saya minatsuki ; fourproud_illusionFebruary 14 2010, 01:51:30 UTC
She barely managed to keep the blade that shot out from the door from slicing through her as she drew her gun quickly and deflected the blade with the barrel as she held it sideways. That’s when Creed appears. Creed was a partner that Train had long ago, and grew infatuated with the Black Cat and his cold-blooded killing abilities. However time with Saya had softened Train, made him be able to smile and took away the coldness in his eyes, and Creed hates her for it. So it quickly turns into a fight which Saya can tell that she can’t win in that scenario, as Creed attacks her with such bloodlust she can’t fend it off very well. Managing an escape through the window, she manages to lead him out into a more deserted part of town. Assuming that she had made an attempt to run away, Creed taunts her, to which she only smiles back. Then she shoots a bullet in the complete opposite direction from him, it ricochets off one item, then another, before managing to find purchase in his leg. The Reflect Shot: which Saya had spent five years perfecting, and her signature technique. It looks like the fight is well-matched, when suddenly Saya hears voices. Children, who wandered away from the festival that was being held. She looks away for a moment, about to tell them to run away--
And then she’s stabbed.
Creed, the dirty bastard that he is, took the opportunity to make a hit to Saya’s vitals as she was distracted. Next he was walking away, but Saya couldn’t give up yet. There was a gut feeling that if she let him go, he’d cause a lot of pain for other people. He was just about to dispose of the children who acted as witnesses when she raised her gun and mustered all her strength to pull the trigger and break his sword as it makes direct contact with the blade from close range. The children run away, but Creed is not happy in the slightest. Picking up the bladed portion without the hilt, he walks back to her, proclaiming that if he’d left her there, she would’ve died from blood loss. But for good measure, he’d carve out her heart. But just as he raises the blade, Train comes out of nowhere and socks him in the jaw.
Creed eventually retreats as he can sense the malice coming from Train, and just as Train is about to dash after him, Saya grabs onto the edge of his jacket. He tries to talk to the dying Saya, telling her not to speak even though she goes on about having something to tell him. She seems very at peace with the situation, telling him how she planned on moving soon anyway. She’d been staying there for too long, and once she got him to smile… she felt like everything was fine and she could move on. She recaps her life, all the people she met, all the places she went to, and admits that Train was the only one that she ever considered a friend. Tears begin to fall from her face, and she wonders why she’s crying. It’s so silly. Her final message to train is that it was okay. He could forget about her and move on with his life. He didn’t need to hold on to her memory or take revenge… it was okay.
And then she’s stabbed.
Creed, the dirty bastard that he is, took the opportunity to make a hit to Saya’s vitals as she was distracted. Next he was walking away, but Saya couldn’t give up yet. There was a gut feeling that if she let him go, he’d cause a lot of pain for other people. He was just about to dispose of the children who acted as witnesses when she raised her gun and mustered all her strength to pull the trigger and break his sword as it makes direct contact with the blade from close range. The children run away, but Creed is not happy in the slightest. Picking up the bladed portion without the hilt, he walks back to her, proclaiming that if he’d left her there, she would’ve died from blood loss. But for good measure, he’d carve out her heart. But just as he raises the blade, Train comes out of nowhere and socks him in the jaw.
Creed eventually retreats as he can sense the malice coming from Train, and just as Train is about to dash after him, Saya grabs onto the edge of his jacket. He tries to talk to the dying Saya, telling her not to speak even though she goes on about having something to tell him. She seems very at peace with the situation, telling him how she planned on moving soon anyway. She’d been staying there for too long, and once she got him to smile… she felt like everything was fine and she could move on. She recaps her life, all the people she met, all the places she went to, and admits that Train was the only one that she ever considered a friend. Tears begin to fall from her face, and she wonders why she’s crying. It’s so silly. Her final message to train is that it was okay. He could forget about her and move on with his life. He didn’t need to hold on to her memory or take revenge… it was okay.
And then Saya died.
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