Heyla!
I guess it's about time to post Part One of this Clover 'fic that I've
been working on for forever. (The Fates have been conspiring to take away every
available bit of free time lately...though unfortunately the Muses seem to be
active as ever....) :>
This 'fic happens two and a half years after the end of Clover 2, and
therefore contains lots of spoilers...so for anyone hasn't read the manga, this
contains some stuff you probably don't want to know! It's a sequel to a previous
Clover 'fic, but you don't need to have read that 'fic to understand what’s going
on in this one. (Basically, Suu is still alive, and she came back once already
to see Gingetsu and Lan). There's no shounen-ai content, but it does contain
some mild yaoi squeamishness towards the end. Comments and suggestions are
welcomed.
Jonna
**********
Clover
Iris
Part 1 of 4
by Jonna Coombs
posted May 14, 2000
**********
DISCLAIMER: The characters and settings of Clover do not belong to me, but
instead are property of the wonderful and extremely talented manga group CLAMP
(and their associates). This is a work of fanfiction, and is posted for non-
commercial entertainment purposes only.
**********
The symbol was a simple one, a design in green of a stem with multiple
leaves.
General Kou knelt in the silence and the darkness of the room where the
Parliament normally met. The room was empty today, the Parliament was not in
session. Alone in the quiet, Kou was free to call up this single image, and to
allow the sadness she felt upon seeing it to touch her time-worn features. The
outline of the emblem nearly filled the borders of the circular screen in front
of her. At this magnification, the barcode marking inscribed within the symbol
was easy to see...the serial number of the person who wore it.
"A seal of the Clover-leaf project," a voice spoke from behind her. She
had not heard Sage Shuu enter the room, but it didn't surprise her to realize
that the Chairman of the Parliament had followed her here. "...The mark of the
Four-leaf clover."
Kou didn't reply, studying the clover leaf a few more long moments before
causing the picture to go dark. Shuu came forward and knelt in his usual place,
looking down into his own screen’s mirrored surface. Light played along the deep-
etched planes of his face as the monitor came to life. "We won't be able to find
her again," he said.
Kou smiled faintly. "No one can find a Four-leaf that doesn't wish to be
found. Not even another Four-leaf clover could do that."
The Chairman did not look up from his screen. To Kou's mild surprise, he
let the observation pass without comment. "She came back once, to help one of the
Three-leafs," he said. "She will come back again."
General Kou didn't say the
words out loud. She didn’t need to. That simple fact was what the other members
of the Parliament most feared.
"...And the Three-leaf," he continued. The light on his face flickered as
the picture on the screen before him changed. "We will have to come to a decision
about what to do with him soon."
"The Three-leaf has given us no trouble," Kou spoke quietly. "It has been
almost five years since he left the research institute to go outside. In all that
time, he has done nothing to go against the will of the Parliament."
Sage Shuu was unmoved by her mild protest. "The control we put on him is
no longer effective. For that reason alone, something will need to be done."
General Kou bowed her head. It was dangerous, very dangerous, for a
Clover to exist without control. She knew that better than anyone. She had been
with the Clover-leaf project since its inception. The project was wider-reaching
and had more complex roots than most people realized. Few knew about the
existence of Clovers. Fewer still knew *why* they existed at all. "You will
call a meeting of the Parliament?" she asked.
"It is time." He rose and turned to go, then stopped. "The Clover
project has not been nearly as successful as its supporters had initially hoped.
Of all the Clovers, one is missing, and two are dead." He cast a significant gaze
in her direction, his eyes focused intently on her face. "Perhaps it is finally
time to terminate it altogether."
"That will require a vote by the Parliament," Kou said coolly. She knew
it wasn't a serious threat. He was only testing her. Each member of Parliament
was all too well aware that taking care to the three remaining Clovers within
their reach would not be enough to bring the project to an end.
"Indeed." His heavy gaze rested on her a moment longer. "The Parliament
acts for the good of the country. You should remember that the happiness of a
handful of people is nothing compared to that."
She watched him silently as he left.
"Happiness," Kou whispered to the empty room, long after the echo of his
footsteps had faded away. "Finding it is easy. But how long can a person make
it last?"
**********
Far away from the council room and the discussions and intrigues of the
Parliament, a young woman with white-blond hair stood on a balcony, eyes closed
as she savored the warm summer breeze. Brightly colored birds with mechanical
wings perched on the rail of the balcony on either side of her. They were her
constant companions wherever she went.
For the moment, however, she ignored their presence here, shutting out
even the pleasant feel of the wind, as she drew in her power and concentrated,
sending her thoughts out over the distance...across the elusive electronic
network that was called the Minor Waves. If she wanted to, she could speak
through any telephone connection or radio in the world. But today her goal was
a little trickier than that...because the person she wanted to speak to had to
be able to answer her in the same way.
--|Lan.|--
As a Three-leaf, Lan had only limited access to the Minor Waves. He
couldn’t find her, but he could talk to her once she found him. She searched
for him now, out across the distance that meant nothing to her power. It
helped that she already knew exactly where to look.
--|Lan.|--
He was startled, she could feel that when he first heard her voice...saw
his eyes widen in the multi-colored light cast onto his face by the computer
screen. He looked up, casting his thought out in answer. His contact was weak,
tenuous in this place he was trying to access without the aid of any electronic
device. She 'caught' his return query, her thought closing over it like the
handclasp of an old friend.
--|Suu.|--
--|Lan,|-- she said, her voice serious and somber. --|You have to leave
that place. It's becoming very dangerous for you stay.|--
--|No,|-- he replied after a long moment of hesitation. Then, as if
offering an explanation, he added, --|I can't.|--
--|You have to,|-- Suu insisted. --|The Parliament knows. They're
deciding what to do about it now.|--
The statement did not surprise him. She felt his resignation, heard it in
his voice. --|They were lenient to let it go this long.|-- It had been a little
over two years since Suu had first visited him in the hospital to cure him of
the virus that had nearly taken his life. Two years. Since that time, two
years was all that Lan had aged. Two years and not forty.
--|Gingetsu will not leave,|-- he said. --|Kazuhiko still looks for
Oruha's killer. Gingetsu suspects those inquiries may bring repercussions from
the Parliament, and won’t abandon him.|-- His voice took on a note of unbreakable
resolve. --|I will not leave without Gingetsu.|--
--|They may kill you if you stay,|-- she said.
--|They may kill me if I leave. They would not hesitate to kill other
people too.|-- There was a flicker in his concentration. --|Gingetsu is coming
home.|-- The Lt. Colonel didn't know about these conversations on the Minor
Waves, and there was always a chance that he, as a Two-leaf, might be able to
sense them if he was in very close proximity. --|I have to go.|--
--|Be careful!|-- she called after him as he slipped out of contact. But
he was already gone. Suu opened her eyes to see the bird perched by her hand re-
garding her with curiosity. It's outline blurred as she blinked to clear tearing
eyes. "I tried to warn you," she whispered. "I just don’t want anyone to be
hurt."
**********
Lan woke up abruptly in the darkness of his room, startled from his sleep
by some dream that he couldn’t remember now. The red letters of the digital clock
by his bedside indicated a time of 03:36. He lay very still for long moments,
straining to hear any noise above the rapid beating of his own heart. It was
silent. Slowly, he pushed back the covers, swinging his legs over the edge of
the bed and flinching slightly as his bare feet hit the cold floor. He didn't
turn on the light, but instead crossed quietly to the door, pajama bottoms
whispering slightly as he walked.
He was gone tonight, off on duty. Lan had the apartment
to himself. For reassurance, he traced a hand down the wall, reaching past it
with is mind to the wires beyond. Effortlessly, he interfaced with the security
system. The system had been designed by a Two-leaf clover and modified by a
Three-leaf. Nothing should be able to get through those protections without
setting them off.
Except perhaps for a group of five wizards....
he told himself. He had never given the
Parliament any reason to doubt that he would remain here within the confines of
this building. Lan knew very well about the explosive device that Gingetsu had
volunteered to bear for his sake, though the Lt. Colonel had never spoken of it.
Surely the wizards of the Parliament knew that he would never do anything that
would cause Gingetsu to be killed.
...But, if they had somehow found out about his conversations with Suu....
All connections...alarms and security monitors seemed to be in place. Lan
relaxed marginally. he chided. Soundlessly he opened the door
and stepped out into the main room.
Somebody turned on the room lights.
It took a moment for Lan's eyes to adjust to the sudden brightness. When
they did, Lan saw four people, armed and armored, standing inside the main room.
All were turned towards him and aiming guns. Not energy rifles, but old-fashioned
projectile weapons. Very effective. A Clover had no control over ordinary
bullets. Lan studied them with a sinking heart. It seemed that someone had
decided to take away his small bit of freedom after all.
"Come with us," the man who happened to be nearest him said. He gestured
with his gun towards the door.
Lan looked at him, the expression on his face becoming one of intense
unhappiness. "Please," he said, his voice low and earnest, "Don't make me hurt
you."
The man hesitated for a moment. Perhaps he appreciated the irony of the
words...that a skinny young man with no weapons and clad only in pajama bottoms
should be standing in the doorway, making such a statement. Then again, if the
Parliament had sent them, they should be well aware of a Clover's powers.
"You have no choice," the man said. "You're coming with us."
"I won't go back. Even if you keep me apart from A, I won't go back to
that place."
The man took a determined step forward. "You'll go where we tell you to."
"No." They were standing much too close to the walls. All four of them
were. Two of them heard the noise behind them in time to turn, to see the wires
carrying live current shoot out to whip around and entangle them. Their metal
armor was no protection from a high voltage electrical surge. All four of the
men dropped to the ground, convulsing. Within a few moments, they had stopped
moving entirely.
Lan slowly walked over to the one who had spoken to him. Standing above
him, he looked down at the soldier in sorrow.
"I didn't want to hurt you. You shouldn't have tried to make me go."
There had to be more soldiers than this. Lan wouldn't be able to leave
the apartment by simply walking out the front door. He glanced back over his
shoulder into his room. The computer... Lan bit his lip. If the Wizards of
Parliament were assembled, they would be able to block a Transfer, if he
attempted one. To go directly against them would be impossible.
Still, what A had said to him at their last meeting had been true. Lan
would rather die than be locked back up in the research institute again. Most
wild birds didn't live long in captivity. If they took him back to that place and
forced him to live imprisoned and isolated, he knew that he would not survive.
The computer lines were his only hope. He had to try that first. If
fewer than five wizards had assembled, there was a chance he could slip out past
them without even alerting them to his presence. Swiftly, Lan went back into his
room, leaving the lights off and staying carefully away from the large windows.
The computer workstation hummed to life at his command. He closed his eyes
as it powered up, concentrating as the hardware he required for personal transfer
crystallized beneath his palms.
The wizards didn't interfere with the equipment download. Lan took it as
a positive sign. Perhaps he'd be able to win free after all.
He was wrong.
Without warning, a hand snaked over his left shoulder, grabbing his chin
firmly and yanking him wildly off balance against the bony support of a broad
shoulder. Lan's hands flew up to claw at the arm, even as he felt a cold sting
at the base of his neck, a sharp pain that was rapidly followed by spreading
numbness. Some kind of strong narcotic surged through his system with alarming
speed. His vision tilted and started to turn hazy. It was impossible to fight
the drug...or the arms that wrapped around him like bands of iron, refusing to let
go. Lan felt himself sagging helplessly back in his assailant’s unrelenting
grip.
"Ginge...tsu..." he whispered.
A warm breath of air fanned across his cheek. "He can't hear you," a
man's voice said pleasantly. The hands around him loosened, and the black and
white tile of the floor came up underneath him and struck with jarring force.
For a moment, Lan thought he saw bright, dancing lights...the beautiful lights
of the city at night. Then they danced away, and he saw nothing at all.
A shadow passed over the body crumpled untidily on the floor, as an older
man stepped over him to the desk. With his right hand, he reached into his long,
almost medical-style coat and removed a small, silver cube about the size of his
palm. He set it down on the varnished wood with a soft, metallic click. His left
hand reached up to touch the button of a microphone set into his ear.
"Are you recording?" he asked to the air.
"Yes," a woman's voice replied, her voice coming clearly over the
electronics in the earpiece.
"Good."
The man walked back over to where Lan lay, prodding one bare shoulder with
the toe of his boot until the tattoo that was marked there came fully into the
light. Three-leaf clover. The man chuckled unpleasantly and dropped down onto
one knee, removing his glove and brushing his fingertips across the smooth surface
of unnaturally dyed skin. ...Across the bar-code marking of the Clover-leaf
project.
The man placed a hand on the back of Lan's neck and rolled him over
against his knee. "Not quite the same," he murmured, trailing his fingers across
the side of Lan's face and along the line of his chin, tilting back his head.
"Not quite so cute." The pad of one thumb traced along the curve of his captive's
lower lip. The narrow eyes behind the small dark lenses perched on the man's
nose were predatorily intent. "...And yet a Prince, nonetheless."
He leaned forward over the unconscious young man, his eyes alight with
sudden, malicious purpose. His tongue lolled forward even as his mouth closed
over Lan's. It was so easy to turn his captive’s head to exactly the right angle,
to stroke open the closed line of the jaw. The soft, still lips offered him
no resistance. He slipped past them, going deep and slow to fully explore the
contours of the mouth beneath his own. Ah yes, that was very nice. Even nicer
than he had expected it to be. It was no wonder that the annoying Lieutenant
Colonel of the Secret Colors Battalion seemed so fixated on this particular
young man. After a good, long time, the soldier came up for a moment to catch
his breath. He traced a hand lingeringly along Lan's cheek and down the graceful
line of his throat before kissing him a second time...allowing his tongue to
dip down several times between their parted lips, in full view of the little
silver box on the table. The young man had such a sweet mouth. Really it seemed
a shame to stop there....
...But there would be plenty of time to play later. The man gave the
tranquil lips one last, lingering taste before drawing back and wiping his own
mouth with an expression of complete and utter satisfaction. His gaze went once
again to the silver holographic recorder, and he gave a lazy grin.
"Your precious Three-leaf is now mine," Berus said aloud.
"...Come and get him, if you can."
**********
Author’s Note:
Ick. IMHO, Berus is *so* slimy! (Though I'm half-tempted to write a
'fic about how he really does love Kazuhiko, he just had a bad childhood and is
terribly misunderstood. Err...maybe not.)
The description of Lan's premature aging (or lack thereof) in the line
"Two years and not forty" comes from by own arbitrary estimation of his aging
process. (I'm sure this topic has been discussed previously on some ML
somewhere!)
To me, it looks like Lan is about 12-13 in Clover 4, about 16 in Clover 3,
and about 25-ish in Clover 1 and 2 (using some of CLAMP's other characters with
known ages as models.) If there were a year's time between each of those events,
it seems realistic that he is aging by multiples of four for every year that
passes. If he starts out at 12, he ages 4 years the 1st year, which puts him
at 16. The next year he'd age 8 years, putting him at 24 (2 years after Clover
4). If that continued, the next year he'd be 36, then 52, then 72 (about the
average life expectancy of a human male, barring enormous advances in medical
technology which might be possible in the world of Clover). Of course, age
72 doesn't *quite* match Sage Shuu’s prediction "At *most* he has five years
to live" ...But calculating Lan's age with multiples of five doesn't really fit
with the images in the manga.
Ah, the hallmark of a devoted CLAMP fangirl...complete over-analysis of
the tiniest little plot details! :>
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