Mercurial > moonlitnights
comparison old/stories/dearsakura-25.txt @ 2:fc00894c1d4a moonlitnights
[svn r3] moved all the bad stuff to 'old'
author | rlm |
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date | Fri, 19 Feb 2010 20:53:12 -0500 |
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1 "Ouch!" Sakura shook her finger in the air and then sucked on the | |
2 fingertip, tasting the salty tang of her own blood. How did Tomoyo do | |
3 all that sewing without ending up like a pincushion? Smiling | |
4 ruefully, she realized that her sewing skills were lacking because | |
5 she always depended on Tomoyo, her father, and even her brother for | |
6 most thread and needlework. She could mend a tear and put on a patch, | |
7 but the tailoring that her best friend did was simply beyond her. She | |
8 remembered early on as a Cardcaptor peeking into a company van and | |
9 seeing the spectacular wardrobe Tomoyo had prepared for her. At the | |
10 time, she concluded the massive resources of the Daidouji household, | |
11 or even Daidouji Toys, Ltd., had been marshaled and deployed to clad | |
12 her in a parade of kawaii regalia. Only later did she learn that | |
13 Tomoyo did every stitch herself. Through the years that followed, the | |
14 two girls spent hours together, talking and drinking tea while Tomoyo | |
15 fitted and altered the amazing creations. Being with the little | |
16 seamstress made precious an experience that would otherwise have been | |
17 tedious as Sakura stretched and posed while Tomoyo snipped and sewed. | |
18 For the Card Mistress it was a chance to talk about her loves and | |
19 fears and joys while the dark-haired girl listened, solemn and cheery | |
20 in turn. Tomoyo was as careful with her heart as with the delicate | |
21 fabrics that made up the costumes, and her carefully considered | |
22 advice and reassurance helped Sakura through many a difficult time. | |
23 As she sewed a strip of satin to trim the hem of the little yellow | |
24 dress Tomoyo had left in Hong Kong, Sakura began to grasp the | |
25 countless hours of labor that the quiet, pale girl had spent just to | |
26 make her look special. | |
27 | |
28 Again she remembered that truck full of outfits Tomoyo unveiled | |
29 before they went to capture the Shadow card. There was a spectacular | |
30 array of over 50 costumes that ranged from the cute to the dramatic, | |
31 with the occasional practical piece thrown in for good measure. After | |
32 the terrifying exertions of capturing Shadow, Sakura had asked Tomoyo | |
33 how she got so many costumes ready so quickly. Tomoyo smiled | |
34 enigmatically and replied, | |
35 | |
36 "Oh, I've been working on them for over a year". | |
37 | |
38 Sakura gave the girl a baffled look and blurted out, "But you only | |
39 found out about me and Clow Cards a few days ago." | |
40 | |
41 Tomoyo tilted her head, lavender hair blending into the dark, | |
42 moonless night as she answered in a musical voice, "I've always known | |
43 Sakura-chan was a magical girl.” | |
44 | |
45 Sakura merely sweatdropped, dismissing this as one of her adoring | |
46 friend's many eccentricities. But now, years later, she was quietly | |
47 astonished. Long before the creations of Clow Reed had found her, | |
48 Tomoyo saw her as magical. Not for her power, or the cards she | |
49 captured, but for herself. Sakura smiled as she worked the needle | |
50 carefully through the gossamer material. From the day they met in | |
51 that third grade classroom, Tomoyo's love had been ever-present, | |
52 wrapped around Sakura’s heart like a comforting cocoon. She was | |
53 always special to the sapphire-eyed girl, long before she was the | |
54 Mistress of the Cards. Sakura paused, puzzled, the silver needle | |
55 poised in midair as she softly whispered, | |
56 | |
57 "It's as if I was always her special person". She felt her face | |
58 flush scarlet: that wonderful flustery feeling of being loved by | |
59 Tomoyo. How she missed that in Hong Kong. The longing grew worse | |
60 every day without her. The ache in her breast was finally assuaged by | |
61 that enchanting visit, but her heart shattered watching the aircraft | |
62 spirit Tomoyo away. Her special person. Sakura stared at the fabric | |
63 in her lap, the last, unfinished design of her best friend. With a | |
64 grin, she shook her head and thought a little sadly, oh, to be her | |
65 special person for just one day! Sakura had been slow to realize the | |
66 depths of Tomoyo's love. Only distance, which clove the two friends | |
67 as nothing before, revealed how cruel separation could be. Without | |
68 the constant presence of that fulsome love, Sakura felt hopelessly | |
69 adrift. She tumbled into dark despair, with only her unrealized love | |
70 to light the way. Glowing like a little candle in the blackest night, | |
71 that love for Tomoyo finally blazed forth when she at last understood | |
72 her heart. And though she was not Tomoyo's special someone, that did | |
73 not affect her own love in the least. Even if Tomoyo did end up | |
74 happily with her special person, Sakura's love would shine forth like | |
75 a beacon through the pain of not having her. I'll love her no matter | |
76 what, she thought to herself. But I'll die if she leaves me. | |
77 | |
78 Remembering the chilling farewell in Tomoyo’s last letter, Sakura | |
79 teetered on the brink of tears. If she leaves me. Taking a deep | |
80 breath, Sakura buried the thought, for she could not face such a | |
81 wretched possibility. "Buttons", she said suddenly, "I need buttons | |
82 for this dress". Rising, she carefully placed the dress on the desk, | |
83 slipping off the thimble and absent-mindedly massaging her pin- | |
84 pricked hands. Stretching, she felt the fatigue fall from her body as | |
85 muscles tensed and relaxed. The buttons would be upstairs, in the | |
86 attic, with the sewing supplies she had packed away before moving to | |
87 Hong Kong. She walked from the room, down the hall past her sleeping | |
88 brother, and climbed the ladder to the trap door. Emerging into the | |
89 darkness, she carefully felt her way along the wall and then | |
90 hesitated as a fear of the dark bubbled up from long ago. Slowly | |
91 letting out a breath she grimaced, ashamed at such a childish worry. | |
92 Inching her way forward, her nimble fingers finally brushed against | |
93 the light switch and clicked it on. The naked bulb starkly | |
94 illuminated the maze of tightly stacked boxes and trunks. Sakura | |
95 realized her father or brother had rearranged things since she left, | |
96 for the sewing things were nowhere to be seen. | |
97 | |
98 With a shrug she began to move boxes, coughing in the billowing | |
99 dust. Finally, on the verge of giving up, she uncovered a small | |
100 shoebox with the word, "notions" written on the side. The writing | |
101 puzzled her, for she did not recognize the almost childish script. | |
102 With a tug, she pulled it out from the little nook it was wedged | |
103 into. Opening the lid, she found a box full of buttons- perfect! She | |
104 smiled and carried the little treasure over to the light, examining | |
105 the varied circles and squares of plastic and metal. Spilling some | |
106 out onto the lid, she nodded happily. These would do just fine. Then, | |
107 Sakura's attention was caught by something at the bottom. She poured | |
108 more buttons out in a little pile, and gingerly pulled out a faded | |
109 photograph. | |
110 | |
111 The colors had washed out over the years, but the figures were | |
112 instantly recognizable. Tomoyo’s mother was dressed in a schoolgirl's | |
113 sailor suit. Draped over the young Sonomi was Sakura's mother, | |
114 similarly clad in a dark blue dress, a red bow around her collar. | |
115 With one arm she embraced her cousin, while the other was held up, | |
116 triumphantly showing two bandaged fingers in a little "V" for | |
117 victory. Both girls were smiling merrily, surrounded by the supplies | |
118 and equipment of what looked like a Home Economics classroom. Sakura | |
119 turned the picture over, and written in that same childish | |
120 handwriting that adorned the box were four lines: | |
121 | |
122 "Hiroji-sensei's class | |
123 7th grade | |
124 I passed! | |
125 Thank you, Sonomi-chan" | |
126 | |
127 The back was decorated with odd little doodles of hearts and | |
128 flowers. Sakura looked again at the picture and smiled, thanking her | |
129 mother for the little present that had waited so patiently. Tomoyo's | |
130 costume could have no better buttons than these. Emptying them back | |
131 into the box, the auburn-haired woman carefully placed the photograph | |
132 on top and replaced the lid, tucking the package under her arm. | |
133 Turning off the light, she moved to the entranceway of the attic and | |
134 climbed down to the hall. Returning to her room, she placed the | |
135 shoebox on the desk, took up the fabric and began to sew again. She | |
136 was startled when a familiar voice called out from the shadows behind | |
137 her, | |
138 | |
139 "What are you doing?" | |
140 | |
141 She turned quickly, and saw Syaoran standing up against the wall, | |
142 arms crossed and scowling. She rose and took one step towards him, | |
143 but something in his manner froze her. In a meek tone she answered, | |
144 | |
145 "I'm sorry I couldn't tell you before I left, but I had to hurry. I | |
146 called Ieran-sama when my flight arrived. Didn't she tell you"? | |
147 | |
148 Syaoran looked away with barely suppressed anger, as if he were | |
149 addressing a hopelessly slow child. Then he nodded to the pile of | |
150 fabric on the floor and impatiently repeated himself, "What-are-you- | |
151 doing"? | |
152 | |
153 "Oh", Sakura glanced at the dress she had dropped to the floor. She | |
154 scurried to pick it up, and held it in front of her husband. Her | |
155 smile faltered as he recoiled in horror at the unfinished costume he | |
156 had seen in his Mother’s magic. He yelled at her, | |
157 | |
158 “Put that damn thing away. Where did you get it? What is it?” | |
159 | |
160 Neatly folding the costume, she placed it back on the desk, then | |
161 faced Syaoran, her hands held to her breast as she replied, | |
162 | |
163 "I, I wanted to make something for Tomoyo-chan. Well, actually, she | |
164 made it, the design, I mean, I could never do something like this. | |
165 And she started it, but because of the wedding dress being the last | |
166 thing she would make for me she didn't finish, and I thought I could, | |
167 well, finish it for her, and I found some of mother's buttons in the | |
168 attic and..." Her voice trailed off into silence. Caught by her | |
169 husband's withering stare, she felt small and foolish. | |
170 | |
171 As he calmed down, Syaoran struggled to keep his sense of gravity. | |
172 As if impressed by his own cleverness, he sneered, “I knew that crazy | |
173 girl had something to do with all this. All right, get your things | |
174 together and let’s go.” | |
175 | |
176 But instead of compliance, Sakura stood with her hands clasped and | |
177 head bowed. Syaoran stepped towards her, irritated at this unusual | |
178 hesitation. In a soft but firm voice she broke the silence, “I’m not | |
179 going. I have to see Tomoyo-chan”. | |
180 | |
181 He stopped short, flabbergasted. All he could manage was a hoarse, | |
182 “What”? | |
183 | |
184 Sakura looked up at him, jade eyes flashing a fiery determination he | |
185 had rarely seen since the days of card capturing. But her voice was | |
186 calm as she continued, “Tomoyo-chan said she is going to leave. I | |
187 have to see her.” | |
188 | |
189 The future Head of the House of Li frowned, struggling to suppress | |
190 his anger. He snapped at the woman within arm’s reach, “You can call | |
191 her on the phone, or write one of your silly letters. We’re going | |
192 home- now”. | |
193 | |
194 Sakura looked at the floor and slowly shook her head. He felt a wild | |
195 urge to strike her, to slap the defiance out of her. Barely in | |
196 control of his raging emotions he spluttered, “I can’t believe I’m | |
197 hearing this. What kind of garbage did she fill your head up with”? | |
198 He paused, and drew a deep breath. This was not like his complacent | |
199 wife at all. Very well. The chivalrous husband would try a new tack | |
200 and forgive his erring wife. He pronounced in a patronizing and | |
201 reassuring tone, “Now let me help you with your bags and we can talk | |
202 about it on the plane.” | |
203 | |
204 But Sakura looked up at him, earnestly gazing at his face. Finally, | |
205 she said simply, “No”. | |
206 | |
207 Fists clenched, shaking with fury, he turned his back on her, | |
208 shaking with rage. How dare she defy him! After running off to Japan, | |
209 wasting money they did not have, and now refusing to obey. Unable to | |
210 contain his anger, he slammed his fist into the door, nearly rattling | |
211 it off the hinges. “Damn it!” he yelled, “Who do you think you are?” | |
212 | |
213 Whirling to face her, falling into a fighting stance, his mind raced | |
214 out of control. But the young woman simply stood before him, calm and | |
215 unafraid. Suddenly there came a knock on the door, and a male voice | |
216 called out, “Sakura-chan, what’s going on?” The door opened, and a | |
217 pajama-clad Touya peered into the room. Seeing Syaoran, he frowned, | |
218 and then looked carefully at his younger sister. In as neutral a | |
219 voice as he could manage he asked, | |
220 | |
221 “Do you need any help”? | |
222 | |
223 Sakura relaxed, smiled, shook her head and answered sweetly, “No, | |
224 everything is fine. I’m sorry we woke you up. We’ll be more quiet”. | |
225 | |
226 Touya shot another warning look at his least favorite brother-in-law | |
227 before sizing up the seemingly unconcerned young woman. “OK”, he | |
228 spoke in his usual laconic voice, as if such domestic squabbles | |
229 around the house at 3 A.M were the norm, “But you call me if you need | |
230 me. Goodnight.” | |
231 | |
232 When the door closed, the two stood silent, facing each other for | |
233 the longest time. Finally, with an exasperated sigh Syaoran fixed his | |
234 wayward wife with a hard stare. His voice was commanding, even | |
235 patronizing, as if he would no longer brook her exasperating | |
236 insolence, | |
237 | |
238 “Sakura, you have to make choices in life. You have to have | |
239 priorities. You’re a big girl now, married to the future Head of the | |
240 House of Li. I can’t have you running off every time some loopy girl | |
241 from the past calls you on the phone. You just can’t do this sort of | |
242 thing. It makes me look ridiculous. Tomoeda was nice, but it’s all | |
243 over now. You have a new life, with me You’re going to have to choose | |
244 between your friend and your true love. Now, go get your things and | |
245 we’ll forget all about this”. | |
246 | |
247 At first Sakura looked at him with surprise, and then stared at the | |
248 floor. The Chinese sorcerer smiled as he detected the glint of tears | |
249 welling in her eyes. She looked deep in thought, and after a moment | |
250 looked up at him with wet and sparkling eyes. Her voice was brimming | |
251 with emotion as she spoke, | |
252 | |
253 “I’m sorry, Syaoran-chan. I’m so sorry. This is all my fault. I | |
254 guess I knew the choice would come someday soon, just not this soon. | |
255 If only I’d known. I’m so sorry.” | |
256 | |
257 The tears coursed down her cheeks as she stood miserably before him. | |
258 Well, he thought, at least she’s speaking sense now. He almost felt | |
259 pity for her, though his anger was still too fresh and raw for that. | |
260 He did care for her, though at times like this love was an ordeal. | |
261 Still, he would find it in his heart to forgive her. But he would | |
262 make sure she never saw or talked or wrote to that crazy Daidouji | |
263 woman ever again. Syaoran’s quiet voice brimmed with magniminity for | |
264 a defeated foe, “Come on Sakura-chan. Let’s go home.” | |
265 | |
266 But the woman did not move, looking at him sadly as she spoke, “I’m | |
267 not going.” | |
268 | |
269 Too baffled to be angry, he gawked at her, mouth open as if his | |
270 words were frozen in mid-sentence. Sakura shook her head and spoke | |
271 almost pleadingly, | |
272 | |
273 “It’s my fault. I should have known my own feelings. If I had, all | |
274 this would never have happened. I’ve hurt so many people: you, your | |
275 mother, Meiling-chan, Tomoyo-chan. All because I was too stupid to | |
276 know what was in my heart.” | |
277 | |
278 Syaoran could only stare in disbelief as the woman hugged herself | |
279 tightly for reassurance before continuing, | |
280 | |
281 “Syaoran-chan, you were always one of my very best friends. I | |
282 couldn’t have done what I did with the cards without you. It meant so | |
283 much to me that we were together. And I do love you, as a friend | |
284 forever in my heart. But now I know my true love is Tomoyo-chan. I’ve | |
285 loved her all along, but just didn’t understand. Not until last | |
286 night. Last night. That’s only a day ago.” The woman looked stunned | |
287 as she said this, as if an entire life had been lived in only 24 | |
288 hours. After a brief smile, she spoke again, | |
289 | |
290 “Last night I finally realized who I love. My one, true love. My | |
291 special person. She was so close for so long that I never knew until | |
292 she was gone. I could have saved everyone so much pain if I knew.” | |
293 | |
294 Pain. Syaoran felt it in a wave, as helpless as when Meiling | |
295 connected with his solar plexus earlier that day. Staring at his wife | |
296 in dumb incomprehension, he managed to croak out, | |
297 | |
298 “But Sakura, I love you.” | |
299 | |
300 She looked at him, and he had the uncomfortable sensation that with | |
301 her magic she could see straight to his heart. She smiled and asked | |
302 gently, “Do you really love me Syaoran, like that? It really hasn’t | |
303 felt that way. Not like I thought it would. Not like what I feel from | |
304 her.” | |
305 | |
306 Indignant and righteous, he made ready to protest. But the auburn- | |
307 haired woman held up her hand and commanded his silence. A sudden | |
308 wave of something ineffable washed over them both, a shuddering, | |
309 prickly sensation that enveloped him like a living fog. He stared at | |
310 his wife, for somehow she was changed. It was as if all the magic | |
311 were drained out of her like water in broken crockery. She stood | |
312 before him, not the Mistress of the Cards, but as little Kinomoto | |
313 Sakura, sweet, genki, and horribly ordinary. Her voice was the same | |
314 he had heard on a playground long ago, when the Cards were in the | |
315 air, and a Japanese schoolgirl had just begun her long journey, | |
316 | |
317 “You loved Yukito once, like I did. But when my powers grew greater | |
318 than his, then your affection for me did, too. Do you really love me, | |
319 Syaoran-chan? If I was just plain old Sakura, would you still love me | |
320 then?” | |
321 | |
322 He recoiled at the sight. Stripped her magical glamour she seemed | |
323 small and weak. Where was the enchanting woman he had married? Where | |
324 was the successor to the famed Clow Reed? Was this some illusion, a | |
325 doppelganger that had abducted his precious wife and substituted some | |
326 bland and pathetic double? He began to speak, to accuse and threaten | |
327 this alien presence, when he heard Sakura’s voice, distant yet | |
328 familiar. She stared at him, his mind hers to know. Sadly shaking her | |
329 head, she quietly spoke, | |
330 | |
331 “ I’m not an illusion. It’s just me. It’s just me without my magic. | |
332 It’s who I really am. But I don’t think it’s who you really love. Do | |
333 you? Do you really love me, Syaoran-chan?” | |
334 | |
335 He felt sick as he looked at her. She was nothing, a nobody. In a | |
336 bitter tone he declared, “You sound just like Mother.” | |
337 | |
338 Sakura let out a little sigh and the two stood silent. Finally, she | |
339 spoke in a voice etched with the pain of a new found knowledge, | |
340 “Ieran-sama is very wise. For all my power, she is much wiser than | |
341 me. She was right, Syaoran-chan. We don’t belong together. Now I know | |
342 that she didn’t really hate me. She just wanted what was best for | |
343 everyone. Even me.” | |
344 | |
345 With that he looked up and saw her as he knew her, energy flooding | |
346 back, filling her pure power. In fear and awe he beheld her, once | |
347 again the dread Mistress of the Cards. He reeled backwards, confused | |
348 and frightened, his mother’s mocking voice blaring inside his head. | |
349 He held his hands to his temples as her piecing words echoed, “You | |
350 don’t love her. You love her power.” He felt helpless, a rag doll in | |
351 the hands of a blind and savage Fate. Struggling to regain his calm, | |
352 he leaned against the wall and whimpered. Sakura stood with her hands | |
353 at her side, unable to comfort her shattered husband. Finally he | |
354 composed himself enough to turn and face her. He was no man’s fool. | |
355 He was not to be trifled with. Trembling, he took an envelope from | |
356 his pocket, opened it, and placed a ticket on the nearby dresser. His | |
357 face was blank as he spoke, | |
358 | |
359 “I’m leaving. If you are not on this plane when it departs, then | |
360 don’t bother coming back again. Ever.” He felt a surge of power, as | |
361 if he, and not this stupid and dangerous woman, was in control. She | |
362 bowed low, her sad, verdant eyes locked with his as she answered | |
363 softly, | |
364 | |
365 “Hai, Syaoran. Sayonara.” | |
366 | |
367 He strode for the door, and then stopped. Turning quickly, he gaped | |
368 at her, his face twisted with loathing. He spat out the bitter words, | |
369 “I don’t love you. I hate you.” Then he walked through the door and | |
370 shut it firmly. | |
371 | |
372 For a long time, Sakura stared at the closed door. Syaoran’s parting | |
373 words stung her, even though she knew they were not true. Consumed | |
374 with anger, his words spilled, tainted and colored by out-of-control | |
375 emotions. But part of what he said was true: he did not love her. Or, | |
376 rather, he loved her as a friend, and no more. Oddly, this was great | |
377 consolation for the shattered woman, who saw her marriage of months | |
378 implode in minutes. Had Syaoran truly loved her, she would have been | |
379 chained to a marriage that was a terrible mistake. For thousands of | |
380 years, women have borne loveless matches, and Sakura would have been | |
381 one among millions of sad and broken hearts. Perhaps she could have | |
382 found some happiness in children, or teaching, or even magic, all | |
383 while her heart longed for her true love. Or she might have died | |
384 slowly, longing for a love she could never have. Even leaving him | |
385 later was a stark possibility, and could only have made things worse | |
386 with the passage of time. | |
387 | |
388 | |
389 With a sigh, Sakura sat at her desk and again took up sewing. The | |
390 rhythm of needle and thread calmed her heart, for there was stillness | |
391 in the motion of every stitch. Suddenly she flinched as the needle | |
392 pricked her finger. Gazing at her hand, she put her work on the table | |
393 and slipped off the golden wedding ring. Placing it by the ticket on | |
394 the desk, she thought, I'll send it to him later. She stared at her | |
395 now bare finger. The ring came off so easily, as if their marriage | |
396 had never been. But that was not quite true either, for much had | |
397 happened in married life she did not regret, and would never forget. | |
398 Picking up the yellow dress and sewing again, she recalled the | |
399 exquisite anticipation of her wedding day, and the mystery of the | |
400 night that followed. To be in Syaoran’s company, if not quite love, | |
401 was pleasant, the companionship of two good friends. "It was my fault | |
402 for wanting it to be more, for not knowing my own feelings", she | |
403 whispered sadly. Curiously, Sakura felt no regret for the end of her | |
404 marriage. But she did feel sorry for the pain she brought Sayoran, | |
405 and knew that regret would never leave her. | |
406 | |
407 Paradoxically, the greatest gift of her marriage was the misery of | |
408 being without Tomoyo. Growing up with the girl, she came to take her | |
409 amazing presence for granted. Being so close to that dazzling spirit | |
410 had blinded Sakura to her own true feelings. Only in Hong Kong did | |
411 she learn the hard lesson of what Tomoyo meant to her. When marriage | |
412 pulled them apart, she finally saw that life without the azure-eyed | |
413 girl was simply impossible. Accepting Syaoran's proposal, she prayed | |
414 marriage would bring her love. It did, but in a way completely | |
415 unforseen. Marriage was a strange path leading her far away, yet | |
416 bringing her back to where she started. But oh, how diffreent things | |
417 were now! When she left, Tomoyo was her friend. But tonight, as her | |
418 marriage ended, Tomoyo was her one, true love. And tommorow she would | |
419 see her again. | |
420 | |
421 Sakura felt awash in giddy anticipation. Freedom swept her soul like | |
422 a gentle zephyr, a whipsering wind of possibilities and hope. Soon | |
423 she would see Tomoyo, lay her love at the dark-haired girl's feet, | |
424 and beg her to stay. She gigled, wondering about the woman's reaction | |
425 to so stunning a revelation. Perhaps she could never take the place | |
426 of that special someone in her friend's gentle heart. But just to be | |
427 with her, to feel Tomoyo's love again was enough. Even more, Sakura | |
428 wanted to make her happy, to heal the pain in those azure eyes. "I'll | |
429 give her everything I have", she thought, stitching the last button | |
430 into place, "though she already has my heart." | |
431 | |
432 With that, she held up the costume, admiring the work. Well, | |
433 admiring Tomoyo's work, anyway, perfect as always. Her own | |
434 contribution was flawed: an uneven line here, a too-big button hole | |
435 there. But it was her work, and now the costume was theirs. Lovingly | |
436 she folded the silken fabric, and suddenly felt very, very tired. | |
437 Resting her head on the desk she whispered dreamily, "Tommorow. | |
438 Tommorow I'll see her. I'll see my angel." | |
439 | |
440 And so, sleep came at last. | |
441 | |
442 |