by Nayt on Thu Dec 18, 2008 2:53 am
"Okay . . ." she nodded.
Even though he had basically given her permission, Usurii was still extremely cautious. It was all with good reason, she felt, because a man who'd harm a child probably didn't have the scruples to keep himself from attacking her even though he had given her permission to peek into his memories . . .
Starting from birth was the most efficient way to go about this process, but she had particular memories in mind, and they were far beyond the point of birth. Usurii knew which memory preceded that which had been repressed, and it wasn't that distant. Getting there, though, was essentially a backwards development, starting from just a few seconds ago and rewinding back with each second, from the now to when he walked through the shadows with Brenden, to their meeting, and back even more.
All the while, Shin would feel absolutely nothing--no flashes of memories, no odd colors, sounds, or distortion of his reality, nothing out of the ordinary in the slightest. Usurii's work could go entirely without notice, and those that were aware of this had it in their right minds to be weary of her.
There was a point that she stopped, though, and removed her hand from Shin's forehead. She had witnessed something she had rather not witness--something awful, something shocking. Usurii had not gone back far enough to see Shin's deeds as a mercenary, or what his time was like with "Eri Tetsuken," or when he effectively killed her unborn child some time afterward. No, it was the enigmas that she saw, and she did not gloss over those memories. She had watched them all from start to finish, when Shin "met" Sturm through all the battles, to Silver's involvement--all of it. Especially those that Shin Shiden had killed.
Sturm had never explained to her how the other enigmas that had allied with him died, or who had done them in. She only knew that they had perished in some sort of battle, presumably against the true enemy that Sturm fought against. Now she knew . . . and the most she could feel about it was absolute confusion.
"Y-you . . . you're the one who . . ." Usurii whispered in shock as she backed away from him, ". . . Emitt . . . and Desmon--y-you're the one that . . ."
Truth be told, Usurii never had the opportunity to get especially close to her Master's colleagues. She had conversed with them a couple of times, but that was all. At best, they were acquaintances of hers, nowhere near as close to her as someone like Tehnos was--someone in her life that had also perished in battle. Because of this, she didn't feel particularly destroyed by the revelation, but she was still saddened by it. Though she only knew them scarcely, her Master's colleagues seemed like such nice people.
Usurii didn't noticed she had been backing up from Shin until she felt her back against the wall. She stared at the floor, one hand covering her mouth, the other flat against the wall. She had figured that Shin was a relatively unkind person, capable of hurting a child without conscience, and thought he would be no better than the Gartel that they--the Ersatzshad--tried to avoid at all costs. She hadn't guessed that he mercilessly slew Sturm's men, which was especially surprising because he was here in Sturm's facility, an ally! Usurii couldn't understand this. Shouldn't this man be her Master's enemy . . . and her enemy, as well?
"Why?" she whispered again, a touch of sadness added to her shock, "Why would Master bring you here, after that . . .? Y-you killed . . . you killed his allies a-and . . . and the few he trusted--why would he bring you here? Why would he take you in as some sort of ally? Why . . .?"