|
Silence now the
sound
My breath the only
motion around
Demons cluttering
around
My face showing no
emotion
Shackled by my sentence,
expecting no return
Creed
Reeve awoke in a world of darkness and light, of hot and cold, a place where murderers murdered the innocents for noble causes. But Reeve did not know these things. He did not know where he was or even how he had gotten here. All he knew was that he was in pain and he had no balm in Gilead to ease that pain. His muscles felt weak and watery, as if all the strength had been leeched from them by invisible parasites. All of his heavy limbs were aching and sore, and he felt as if someone had pounded him from head to toe with a sledgehammer. But worst of all was the pain in his head, the pain of all pains. He had the mother of all migraines that no human medicine could hope to cure. It beat against his temples like a mind's demon trying to burst free of his skull and spread its disease to the rest of the world. Hot and cold raced across his scalp, pulsating like a thing alive.
All these physical sensations, were, of
course only the half of it. A hellish
fever was engulfing his entire head like a fiery shroud, and somewhere in the
back of his agonized mind, Reeve knew that the madness that so many old people
succumbed to in their fugue, the madness that had destroyed Sephiroth, the
madness that Hojo had fed on like a hungering man on food, was now threatening
him with its chaotic touch. All of his
thoughts and memories were a jumbled mass of puzzle pieces that could never
hope to be put together again. Memories
of the past, thoughts of the present, and predictions of the future were all
flung carelessly together in one haphazard pile in Reeve's brain, a mess beyond
help. Nothing made sense to him
anymore.
Opening his eyes, the man struggled to make some sort of logic appear in what he saw yet did not see. His eyelids were as heavy as lead, and his black hair was soaked through with sweat and hanging into his eyes like a protective veil. The first thing Reeve saw when his bleary, crazed eyes came into focus was a strange world filled an outlandish breed of light and darkness, looking like an offspring from a coupling by the colors of midnight and the otherworldly green light of the Lifestream. He was hanging in the middle of dark void with thick wisps of green mist floating all around, not allowing his teary eyes to see more than a few feet in front of him ? not that he could have made sense of what he saw anyways. The pain in his skull was so supernaturally intense that his vision kept blurring and distorting, just like his memories, thoughts, and emotions. The scenery ran together until all Reeve could behold through the hammering in his head was a massive blur of black and green.
An
unwitting moan escaping his parched throat, Reeve shut his brown eyes tightly
and waited anxiously for a sudden bought of unbearable nausea to pass. His head pulsed with madness and heat, and
for a moment, he relapsed into unconsciousness, the darkness becoming whole and
complete for a few precious moments before the odious realm he was imprisoned
in yanked him back to reality, forcing him to bear witness to the torturous
silence that it taunted him with.
Gritting
his teeth as if the pain could bring his thoughts back into something
resembling order, Reeve forced his eyes open and made them focus with the sheer
force of his will. His long inactive
neck muscles screamed in protest as he lifted his head slowly until he met some
sort of strange resistance from behind.
His feverish mind whirled, feeding him dozens of words at a time for the
thing that was behind him. One stuck
out beyond the rest.
A
wall. There's a wall behind me.
His
head lolled to the side, and Reeve saw that his right wrist was pinioned to the
stone wall by some sort of metal cuff that cut rudely into the tender flesh of
his wrist. Though he couldn't feel his
hands (the blood had long since drained from them), he instinctively flopped
his burning head to the left to see that his other hand was bound in a similar
fashion, with another metal cuff.
Racking his jumbled brain, he struggled to come up with a word...
Shackles! That's what they are!
It
took a moment for Reeve's wasted mind to clank the thoughts together that being
shackled to a wall with a high fever in a room that was completely black except
for strange wisps of noxious green mist was a very bad thing. A very, very bad thing.
Reeve's
heart began to pound in his chest with a fervor that matched the insanity
threatening to beat his brain to a pulp with its chaotic weight. What am I doing here? he
wondered wildly, trying to focus his eyes so he could discern something
familiar in the world around him. Who
put me here?
Phantoms
of the recent past suddenly rose up in response to his soundless query, leaping
like mnemonic demons out of the whirling maelstrom in his mind to reveal the
cold, hard truth to him. Visions
whizzed past him like an out of control slideshow, there and gone so quickly
that he barely had time to grasp them, much less make sense of them.
Files. Papers.
Lights. His office.
Shadow
on the opposite wall. A presence behind
him.
Man! Dark clothes. Ski mask. Can't see his
eyes! Run!
Hitting
the floor hard. Pain from his bleeding
lip. Did the man hit him?
Something
slamming against his head. Darkness
coming. Reno's voice in the hall?
The
man hovering over him! Who?
The
Running Man.
Reeve
was jolted out of his tumbled memories by the undeniable sound of voices
somewhere in this room of light and dark.
Jerking his chains ? he belatedly realized that his feet were shackled,
too ? the President of Neo-Shinra opened his eyes wide and tried to pinpoint
the source of these new voices.
Somewhere in the back of his rational mind, which was buried deep
beneath all the madness, Reeve knew that he should be afraid of what was developing. What if these people were here to hurt
him? Chances were they were in league
with the Running Man, the kidnapper responsible for his being here. But the tattered remains of Reeve's common
sense were just that ? tattered remains.
All he knew was that there was something else in here other than
darkness and light, and he might be able to get answers regarding where he was
and why he was here.
Try
as he might, however, the man couldn't lock down onto the voices that seemed to
originate from the thick mist itself.
He could definitely hear them, however.
Footsteps of several people echoed in the solitude of his prison,
slicing through the heavy silence like a hot knife through butter. Their voices gained in volume as they
apparently got closer and closer to where Reeve was chained to the wall. In a slight panic now and unnerved by the
disembodied voices that would probably be deciding his fate, he squinted into
the misty green and black gloom, trying in vain to see who his mysterious
visitors were.
The
footsteps abruptly came to a halt, and Reeve's blurry and distorted vision
suddenly caught a brief glimpse of shadowy figures standing fearlessly in the
exotically scented mist, wearing it like a protective cloak. Then he blinked, and they were gone. Their voices, however, remained, and, given
their proximity, he was able to now make the scantest bit of sense from their
words.
"...disappointing
subject," one ? a man ? was saying, and his voice sent a sudden stream of
shivers coursing down Reeve's spine. He
had heard cold, heartless voices before, and until this man's words reached his
ears, he would have said that Vincent and the late Sephiroth were in the lead
as far as deep, icy, callous-sounding voices went, but this new man made
Vincent sound like a peppy cheerleader by comparison.
"I
expected much better results," the Cold One said, his terrifying voice reaching
out from its covering of mist and darkness to pierce Reeve's ears and penetrate
his consciousness, making the prisoner's heart freeze in terror.
"There
something wrong with him? Why is he all
weak and wobbly like that?" a woman's voice with a thick accent of some sort
asked.
"Nothing
I'll concern myself with," the Cold One replied tonelessly. "Just an unfortunate result of the
interrogation. He's as raw as an
exposed nerve and probably insane, too.
Given his current state, death would be a mercy for him."
Reeve
shuddered violently.
Another
man's voice, low and calm with some sort of rasp to it, spoke up. "No death will be issued," it said firmly. "I went through great lengths to bring you
this one. You make sure to keep him
alive, at least. There are some bounty
hunters who will pay a good price for the President of Neo-Shinra. He's no good to me dead."
The
Running Man! Reeve realized
with a start.
"Sounds
like he wasn't much good alive either," the woman snorted condescendingly, her
nasal voice making Reeve grit his teeth.
"I can't believe that Mr. Big Shot President here didn't know anything."
"I repeatedly told you two the same thing," the Running Man said coldly. "He may be President, but that's all he is. And he's only a normal human being, to top it all off. I knew obtaining him would produce no result, and now I have the entire crew of not just AVALANCHE, but the Turks, out for my blood."
"Turks,"
the woman suddenly said softly, then let out a high-pitched laugh as she
apparently shared some inside joke with herself.
The
Cold One ignored the woman's outburst and addressed the Running Man. "Capturing this one was easy enough, wasn't
it?"
"All
too easy," the Running Man agreed flatly.
"Then
I will hear no other complaints from you," the Cold One deadpanned. "Your job is to hunt out the people that I
tell you to."
"You
don't control me," the Running Man snapped.
Unfazed,
the Cold One replied, "No, but I did once.
It wasn't that long ago. Do you
care to recall?"
No
answer.
"I
didn't think so," the Cold One said tonelessly with no hint of pride or triumph
in his voice. "You were a good acolyte,
Titus, and now you make a good hunter even if you don't work solely for the
values I represent."
"Values?"
the Running Man echoed acidly. "You
represent something, I'll give you that, but they are not values. Nothing that goes on down here has any value
to anyone. You and your followers are
soulless, mindless, and heartless. You
aid the Burrower, the Hungry One, the very thing that is the source of the
Planet's disease. But you are no loyal
worshipper. I know you intend to slay
the monster you've idolized as a god for hundreds of years. I'm telling you, this ill-timed mutiny of
yours won't work."
"What
makes you say that, sugar?" the woman asked in an amused tone.
"The
Burrower is thousands of years old," the Running Man deadpanned. "The last of the Beasts. Killing him isn't going to be as easy as you
both seem to believe. Chances are more
likely of the Planet dying all around us and withering away before you devise a
fiendish plan to slay him."
"As
I was saying," the Cold One continued, as if the Running Man and the woman had
never spoken in the first place.
"You're a good hunter, but tonight your work was...most displeasing."
Silence.
"You
were followed," the Cold One continued, icy voice never wavering. "Two members of AVALANCHE were able to track
you and follow you to the deep sea complex.
What if they had discovered our underground lair? Most humans would have run scared from the
vibes of the complex. These two,
however, did no such thing. AVALANCHE
and the Turks are going to be formidable opponents."
"They
wouldn't have made it to the subterranean tunnels," the woman interrupted
haughtily. "The fear would have gotten
to them eventually."
"I
wasn't expecting the likes of Vincent Valentine to show up," the Running Man
said coldly. "He's more monster than
man." A sly tone entered the hunter's
deep, gravelly voice. "He's almost as
bestial as you, my ex-Lord."
"Vincent
Valentine," the woman repeated with demonic thoughtfulness, as if tasting the
name as it fell from her lips. "An
ex-Turk, am I right?"
"You
do know your Turks, don't you?" the Running Man grumbled.
"You
bet, darlin'," the woman cooed, a nasty undertone prevalent in her nasal
voice. "Who was the other one with
him?"
"Just
some ninja girl," the Running Man said flatly.
"A thief to be exact. She is
not?"
"Her
name is Yuffie Kisaragi," the Cold One suddenly interrupted, silencing his two
companions. "She is the daughter of
Lord Godo of Wutai."
"Wutai..."
the woman pondered thoughtfully.
"I
want that girl," the Cold One deadpanned.
"What
about Valentine?" the woman asked suddenly, a pouting tone entering her voice.
"Oversexed
whore-bag," the Running Man suddenly snapped.
"Vincent Valentine will not offer you the carnal pleasures that you seek
from every man. I'm sure he would
rather die first than submit to your feminine wiles."
"Jealous,
honey?" the woman taunted cheerfully.
"Are you trying to say that you want to be friends like we used
to be?"
"Valentine
will be next to impossible to catch," the Cold One interrupted. "The girl is our next best bet."
"Why?"
the woman pouted. "She's just some
ditzy teenybopper. What has she
anything to do with Valentine?"
The Cold One ignored her and addressed the
Running Man. "Titus, you will bring us
the girl."
Yuffie! Reeve thought wildly. No! She's only seventeen! What would they want with her?
"Easier
said than done," the Running Man seethed coldly. "She will be flanked on all sides by AVALANCHE and the
Turks. Besides, how much do you think
one teenage girl can tell us?"
"You're
just a bounty hunter now," the Cold One deadpanned. "You're not meant to ask questions; it is not your right to do
so. All you are is just more mindless
brawn to be dispatched at the slightest gesture of my hand. You've fallen from grace, my old
friend. My opinion of you, once so
high, has been greatly hindered by your rebellious acts of several years ago."
The Running Man ignored all these jabs. "And what if I refuse to bring you this
girl?"
"It
may be easier that way," the Cold One responded flatly. "One of my other hunters may have better luck
catching her. After all, AVALANCHE and
the Turks do think that you are the mastermind behind the kidnapping of their
friend here. You're all they have to go
on; they'll be on the lookout for you.
How long do you think you can run around freely without me to protect
you from the combined might and fury of both AVALANCHE and the Turks?"
Silence.
"You
are beginning to see reason, then?" the Cold One asked. "Will you bring us the girl?"
A
long pause, then, "Yes. I shall."
"I'm
comin' with you, honey. This will be a
fun way to pass the time," the woman said suddenly.
"You
are most definitely not coming," the Running Man snapped in a low, dangerous
voice, apparently not at all pleased with the situation.
"She
goes," the Cold One said simply.
Another
heavy silence followed, lasting so long that Reeve began wondering if he had
been hallucinating about the voices this entire time. But then the Running Man ? whose name was Titus, apparently ?
answered flatly, "Very well. It is as
you wish."
"Get
on it then," the Cold One deadpanned.
"What
about him?" the Running Man abruptly asked, and Reeve suddenly felt three pairs
of eyes focus on him from the cover of the misty darkness, unseen beacons of
sinister light in this forgotten and unheard of place. He squirmed slightly, just a mere jerking of
his limbs, jangling the chains slightly.
He hadn't the energy to do anything more. Did they know that he had understood all of what they had been
saying?
"I
have not yet decided his fate," the Cold One said shortly, his soulless voice
chilling Reeve to the bone. It was
truly terrifying to know that this man held his life in his hands.
"His
allies will not rest until he is found," the Running Man commented in a neutral
tone, but Reeve thought he heard some strange double meaning in the hunter's deep
voice.
The
woman with the accent apparently heard it, too. "Are you saying we should return him to his friends?"
"No
such thing will be done," the Cold One interrupted. "He shall remain here in his prison until I decide his fate."
No! Reeve thought wildly. Don't leave me in here alone, not with
the fever and madness! Please!
But the footsteps had started up again, only
this time they were moving away, getting softer and softer, taking Reeve's hope
of escaping by some act of mercy with them.
He jerked as hard as he could, which was not very hard, against his
shackles, but that got him nowhere. The
fever in his brain was making his eyesight blurry, and the dark realm of
unconsciousness was suddenly returning to take him back. His limbs grew increasingly heavy as the
pounding in his skull crescendoed to an insane degree, almost obliterating all
other sounds.
Yet,
the last things he heard before the darkness took him under were the fading
voices of the Cold One, the Running Man, and the mysterious woman.
"Indulge
me, big guy," the woman said amicably, addressing the Cold One in a
conversational tone. "Just what exactly
to you intend to do with Mr. President back there?"
"Kill
him," the Cold One deadpanned.
"Wouldn't
that be a bit rash?" the Running Man asked flatly.
"Then
I'll just feed him to the Hungry One," the other man replied in his icy tone of
voice. "The Burrower is always up for
the taste of modern flesh."
Then
they were gone, and Reeve was left alone, hanging limply from the shackles that
bound him to the wall of his prison.