[Author's note: Hi, all! Here's a
fic that was inspired by, of all things, a sign in the window of a
yoga studio. Possible spoilers for Clover 4, though if any exist
they're subtle; the story also contains mild, implicit shounen ai.
The original story and artwork of Clover is copyrighted by CLAMP;
this story is a not-for-profit fanwork intended as homage and
shameless worship, not as any sort of infringement. Thanks go out to
Kristin O. for her translations and editing suggestions. Enjoy! And
C&Cs are always welcome. ^_^]
Forever Is in You
A Clover fanfic
By Natalie Baan
Lying here, next to you, I can feel the bedside clock tick over,
digital numbers melting into new forms. If I rolled my head and
looked in the opposite direction, I'd see the clock's face, its green
and mutable traceries that seem constant unless you watch them for
the change.
But I'd rather look at you.
A faint ambient light--moonlight, screenlight, the fog-smeared glow
of the streetlamps outside, all dissolved together--matches its
paleness to your pale hair. They complement each other, both washed
of color, translucently lambent, holding off the dark. If I reached
out, not with my hands but with the nerve and sinew of magic, I could
edge the bathroom's dimmer up, not enough to wake even you, and in
the increased brightness reflecting from the wall I'd see the shadows
of your face begin to reveal what before had been implication,
suggestion: your lashes a blurred fringe along lowered eyelids, the
only visor of your sleep; the softening of your mouth that lets your
lips part, almost imperceptibly; the curved line of your neck between
shoulder and pillow as you lie on your side, turned toward me. But I
don't need more light to know your features, so well-studied, to
sense your presence next to me--that glimpse in the night would be
extra, a grace note, a gift. What I have is enough. Nor do I need to
glance at the clock to mark time's passing--I'm attuned to its pulse,
a Minor Wave of seconds being counted out, flicker of precise
electronic measurement, its subdivisions finer than the reckoning of
my own heart. As the signal goes to the liquid crystal display, I
already know it and am rejoicing.
/This is another minute that I'm with you./
When I first came to this house, I had trouble being at peace: I was
a constant whirl of motion and need. (And if my franticness appeared
subdued compared to other boys my seeming age, consider that somber,
silent institute, the steel-strung web of the lab where I lived and
where a part of me will be long after I am gone. Or maybe it's true
what they say--that I've always been quiet. I can't see far enough
back to know what I might have been.) I was struggling with my life's
limits then no less than before I met you, during that bleak time
when all I could see was despair, loneliness, alienation, a
claustrophobia of the heart, and there was no future I was going
toward. The boy called C was a dark-winged bird, trapped and
battering against glass, window to window, until it discovered an
open pane and darted to freedom and its own likely death, cagebred,
knowing nothing of the sky.
Instead, I found (or was found by) you.
And then there /was/ a future, and it was luminous, breathtaking, far
too short all of a sudden--or perhaps it was far too long, a vast,
indefinable reach that made five years seem a mere eye-blink in
comparison. I couldn't stop clutching at this happiness, so new and
strange, unprecedented and wondrous, and I was frightened beyond all
reason that if I made any mistake or omission everything would be
taken away, even sooner than otherwise would be the case. I was
trying so hard to do things for you, to be useful, to be right. But
you were patient, steady and apparently changeless as the sun, and in
your stillness I found a still space of my own. I learned to breathe,
to stretch out in your regard, to trust to your presence day by day.
Even when I began to believe, though, an ache of sadness remained,
for how little I had to give you, for how much time we wouldn't have
together.
And I don't know when it was exactly, but I know I was looking at
your lamp ("a light of your own," you called it, but I still think of
it as yours as much as mine, the light you gave me by giving me the
freedom to be my own light). I was watching the tiny flame and
thinking of entropy, how every burning is really a dying, even the
suns of this universe pouring themselves out into their effulgence,
and I was trying to grasp the scale of /their/ lives, how large a
share they had in the span of time. I remember the little shock then,
as though I'd been careless about touching electricity, when I
realized that there's only one eternity and it's the same for all:
for stars no less than boys there's an endless expanse before their
birth and after their passing. A familiar grief folded around me, as
tight as a heedless child's fist.
But I looked into the flame's calm core, the shadow around the wick,
that seeming void from which the fire springs, and I understood
suddenly that eternity isn't the great unknown rising up beyond our
lives, like a tsunami poised to roll through and blot out any trace
of what we've made. Eternity is happening now--this very moment is a
fragment of eternity, one that's just the right size to measure and
to hold. Forever is in you, and in me; it's in a room lit by soaring
arched windows, it's in the warmth of a cup cradled between two
hands. Forever is what we dwell in every day, a reality that we touch
whenever we are most alive.
It was never the physical walls that made me feel a prisoner, in the
institute or in your home. Though you've worried about it, I've never
suffered from my confinement--I've never had any real desire to go
out into the world. It was the walls my own mind built that I threw
myself against, fluttering, reckless and forlorn, and of all that lay
beyond them I had neither knowledge nor hope. But if I don't define
my life by arbitrary borders, if I don't count up these minutes but
simply love you as they pass, then this little room of time opens as
wide as heaven.
For if I share eternity with you, what more do I need?
On the far side of the bedroom, the console in low-power sleep mode
croons its lullaby, inaudible murmur and hush, tiny fluctuations of
current cycling like the ocean waves they're named for. At last I
roll toward you, and you, light sleeper, slide your arm around my
waist, drawing me nearer with a susurration of sheets, a sigh.
Curling to your chest, I tuck my head beneath your chin so I can
breathe you, feel the rhythm of your own breath in turn, the warmth
we gather between us by our closeness, and I shut my eyes. In the
night, I sense the clock's read-out change once more, another minute
passing.
It means nothing.
It means everything.
"The dream where I saw a blowing wind scatter the blossoms,
Even after awakening from it, disturbs my heart."
-Saigyou
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N * n-chan@firecat.net * http://www.firecat.net/fanfics
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