Mercurial > moonlitnights
view old/stories/dearsakura-19.txt @ 3:4a98b0ae6e0b moonlitnights
[svn r4] got moon images from NASA!
author | rlm |
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date | Sun, 14 Mar 2010 07:01:51 -0400 |
parents | fc00894c1d4a |
children |
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1 Dear Sakura2 by Amazoness Duo and G.P.3 amazonessduo@hotmail.com4 pearsong1954@yahoo.com6 I.7 Sakura felt the tickling caress of little wavelets as she plowed8 through the gentle waters of the bay. Glancing at a wetly glistening9 Tomoyo, she was met with azure eyes that regarded her with10 affectionate trust. With her odd costumes and curious remarks, the11 dark-haired girl kindled a half-blush, half-heartache that thrilled12 and confused the Mistress of the Cards. But there was no confusion13 now, only a sunny glow that lit Sakura's entire being as she held the14 soft, supple presence of her friend so delightfully close. Gazing15 into the deep water, she was amazed by the strange, colorful fish16 darting about. With mild surprise she scanned the horizon, and17 realized the shore was lost to view. But it didn't seem to matter;18 nothing mattered but being here with Tomoyo. She closed her eyes and19 pulled through the water with slow, leisurely strokes. I could swim20 like this forever, she thought languidly. Her friend’s lustrously21 dark hair was streaming in the water as they swam, and the girl’s22 pale skin sparkled in the dazzling sunlight. Sakura felt a sweet,23 overwhelming longing for the delicate girl by her side, and hugged24 her tightly, entranced by her delightful nearness. Her gaze caught25 the horizon, the seam between sea and sky that sparkled in the far26 distance. Staring at that razor's edge where blue met blue, Sakura27 felt love as she never had before. Yet somehow these feelings had28 always been with her, ever since she had been a child too young to29 know that such love can be. Perplexed by this tangle of emotions, she30 turned to ask her friend to explain this puzzling contradiction. But31 Tomoyo was gone.33 Blinking in disbelief, Sakura circled in the water, expecting the34 girl to be bobbing on the shimmering surface nearby. But there was35 nothing, only sea and sky brilliantly lit by the tropical sun.36 Suddenly Sakura remembered, and her heart tightened and froze, "She37 can't swim". She thrashed in the water as panic swept her. But there38 was nothing save the disturbance of her wild swimming on the ocean’s39 placid film. Filling her lungs with air, Sakura dove deep into the40 water. The fish scattered as she swam, leaving her alone as she41 surged forward. The salty brine stung her eyes as she strained to42 see. But there was only water: empty, endless, and vast. Her lungs43 ached as each stroke pulled her deeper. The sea was now cold and dark44 as she left the dappled sunlight extinguished and plunged into a45 black nothingness. Completely disoriented, she lost all sense of46 direction and dimension. As the seconds swept by her heart, starved47 for oxygen, beat wildly out of control. Finally, her body panicked48 and sucked in lungfuls of burning seawater. The darkness spread from49 her vision to her mind as consciousness faded. When she died, the50 pain and panic gave way to a whispering sadness. Her final thoughts51 were of Tomoyo, and how she had failed to save her from drowning.53 Sakura lurched out of bed as her lungs desperately gasped for air.54 Her heart hammered in her chest as she slowly came to, eyes55 discerning the dim outlines of her room in the pale starlight. With a56 hand held tightly to her breast, she remembered the dream that57 started so beautifully, and ended so horrifically. Still shaken, she58 slipped out of bed, opened the door, and stood in the hallway.59 Slumping to the floor, she pulled herself into a little ball and sat60 deep in thought. Part of her wanted to forget the awful dream. Surely61 it was nothing more than that; a night terror that dissipated with62 the coming of day. But Kero-chan once said that the dreams of a63 Cardcaptor were often prophetic, and thus important. The very idea64 that this dream held any glint of the future brought a shiver of65 fear. Sakura closed her eyes and forced herself to think. The dream66 had seemed so real. Worse than her own death was failing to save67 Tomoyo. Ever since that night in the garden, the pain in her best68 friend’s eyes had haunted Sakura. Somehow it seemed her fault that69 the dark-haired woman was suffering so. Never did the pale woman70 utter a single reproach, or even a plea for help. But those beautiful71 lavender eyes had betrayed her, and now Sakura knew that something72 was terribly wrong. Sakura also sensed that her friend was faithfully73 waiting for help. Tomoyo's trust was touching, but it frightened74 her.76 Helping her friend wasn't a matter of capturing cards or fighting77 with magical forces. All that seemed simple compared to the problem78 of Tomoyo's heart. The person her friend loved she could not have,79 and despite efforts to conceal it, loneliness was a burden that bore80 heavily upon her. Tomoyo would not say who this special someone was,81 and Sakura felt a brief flash of anger. The least they could do is be82 aware of such a wonderful love, and to gently thank Tomoyo for it,83 even if they were unable to return her precious feelings. But then,84 what if they did know? Would that really help her, if they knew of85 her love but did not love her? Frustrated, Sakura rose and walked86 down the hall. She had to do something, anything. She had to help.87 But how? This was like fighting with shadows, dim outlines that she88 could barely perceive. In order to help, she needed to know. Sakura89 had to know who Tomoyo's special someone was. At this, she blushed90 and stopped pacing. Part of her asked mockingly, "And just why do you91 want to know? Are you jealous?" She shook her head, frustrated and92 disturbed by the confused feelings that gripped her. She knew she93 shouldn't feel bad that Tomoyo had her own true love. She knew in her94 heart that she desired Tomoyo’s happiness. But somehow, it hurt not95 to be that special someone. Tomoyo's affection was something she had96 grown up with, as much a part of her life as breathing. That this97 affection now caressed someone else was bittersweet, for while she98 was glad that love lit Tomoyo's gentle heart, it saddened her that99 she was not the one. This realization brought a new storm of100 frustration, and Sakura threw on a skirt and blouse, slipped on a101 pair of sandals, and walked out of the house.103 The auburn-haired girl followed the road for a while, and then left104 it for the trail that led to the top of Victoria Peak. The air was105 cool on her face, and it felt good to walk the steep, snaking106 pathway. Through the trees she caught a glimpse of the city below,107 brightly lit and no doubt raucous even now in the early morning. She108 was glad the weekend was approaching, for she needed time. Surely109 this frustrating ignorance was worse than finally discovering who110 Tomoyo's love was. But part of her resisted, as if unwilling to know.111 In fact, part of her simply didn't want Tomoyo to be in love with112 someone else. This brought a blush, and a reprimand as Sakura scolded113 herself for such selfishness. But it was true, and she knew it. She114 had finally realized, during Tomoyo’s trip to Hong Kong, that she115 wanted Tomoyo's love for herself. To be the focus of Tomoyo's116 attention was an ecstasy beyond words. She remembered Tomoyo filming117 in the Matsukaya, remembered twirling and dancing for her friend's118 delight. This brought another blush, for those memories were119 intensely sweet and stirring. Sakura walked far along the pathway in120 this blissful state before her wandering mind returned to the task at121 hand. It occurred to her that her own feelings were part of the122 problem. They clouded her understanding, her ability to solve the123 riddle of Tomoyo's special someone. Until she first understood her124 own feelings, she would never understand Tomoyo’s. This was all so125 complicated, and made the capturing of the Cards seem almost easy.127 The Cards were really no more than puzzles to be solved. As time128 went by, she had grown to love them. But at first, they were things129 to be captured, a job to be done. Tomoyo wasn't like that at all.130 Sakura cared deeply for her, and ironically this made it more131 difficult to help. Had she loved the Cards then as she did now,132 capturing and binding them would have been more difficult. She was so133 tangled in her emotions for Tomoyo that she nearly felt overwhelmed.134 And overwhelmed people, as her brother once remarked, are not very135 useful. Somehow, she had to understand her own feelings for the girl136 before she could help her.138 Sakura suddenly realized she was nearly at the top of the peak. And139 there, just outside the heavy foliage flanking the trail, was the140 spot they had watched the moonrise together. Sakura walked on the141 soft grass, dew tickling her sandal-clad little feet. She sat down142 and gazed at the islands of the bay shrouded in the dark night. She143 stretched out on her back, hands behind her head, and stared up into144 the sky. The crescent moon was a tiny boat in a sea of stars, the145 vast emptiness illumined by thousands of brightly burning hearts.146 Sometimes she felt their power, her power, the power of the stars.147 When the Cards were all transformed, and Eriol’s final challenge148 overcome, she had never wondered what was next. Her love for Syaoran149 bloomed, thanks to the tender care of her friends. Sakura now150 realized that Tomoyo had helped her friend have a happy marriage that151 she would never have. That would be just like her, Sakura thought152 with a trace of sadness. She remembered the look in her eyes as they153 watched the parade of wedding dresses at the department store. "She154 must have felt that pain for a long time, but she hid it from me.155 Why? Why would she hide something like that? Because she didn't want156 me to feel bad. I was so happy to be married, and she didn't want to157 spoil my happiness with her feelings. I just ignored her all those158 years. It's like I didn't care at all."160 Sakura sat up, damp from the dew and fighting back tears. She stared161 at the hands folded on her lap and whispered miserably, "I'm so162 sorry, Tomoyo-chan. I didn't know. I should have, but I just didn't163 know". She clenched her fists angrily. That was no excuse then, and164 it was no excuse now. Tomoyo was suffering, and needed her. Somehow,165 she had to help. She had to find Tomoyo's special someone and tell166 them. At least then Tomoyo's love would be appreciated, even if this167 person could not be with her. But would this really be any168 consolation? Poor Tomoyo would love this person with all her heart,169 but she would have nobody to love her. It all seemed so wrong and170 unfair. Tomoyo's love was like nothing Sakura had ever experienced.171 Even as just a friend, the joy and bliss of being loved by this172 wonderful girl was staggering. Through the years Sakura had been173 unaware of how luminous Tomoyo’s love was. "Only when I moved to Hong174 Kong," she thought, "did I really know what it would mean to be away175 from her". She tried to explain this to Tomoyo when they danced the176 night before she left for Japan, but words failed her as surely as177 she had failed Tomoyo. She stumblingly groped for words because she178 herself did not fully understand. Even now, all she really knew was179 that she missed Tomoyo desperately and longed to be with her. And if180 she did not know her own feelings, how could she possibly hope to181 help Tomoyo? Sakura stood up and hugged herself as a chill breeze182 swept the grassy swale. The sky had turned a pale gray. Dawn.184 Sakura smiled, for if resolution would not absolve her of the hurt185 she had caused, it would at least set her guilt aside until she186 finished this important task. She would help Tomoyo, but to do so she187 must first know her own feelings. Until then, it would be impossible188 to find her way. Her feelings were inextricably bound with the189 beautiful dark-haired girl, but once they were unraveled she would190 see her way more clearly. But how could she know her own heart? She191 faced that riddle when Syaoran was leaving for Hong Kong. Then she192 was lucky, for friends told her what her heart desired. But now she193 was frighteningly alone, and did not know where to go for help. The194 one person she could trust ultimately was far away in Japan Besides,195 Sakura thought, even if she were at my side I couldn't ask her about196 this. The thought of the pale girl again at her side was a pleasant197 one, and brought back memories in a flood. Here they snuggled198 together, Tomoyo resting her head on Sakura’s shoulder while the moon199 sailed a velvet sky. Sakura longed to have those moments back, to200 live them again and again for all eternity. But sweet memories would201 not heal the hurts she had caused, and the Mistress of the Cards202 purged them from her mind. Clenching her fists, Sakura looked out at203 the dawn with determined eyes. Her voice was firm as she said out204 loud,206 "I'll ask Dark-sama and Light-sama about my feelings. I'll make them207 tell me."209 And for the instant these words were uttered, she looked like what210 she truly was: the most powerful being on earth. And her countenance211 was terrible to behold.213 II.214 All through the day that followed that dawn, Sakura thought about215 the task ahead. At dinner Ieran-sama asked if she felt all right,216 "You are unusually quiet tonight, Sakura."218 Sakura looked slightly surprised and bowed, "I'm fine, Ieran-sama.219 Thank you for your concern."221 Fanren chirped in with a giggly voice, "Quiet, hmm? Maybe you've222 been around Syaoran-chan too long. Next thing you'll be all dour and223 grumpy, too."225 Syaoran scowled and poked at his rice. But that only brought a fresh226 storm of teasing from Fanren, eager to see her little brother stalk227 off in a huff. Ieran-sama ended the game when she ordered the dishes228 cleared, and after helping to clean up Sakura worked on papers from229 school. After kissing Syaoran goodnight, she waited until the house230 was silent, and stole into the guest room. Or, as she now called it,231 Tomoyo’s room.233 She took the Cards from the drawer of the old colonial desk, and234 decided Shield would seal her off from the rest of the household.235 Looking at her skirt and blouse, she wished they were not quite so236 plain. Kero always said the Cards preferred a proper looking237 Mistress, and Tomoyo's creations had seemingly charmed and impressed238 them. Certainly Kero had approved, Sakura thought ruefully,239 especially when he got to share in the sartorial splendor. Well, what240 she now wore would have to do. She pulled the chain around her neck241 from her blouse and spoke the chant of power. In a blinding flash242 Shield came to life, barring the doors and windows with golden243 chains. Holding her staff in one hand, Sakura picked up The Dark and244 The Light and flicked them into the air. With a twirl and a flourish245 she awakened them amid a gale of shadow and blaze. They stood before246 her shimmering with power, beautiful and majestic. Instinctively she247 bowed, and they returned her bow with graceful solemnity. Light248 smiled cheerfully and spoke while Dark waited pensively,250 “Konbanwa, Sakura-chan. How are you this lovely evening”? Despite251 her earnestness, Sakura smiled in sheer delight. The beauty of the252 two was always such a joy to behold. They stood together,253 affectionately holding hands, long, lustrous hair floating as if they254 were underwater. They were a perfect contrast, yet a perfect pair,255 and Sakura’s heart ached to see them together. She was always careful256 to place the two cards next to one another, for which Light had257 laughingly thanked her, but said it was unnecessary, “We have always258 been together, and ever shall be.” But Sakura now tried to look259 serious, for she knew the two could be cryptic, playfully hiding the260 knowledge she desired. In a commanding voice, edged with the power of261 the Mistress of the Cards, Sakura spoke,263 “Thank you, Light-sama. I am well. But there is something I need264 from you.”266 The response was so different from the young woman’s normal tone267 that Light-sama was taken aback and did not reply. Dark-sama spoke in268 a voice like rustlings in the shadows, “Speak, Mistress, for all we269 have is yours to ask for”.271 Uncomfortable with such a formal reply, Sakura shifted her stance.272 She was never like this with the Cards, and it all seemed very out of273 place. But she had to find out for Tomoyo’s sake, so again she spoke274 up firmly, “I need to know my feelings for Tomoyo-chan”.276 Sakura thought she detected the briefest hint of a smile on Dark-277 sama’s normally impassive face. But it was Light-sama that answered278 back in a ringing, almost angry, challenge, “We cannot do what you279 ask”.281 Sakura looked down at the floor, wishing she had one of Tomoyo’s282 impressive costumes to make her feel more imperious than she felt.283 Suddenly a flash of anger energized her, and in a stern voice that284 shook the room she shot back, “I can command you to answer”.286 Light-sama looked surprised, and a nearly imperceptible trace of287 fear darkened the light that glowed all around her. She quickly288 recovered, fixing Sakura with a haughty stare. She began to reply,289 but Dark-sama gently touched her shoulder, calming her at a glance290 with dark, gentle eyes. The shadowy figure then turned to Sakura and291 stepped forward. She knelt down and bowed low, forehead touching the292 floor, black hair forming a darkly radiant pool on the floor. Her293 feathery voice was mild and meek,295 “It is your right as Mistress of the Cards. You may command us, if296 that is truly your wish.”298 Sakura’s heart sank. It felt so awful, as if she were forcing them299 to do her bidding like servants, or even slaves. She knew that was300 how Clow Reed had dealt with them; even Yue and Kereberous never301 dared address him as other than “Master”. But Sakura loved her Cards,302 not as their Master but as their friend, and it hurt her to see Dark-303 sama bowing like this. Trembling, she realized she could never force304 them against their will, even if she did have the right. Her305 shoulders slumped and she lowered the staff, defeated by the gentle306 submission of Dark-sama. Verging on tears she answered haltingly,307 “Gomenesai, Dark-sama, Light-sama. I don’t want to be like that with308 you. I can’t.” She looked up, her emerald eyes wet with tears. Light-309 sama again stared in surprise, but this time with pity, not defiance.310 Dark-sama smiled as she rose gracefully from her bow, then leaned311 over and placed her hands on the woman’s shoulders. Her tranquil312 voice was melodious and calming,314 “That is why the Cards love you so, Sakura-chan. We would do315 anything for you, because you do not command us. But we cannot tell316 you your feelings for Tomoyo. We cannot tell you, because only you317 can know what is in your heart.”319 Sakura again remembered agonizing over Syaoran’s departure to Hong320 Kong. How would she have known what was in her own heart if her321 friends had not helped her, nudged her, and all but told her that322 Syaoran was her true love? As if reading her thoughts, Light-sama323 spoke up brightly,325 “Others cannot know such things, and though they mean to help they326 bring confusion, not light. Sakura-chan, you have never really known327 your own heart, or these feelings would not be a mystery to you. You328 must do this yourself if you would know the truth”.330 Sakura looked hesitant and uncertain. She was confident in many331 things, but not this. Not knowing her own feelings. They had always332 been baffling, an emotional web that frustrated and bound her. She333 had been so thankful when everyone had helped her before. But if this334 was something she must do alone, then she would try her hardest. For335 Tomoyo’s sake she could not fail. Sakura felt a surge of strength336 that steeled her determination. She bowed low to the wise and337 beautiful women. Her smile was bright and confident as she spoke with338 an enthusiastic but steady voice, “Thank you so very much, Dark-sama339 and Light-sama. I promise I will try my best.”342 The two women shimmered before her, smiles filling her with peace343 and strength. She resisted the urge to hug them, and instead bowed344 again and returned Shield to its card form. As Sakura turned to go,345 Light-sama approached her. Breathless, she saw the glowing figure346 lean over her, golden hair waving in the air like seaweed in an ocean347 swell. She met Sakura’s forehead with a tender kiss and the words,348 “To help light your way, Mistress”. Sakura felt a surge of warmth and349 hope, and smiled radiantly as she bowed her thanks. With that the350 young woman was gone, leaving Dark and Light to linger awhile,351 content in the eloquent silence of each other’s company.353 III.354 Sakura stirred her coffee with absent-minded detachment. The quaint355 little café overlooked the Bay, offering a scenic vista of ferryboats356 and seagulls. But Sakura’s attention was far away, in another time357 and place altogether. She had wandered the landscape of childhood all358 day long, and like an explorer returning home came bearing strange359 and exotic memories. She realized now that her time as a child had360 been like the nursery-rhyme song so dimly remembered: “Merrily,361 merrily, merrily, merrily, life is but a dream”. It was as if she had362 dreamt away her years in Tomoeda, and now awakened to the marvels363 that filled her pleasant slumber.365 Above all else was the extraordinary love of her best friend,366 Tomoyo. This love had been sweetly present all through her life. As367 she meandered through memory she saw it in places unsuspected and368 unlooked for. Love was there in all the girl did and all that she369 was. Love was sewn into the elaborate costumes Sakura had worn in370 capturing the Cards. At the time, their excess of kawaii had caused371 the Cardcaptor no end of embarrassment. Yet Tomoyo sewed them with372 meticulous care, and if they were playful and carefree, they also373 marked Sakura in a singular way as the new Cardcaptor. But most of374 all they reflected the glowing love that Tomoyo held for her. The375 girl was ecstatic when her friend wore them, and that crazy, innocent376 delight was something Sakura painfully missed. No longer embarrassed,377 she longed once again be the focus of the rapturous love.379 Tomoyo’s love embraced her in a comforting cocoon of blissful380 contentment, yet it also tossed her into the sky, deliriously free to381 soar beyond limits she would never have dared on her own. Tomoyo’s382 love was vast and deep, a mysterious ocean that gently rocked and383 swayed Sakura’s heart. Tomoyo gave her strength and hope, help and384 solace, and the delightful charm of her shinning presence. “And what385 did I give her?” Sakura thought in a hot flash of shame. “I took all386 my problems to her, and she helped me every time. But I didn’t help387 her. I didn’t even know about her special love. She did so much for388 me, and I never even let her know. I didn’t even know myself.” This389 last thought seemed particularly bitter.391 Sakura realized that Tomoyo had paid a dear price for her friend’s392 denseness. “She supported me, and I ignored her. I took her for393 granted, like she would always be there, just for me. How could I394 have been so selfish?” So powerful and ever-present was Tomoyo’s love395 that Sakura simply grew used to it. It pained her to think so, but it396 could not be denied. Like air and water, Tomoyo’s love was something397 Sakura needed, and unconsciously came to expect. She had taken her398 marvelous friend for granted. She knew this now because Tomoyo was399 far away, and that love and affection were no longer a part of400 Sakura’s daily life. This knowledge made the memories of her time in401 school with Syaoran especially hard to face. When Syaoran returned402 from Hong Kong, she had flown to his arms, losing herself in the403 Chinese magician. Enamored by his stoic strength and charmed by his404 stingily given attentions, she had been oblivious to all else. She405 remembered the time they sat in swings at the park while she spoke406 about her feelings for Yukito. She was deeply moved as he silently407 listened to her, but now she wondered if his silence was more a lack408 of interest than concern. But how many times had Tomoyo listened to409 her problems and worries, really listened with all her heart and410 spirit? She was always there, sympathetic and caring, listening to411 confessions and sobs until dawn chased the stars away. Even now it412 was Tomoyo she went to with all of her problems, as well as her413 delights and joys. But Sakura had hardly given Tomoyo’s fragile heart414 a second thought. She always assumed the girl was happy, for the dark-415 haired girl never spoke of the pain and hurt that Sakura had seen so416 recently in her eyes.418 Was this pain new? Had her friend sailed blithely through childhood419 without worry or care? It was comforting to think, but Sakura sensed420 it was not so. No, Tomoyo must have had some sadness and421 disappointment throughout the years they were together. But she had422 never said a word, and Sakura had never asked. She kept whatever423 troubled her to herself, but why? The answer, Sakura thought as she424 sipped her cold coffee, was stark and obvious: for me.426 Not only was Tomoyo always there for her, but she carefully kept her427 own problems from Sakura as well. The toll these years of sacrifice428 must have cost her friend seemed staggering. On the brink of tears,429 Sakura thought to herself, “She was always there for me, and happy430 for me, and silent for me. And I never even knew”. Hurriedly leaving431 money on the table, she began headed into the center of the busy432 city. Walking usually eased her heart, but not today. She thought of433 those last years in High School where her world revolved around434 Syaoran. Sometimes he was all she could think about. When he was in435 Japan they were always together, and when he was absent she talked436 and thought and dreamed about him, and little else. Never did she ask437 about Tomoyo’s crushes, or dates, or cherished hopes. There weren’t438 any, of course; only a hopeless love from afar that left her lonely,439 a shattered heart her only confidante. Ever since Tomoyo explained440 the reason for not buying a teddy bear for her special someone,441 Sakura had assumed her odd friend was content with unrequited love.442 She thought of her reply at the time, “I know Tomoyo’s special person443 must be very happy”. Now it sounded shallow and ridiculous, and the444 memory of her remark made her physically ill.446 “Baka.” Sakura felt a rare anger welling up inside, an anger that447 accused her of a cruel disregard, “It’s a wonder she can stand to be448 around me.” Yet this was one of the many miracles of her dearest449 friend. Never once, in any way, did Tomoyo betray a trace of anger or450 reproach. Not a word, or a gesture, or a sign did she give of the451 wrong that Sakura had done her through a carefree and foolish452 neglect. She hid her pain, and all those years Sakura did not see.453 But what she did see, despite the hurt done her, was Tomoyo’s454 astonishing love. That was no mask. Her love had sweetly shaken455 Sakura’s heart, and was as real as the warmth of the sun. With Tomoyo456 gone that love was now distant, and for four months Sakura felt the457 ache of loneliness. Slowly she realized what it meant when that love458 was absent from her everyday life. Sakura felt on the edge of459 collapse before Tomoyo came to Hong Kong, and it was this finally460 opened her eyes to what the dark-haired woman meant to her. But poor461 Tomoyo had endured years of such desolation, alone, without even the462 hope of being with her true love. “She should hate me,” Sakura463 thought as she sobbed, “but she still loves me.” Oblivious to the464 curious stares and embarrassed glances from people passing buy,465 Sakura cried her way to the bus stop that would take her to Silver466 Strand Beach.468 When the bus boarded the ferry, Sakura stepped out and stood on the469 bow of the little boat chuffing over the water. The sea breeze eased470 her distress, and the salt spray cleansed and refreshed her. Gulls471 circled and dipped in the late morning sun, greedy for scraps and472 tidbits from the tiny humans below. They set up a noisy chorus when a473 young boy and his mother hurled pieces of sandwich high into the air.474 As the birds pirouted and swooped, snatching the bread in mid-flight,475 Sakura remembered flying, remembered the dizzy, dancing joy of476 cleaving the air with magical wings. In the air you were free, but477 that was a different sort of freedom than what she embraced in Hong478 Kong. Here she had her new life, free from the family and friends of479 her old life. She was free, but miserable. Now, far away from480 Tomoyo’s affection, she felt a leaden burden that weighed heavier481 upon her with each passing day. Worse, by flying away to a life with482 the man she loved, she forgot her obligations to her dearest friend.483 Sakura remembered a tearful confession in one of her letters, an484 apology for not knowing sooner how hard it was for Tomoyo to be485 without her true love. The woman replied in soothing tones; you486 didn’t now, it’s all right. But she should have known, and it wasn’t487 all right at all. Unaware of Tomoyo’s needs, Sakura had proven a488 selfish and insensitive friend. She burned with shame at the very489 thought of her neglect But all this would change, and it would change490 now. She would discover Tomoyo’s special person, and talk to them.491 She would tell them of Tomoyo’s precious feelings. And then, she492 thought excitedly as she again boarded the bus, Tomoyo would have her493 happy ending. Unless, of course, that special person did not love494 Tomoyo. What then?496 Sakura slumped in her seat as the bus left the ferry and wound it’s497 way up the east coast to the beach. What if this mysterious person498 did not share Tomoyo’s feelings, or was already with someone else?499 Tomoyo had said as much in her letters, pleading with Sakura to let500 things be. Sakura’s hesitation was brief. Her resolution to make up501 for past failings drove her forward with staunch determination. She502 would help heal the sadness reflected in Tomoyo’s hauntingly503 beautiful eyes. There would never be any chance for Tomoyo if this504 true love never knew her feelings. And if they did not love her? This505 seemed inconceiveable, so Sakura decided to worry about it if it506 happened. It felt good, finally knowing what to do. Her mind made up,507 Sakura sensed something like contentment as she turned to the508 difficult question that had to be answered before she could begin:509 just what were her feelings for Tomoyo?511 When the bus let off the passengers at the beach, Sakura was512 relieved to see that there were relatively few people enjoying the513 water. She had a towel to lay on, but no swimsuit. She simply wanted514 to be here, where they had shared part of an all too brief day515 together. Slipping off her sandals, Sakura felt the hot sand beneath516 her bare feet. Walking to the water’s edge, she traced the line517 between sea and shore, warm water tickling her feet, delightedly518 digging her toe into the dark, wet sand. Finally, she found a spot519 and laid out the colorful towel, then sat and watched the other520 beachgoers. A boy run up to the oncoming waves, squeeled, and then521 run back laughing to his mother. The sun was bright and reflected off522 the water with a glare, so Sakura closed her eyes and began to try523 and understand her feelings for Tomoyo.525 Tomoyo was her best friend, and had been ever since the gift of a526 little eraser in third grade. Sakura remembered that first day in527 class surprisingly well. Daidouji Tomoyo had been introduced as a528 transfer student, bowing shyly as all eyes in the class appraised529 her. She was given the seat next to Sakura, and as the new girl530 unpacked her books, the brunette gazed at her in wonder. Dressed in a531 brand new uniform, lustrous lavender hair covering her back and532 shoulders, she was the prettiest girl Sakura had ever seen. When the533 Daidouji girl glanced her way, the genki girl flashed a radiant534 smile. This brought a crimson blush that graced the new girl’s535 strikingly pale skin. Later in the day she saw a distressed Tomoyo536 frantically looking in her book bag. Sakura cheerfully gave her an537 eraser to correct her mistake, a gift the girl accepted with surprise538 and delight. Later they sat together for lunch, talking about family539 and food and all the little things so important to children. Sakura540 liked her from the very first, and they quickly became best friends.541 They were inseparable, sharing moments and memories while the years542 passed by like a slow, melodious song.545 Everything a best friend should be the pale, kindly girl had been.546 She was kind and caring, always there with love and support. Sakura547 now wondered if she could ever have gone through the trials of548 childhood and adolescence without her. All through the capturing of549 the Cards, their transformation, and the final battle with Eriol,550 Tomoyo had been by her side. The dark-haired girl filled her with a551 confidence she often lacked, and made it possible to meet challenges552 that would otherwise have been overwhelming. Tomoyo meant a shoulder553 to cry on, a reassuring hug, and words of sympathy and solace. She554 adored her friend, and Sakura basked in that glowing adoration. It555 was odd to think of it like this, but it was almost as if she were556 Tomoyo’s special someone. Tomoyo affection for her best friend made557 Sakura feel unique, exceptional, and loved. In turn, she loved Tomoyo558 as her best friend. There was a quiet contentment in her presence.559 Sometimes they would just sit together, watching a sunset, or leaves560 blown in the wind. There was no need for words. Their friendship561 found comfort in the intimate silence they shared. Just to be with562 her made Sakura’s heart glad. Sakura carried the knowledge that563 Tomoyo would always be there for her. She could always rely on Tomoyo564 her help, advice, and insight. Sakura passed through childhood565 virtually free of fear or anxiety, save for ghosts, of course, There566 was no place for fear with Tomoyo as her friend.568 Sakura opened her eyes and squinted against the brilliant sunlight.569 She scanned the horizon and saw a small fleet of junks bobbing in the570 water, nets hauling in a sparkling catch of fish that glittered like571 silver. She loved to eat fish, but was happy not to have to catch572 them. The thought of the poor things thrashing helplessly about as573 they were hauled out of the water reminded her of last night’s dream,574 and she shivered despite the heat. Like the fish, this is how she575 felt living in Hong Kong: stunned, disoriented, and desperate.576 Struggling to cope with this distress, she slowly discerned its577 cause. It was because she missed Tomoyo. She missed the constant,578 sparkling presence of the tender girl in far-away Tomoeda. Slowly579 Sakura began to fathom the depths of her feelings for her best580 friend. She had always liked her, more than any of her other many581 friends. But it was more than just liking her that she felt. It was582 love. Sakura knew she was terribly dense about human feelings. It was583 so very hard to understand her emotions, let alone those of others.584 This ignorance caused pain and embarrassment, and even now was the585 reason for her curious odyssey. Being away from Tomoyo had thrown her586 into an emotional storm, yet all the agony it caused her eyes were587 finally opened. She missed Tomoyo so terribly because she loved her.589 Of course, She missed her other friends, like Naoko, and Chisato,590 and Rika. But not like this, not like Tomoyo. Being away from the591 azure-eyed girl left her lonely and frantic, teetering on a despair592 that should have had no place in her happy married life. So powerful593 were her feelings that it no longer made sense to think she simply594 “liked” her best friend. She experienced emotions somewhat like this595 with Syaoran and Yukito, but nowhere near as deep and intense. In the596 time away from Tomoyo, she finally came to understand that she loved597 her best friend. But just what did this love mean? At first, she598 decided it was the love of friendship. She remembered a moving story599 of the ancient Greeks. It told of a man condemned to death, but600 given his freedom to attend a sister’s wedding on the condition that601 should he fail to return at the appointed time, his best friend would602 die in his place. The man fought through incredible hazards and603 hardships, but in the end returned and faced death for the love of604 his friend. Sakura cried when she read this tale, and for the first605 time understood that love bound friends as surely as it did lovers.606 She even wrote about this in a letter to Tomoyo, asking if someone607 could be more than a best friend, could be a “special friend”. But608 listening now to waves crashing on the beach, and random cries of609 children playing, Sakura knew the love she bore Tomoyo lay beyond the610 bounds of friendship.613 She heard the playful screech of a little girl who was tagged, and614 now ran after her former persuer to make them “it”. The sun was615 lowering towards the western horizon, bathing the hills of the New616 Territories in a fiery orange glow. She suddenly realized she had617 forgotten to put suntan lotion on her face and arms. Gingerly the618 young woman touched her skin, hoping the burn would not be too619 severe. This triggered memories of Tomoyo stretched out on the towel,620 Sakura rubbing the cool lotion into her creamy, alabaster skin. The621 woman on the beach caught her breath and felt a crimson flush spread622 over her neck and cheeks. Shaking her head, she tried to focus on the623 question of just how she loved Tomoyo. There was an intimacy between624 the two, more like sisters than best friends. Sakura recalled625 frantically phoning Tomoyo late one night when she was barely626 thirteen. Suspended between mortified embarrassment and utter627 terror, she was sure she had been stricken with some dread disease,628 but could not bring herself to ask her brother or father for help.629 Only Tomoyo would do. After calming the panicky girl with her soft,630 melodious voice, Tomoyo spoke with her mother and quickly returned a631 diagnosis was as old as girls and women themselves. In minutes Tomoyo632 arrived at the Kinomoto residence to comfort and be with her friend.633 Of all the people Sakura had ever known, there was no one she felt634 safer with in sharing her most private thoughts and secrets. There635 was that special trust of family between them, though without the636 irritation she so often felt with her brother. The bond between the637 two girls felt deep and ancient, as indeed it was.639 Sakura wondered sometimes about the blood ties between them. Their640 Mothers had been cousins, and grew up together in cherished intimacy.641 It seemed that Sonomi had loved Nadeshiko, and the two were642 inseparable until Fujitaka came between them. It was funny that their643 mothers had been so close, just like their daughters. But Marriage644 tore them apart, and Sakura now grieved for Sonomi. She was sad, and645 even a bit guilty, for if Nadeshiko had blossomed in her marriage,646 Sonomi had never quite recovered from her lost love. Tomoyo hinted in647 a letter that Sonomi was a bit like Sakura’s sensei friend, and this648 comparison cut like a razor. She had seen Jun-sama’s suffering first649 hand, and the thought that the kind and beautiful Sonomi shared this650 pain was unbearable.652 Yet as Tomoyo had once laughingly observed, things were curiously653 mixed up. While the daughters were, like their mothers, somehow654 connected, it was as if Sakura and Tomoyo had been switched at birth.655 Each looked and acted much like the other’s mother. Like Sonomi,656 Sakura was athletic, hot-tempered, and determined to succeed in all657 she did. Tomoyo, like Nadeshiko, was quiet, quirky, and brimming with658 love. In an odd way, physical and psychological aspects of the659 Amamiya cousins had been blended together in their children. But no660 matter how she considered her relationship to Tomoyo, Sakura realized661 there was a deeper connection between them than mere friendship.662 Although unaware of each other for eight years, the two girls fell663 instantly fell together like long lost siblings. For Sakura, Tomoyo664 felt like a lost part of her very being. This special affinity for665 the dark-haired girl had almost sisterly quality to it. Yet there was666 still more to their relationship than that. Even if they had been667 sisters, how to explain that awful parting at the airport?669 As Tomoyo boarded her plane, Sakura was swept by a despair she never670 thought possible. It dredged up horrific memories from long ago,671 memories the shattered woman did not even know existed. When Tomoyo672 left, it was as if her Mother had died all over again. But this time,673 Sakura did not see with the eyes of an innocent three year old, a674 child who could be told that mommy was in a beautiful place in the675 sky. This time, she knew Tomoyo was gone, and could not shake the676 irrational fear that they might never be together again. Her mother’s677 early death did not seem to affect her much in large part because of678 Fujitaka. Her father devoted his life to filling the gaping hole left679 by the tragic absence of Nadeshiko. Sakura sometimes heard tales of680 other fathers from her friends in school. Many fathers were often681 absent , seemingly indifferent to their own families. They spent long682 hours at grinding jobs, and were too exhausted to take part in family683 affairs when they did return. Busy with overtime and obligatory684 drinking bouts with the boys, these were the fathers that forgot685 birthdays and teacher’s names, who never went to school plays, fairs686 or parent’s days. Their sole purpose of winning the bread left little687 time to enjoy it. Sometimes Sakura wondered if this was the sort of688 father her own husband would prove to be, and this troubled her689 greatly. Her father was so very different from all the others. He was690 gentle, encouraging, and loved with a mother’s unconditional love. He691 had mastered the domestic arts that ironically escaped Nadeshiko692 herself: cooking, cleaning, sewing, and the myriad little details693 that make a household run properly. But for all his dedicated effort,694 the loss of a mother might still have affected Sakura more had it not695 been for Tomoyo.697 Growing up, Sakura loved Tomoyo as the mother she never had. The698 very fact she looked like the pictures of Nadeshiko may have699 reinforced the girl’s imperceptible feelings. The Daidouji girl’s700 nature was very much as Fujitaka had described his wife: sweet,701 gentle, placid, and loving. He once remarked that in all their years702 together, he had never seen even a trace of anger on her luminous703 face. Tomoyo was exactly the same: ever smiling, kind, and caring.704 With maternal affection, Tomoyo had nurtured Sakura through the705 trials of childhood and adolescence. She was there to ease the hurts706 and soothe the pains of growing up. She encouraged the first,707 tentative steps towards love with Yukito-san and Li-kun. Sakura often708 found herself crying in the arms of Tomoyo, who hugged her back with709 in a motherly embrace. In the arms of its mother, a child always710 feels that everything will be all right. Even as they whirled711 together on the dance floor, when Sakura burst into tears at the712 harrowing prospect of Tomoyo’s imminent return to Japan, the dark-713 haired woman enfolded her in her arms and brought soothing714 reassurance with nothing more than her gentle presence. Yukito might715 have said this parental affection was the key to Sakura’s love for716 Tomoyo, as it had been for him. Years ago, he told Sakura she loved717 him because he was like her beloved father. She agreed, but not718 because she believed he was right. She knew her that Touya loved him,719 so she said yes, and stepped aside. But if her feelings for Yukito720 were not quite true love, they were still more than a schoolgirl721 crush. It was painful to let the gentle boy go, but she did. And722 Sakura now knew that her love for Tomoyo was no more easily explained723 this way than her feelings for Yukito. She had loved Yukito more than724 a father figure, and loved Tomoyo more than the mother she never725 knew. The kiss in the garden had shattered that explanation for726 Sakura’s love. For all her maternal kindness, Tomoyo stirred up727 passionate feelings in Sakura that no daughter ever had for her728 mother.731 Watching a slender, gorgeous, woman preparing to leave the beach732 reminded Sakura of Tomoyo slipping out of her white sundress. This733 memory summoned a fiery longing that gripped her heart, and the734 feverish desire that haunted her recent dreams. She trembled in735 remembrance of braiding the long, lavender tresses, the silken feel736 of pale skin, the sweet, flowery scent that wafted like a heavenly737 little cloud. Tomoyo’s visit awakened a sensuous craving for this738 achingly beautiful woman, a desire that previously hovered only on739 the rim of Sakura’s awareness. Tomoyo always seemed to her the740 prettiest of girls. There was a delicate loveliness about her that741 Sakura found irresistible. As childhood passed into adolescence, her742 feelings changed with her body, imperceptibly at first, but in the743 end irrevocably. So captivated by Syaoran was she that this change in744 her feelings almost went unnoticed. Only little hints were left, odd745 moments that puzzled her when they happened, and were quickly746 forgotten as meaningless puzzles. But now, in the grip of memory,747 these puzzles seemed more like keys to resolving the sweet confusion748 that played havoc with her heart.750 Most vivid was a memory from the 8th grade, in a gym class where751 Tomoyo gamely struggled with a difficult floor exercise. The other752 students left for home, but Sakura stayed to help her friend master753 the complicated pattern. She spotted for Tomoyo, holding her closely,754 guiding her with a sure, firm touch. Slowly at first, the dark-haired755 girl caught the rhythm of the movements, and her natural grace and756 charm moved Sakura’s heart. For some reason her very nearness757 flustered Sakura, distracting her from the lesson she was trying to758 impart. Sakura blushed fiercely while Tomoyo, still as a fawn,759 daintily arched her supple body and gazed up with trusting eyes.760 Breathing raggedly, Sakura stood by her, their faces nearly touching,761 utterly enraptured by the wan beauty of the delicate girl. From762 nowhere she felt a mad desire to embrace her, caress her, and shower763 her with kisses. The brunette leaned closer, heart hammering as their764 lips nearly touched. Suddenly she blushed crimson and pulled quickly765 away. Tomoyo seemed pleasantly baffled, and then worried as her766 friend turned her back and trembled. Sakura stammered out something767 about a pulled muscle, and struggled to calm her racing heart. Had768 Tomoyo come to her then, with a kindly touch or a concerned hug,769 Sakura was unsure just what might have happened. But the odd little770 whirlwind passed quickly, and Tomoyo returned to being just a best771 friend. Yet this was not the only time that some unseen passion had772 seized Sakura’s heart. Tomoyo’s presence had sometimes captivated and773 enthralled her in ways she could not fathom. Confused, even774 frightened, part of Sakura had succeeded in forgetting these strange,775 overpowering little moments. But delving into the depths of her776 feelings, Sakura found that these hidden memories now came flooding777 back. And these feelings she remembered were the identical to those778 in the garden, where she was swept away by an overwhelming love for779 Tomoyo.782 Sakura stood up and stretched, drained but oddly exhilarated. As day783 gave way to night, she gathered her things and walked to board the784 approaching bus. She was tantalizingly close now, sensing a785 revelation that would make her feelings clear at last. Though she786 appeared charmingly normal at first glance, the genki young woman was787 unusual in many ways, not least in her utter honesty. Most people shy788 away from such ruthless examinations of their inner feelings. As the789 saying goes, they prefer not to stir muddy waters and cause790 difficulties. Or, they cling to comfortable illusions, rejecting791 thorny and painful realities. As Fanren observed, Sakura was in many792 ways a simple girl. She wanted to know what was true, and could not793 abide to live a life that was false. Her desire to know had794 inexorably driven her to gather the Cards, and then transform them.795 In doing so she jeopardized not only her life, but also those most796 precious to her. Now she was on a journey to know her true feelings797 for Tomoyo, and after that the identity of her best friend’s true798 love. Where this journey led, or how it was resolved, did not concern799 her at all. Indeed, she was frighteningly innocent of the havoc and800 pain such discoveries might unleash. But had she known, she would801 have plunged forward regardless, for her determination to understand802 was implacable. After a long ride over the ferry and into the City,803 she boarded the last electric tram up Victoria Peak. When she exited804 the tram and began walking, the exhausted little P.E. teacher caught805 a second wind, and raced up the hill to the mansion. Preparing for806 bed in her room, Ieran-sama saw her daughter-in-law dashing into the807 house, and wondered what she was doing out running at such an hour.809 Tip-toeing into her room, Sakura retrieved the Cards from their810 resting place. For a moment she stood over the sleeping Syaoran,811 smiling. Then she slipped away, latched the door, and walked down the812 hall to Tomoyo's room. She sat on a chair by the window and gazed at813 the garden, dark and silent in the still of night. What happened in814 that garden changed everything forever. Never had her love for Tomoyo815 felt so strong and all-encompassing. Never had she felt so816 deliriously close to another human being. Oddly, it all started with817 Tomoyo's wrenching pain. Sakura had seen little slivers of her secret818 hurt before, in letters and during the trip to the Matsukaya. But819 sitting in the garden, Tomoyo was unwilling or unable to conceal the820 torment of life without her special someone. She broke down, sobbing821 in Sakura's arms. Sakura's heart was riven as she hugged her tightly,822 wishing with all her power that Tomoyo would be all right.823 Miraculously, she was. While embraced by Sakura, the pale girl seemed824 healed of her terrible hurt. In this blinding moment Sakura realized825 the agony of loneliness that her best friend lived with everyday. But826 the Mistress of the Cards also saw that in her arms, Tomoyo's pain827 was assuaged. She said that with Sakura she was happy, and the full828 truth of this at last opened her emerald eyes. Here was yet another829 revelation, for Tomoyo needed her as surely as she needed Tomoyo. She830 longed to hold and comfort her pale friend, to take away the pain831 forever. If indeed she had such power, Sakura vowed now to use it,832 regardless of cost or consequence.834 That night in the garden, Sakura and Tomoyo were like two castaways835 washed up on a foreign shore, gazing on a world and each other made836 marvelous and new. It was as if Sakura saw Tomoyo, the girl she grew837 up with, for the very first time: fragile, vulnerable, and838 breathtakingly beautiful. When that enchanting woman came so839 enticingly close, a surge of desire swept Sakura’s body and shook her840 heart. In that magical kiss, two souls met for the very first time.841 Sakura touched her cheek as a sweet warmth enfolded her. The memory842 of that kiss lingered still, echoing in her heart, tingling through843 every cell of her body. She loved Tomoyo as a friend, a sister, and a844 mother. But after they kissed, she knew her love was unimaginably845 vast and unbounded, a door to infinite space, a precipice on the edge846 of forever. If she had hesitated to step over that awesome threshold,847 it was only because the luscious shock of that kiss had left her848 utterly enchanted.850 But now, following her road to the very end, she was awakening. The851 meaning of her love for Tomoyo was finally clear. Sitting quietly in852 the shimmering night, a gentle rain of tears falling on her folded853 hands, Sakura at last understood her feelings. Perhaps deep within a854 part of her had suspected or known, all along. But now the splendid855 truth resounded throughout her entire being. Sakura could sing, or856 cry, or shout this truth, but her steady heartbeat bore a more857 eloquent testimony. In her heart nestled a precious knowledge, a858 knowledge gained through pain, joy, and time. And what her heart knew859 would change her forever.861 Daidouji Tomoyo was her one, True Love.