Yamanaka Ino (
intraspective) wrote2016-10-07 07:34 pm
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Entry tags:
Sector 5 Church, Midgar, Gaia, Friday Late Night
This time of night all the good boys and girls were in bed.
At least, they usually were in the stories. Ino knew far, far too much about how Midgar (and life in general) worked to think that being up late was any real indicator of good or badness.
She didn't have to be out tonight, patrolling, and she wasn't officially on the clock anyway (not that that meant much) but she'd been away for the last few weeks, out in Wutai since it was easy for her to pass as a native there, and so she wanted to reacquaint herself with her home.
Midgar was an ugly city, all dark metal, rust, and green smoke skies. She still thought it was beautiful, when she saw the flicker and glitter of mako lit streetlights and the old empty-eyed fallen trains. Beautiful in a lonely sort of way, which suited her mood completely.
There'd been no time, out in Wutai to celebrate her birthday (she was twenty-two now), and while the Turks had offered to take her out tonight, none of them had been surprised when she'd begged off. They could go drinking without her.
As she usually did, when she was in this sort of mood, her footsteps ghosted her to Aerith's church. This time of night, Aerith wasn't there. Aerith was (mostly) a good girl.
Letting the door slip shut behind her, Ino approached the flowers, somehow lit by the moon despite the plate overhead (she knew, she'd gone looking once and it still didn't make sense), and knelt down to touch them.
"Hey," she said, smiling slightly as her hair spilled over her shoulders to touch the flowers too. "How've you been? Being good for your mom?"
[OOC: Expecting one, but open for calls/texts, sure.]
At least, they usually were in the stories. Ino knew far, far too much about how Midgar (and life in general) worked to think that being up late was any real indicator of good or badness.
She didn't have to be out tonight, patrolling, and she wasn't officially on the clock anyway (not that that meant much) but she'd been away for the last few weeks, out in Wutai since it was easy for her to pass as a native there, and so she wanted to reacquaint herself with her home.
Midgar was an ugly city, all dark metal, rust, and green smoke skies. She still thought it was beautiful, when she saw the flicker and glitter of mako lit streetlights and the old empty-eyed fallen trains. Beautiful in a lonely sort of way, which suited her mood completely.
There'd been no time, out in Wutai to celebrate her birthday (she was twenty-two now), and while the Turks had offered to take her out tonight, none of them had been surprised when she'd begged off. They could go drinking without her.
As she usually did, when she was in this sort of mood, her footsteps ghosted her to Aerith's church. This time of night, Aerith wasn't there. Aerith was (mostly) a good girl.
Letting the door slip shut behind her, Ino approached the flowers, somehow lit by the moon despite the plate overhead (she knew, she'd gone looking once and it still didn't make sense), and knelt down to touch them.
"Hey," she said, smiling slightly as her hair spilled over her shoulders to touch the flowers too. "How've you been? Being good for your mom?"
[OOC: Expecting one, but open for calls/texts, sure.]
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It was a quiet night. And now he was torturing himself.
Clearly, he was bad at taking advantage of the reprieve.
It's been too long. I lose track, not even sometimes. Time doesn't mean much anymore, I guess.
Except that Ino's life was slipping by, and he wasn't even a part of it.
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Who wasn't part of whose life again?
"Not really," she agreed. "All those big numbers and stuff that mattered, well, they don't seem to matter no more."
It was pretty sad, really, but Ino was better than she'd been, back when it had been new pain.
"Still here, though," she said. "Pretty surprised."
By her living or by his staying around? How about both? It would have been easier if she hadn't had both.
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It would be lonely in here, making up conversations in his head with nobody in particular.
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For conversations with dead people. Ino couldn't say that.
"You probably don't know," she said, "but Tseng and I got married."
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... Was it a nice wedding?
He didn't know what else to say, to that.
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Then, because Ino couldn't be cruel to this voice in her heart, she added, truthfully, "Not real married. It was for a job."
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... Really, Zack?
I mean... I want you to be happy. I really, really do. And if you find somebody who...
Wow, this was hard.
... Who MAKES you happy...
Really, really hard.
But, you know. TSENG.
That part was easier.
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"He was a perfectly acceptable husband," she said loftily. "Though not for me."
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I hope not. He's so... so Tseng.
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"But ain't much my type. And I weren't his either. The wife he ordered me to be were more like someone else."
Ino was judging Tseng pretty hard for that, but it was funny here and now.
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Zack could spot a crush at fifty paces, apparently unless it involved Tseng's feelings for Aerith.
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"Well," Ino said, "her hair's darker than mine, and she's got green eyes, and she likes flowers..."
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... Seriously, Zack. Seriously. You found a freaking camera with his name on it outside the church, once.
...
Which was actually really creepy.
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She laughed again, that bright, silvery laugh that only rarely came out. "But it's so obvious!"
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HONESTLY, ZACK.
Why doesn't he just ask her out, then? Just one date!
Because he clearly hadn't been to the Zack Fair School of Romance.
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"I think he's shy," Ino said helpfully.
She was pretty sure it had to do more with Aerith not being interested and the fact that the Turks could not be, officially, Aerith's friends. She was a job.
Or, well, she was meant to be.
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There had to be at least a dozen different reasons why that never would have worked.
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Wow, could she ever think of all the ways that wouldn't work.
"He probably wouldn't've wanted to if I'd been there," she said lightly. "Since he's my boss and all."
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Zack's friend? Zack... didn't even know, anymore. He'd seen faces. He'd seen black suits. Ino's face hadn't been among them, but Tseng...
Tseng had been there. He could swear he still heard Tseng from time to time.
He's really got to work on his people skills, huh?
There. Winning save for team Fair.
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There are plenty of different realities, he said, finally. Maybe somewhere, everybody gets the chance to be happy.
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"What," she said, "you mean you're not?"
She was sometimes, when she was busy, these days. On nights like this, she never was.
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When questions like that came up, he never did. He fell silent for what had to be a solid half-minute before, finally, he came up with a reply.
How's Silly?
There. Talk about the bird. The bird was not a loaded subject.
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Maybe if they'd never talked, after he'd died, she'd be over him by now. High school loves didn't usually last so long, did they?
But every time they talked, there was still a bit of gladness. She was selfish and lonely. A ghost was a poor substitute for the real thing and, since she wasn't like Aerith, maybe it was just all in her head in the first place. Maybe she was just crazy.
"Still the same," she said quietly. "Silly never changes."
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