Shattered Boundaries | By : Crya2Evans Category: Final Fantasy VII > General Views: 836 -:- Recommendations : 0 -:- Currently Reading : 0 |
Disclaimer: I do not own Final Fantasy VII, nor any of the characters from it. I do not make any money from the writing of this story. |
Disclaimer: I neither own
Final Fantasy VII nor profit from the writing of this fic. I am merely
borrowing without permission from Square-Enix.
A/N: This is a ten-part series of
related one-shots that is a prequel to my Shattered Ice Redux and Shattered Dreams
Arc.
Warnings: Yaoi, Het, Lemon, Lime, Oral,
Language, Implied Rape
Pairings: Reeve/OC(f), Reno/Reeve
Shattered Boundaries: As We Were
The haze of pollution and
smoke hung endlessly over the slums of Midgar, like a vapor of forgotten dreams
and fallen idols. It stank, as it always did, the odor of failed times and the
decay of a golden memory. The mako reactors loomed over the tattered remains of
poor homes, the gaudily painted whores standing on the corner and the beaten, dejected
men shuffling along with haunted eyes. They stood a mockery of ShinRa’s
brilliance and a testament to all those in the shadow of the mega corporation
that they were truly beneath notice. Only five years in existence, yet the
reactors and the plate had quickly degraded the lives of those living beneath
them.
The thin boy with bright red
hair stood huddled against the cold, lingering on the corner with wary eyes and
gazing intently at those around him. He knew these streets well, knew the
shadows and the secrets, they had been his home for his entire life. It was
something he understood, loathed deep within the constant grin and underneath
the strained look to his eyes, the same that all slum-residents wore, that he
could never escape from them. Never escape from the hand that fate had dealt
him.
His clothes were tattered
like the others around him. A thin, cotton shirt hung on his bony shoulders,
accompanied by a pair of jeans patched several times over and boots,
thick-soled, probably the most expensive and well-kept item he wore. He was
ignored by those milling about him, the same dismissal that all those who lived
in the slums learned to adopt. It was best to keep one’s eyes to themselves,
lest one finds themselves pulled into a dark alley and robbed for all they’re
worth, which wouldn’t be much.
The red-haired boy was not
standing on the street without purpose. Despite his shivering, his aquamarine
gaze was intently studying the buildings around him as if searching for
something or someone. And he was.
“Ichi! Ichi!” His name was
yelled above the quiet crowds, almost drawing all attention his way were it not
for the impassivity that all slum-residents had developed. The red-haired boy,
Ichi, short for Ichigo, sighed and rolled his eyes dramatically, turning his
head to spot the grungy, shaggy-haired boy that was calling his name.
The just as shabbily dressed
blond ran his way, darting out from a dark alleyway, his holey sneakers
slapping loudly against the pavement. Les, as the thin boy had taken to calling
himself since no one of their gang remembered their real names, was supposed to
be watching their current mark.
“Ichi!”
“Dammit, Les!” cursed Ichigo,
grabbing the boy by the back of his shirt, and the two stumbled into the
shadows of an overhang where a street light had long gone out, the bulb to
never be replaced. “Wha’d I tell ya bout callin’ m’name, yo?”
“Sorry boss,” the boy gasped
as he grinned, not appearing the least bit apologetic. “But Merel say it’s near
‘tat time.”
Blue eyes blinked as Ichigo
considered his words, gaze shifting over the crowds outside. This was his first
time trying to lead the Razors on his own. They were a relatively small gang
now, only seven members. That damn street fight two weeks ago had nearly wiped
them out, his older brother included. Ryu was only his half-brother but still
the only family he had had.
Ichigo never knew his mother.
She had disappeared after giving birth to him, leaving his poor father alone
with a baby to raise. And now Da was dead, too. Another victim of ShinRa’s
mockery, he had died in an accident at the Number 5 Reactor. Ichigo supposed he
was one of the lucky few. He actually knew his Da, Kurogane, for a time, but
before he had even hit puberty, he had found himself an orphan. If it hadn’t
been for Ryuuken, Ichigo was certain he would have died on the streets of the
Midgar slums.
The golden city of dreams.
Perish the thought.
Chewing his lip in thought,
Ichi released Les and idly rubbed the still healing marks on his face, wincing
when his calloused finger caught on a ridge of flesh, nearly tearing open the
wounds again. Though they were almost six months old, his constant picking and
scratching kept them from healing properly. He hated the marks and all that
they implied.
He hadn’t told anyone in the
Razors how and why he had gotten the tattoos or about the bruises for that
matter, and Yeris had nearly fought him trying to find out. Curious bunch of
nosy brats. But no matter how much they poked and prodded, he kept his secret
safe.
He didn’t want to admit
anything about Daren, the first serious mistake he had made. When Ryu had seen
what had become of his younger brother he had punched him upside the head for
being such an idiot. He hadn’t expected Daren to suddenly turn on him, knocking
him out with some sort of drug. Ichi had woken up groggy and disorientated with
his face throbbing like someone had gone after him with a lead pipe.
It wasn’t until he looked
into the mirror that he had realized what had happened. Daren had marked him in
the same way he marked all of his male tricks. Anyone who took one look at Ichi
would assume he was for free with Daren taking in the profits. He supposed it
was his ex-boyfriend’s way of punishing him for fighting back when Daren had
tried to smack him around again.
The fact that Daren was dead
didn’t stop them from coming either. It only made his life that much more
complicated, not that it wasn’t already. He had been fine beneath Ryu, learning
from his brother, but now, he was on his own without Ryu’s advice. He only
hoped that he didn’t get them all killed somewhere along the way, especially
with his half-baked and somewhat reckless idea.
To steal from Don Corneo?
It was madness. But they
needed cash, and they needed it quick. Ichi was good at what he did, one of the
best thieves and pickpockets in the slums. It was the others he was worried
about.
He eyed Les, fingers itching
suddenly for cigarettes he didn’t smoke. They would have done something for the
curdling fear in his belly.
“Merel be sure?” he
questioned, pinning the other boy down with his overly bright eyes. Like most
of the residents of the slums who tended to collect around the mako reactors,
Ichi’s eyes glowed with an overflow of mako infusion.
Les nodded. “Ye’.”
Taking a deep breath, Ichi
cracked his neck, finally rousing from his nearly frozen position. He moved to
the mouth of the alley, sweeping his gaze over the milling crowd beyond him.
They all had the same, all-too-familiar look to them, only hanging onto their
miserable lives because they were too stubborn to just give up and give in.
Kind of like himself. And though he didn’t honestly believe anyone noticed
anything, Ichi he didn’t want to run into a Shark or a Fang with only Les at
his side.
“Alright, les’ go, yo,” Ichi
muttered, stepping forward into the crowd and quickly getting swept up in the
current. He hunched against the chill, turning right to head in the general
direction of the Don’s house. He dimly registered Les scrabbling to keep up to
his long-legged stride as his ears picked up on idle conversation around him:
bitching about pay, griping about the wife at home, complaining about the
people above the plate, the same as usual. People in the slums were nothing if
not predictable.
His sharp gaze kept a careful
watch for anyone who seemed too interested in his face or his markings as one
hand hovering near the pocketknife he kept tucked into his pants. He was not in
the mood to fend off would-be rapists. Fucking Daren had insured that he would
never sleep or live easily for the rest of his life.
“Ne, Ichi, lemme ‘ave a
smoke,” Les whined, breaking into his internal thoughts.
The redhead shook his head.
“Ya need ta stop ‘that shit, yo. ‘Ts bad for ya.” He wasn’t sure exactly why he
carried a pack of cigarettes, but as expensive as they were and as short on
funds his group was, he had to dole them out like candy, on a by-person basis.
It was actually quite pathetic. Besides, Les was too young to start smoking
already. The boy was only nine and trying to act all grown, consequence of
living on the streets.
“Ryu wudda lemme ‘ave it.”
Ichigo scowled at both the reminder of his brother and
the younger kid’s attempts to trick him. Les was quite the smart little
bastard, wasn’t he? Trying to play on all the insecurities Ichi was trying his
best to hide. It wasn’t going to help his case any though.
He might not have looked like it, but Ichigo Renaurd was
actually quite intelligent. He had a bit more schooling than the rest of them,
even though for his age it was pathetically inadequate. But on the street, book
smarts did not account for much. It was cunning or strength or a bit of both.
Knowing how to solve for some random letter in a series of equally vague
problems had little value beneath the plate.
Smoothly shifting around the
strangers passing by them, some trying to bowl over his slight figure, Ichi
gave Les a sour look. “Don’ gimme ‘hat bull, Les. Ryu ‘ated cigs. Ya
don’ like it, ya can leave, but don’ think ‘nyone else’ll take ya in.”
It sucked, but it was true.
Les was scrawny and young and had little skill. Much like Ichi, Les had been
made an orphan not too long ago and wasn’t as adapted to life on the streets.
While the boy was slowly beginning to understand the finer arts of pickpocketing,
he lacked all knowledge of subtlety. And he hadn’t yet had to kill. In a sense,
it was as if a part of him remained somewhat innocent. Given their life beneath
the plate, Ichi knew it was only a matter of time before Les was forced into a
position where he had no choice.
Much like Ichi himself.
Les pouted briefly and went
quiet for a moment after Ichigo’s last statement, letting loose a brief shiver
as he hurried to keep up with his “senpai.” At the moment, he might not have
agreed with the “boss”, but he looked up to Ichigo, as did most members of the
Razors. Five of the seven of them were younger than Ichi’s fourteen years. And
although Van was sixteen, he still deferred to Ichigo.
“Wha’s th’plan, Ichi?”
Ichigo’s lips curled into a
frown. “Fer start, don’ say, Ichi, dumbass,” he growled, reaching out with one
thin arm to cuff Les along the side of his head. It was reminiscent of
something his brother would have done. “I dun told ya ‘bout ‘hat already, yo.”
The kid managed to look
penitent as he rubbed the spot on his head, though it couldn’t have hurt
anymore than stubbing his toe would have. “My bad. What’s it?”
He waved a hand of dismissal
as he snorted. “Ge’in, ge’out; no noise, no fight. We can’t lose ‘nymore. Not
aftah th’Sharks, fuckin’ bastards,” Ichigo sneered, mind again recalling the
gang fight of two weeks past. It had decimated their gang to less than half,
killed his brother and made them lose their stomping grounds. But Ichigo had
plans. He wasn’t going to live half-assed in the slums anymore.
If he was going to be a
leader of the Razors, then they were going to be the strongest and most
influential gang beneath the plate. He wasn’t going to settle for simply
surviving.
And breaking into the Don’s
mansion was the first step.
Les wasn’t aware of the full
plan because he was both new and unskilled. Ichi didn’t trust that he wouldn’t
screw it up, which was much the same for Merel. The both of them had been
assigned the tasks of waiting outside, scouting out the best escape paths
should it be necessary. Neither he nor Merel had been exactly happy about it
but couldn’t very well argue.
Ichigo took a deep breath as
he broke free of the crowd in Sector Six and found himself standing just beyond
the massive walls of the Don’s home, said walls having been covered with
graffiti already. Large banners and burly guards immediately captured his
attention, and he knew that somewhere just beyond where he couldn’t see, four
other members of the Razors were just waiting for his signal.
He couldn’t help but wonder,
as he mentally prepared himself for the difficult task of sneaking in,
pilfering, and sneaking out without getting caught, if his life would ever be
anything better. With the chill wind trying
to sneak beneath his clothes and a boy far too young to have eyes that old
beside him, it seemed highly unlikely. But if there was one thing that the
slums couldn’t take from him, it was his right to dream.
* * *
As he finished the second
course, a light soup that did nothing to quell the aching hunger inside of him,
Reeve carefully laid the spoon aside without a single clang of expensive
silverware on even more expensive Costa dishware. That would have been a major
social faux pas, one that he had learned at a very young age to never commit
along with several others that floated around in his head, constantly
reprimanding him in a voice that suspiciously sounded like his mother’s
chastising tone.
He resisted the urge to tug
on the tie around his neck, the weight of expectations so thick that he nearly
choked on them. Instead, he swallowed thickly since he had been taught to never
clear his throat in any setting and raised amber eyes to the both of his
parents, who were currently sipping the last of their soup with the same
maddening but socially acceptable pace.
Celia and Kain Tuesti were in
their prime, both barely having crested fifty and approaching the ripe age of
retirement. His mother’s hair was just beginning to streak with grey at the
temples, which she refused to color because she had far too much dignity. His
father’s face was slowly beginning to take on a full range of laugh lines, but
Reeve couldn’t remember the last time he had actually heard his father laugh.
His eyes surreptitiously
passing between the two of them, he couldn’t help but internally remark at how
he somehow managed to be a blend of them both and yet not like them in the
slightest. His mother’s hair and his father’s eyes, his father’s height and his
mother’s build but none of their interests or talents.
Reeve hadn’t quite ended up
according to their plans. He didn’t work in any sort of medical profession, but
worst of all, he held a position within ShinRa Electric Company, which though
wealthy and widespread, didn’t exactly hold the same prestige as his parent’s
occupations as surgeons. Neither his mother nor his father had understood at
first how it had felt for him as a child, growing up within a gilded cage. He
had felt stifled under expectations, and although he hadn’t crazily rebelled,
he had found a way to break free.
Thus, the reason for the
uncomfortable circumstances at the present moment; it was the first time he had
seen his parents since leaving home at sixteen for Academy, though that had not
been the end of communications. Letters and brief phone calls had let them know
he was alive and not out, homeless and on the streets. He finally felt he had
something to offer them in terms of his life that they could not refute. His
recent promotion proved that he had something to show for what they considered
a “rash and random act of rebellion. “They hadn’t realized that he had been
planning his escape since he was twelve years old.
He waited until both Celia
and Kain finished the second course before speaking, keeping his tone
respectable. “It is a shame that Reis was unable to attend,” he commented
politely, his voice sounding incredibly loud in the almost reverent silence of
the large dining hall within their Costa del Sol main house.
His mother smiled, though he
could tell that the gesture was thin, strained even. “Yes.” She paused,
seemingly choosing her words. “She is quite the busy flower after all. Reis
simply could not miss her music lesson for an act of spontaneity.”
Internally, Reeve winced at
her double meaning. Every instance of his life had once been like that, so
carefully structured that he found it amazing they hadn’t trained his body to
urinate on schedule. He also remembered the music lessons well, yet another
disappoint for his mother. Both piano and violin, both of which he had absolutely
no talent for. He simply did not have the ear for the finer intricacies of the
musical language.
“I hear she is quite
talented,” he responded instead, biting back any other comment he thought to
make. It wouldn’t do to upset his mother this early in the conversation, not
when he had yet to tell them the purpose behind actually wanting to see them.
“She plays the violin
absolutely beautifully,” his father explained, face beaming with pride. It was
quite clear to whom they had passed their expectations. Reeve wasn’t sure if he
should feel guilty for forcing that upon Reis or relieved that they had finally
given up on him.
It was then that the servants
quietly made their entrance, clearing away empty bowls, refilling beverages,
and finally bringing out the main dish, served on the same elegant and refined
dishware as before. The flavorful aroma of roasted fowl in an orange glaze,
served with a side of steamed vegetables wafted in Reeve’s direction, making
his mouth salivate. He had skipped lunch that afternoon to meet with President
ShinRa and was incredibly hungry, though he knew better than to scarf it down.
“I would like to hear her
some time,” Reeve suggested quietly as he gave a gentle smile to the servant
who had laid out his plate before him. He and his younger sister, Reis, were
twelve years apart, and he adored her. She was energetic and cheerful, and no
matter what his parents said about him, she remained steadfastly loyal to him.
It was quite endearing.
Celia smiled then, a true smile
that actually brightened her brown eyes. “She would love it if you did. Now,
why not explain the reason for this dinner, Reeve? We are very interested in
hearing what you have to say.” Both she and his father turned their gazes on
him then, eyes piercing and demanding.
He swallowed to clear his
throat, an inexplicable rise of nervousness building within him. That hunger
wilted and faded. It wasn’t so much that he was afraid of what he had to say,
but they were his family. Wasn’t it ingrained in children to seek the approval
of their parents, even on some level? He wanted them to be proud of him, even
if he did not follow their path. And he didn’t want to lose his family either.
He set his fork down,
suddenly not too interested in his meal. “Well, as you know--"
“Do not begin a conversation
with ‘well’, Reeve. It is unbecoming,” his father interrupted before he could
even speak, shooting him an all too familiar disapproving stare. It had begun,
and he hadn’t even said four words.
The executive nodded, wincing
internally. Perhaps he shouldn’t have bothered.
“As I am certain you are
already aware, construction on the new Midgar completed three years past with
the final laying of the plates.”
Celia frowned, her brow
furrowing in confusion. “I was not conscious of this,” she countered,
half-turning to her husband to question him. “Did you know of this, Kain?”
“I called you when they
accepted my proposal,” Reeve insisted, beginning to flounder and suddenly
feeling every bit like he had when he was sixteen, attempting to convince them
he wanted to attend Academy and not the more prestigious Conservatory located
within Costa del Sol. “I sent you update letters once a month as to the
progress of the construction.”
Kain shook his head. “As
eventful as it has been around here, that information must have simply been
misplaced.” He waved a hand towards his son as he picked up a gilded fork with
the other, already looking towards his steaming meal. “Continue, Reeve. I am
sure we will be able to understand nevertheless.”
Misplaced, my ass, his internal voice scoffed. They chose to disregard
the information because it didn’t have anything to do with that they wanted
from him.
Seeing that they were going
to be difficult no matter how he presented the information, Reeve took a deep
breath and barreled directly forward. “Since the construction has been
completed, Midgar has been running at full capacity and the President is quite
pleased with the results. I have been promoted to a member of the board, and I
now own a small part of the company.”
His father’s bushy brows rose nearly to his hairline.
“Simply because you designed the shape of his building, the President believes
you are quite capable of making executive decisions?”
Typical. His father completely bypassed the fact that
Reeve was promoted and instead concentrated on the only negative truth he could
pounce on.
Reeve frowned, his lips
forming a thin line. “I am not an architect alone. I also designed the mako
reactors and their energy output system. I had been working on that blueprint
since my second year at Academy. I have told you this already.”
“I do not understand,” his
mother commented, pursing her lips slightly as she shook her head. “What is so
unique about your design that they would accept it from someone who amounts to
little more than a child?”
He gritted his teeth,
resisting the urge to scream and yell at them in an immature fashion. He didn’t
think it would pierce their cultured core, anyways. Instead, Reeve took a deep
and calming breath, preparing to explain further.
“I combined the eight
surrounding towns and created a distinctive infrastructure that has them
running along the same electrical network. By placing ShinRa Tower in the
center and threading all operations through that base, as well as dispersing
the mako reactors in an eight-spoke pattern, I have made energy cheap and
accessible to everyone.” He smiled then, enthusiasm for his work peeking
through his exterior. “It was my dream to better the lives of those already living
in those towns.”
His father hmm’ed
thoughtfully. “I see,” he responded, neutrally seemingly rolling Reeve’s words
around in his mind. “Since construction is complete, what are your
responsibilities now?”
“I have been made minister of
their Housing and Urban Development department. It is my task to keep watch
over the well-being of the people, as well as track and approve all new
construction,” Reeve explained. His job now basically amounted to piles of
paperwork with him designing new schematics on the side, including certain
requests from the President himself.
“Does that mean that you are
finally ready to settle down then?” his mother questioned, unable to handle her
obvious enthusiasm for this particular subject. “I believe Anastasia has just
graduated and plans on interning with us,” Celia suggested immediately.
On the outside, Reeve gave
them an impassive expression, but inwardly, he was grimacing. He remembered
Anastasia. She was boring, high-class, and essentially snotty. She couldn’t
carry on a conversation to save her life, and her favorite subjects included
herself, her yacht, her summer home, etc. Though she was attractive to Reeve,
her personality killed any affection he might have developed.
The recently promoted
executive shook his head, attempting to return to the meal before him. “No,
Mother. I am in no hurry to marry quite yet and certainly not Anastasia
Drummond. There is still much I must accomplish before I can even think about
beginning a family.” He picked up his fork, eyeing the fowl before him, which
had once looked enticing but now seemed unappetizing since the orange glaze had
long since hardened into a shiny, globulous paste.
He sighed softly, the motion
barely noticeable as his parents sent him a twin set of disapproving looks, his
mother even going so far as to shake her head in censure. “You are twenty-four,
Reeve. No respectable woman will even consider a marriage if you allow yourself
to get too old.”
He opened his mouth to argue,
but a firm buzzing in his left side quickly alternated his train of thought. He
furrowed his brow in confusion, wondering who on Gaia would be calling him. His
secretary knew that he was out of town, and he wasn’t expected in any meetings.
He idly palmed the vibrating phone as he considered his options.
“What is it?” Kain asked,
having noticed the strange look on his son’s face.
Scooting back his chair and
pulling the hand-woven cloth napkin from his lap, only to set it on the table,
Reeve rose to his feet. “Excuse me, please,” he inserted with the slight bob of
his head as he backed away from the table, one hand already delving into his
left pocket. He ignored both of his parent’s incredulous stares as he turned
his back to the table, pulling out his PHS and flipping it open.
“Tuesti here,” he answered
crisply, walking to the far side of the room, where hopefully his conversation
would not be heard. He didn’t even bother to check the display; there were few
people who had his cell number.
Almost instantly, he winced
at the voice that floated through the speaker, grating on his already strained
nerves. “Reeve, darling,” said the female, followed by an amused, giggling,
chuckle. “Where in Gaia are you? Your secretary told me that you had taken a
personal day.”
Reeve sighed, rubbing a hand
across his forehead. Cameron, his current… well, he supposed girlfriend was the
correct term, though he was honestly considering ending their relationship. She
was everything his parents wanted for him and nothing he wanted for himself,
other than her beauty, which only ran skin deep.
He had met her during the grand opening of the Kabuki
Theater in Junon, and it was then that she had revealed her actual residence
was within Midgar. He had been attracted to her stunning looks and obvious
interest in the finer arts of dramatic presentations. She had immediately
recognized him as being a Tuesti, though he hadn’t known her from the next high
socialite that passed.
But recently, her voice had
begun to sound like nails on a chalkboard, and he found even spending twenty
minutes with her threatened to put him to sleep… or force him to fight down the
urge to jump from the nearest high-rise. She wasn’t a bad person by any means,
but like most spoiled and rich daughters of high society, she didn’t understand
a thing about hard work or his dedication to his career. She constantly vied
for his attention and never once stopped hinting about marriage or something
similar. Not to mention that he knew for a fact that her mother was in close
association with his mother.
They sought to bind the
families Tuesti and Tousen into one big, happy, aristocratic conglomeration.
Cameron was nothing if not
predictable and boring, thus the main reason he was already seeking excuses to
end their pathetic one-way relationship in the search for something far more
meaningful. She simply used up far too much of his energy and time for her
existence to be anything more than a nuisance.
“Cameron,” he acknowledged
simply, shoulders sagging with weariness. “I am at my parent’s house right now.
Is it important?”
She tsk’ed at him, and he
could practically see her shaking her head at him, brunet and expensive curls
bouncing around her shoulders. “Silly. You should have told me you were going
home. I would have loved to see dear Celia again. How is she doing by the way?”
He took a deep breath,
speaking through slightly clenched teeth. “Mother is well. I am certain she
will be delighted to know that you are thinking of her. However, we are having
a rather important discussion. Can you and I continue this at a later time,
when I have returned to Midgar?”
Cameron laughed. “Of course,
darling. I shall eagerly await your call. Smooches,” she giggled, her voice
reaching that annoying high-pitch quality that he tended to associate with
young girls.
He clicked the phone shut
without any other word, knowing she wouldn’t take it harshly in the slightest.
Things like that tended to roll off her back like water, as if she were
impermeable to even the smallest hints that he was quickly losing interest in
their relationship. Taking a deep breath, and feeling the angry glares of both
of his parents searing into his back, he slid the phone back into his pocket
and turned towards the table, finding his seat once more.
“Who was that, Reeve?” his
mother interrogated immediately, not even giving him the chance to apply the
appropriate apology and explanation.
He scooted his chair forward
back into position, staring down at a plate that no longer held fowl but now
some chocolate concoction that was obviously meant to be their dessert. It had
changed so quickly. He blinked in slight surprise, dimly registering cherry and
mint chips before looking up and directly into the amber eyes that mirrored his
own in color alone.
“Cameron Tousen. I am sure
you remember her,” he replied quickly, throat suddenly going dry as he reached
for the warm tea to moisten his lips. “She sends her greetings.”
His mother raised one elegant
brow. “You did not tell us you were seeing the first daughter of the Tousen
family.”
Reeve winced. “I did not
consider it a fact of importance.” Meaning, he did not want them to get their
hopes up and believe he was considering marriage when he had so blatantly
claimed he didn’t want to earlier.
Kain Tuesti scoffed
immediately. “Do not be ridiculous, Reeve. Of course it is important. The
Tousen’s have long been good friends of the Tuesti’s. If the two of you were to
marry, it would effectively seal what is already a longstanding beneficial
relationship.”
“We are not going to marry,”
Reeve insisted, resisting the urge to rub his temple before them. “I am not in
any position to make such a decision like that at the moment. I simply do not
have the--"
“Of course you do,” his
mother inserted easily, completely overriding his words before he could even
finish speaking. “You have a well-paying job now and a home, even if it is not
a particularly large dwelling. You are still young. Now is the perfect time to
consider it.” She spooned an appropriate amount of the chocolate confection
into her mouth, thereby effectively ending the discussion.
Frustrated, Reeve wondered
why he even bothered to tell them anything when it was obvious they only heard
what they wanted to hear. He sighed, turning his gaze back down to his own
dessert, wondering why it, too, lacked all attraction. In the end, did it even
mean anything to tell them what he had accomplished?
They were still looking for
him to see the “error of his ways” and return to the life they had chosen, even
going so far as to steer his current path in their direction. Why had he even
bothered at all?
He wondered if there was
something out there he had yet to find.
- - - -
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