Blackened Petals
[02.08.01] » by Negative Creep
*****
"Excuse me sir, would you like to buy a flower? Only 5 gil......."
It was surprising to see any bright colors in the slums. The predominating shades were of brown silt, and the
dark gray of steel corroding with rust. Occasionally the monotony was broken up by the rainbow-scrawl
of graffiti on the side of some building or a garish neon sign, but those colors were harsh, unnatural. The
color that had caught the passing man's eye had not been garish nor man-made, but natural, like grass and
the sky -- things rarely seen in the Sector 5 Slums.
Turning to find the source of the voice and the unnatural display of color, the passing businessman came face
to face with an exhausted-looking flower girl. Her face was streaked with dirt, the pretty dress she wore
frayed at the edges, but there was still something fresh and pure about her.....Innocent even, a commodity
found under the plate even less than rainbow-shaded palettes. Smiling politely at her potential customer, she
held up the source of the color, a shabby basket full of fading flowers.
"Buy one sir?" the girl intoned, her voice cheerful and lilting despite her exhausted appearance.
The man wondered how many times a day she must ask this question to the uncaring crowds, and how many
times a day she was ignored.
What a brave girl she is, he thought, and, with a kind smile, he dug into his pocket and produced a
10-gil piece.
"I'll take two, please."
The girl's eyes lit up like twin nebulas.
"Oh...oh, yes sir, yes sir! Thank you sir!!"
Nodding frantically, she picked two of the best flowers from her basket and handed them to the
businessman. Pocketing the two slightly wilted pink roses the girl had given him, the gentleman gave her a
courteous nod and continued on his way, soon disappearing into the innumerable crowds of people that
filled the slums.
The flower girl watched him until he was well out of sight, then picked up her basket of wares and made her
own way through the crowd.
The smile disappeared from her face, and the look that replaced it was one of a hunted animal. Eyes
darting this way and that, she rushed through the evening traffic until she reached a darkened alleyway, and
there she allowed herself to relax, leaning against the grimy concrete surface and panting. A look of relief
crossed her face.
"I did it! I got away this time!"
She allowed a small smirk to creep across her face again and turned to exit the alleyway. As she did, another
voice echoed out of the blackness.
"Oh you did, eh?"
The flower girl's expression changed to sheer terror.
"Aeris!"
As if summoned by her name, out of the shadows stepped yet another teenage girl, wielding a large staff. She looked slightly
older than the other girl, and, also unlike her, the expression written on her face was not of fear, but of smugness. A face
used to getting her way.
A casual onlooker would've thought her as fresh-faced and innocent as the first flower girl, maybe even more so. But what
they wouldn't notice, what they never seemed to notice, was the look in the jade-green eyes, the look usually camouflaged by
a sweet expression of fealty.
Money? Oh my no, I sell my flowers to make people happy! The smile said. To make YOU happy, of course!
But under it, like an eel in a dark underwater cave waiting for unwary scuba-divers, was a cunning and calculating look -
much less becoming, yes, but much more honest.
Aeris was no fool. She knew that to survive in the slums one had to make money; to survive in comfort you had to
make more. There were several ways to do this in the Slums- most of them unpleasant. In fact, flower-selling was one of
the more lucrative professions, if you could make it pay out. It all depended on having the right face, voice, attitude, etc.
And Aeris seemed to have them all in spades.
There was one problem with this, however. If even one competitor began selling her wares in your vicinity, it could
drastically reduce profits. And when the other slum girls had seen Aeris making so much money simply selling flowers,
they had understandably wanted the same for themselves.
However, none of them ever succeeded. After two or three attempts none even attempted the feat anymore; the ones that
were persistent in trying to sell their grubby, faded petals began to disappear at an alarming rate. Rumors began to
circulate about Aeris, unflattering rumors. To them all she responded with an innocent shrug and the ever-present sunshine
smile. But as always, lurking under the smile and the innocence was a business shark as ruthless as any Turk.
Yes, Aeris was the undisputed queen of the flower girls. And if someone dared to challenge her, they paid -- either with gil
or their health. Which one this unfortunate bud merchant would pay with remained to be seen. At the moment she was on
her knees, clutching at Aeris's spotless pink skirt.
"Oh please Aeris, please let me go! I just wanted a little spending cash, I won't do it again!! Honest!!"
The girl clutched at the hems of the older girl's skirt even more, whining and cringing like a subservient dog. Disdainfully
Aeris pushed her away with the toe of one of her boots.
"I would have mercy, Kelly, but this is the third time I've caught you selling in my territory. I let you off the last two
times -- I can't do that again, now can I sweetie?"
The saccharine tones in Aeris's voice didn't warm the cockles of Kelly's heart; she knew what the veiled threat behind the
sweetness meant. The sadistic smirk on her lips didn't help either - things were not looking good. And sure enough, the
smile turned to a snarl as Aeris wrenched the girl up by her bobbed hair.
"Listen you.." she hissed, "You give me all the gil you've made off of trolling my territory, and I'll let you go home with all
your teeth intact. If you don't......" and here she twirled her staff menacingly ".........then I'll just have to take the price
out on your head. So what's it going to be then, eh?"
Kelly began to sob, tears making trails down her grimy cheeks. Aeris's expression didn't change; mercy was not a
word in her vocabulary when it came to the flower-selling business. She made a menacing movement with her staff in the
younger girl's direction, and with a final burst of tears Kelly deposited all her gil into Aeris's outstretched palm.
Counting the gold pieces carefully with one eye while watching the flower girl with the other, Aeris gave a curt nod.
"Get out of my sight, and stay out of it." she muttered, still greedily fingering the gold coins, finally pocketing the other
girl's earnings with a professional slide of the hand.
As Kelly turned to leave, she tripped over a loose brick, stumbling to the ground with a cry. As she stumbled, something else
fell from the front of her dress. A small leather pouch dropped into the dust with a soft thud, and before Kelly could react,
Aeris had snatched it up and dumped the contents into her lily-white hand.
Gil pieces. 30, to be exact. Aeris looked at the money slowly, then back at Kelly, then back at the money.
The other girl gave a strangled squeal, like a rabbit being shaken by a dog, and backed against the brick wall, opening and
shutting her mouth silently. Aeris slowly put the money in her pocket while never taking her eyes off the girl, very slowly
picking up her staff and advancing.
"Thought you'd just give me half and keep the rest, huh? Because I'd never find out, right? Well, that's not how it works. I
always find out. The Planet's on my side. And now, Kelly my friend, I have to charge you double. I have to make sure
noone wants to buy flowers from you again."
She lifted the butt end of her staff in one fluid motion and in the blink of an eye had rammed it into the girl's mouth. Almost
at the same time she switched ends and slammed the blunt pole into the girl's nose, making the bone crunch sickeningly loud.
Panting, she paused and looked briefly at the victim of her anger.
The girl was now writhing on the ground in agony, hands squeezed to her crushed nose in a futile attempt to stop the bleeding.
Streaks of red squeezed through her fingers, and occasionally she spat blood and teeth from the mutilated orifice of her
mouth. Aeris surveyed the destruction she had wrought with some satisfaction.
"Hrmmmmm..." she mused quietly "......Good, but not good enough. I'm definitely not done with you yet."
The girl's eyes widened with fear, and in a panic she began crawling towards the far end of the alleyway, in a futile attempt
to lose herself in the darkness. A trail of blood snaked behind her, dripping into the dust and grime, leaving a clear trail of
her passing. Aeris's smirk grew larger by a fraction, and with a grim chuckle she followed Kelly into the darkness.
****
Noone ever found out the truth about what had happened to Kelly. The poor girl was found in an alleyway, her face beaten to
a pulp, her gil and flowers gone. The authorities assumed that it must have been one of the roving gangs that populated the
slums preying on the weak, and since Kelly had lost the ability to speak since the incident, this theory was never challenged.
"Would you like to buy a flower? Only 5 gil!"
An old woman, passing through Sector 5 on a visit to her son, paused at the bright display of color by the side of the path. A
pretty young girl, all freshness and innocence, was selling flowers from a small basket she carried on her shoulder.
What a pretty young lass, the old woman thought. I wonder how she survives in this wretched place, poor lamb.
"I'll take 3, please..." the old woman said, opening a small coinpurse to retrieve the needed money. Taking the proffered lilies, the
senior smiled at the girl's astonished thanks and continued on her journey.
"Why can't more girls be like her? Such good manners. It's a pity there aren't more like that." the woman muttered as she
wobbled her way down the path, soon disappearing into the crowd.
And Aeris counted her gil and smiled.
END
|