Hello,
This monologue is the sequel to another one of my fics, "Squaring the
Circle." This time, the story is told from Seishiro's point of view, and it
responds to the ideas of the first story.
It is definitely better to read "Squaring the Circle" before reading this
one, but I suppose it can be read without any prior knowledge of that story.
However, that will make it exponentially more difficult to understand.
To Ariss, who has begged me for the "other half of the circle" for a long
time, now. This one is for you.
Please enjoy!
Best wishes,
Amarythia
Squaring the Circle 2:
The Circle Squared
A Tokyo Babylon/X Fanfic and Monologue
by Amarythia Duuk'Tarquith
There's so much I can't tell you. Even now, after the battle at the end of
the world has been finished and won.
I see you standing there, Subaru-kun, so close to the cherry tree. There is
a gentle wind, and it ruffles your dark hair like raven's feathers. Your
eyes are downcast, almost pensive, so you don't see me. You grip your hands
together and wring them as if they pain you.
There are many people spending time in Ueno Park today. A pleasant spring
day, warm but not overly so, with a cool breeze to moderate the perceived
temperature. A place full of games, picnics, and afternoon walks. I doubt
anyone notices the tall, too-thin young man dressed carelessly in black and
white. He walks slowly below the boughs of the trees and comes to stop in
front of one tree in particular.
Just another tourist admiring the blossoms.
It knows you stand before it, of course, and the cherry tree's
acknowledgement of your presence only heightens my own awareness of you.
Strange. It regards you without animosity. Perhaps it knows that you will
no longer try to steal the souls of the dead from its keeping. Or, maybe it
is just reassured that I am near enough to defend it if necessary. Either
way.
Do you know that the sakura no longer demands your death? Yes, that's right.
Once, the tree called for your heart. Now, when I am near to you, it's
silent.
Except, sometimes...I think it's telling me something else.
I wish I could laugh.
Even so, the marks on your hands still call out to me, especially when we are
close. You are the only job I never finished now that my obligations to the
Earth have been discharged.
I haven't seen you since the final battle. You've hid yourself well. I
knew that you hadn't left Tokyo after the death of Kamui, but I could not
ascertain anymore than that. Only a faint tugging as those inverted
pentagrams, now muffled, scream for their creator. Even now, the sakura is
more certain of your presence than am I. In a way, though, it's easier to
talk to an image of you than you yourself. Is that on purpose?
Impressive. Your powers have grown substantially in the past nine years.
Or, perhaps not.
Perhaps you've simply found the strength of heart to use what has always been
there.
You've always been a powerful youth, and you carry the full inheritance of
your clan, the Sumeragi. Power enough for two people descended from the
purest and most direct lineage of that august family, yourself and
Hokuto-chan, encapsulated into a single, frail body. Not surprising, then,
that you've lacked the will to use it in the past.
Remember that day nine years ago when I drew you into my world? You would
not fight me then, even though you might have defeated me had you sincerely
tried. I watched you cry and cry, not even flinching when I touched you.
So unnatural of you, Subaru-kun, not to defend your life.
After all, Life strives only to preserve itself. Why does the heart beat
even when it is removed from the body? When human beings fall unconscious
after too much alcohol or an overdose of illegal drugs, what is the body
doing but trying to save the foolhardy person? Why does the grass always
grow back after it is mowed? If they weren't life-preserving, would eating,
drinking, and sexual intercourse be pleasurable? What are genes, other than
tiny bundles of information that encode the processes of Life?
And then, Death takes Life away. Death hungers for Life, but even if Death
were to consume all Life, it would not gain a Life of its own. The sakura I
serve is this way, feeding upon the blood and spirits of humanity for an
eternity, unable to achieve the one thing that it truly desires—the chance to
reenter the circle of Life and Death.
I feel my lips curl slightly. Perhaps, I too longed for Life. Why else
would I have spent a year with you?
It was a pleasant enough life, living with you and your sister.
Companionship and amusement, at the very least. I kind of liked playing the
role of the benevolent older man and charming veterinarian. It was the
road-less-traveled, and, for the first time, I saw my extended periods of my
life through the eyes of others and what I might have been if I had not
claimed the mantle of Sakurazukamori from my mother.
Interesting, definitely.
However, it was a farce, and it had to end, as all fun things must,
eventually. I hadn't fulfilled my oath with you, either. Loose ends needed
tying, and there was the final battle to consider. I'm sure you understand.
I'm closer still to you now. I hear you whisper, and your voice comes to me
on a pink swirl of air.
We tried to square the circle.
Did we now? How very cute, Subaru-kun.
Oh, no...I did not err; I devoured Life as is surely within my nature. You
are the one at fault.
Only polluted Life seeks out Death for comfort. Tsk, tsk, Subaru-kun... No
wonder the Earth itself screamed for change. The forces of preservation were
not even doing their job.
Hokuto-chan understood that when she came to me and offered her own life in
exchange for yours. She knew that, unless she died, there would be three
deaths...yours, mine, and hers. My Death would devour your life, and then,
as I renounced my connection with Death, the cherry tree would call my spirit
back to it forever. Finally, Hokuto-chan herself would die, if only from the
despair of it all.
Really, I should stop. Things that could have happened but did not are
unimportant and immaterial. Why bother worry about futures that will never
come? Why deceive ourselves?
And, yet, you stand here now. Who can cleanse your spirit if not your own
dearest sister?
Hmm.
I wonder; was it really Death you sought after all? And was it really a Life
I found when I landed myself a day job and two young friends? Could it be
that the embodiment of Life wanted a normal life of his own and that the
mystic assassin wanted the oblivion of membership in the banal workforce of
Tokyo, Japan Incorporated? What are the implications of Death seeking death
and Life seeking life? What should happen if the two meet?
Certainly, they both deny themselves. They are the same, but unhealthily so.
Two like charges will repel each other in perpetuity. When both are weak,
an outside force may press them together, and, as long as that force remains,
they will stay, albeit unwillingly, together. Despite this, when both are
strong, nothing can hold them together for long, and when they force each
other away, the strength behind it might be so great as to cause surrounding
damage. However, when two opposite charges meet, they are drawn together.
And not only that. The electricity we use to light our houses and cook our
food relies upon such a principle, and the principle of opposite charges is
used to create a single continuous stream of power. Which is "positive" and
which is "negative"? Does it matter if both charges are present and the
battery functions? Have they not become a single unit, meaningless unless
all parts are together?
I cannot think.
Yes. It's probably better that you are no longer dependent upon your own
desire, anyway. I, as well. Together, we are more than the sum of our parts.
In that case, there is no need to separate ourselves as completely as you've
enforced. Life needs Death, just as Death needs Life. We are mere parts of
that endless circle, and a circle has no corners, no sides. There is only a
single stroke that goes on forever. Who can divide the parts when they all
merge into one perfect shape? We are different, yes, but those differences
ultimately do not matter. Thus, in rejecting their importance, there ceases
to be any distinction between us.
So, then, what is the point in denying this simple logic? The will is
unnecessary. Neither can be without the other.
Not forever.
You cannot avoid or wish for Death without a call from him. Likewise, I
cannot live without acknowledging Life itself. When you hand touches the
bark of the sakura, I know...not too close and not too far away, either.
Together and in perfect balance.
I'm so close to you now. When I inhale, it is the sweet fragrance of your
hair that fills my nostrils. When I reach out to embrace you from behind,
you do not pull away. I draw you deeper into me, and your body, at first
stiff and afraid, soon yields to me. You press your cheek against my
shoulder and grasp my hands to press them to your face. You gasp out my name
brokenly as I murmur yours into your ear.
There is no one to see us. Just two lovers admiring the blossoms.
A single drop of moisture falls upon the back of my hand before you pull away
from me and flee.
Ah, Subaru-kun. The circle hasn't reclaimed us yet, and I'm not quite ready
to say my last farewells.
Not in the least.
*END*
Author's Comments: Dedicated to Ariss, who has wanted to see the "other
half" for a long time, now. I hope it pleases you.
All characters are copyrighted by CLAMP and their affiliates.
Please see the prequel: "Squaring the Circle"
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"There are boundaries we pass in spite of the war,
But our own, we can't seem to cross."
-Sarah Brightman, "He Doesn't See Me"
_Cherry Blossom Monologues_
http://members.aol.com/~amarythia/CBM.htm/
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