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year 5, quarter 3
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[attr="class","ayab-text"] Aerith had awoken on the outskirts of this city and so she had taken her chances of venturing in. It reminded her so much of the hustle and bustle of Midgar, but this was not the city she had called home her entire life. There were so very many things wrong with her current surroundings that it worried her greatly. She had been on her way to the City of the Ancients to pray for Holy. Her path had been set and she had been determined to do what she could to prevent the calamity that would be summoned forth: Meteor. But then she had gone to sleep within one of the abandoned houses of her people and had awoken to this cityscape. The White Materia was still with her as well, but it was hidden within the ribbon used to hold back her hair as it always was. Useless until prayed upon for the utilization of Holy. But that had not happened because she had not gotten the chance. [break][break]
Where were her friends? Cloud? Tifa? Barret? Flashes of the others' faces crossed her mind as she tried to get someone to tell her where she was. Some people simply brushed past her as if she were invisible and others simply scoffed at her question. Aerith bristled a little when the fourth person she asked had the gall to laugh at her before walking off. Well, that was just rude! She huffed in mild irritation as she realized that she was very much on her own this time. That was alright! She had survived in Midgar for quite a long while even if most of her childhood had been spent being watched by Shinra. No, she knew she could do this![break][break]
All of her travels had been quite intense with the foes she had faced and so many truths she had learned about herself and about the Planet. If only she could hear her mother's voice to simply give her the answers she desired. That was the most alarming thing about this place: she could not hear the voice of the Planet. The lifestream was completely absent from her attuned senses and she felt quite deafened by it. Even in Midgar, she had always sensed something even with the reactors going at full strength. A startled yelp escaped her as she found herself pushed onto the ground before her as she reached out with her hands to attempt to catch her fall. Someone had bumped into her without even the courtesy of an apology or trying to help her up. [break][break]
Another sigh escaped her as she slowly stood up and brushed off her dress with a shake of her head. "Yup, this city is just like Midgar. Even the people are the same. Always in a hurry without looking," she muttered to herself with a huff.
Post by Cloud Strife on Jun 28, 2020 13:19:16 GMT -6
In the morning Cloud passed by a slum scrapyard with a broken down motorcycle sat out front on flat skins of rubber that once were tires. Caked in a thick patina of dust and grime from forks to tail like some forgotten relic only just hauled from the depths of the earth. A handpainted sign in thick black grease on cardboard hanging from its handlebars advertised ten thousand gil or best offer. Cloud had gil in his pockets, now, but none of it to spare. Maybe he could rub two coins together until a third spawned between them and call that his best offer. It was the twelfth time he'd passed by the yard after finding Tifa and getting his bearings and settling into life in the city of Sonora and every single time he stopped and he stared long and hard at the sad old machine. In his mind the sound of the engine turning over. The crunch of the tires over gravel as he eased it forward. His hands in the mechanical innards of the bike bringing the dead back to life, smears of black from his fingertips to his elbows. Then he shook his head and he walked on past and he kept dreaming.
He could afford to keep dreaming now. And to think about practical things. About picking up jobs and helping Tifa with the rent while he hunted down leads on his friends. While he lived, for the first time in what felt like eternity, without a blade dangling over his neck on fraying rope. The worries he once held in his heart since the moment he woke up in this world evaporated like water in the desert. He was whole now, and Tifa was with him, and he'd find the others, and the world wasn't ending. An almost terrifying expanse of possibility lay before him.
Cloud had since shed the weathered old SOLDIER uniform. It wasn't him anymore. Never had been, really, but it still lay in the apartment in a neat folded pile underneath its battered boots. He thought maybe he ought to burn it but something held him back and he didn't know what. He kept the armor and the gloves and he wore a dark blue shirt and loose black pants and a new pair of boots and he looked, if not a new man, then a recently renovated one. Appearances mattered when you didn't have a reputation yet, though the story of the battle with the robot house that heralded his arrival in the city spread far enough to bring in some work.
So he worked.
After he left the scrapyard and the sad old motorcycle behind he headed out into the bustling heart of the city where people stared at the sword on his back and he put on his best stoic tough guy expression and acted like he had important places to be. He worked a job where he watched men load and unload trucks and glared at anyone who wasn't supposed to be there. When the thieves finally showed up Cloud welcomed the violent distraction even if it was over in a few seconds. He got paid less than what he thought he should have but it was more than nothing so it would have to do.
Now, money in hand, he made for a shop to buy a few sundries itemized in a list in his head. From the outside he looked into the shop and that was when he saw her reflection in the window. Unmistakable, even in a crowd, like all the world was dull and monochrome except for her. Cloud whirled around to stare across the street and froze in his tracks and watched with wide disbelieving eyes and a catch in his throat.
You're seeing things again.
He looked away. Scrubbed a hand down his face and inhaled a long deep breath. He couldn't count the number of times he thought he saw a flash of fluttering pink fabric out of the corner of his eye or heard bright, distant laughter like an echo across time, always drifting out of reach like smoke in the wind. No trace but a hollow memory. When he looked at where she'd been standing she was still there and he didn't know what to do. It didn't make sense. She was gone. He remembered it in detail so excruciating it might have been branded into his brain. The way the light went out of her eyes. Lifeless body in his arms. This didn't make sense.
Before he realized it his feet carried him across the street with a desperate urgency. Tires squealed and a driver yelled something profane out the window that Cloud didn't hear. He pushed his way through the hurried pedestrian traffic until he reached her, until he stood before her slackjawed and wide-eyed.
[attr="class","ayab-text"] The sudden sound of yelling and angry drivers caught her attention as she looked to the side with widened, emerald eyes. It felt as if itself had come to a standstill when she saw the familiar form of Cloud racing towards her. Pushing his way through others and oncoming traffic to simply get to her. Aerith felt her hand immediately go to her mouth in surprise as both elation and slight trepidation went through her. The last time she had seen him in person had been after they had found the Black Materia. Cloud had been controlled by Sephiroth to give him the destructive materia before he had broken down before her: launching himself at her in his confusion and anger. No, she had not blamed him for what had happened in the least. It was a situation that could have broken so many and Cloud had always been so strong in the face of so much. Everyone had a breaking point and his had been worse than most. [break][break]
Her hand had yet to lower from her mouth even as he stopped before her with the most slack-jawed expression she had ever witnessed from him. And she had seen him in many precarious situations! One that included him in a dress! Aerith could not help but laugh at the look on his face as she regarded him with warm eyes and a bright smile that curled on her lips. "If only you could see yourself right now, Cloud. You look as if you've seen a ghost!" If she had known the true implications of those words, then she never would have said them. As it was, Aerith was merely happy to see a familiar face within this odd place and so quickly as well! [break][break]
She leaned forward to hug him fiercely to reassure herself that he was definitely real and solid. Yup! And just for a measure, she leaned back to pinch his cheek with a slightly mischievous glint in her eyes. "Just to make sure one of us isn't dreaming. I'm really happy to see you, Cloud!" Her hands rested against his cheeks with affection as she stared up at him. He looked a little different from their last occurrence. He seemed more mature and less unsure of himself now--along with the change in apparel as well. How much had she missed since she had parted ways with the group? Her expression grew a little more serious as she took a small step back to look up at him thoughtfully. [break][break]
"I was in the Forgotten City before I woke up here, Cloud. Where even is here? And are the others here with you?" If Cloud was here before her, then that meant the others had to be here, right? Tifa? Barret? Cid? Nanaki? Something was just no right about her sudden appearance here and the lack of the lifestream here.
Post by Cloud Strife on Jul 5, 2020 14:36:47 GMT -6
He froze in place. His throat went dry when she smiled at him and spoke to him in words that weren't just an echo of the last conversation they'd ever had. Only when she threw her arms around him did he accept the reality of it and even then it was only just. Something stung in his eyes. He had to fight to wrangle himself into some measure of composure by the time she pulled back to look at him. He held it together with tape and string.
Cloud had changed but she was the same. The same face in his dreams, the same voice in his memory, the same ache in his heart. In his nightmares this scene would end with a great black shape looming up behind her but it was nowhere here. Just a stream of agitated Sonoran pedestrians flowing around them and muttering bitterly as they passed.
When she stepped back and told him she'd last been in the Forgotten City, he looked away and crossed his arms over his chest and tried to disguise it as a nothing reaction but did a poor job of it. Too many thoughts and memories ran through his head too quickly. She didn't remember what happened to her. How was he supposed to tell her-- should he even tell her? But above all, one thought rang out clearly in the mess of his head:
Keep it together.
Cloud cleared his throat and renewed his composure and looked back at her.
"Aerith... There's... Ah..." he stammered, rubbing the back of his neck. "We should find somewhere to sit down and talk. A lot... a lot happened."
Too much of which he still didn't understand. He wished someone smarter than him was here to explain it in his stead.
He remembered passing by some dingy urban park on his way over from the slums to this side of town. Graffiti covered benches and rusting swings bordered by a concrete half wall. It wasn't far. Most of all it was quiet. It beat trying to talk in the street while a crowd of pedestrians shoved past them. He nodded in the direction of it, for Aerith to follow him as he started to walk.
"This city's called Sonora," he explained. "Tifa's here, too. I'm still lookin' for everyone else."
He found himself staring at her as they walked, only glancing away when he needed to get his bearings. In a world that stole people from their own maybe it shouldn't have been so difficult to grasp that its reach wasn't limited to the living. Yet the wound her death left on him was so deep that Cloud hadn't even considered the possibility. He didn't know what to think now. A part of him remained on edge, waiting for the catch, the other shoe to drop. The rest of him just wanted to take it for what it was. She was here again. What did it matter why or how?
[attr="class","ayab-text"] There was something wrong and Aerith did not know how to address it. It was as plain as day for her to see the turmoil that lined every inch of Cloud's body and within his eyes as well. He was hiding something from her and she felt her brow furrow in concern. What was there that he felt the need to react to her presence the way he did? It was like...he was surprised to see her in front of him. Not in the sense of seeing someone after a long parting, but in the sense that something bad had happened in the aftermath. A small hum of disapproval escaped her as she debated on questioning him outright or giving him a little time to gather his thoughts. This meeting was unexpected to them both and she wished to be understanding of his emotions and what was bothering him. [break][break]
"You're hiding something from me." Well, there went her idea of being patient with him. The words had slid from her lips before she could control herself. His body language spoke volumes of how he was feeling even if he was not speaking of how he felt. It was not like he was doing that great of a job of trying to hide his anxiety, but Aerith also knew Cloud well enough to know when he felt cornered and a little overwhelmed. "What's wrong? What do you mean a lot has happened?" That was certainly a worrying sentence to think over as her friend stammered over his words. [break][break]
It was a fair enough request, though. A more practical one, too! The people pushing past them did not present a comfortable area for privacy, anyway. Aerith was also getting tired of people shoving past her like she was an obstacle to get through. Her nose crinkled as she cast a mild glare at someone that had knocked into her shoulder again. Huffing to herself, she looked back to Cloud as she nodded to him and followed after. "Sonora? I've never heard of it, but we're not on Gaia anymore, are we? I can't even sense the lifestream anymore. Everything about this just feels wrong to my senses." But her worry dissipated somewhat at the mention of Tifa and her expression brightened knowing that her best friend was safe. [break][break]
"Oh, thank goodness! I'm so happy she's here, too. It's good to know that you weren't alone here." Aerith looked up with a genuine smile to Cloud as she noticed him staring at her again. A delicate brow was quirked upward as she considered him--something was definitely wrong. "...something happened to me, didn't it? Whatever it was, I'm here now and so are you. Focus on the present moment and enjoy it for what it is." Aerith smiled brightly up at the swordsman as she linked her arm through his easily. A small thing to tether herself with and to remind Cloud that she was right here and now going anywhere for the time being. As far as she could recall, nothing had happened to her as the last memory she held was falling asleep before setting out on her mission to pray for Holy. [break][break]
But memories could be fallible and it was clear that something bad had happened if Cloud's constant staring and inner turmoil was anything for her to go by.
Post by Cloud Strife on Jul 10, 2020 22:12:11 GMT -6
She had so many questions and Cloud couldn't blame her. His stammered non-explanation did little other than spark worry and more questions. He wished he had answers for all of them but all he could tell her was what he knew and none of what he knew answered the bigger question that encompassed everything else: why?
It would have been too easy if she could have communed with this planet and drawn out the answers for herself. He was no planetologist but some naive part of him assumed that there must be some kind of a lifestream here. It was how planets worked, right? Just like how people had blood and a heart to pump it through their veins. That Aerith couldn't sense it only added another layer of unease to everything about this place. Like trying to walk the deck of a ship careening with the waves. As soon as you found your footing, the world shifted in a different direction.
His eyes followed her hand as she linked herself arm in arm with him. A strange sense of deja vu. The tension in him began to uncoil by degrees. They walked.
"I'm not trying to hide things from you," he said, "I just don't know if I can explain it all in a way that'll make sense. It doesn't even make sense to me. But... I'll try."
Past a weapons store with black iron bars bolted over the windows and the last letter of its name buzzing and flickering in neon. Down at the end of the block lay the park, its entrance marked by an arched metal sign in flaking green paint mounted on posts bolted into the concrete half-wall. It was empty. It had the sad look of disuse about it. Old flyers peeling from the lamppost and tattered and flapping in the breeze. Garbage scattered like fallen leaves around a trash bin. Patches of rust corroding the chains on the swings. Where there wasn't rust there was graffiti, layers of it in indecipherable cursive weathered and re-painted and weathered again.
With Aerith on his arm he walked over to a solitary wooden bench painted dull blue and flecked by illegible tags in white and silver spraypaint. He sat at one end and shrugged one shoulder to hike up the end of the sword on his back until it hung at a comfortable angle. He leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees and looked like he had to think long and hard about too many different things. He cracked his knuckles for something to do with his hands and he looked at Aerith and took a breath and started talking.
"You're right that we're not on our planet anymore. I dunno know how we got here, or why... But we're not the only ones. When I was on the road I met somebody else who woke up here. He talked about places that I never heard of. Places that aren't on this world either. Whatever grabbed us, it's grabbin' all kinds of people from all kinds of places."
That was the easy part. It was the recap on the cargo ship, or in the hotel at Gold Saucer. It was gathering the facts all together and speaking them out loud, as much for his benefit as it was for everybody else's. That was all he had straight about this place. It was worth about as much as the lint in his pocket.
"He said he woke up missing memories. Even Tifa doesn't remember everything. Maybe I'm missing something, too. I don't know. But I remember the Forgotten City... And what happened after."
His composure started to crack and he looked away, straight ahead at nothing. He clenched his fists and the leather of his gloves creaked with the tension. The memory still so raw he might as well have been there again, standing in that ethereal light, that heavy silence, watching, frozen...
Keep it together...
How the hell am I supposed to do that?
"Sephiroth was after you, so we followed you to the Forgotten City. Found you praying. Tryin' to summon Holy," he said. His voice was quiet and even and measured and balanced on the edge of a blade and if he so much as breathed wrong it was all going to shatter like a mirror against his fist. "Sephiroth... Took control of me, again, like he did at the Temple... I tried to fight it. He almost made me--" Cloud swallowed back a hard lump in his throat and shook his head. "I snapped out of it, but he was there... I couldn't... I couldn't stop him. He killed you, Aerith."
He screwed his eyes shut tight like that might stop the scene from playing in his mind again and again and again as it had so many times before. It didn't and he opened his eyes and blinked away the burn welling up in them and found the guts to fix them on Aerith once more even with her death on his mind. To imprint this picture in his head. The life in her eyes. Did this absolve him of the sin of his failure? Could he bury the horror of it?
"He killed you but now you're here and I don't... I don't understand what's happening."
[attr="class","ayab-text"] That was all Aerith could really ask for. An attempt at answers for what this place was and why Cloud was acting the way he was. What had happened in her absence? For herself, it had only been a few days since she had seen him, but it seemed to be a lifetime to her friend. Aerith took in the various sights as he lead her into the industrial park--it reminded her very much of the park in Sector Six. An old, rusted thing that had served as a hideaway for her as a young girl and in her adolescent years. There was grafiti and trash and rust on nearly every surface. It reminded her so much of Midgar that she found herself aching for it. "So, the will of this planet is to grab whomever it can from different worlds? But...how can this planet survive without a lifestream?" [break][break]
That was what boggled her mind the most. The lifestream was the collective consciousness and blood of Gaia--it created life and in return absorbed the knowledge that those precious lives had gained. A harmonious cycle her people had been the stewards of for countless years before tragedy struck. Now she was the only remnant left and now she could not even find comfort in her bloodline. There were no voices to guide her forward, nor was there the familiar hum of the lifestream beneath her feet and all around her. This world was eerily silent and it left her feeling more vulnerable than she had in a long, long time. [break][break]
She sat down beside Cloud and placed her hands upon her lap before looking to Cloud. Missing memories? A thoughtful hum escaped her as she considered her own mind for a moment. Was she missing anything? No, Aerith was quite sure her own recollections were as whole as they could be considering the circumstances. "What happened after?" That was when her brow furrowed and confusion marred her features. There had not been an afterward for her, because she had not even begun to pray for Holy before being pulled here. A brief sense of panic filled her as she raised her hands immediately to the ribbon holding her hair back. Slim fingers reached beneath the firm knot and she still felt it secured within her braid: her mother's White Materia. [break][break]
The composure Cloud was trying to keep was cracking before her and she reached forward to grasp his one hand in both of her own. A comforting gesture as she silently took in everything he said. Sephiroth had killed her? Aerith felt her mind scrambling to try and make sense of what Cloud recalled and experienced and what had not even happened to her. Did this mean...she had been pulled from a different time? "That was never your fault, Cloud. If I died, then I did so knowing what could happen to me." It had been a very real possibility for her the moment she had gone off on her own, but she had hoped that it would not. Because she wished for more out of her life and to be with her friends until the very end of her days. [break][break]
"I'm not sure either, Cloud," she admitted softly. Already she was reaching forward to gather her friend into her arms to soothe away his sorrows and the guilt that weighed on him so heavily. "I don't remember this happening, because I don't believe I experienced any of this. I never had the chance to pray for Holy before being pulled here." Regardless of whether it had happened to her, she knew that Cloud had witnessed her death and had been unable to prevent it. Of course, she never would have expected him to do so. Everyone died eventually and there was no stopping that sometimes. [break][break]
"I'm here now and whatever guilt you have, I would never have blamed you. You came for me and that's all that matters." Her first priority was attempting to comfort her friend before figuring out this utter confusion. A soft sigh escaped her as she pulled back a little and looked up at Cloud with a soft smile on her face. "Smile for me? I always loved seeing you smile. I always felt so accomplished when I managed to see it and know I was the cause of it."
Post by Cloud Strife on Aug 1, 2020 18:07:40 GMT -6
Cloud's eyes searched her face but he didn't know what for. Behind the shine of Mako he tried dumbly to fit the pieces of everything together. To make sense of the impossible. Then a thought hit him like a tight, cold fist square to the gut. She was so certain that the nightmare burned into Cloud's skull hadn't happened to her at all before she appeared here that Cloud questioned what he remembered. Everything from the moment he woke up after the Temple of the Ancients. What if he hadn't woken up? What if everything he remembered was just another twisted illusion cobbled together in a broken mind? Memories lied. He knew that better than most. What if--
Just stop thinking about it.
If she doesn't remember it how can I know it really happened? Nibelheim--
--Wasn't made up. You were there, you just remembered it wrong.
...
You were never at the Forgotten City before. Or the Northern Crater. Or Mideel. All of that was new. You couldn't just make that up, right?
...
Ask the others when you find them. Ask Tifa. Stop thinking about it until then.
He inhaled a slow breath and felt as though he was standing on the edge of a cliff and the saner voice in his head told him to take a little step backwards. He had his feet under him but he was peering over the edge into the bottomless dark and it was a long way down. He knew the fall well. The climb out was a tough one. But he had help. Still had help, if he needed it. When the world started fraying at the edges all he had to do was remember that.
He stopped thinking too much about the wrong things. His existential crisis didn't matter right now. All that mattered was that Aerith was sitting beside him on a battered park bench in a neglected park in Sonora, that she was alive and whole and telling him she forgave him for a failure he thought he'd carry with him for the rest of his life. He needed a minute to let it sink in. To feel the weight lift off his shoulders like she'd just grabbed it and thrown it aside. That simple.
And as the dead weight of guilt left him the anguish in his face faded away and all the questions that still hung in the air, all the truths he still needed to tell moved aside. When she asked him to smile he reflexively shook his head in a weak denial. He didn't smile on cue. Except at the same time her asking him to brought up that small, involuntary curve of his mouth and all the anxious tension he carried in him came out in a quiet chuckle and he looked away, almost embarrassed by it.
He sat up a little straighter. A chill Sonoran breeze blew through the park, rustled his hair, wafted in the smell of industry and exhaust. Midgar felt near and distant all at once.
"Aerith... Hey... Thanks." he said. His voice was warm and quiet, the waver of uncertainty gone. "Whatever's going on with this place... I'm glad you're here."
Silently, he made a vow, etched it into his bones. He wouldn't lose any more friends. Not here, not ever. It didn't matter what it cost him to make that true. He didn't understand this place, this world, why any of them were here, but if he had to make something out of it then he'd make it a second chance.
But she wasn't the only friend he'd lost. And he still owed her the truth about that. About himself.
"...There's still more I have to tell you," he added, rubbing the back of his head. "Stuff that... Well, I never told you the truth about me. About SOLDIER. 'Cause I didn't even know what the truth was. I was pretty messed up when we met. It's... a long story."
[attr="class","ayab-text"] Already she could see Cloud overthinking everything she had just told him. A mild sound of exasperation escaped her as she resisted the urge to lightly poke his forehead. "Just listen to my voice. You're real and everything around you is real," she said calmly. The young woman remembered quite well how faulty Cloud's memories had been when she had left the group and his periods of silence over a particularly sensitive matter. It seemed that her own differing recollections had set off a similar reaction. What did it all mean? Had she been plucked from a vital moment in a different stream of time? Such a thing seemed so impossible but it could not be with how they were both here on this different world. [break][break]
A playful laugh escaped her as Cloud began to shake his head at her request only to smile for her anyway. "See? Was that so hard? A smile really can make most things better!" Aerith was relieved to see some of that anxious tension drain from his expression. Oh, there were still plenty of questions to seek answers for, but what really mattered was the present moment. Nothing could be addressed right at that moment beyond just trying to fit some of these jigsaw pieces together. Living in the present meant more to her than trying to hurtle herself into an unknown future. The past could not be changed and the future was ever-changing. But the present? Well, she would rather exist as she was at this moment right now and know she had experienced everything she could. The good and the bad. [break][break]
Or could it be changed? No, Aerith would rather not think on such mindboggling matters at present! "That's what I'm here for! To be a voice of reason and to make you smile whether you want to or not." Her own voice was warm as she smiled up at him brightly. Her head tilted to the side when Cloud mentioned even more to tell her. A small hum of understanding escaped her before she slowly shook her head with another smile in place. There was never an ending to the story, was there? [break][break]
"Well, I'm not going anywhere. Tell me as much as you'd like or none of it at all. You're still Cloud to me at the end of the day," she reassured. Goodness knew she still did not understand all of her own past. The knowledge of her people had been limited at best and what she did know was from what she had learned at Cosmo Canyon and from her mother in childhood.
Post by Cloud Strife on Sept 1, 2020 23:14:25 GMT -6
You're still Cloud to me.
It was funny in a way that wasn't funny at all to hear her say that. Cloud hadn't really been Cloud for the time they knew each other. He hadn't even been Cloud to himself. He'd been pieces of a person who'd been Cloud, held together by pieces that weren't. He was a SOLDIER until he wasn't. A failed clone begging for a number until he wasn't. Until he was a husk waiting to find himself buried in the murk of the past.
It wasn't the first time he'd been gone a long way away. Once, in a cold dim basement in Nibelheim...
"You remember when we passed through Gongaga?" he asked tentatively. "There were those people asking about their son who joined SOLDIER. Zack. I said I didn't know him. But you did. You told me you heard he'd been missing."
The air then had been stifling, thick with heat and humidity. They were standing in the shadow of the ruined reactor on a dirt street outside Zack's parents' house. I think it was 5 years ago, she'd told him. He went out on a job, and never came back. He loved women, a real ladies' man. He probably found someone else... But something nagged at the back of Cloud's mind, pulsing like a headache. It was just the heat. Or he was just tired. They'd been on the road too long. It was an excuse like everything was back then. Every bright, blazing neon sign pointing to something being wrong with him was nothing. He was fine.
Until he wasn't.
Thinking back on it now all he felt was a twisted knot in his stomach, the heat of shame on the back of his neck. Like he'd betrayed Zack's memory. Unconscious or not.
Cloud looked up at Sonora's gunmetal sky, at a nothing point in the space between the highrises, watching the dull grey clouds drift and swirl in the wind like the mako smoke hovering over Mt. Nibel.
"The truth is, I knew Zack. But I was never in SOLDIER. I tried to join but I didn't make it. I was just another Shinra grunt, and... I was ashamed of myself. I couldn't go back home and face everybody, so I stayed with Shinra. They'd send us along to support the SOLDIER operatives sometimes. That's how I met Zack. We went on a few missions together. He didn't have to give me the time of day, you know. I was... I was nothing and he was First Class. But it wasn't like that. He always had time for me. He was my friend."
When Cloud looked to Aerith again something in his face suddenly seemed very young. The ghost of that sixteen year old kid who went back to Nibelheim and didn't come out the same.
"He didn't go off and find somebody else," he said softly. "Thought you'd want to know."