Mercurial > moonlitnights
view old/stories/tomoyo.txt @ 4:69f0191c9016 moonlitnights tip
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author | Robert McIntyre <rlm@mit.edu> |
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date | Tue, 22 Jun 2010 13:42:35 -0400 |
parents | fc00894c1d4a |
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1 By Luriko-Ysabeth2 iac@tangle.org4 Frame: Pieces of Her Soul7 There are two things I have known since before I can remember.9 Firstly, that I loved Kinomoto Sakura.11 And secondly, that she would never care for me the way I did for her.14 One can grow accustomed to anything when one is a child, I hear, no15 matter how odd, no matter how painful.17 And truly, it doesn't hurt that much, not now. Knowing that someday she18 will go to someone, probably some man, in whose arms she fits, whose19 house she graces, whose life she completes -- she deserves this, if it20 will make her happy. She deserves a wedding out of fairytales and a house21 out of dreams and a husband out of a maiden's longings, and a place in22 which her soul may fly as fast and as far as I know it can go.24 (He had best be worthy of her, he had best make her happy, or -- he25 shall answer to me.)28 Maybe when my body changes and blossoms, and strange elixirs sing in my29 blood, it will be harder to remember this, as it was hard for my mother30 to understand it.32 Mother... you never did understand, did you? You never forgave your33 cousin Nadeshiko for wedding a kind man and bearing *him* two children in34 whom there is a perfection.36 Yes, two.38 It... fits, doesn't it, that as Sonomi loved Nadeshiko, Sonomi's child39 should love Nadeshiko's children?41 Yet, even beyond their differences, my feelings for the one are nowhere42 near as strong as for the other; even though there are reflections, each43 in each, there is just no comparison.45 It is nothing to Touya's detriment. He is... earth, distilled and46 refined to all that earth is, a mingling of all five, protecting,47 guarding, warm under the sun, cool with the night, fertile ground for48 small lives, endlessly renewing itself even as it is endlessly worn away,49 enduring for long years harsh and soft by turns.51 Earth, inexorably drawn to the moon by the forces of gravity, even as52 the moon is drawn to it and it is drawn to the sun...54 It is no fault of earth that I chose to look up instead of down, and55 gave my heart to a distant star.58 Perhaps it would be more accurate to say that the star, just by burning59 as brightly and as gaily as it did, called my heart out of me.61 It would have been... easier, had I wanted the earth. I might even have62 had it, if not all to myself.64 But Sakura-chan is -- *Sakura*. There is nothing more beautiful or65 interesting to me, nothing that I would rather see. For just a moment of66 her in motion, limbs full of their own grace as she runs towards the67 goal... I would sell the whole earth for that to hold in my hands and68 call forth those feelings from my heart each time I gazed upon her, and69 count it well spent in the bargain.71 And I have that, and a thousand others besides.73 I love my mother dearly, but she can act foolish beyond measure. She74 loved Nadeshiko, perhaps even as I love Sakura-chan, and wanted nothing75 more than to be with her forever.77 If Sakura-chan were to dwell in my house, eat at my board, sleep in my78 bed, then no one in all the world would be happier than I am.80 But even now, I am happy.82 When Nadeshiko married Kinomoto-san, my mother was hurt and jealous; I83 don't think she had ever thought that Nadeshiko might want someone else.85 And because she was angry, she went away and never saw her again. Where86 is there sense in that? Where is there reason?88 I like o-sushi. It is good to taste and filling to eat. But just because89 I cannot have o-sushi, shall I refuse to eat o-musubi? Shall I turn down90 chazuke? They, too, are filling to eat, and their taste is not bad.92 Sakura-chan will offer the greater part of her soul into the keeping of93 some lucky other person, to hold and to nurture.95 But that's all right. The sun is bright. Water is wet. Rocks are hard. I96 love Kinomoto Sakura. She will love someone else and be happy.98 And I will be happy that she is happy.101 I don't think Mother ever quite understood that. We were vacationing102 once, on an island. I woke up very early one morning and went down to the103 beach as the sun was rising through the clouds. The water shone for a104 moment like silver and steel, and the clouds were all shot with pink and105 orange and mauve and gold, and the rocks curved down into the water as106 the gulls arced out beyond them and the breeze came salt-laden into my107 face -- that moment, just then, was perfect and eternal, and I was happy.110 (I tried to take a picture, but it couldn't hold it all and didn't come111 out that well anyway -- I wasn't as good then as I am now. It's all112 right; I can still remember most of it, and there have been other113 sunrises, even if they weren't the same.)115 Much later, when my mother woke up, I told her how much I liked it116 there.118 She offered to buy the house and probably the island as well, so I could119 keep the thing that made me so happy and come there whenever I really120 wanted to.122 But you can't do that. You can't own a sunrise, or gulls in flight. Even123 if you lay claim to the place where they are. Even if you put a collar or124 something on the gulls -- even if you put them in a cage, you can't have125 the beauty of their soaring unless they give it to you (and I can't see126 how they could if they were in a cage, anyway).128 So I thanked her, politely, and told her I would rather have a nicer129 camera and maybe some lessons in how to take better pictures.132 Many people, when they first encountered a camera, thought that it would133 steal someone's soul if it took a picture of them.135 You can't do that, of course. Just one photograph, one frame of film, or136 even the entire strip cannot be enough for all of a person, in their good137 times and their bad times, with all their quirks and all their138 inconsistencies.140 But you can, in one picture, capture a *facet* of them. Not all. Not141 everything. But a little piece, one solitary moment of what they are.143 The more pieces, the more you can assemble something vaguely like a144 picture of the person they are.146 And it isn't even stealing, any more than my blurry picture on the147 island stole the sun out of the sky. It's a record of a gift -- the gift148 that that person gave to the outside world, of what they were at that149 moment.151 I have a picture, of Sakura-chan running, limbs full of their own grace152 as she runs towards the goal. A crystallized memory of how she looked as153 she was doing her best, for me and for all of us and especially for154 herself, that I can look at even when Sakura-chan is not around.156 It's one of my favorites; I have many favorites, among all the pictures157 and movies I have taken of Sakura-chan.159 Someone else will be the recipient of most of her soul, and she in turn160 will be given that person's soul to have in her keeping.162 (I'm doing my best to help make sure that that person is someone who163 deserves that very great honor, and will make Sakura-chan happy.)165 And when that happens... she won't have as much time to spend with me. I166 know that. I'm expecting it.168 Love is infinite.170 A soul is infinite.172 Time in a day has a limit of 8, 6400 seconds, according to my173 calculator. And every one of those seconds is precious, and every one is174 no longer than it takes to say four syllables (five if you're quick).176 So time is something you have to divide up. If you have to give time to177 your family, it needs to come from somewhere else... including your178 friends.180 And even... even if she took the time from somewhere that wasn't me, my181 time with her will always be a gift, not a right.183 But I'm not unhappy. I'm content -- after all, how many other people are184 there who don't know Sakura-chan at all? How many other people are there185 whose closest contact with her is to see her skate by once, on her way to186 wherever she's going?188 I, however... I have a treasury of every piece of her soul that she has189 chosen to give me. Whether she's happy, whether she's angry, whether she190 is overtaken by surprise or sorrow; all of them are Sakura-chan, and thus191 all of them are beautiful.193 And each image, a tiny facet in itself, brings back the memories and the194 feelings, and the way it was before and after and during -- sometimes, a195 moment so beautiful it hurt.197 And even that other person... they won't have all of her. They won't198 share in many of these, any more than I'll share in many of their images,199 or either of us will share in most of Touya's pieces of Sakura-chan. Even200 beyond that, there are parts of Kinomoto Sakura that none other than201 herself shall ever see.203 Any more than anyone ever saw some parts of Amamiya or Kinomoto204 Nadeshiko, as much as my mother wanted to. No one else can own all of a205 person.207 So why should I be jealous of the person whom Sakura-chan will choose to208 love?210 I, too, have pieces of her soul.