Subaru was still sitting in the park. The little fool had been waiting on that bench for hours, his gaze scarcely wavering from the snow-bound cherry tree.
What did he think that he'd accomplish there?
Seishirou shrugged off the farsight vision for a moment, letting his mind return to the low-lit confines of his apartment's living room. Picking up the glass by his side, he took a measured sip of its contents, savoring the sweet, pleasant fire of the alcohol. Then once more he glanced across the distance, amused by the persistence of his enemy.
Not such a /little/ fool, of course. Not anymore. Subaru had grown taller in the intervening years, his face leaner with developing maturity. He dressed casually, now that he wasn't a victim of his sister's fashion whims, and it made him look less like...how had she put it?...a "dress-up doll." And the eyes...those were most different of all. They had ceased to be such drowning pools of innocence, shimmering with every emotion that touched his heart. Subaru had had eyes like an animal's, Seishirou thought, eyes that understood nothing--and perhaps there was a time when Subaru might have been flattered by at least part of that comparison. Those eyes had narrowed though, and they guarded themselves: deep green mirrors no longer full of light. There were things that he had come to understand.
But he was still a fool.
Seishirou looked away from him again, long enough to find the stereo remote. He thumbed it on, and the CD-player whirred softly, shifting through its program. As that ended and the low pulse of music began, Seishirou leaned back against the cushions of his chair. He closed his eyes and smiled at the Sumeragi heir: out haunting Ueno Park on this winter's night, so very like the ghosts it was that family's work to ease.
<So restless and so futile...are you waiting for me to discover you there? Will you challenge me, when I arrive to defend the cherry tree barrow? What nonsense. I have better things to do with my time, I assure you. Especially on a night as cold as this.>
<Did you really think that I would come to you?>
Seishirou's eyes opened slowly, one golden-brown and one a cloudy swirl of white. He gazed at Subaru with mild curiosity, wondering what passed through the other's mind at times like these.
<What is it you hope for? What do you intend to do? Strike out against the sakura itself?> Seishirou chuckled softly at that.
<Well, perhaps you're only there to torment yourself....>
<You've always had a talent for suffering.>
Subaru stood up and began pacing in front of the bench, something he'd done more than once already. Most likely he was trying to keep warm. Seishirou watched him cough briefly, and flick the end of his cigarette into a snowbank. The sound of the cough was quiet, muted by distance; the music on Seishirou's end nearly drowned it out. After another moment Subaru paused, and made a halfhearted attempt to feel for scrying. Seishirou thinned his farsight out deftly, diffusing the field of vision across the entire end of the park, and Subaru, seeking a direct gaze, didn't notice him at all.
<Clumsy, Subaru-kun. You're usually not so careless.>
Subaru searched for a little while longer, but his determination appeared to waver and he soon gave up the effort. Seishirou watched him slump onto the bench again. It was like observing something from the corner of one's eye, discerning what could only half be seen. In the dimness and from this new, unfocused vantage, the onmyouji was scarcely visible: a blur of shadow and motion that soon became still.
That waited, as if the gesture itself was what mattered.
<Well, I suppose it's not important what your reasons are. There's nothing you can do out there that would affect me. If your presence near the sakura was any sort of danger, I would have already taken care of it. Believe me-->
<I would not have spared you.>
What did he think that he'd accomplish there?
Seishirou shrugged off the farsight vision for a moment, letting his mind return to the low-lit confines of his apartment's living room. Picking up the glass by his side, he took a measured sip of its contents, savoring the sweet, pleasant fire of the alcohol. Then once more he glanced across the distance, amused by the persistence of his enemy.
Not such a /little/ fool, of course. Not anymore. Subaru had grown taller in the intervening years, his face leaner with developing maturity. He dressed casually, now that he wasn't a victim of his sister's fashion whims, and it made him look less like...how had she put it?...a "dress-up doll." And the eyes...those were most different of all. They had ceased to be such drowning pools of innocence, shimmering with every emotion that touched his heart. Subaru had had eyes like an animal's, Seishirou thought, eyes that understood nothing--and perhaps there was a time when Subaru might have been flattered by at least part of that comparison. Those eyes had narrowed though, and they guarded themselves: deep green mirrors no longer full of light. There were things that he had come to understand.
But he was still a fool.
Seishirou looked away from him again, long enough to find the stereo remote. He thumbed it on, and the CD-player whirred softly, shifting through its program. As that ended and the low pulse of music began, Seishirou leaned back against the cushions of his chair. He closed his eyes and smiled at the Sumeragi heir: out haunting Ueno Park on this winter's night, so very like the ghosts it was that family's work to ease.
<So restless and so futile...are you waiting for me to discover you there? Will you challenge me, when I arrive to defend the cherry tree barrow? What nonsense. I have better things to do with my time, I assure you. Especially on a night as cold as this.>
<Did you really think that I would come to you?>
Seishirou's eyes opened slowly, one golden-brown and one a cloudy swirl of white. He gazed at Subaru with mild curiosity, wondering what passed through the other's mind at times like these.
<What is it you hope for? What do you intend to do? Strike out against the sakura itself?> Seishirou chuckled softly at that.
<Well, perhaps you're only there to torment yourself....>
<You've always had a talent for suffering.>
Subaru stood up and began pacing in front of the bench, something he'd done more than once already. Most likely he was trying to keep warm. Seishirou watched him cough briefly, and flick the end of his cigarette into a snowbank. The sound of the cough was quiet, muted by distance; the music on Seishirou's end nearly drowned it out. After another moment Subaru paused, and made a halfhearted attempt to feel for scrying. Seishirou thinned his farsight out deftly, diffusing the field of vision across the entire end of the park, and Subaru, seeking a direct gaze, didn't notice him at all.
<Clumsy, Subaru-kun. You're usually not so careless.>
Subaru searched for a little while longer, but his determination appeared to waver and he soon gave up the effort. Seishirou watched him slump onto the bench again. It was like observing something from the corner of one's eye, discerning what could only half be seen. In the dimness and from this new, unfocused vantage, the onmyouji was scarcely visible: a blur of shadow and motion that soon became still.
That waited, as if the gesture itself was what mattered.
<Well, I suppose it's not important what your reasons are. There's nothing you can do out there that would affect me. If your presence near the sakura was any sort of danger, I would have already taken care of it. Believe me-->
<I would not have spared you.>