Title:
On the Edge
Author: Hieiko
Fandom: Yu Yu
Hakusho
Pairing: Hiei/Mukuro
Disclaimer: I don't own
YYH.
Notes: Written for the livejournal community
1sentence's
Theme set Epsilon.
Summary: Life or death is a choice they always
have to make, and they're always on the edge.
i.
Everyone
moved well out of the way whenever Mukuro was in a rage; Hiei was the
only exception. Nobody understood how he managed to keep his cool
even as she proceeded to lash out at him. Some assumed that, since he
was a young youkai, it was simply recklessness on his part.
ii.
The
last time Mukuro had been angry, Hiei had even provoked her further
by speaking of things she didn't want to hear. Most of Mukuro's
subjects had expected her to kill him on the spot; they had been
surprised when they were proven wrong after Hiei returned with a
mysterious gift. But even more unnerving was the obvious gentleness
in her eyes whenever she looked at Hiei since then.
iii.
It
was no longer a secret that he was Mukuro's favored one. Thousands of
youkai had been under her service for centuries, but when Hiei had
arrived, none of them seemed to matter. Though Mukuro was a woman who
carried the title of King, she never found contentment until she cast
it aside and listened to the advice of a Forbidden Child.
iv.
Hiei had initially joined Mukuro to test his own power and
improve his skills, not knowing that there was much more he would
learn from her. Months had passed in a blur as she sent hundreds of
youkai after youkai to challenge him. It annoyed Hiei because he felt
he was being kept waiting.
But everything changed on the day Mukuro finally showed herself.
v.
Hiei still never
showed any respect for her authority when he spoke, nor did he heed
any of her commands; strangely, this was how Mukuro knew that he was
worthy.
She was aware that she didn't hold his full attention, because of his attachments to his sister and friends. She felt the need to prod him constantly about them, just to get a reaction. It amused her that a three-eyed Jaganshi could be so blind.
Hiei could pinpoint the most minute details of battle, but his own emotions tended to escape his notice.
vi.
Sometimes
they spoke about death; they both believed that their souls were
headed for hell. Mukuro thought that it would be a picture-perfect
setting: she as Queen, and he as her Consort.
Hiei called her a fool.
She waved away the insult, and declared that she was not foolish, but perhaps quite mad.
vii.
A few
times Mukuro caught Hiei sleeping, and thought he looked like a
child. But as soon as he awakened, she would feel as though she had
been dragged from the past to the present. It was easy for her to see
the shadows behind his eyes then, because they were mirrored in her
own.
viii.
Hiei never said goodbye whenever he left.
He never said where he was going, either. But he always brought
something for her when he returned.
Mukuro appreciated those little things, but she was relieved just to have him back safe.
ix.
They both had enough ghosts in their pasts that an occasional
visit was inevitable. Sometimes it was simply a matter of turning the
page to the next story, and forgetting about it. At other times,
there was a cry of "an eye for an eye".
Neither of them would give in to such demands, of course.
x.
It
was rare to hear birds singing in their part of Makai; even rarer was
the chance for them to listen. Mukuro did not know how it began, but
it seemed that suddenly she and Hiei had been spending more time
appreciating the wonders of nature.
"Stop and smell the roses," she would say; "I don't like the smell," he'd answer.
xi.
Time passed slowly, but pass it did;
they soon found themselves in another war.
After every battle, Hiei washed the blood off her hands, and she did the same for him. Mukuro tore scraps from her own clothing to bandage his wounds; her own injuries were wrapped in scraps of Hiei's black cloak.
xii.
It was fortunate that history tended to
repeat itself; three of the most powerful youkai, one of whom was
Hiei, ended the war in a stalemate. But for all his talk, Hiei didn't
want the political power, so he let Mukuro take the reins. She
accepted it, but wondered why being a ruler bothered her now when she
had spent centuries in the same position.
Perhaps they had been graced by Divine Providence, or perhaps just luck, but later an old friend returned with another impetuous proposal about a tournament.
xiii.
No more walls remained between
them, after all the years together in times of war and peace. They
had seen one another naked, in every sense of the word.
Eventually, their passion drove them to embark on the journey of starting a family.
xiv.
On the day their first child was born,
Mukuro heard her husband's muttered vow that he would allow no harm
to come to their child. With a wry grin, she then asked why he picked
Urameshi Yusuke (who attracted trouble like honey did flies) as
godfather for their precious daughter.
Hiei ignored Mukuro's words, and merely continued to observe the infant suckling hungrily from her breast.
If an innocent life could be born from two warriors who knew nothing but blood and death, perhaps miracles do happen.