| hazelator ( @ 2005-10-13 21:08:00 |
| Current mood: | |
| Entry tags: | advent children, ff7, fic: empire, tseng/rufus |
[FF7-AC] Empire: Chapter 3 Chapter Rating: PG-13
Empire: Chapter 3
Pairings: Tseng/Rufus, Rude/Reno
Status: Beta release; Subject to revision
Total word count: 8,105
III
“Sir,
you shouldn’t—“
“Shut
up, Tseng. Now, we know that…”
Voices
roused him from sleep, and Cloud rolled over to check the time. His hand
encountered empty air instead of the bedside table, and he snapped awake
instantly, one hand reaching for the Buster Sword.
Sunlight
hit him in the eyes and he blinked.
Oh.
Junon.
“I
want answers and I want them now.” Strains
of conversation could be heard from the next room, Rufus’ voice raised in
annoyance, and interspersed with the quieter answers of someone that Cloud
couldn’t quite hear.
“If
necessary…” Rufus had lowered his voice, and the next words were lost. Cloud
searched for his boots and started pulling them on.
“Sir,
is that really necessary?” Elena said.
“If
not, kill him.”
Cloud
froze. There was the sound of a door opening, and closing, and someone leaving
down the hallway. Frowning, he shoved his foot into the boot and grabbed the
Buster Sword. There was a confrontation to be had.
--
Rufus
looked up when he entered. The President was propped up in bed, typing
furiously on a laptop positioned across his knees. White bandages showed
through the V in his shirt collar, wrapping up the shoulder wound obtained from
the night before.
“Good
morning,” Rufus said carefully, evidently uncertain of what to make of his
mood.
“Who
are you planning to assassinate?” Cloud demanded without preamble.
“No
one.” Rufus snapped the cover of the laptop shut. “I had merely ordered
investigations into whoever was behind the attempt last night.”
The
frown on his face morphed into a full fledged scowl. “You ordered Elena to kill
someone.”
Rufus
blinked. “Oh. That. We had a lead. I simply authorized her to use force to
extract the information if necessary.”
“You…”
Two angry strides brought him to the side of the bed. “You haven’t changed in
the slightest.”
Some
emotion darkened Rufus’ blue eyes. “Someone tried to kill me last night. I have
a right to know who, or what. Preferably before—“
“—before
nothing. You and your mafia games need
to stop. People’s lives are not for you to dispose of at a whim.”
“Cloud—“
“You will ask Elena to stand down,” Cloud growled, leveling the
Buster Sword at Rufus’ throat.
Rufus
jerked sharply backwards, jaw clenching sharply, something unidentifiable – Fear, perhaps? – flashing across his face, before a gloved
hand reached up to shove the blade out of the way.
Cloud
hadn’t noticed Tseng, silently stationed against one wall, until then. The Turk
angled the blade at the floor, turning to pin Cloud with a stare, anger boiling
in his eyes. “Kindly refrain from doing that,” he said in a low voice.
Cloud
glanced back to Rufus, but the President wasn’t looking at him. He was hunched
forward, breathing raggedly, one hand clenching at the bandages around his
neck.
“President,”
Tseng called softly, and Rufus seemed to snap back into himself, inhaling
sharply, and dropping his hand back to his laptop.
“You
were a SOLDIER,” Rufus said, still not looking up. “You should know that
there’s no room for indulging compassion in war.”
“You
got that scar from a sword,” Cloud said.
Rufus
stiffened, and sat up straighter. “That… is none of your business.
Neither are my methods of inquiry after would-be murderers.”
“Or
perhaps you might like to go with Elena,” Tseng suggested softly. Two pairs of
blue eyes turned to study him. He shrugged. “Perhaps the heroes of Avalanche
know methods of extracting information that we don’t.”
I highly doubt it, was the look that Rufus shot him.
“Or
perhaps more humane methods,” Tseng said blandly. “After all, they are the ones
who liberated the world from the tyranny of Shinra.”
The explosion of the Mako reactor in Sector 5 has resulted in extensive
damage to the surrounding areas…
I calculated the components of that bomb to the T! It wasn’t supposed
to cause that big an explosion! What went wrong?
…at least 47 people were killed and hundreds more injured, not
including reactor staff…
That Avalanche bunch is just as bad as Shinra!
…President Shinra was quoted as calling it “A great tragedy”, and
vowing to take all measures necessary to eliminate the terrorist group
Avalanche…
Cloud
shook his head sharply to drive away the ghosts of the past.
I have sinned.
I can’t save anyone.
He
glanced briefly at Rufus, who met his gaze evenly, but said nothing. With a
scowl, Cloud wrenched the Buster Sword’s blade out of Tseng’s grip, pivoted on
a heel, and headed out of the room. His footsteps echoed angrily down the hall.
-
“The
Chief sucks.”
Most
people would probably have asked why. And considering it was Rufus Shinra he
was talking about, most people would either have agreed emphatically or been
utterly appalled.
As it
was, Rude just gave him a curious look. Or at least, he assumed
it was a curious look behind those dark glasses.
“He’s
not answering his PHS,”
“You
were supposed to call him after we got to the Golden Saucer,” Rude pointed out.
Of course, that has nothing to do with the fact that you’ve neglected
to get it fixed, was what Rude’s raised eyebrow told him.
He
shrugged again, pausing to admire the plethora of chicks in their brightly
colored bikinis scattered across the sand. “A feast for the eyes”, some of the
more seedy magazines called it.
A
small smirk spread across his features as he turned back to Rude. “Hey, this
beach is too crowded.”
“We
could go back to the inn,” the other Turk suggested.
“But
I want a tan. And you need to brush up on yours.” There was a sparkle in
“And,
of course, we can’t tan properly if we’re all suited up…”
The
beach emptied itself rather quickly after that, except for the curious and the
impervious. Someone called the local police complaining about two men and
grossly indecent exposure and unnatural intercourse on the beach.
-
Gentle
hands landed on his shoulders, which Rufus hadn’t realized were still trembling.
He forced himself to relax: taking a deep breath and exerting the iron control
that he had learnt a long time ago. Tseng’s thumbs moved, idly tracing circles
along locked muscles just below the shoulder blades, and with another breath,
Rufus could feel the tension draining out of him.
“Are
you alright?” Tseng asked.
He
tore his gaze from the laptop still clutched between his hands to look up. The
Turk was hovering over him, concern etched in his face.
“Fine,”
he replied shortly, inclining his head at the doorway through which Strife had
departed. “Please close the door.”
Tseng
did as asked, quietly, efficiently, and then returned to his side.
“That
was fairly pathetic,” Rufus said, running a hand through his bangs.
“It
was understandable.”
He
shook his head. “Phobias and ghosts of the past are perhaps acceptable in
people who don’t have enemies. But…” his hand came down to trace the bandage
around his throat, fingers unconsciously following the line of the scar
concealed beneath. “…those who play mind games cannot afford such weaknesses.”
He sighed, mood flashing from critical to impatient to resigned. And reached up
to wrap a hand around Tseng’s neck. “Sit down. You’re way too tall.”
He
could never hide anything from Tseng. Not when they were separated by all the
miles between Midgar and wherever his father had chosen to exile him to, with
only the static filled telephone line to connect them. He certainly couldn’t
hide anything from Tseng when they were this close, skin to skin, mouths crushed
on each other’s, or lying limbs entwined, breaths shuddering as their heart
beats slowed.
So it
was no surprise that Tseng sensed his unspoken apology. Perhaps tasted it in
the bitterness on his tongue, or felt it in some discordant break in their rhythm.
Perhaps Tseng just knew, in that
inexplicable way of his.
“You’re
thinking of Strife,” the Turk murmured softly into his collarbone.
He
didn’t try to deny it.
Tseng
propped himself up on his elbows, dark gaze searching his face. “May I ask
why?”
Rufus
looked away. “I need him on my side. Shinra needs
him on its side.”
“And
for no other reason?”
“None.”
“If I
may venture a blunt question…”
“You
have always had that privilege.”
“Do
you harbor feelings for him?”
“No.”
“And
you would…”
The question
hung in the air, poised like a double edged sword between both of them. Rufus
closed his eyes and sighed. “I would do whatever was necessary.”
A
hair running through his hair, and Tseng’s lips brushing, feather light, across
his brow. “I would not have you prostitute your honor for this.”
He
laughed at that, a short, bitter sound. “We are all whores, Tseng. Didn’t the
old man tell you that? We sell ourselves out to the highest bidder for whatever
they can give us in return. Fame. Money. Influence. Power.”
“For
the sake of a company?”
“For
the sake of the world,” he said sharply.
He
knew that Tseng didn’t understand. Different backgrounds. Different cultures.
Different gut level reactions, for all that they had been together for years
now. For all that they shared a bed and a life. Tseng might have left Wutai,
but Wutai had never quite left him; its concepts of honor and its lure of a
simple life unconcerned with the outside world still buried somewhere deep
within his heart. Impossible, then, for him to understand a world built around
power and money and little else; impossible for him to envision, let alone
comprehend, the gut level reaction to consolidate, network, interact… to draw
all potential resources to oneself before they became potential enemies.
He needed Strife, hero of the new world… this haunted boy who
was far, far more important than he thought he was. The world
looked to Cloud Strife for direction and inspiration, sheep looking to their
shepherd to point them in the right direction, to tell them what was good and
evil… no, to wring those stupid, bigoted concepts from a world in which they
did not actually exist. And if Strife declared Shinra Company to be evil and
damned it to hell, then the world damned Shinra Company to hell, and Rufus
Shinra with it.
And
if he went down, so would Tseng, because a Turk’s loyalty was absolute.
His
shoulder throbbed where the assassin’s bullet had found its mark.
This is not merely a fight to rebuilt Shinra Company. This is a fight
to survive.
And
that much Tseng could understand. Could probably understand better than he
could. Survival was paramount. Honor and love were useless luxuries.
Impediments.
He
had abandoned those notions a long time ago.
“I’m
sorry,” he said again, because Tseng deserved better than this. Because, once
upon a time, Rufus Shinra had had his chance, and he had blown it completely. Because
Tseng, as well as Rude and Reno and Elena, had said no word of blame, merely
picking up the pieces behind him and standing by his side even after his fall
from grace.
“No
apology necessary,” Tseng murmured.
Because
damned if he was going to let them down a second time.
-