to stop, and he did so as if coming out of a daze, so focused
was he on killing the one who murdered Aeris as she prayed on the altar. Sephiroth.
My poor, sweet, bastard son, Sephiroth.
He turned and came back, moving with that same step-after-step
relentlessness. He didn't bother to
wipe his sword clean after battles, he simply sheathed it and marched, that
dead look in his eyes the entire time.
The eyes that looked at me, demanding to know why we stopped.
"What
is it?"
"Tifa
collapsed again."
His
eyes widened, losing that dead look momentarily, and he ran to the girl's
unconscious form, rolling it over, checking for a pulse. Materia wouldn't work in this
situation. We needed to find shelter.
"We
need to rest. I saw a cave about a
hundred yards back that we can use."
He
stood, head bowed, as though thinking.
"Take her back. I'm going
ahead."
I
wasn't surprised. "No."
He
looked up at me in confused, blurry anger.
I had never outright refused him before that moment.
"What?"
"I
can't allow that."
He
started walking toward me in that rapid, jerky pace people assume when they are
angry. His hand moved up toward the
sword covered with frozen blood he had strapped to his back. The cold had gotten to him.
He
didn't get halfway to me when I put him to sleep using one of the many materia
he gave me. It was easy. He was already weary in body and
spirit. He fell forward face first in
much the same way Tifa did. I picked
him up and threw him over my shoulder and went to where Tifa lay. As I bent to pick her up I saw her face, her
beautiful face, and suddenly I saw the little girl I found on the steep slopes
of the mountains, unconscious and freezing to death alone in the snow. I almost staggered back before picking her
up under the crook of my arm. Today is a
hard day to find.
I
spotted movement out of the corner of my eye.
I could hear them, I could smell them.
They were all around, predators that picked up on our scent or heard us
talking. It would be a long trip
back. I wasn't strong enough to make it
on my own, I knew that. But It
was. I reached down, deep down, to
where I kept It chained in the dark corners and began to draw strength from
it. It screamed in furious protest
while I fed and continued screaming after I was done until I gave it a mental
lashing. It fell silent, sullen and
brooding. When I lost control again, it
was a question of 'when' not 'if,' it would be furious.
We
reached the old man's house just as the sun was beginning to set. It was a long sun this far north, one that
lasted well into the night, so I estimate I've been walking for at least four
hours. I stopped periodically to warm
them up in the many hidden caves of ice that pocked the Great Glacier, putting
them to sleep if they stirred and fighting any monsters that happened to come
our way. I was almost out of
ammunition.
The old
man opened the door for me before I could knock. He wasn't surprised. It
was the third time this happened. He
already set aside a room for the two, where I undressed the both of them,
careful to avert my eyes, and tucked the both of them in warm blankets as
though they were children. The sleep
spell was wearing out and soon they would awaken. The old man gave me a canteen and I drank greedily. The cold dries you out like no other, as the
wise mountaineer Mike Thompson of Nibelheim once told me. How right you were Mike.
Surprisingly,
Tifa was the first to awaken. Perhaps
awaken isn't the right word. More like
she gained consciousness, but only slightest bit. I doubted she knew that she cried out softly for Cloud. I knelt by her, cradling her head while I
poured water in her mouth. She
sputtered a bit and then swallowed, drinking with the same desperate greed I
did a moment before. She looked like
she was about to come fully awake but slipped back into unconsciousness. I looked over at Cloud. He didn't look like he was going to awaken
any time soon. I set the canteen next
to him. I wasn't worried about him, he
had the benefit of Jenova cells to him alive.
The old
man was seated in one of the chairs beside the fire, tobacco pipe between his
teeth and chess board set on a table
before him. We played five games so far
and were halfway through the sixth. He
looked up and nodded at me as I approached.
"Your
move," he said around the pipe.
I sat
and maneuvered my remaining rook across from his king.
"Check."
He
moved his king behind a pawn.
"Your
third time back."
I took
his bishop with my knight.
"Yes."
"You're
stronger than you look."
I
didn't answer.
He
breathed out a puff of blue smoke and took my other knight with a rook. "It's that boy ain't it?"
I moved
my bishop. "Yes. He lost someone dear to him. Checkmate."
He
sighed and began setting the pieces back in their original positions. "Yeah, I figured as much. He has that look in his eye, you know? Like a part of him just died."
I
couldn't have agreed more.
"Yes."
He knew
there was something about me, something that wasn't normal, but he didn't
remark on it. The first time I came
back carrying Cloud and Tifa, he gave my glowing eyes and claw nothing more
than a cursory glance before offering a game of chess. I suppose after living as long as he had,
nothing surprised him much anymore.
He
glanced over to the right and puffed.
Tifa was standing there, a pensive, weary expression on her face,
blanket wrapped around her body. I gave
the old man a look and he nodded, stood up, said something about checking the
bathroom for freezing and left. I set
the table aside and motioned for Tifa to sit.
She sat.
She was
silent for a moment, unsure of what to say.
I scared her. I couldn't blame
her. Sometimes I scared myself. She suddenly looked at me, mouth open as if
to say something then stopped, blushing, and turned her face to the fire. I admired the way the firelight played on
her face. She was very beautiful.
I could
see her gather up her courage to speak.
"Um, I know we haven't really talked all that much, Vincent, but I
just wanted to say thank you. For me
and Cloud."
I
nodded, expressionless and silent, looking at her. She blushed again and turned her face to the fire.
"Don't
thank me yet, Tifa. We are not across
the Glacier," I said.
She
jumped slightly, not expecting me to speak.
"No Vincent, I mean it, if it wasn't for you we wouldn't have
-"
I
raised my hand to cut her off. "I
won't do it again."
She
stopped, gaping. For a few long moments
there was no sound other than the crackle of the fire.
"What
do you mean?" she whispered.
"I
won't do it again," I repeated. I
don't know why I was telling her. It
would be better if I simply left the both of them when they fell again, if I
ignored their pleas for help and just walked on. "If you fall I won't pull you out."
"But,
why...?"
"Because
we are wasting time. Every moment we
spend here is a moment I could be using to find Hojo and Sephiroth. Cloud is becoming a liability -Richard's words coming from my mouth- to
me, to all of us. He is not
thinking. He will destroy himself and
the rest of you along with him. It
would be better if I simply left you out there to freeze."
I
paused. She was looking at me as though
seeing me for the first time. Like a
monster in human skin. I knew I should
have left it there, let her tell me that they were not going to fail, they
would kill Sephiroth, they would learn whatever secrets they needed from Hojo,
and save the Planet in the entire process.
I should have just let them march on to their deaths and go by
myself. But something about it did not
feel right, as though there should be something more.
"But
perhaps there is a way to save him."
I gave
her a hard look, to make sure she was listening. "In Wutai, there is a saying for a man like Cloud. 'He is like a sword without a sheathe.' He is dangerous, Tifa, to himself and all
around him. If you fall out there I may
change my mind and save you but he would be left out there for the cold and
monsters." I leaned in
closer. "However if you can keep
him under control, if you can be his sheathe, you may survive the next trip
across."
Tifa
was still looking at me in that way. I
hated it. "Why are you telling me
this?"
I spoke
harshly. "Because you want to
live. Is that not enough?"
She
recoiled as if I had bitten at her. A
corner of the blanket slipped to the side, revealing a long leg sculpted by
many hours of martial arts practice and tanned by many hours of trekking under
the hot sun. As she bent forward
quickly to throw the piece of blanket back over it, more of it fell away, this
time the top half, revealing much of the soft curve of her proud, ample bosom. She looked back up at me, her eyes telling
me she was embarrassed and very afraid that I had seen too much. I had.
And I wanted her. I wanted her
with a desire that shocked me, a desire I thought I would never feel
again. I didn't want her in the way I
wanted Aeris that first night we met, no, I wanted her in the way a man wants a
woman. She was no longer a work of art,
a painting or sculpture I might admire for hours on end, but a living,
breathing woman. Lust made unfamiliar
by time raged through my veins, lust I hadn't felt since I met Lucrecia. She saw this, she must have, for she was
paralyzed in the same way a mouse is paralyzed when it meets the gaze of a
serpent. A low growl was forming deep
in my throat. It was the monster in me
coming out.
It took
a moment to fight my lower instincts back into control. My breathing was ragged.
"Go
to sleep."
She
came out of her fear-induced trance and hurried back into the room with Cloud,
ignoring the way the blanket flapped around her, revealing tantalizing portions
of flesh. I kept my eyes down. I slept in the chair that night. Whatever may come tomorrow would come and
there was nothing I could do to stop it.
We
started out at dawn, Cloud setting his grim, inexorable pace toward Sephiroth
(I explained to him that he fell unconscious, an explanation he accepted
quickly and without argument, eager to resume the journey) and Tifa trying her
best to avoid looking at me. She did
not have to fear me for that reason anymore, the desire I felt the night before
was gone. But there was still the
matter of the sword and sheathe.
We came
to the place where Tifa collapsed and Cloud had fallen asleep from my
spell. Tifa stopped and doubled over,
breathing hard. I called for Cloud to
stop. A mix of deja vu and a sort of
strange sadness filled me. It was going
to end here, at least for them.
Cloud
came back, his eyes still holding that hard, dead look. "Why did you stop?"
"Tifa
is tired. We must rest."
Cloud
stood for a moment as if considering.
"Take her back to the cave.
I'm going on ahead."
I was
about to tell him no, that I wasn't taking her back, that I wasn't going to
rest, that I was the one going on ahead, that I would leave her there and him
too, because he looked like he was ready to collapse and he couldn't last much
longer, maybe a few miles at the most, and I was going to find Sephiroth myself
without them because he had become a liability. Then Tifa intervened.
"Cloud? We need to rest," she said, touching
his arm. "You're tired, all of us
are. Just for an hour. Please?"
His
eyes softened for a moment. "Tifa,
I... you're right. We need to
rest." He smiled tiredly, the
first time since Aeris had died.
"Can't fight while we're tired right?"
Tifa
gave a quiet sigh of relief while she and Cloud walked over the hard-packed
snow to the shelter. I saw her turning
her head to look at me, but I turned my head until they were past me and
followed them. I did not want to see
what was in her eyes, gratitude or revulsion, it did not matter. I was a monster. I was going to sacrifice them to reach my own goal and I felt
there were going to be many moments like these over the course of our time
together. It was going to be a long
journey.
Author's Note: I got
the idea for this story (which is an excerpt from a much larger story I've been
thinking about writing over the last two years or so) after watching the
Kenshin OAV's, the part when Tomoe is told to be the sheathe to Kenshin's
sword, and my own experience playing Final Fantasy VII. I always wondered how the group survived the
Great Glacier when they fainted, so I thought I'd write a small, if unlikely
explanation to it. It's still in rough
draft form so please forgive any spelling errors or lack of ease when reading.