Midgar Barrens: W.R.O Hunter’s Lodge\
Outside of
Midgar and only a few miles shy of Edge was the Hunter’s Lodge, the unofficial
name for the W.R.O. Materia Hunter’s base of operations. It was a small, squat Shinra military bunker
abandoned after the Jenvoa War. Like all
things Shinra, the W.R.O. picked it up and repurposed it.
From a
distance, it looked like a series of square buildings dug into the dusty red
earth of the Midgar wastes. Since moving
in, the Hunters had done little to repair or upgrade the exterior walls,
leaving them wind blasted and worn. The
interior had been left in similar disrepair, save for a vault built into its
base where materia is held before extraction to the W.R.O. HQ building.
Hunter
philosophy was that every base is disposable.
They are a nomadic force, moving where the trouble was. A central base of operations, while
logistically sound, was financially unreasonable considering how small the
Hunter force was and how frequently they moved.
Despite
their humble foundations, the Hunters were quite successful. Everywhere they went, materia smuggling rings
were broken down and the materia they coveted and sold was confiscated and
distributed to proper authorities.
Dangerous materia was kept off the streets, while medical materia was
made readily available wherever resources accommodated.
Much of the
lodge itself was located underground.
Here, a series of tunnels connected rooms that once served as bunks for
Shinra soldiers. They were made into
offices for what few onsite Hunter work there was to be done. A handful of agents stayed, too, rather than
pay rent in Edge. Yuffie originally
intended to do the same until Tifa offered her a room.
Yuffie
didn’t visit often. She found the narrow
halls of the Lodge oppressing and the dim lightning worse. Daisy was there almost every day, to check on
new information, resupply, and write reports.
She enjoyed the paperwork, which was why Yuffie worked with her so
often.
Daisy was a
few years older than Yuffie, dark-haired, dark-eyed, and gentle. She joined the Shinra military at a young
age, as many people did, with dreams of a better life. While she was an expert marksman, she never
saw combat and was grateful for it. When
she joined it was with romantic aspirations of protecting people from monsters
or bringing them the light of industry.
That didn’t
last long. She quickly learned the true
motives of Shinra, and the atrocities they committed, atrocities hidden from
the public eye in the name of progress. That was when she filed for a desk job,
and she was lucky to get one.
After the
war, Daisy turned her efforts toward rebuilding. She believed in the W.R.O. and its mission,
and since she was a former Shinra soldier, she viewed it as her responsibility
to set things right. Yuffie often
reminded Daisy that she was a soldier in name only, but that didn’t do much to
ease her guilty conscious.
They
arrived at the lodge in the early afternoon.
The asphalt danced in the midday heat.
Yuffie nearly fell from the passenger seat in her scramble to get out of
the car. It took everything in her to
keep from vomiting again. The distance
between Edge and the Lodge, while short by most standards, was another reason
Yuffie didn’t visit often.
She was
still nursing an upset stomach on the way in the front door, and Daisy was good
enough to help her along. They took a
series of long, winding corridors with bare, chipped walls to the
cafeteria. They had already sent the
information to Shelke, but Daisy decided she wanted to visit the lodge to eat
and do her own research.
They had
just reached the door when a petite, bespectacled blond woman approached them,
calling their names. “Um. Excuse me.
Ms. Kisaragi. Ms. Kisaragi, could
I bother you?”
Yuffie, who
had been holding her stomach up until then, leaned against the wall and looked
up. “Canary?”
“Uh.” Canary shifted, adjusted her glasses. She normally worked the front desk, but the
girls had taken the back entrance. She
was a mousy young woman who seemed perpetually scrambled. It always surprised Yuffie that Canary would
ever follow the hunters anywhere around the world, but every time they moved,
she moved with them. “Yes,” she said,
“I’m sorry to bother you, but Mr. Reed would like to see you.”
Yuffie
sighed and rolled her eyes. “Oh,
great. What now?”
“I’m
sorry. I didn’t think to ask.”
“You’re
fine, Canary.” Daisy helped Yuffie up
and took her by the arm. “Come on, I’ll
go with you. It’s probably about what
happened at Wasteland anyway.”
Yuffie
groaned as Daisy dragged her forward.
“Or we could ignore the old guy and focus on our work. Our real work. I’d prefer that over his lectures.”
“He gives
us our work, which means that sometimes, our work is to listen to his
lectures.”
“I just
want to make it known that I disagree.”
“Fine.
Disagree. Just do it quietly.”
Daisy led
Yuffie through the halls by the arm. In
the back of the facility, closest to the materia vault, they find the program director’s
office. Mr. Reed was a tall, stout man
with a trim beard and short, dark hair.
He wore a fine, blue suit with a light blue tie and polished leather
shoes. His name plate, too, was polished
and sat gleaming on his desk when they entered.
When he saw
them, he sighed and showed them to their chairs. His office, relative to the offices in the
building, was larger but still quite small by conventional terms. His desk was stacked high with paperwork and
stuffed with file folder. He had an
older computer purring, loudly, on his desk, which he stared at as they settled.
“Ms. Gould,
I didn’t ask for you.”
“I know,”
Daisy said as she eased into her seat.
She had to force Yuffie into the other one. “But, I thought that since Yuffie and I are
partners, it wouldn’t hurt for me to present.”
He gave her
a long, tired stare, and then nodded.
“Fine, if you insist.” He stood
from his desk and folded his arms behind his back, but only after smoothing out
his jacket. “It won’t hurt for you to
hear what needs to be said, I’m sure.”
Yuffie sat
curled in her seat, still holding her stomach.
She watched him pace behind his desk quietly, sorting his thoughts, and
when he turned on her, he glared. “What’s
wrong with you?”
“Motion
sickness,” Daisy said.
“Oh,
yes.” He leaned forward on his
chair. “Quite the agent, aren’t you?”
Yuffie
shrugged. “Not everyone can sit behind a
desk all day.”
His eyes
narrowed, and he stood again and resumed his pacing. “Enough of that. Let’s review your work lately, Ms.
Kisaragi. In particular, your most
recent escapade, where you involved yourself in a bar brawl at a known criminal
location.”
“Okay, how
in the world did you hear about that already?”
He stopped
on point and smiled grimly. “So, you
don’t deny it?”
“No,”
Yuffie said, and Daisy pinched her wrist.
Yuffie recoiled and frowned.
“Ow! What? It’s not like he would
believe me even if I lied. Anyway, I
didn’t do anything wrong. We were there
gathering information.”
Reed raised
single eyebrow. “With your fists?”
“Sometimes
the only way to get the best information is to beat it out of someone.”
Daisy
pinched Yuffie again and then folded her hands on her lap. “Director Reed, I
assure you, in this situation, Yuffie did her absolute best to operate within
mission parameters and reacted accordingly only due to a shift in said
parameters.”
“So you’ve
said before,” Reed said. “You said it
during the car chase through Edge.”
“What,”
Yuffie said, “Was I supposed to just let them escape?”
“You said
it during the warehouse fire in Wutai.”
“Hey, turns
out fire materia makes things burn.”
Yuffie nudged Daisy, who glared at her.
“I’m right here, aren’t I?”
“And you
said it in Junon, when she got drunk and captured by the enemy.”
“Okay, now
that,” Yuffie paused, “That was not my greatest moment, but we made it out
okay, didn’t we?”
“And there
is your problem, Ms. Kisaragi. You
always make it out. You rely on others
to clean up the messes you’ve made, and you always end up making it out with
the story, don’t you?”
“I don’t
think that’s a problem,” Yuffie said, leaning back in her chair, crossing her
legs and arms in a sulk. “You just want
to string me up.”
“Sir,”
Daisy interrupted, with another glare at Yuffie. “With all due respect, I was on each of these
operations and was just as much involved as she was. So, why am I not being reprimanded like she
is?”
“Because,
you’re solving the problems your partner causes.” Reed sighed. “Which is commendable. But, were it not for her reckless behavior in
the first place, you wouldn’t need to clean up after her like a mother with a
child.”
“Sir,
again, with all due respect, I don’t think that’s fair.”
“Oh, it’s
definitely not fair,” Yuffie said, her body sinking into itself in an effort to
keep from throttling Reed. “What would
be fair is if he focused on his paperwork and left the real work to
professionals.”
“Professionals.”
Reed laughed. “You mean childhood
materia thieves turned ‘heroes’ because they knew the right people. That sort of professional?”
Yuffie
stood and glared with balled fists. “And
where were you during all of that?
Hiding and cowering with everyone else?”
“I was
working with the Director to evacuate people from the city, what you were
supposed to be doing rather than floating around with your friend, Mr.
Valentine and taking credit for his successes.
But that’s what you do, isn’t it?
Throw yourself into the middle of things and claim victory after it’s
all over.”
“Sir,”
Daisy said, but she was cut off by a glare from him.
“Listen,
Ms. Kisaragi. You are a member of the
Hunters, which is a W.R.O. operation. We
are not at war with monsters anymore, and we shouldn’t act like it. Your actions don’t save the world. They just cause trouble for the organization
at large.”
“I stop bad
guys!”
“You cause
property damage and hurt people in the name of your own personal crusade,” Reed
said. He held her gaze, even as she
glared at him, and met it with a glare of his own. “According to officers on the scene you were
threatening the young men at the bar.
And what did you get for it?”
Yuffie prepared
to move on him but felt Daisy grab at her wrist. She took a deep breath. “Well, sorry, but we got information.”
“And I hope
it is worth the trouble that it has caused for the W.R.O. and the peacekeeper
wardens.” Reed stood tall and adjusted
his jacket again. Then, he pulled out
his chair and took a seat. He returned
to his computer and started filling in paperwork. “I just wanted to warn you, Ms.
Kisaragi. I won’t be overlooking your
antics anymore. What good will you had
coming into this is all used up and the Director can’t protect you forever.”
Yuffie
scoffed. “Listen, I’ll worry about that
when you actually get the guts to stand up and take a shot.” She turned to the door and yanked it
open. “Come on, Daisy, we’ve got work to
do.”
Daisy stood
and bowed to Reed. She muttered an
apology before turning to chase after Yuffie, closing the door discreetly on
her way out.
-Disc One-
Yuffie led
them down the hall until it became clear that she had no idea where they were
going. Daisy took lead then and led them
through long, dark hallways to Lodge’s cafeteria. On the way, she glared back at Yuffie over
her shoulder and found the shorter woman walking with her arms behind her head,
pretending to nonchalant.
Yuffie met
her gaze. “What?”
“You.” Daisy huffed.
“Listen, D,
I didn’t say anything to him that he didn’t have coming.”
“He’s your
boss, Yuffie.”
“He’s your
boss,” Yuffie said. “I’ve been at this
way longer than he has. And besides,
he’s a jerk.”
“You push
his buttons.”
“He pushes
mine.”
Daisy
stopped at the cafeteria door and had her hand on it when she turned to face
Yuffie. Her other hand rested on her
hip. “And you don’t even try to make it
better.”
“He’s a
paper-pusher. I’m the one doing all the
real work.”
“You are
the one who’s making all the real work harder for all of us,” Daisy said. “Whether you realize it or not, we all aren’t
heroes from the good old days, Yuffie.
Some of us haven’t saved the world three times over and are just trying
to do the best we can now, and we can’t do that without resources. Resources that he is in charge of procuring.”
“I…”
They entered
the cafeteria and come to a stop. Across
the room, sitting alone with an open folder and a tray in front of him was
Oliver Sykes. Daisy went quiet when she
saw him and smiled faintly as he made eye contact with her. He waved them both over. “Well, hello, you two,” he said as they
approached. “I thought I saw you around
here.”
“Oliver.” Daisy adjusted her jacket and tightened her
ponytail. “Yeah, we’ve been, um.”
“Arguing,”
Yuffie said, slumping down at the table.
“We’ve been arguing. And heya,
Oliver.” She reached forward and took
the fruit cup from his tray. She had the
lid off and the fruit halfway into her mouth before he could speak.
Oliver was
a good soldier, quiet and industrious.
He worked alone most of the time, and even when on a team operated
largely in isolation. For those reasons,
he got along well with Yuffie. Neither
intruded on each other’s efforts.
He was also
quite easy on the eyes. Though short, he
was stout and had eyes so green they looked mako-infused, save for lacking the
signature glow. Even without that sort of enhancement, he could hold his own in
a fight, too. Yuffie had seen him spar
with other soldiers and was impressed.
He won far more often than he lost.
As they
settled, Oliver shut his folder and set it on the seat beside him. He took off his glasses and tucked them into
his shirt. “What were you two arguing
about, if I may ask?”
“The
usual. Reed’s up my ass, and Daisy
thinks I should let him make home there.”
Yuffie poured the rest of his fruit cup into her mouth and then tossed
the empty remains onto his tray. She
caught Daisy staring and lifted her eyebrows in response. “What?”
“Anyway,”
Daisy said, sighing her frown away.
“What were you working on? We’re not interrupting, are we?”
“No.” Oliver smiled, and it showed his
dimples. “No, just found some smuggling
in the Kalm area. It’s nothing major,
but I’m looking into it. How about you
two, how did last night go?”
“Smooth,”
Yuffie said. Daisy gave her another
look, and Yuffie met it again.
“Seriously, what?”
Daisy
rolled her eyes.
“Daisy
stepped into steal the spotlight, as usual.”
“So, she
saved your rear,” Oliver said, and Daisy laughed.
“Sure, you
can call it that if you like.” Yuffie leaned
forward and, without him noticing, took his roll from his tray. By the time he realized what she had done,
she had eaten half of it, so he sighed in defeat the slid the rest of his food
over to her. She responded with a cheeky
grin.
“Anyway,
today we followed up on a lead,” Daisy said.
“Which, in turn, led us to another lead, which is why we’re here.”
“Doing
research,” Oliver asked, leaning forward on his elbows and doing his best to ignore
the way Yuffie ‘ate’ his food. He wasn’t
sure she even chewed.
“Grabbing
lunch,” Yuffie said between bites.
“Yuffie has
Shelke doing the work,” Daisy said.
“You know,
you always say that with a tone. Like
you don’t approve.”
“That’s
because I don’t approve.”
They looked
at each other, and Yuffie shrugged. “If
you have a resource, why not use it.”
“She
actually has a point,” Oliver said.
“What’s your lead for, anyway? If I may ask.”
Yuffie gave
a great big swallow. “Some guy over at Wasteland dropped a name,” Yuffie
said. “Emerald Lotus. Sound familiar?”
Oliver
paused, scratched his chin, shook his head.
“Nothing. Sorry.”
“Damn.” Yuffie burped and shoved the tray away while
Daisy grimaced. A chime sounded from her
bracer, and she stood from the table with a half-wave and skipped across the
room, finding privacy near the awning overlooking the barrens. She stared out the window, at Edge rising in
the distance. “Well, hello.”
“Yuffie
Kisaragi.”
“Who else
would it be, Shelke?”
“I have
information for you.”
“On the
Emerald Lotus?”
“What else
would I call you for, Yuffie Kisaragi?”
“Sarcasm,”
Yuffie said, smiling. “You may yet
become a real girl after all. So, tell
me something good already.”
“The
Emerald Lotus is a type of medical plant found in the Wutai region. In small doses it is known to have
regenerative effects, though ingestion of its leaves can, in large doses, cause
minor auditory or visual hallucinations.
This is caused by…”
“Shelke. Shelke!
I know this already. I’m from
Wutai, remember?”
“Yes,”
Shelke said, “In ancient Wutai cultures it was adopted as a symbol of both
regeneration and metaphysical ascendance. The oldest texts sometimes use it to
symbolize rebirth. According to the myth
of…”
“Shelke, do
you have anything about the Emerald Lotus that I want to hear about.”
Shelke
paused for a moment. Yuffie heard
typing, clicking, and then, “An anti-WRO organization calling itself the Emerald
Lotus has become very active in the Midgar region in the past two years. It is believed that they began as a group of
small-time crime rings focusing on minor criminal activities such as extortion,
bribery, and materia smuggling.
Recently, however, while crime has reduced sharply, the severity and
scope of crimes committed has increased proportionately. That is to say, they are becoming organized.”
Yuffie
glanced back at where Daisy and Oliver were flirting. “Anything else?”
“Their
influence is growing. It seems they’ve
become quite influential in the Kalm area and even reach Junon.
“Kalm,
huh?” Yuffie stepped outside, into the
fresh air. She breathed deep of it
before leaning onto the patio railing.
“And what exactly is their beef with the WRO?”
“Official
transcripts of captured and interrogated members claim their leader, calling
himself only Lotus, is against any form of larger, extranational
governments. He speaks loftily of an
anarchist society of equals, living with absolute freedom, free from government
oversight and uses lingering fears of Shinra to gain support.”
“Sounds
like scum.”
“Perhaps,
but his organization is growing quickly.”
Yuffie
nodded. “People are still scared of all
that crap, especially with the Deep Ground stuff only a few years back. Anything else?”
“The
Emerald Lotus are holding a rally tonight, in the ruins of Midgar, sector
four.”
“Sector
four.” Yuffie stood from the railing and
returned inside. “Sounds like I’m taking
Daisy somewhere nice tonight.”
“Be
careful, Yuffie Kisaragi, and contact me if you need anything.”
“We’ll keep
you posted. Thanks, Shelke.”
“Yes,”
Shelke said, and she cut the call.
Yuffie
returned to the table and stood quietly, hands on her hips, smiling until Daisy
and Oliver acknowledged her.
“Uh oh,
Daisy, that looks like trouble,” Oliver said.
“That is
trouble,” Daisy said, and she crossed her arms.
“What did Shelke say?”
“She said
that you need to dress up nice, because we’ve got two tickets to an Emerald
Lotus rally in sector four, but they’ve got a dress code. Bummer, but she thinks we should crash.”
“Does she
think that, or do you,” Oliver asked, and Yuffie shrugged. Oliver shook his head. “Didn’t Reed just get onto you for sticking
your nose into this?”
“Oh, yeah,”
Yuffie said thoughtfully. “Huh. Guess I forgot about it because I don’t
care? Yeah, it’s probably because I
don’t care.” She looked at Daisy. “You in?”
“I’ll be
there,” she said, and Oliver shook his head again. “What can I say? She’d be lost without me.”
“Aren’t you
the martyr?” Yuffie waved and turned to
leave. “I’m going to train until
then. You two lovebirds have fun and
Daisy, sweetie, I’ll see you tonight.
Don’t leave me hanging.”
“I’ll be
there,” Daisy said, and she waved over her shoulder. When she turned back to Oliver, she found him
frowning. “What?”
“She’s
going to get you killed one of these days.”
“No,” Daisy
said, and she laughed. “She’ll get
herself killed long before that.”
The Ruins of Midgar: Sector Four\
Daisy drove
them to the outskirts of Midgar, with Yuffie hanging, half-sick, over the side
of the car. They stopped just outside of
the sector-four fence, half-flattened during meteor fall and blackened by the
heat of the Sister Ray’s backfire. Parts
of the chain link had melted away altogether.
Massive
spires of debris gleamed in the sunlight and jutted from the earth, remnants of
crises past. Every sector bared their
scars proudly during the day but seemed haunted by night. Yuffie considered that perhaps nausea was
influencing her perception and could find no argument to the contrary.
They parked
in the shadows, among the debris, and then waited for nightfall. Both found disguises. Yuffie work a dark jacket with her hood up
and a pair of loose pants belted tightly around her midsection. Red-tinted shades completed the ensemble and
effectively covered her face, or so Daisy claimed.
Daisy wore
a bright green vest over a tight black sweater and a pair of brown pants with
deep pockets. She kept small two small
sidearms attached to the vest and kept her vest zipped tight. Like Yuffie, she kept her face covered with
sunglasses and also wore a big, brown hat with the bill angled low.
The
remaining streets of sector four were long, narrow, and littered with decay. Up close the fractured remains of the plate
towered over them, gleaming faintly where the moonlight touched them and
crusted in dust farther below. Bones lay
scattered around them, tattered clothes hanging from some. The air smelled strongly of oil and ruin.
Yuffie kept
her eye down as they passed. Daisy
grimaced at their surroundings before turning her attention ahead, at the
lights appearing in the distance. “That
must be where the rally is.”
“Must be,”
Yuffie said quietly.
“Now, don’t
look anyone in the eye. And don’t
talk. You’re famous in all the wrong
circles, so they might recognize you.”
“Daisy,
please. I know how to infiltrate a
place. I’m the great ninja Yuffie,
remember?”
Daisy
sighed. “So, you keep saying.”
“What?”
“Nothing,
nothing at all. Just be careful.”
“I feel
like you’re talking down to me. Listen,
just because I get motion sickness—a lot of people get motion sickness, you
know.”
“Yes, yes,”
Daisy said. “It’s not the motion
sickness.”
Yuffie
stopped and lowered her glasses to reveal a glare. “Then what is it?”
Daisy
stopped, too, but she shied away. “It’s
that, sometimes, in your excitement, you can sometimes be a bit, well,
theatrical.”
“Name one
time, ever, that I’ve been,” Yuffie made quotations marks with her fingers,
“Theatrical!” Her fists came to rest on
her hips as she really gave herself to the glare.
Daisy
sighed. “Nevermind,” she said, and she
hurried forward.
Yuffie
followed shortly after, saying, “Hey!
Don’t you walk away from me,” but Daisy did just that and ignored her.
-Disc One-
Up close
the lights were blinding and gave off a great deal of heat. A stage had been set up, freshly built in an
area cleared of wreckage. Enormous
chunks of steel—remnants of the upper plate, Yuffie was sure—were stacked high
around it for added privacy. Standing
out front were two guards, both wearing dark green vests with a golden emblem
across the chest. The emblem was of a
flower.
People
gathered in the clearing, pooling before the platform. They talked quietly in the dusty heat of the
night, their voices amplifying each other and creating a thunderous
murmur. Yuffie approached confidently,
with Daisy trailing, and they passed the guards without issue. Inside, they hugged the rear and talked in
hushed whispers.
“Think this
is the place?”
Daisy
nodded. “It couldn’t be anything
else.” She looked back at the
entryway. More people were following
them in. They seemed to appear from the
darkness, coming from all sides. “This
isn’t some small gathering. Look at the
headcount.”
“Yeah,”
Yuffie said, grinning. “Been a while
since I fought an entire army.”
Daisy
frowned.
“I’m
kidding.”
“You better
be. We’re here to gather information,
nothing else.” She whispered this with
as much authority as she could, which wasn’t much. There were people around her on all
sides. Increasingly, it was growing
harder and harder to keep their conversation private.
“I know, I
know, and I’ll get it done.” Yuffie
pointed at herself. “Ninja.”
Daisy’s
frown deepened. “It’s a good thing I
brought my guns.”
“Oh, you
worry too much. Now, go. We shouldn’t be seen together. Pretty girls like us, we’ll draw attention.”
“Be.
Careful.”
Yuffie
grunted and slipped into the crowd, disappearing among the bodies. She found a place upfront and surveyed the
stage. It was stable but shoddy, thrown
together from the mess that was there, she was sure. The lights buzzed, but the loudest sound was
the whirring of the generators powering them.
From the
corner of her eye, Yuffie spied Daisy in the back. Attendees were still gathering but there was
little room left. Anxiety moved through
the crowd like static. Everyone was one
edge, excited to hear what the Lotus had to offer, each interested in the
cause.
Yuffie was
anxious to hear it, too. She gave
furtive glances at those around her, nodded gently when she made eye contact,
and she did her best to be discreet without being suspicious. The people here wanted the same thing as
her—to see what the Emerald Lotus was and what it would do.
The only
difference was, Yuffie planned to stop them.
As she
listened, Yuffie learned more of the people gathered there. Each had complaints
about the W.R.O. and voiced without restraint.
There was no fear there, no fright that they might be heard. Every word was met with agreement or else
parroted by others around her.
The people
here didn’t like the W.R.O. or what it represented. They viewed it, at best, as an inconvenience
and, at worst, just another Shinra.
Every aspect was criticized, including the Materia Hunters, and at times
Yuffie found herself agreeing.
Under
W.R.O. rule the distribution of materia was tightly controlled. These efforts were intended to curb the usage
of dangerous materia. After Shinra’s
fall there was so much chaos. People who
had been stripped of freedom, some kind and some cruel, found themselves
without shepherds in the storm that was the new world, and in such times people
grow wild.
Some of the
things Yuffie saw in the field justified the Hunters for her. She found rings of women ensnared by
manipulate materia and used for unspeakable acts. She found fire or lightning materia
weaponized by thugs and criminals who were harassing local towns. In one particularly gruesome case ,a Wutai
veteran was murdering tourists to the area by using ice materia to freeze them
alive and watched the life leave them slowly.
But the
people didn’t know about that, and they never would. W.R.O. politics was built around order, and
anything that spoke any sort of failure on their part was kept quiet. Worse still, were some of the policies
instituted that the people did know about.
Most notorious was the cure materia shortage.
After
Shinra’s fall, materia became a commodity.
While materia occured naturally in nature, much of the materia bought
and sold was manufactured and distributed originally by Shinra itself or
otherwise mined by them. Without Shinra
there to produce the raw goods, the stock dwindled and could no longer meet
demands.
In short,
there wasn’t enough cure materia for everyone.
The W.R.O. solved this problem by tightening control of cure materia and
then cutting distribution altogether.
They set up clinics, which were free to start but operation costs were
too steep. A cost was instituted to pay working
operating these clinics, and soon after prices increased.
Soon, the
W.R.O. clinics became one of the biggest money-makers for the para-military
organization, and they were also one of its major public faces. Among this crowd of refugees and rebels who
feel betrayed by the new government, the clinics were also an example of
everything wrong with the W.R.O., and listening to their complaints, Yuffie
couldn’t find herself disagreeing.
Still,
despite her understanding, the complaints eventually bled together into a
cynical white noise. She stayed close to
the stage and stared straight ahead, waiting for the real Emerald Lotus to
appear. The people around her were
prospects and that meant, from her experience, they were about as close to the
actual organization as sand was to glass.
A few
minutes passed and then there was movement in the crowd. The soldiers outside moved in and were joined
by other Lotus soldiers. Over a dozen of
them took places among the crowd. A few
worked in the shadows to turn up the lights, and Yuffie could just see them as
formless shapes moving in the darkness.
A group of
lotus soldiers stepped onto the stage, led by a tall, thin man with a dark
mustache. They all wore the green lotus
uniform, but he has his open, revealing a toned and slightly scarred chest
underneath. He had a tattoo on his left
pectoral of a behemoth.
Mustache
took center stage and scooped up the microphone. He tapped it and listened to the speakers
whine. The people backstage adjusted the
audio while the crowd held their ears.
Yuffie winced.
“Hello,
everyone,” he said. His accent told that
he was from Junon, but it was light, which meant he travelled. He moved easily and with a limp. Yuffie figured him for a former Shinra
soldier. “It is truly wonderful to see
so many of you here, so many who can live with open eyes and opens hearts. On this site, not long ago, a war was fought
with human lives, for human lives.
Shinra monetized us and enslaved us with their ‘mako energy,’ and they
burned any who disagreed, and the W.R.O. is barely different. Same system, different suits.”
The crowd
murmured a polite cheer, and all around her Yuffie could feel the energy
changing. It was hardened and stirred,
galvanizing from a disorganized discontent into a focused force.
“But
tonight, will be the beginning of change, true change. Tonight will be a revelation! The Emerald Lotus is here to help you, not to
see, but to act. We will change this
world, and we will cut away your shackles and return to you the freedom taken
by a money-hungry government that wishes only to control you. We will show you that your freedom was never
truly taken at all, only hidden away behind a mirage of lies and false
institutions.”
A storm of
applause greeted this, and Yuffie could feel the bodies around her moving. The
lights and heat surrounded and suffocated her as the bodies moved. They swayed and clapped, and they listened
raptly to his every word.
Silence
settled, and Yuffie could hear even Mustache’s footfalls as he paced across the
stage. “I am but a man, as all of you
are but men, but together we are more.
The Emerald Lotus is not an organization but a body of people working
toward one future, one unified goal—a free world for all. We are a vision of what could be, of what
should be, of the end of a corrupt empire that has grown from Shinra’s ashes,”
he said. “The W.R.O. is a disease and
we? We are the cure.”
The crowd
cheered again and grew wilder by the minute.
Mustache smiled at the chaos he sewed and lifted his hand. Silence fell, and he lifted the microphone
once again to his lips.
“But I go
on. I am here not to incite you to
rebellion—no, that is not my job. For I
am like you, all of you, who have come from broken homes, from broken lives
taken from us by the broken people chosen by those sheep too weak to break from
the herd, but I was saved, as you all will be, by our true leader, but the one
man who hears our voice, who sees our suffering, and who knows how to fix it.”
Mustache
stepped back and extended his arm, and a man appeared from shadows. To that point, Yuffie didn’t see him, and she
was stunned by his sudden appearance. He
moved liquidly from the shadows, draped in a flowing green robes richly
embroidered. He had his hood up, trimmed
with golden fabric. A mask covered his
face, expressionless white, with thin, dark slants for him to see from.
Mustache
smiled at the awed silence of the crowd and handed off the microphone to this
man, who seized it and stared out at the people. He rose it to his mask, and he spoke. His voice was rich and smooth but had an
energy to it that bespoke youth.
“Long ago,
before Shinra and even before materia, the ancient people of Wutai used a
single flower to cure all of their ails.
It was small and thin, with eighty tiny petals. It grew in the shallows
of ponds, floating across the surface like a shooting star and had a blossom in
the center of the deepest green.
“Once upon
a time, it was used by men and women of the tribes there to heal wounds and
fight disease and, in certain rituals, to give visions of the future. As time passed, and technology advanced, this
practice was left forgotten, living only in myth or parable, but in truth it
was once a primary regent in the ancient potions, used to heal small
lacerations or ease suffering.
“That was
the Emerald Lotus, and just as it healed, so shall we. We will cure this world of the lies and
corruption that spoil it, and we will lead it toward a new future, one of
mended wounds that were once left to fester by corporate greed and hunger for
power.
“Brick-by-brick,
the W.R.O. has recreated everything they destroyed in Shinra, and we have let
them do it. Shinra burned down my home,
enslaved my people, tortured my body in countless ways before leaving me to
die. Now, Shinra is dead, and a new
taskmaster has risen in its place. It
claims to be different, but I do not see my home returned. I do not see my family avenged. All I see are the same crimes committed, but
now people accept them with open hands.
“I am no
leader, I am the Lotus. I am a simple
vision, a spirit of righteous change conjured by all of you.” He pointed to the crowd as he spoke, and
everyone held their breath. “You suffer
under Shinra’s ghost no more. The W.R.O.
uses honeyed lies to hide their poison, but you will not swallow. The seeds of rebellion are planted and ready
to flower, and it is our hands which will pluck the ripened fruit and eat of it
freely.
“It is for
you that I exist. I am a simple Lotus,
waiting in the water to be consumed by a sick and dying world, by a sick and dying
people. So, trust me, trust in the
vision I give you and, fight alongside me.
For only if we fight will we be truly, truly free.”
There were no
applause, not even a cough. When Yuffie
turned to see the crowd, she found them in awed silence. They didn’t simply watch him. They worshipped him. They saw in him everything that the W.R.O.
promised but failed to be. They saw in
him every complaint, every hunger, every pain, and every hurt, and they saw in
him the way to take it all away.
“And now
the sad truth. We are fighting a war,
and we are fighting it to the death. The
W.R.O. has grown fat and drunk on its power, and it does not want to let go. There are those so indoctrinated that they
willingly let these slave-masters leash them like dogs and parade them about,
eating scraps discarded from the table because they lack the resolve to rise
and take them for themselves.
“Violence
will happen. It is unwanted but
inevitable. Words have not worked and
will not work, not against those so sick with greed that they cannot hear. The pen is no mightier either, for our
enemies can see only the gil they stand to make, not the text which we
write. No, weapons will be our font, and
our message will be left in flame and in blood.
This flesh is necrotic, and we must cauterize it before we can heal.
“So, we
fight. We take our futures from those
who would shepherd us against our will.
We wage this final war, and we free ourselves from the cages built
around us long ago. We become the heroes
they claim to be, the heroes we were always meant to be, and we tear down this
wall of lies so that we can truly, finally, see reality.”
He went
quiet again, and this time they cheered.
It was a sea of flailing limbs and Yuffie spied Daisy in the back,
looking pale and frightened. They made
eye contact, and Yuffie was sure she looked the same.
The two of
them traded nods and Yuffie sunk into the bodies. She moved smoothly through the masses and
stopped only when the crowd went quiet.
Lotus was speaking again before she could turn.
“I am glad
that I have your support. Now, for the
first step. Before we fight, we should
send them a message. A declaration of
war, and I know just the message to send.
Yuffie Kisaragi, if you could help us with that task.”
She froze
and stared into his mask, and she could almost feel him smiling. The bodies around her parted, giving her a
long, narrow view of the stage. He
watched her, microphone to his mask, stone-still.
“I knew you
were here,” he said. “How could I not
recognize you, hero of the Jenova War, supposed savior from the meteor fall,
leashed and collared and trained to attack on command. Have you come here today to sniff me
out? To devour me before we devour your
beloved master? Are you afraid I might
share the valuable materia that you have worked so hard to keep out of the
hands of those who truly need it?”
Eyes were
trained on her now. The soldiers in the
corners had left their post and were moving through the crowd. The bodies around here went still, stiff, all
watching with her uncertainty, in awed fright.
They shifted only as they were shoved about by the enemies moving
through them.
Yuffie
tugged her hood back and tossed her glasses to the ground. “You know, this is embarrassing. I get recognized everywhere I go. Price of being famous, huh?”
“Must be,”
Lotus said. “Why are you here, hunter?”
“Just
taking a look at your little club here.
I was thinking of joining, but I don’t like the outfits.”
“Ah. But you stayed long enough to memorize the
faces of those here so that you can take our families from us as we sleep.”
“Please,”
Yuffie said. “You’re painting some kind
of picture here, but you’re not a very good artist.”
“Art has
always been subjective,” Lotus said.
“But, enough. We know your rhetoric
and I know your rules, and I will not be subject to them.”
“No, you
want to play by your own rules, get everything in the world without a care for
the people it might hurt.”
“I want
only to do what is right, based on my own conscious and not on the pockets of
those who would make me their slave. I
will not bow to some new dictator, nor kiss the boot of one who kicks me down.”
“I’ll be
kicking you in a second.” Yuffie noted
how the crowd was thinning around her, how the soldiers were making wide circles
about her, ready to strike but afraid to make the first move. “Listen, all of you. The W.R.O. just wants to help. It just wants to create order!”
“And why
does the W.R.O. have to create order?
Why can’t we do that on our own?
Why do they need to control how we live?”
“Oh
my-You’re ridiculous, you know that?
You’ll just take anything I do and say and turn it against me!”
“Easy to do
when you’re so wrong,” Lotus said. “But,
I understand. You’re a good dog. Reeve has you well-trained.”
Yuffie
growled. “Keep talking and you’ll see
just how well-trained I am!”
Lotus
laughed. “And what will you do? Assault me, as you did the patrons of the
Wasteland? Look well, everyone, this is
the W.R.O.’s true face. Force in the
face of opposition. If you can’t buy
them, then you intimidate them. The
problem here is, Yuffie, I am not afraid of you. And I will not bow to anyone.”
“Oh, I
don’t know. I think I’ll have you on
your knees in a bit.”
Yuffie
charged. The soldiers around her broke
holding pattern, but they didn’t know how to move. They were hesitant and slow, and they could
do little more than watch from the sidelines as she made her approach.
At the
stage she jumped and flipped through the air.
At apex, she pulled a materia from her pocket and felt it draw from her
body. A spark of electricity jumped from
the sphere and made an arc toward Lotus.
It died before reaching him.
He stood
still and watched her descent. She drew
a knife from her other pocket and brought it down toward him but hit empty
air. He side-stepped the attack and
kicked her hard in the chest, knocking her from the stage and onto her back on
the ground. She used the momentum from
her fall to roll backward and onto her feet, and she staggered to a stop.
Lotus
watched her from the stage. In one hand
he held the microphone. In the other, he
held a small handle with a little red button on the end. The button glowed dimly beneath the
floodlights. “Surprised that your
materia failed you? Don’t be. We’ve
found a solution to our materia problems, one which will level the playing
field. We call it a materia jammer. When activated, all materia within a fifty-foot
radius is rendered useless.”
Yuffie
scowled. “Doesn’t matter.” She yanked her jacket off and dropped it at
her side. “I don’t need materia to knock
your ass up and down that stage.”
“Yes. You’re quite the fighter. Overcame the five gods of the pagoda on your
own.” Lotus tossed the jammer to a tall,
dark woman standing nearby and then dropped the microphone. He leapt from the stage and landed ten feet
away from her, staring into her eyes.
“We’ll see how long you last.”
Yuffie
threw her dagger, and he kicked it away.
He undid his cloak, revealing a loose, black gi underneath, and folded
the cloak carefully before leaving it on the stage. When he turned, he still had his hood up, and
he tucked it into his mask before meeting her eyes. “Yuffie Kisaragai, daughter of the great
Gotoh Kisaragi, leader of the Wutai, highest of the five gods. I had thought you were better than this.”
“I’m just
rusty.”
“Let’s give
you incentive then.” He pointed to the
corner and Yuffie saw Daisy standing straight, her weapons discarded. A blonde stood behind her, eyes glowing green
and holding a sword to Daisy’s throat.
Yuffie
sighed. “Really, Daze?”
“Yuffie,
I’m sorry!”
“Yeah,
yeah, just sit tight.” Yuffie widened
her stance and turned back to Lotus.
“I’ll mop this guy up quick.”
Lotus
laughed. “You think highly of yourself,
don’t you?”
“You’ve
done your homework. You should
know. I’m an old veteran.”
“Yes, you
were.”
“Oh, man,
am I going to enjoy punching that mask into your skull!”
“Then do
it.”
She charged
again and swung hard, but by then he wasn’t there. He moved a small, discreet circle around her. She met him coming around, bringing her left
fist back at him, and he ducked under it.
This continued, strike and evasion, strike and evasion, looking almost
like a dance.
Yuffie
stepped in, tangled her right leg in his, and tried to punch for the head, but
he caught her by the fist and twisted her around. He moved to pin her against the stage, but
she twirled in the air and used her momentum to twist his arm back. Flowing with her movements, he spun, too, and
then kicked her in the side, knocking the air from her.
She
stumbled into the stage and glared at him.
The blow was glancing, and adrenaline kept her going. She was hurt, but it was mostly bruised
pride. He was smiling behind his mask,
she was sure.
He bounced
on his feet and laughed. “Weren’t the
people of Wutai supposed to be good at hand-to-hand combat?”
“Shut.
Up!” Yuffie kicked high and missed
wide. She spun on heel and kicked
overhead, and Lotus caught her by the ankle and threw her to the ground. She landed in the dust and rolled to a stop
before pushing off and continuing her assault.
Her next
swing landed her in his grasp. She drew
another knife and swiped at his face. It
left a shallow scrap across his mask. He
moved too quickly, too fluidly for her to pin down, and at this point it was
becoming clear that he was toying with her.
He tossed a handful of dust into her face and twisted the dagger out of
her hand.
She
staggered back, coughing and rubbing dust from her eyes, while he walked a
small circle around her. He held the
dagger between his hands, regarding it casually as he spoke. “Truly, I am disappointed. After all, you were a hero. A legend.
Or so you remind people but, it seems, like most legends, you’re mostly
fiction.”
Yuffie’s
eyes burned, but she was angry, so she swung wildly. Each time she could feel his body just
outside of her reach. He moved around
her, but his presence remained static, and it kept her swinging, kept her
mad. Finally, he stopped retreating and
met one of her swings with a kick to the gut.
This one hurt for real.
“Or, maybe
it is that your time in captivity had dulled your fangs. Have your masters pampered you with shiny
things?”
“Big talk
for someone who is doing nothing but dancing around my attacks,” she
coughed. “What, afraid to break a nail?”
“Yuffie,”
Daisy shouted. “Don’t!” The woman behind her had adjusted the blade.
Yuffie saw
Lotus look back, and then look forward again.
“Fine,” he said. “This game has
gone on long enough. Watch, everyone, as
I end a legend.”
He made
toward her, and Yuffie dug in her feet.
Years ago, before the Hunters were put together, Tifa helped Yuffie to
sharpen her hand-to-hand combat. They
studied together, and Tifa taught her a secret that no one else knew. It was a part of the school of martial arts
she learned as a teen.
The attack
was called the school’s Death Blow. It
was a forced critical strike. To do it
right, Yuffie had to wait and put all of herself into one blow. The attack was to be swift and discreet and,
if she was lucky, it would end the fight immediately. The key was stance and force.
If it hit,
the damage would be catastrophic, and Lotus would be eating his mask. If it missed, then Yuffie would be wide open
and without time to react. Either way,
the battle would be over.
She could
hardly see him, but she could feel his approach, hear his footsteps. When he was closed, she aimed for his
chest. She took a small step with her
right foot, and she braced herself. With
both hands, she struck with lightning force, and she hit nothing.
He danced
around her again, grabbing her by the arms and redirecting her energy. She couldn’t react in time to stop it and
found herself being thrown, face-first, into the stage. Her nose cracked and flesh parted. Blood gushed and filled her mouth. It painted her chin red.
She
spiraled around toward him and didn’t respond until he landed a blow into her
gut. She backed again, into the stage,
and then pushed off without thinking.
She couldn’t breathe and her legs were giving out. She fell into him and felt pain in her left
shoulder. He had sunk the dagger into
her.
Lotus held
her up, one hand under her right arm and the other holding the dagger. He released her and let her fall into the
dirt, where her blood was pooled. He
stood over her, covered in blood that, briefly, she thought might be his and
then reality caught up to her. She
coughed and stared blindly into the inky black sky.
He leaned
over her. “I won’t kill you, because I
have a message,” he said, and he stepped onto her face and pushed it into the
blood and the dirt. “So, listen, and
listen well. Tell them that I am coming,
and that there’s nothing they can do to stop my revolution.” He pulled his foot back and kicked her.
Her head
jerked to the side and the world spun. A
trail of blood was spread around her.
Everything was glaring and white, and then her vision started to
fade. The last thing she saw before she
blacked out was Daisy with a blade sticking from her gut.