samuraiprosecutor (
samuraiprosecutor) wrote2009-12-26 11:19 pm
Entry tags:
[RL 41: I'll Be Home for Christmas (Redux); Edgeworth, Phoenix, Maya, Pearl][Backdated]
((OOC: Back-dated to December 24th, 2009 comm time.))
The CSI photos he’d found years ago in case files hadn’t done the place justice.
It was an unsurprising discovery. Evidence photos weren’t meant to capture a location, they were meant to capture an event. Sterile snapshots of a moment in time, the only spirit they typically conveyed was a pervading sense of violation and pain that differed in degrees depending on the crime. There had been no indication of the peace that normally laid over Kurain, or the cold, pristine perfection of its exotic, snow covered buildings.
Only his experiences at Hazakura Temple helped prepare him for this environment...and they obviously hadn’t prepared him very well, as evidenced by the fact that he was standing at the entrance to the village, ankle deep in snow and wearing a wholly inadequate pea coat. Reverence quickly fading in the face of his involuntary shivering, he hunched his shoulders against the wind and moved into the village.
When he reached the center of town, marked by the stone monolith that jutted from the ground, he paused to get his bearings, praying as he did so that none of the village’s hidden occupants were clandestinely watching this strange fool who didn’t even have the sense to dress for the weather. As many of the buildings were similar and he didn’t recall exactly what the Fey manor looked like, surveying the buildings didn’t prove very helpful. In the end, he was forced to make a blind guess. He headed towards the largest of the buildings; knowing the Fey family’s importance to the village, that seemed the likeliest one to be their ancestral home, and if it wasn’t, hopefully someone inside would be able to direct him there.
Something hitched in his chest as he set foot on the front porch, but he didn’t pause before reaching up to rap the large knocker on the door. It was only after he’d done so that the hesitation set in. Standing there before the immense, gleaming wooden doors, he gave another shudder and finally turned away from the entrance to stare out over the landscape, ears perked warily for any sounds of movement behind him.
The CSI photos he’d found years ago in case files hadn’t done the place justice.
It was an unsurprising discovery. Evidence photos weren’t meant to capture a location, they were meant to capture an event. Sterile snapshots of a moment in time, the only spirit they typically conveyed was a pervading sense of violation and pain that differed in degrees depending on the crime. There had been no indication of the peace that normally laid over Kurain, or the cold, pristine perfection of its exotic, snow covered buildings.
Only his experiences at Hazakura Temple helped prepare him for this environment...and they obviously hadn’t prepared him very well, as evidenced by the fact that he was standing at the entrance to the village, ankle deep in snow and wearing a wholly inadequate pea coat. Reverence quickly fading in the face of his involuntary shivering, he hunched his shoulders against the wind and moved into the village.
When he reached the center of town, marked by the stone monolith that jutted from the ground, he paused to get his bearings, praying as he did so that none of the village’s hidden occupants were clandestinely watching this strange fool who didn’t even have the sense to dress for the weather. As many of the buildings were similar and he didn’t recall exactly what the Fey manor looked like, surveying the buildings didn’t prove very helpful. In the end, he was forced to make a blind guess. He headed towards the largest of the buildings; knowing the Fey family’s importance to the village, that seemed the likeliest one to be their ancestral home, and if it wasn’t, hopefully someone inside would be able to direct him there.
Something hitched in his chest as he set foot on the front porch, but he didn’t pause before reaching up to rap the large knocker on the door. It was only after he’d done so that the hesitation set in. Standing there before the immense, gleaming wooden doors, he gave another shudder and finally turned away from the entrance to stare out over the landscape, ears perked warily for any sounds of movement behind him.

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It was little moments like this, however, when he was alone and wandering the halls, that he'd catch himself wondering what Edgeworth was doing or what he'd think if Phoenix had randomly decided to show up in Paris, and it was thoughts like those that reminded Phoenix that Edgeworth probably wouldn't have a clue why the defense attorney even cared in the first place.
...And it was reminders like that which had Phoenix mentally smacking himself. He really needed to stop thinking about it and start focusing on what he was doing in the here and now, like trying not to freeze while he made his way to the restroom. Brooding wasn't going to help anything; it wouldn't bring back Edgeworth's memories, and it certainly wasn't going to put Phoenix in a better mood, so the best thing to do was put those thoughts in the back of his mind and concentrate on something else. Something like the knock at the door.
Wait. The knock at the door...?
Stopping in his tracks, he backed up and glanced at the main entrance, frowning a little. Was someone really out there in the middle of the night? In this weather?
"Hey, Maya?" he called, glancing over his shoulder. "I think someone's at the door..."
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That was also assuming anyone opened the door—for all he knew, the building could be some temple that was only staffed during the day, a possibility he began to be more convinced of the longer he stood there in the cold. After another glance at the door, he turned back to the street outside, beginning to wonder if he should try another building.
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"I guess I'll get it," he said to himself. Tightening the kimono he'd been fitted with on arrival, he prepared to brace himself against the wind outside and carefully slid the door about a foot open, peering out from behind it. The cold air immediately flooded the room, and he tried not to cringe as he asked, "Can I help y--"
The words immediately died in his throat, however. The man on the porch may not have been facing Phoenix, but that head of hair was unmistakable...
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Standing there on the snow-covered porch, lit by the light of the moon and the dim lamps that flanked the door, Edgeworth suddenly couldn’t find anything to say.
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Swallowing to fight the sudden dryness in his mouth, Phoenix pushed the door a little wider and stood in the entrance way, frowning in confusion. "Edgeworth? What are you...?"
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“Apparently we...didn’t end that conversation soon enough.”
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With a gentle shake of his head and a hint of a melancholy smirk on his lips, Edgeworth quietly answered, “I’m back, Wright.”
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Still, he could keep neither his brow from twitching upward nor the hopefulness from his voice when he asked, "You mean you...?"
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The moment was almost surreal, but soon enough reality began to impose itself on the situation...the overwhelming reality of Wright, of everything Edgeworth had almost lost, enfolding him with warmth. His fingers clenched and suddenly his hands were moving, his arms lifting to wrap themselves, hesitantly, around Wright. Edgeworth leaned his chin against his friend’s shoulder and held him, his own grip slowly tightening as if he was afraid the man would be taken away again if he didn’t hold on.
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Nothing he could have said would have been able to express how grateful he was, even if words weren't failing him. He hoped squeezing the life out of Edgeworth was an adequate alternative.
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Eventually he pulled away, slowly, his gaze betraying a hint of reluctance before he awkwardly averted his eyes to the ground.
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“It doesn’t suit someone like you to cry useless tears, Wright,” he answered with a soft quirk of his lips, as he held his friend’s gaze without hesitation.
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"I hope you don't plan on standing here all night," he finally said as he lowered his arm, exhaling slowly. All traces of tears were gone, though his face was likely to betray his emotions like it always did. He simply smiled, a hint of a smirk playing on his lips, and continued, "As glad as I am to see you, I think I'd rather be inside."
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Maybe the community showed mercy after all, he thought, or maybe they were just lucky. Either way, he was certainly counting his blessings.
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She walked closer, recognising Phoenix as she drew near to the open doorframe. "Mr. Nick?" she piped up. "Who is it at this time of night?" She hurried to stand next to him, to get a better look, and her mouth fell open in a large "o", her eyes widening.
"Mr. Edgeworth!" she exclaimed after a few seconds, a smile breaking out over her face. She could hardly believe it - she thought that his memories were still missing, and she was sure that he wouldn't have come here if he couldn't remember... but that didn't matter, right? She was still really happy to see him, especially on Christmas! "I didn't think you were going to come!"
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"I wasn't."