Chapter Eighteen - Regrets
A World without Misery (Interitus 1: Book 0)
Chapter
Eighteen – Regrets
“Hey,
Vaida, did you say something?” Hatasuko muttered sleepily.
Hatasuko
opened his tired eyes and glanced around the upstairs room. The flickering
candles lightly interrupted the darkness. Vaida slept peacefully beside him
with her face pressed against his side, and her little hands clung onto his
chest. He glanced around for a moment to search for the sound that pulled him
from his sleep, but everything inside the room was quiet. However, he heard
several shouts and voices from the street outside the inn. It seemed like a
strange time for people to be outside and hollering.
“The
tempest is restless like never before. The lost souls are furiously pronouncing
their pain. These screams are deafening. Why are they screaming now? Why
do I hear them?” Hatasuko groaned, knowing that he would not fall back asleep.
Suddenly,
the entire room shook from a citywide tremor. A clamorous roar boomed from
elsewhere in Bones City; it was certainly the sound of shadow spheres
detonating. The massive tremor extinguished the candles. Vaida was startled
from her sleep and jumped onto her feet, and then she fell to the floor when
she heard a distant explosion.
“It’s
here! This can’t be a coincidence. The Interfectus is chasing us,” Hatasuko
said quickly as he threw himself off the mattress.
The
adrenaline rush provided Hatasuko and Vaida with enough energy to prepare for
battle. They both equipped their whips, rocks, shields, and swords. After
opening the window and peering through it, he saw that the transparent layer of
blackness had already eclipsed the stars. The avatar of all anguish stood
behind a curtain of glowing smoke; Hatasuko could see its golden eyes pierce
the darkness. The Interfectus then lifted its massive foot and slammed it down
upon the block beneath it. Smoke and wreckage flew off like a cloud around its
leg. Hatasuko prepared to jump out of the window and into the street, but then
Vaida clung onto his left arm.
Before the city stopped shaking from the impact, Vaida
whispered, “I thought that the memories were locked in my nightmares, but I
forgot who my enemy is. The Interfectus is a nightmare’s incarnate, and so it gives
life only to pain.”
“Bones
City will not fall; we will make sure of that. Are you ready?”
Vaida
nodded. Still clinging to his arm, Vaida lifted her feet off the ground.
Hatasuko jumped through the open window, slammed his feet onto the dirt street
below, and then took off running toward the demon of flashing blades and
shifting shadows. Through the cloud of dust and smoke, Hatasuko and Vaida ran
hand-in-hand toward the Interfectus.
“Forsaken!
We’re forsaken! God can see us, but he will not save us! The Interfectus is
here by divine decree!” announced a man from the roof of a building ahead.
In
the blink of an eye, the shadow claw of the Interfectus tore through this man’s
body with a quintuple splash of blood. The demon lifted its victim high into
the air, spread its dagger fingers, and tore him to shreds in a matter of
milliseconds. The evacuating citizens screamed as they saw this execution, but
screams turned to shouts when the shadow claw transformed into a blade of
shadows.
“Let
go of me! Don’t let them die!” Vaida screamed frantically from behind.
Hatasuko
could tell that Vaida was distraught because of the location, but he also knew that
he had a very short time to block the next attack. Therefore, he let go of her
and accelerated to his fastest speed. He then swung back his sword and prepared
his power. At that exact moment, the Interfectus tilted its blade and then
slashed it diagonally at the evacuees. Hatasuko glared with his golden eyes, unsure
if he would arrive in time to block the strike, but then the monster yanked its
slashing shadow sword just slightly away from him. He now had no chance. He
watched helplessly as a single slash dismembered seven running citizens. The
shadow sword crashed through a small home on the right side of the street,
destroyed it instantly, and then retracted back into the body of the monster.
“Mama,
no, please, no! This can’t be real! Mama, please say something,” screamed a
young child in the street.
In a state of shock and horror, Hatasuko watched a young
boy prod his mother’s corpse on the right side of the bloodstained street. The
top half of the boy’s head had been torn off by the shadow blade’s slash. His
bloody brain was exposed to the smoky air; his eyes shone with a golden glow as
he clenched his mother’s hand.
Though
it was an involuntary reaction, Hatasuko dropped to his knees in the street. He
stared on as the dying boy begged his mother to somehow cling to life. He
begged her to somehow say it was a dream, but his words became slurred and
nearly incomprehensible as his brain bled out in the street.
“Hatasuko!
Don’t look, don’t watch, don’t remember! Please, please stand back up,” Vaida
said, wrapping her arms around him from behind.
As
a deafening explosion shook the city from somewhere to the east, Hatasuko watched
the child die in the street beside them. He could feel another confused, lost,
miserable soul cross from life into the endless abyss. With tears in his eyes,
Hatasuko rose to his feet and hooked his shield onto his back.
“Scattershot!”
Vaida exclaimed, pointing at the airspace in front of the Interfectus.
Without
any delay, she tossed a rock gently into the air and began running; Hatasuko
caught the rock and activated his power. As his roaring muscles glowed with
energy, Hatasuko launched the rock with so much speed that it unleashed a sonic
boom. The weapon ascended so quickly that it struck the scattershot before the
Interfectus launched it. Every shadow sphere detonated and engulfed the upper
half of the monster with blue fire. The Interfectus stumbled backward from the fiery
shockwave, so its massive foot smashed through more homes in the heart of Bones
City.
Hatasuko
began running so that he could catch up to Vaida, but once again, he was too
slow; the demon counterattacked with a sudden slash from its shadow sword.
Vaida flinched because she thought that the monster had aimed for her, but
instead it tore through a running family just a couple blocks away. And though
he could not see it, Hatasuko felt their souls get violently severed from
bodies. The streets shook from the impact of buildings collapsing, but the
tremors were not enough to stop them. Hatasuko and Vaida accelerated as they
ran toward the Interfectus.
“It’s
a fast shot! Double throw, double throw!” Hatasuko yelled.
Vaida
and Hatasuko both stopped running simultaneously. As the Interfectus shot down
another cluster of shadow bombs, Hatasuko and Vaida both threw a rock at the
same time. Though they aimed blindly, relying on chance alone to stop the
scattershot, Hatasuko activated his power and launched his rock with
overwhelming speed. He threw it in such a way that it would strike the
Interfectus even if he missed the shadow spheres, and his gamble was rewarded;
the high-speed projectile blew through the scattershot and struck the monster
in the distance. Sixteen bursts of blue fire drowned out the screams of fleeing
citizens. The fiery shockwave engulfed a tall building at the end of the next
block; Hatasuko and Vaida both flinched when they heard a scream from inside
the burning building. They both ran toward the scream, but Hatasuko knew that Vaida
lost focus on everything else.
“We can try to save them, but don’t run into the flames!”
Hatasuko yelled.
“Why
not? We’re the only ones who can help!” Vaida exclaimed.
“Because
you’re more vital than they are! You save scores of lives every time we fight.
They do not! Your life is worth a lot more than theirs,” Hatasuko reasoned.
But
Vaida retorted, “My life isn’t worth anything. When I think about the man who
gave his life to save me from the flames… I hate it. I hate that he made
that sacrifice. It wasn’t worth it; I wasn’t worth it! That’s why I fight so
fearlessly. Because I’m risking something I shouldn’t have to begin with.”
When
they arrived outside the door of the burning building, Vaida ripped apart the
door with a double slash from her swords. The smoke glowed from the fiery light,
but she ran inside so quickly that Hatasuko could not follow her; she knew that
he would stop her if he could.
As
if it had waited for her to run inside, the Interfectus swung its shadow spear down
from the flashing sky. The spear flew so high that it would strike the second
story of the burning building; it would collapse the structure with Vaida
trapped inside. In a rushed state of desperation, Hatasuko ripped his shield
off his back and threw it upward with a quick flick of his wrist.
The
spear flew faster than his shield. The first weapon of the Interfectus blew
through the second story of the building and crumbled the structure; the third
story collapsed onto the second. A flashing cloud of sparks and cinders burst
into the air. Hatasuko yelled, spun, and slashed his sword through the wall
with enough strength to destroy it altogether. As the second floor collapsed
onto the first, a fiery backdraft blew through the hole and engulfed Hatasuko,
but he slashed his sword with so much force that the flames diverged around his
massive body.
“VAIDA!
WHERE ARE YOU?” Hatasuko screamed as he ran into the flames.
At the other end of the burning shambles which were once
this building, Vaida stood with her back pressed against a corner. She clenched
a little girl in her shaking arms. Though Vaida was terrified to the point that
her strong arms trembled uncontrollably, the little girl was untouched by the
flames. With several swings of his mighty sword, Hatasuko tore a path straight
through the wreckage until he reached her. Bones City shuddered again as the
Interfectus stomped its foot in the distance, but Hatasuko ignored the
deafening screams in his head.
“Vaida!
We have to get out of here. The Interfecti do not go easy on children; it will
not hesitate to attack again. The girl can run away on her own,” Hatasuko said
to her.
With
the glow of fire shimmering in her tear-filled eyes, Vaida looked up and
whispered, “No, Hatasuko. No, she cannot.”
Hatasuko
looked down at the girl clenched in Vaida’s arms. Her skin was stained with ash,
smoke lifted from her hair, but none of her skin appeared to be burned.
Nevertheless, the little girl’s mouth and eyes hung open. Her blue eyes stared
dead ahead; her chest was completely motionless. The black residue of smoke and
ash stained her teeth. A trickle of tears ran down Vaida’s face and cleansed
the ash from her cheeks.
“She suffocated in the smoke. She was strangled from this
world by the darkness,” Vaida whispered as she lowered the girl onto the
smoldering debris.
“I
don’t think we should stay here. The Interfectus planned to fight us here for a
reason. I don’t want anything to happen to you; I’m scared I might not be able
to protect you. Let’s run. Let’s leave the city, and then the Interfecti can’t
fulfill whatever sick plans they have for us,” Hatasuko said to his shaken
friend.
Vaida
sheathed her swords in the holster on her back, grabbed her whip with her right
hand, and grabbed her shield with her left. She glared at the Interfectus with
her good eye as her dead eye stared at the burning wreckage around them. There
was a fierceness in her eyes. She lifted her left foot, kicked off the
half-crumbled wall behind her, and raced toward the Interfectus with a sudden
jolt. As she ran through the smoke and between the flashing flames, she said,
“I won’t run away from this.”
Inspired
by her intrepid decision, Hatasuko did the same. He broke what was left of the
smoldering wall when he tried to kick off of it, but he quickly regained his
balance and ran after his friend. However, he could not follow her directly; he
had to make a detour to grab his black shield from the street.
Though
the Interfectus had not yet destroyed the long road ahead of Vaida, it was
scattered with debris as people ran away from the monster. Vaida dashed in the
opposite direction from the evacuees, running toward the monster. With every
step, she remembered that it had already taken everything from her once, many
years ago in this same place.
The
Interfectus suddenly attacked by extending its massive claw, but the fleeing
citizens diverged and dodged this attack. The shadow claw then lunged at Vaida with
terrifying speed, but she jumped out of the way. As she flew through the smoky air,
the Interfectus tried to dismember her from behind with its giant dagger-like
fingers. But in midair, she flung her whip forward with a deafening crack. The
edge of her whip enwrapped a spoke on a wagon wheel, so Vaida pulled in swiftly
and flung herself away from the high-speed shadow claw. As soon as her running
feet hit the ground, she yanked her whip free and raced toward the Interfectus.
The Interfectus swiftly attacked again with a tremendous
slash from its extended right arm. This shadow blade flew down from the sky
like a diagonal guillotine; it was a second away from slaughtering Vaida and an
evacuee. Since the frightened man ran toward her without knowing of the danger,
Vaida suddenly jumped up, slammed her feet against him, and then kicked with
all her strength. The impact sent him flying off to the right, and the recoil
threw Vaida to the left. As the guillotine blade struck the street between
them, shaking the whole block, Vaida landed on the dirt street and resumed
running toward the monster.
Since
the shadow blade was so long, Hatasuko lunged at its far end with a mighty swing
of his sword. As it flew through the air, Hatasuko activated his power, but the
Interfectus was faster; it retracted its arm just milliseconds before Hatasuko
would have destroyed it. His sword tore clear through the street without
slowing down at all, though the impact twisted his giant body. After a complete
swing of the sword, he realized that he still controlled his brief flash of
superstrength, so he followed through with his swing and threw his sword at the
monster. The sword broke the speed of sound with an earsplitting crack, and
when it struck the monster in the chest, its armor exploded with a burst of
sparks and steel. Shards of broken armor rained down from the demon; the sword
had blown apart and sent a storm of shrapnel into its body.
Vaida realized that her golden-eyed friend had distracted
the Interfectus, so she started to run at a more conspicuous speed. Though smoke
and exhaustion oppressed her movements, she charged heedlessly through the ashy
streets. She was only three blocks away from the floating feet of the
Interfectus.
The
Interfectus triggered its first weapon, transformed its left hand into a shadow
claw, and thrust it at Hatasuko at a very high speed. He noticed that the
Interfectus did not twist its body to hasten the strike; this was a sign that
his last attack had done major damage. Nevertheless, Hatasuko knew that he had
to act fast; five shadow daggers lunged toward him at once. He threw himself aside,
twisted in midair, and pulled up his shield. The Interfectus suddenly changed
direction and slammed its massive claws at him from a different angle. The
finger-blades hit his shield like an open-hand slap; the impact slammed
Hatasuko’s back into a brick wall with enough force to shake the entire
building.
Though
his back pressed against the wall and his feet dangled over the ground, his
thin shield was the only thing in between his body and the demon’s claws. The Interfectus
could not break the shield by squeezing its hand, so instead it transformed its
hand into a shadow blade.
With
a sudden slash, the Interfectus tore partway through Hatasuko’s shins. As he
screamed from the excruciating pain, blood spewed from the double injury.
Hatasuko fell onto his feet, but since his torn legs could not sustain his
weight, he fell again onto his knees. Before the Interfectus could retract its
weapon, Hatasuko activated his power; he spent the last of his quintessence on
a desperate counterattack. He slammed his glowing fist into the sword of
shadows, shattered the entire segment, and forced the demon’s arm to snap
partway down.
Despite
this injury, the Interfectus slammed its massive foot down upon a street in the
distance. The entire city shook and shuddered from the earthquake; the nearest building
collapsed onto Hatasuko as he knelt in the dirt street. When the cloud of
starlit dust faded, he was buried beneath a pile of shambles and debris.
Meanwhile,
since Vaida moved undetected by the golden eyes of the Interfectus, she ran to
the back of a large building, just one block away from the floating demon. With
a quick slash of her swords, she tore her way into the backdoor of a piscileo
processing factory. This factory was one of many in Bones City, but Vaida knew that
she could access a powerful weapon here.
“That
narrowing hose has to be here somewhere. Come on, where is it? Where is it?”
Vaida whispered to herself with a frantic sense of urgency.
As
the whole city shook in the background, Vaida saw a giant tank of piscileo oil
at the far end of the room. Some entrepreneurs had found a way to use this oil
to fuel lamps and other minor amenities, but the oil tank was generally just
waste. Vaida glanced around the area until she finally found a large hose laid
out on the floor. Though the hose was motionless, Vaida frantically ran
alongside it, following it from the narrow end toward the wider end. The
deafening sound of a fiery explosion emanated from the east; the ground beneath
her feet shook from the shockwaves.
When Vaida reached the far end of the hose, she saw that
it was hooked into the bottom of a very large tank of water. She recognized this
narrowing hose as one of the first machines she had ever studied. The tube was
very wide on one end, but it gradually became narrower so that water would
speed up tremendously inside it. By the time the water stream would emerge from
the thinner opening at its far end, it would flow fast enough to tear the skin
off a piscileo. Nevertheless, Vaida threw her little hands onto the hose and twisted
it until it disconnected from the water tank. She held it closely in her hands
as she dashed back over to the oil tank, but she stopped when she noticed a
teenage girl hiding in the shadowy corner.
Vaida
asked the terrified girl, “Do you know how to hook up the hose? Can you please
do it for me? I need it hooked on the oil tank! I’m begging you.”
“Yes,
I know how. I can do that,” she answered, though her eyes were still frantic.
Vaida
tossed the thick hose as far as she could toward the girl, and then she ran in
the opposite direction. She ran along the narrowing hose until she finally
reached its far end. Two metal shafts stuck out of the nozzle so that a person
could easily control it with both hands, and she grabbed it by these shafts.
A
flash of fiery light lit up the city again; the blue glow shone through a
window up ahead. When the glow disappeared, Vaida realized that she could see
the Interfectus clearly through this window, so she destroyed the glass with a
quick spinning kick. She grabbed the nearest flaming candle, jammed the bottom
of it between the metal prongs in the window frame, and steadied the nozzle
just behind the flame. She then threw her head over her right shoulder.
Though
her dead right eye could not see the frightened girl or the oil tank, Vaida
yelled out, “Remove the seal!”
The
girl pulled the large lever that sealed the opening to the oil tank. Since the
opening was at the bottom of the massive tank, the pressure was very high, and
therefore the oil surged into the wide end of the hose at a high speed. It
charged through the long tube and quickly accelerated. In just under three
seconds, the first spurt of high-speed oil shot forth from the narrow nozzle,
struck the candle, and instantly burst into fire. This giant flamethrower shot
into the sky in just a split second; the concentrated flames struck the legs of
the Interfectus and then engulfed it like a cloud of fire.
As Vaida unleashed the tremendous stream of fire onto the
shadow demon from a distance, she tilted shafts and aimed the nozzle even
higher than before. She expelled the stream of burning oil so quickly that her
dark hair flew behind her head from the hot wind. The high-temperature
backdrafts eventually ignited the window frame with tiny embers. Vaida watched
these tiny flames carefully, but she concentrated on the way that the
Interfectus strived to protect itself.
At
first, it tried to deflect the flamethrower by swinging its arms, but this achieved
nothing; its black-steel armor glowed red from the heat. Before long, the
Interfectus activated its second weapon and summoned a shadow shield to defend
itself, but even this did not work. Vaida merely tilted the hose nozzle and
directed the flames in a different direction. The orange stream of bursting
flames fell beneath the shield and struck the pelvis region on the Interfectus.
“I
still can’t tell if I’m even hurting it. It’s like the shield and flames are
playing hide-and-seek. But maybe this will give people enough time to escape. The
Interfectus won’t kill my city again. Never again,” she whispered.
The
window frame was now completely ablaze. Vaida had to back up so that the fire
would not ride the backdrafts and strike her. As she clenched her teeth,
steadied the nozzle, and blasted the flamethrower at the monster, Vaida used
every muscle in her body just to hold herself in place. The sweat on her face shimmered
from the light of flashing flames; her scars were illuminated by the weapon
which had stopped the Interfectus.
Meanwhile, as Hatasuko stumbled through the ashen streets
with his hands on his knees, he glanced over his shoulder and saw that he left
a trail of blood behind him. He could not run because of the state of his
shins, but he stumbled toward the demon as quickly as he could. As he walked,
an array of black fire appeared beneath his feet, engulfing him with the energy
that fueled his power. Nevertheless, he smiled every time he glanced up and saw
the shadow demon hiding behind its shield. Though he did not know how she did
it, he knew that Vaida had created this spectacular weapon of searing flames.
The inferno that engulfed the Interfectus also illuminated the city; the glare
shrouded every star in the sky.
“If
I can get there in time, if it stays locked in place long enough, then maybe I
can kill it. Perhaps tonight is the night that the first Interfectus falls
forever. I can feel it in my bones. There’s a chorus of lost souls cheering us
on; all of humanity is standing in our corner,” Hatasuko whispered.
But in the blink of an eye, the roaring tempest
transformed from cheering to screaming. Hatasuko braced himself and glared ahead
as the Interfectus finally jumped into the sky; a shockwave rolled across the
city just from the motion of this jump. Vaida’s flamethrower tried to follow its
flying feet, but the Interfectus went too high and too fast. In its throne in
the sky, flying far above the smoke-stained streets of Bones City, the
Interfectus unleashed its third weapon and summoned a scattershot of shadow
spheres. Its scorching armor glowed red, but this did not slow it down at all.
It launched the scattershot as swiftly and suddenly as it could; every shadow
sphere shot toward the roof of the factory building.
With
an urgent rush of adrenaline, Hatasuko grabbed two rocks from his bag and
activated his power; he launched them both in the sky at a supersonic speed.
But despite his incredible strength, he had simply thrown from too far away. The
rocks flew well over the shadow spheres because he had misjudged the distance.
A moment later, every shadow sphere crashed upon the roof of the factory
building and detonated on impact. There were seventeen simultaneous explosions
of blue fire. The four-story factory collapsed on itself with an earthshaking
burst of flames.
Although
he ran faster than ever before on wounded legs which could hardly support his
weight, Hatasuko felt like he had been suddenly paralyzed. The adrenaline
turned to ice in his veins. As he dashed toward the flaming factory at full
speed, the voices in the tempest seemed to warp into a horrifying chorus of
taunting sneers. He knew he had imagined it; he knew that the lost souls were
not against him, but it mirrored his crushing sense of dread.
“Vaida, you have to still be there. Damn it, Vaida,
you have to be okay! I’ve already lost everything to the Interfectus; it
cannot happen again. Not to you! Anyone but you,” Hatasuko said in
between pained gasps as he ran toward the burning building.
Blood
sputtered out from the gashes in his legs with every running step. The wounds
were deeper than he originally realized, but it didn’t matter to him at all.
Only one thing mattered. He was now only a block away from the burning wreckage
which had once been the piscileo factory. Hatasuko sprinted toward it without regard
to pain, his blood loss, or the eyes of the Interfectus floating over the wreckage.
It was only by luck that the monster could not see him; a thick cloak of black
smoke blocked its golden eyes.
Hatasuko
ran into the flaming shambles, looking ahead only enough that he could run through
the wreckage which had not yet caught fire. The air was flooded with thick
smoke; he could detect a familiar stench beneath the stronger scent of oil. His
blood turned to ice as soon as he recognized the stench of burning flesh, and
his eyes became wide when he saw a burning body crawling away from a pile of
flaming debris. This body stopped crawling before he could reach it. He was
horrified at first by the possibility that he had just watched Vaida burn to
death, but he managed to stop and see that that this person was too short. This
was not Vaida.
On
half-torn legs covered in ash and blood, Hatasuko ran deeper into the inferno. He
saw a very large opening in the burning wreckage, almost like an oasis in a
firestorm. He ran through the flames toward this clearing. As he ran, the
flames scorched his legs and forced his blood to sizzle. The jagged rocks and
twisted metal tore through his smoldering shoes. He ran into a giant cloud of
steam which plumed from the burning wreckage, and soon he found Vaida lying on
her back. The steam swirled around her. Her eyes were open, but she stared
hollowly into the smoky sky. As Hatasuko ran across the clearing, he realized
that glass and water scattered the ground. A huge tank of water had shattered
in this place; it was the only reason that the inferno had not devoured Vaida.
When Hatasuko reached her, he dropped onto his bloody knees and inspected her,
looking everywhere for injuries.
Vaida’s body shimmered from the light of the fire that
raged on around them. Deep bruises stained the left side of her body; her blood
stained the thin puddle around her. She was motionless and unresponsive, and
with a body-shaking rush of fear, Hatasuko suspected that smoke inhalation had
taken her life. He glared at her chest and confirmed that she was breathing.
Vaida was alive, but she did not move at all.
“Shadow
bombs hit the building. It collapsed on you. It’s just like the night your
world ended in fire. You probably had to crawl here. Oh, Vaida, your heart
wasn’t ready to handle this,” Hatasuko whispered, wiping the tears from his
eyes.
“And just like everything else, it will
only get worse from here,” Adishina whispered from the edge of the tempest.
Hatasuko
glanced around and saw that the flashing flames were closer now. The flames boiled
the edge of the puddle, evaporated the water in the wooden floor, and slowly
crawled closer to Vaida.
“You’ve
already lost so much to fire. I won’t let it take you. I promise you. I promise
you that I won’t let you die in here,” Hatasuko said to her catatonic body.
“You shouldn’t promise something you
know you can’t give. Hope only exists to strengthen the power of darkness. It
makes us believe there’s some way out of the shadows when there so obviously is
not, and then it all just hurts so much worse,” said Adishina.
“It’s
not hopeless. It can’t be hopeless.”
Hatasuko
lifted his paralyzed friend into his big arms and stood up to his full height.
Just the process of standing caused blood to leak from the massive gashes on
his shins. The flames burned so brightly that he could hardly see the wreckage.
There was no path through the fire anymore. The inferno had them surrounded,
and since it was clearly fueled by a large presence of oil, it would not burn
itself out. There was no way out. The flames would inevitably evaporate the
rest of the water and engulf them both. Hatasuko’s legs afflicted him with excruciating
pain as punishment for standing, so he lowered himself and his friend into the
tiny puddle once again.
“I
won’t let it take you, Vaida. I won’t let it.”
Hatasuko
lowered his giant body on top of his catatonic friend. Vaida was completely
covered by him. As they huddled there, in the shrinking oasis as the walls of
the inferno inched closer, Hatasuko stared into her hollow eyes. Her scars
looked like they shone from the light of the fire. He stayed like this for a
short while, almost completely motionless.
“Are
you really going to sacrifice yourself? As dark as you’ve become, you are still
humankind’s only chance,” whispered Adishina.
“This
is my life. This is my sacrifice,” Hatasuko muttered in response.
“Don’t
do it. Please don’t do it. Please run; I’m not worth it. I’m not worth your
sacrifice. I’m not worth your life,” Vaida whispered from underneath.
Despite these words, her teary eyes remained empty.
Except for an intense state of shivering, Vaida remained motionless. Her
fingertips clawed against the ground as she spoke again in a frantic voice.
“I’m not worth anything!
I’m not worth this. Please go. Dad, please run. Please. Please!”
“What? No, Vaida, you’re dreaming! That isn’t, I mean, I
guess it is, but-”
“GET OFF OF ME!” Vaida screamed.
Vaida suddenly slammed her fists into Hatasuko’s chest.
He lifted himself slightly off her body as the flashing flames danced around
them. With tears streaming from her furious eyes, Vaida slammed her fists
against him again and again from underneath.
“I WON’T LET YOU DO THIS! Hatasuko, get off. GET THE FUCK OFF OF ME! Don’t you dare sacrifice yourself for this. I
won’t let you. I won’t let you. I won’t let you. I won’t let you. I won’t let
you. I won’t let you. I won’t let you,” she said, hitting him again with every
repetition.
“I won’t let go of you. I won’t let the flames take you.”
Vaida finally fell silent. Her fists dropped to her sides.
She fell flat against the wet floor as her tear-soaked face glistened from the fiery
glow. She whispered through her tears, “I hate you, dad. I hate you so much for
leaving me. You left me to live with this pain all alone. I won’t ever forgive
you. I won’t ever forgive you.”
“This is a sacrifice I have to make, Vaida.”
“This is a sacrifice that no one asked you to
make. I hate myself, Hatasuko! I hate myself, I hate my
fragile heart, I hate my ugly scars, I hate my memories, and I hate
that death is the only way I can escape any of it. I hate that I lost my
parents. I hate that they died just trying to protect me. I hate
that they were so wasteful. I hate that they didn’t stop to think about
how much it would hurt me. I hate that I see him burn every time I see
my scars. I hate that this one memory has this much power over me.
Please, please, Hatasuko, please don’t make me go through that again. Just let
me burn. Just let the fire take the girl it created. Don’t let me watch you die
too.”
Hatasuko stayed silent for almost a minute, just
processing everything that she said. He did not even notice that he was crying
until his ashy tears dripped onto her face. Though she was conscious now, Vaida
still shivered uncontrollably. Her eyes were slammed shut, and her fingertips dug
into the wood at her sides. The flames were closer now than ever.
“Hatasuko, please
listen to me. I think there is a way out of this. When you activate your
Astrodeus power, your body and your weapon become unbreakable, right? That’s
the only way your sword survives striking an Interfectus,” Adishina offered.
“Yes,
I do believe that’s right,” Hatasuko answered.
“Then
grab the far end of your shield. Hold it like a fan, use your power, and make a
gust of wind. It won’t destroy the fire, but it can make a path through it,”
Adishina suggested.
“I have to try it. Vaida, you’re half-right. I cannot
die in here, but neither can you! We’re getting out. Stay down, but get ready
to run. You’re probably gonna be faster than me,” Hatasuko said.
Without waiting for an explanation, Vaida crouched and
glared at the flames around her. Hatasuko detached his shield, stood up, and
pulled it back with both hands. With a luminous activation of his power,
Hatasuko swung his shield with so much force that he spun around six times in a
single second. A tremendous gust of wind flew out from his glowing shield,
struck the flames, and blew them away for a brief moment. Vaida lunged out and sprinted
across the path with the smallest flames; Hatasuko followed behind her before
the inferno could rekindle. When they emerged out into the dirt street, their
bodies were so exhausted that they collapsed together in the dirt and ashes.
They watched from a short distance as the factory building burned.
“You were too
willing to let yourself die,” Vaida whispered.
“I don’t want to see you in pain ever again,” he
answered.
“Please stop lying, Hatasuko. Please stop hiding
yourself from me. I know you want to protect me… and you see me as helpless,
fragile, hopeless. I know. But it’s more than that. You’re more like me than
you realize. You’re just as hurt as I am, and you want to escape. You want to
escape this just as much as I do! I have one eye that can only see the past,
but both of your eyes are locked in darkness,” she said.
As the rampaging monster assaulted the city in the distance, Vaida shifted her gaze and stared at his golden eyes. Her scars looked sharper now than they did before; the extreme heat had irritated her burns. She said to him with a dejected stare, “I may seem like the one who’s tragically sad, but that’s because you hide your heart in a steel box. Our friendship works because misery loves company, and no one in this world is as miserable as you.”
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