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Akogare
(Longing)
A CCS fanfic by Sakura
Standard disclaimers apply.
New edited version thanks to Oneesama. *huggles*
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He saw and knew everything.
And that was not because there was half of a sorcerer named Clow Reed inside
him, a being who easily saw beyond the future and possibly, what was even
beyond that. No, it didn't take years
of magic, some fancy spell, a single incantation. It was simple --- he sat at the back row, right behind her. All it took was a watchful eye and a little acting
to convince other people that you were busy with a novel instead of staring at
her long dark hair.
How many years had he been staring at that lovely head of hers? He had been sitting behind her since fifth
grade. So it's been what, four years? Yes.
He had been staring at her hair for four years. He didn't even intend for things to happen
that way; it just seemed that whenever he drew lots for a seat there was some
rule of Fate that he pick the one behind her.
Not that he minded. He really didn't.
Sitting behind her like this, he saw and knew everything.
He knew that she loved Sakura. It
didn't take much to figure that out.
And unlike the others who just dismissed it all as friendly affection,
he knew her feelings ran deep. It was
the morning Li Syaoran came back from Hong Kong --- the way her smile faltered
for the briefest of seconds, the slight squeak in her voice, Welcome back,
Li-kun, how have you been? She was
smiling, turning from Sakura's glowing face to Syaoran's flushed one, her dark
eyes filling with some emotion that was hard to decipher. Despair?
Loss? She then politely excused
herself and went back to her book. From
that moment on she had been completely changed.
His eyes absently trailed down the long dark hair tumbling over her drooped
shoulders, feeling the urge to string his fingers through it, even
if under the pretense of straightening out the tangles. Instead his fingers clenched on the now
forgotten novel in his grasp.
There were a thousand spells carved into his memory. He idly ran through them one by one. He couldn't remember; was there one for happiness? If there was one, impatiently pointed
out the small sane voice in his head, you would've used it a long time
ago. On yourself.
I am happy, she had defiantly said, raising her head higher so she was
looking down on him, staring him down with those fiery violet eyes. They both knew it was a lie, but he wisely
chose to keep his silence. Tomoyo had
this strange theory of happiness --- that even if your heart burned with
longing for this one person, just as long as this person was happy (even if in
the arms of another) that meant you were happy as well. So there she was, doubling over with pain,
and still she gave herself a pat on the back, congratulating herself for
finding bliss.
Or maybe he was exaggerating things a little too much. But he really didn't comprehend this
happiness of hers. If the Tomoyo he was
seeing right now was really happy, then he'd rather that she be sad.
Suddenly her shoulders straightened up and he looked back down at his novel
before she caught him staring at her.
"Hiiragizawa-kun," she softly said. She was turned around in her seat so she was facing him.
He looked up with the customary smile.
She went on. "I have a favor to
ask of you."
***
The art teacher believed her excuse for not having been able to turn in the
sketch; taking in her distressed face, her trembling hands. Okay, one more day, the teacher conceded,
believing the fib --- that she had a headache and wasn't able to draw anything
in her state. It was lucky that she was
really feeling out of sorts, otherwise she wouldn't have been able to pull it
off.
He asked where she wanted to do the sketch.
The schoolyard, he asked, and she suddenly had a vision of Sakura and
Syaoran seated before each other sketching and laughing, and her chest
tightened at that. No, she said firmly,
the music room. Never mind that it was
her private sanctuary. Just as long as
it kept her away from it all.
He sat on the piano bench, pushing back the glasses on the bridge of his nose,
then pensively folding his hands together.
She pulled up a chair and sat down in front of him, pencil ready.
"May I begin?" she asked politely, well-versed in the language of
strangers.
He nodded, equally distant.
"Please do."
A circle. The beginnings of a
face. Divide into two. Two circles for eyes, two larger circles for
glasses. A nose. A smile.
Finished.
Eriol was simple to draw.
So why couldn't she come up with anything that looked like him?
"Oh no," she groaned in spite of herself.
"What's the matter?"
"I'm afraid I'm not good at this."
"Take your time," he good-naturedly responded.
She tried again, then shook her head.
"That's it," she said as she folded her sketchbook, "I'll tell
sensei that I can't turn in anything."
"You can." He lifted up the oak cover of the piano and fingered an
ivory key, pressing it slowly.
A single key, soulful in its solitude.
"By the way, the sketch you made yesterday was simply amazing," she
commented, opening her sketchbook, deciding to heed his advice and try one more
time. "You're really good at
drawing."
"It was nothing," he modestly responded, pressing another key. "I just have more eyes than anybody
else so I see more detail."
Whether he was referring to his glasses or the other half that existed in him,
she didn't know. It probably didn't
matter.
She got up from her chair, walked around, and gingerly sat on the bench beside
him.
He glanced at her questioningly.
"I have only one pair of eyes so I need to watch you better," she
replied.
He turned back to the piano.
"Please don't mind me," she reminded him, starting the sketch all
over again.
Then he began to play. It was the same
soft lingering ballad she heard the other day, the morning when she walked in
on him while he was playing in the shadows.
"That's a beautiful piece."
"It's called 'Hikari Sasu Niwa'," he replied.
'Hikari Sasu Niwa'. The Sunlit Garden.
And then they were there, sitting under the trees, laughing with the sun
in their eyes and in their outstretched hands, and her gaze traveled over his
sun-dappled face, realizing that he was much more than circles and a
smile. Pale skin, delicate nose, lovely
dark blue eyes, long dark lashes, tendrils of dark, almost black hair sweeping
against his forehead, gracefully, like the way his pale fingers swept over the
keys. Strangely, breathtakingly
beautiful. How odd. And that gentle smile, so unlike the clumsy
curves she drew with her pencil.
Confused, Tomoyo turned back to her sketchbook. The moment her eyes left his face, everything seemed to dim… She couldn't recall how the eyes softened,
how the curve of his jaw ended, so she stared at him again and he was there
again in the sunshine, telling her of a time long ago when he also sat under
the shade laughing---
Fingers dropped from the keys, halting the music.
Tomoyo jerked back in surprise.
His dark blue eyes were downcast.
"Daidouji-san---"
She realized what she was doing and promptly turned a bright shade of red. "I-I'm sorry, it was rude of me to
stare---"
"No, it's fine."
"I'm very sorry for making you feel uncomfortable."
"Really, it's fine."
They were back in the music room.
She stood up and went back to the chair, watching from a safe distance. "I'll stay here this time. Please don't mind me."
He didn't move.
The pencil was mindlessly drawing frantic circles all over the paper.
***
The art teacher looked up from the sketch.
"This will do. You may
leave, Daidouji."
For a moment Tomoyo held back, wanting to reach out and grab it --- that
embarrassing parody of Hiiragizawa Eriol with the glasses and the wide grinning
mouth, no, that knowing smirk. How it
was all wrong, how it wasn't him at all.
But instead she meekly bowed and walked away.
***
Then one day Sakura accosted her as soon as the teacher left the room, leaving
her no choice but to stay in her seat instead of bolting out of it and running
to the safety of the music room.
"Tomoyo-chan, are you free this afternoon? You have no choral practice on Tuesdays,
right?"
Tomoyo's eyes widened, hopefully.
"Yes."
"Well, Syaoran-kun and I want to try out the sundaes at the new ice cream
parlor downtown today and we were wondering if you wanted to join
us."
Her heart sank. "Oh."
"Come on, it'll be fun!" Sakura persisted, green eyes warm. "Plus, it's been a while since we went
out together."
Around a month or two, to be exact, since he came back.
"You too, Eriol-kun." Sakura turned to the boy seated behind her,
deep in the pages of an English novel.
"Will you come?"
"Are you sure you wouldn't mind having me come along?" came the usual
polite query. Tomoyo recognized the
cautiousness in his voice, knowing that the amber-eyed boy beside
Sakura was probably glaring at him for all he was worth. After all, Syaoran still mistrusted Eriol,
although not as passionately as he used to.
She heard a drawn sigh. "No."
That was Syaoran himself. Sakura
must've nudged him in the ribs, giving him a look that read, He's our friend,
MY friend, give him a chance, please? Tomoyo smiled inwardly at that.
She knew as well as Syaoran did how impossible Sakura was to
resist.
Sakura gripped her shoulder excitedly.
"Hurry up, Tomoyo-chan!"
She looked up to see the others already standing up, waiting for
her. She hurriedly got up and started
fixing her things, mumbling an apology under her breath.
"I hear they have so many new flavors.
They even have peach ice cream!" Sakura went on, helping with a
book every now and then.
"Peach?" Syaoran echoed incredulously.
"Peach." Sakura nodded.
"Ne, you love peach ice cream right, Tomoyo-chan?"
How long has it been since she had a perfectly mindless conversation like this? It felt like years. She had been away from her best friend for
too long. She felt a smile tug at the
corners of her mouth, fought to stop it, lost, and smiled at her.
"Yes, I do. Very much."
***
The ice cream parlor was busy with students from every school imaginable,
flooding the shiny counters and booths in their uniforms and with their bags
and books. They sat at a booth next to
the window, settling themselves under the soothing cold of the air conditioner,
chatting gaily. Rather, Sakura was
chatting gaily, Syaoran and Eriol were talking every once in a while, and
Tomoyo was watching them with a contented smile. This afternoon could turn out well, if she kept her fingers
crossed.
"We might have to go to the counter ourselves," Eriol mused.
"Okay." Sakura nodded, getting up from her seat. "I'll take our orders then." When Syaoran immediately tried to get up
too, Eriol stood up.
"Please stay here with Daidouji-san, Li-kun. I'll go with Sakura-san."
Syaoran hesitated for a moment, then sat back down again. "Thanks."
While the two disappeared into the crowd, Syaoran turned to Tomoyo with a
rather nervous smile.
"So how have you been doing?"
If she was taken aback by the question, she didn't show it. "I'm doing fine."
"I, well...that is, I haven't talked to you in a while," he
stammered. "It's...well, kind of
funny, considering we're in the same class, I mean."
She knew what he was getting at. She
smiled again, this time hoping it was more sincere. "I'm fine. Really."
"Sakura's worried about you." He smiled back, visibly relieved by her
reaction. "She said you're always
at the choral club practicing. She
thinks you're working too hard. She was
really glad to hear about this parlor and the peach ice cream. Although why anybody would want to eat peach
ice cream is beyond me." His amber
eyes widened, suddenly remembering.
"No offense, I didn't mean it that way---"
"How are you?" Tomoyo asked suddenly, curious.
He blinked, startled. "Me? Everything's swell."
"Are you happy?"
He fiddled with his napkin for a moment before answering. When he spoke up, his voice was unusually
quiet and shy. "Yes, I am."
Tomoyo felt another smile coming.
"Then I'm glad."
"Thank you." He said that
slowly, meaningfully.
At that moment the sundaes came, and the peach ice cream was heavenly.
***
Like all pleasant dreams, it was soon over, and outside the ice cream parlor
Sakura reached out to squeeze Tomoyo's hand.
"Tomoyo-chan, you loved the ice cream? You did? Let's do this
again sometime, okay?"
And Tomoyo stared into those wide green depths, feeling the laughter bubbling
up inside her. It was warm,
ticklish. "Why not?"
"Don't practice too hard, okay."
"Hai, okaasama."
And Sakura squeezed her hand again and laughed, and Tomoyo had her back, even
if it was just for a moment.
Then it was over.
She and Eriol stood watching until Syaoran and Sakura disappeared into the
distance. She turned to him. "And thank you too, Hiiragizawa-kun. I have to go now, so..."
"May I walk you home?" he quickly asked, the words flying out of his
mouth before he could stop them. For a
moment he looked boyishly awkward standing there, awaiting her
response.
She was amused. "Yes, thank you."
The walk home was silent, save for the busy sounds of the city around them and
the soft tapping of their shoes on the pavement.
"How are Spinel Sun and Nakuru-san doing?" she asked. Maybe it was just the peach ice cream, but
she suddenly felt buoyant, careless, possessed by this overwhelming ridiculous
urge to ask about everybody she knew.
"They're doing very well. In fact,
right now--" Eriol closed his eyes for a moment and intoned in his strange
deep voice, "Spinel is deep in a tub full of bubbles--"
"He's taking a bath?" she asked.
His eyes flew open, then he smiled.
"No, he's washing dishes."
An image of the small blue-gray winged creature all covered with soap,
scrubbing dishes in the sink.
The laughter bubbled again inside her at the funny thought.
"---And Ruby Moon is at school."
She stared at him, transfixed.
"Can you see him?"
"Yes," he answered, then frowned.
"No. Oh, there he is. He's reading a book. It's...the title is, '10 Ways to Snag a Guy
Who, After Being Subjected to The Living Hell You Made For Him, Made Up His
Mind to Ignore You for the Rest of His Life'."
The warm rush then merrily churned up her throat and it was impossible to hold
it back.
Tomoyo turned away from him and burst into gales of laughter.
"But it's true." He pretended to scratch his head in confusion, but
looking up she saw his eyes were warm.
Wiping sudden tears of laughter from her eyes, she read his pleased smile and
knew that he was telling her patiently, indulgently, as if he were kneeling
under the tree in the sunlit garden and leaning close to her ear and
whispering, This is happiness.
Laughing without a care in the world.
A frosted glass of peach ice cream in the afternoon sun. Doesn't it feel good?
And she laughed again, embracing the newfound warmth to her chest, sighing yes,
yes, yes.
***
At the gate, they were back to their old selves.
Thank you for walking me home. Don't
mention it; it was my pleasure. Please
take care. I will. See you at school tomorrow.
Goodbye.
