--------------------------------------------- Conjure Me 1/1 by Meredith Bronwen Mallory mallorys-girl@cinci.rr.com --------------------------------------------- DECEMBER 5th 2009 They walked hand in hand; though hers was cold as ice to him and she found his to be uncomfortably sweaty. Heat rising from a swamp, ready to smother. Her hands were strong, well formed and colored like light brushing against a peach. Capable. Somehow, Sakura felt all that go away, when he wrapped his calloused fingers around her hand; she thought perhaps he was drawing the magic out of her, a little bit at a time. That was silly, of course; they were just holding hands. Boyfriend and girlfriend, walking out under the cold winter stars as their breaths released in little clouds. Snow whirled about, caught in her auburn hair and pressed against her red coat with the golden buttons. She laughed and, taking the opportunity to disengage her hand, ran ahead, twirling when she reached a fork in the path. Head tilted back, she opened her mouth like a child waiting for a spoonful of powered sugar. The moon was a pale sliver, the delicate crescent of a fingertip. Tomoyo blazed before her eyes, an inadvertent thought, but somehow more real. The moon was a bright distant point of light in her best friendıs fey eyes. She thought about last night, Tomoyoıs soft, cool hand in Sakuraıs own, smiling as they turned and turned, making the world move on their own axis. Then, rather than falling apart, they had pulled together and sunken to their knees in the soft snow. Hands coming together, Tomoyoıs face pillowed on Sakuraıs shoulder. And then, for some reason, Sakura buried her face in her best friendıs hair, lost in an endless river of ebony and violet. ³Hoe,² a soft, incredulous breath, coming in time with the color rising to her cheeks. She realized belatedly that she had been standing still for quite some time, and now Syaoran stood ahead of her waiting. Flashing him an apologetic smile, she hurried to catch up. A cloud draped itself over the moon, making the shapes in the park less familiar. When Sakura was close enough, Syaoran took her hand again. ³Letıs do something different tonight,² Syaoran suggested, turning to Sakura with eyes that looked empty in the moonlight. ³Nani? What do you mean?² absently, she looked at her watch. The hand and shadow fell to nine oıclock. ³I donıt know,² he said in a tone that meant he did, ³Do you want to come to my apartment? You could call your dad, tell him youıll be a little late.² There was something, something in her chest, dark and slithering. She didnıt know what it was. ³Alright,² her voice was quiet. They continued in a different direction, still holding hands. She was sixteen years old. ~ Tomoyo walked carefully in the snow, feeling transported. Trees rose against the star-filled sky, looking like twisted, polished question marks. Not even the lights of the city could change the strange, alien feeling that dipped like a scythe against her ribs. The people sharing the sidewalk seemed somehow more removed, colorless almost, though she told herself that was only her loneliness seeping through. It bled like that, spreading outward like a flower, anti-survival, pulling thorns inward. Shivering, Tomoyo pulled her coat and moon-spangled scarf closer. Her dress, long and red velvet, brushed against the backs of her legs, in time with the soft click of her shoes. That was the rhythm, sudden and very overwheliming: click - clack, click- clack, click - clack. Up beat, down beat. She paused, oblivious to the pedestrians that pushed around her. Slim, china-white fingers pressed against her temples, massaging there for a moment before she continued onward. She thought about Sakura; Sakuraıs hair sliding through the brush, Sakuraıs slim shoulders encased in green that matched her eyes. Sakura, smiling, saying she had a date with Syaoran tonight, but tomorrow she would take Tomoyo down town and theyıd have fun shopping. Yesterday with Sakura, walking through a corridor of ebony trees, snow dripping off their branches like strings of glass beads. They had not seemed like question marks then, but rather totems raised for Sakura, supporting a palace that had never been built. The wind had moved around the two of them like a river current, rising against Tomoyoıs cheek bones-- a longed-for touch-- pushing the clouds across the moon and then away again. Sakura had turned towards Tomoyo, smiling, her emerald eyes like the depths of the ocean in the darkness. Glory had pushed up through Tomoyo then, sung in her veins, and as always there was no where for it to go. It cycled through her, refined each time it passed through her heart, the same as the blood in her veins. Her throat tightened miserably, all the words that tangled there seemed stupid and inexpressive. Sheıd searched Sakuraıs face for understanding, some hint of... there were no words for what she was looking for. Her hands had gripped Sakuraıs and then, by some unspoken agreement, they began to turn, round and round, never getting anywhere, but pulling in towards each other. When they fell to the ground, Tomoyo had laid her head on her friendıs shoulder, gripping the other girlıs coat with hands that felt like they would break. Sheıd said, ³Sakura...² ³Silly, jealous girl,² she murmured to herself. She forced herself to see Sakura, happy and smiling on her wedding day, veil thrown over her face like whatever it was that kept her from seeing the truth. Syaoran would stand just-so beside her, not smiling because he never smiled, but still looking like he was happy, looking like he would take care of Sakura. And herself, somewhere in the background; the one who organized everything, the one who wiped tears off Sakura's face when she said she was scared and didn't know if she could go through with the wedding. Always, Tomoyo held this vision out to herself, but whether it was a promise or a threat even she didn't know. Presently, the wind pushed the snow against her in a gush, like the tiny frozen wings of butterflies. Tomoyo breathed deeply, and the pinch of the scythe became just a little bit stronger. ~ Her coat was tossed haphazardly in the easy chair, her shoes --black patenleather with dainty straps-- sat patiently like twin dogs beside Syaoran's thick sneakers. Sakura saw none of these things, but later she would remember the placement of everything in the room as one remembers the stillness of the world before a tornado. She waited for the windows to blow inward, glass shards like knives ready to cut to the quick. Instead, the color simply drained from the room; no more blue sofa, brown coffee-table, green carpet, black-yellow-brown-blue-red pictures of relatives from China. Only Syaoran's hands retained their color, looking somehow like menacing claws as they hang suspended before her chest. "Ano..." he said, and his hands shook with the words. She realized she hadn't been looking at his face. How strange this felt, like someone else's life. He wanted her to say something, but there didn't seem to be anything inside her anymore-- not even a voice. Wasn't she supposed to feel like she was flying, like she was going to come apart if he didn't touch her and kiss her? Wasn't that in all the movies and the books and the pictures of pretty shoujo heroines in the final panels of manga? This was it, the rose petals would fall across the screen, the hero and heroine would tumble gracefully onto the bed, like dancers. Perhaps, she thought, it takes a little while to build up. So she lifted her lips like she did when she smiled and nodded her head. He moved his fingers to the neckline of her dress-- the pink one with the red ribbons that Tomoyo had made-- and carefully slipped a button loose while he made a little breathy noise that sounded like "Sakura" or the brush of dried leaves on cold stone. Tomoyo had laid her head on Sakura's shoulder, lips pressed into Sakura's scarf as she breathed words there. There was something rhythmic to it, an ancient chant, and Tomoyo's body had moved with it, arms snaking around Sakura's waist. "Daijobu?" Sakura could not remember asking the question, but a small flower of warm air bloomed in the cold, and Tomoyo's body stiffened, so she must have said something like that. "I want to tell you something," Tomoyo had said, "I want to..." Her breath had shuddered, even as Sakura stroked her hair, "but I can't." "Naze?" a little broken word. Tomoyo slipped gracefully from Sakura's arms, her violet-ebony hair falling about her like folded wings. She smiled and it looked painful, and her body was like something that could not be held. Fragility. There was steel underneath, though; it was the color of Tomoyo's eyes. She offered her hand, white as the moon on snow, and helped Sakura stand. One of them said, "let's go get something to eat"; as if nothing had happened. Now they were moving towards the bedroom, Syaoran lifting Sakura into his arms. Her legs were polished and long-- too long, apparently-- and she had a hard time shifting her weight against Syaoran's chest. He was down to his boxers, she clad only in the creamy silk shift with its lace of growing, virginal flowers. ~ Tomoyo tested out a smile, looking at the reflection of her face in the display window. Behind her ethereal image, there cookies, pies and delicate pastries, festive and brightly lit. The smile faltered, then died altogether as Tomoyo attempted to brush away the warm image that rose like a seductress from a bed of silk. Her mind held out the possibility, impossibility, of a table spanned with candles and good food, set before herself and Sakura as they reclined in one another's arms. Her mask crumbled momentarily, her mouth pouted and her eyes closed to hold back tears, but it was gone so quickly that Tomoyo was able to tell herself it hadn't happened. Her heart fluttered weakly within its cage, its protests lost as she pushed the thoughts from her mind. Things that happened without Sakura were in parentheses, and there for didn't count. Instead, Tomoyo turned on her heel and headed into the shop, entering with the cold breeze as her fanfare. She didn't even noticed as her blood ebbed more slowly in her veins. ~ It took only three of Syaoran's heavy steps down the hallway and they were there, poised in the threshold of his room. She tried to smile up at him, but he wasn't even looking at her, and when he tried to move he ended up ramming her hip into the doorframe. Now he was looking at her, lukewarm brown eyes narrowing in concern. Sakura bit her lip so hard she tasted her own bitter wine, but muttered a 'don't worry' to his apology. He put her down on the bed, moving her legs so that they were uncrossed, situating her like a china doll. His hands, big, calloused and sweaty, reached for the hem of her slip, lifting it ever so slightly before she cried out. ~ "Can I get you something, miss?" "Just a cup of tea, with honey, and..." Tomoyo raised her hand instinctively to cover her mouth, then coughed delicately into the white fabric on her palm. She put her hand down quickly, "and a few of those chocolate chip cookies." The tea was in a little china cup lined with gold, the cookies laid on a paper doily; three of them. Syaoran and Sakura and Tomoyo. She carried them carefully to a little round table, crossing her legs as she sat, trying to quell another cough. Raising the cup to her lips, she thought of a dress design like poetry, seams fitting together in careful black, green and gold, silently complimenting the depths of Sakura's shadowed, jungle eyes. Another idea swept away the last, this time a great embroidered gold dragon curling about Sakura's neck line. The images were vivid, making her fingers itch, so that Tomoyo did not see the blood she coughed up into her glove. ~ Syaoran's eyes were narrowed until it looked like he couldn't see anything at all, but Sakura kept her face determined and her hands hard as she loosened his grip on the slip. "Something wrong?" His words were blunt, cutting. "Iie..," Sakura shook her fire-brown locks, "but we can do..." there were words for it, of course, but she somehow couldn't bring herself to use any of them, "without taking this off." "Alright," he said, and she smiled because she somehow wanted to protect herself from him. In the next moment, she turned her lips down, remembering the long monologues of praise in the romance novels-- how the heroine wanted her man to have everything of her, that she wanted to share with him, her whole self. She couldn't hold onto it, any of it, so detached was she. Syaoran took off his boxers, dropping them beside the bed; she slipped off her underwear then tossed them, trying to be decadent, to celebrate her loss, and the white scrap of cloth flew through the air like a kamikaze bird. 'Someone', Tomoyo thought suddenly, wildly, 'is ripping me open and sewing me back up'. An ill tide rose in her being, so swift and powerful that all at once she couldn't remember what it was like to not have pain. There was pain, everywhere, the bright, functional needles of a sewing machine. His breathing was the sound of metal on metal, sword on sword. Sakura moved backwards, feeling the pillows pressing into her back, hands offering her up for sacrifice. Syaoran's nails were rough on her skin, cutting without leaving a mark. Now the pillows would give way no more and her head was pressed against the merciless wall. She had a sudden, insane image of her mother like this: cornered and crying inside. "This isn't it," Sakura imaged her saying, her long hair moving to cover her body in vain, "this isn't, isn't it." She was being pressed in the gears, drawn out like a piece of thread and pinned down again and again. Tomoyo's pretty, gloved hands rose, like the fluttering of doves wings, to touch her burning cheeks. She felt the damp palm of her right fingers, looked down to see them colored in red. As if Sakura had kissed them with lipstick, her traitorous mind supplied. A sound devoid of happiness burst from Tomoyo's lungs; she laughed because she knew she was dying, knew that Sakura would never touch her and now and forever there was really no chance. Strange, how she'd never really admitted it. Sakura said the words, over and over; "this isn't it, this isn't it". They were heavy on her tongue and quick to fly, she was crying without shedding any tears. Syaoran said, "I'm not going to hurt you." As if he hadn't already. Tomoyo's laugh rose, filled the small cafe until she felt the gazes of strangers slithering over her body. Biting down on her lip and swallowing her voice, she tasted her own blood and a touch of the ocean. Salt water; her tears. Fingers, stained and trembling felt against her face as though she was a blind woman. The world blurred and blurred with her pain (God, she didn't even know what was happening), and at last the beating of her lungs forced her to open her mouth. Tomoyo coughed, and blood fell from her lips like grotesque rain. Now the glass did break; windows pushing inward like bubbles released from a child's summer hand. The shards flew wildly, vengeful faeries, and Sakura reared back, watching Syaoran lift his arms in defense. She slipped past him like she was made of nothing. "Tomoyo," she whispered, so pained that she could not remember ever having happiness. The new red kisses of blood on her skin and the crimson river falling between her legs did not concern her, instead she raised her hands to hold the emptiness tearing through her body like a tiger; she looked in Syaoran's dull brown eyes and saw fear there. 'You!' she wanted to scream, to pour accusation on him, but Sakura was too full of her own sick guilt to blame anyone else. Instead, she turned and fled, silken camisole moving against her body like a dozen concerned hands. Down the stairs, her bare fee pounding mercilessly until they were too numb to feel the cold as she ran into the winter night. It was as if someone had taken her hands, was leading her, and indeed she ran with them outstretched, ignorant of her final destination. The star-key dropped against her chest in time with her heart beat, ringing against her ribcage with finality. Then her hand was on a cold metal bar-- she was pushing open a glass door and hurrying into a place filled with bright lights and the sound of Tomoyo dying. Pushing through the crowd with hands that chilled all she moved aside, Sakura saw her best friend laid out of the blue and gold and white pattern tile, a sprawled and broken china doll. She was on her knees without thinking about it, Tomoyo's pale form closed within her arms. The still girl stirred, turning her wide snow-touched star-light eyes on the Card mistress, and Sakura almost cried; for Tomoyo's face was filled with joy at seeing her. "Sa..." Tomoyo's labored breathing swallowed the rest of the sound. Her eyes slipped closed momentarily as sheer red flowed to her lips. They were in a sea of red, Sakura realized, their blood mingling and staining everything around them. "Tomoyo-chan," Sakura managed, holding the other girl's delicate fingers. "Don't die," she said the dark-haired girl's name over and over again, as if the chant could call her back into her body. "I'm so sorry. I was trying to be something I'm not...," Sakura breathed in her tears until her throat hurt with them, "Forgive me, I'll make it up to you." "I told you to," Tomoyo's smile was pale as coral, but it was real; the pieces of Sakura's heart dove in their own suicide to realize just how much of a facade her friend's happiness had been. In death's gentle embrace, her eyes were filled with unconditional love, "I said to Sakura-chan, 'Li-kun loves you'. It's my fault." The words buried themselves in Sakura-- it was the truth when neither of them knew it. Tomoyo's soft, cool hand was against Sakura's cheek, and then tracing softly over her lips. "And I," she managed to raise her head, lips so close to her friend that he Card mistress more felt the confession than heard it; "And I love Sakura." ============== DECEMBER 6th 2009 It was snowing again, falling through the window and collecting in Sakura's lap. She knelt in her pajamas on the window seat, watching the moon move through the clouds and feeling the cold slowly work is way into her veins. The light behind her was dim, coloring her room a brown antique photo; and the shadows seemed to move when they thought she wasn't looking. "Sakura," Cerberus' two fine saber teeth lodged in her shirt, trying to pull her away from the window; she only loosened his grip and absently stroked his golden coat, barely registering sensation. A soft knock at the door; no response, then a shaft of light annihilating the darkness. "Imouto-chan..." this from another voice, and Sakura raised her head just barely to meet her brother's gaze. Touya held the phone in his hand, towards her and away from him. "It's Sonomi-san. She wants to talk to you." Sakura allowed the phone to be placed in her still hands, her green eyes like emerald windows that had been pulled tightly closed against the world. "Ano..." Touya said, "Syaoran was here, earlier. I told him to come back later." For a moment, Sakura moved her lips without sound, before her voice sounded like the high string on a cello-- sweet, but strangely low. "When he comes again," she seemed ageless, eternity shivering by the window, "tell him he knows why I will not see him, and shall never see him again. Tell him I give him no blame, that it is not his fault. Tell him, also, to go home and marry Meiling, that he might keep his honor and make her happy." She turned her hand away, gazing at he bright round buttons of the telephone, before raising it to her ear. Touya stood for a moment, stunned by the chill in his little sister's eyes and voice, before pressing his wide hand against her shoulder and retreating. For a moment, there was only breathing on the line. "Konbanwa, Sonomi-san," Sakura said, pressing her free hand to her mouth, swallowing sob after sob. "Oh, Sakura-chan," the voice of Tomoyo's mother was soothing and discomforting at once. "I wanted to ask you, could you... would you please speak at Tomoyo's funeral tomorrow?" Tears came like static on the line, "She did love you so... I think it would make her happy." "Of course, Sonomi-san," Sakura drew in a breath that caught in her throat, "I would be honored. Tomoyo is..," her eyes closed to combat the truth, "was so... very precious to me." "Hai," they were both crying now, words distorted and raw, "There are things here I think she would want you to have." "I can't take anything from you, Sonomi-san," Sakura said honestly, her hands fisting in Cerberus' fur. The seal beast rested his head in her lap, making small feline noises of comfort. "Tomoyo was your daughter-- you should have her things." "But she would have wanted you to have something," Sonomi insisted, "She cared about you so much." Sakura felt sure she'd been cut, sliced from breast bone o navel with hurt. she wondered. She wanted to tell Sonomi the truth, to say, 'it is my hand that caused your daughter's death-- it was I who loved her, and with my unconscious magic bound her to me. It was also I who betrayed her with another, and killed her.' Sakura strained her eyes in the dim light, focusing on the row of dolls near her bed. She gazed at an ebony-haired, silken-bronze clad doll with a suddenly watery memory of a smile; the doll has been a gift from Tomoyo. Drawing a breath, she whispered into the phone; "I will take only what you want me to have." "Thank you," said the older woman, "Sakura-chan, if you need to talk, I am here. When my Nadeshiko died, I should have liked to have had someone to confide in... I am here if you need me." Sakura bit her lip, "You are in so much pain, and yet yu're trying to ease mine. I hope I can return the favor." "Just go on to be whatever it is Sakura is destined to be," the tiny, disembodied voice entreated, "Tomoyo-chan wanted to see you shine." It was a while before Sakura could speak past the blinding agony, "I will. I promise. Good night, Sonomi-san." "Good night, and thank you," the other voice returned, before the air was still and dead. Sakura held the phone in both hands, looking down into Cerberus' deep brown eyes. "I did kill her, didn't I, Kero-chan?" Sakura's voice was soulless. "You didn't mean to," the seal beast insisted. "No," a sigh, "Everyone said to me, 'Syaoran loves you', and so I thought I must love him too. I wanted so badly not to disappoint anyone. But..." Sakura flung the phone away, watching it slide across the hard-wood floor and spiral there. "I loved Tomoyo. I *love* Tomoyo," she breathed in the present tense and all the hope it held. "I never let myself realize, I was so scared of disappointing everyone." "You were given a power you don't understand," Cerberus pointed out, "How were you to know that your love for her bound you together?" "I'm the one that cut the cord! Why did I go with Syaoran?" Sakura reached blindly for the doll Tomoyo had given her, "The whole time I was there, I knew everything was wrong. If I had left, or said no, Tomoyo-chan would still be alive." Slowly, Sakura climbed to her feet, approaching her desk on shaky legs. Her hands traced the rich cover of the book of Clow, and Sakura Cards resting within. "Now I see why Clow wanted to be rid of this power." Her hand reached for the small over-head lamp as she opened the book, eyes roaming over the beautiful illustrations of power; all beautiful lines and careful coloring. The thought was so sudden that Sakura stood with the force of it, feeling the world fall away beneath her feet. "Clow cheated Death," she murmured. "Hai," said Cerberus without thinking. A low tiger chuckle emerged between his teeth, "Death came to see Clow, once or twice. Knocked on the door-- nice and polite," he smiled at the memory, "but Clow was the most powerful sorcerer ever. He only died when he was tired of his power." The seal beast gazed at Sakura, suddenly aware of the present, "The most powerful sorcerer, save you of course." "I had never thought about living forever," Sakura's words drifted, "or close to forever, anyway." She turned the pages of the book, faster and faster until it was the sound of birds rustling. With awe, she touched over the beautiful faces of the Light and the Dark, "I can save her." Cerberus stared at his Mistress for a moment, before venturing, "You'll have wait, a very long time." "I can learn to wait," Sakura murmured. Her hand was on the key, which swiftly became her staff; she was bounding towards the open window. Her toes touched the windowsill and she leapt out into the night with the Fly card giving her staff wings. Raising her eyes to the moon, Sakura cried her happiness. Tomoyo had waited so long for her, without ever expecting fulfillment-- could not Sakura do the same? The mortician had curled Tomoyo's hair loosely, draping the deep lavender near the girl's neck to cover the scars from the autopsy. Reverently, Sakura touched the corpse's pale cheek, feeling the void left by Tomoyo's soul. Without the shimmer of the girl inside, the body was husk, a poor imitation. With a hiss, she bit her lip, remembering what the doctors had officially reported. A rare disease-- the collection of blood in the lungs. Tomoyo had drowned to death in her own blood; but the doctors didn't know the real reason why. A sob locked in Sakura's throat; Tomoyo didn't look like she was sleeping, or even alive at all, only empty, empty. Moving the lid of the casket away, Sakura reached for her key. "Oh key that holds the power of the Stars," she chanted, hanging ont the words with her sanity, "reveal to me thy true form. By the pledge between us, Sakura doth command! RELEASE!" The breeze settled, and Sakura felt oddly alone-- always, Tomoyo had been by her side, taping and observing her magic. Swallowing her sickness, she lifted the first of the cards. "CREATE-- make for me a box worthy of holding Tomoyo's heart!" A deep breath, and she set the new silver chest aside. "FREEZE-- keep Tomoyo's body young forever!" Finally, she raised her right hand high, "SWORD!" With her eyes firmly fixed on the empty visage of her beautiful best friend, Sakura lifted the sword. "I love you, Tomoyo." And she drove the blade in next to Tomoyo's heart. ================= DECEMBER 5th, 2109 Tomoeda, Japan Once, the area had been the site of an amusement park in bright colored plastics, with children laughing loud into the wind. Before that-- though no one in Tomoeda had a memory extending that far-- an old, towering mansion had rested on the land. Now both were long gone, bull-dozed in turn for progress, and for some twenty years, wild vines and trees had retaken the place. The earth easily forgets humanity. In recent years, it had become the site of a new building project that had the citizens of Tomoeda talking; even the children that climbed the old and faded King Penguin had whispered amongst each other. Gradually, a house seemed to grow from the ground; yellow, with a porch that circled it and turrets as fine for any castle. It became the home of a rich young heiress by the name of Kinomoto Sakura, and if there had ever been another young girl with bright green eyes, a cheerful spirit and whispering brown hair... well, there was no one around to remember her. She looked not a day over sixteen, this young woman, though she insisted she was twenty-two, and as far as anyone knew, she lived in the house by herself. Sometimes, people said they heard voices drifting down from the house, but that was just talk. At first, the towns people resented Kinomoto-san in a way, but she gave generously to the drill team and cheer-leading club at the elementary school, and she seemed to love the town as much as they did. Gradually, she became a regular fixture, and people felt free to wave or greet her on the street. However, only children really seemed at ease with her; perhaps because, despite her powerful baring, she was still so much a child herself. It was there on the calendar in thick, neat Kanji, some of it spilling over into the next neatly lined square. "December 5th," Cerberus read what his mistress had written, standing on his hunches to see, "Tomoyo died. Please come back, Tomoyo." The name was in friendly Hirigana, a little school-girl style heart draw cradled in the 'to'. "Todays the day," he said, padding across the kitchen tile towards his companion, "Think she'll realize it when she wakes up?" Perched on a stool near the counter, Yue tossed a lock of moon-white hair and snorted, "Of course she knows, my furry friend. As if she hasn't been watching the calendar like a hawk." "Hai, hai," there was a flash, and Cerberus flitted into his smaller form, alighting on Yue's shoulder. "I'm just a little worried, though. She hasn't even mentioned it." Yue rolled his eyes, "This is a very big thing-- very personal. She's probably nervous. I think maybe we should..." "Ohayo, Yue-san," the Card Mistress' voice rang clear in the cool winter kitchen. She smiled just a little bit, standing in the doorway with the rainbow lights of the sun catcher playing over her body. With a practiced air, she plucked Cerberus from the air, "Ohayo, Kero-chan." Ignoring the looks her friends gave her, Sakura padded towards the cupboard, pulling on her silken pajama top. Cutlery and china began to chime together-- the sounds of breakfast being made. "Ohayo, Sakura-sama," Yue offered, stretching his wings and barely managing not to over turn the stool. "Kero-chan and I were just talking. We thought perhaps we would let you have the house to yourself today and check out the old haunts-- the temple, the park..." "Hey," Kero back stroked in the air, "As long as we buy some of that really good Pocky from the corner store, I'm happy." Yue batted at him absently, watching as his Mistress turned away from the oven. There were tears back-lighted emerald by her eyes, just barely swimming over her lashes. "Arigato, Yue-san," her smile was gentle and thankful, "That's very kind of you." "Don't mention it," Kero accepted the small pancakes Sakura offered out, "It was my idea." Expertly, he dodged Yue's hand, holding out a slice of pancake to the young man. "I detest food," Yue returned, before turning back to Sakura, "Anyway, I think we'll go right now." Sakura nodded softly and watched her two companions drift out into the hallway. A moment later, she heard the door close, and her body slumped against the counter. Gathering her strength, she moved to sit at the table, picking at her food with a hopeless, disinterested chop-sticks. Around her, the world was a comfortable new day yellow-- outside the window, the sun touched the morning sky opal, and the bare trees rose beautiful. Finally, Sakura pushed herself away from the table and moved towards the back door on unsteady legs. Outside, the winter are was crisp and real on Sakura's skin-- she breathed and watched small white air-flowers bloom. Trotting down the cobble stone path, she moved into the green house, her hands touching lightly on the roses, nadeshikos and lilies that grew there. In truth, she felt a little silly, a little too much like Eriol-- living in her mansion house and playing the recluse. She loved the people of her home town and tried to mingle with them when she could, but they always seemed a little wary. As she plucked a yellow rose to match the morning, Sakura supposed she didn't blame them. She had left scarcely a year after Tomoyo's death, wanting her memories of home to be pleasant, and not back-dropped with odd glances and whispers of suspicion as she failed to age or change. She returned only briefly for her father's funeral, and then for Sonomi-san's and, in the mean time, she traveled. She had been to London, to New York, Paris and even back to Hong Kong for the wedding of Syaoran and Meiling's grand-daughter, Shaiming. Staying in one place for very long was never an option, but she grew to enjoy the different landscapes of her life, all the while longing for the day when the mystery aboard each boat or train or jet she took would not be "who is that pretty young woman?", but "did you see that beautiful pale woman and her friend? I wonder who they are". In a way, she feared her hundred years of living would make her feel separate from Tomoyo-- put distance between them, that they would no longer be able to be friends. Still, the words of her gentle best friend ("There is no one I want to be with more thn Sakura-chan") would come to her at night, and she would dream of adventures for the both of them. Tomoyo had always seemed ageless-- perhaps she and Sakura had finally caught up. Smiling lightly, Sakura carried her armful of flowers back to the house, waving at the young school girls as they passed. "Ohayo, Kinomoto-san!" one voice raised itself above the rest, and the owner lingered by the hedge. "Good morning to you, too, Asahi-san," Sakura greeted, patting the girl's ebony braids with affection, "How are you?" "I'm fine," Asahi chirped, her lop-sided red winter coat making her look like a robin, "You look very happy, Kinomoto-san. How are you?" "I'm well," Sakura felt a slight blush, "and I am happy. A friend of mine will be returning today. It has been a long time since I've seen her." "Really?" Asahi enthused, "Can I meet her?" "I hope so..." Sakura looked away, "though perhaps she may not want to stay. I have wronged her in the past, and hope to make up to her." "Why didn't you see her earlier?" the younger girl inquired. "Ah," Sakura laughed, mostly at herself, "We've had to wait-- I do miss her so much." "Well," Asahi pressed a finger to her lip, considering, "Even if my mother says you are strange, Kinomoto-san, I don't see how any one could not like you. I am sure your friend will stay!" "Thank you, Asahi-san," Sakura murmured, selecting a yellow rose and several small white flowers from her load. "That makes me feel a lot better." Handing the small bouquet over the hedge, Sakura suggested, "Why don't you take these to put in your class room. It'll help brighten up winter." "Thank *you*, Kinomoto-san!" Asahi clasped the blooms to her heart, "It's the last day before break! I can't wait! Winter break is magic!" With that, the young girl turned and ran pell-mell down the street, pausing at the corner to look back and wave. "Don't forget to button your coat!" Sakura called after her, "It's cold out!" "Look who's in their nightgown!" Asahi shouted in return, giggling. Their laughter rang the bare tree branches. "Winter break is magic," Sakura murmured, sobering. Turning, she went back into the house, knowing she could not make herself wait any longer. In Tibet, Sakura had met a young woman who painted other people's sadness, so that they might look at it objectively. The Card Mistress kept her painting in a large, unused bedroom, mounted over a table on which stood a fine silver box. The canvas was coated with both longing and beauty; it was a portrait almost identical to Tomoyo, a young woman with long black-lavander hair standing by a window, cloak wrapped around her and gazing out to the winter sea. There were other things Sakura kept in the bedroom as well. A video camera, tapes, sewing supplies, and stacks upon stacks of journals and sketchbooks-- those things given to her by Sonomi after Tomoyo's funeral. Without realizing she was crying, Sakura placed the flowers in a vase on the nightstand, smoothing the coverlet on the bed. There were fine velvet draps over the windows, rows of beautiful dolls on the wall, waiting for an owner. On the dresser, there were baubles of every kind, jewlery and trinkets selected for someone special. All these things, Sakura had collected, always thinking of Tomoyo-- and yet, now all she wanted was to run through the street with her friend, to play ring around the rosy in the park and fall down upon each other. "Oh, key that hides the power of the stars," Sakura began, lifting the lid of the silver box and gazing in on the thing preserved so perfectly in ice. A heart, the most perfect one-- for it was Tomoyo's. "I call upon Dark and Light, I call upon Life! Give form to the woman who's heart has waited so long! Give life to someone who was robbed of it so young! I call upon the heavens-- once more give body to the spirit of Daidouji Tomoyo!" There was a moment when the room seemed terribly vacant-- as void as the corpse Sakura had watched buried so long ago. Then, an impossible breeze, brushing her short hair against her chin, and... Tomoyo. The pale girl stood still and bare, marveling at her hands, her long arms; her hair moved about her like a thing alive. Someone gasped, someone else cried out-- Tomoyo's gray gaze met Sakura's own. "Sakura-chan," Tomoyo's voice was clear and distinct, a perfect crystal note, "You brought me back. Your magic," there was a smile, and that joy Sakura thought she'd never see again-- Tomoyo was happy to see her! "I didn't think... after I told you..." Sakura swallowed painfully, "Tomoyo-- it was my fault... it wasn't just your love, it was mine!" Tears now, ringing with laughter, and still they stood apart. Neither dared to touch the other, each watching, each sure her hand would find a ghost. "My love tried to keep you with me. I was selfish--" "I wanted Sakura-chan to be happy," Tomoyo confessed, " I thought Syaoran would do that for you." "I know," Sakura reached out her shaking fingers, finally tangling them in Tomoyo's soft hair, "It's okay. Even I didn't know what I really wanted." Stepping forward, Sakura stood in the circle of Tomoyo's open arms, bringing her mouth close the other girl's ear to deliver the words. A whisper, "I love you, Tomoyo. Maybe we won't always be happy---" "I have only wanted Sakura to be happy," Tomoyo cradled the other girl's cheek, "but I would be happy, sad or anything in between with my Sakura." Embracing the other woman, Sakura began to cry in earnest, pressing her lips to Tomoyo's stainless palms. OWARI