Challenge: [236] Memento
Title: Memento Mori
Word Count: 359
Spoilers: None.
Notes: This has got to be the shortest thing I have ever written :/
He
is fond of reminding her of the fact that she is his plaything.
When
she opens her eyes in the morning, when she shuts off the lights at the onset
of midnight, his presence lingers at the back of her mind like a malignant
shadow, unravelling any train of thought she attempts to compose.
Some
days, she finds a single scarlet rose lying innocuously on her pillow, shedding
its lush scent over the linen; other times, she wakes up to find clumps of white
clover scattered around her dresser, flower-heads nodding sleepily with the
draught from her open window.
Marluxia
is the one who teaches her the secret language of flowers, opening her eyes to
a whole new world of meaning, trapped within their coyly-whorling petals.
Amaryllis
for pride and splendid beauty, edelweiss for daring and courage, jasmine for
modesty and grace. Aster for wishes, and cherry blossoms for the transience of
life; anemone for vanishing hopes, rhododendron for danger and mock-orange for
deceit. She has learnt them all, and wonders what would happen once she is
unable to take any more.
That
day comes when the Keyblade master makes his appearance in Castle Oblivion,
storming through the hollow, hallowed halls with a feverish intensity she has
never seen before. One moment she is alone, staring at her white knuckles clenched
around the spiral spine of her sketchpad, and the next, she feels his presence
over her shoulder, cool, leather-gloved hands settling momentarily upon her
shoulder.
“I
trust you know what to do,” he purrs, gently ruffling her hair in a mocking
parody of an affectionate gesture. She nods mutely, not trusting herself to speak.
Just
as he is about to leave, he leans down to her, breath tickling her ear as his lips curve into a smirk she cannot see, but can certainly feel. “Remember,
little nightingale, if you choose to disobey, to stretch your wings…memento mori, my weedling.”
And
then he is gone, leaving nothing but the perfume of cherry blossoms in his
wake, a delicate fragrance superimposed over what Naminé is certain is the tang
of death, bittersweet and burning the back of her throat.