THE SEARCH FOR AERIS
THE UNOFFICIAL SEQUEL TO FINAL FANTASY VII
by Frank Verderosa
The Reluctant Mayor
"I never paid much attention to all that Ancients talk" Barret Wallace
We Have a Plan
"The dead abide here" Red XII
The Great Minton Leaf Episode
"What do we look like, mountain goats?" Barret Wallace
Midgar Again
"Did somebody take out an advertisment in the paper saying we would be
in Midgar today?" Tifa Lockhart
Are All Politicians Crooked?
"So I'm just supposed to wait here with the furballs?" Yuffie Kisaraghi
Those Annoying Bats
"So who's the poor fool who gets to go out there?" Cid Highwind
The Ressurection of ...
"Nor par tellemar..."
CHAPTER I
THE RELUCTANT MAYOR
The Mayor of Corel sat back in his chair and looked vacantly at the heap
of papers that lay on the desk in front of him. He had been working diligently,
or as diligently as was possible for him, to make a dent in those papers
all day, yet looking now it seemed as if he had made almost no progress.
He glanced out a window to his left and saw that the sun now hung low in
the sky, just peaking over the mountains of North Corel. He had been working
on this paperwork all day, but he hated it, and it was slow going. How
he wished he were out in those mountains right now and not stuck behind
this desk!
With a shrug he turned back to his papers. He had too much work to do to
let his mind wander. He reminded himself (for the millionth time, it seemed)
that he had responsibilities now, and couldn't take off and leave everything
on some whim like he used to in the old days. No, those days were gone,
even though he had come to realize that they had been the most exciting
in his life.
Still, a man had to move on. He idly scratched his right arm just above
the gun grafted on it. He looked at the gun for a moment, holding it up
until the sun glinted off it through the window. For all he had used this
lately, Barret mused, he might as well have replaced it with a letter opener.
The door to his office opened. He turned with a frown. He knew he had to
get this paperwork done, and he also knew that he would jump at any interruption
as a chance to get away from it. To prevent that he had left his secretary
with explicit orders that he not he disturbed.
A girl stood in the doorway, but it was not his secretary. He recognized
her and his frown immediately turned into a grin.
"Tifa!" he exclaimed, getting up and striding over to her. "It's so good
to see you again. I didn't know you were in town."
Barret wrapped her in a bear hug, and though she was by no means a fragile
girl, she gasped for breath until he let her go.
"I just got here," she replied after a moment.
"Well, make yourself at home," he said, indicating a seat in front of his
desk. He sat down behind the desk, his paperwork forgotten. "How long has
it been since I last saw you, about a year I guess, eh? I can't believe
it's been that long. How's everything back in Kalm? Are you doing well
with your new bar? How's Cloud? Everything well, I hope?"
Tifa sat down slowly in the chair. She did not speak for a moment, and
at first he thought she had just been overwhelmed from his barrage of questions,
but then he realized this was not so. He and Tifa went back a long way
from their days in Avalanche, and even when things had been bad Tifa had
always been cheerful and optimistic. But now he saw a troubled look in
her eyes.
"Is everything OK? How are things between you and Cloud?" he guessed.
"Ok, I suppose," she said with a shrug.
Obviously not good. He saw that he had guessed correctly.
"What did he do, run off on you?" The pokey haired kid had a good heart
but he was so immature. Barret wondered if he was going to have to knock
some sense into him.
"No, nothing like that, " Tifa said quickly with a smile, as if she understood
his thoughts. She sat back in her chair and glanced out the window. Now
that it came down to it she was reluctant to speak. She had never been
very good about expressing her feelings for Cloud, and did not feel comfortable
talking about it, even with her close friend. But after all, that was the
whole reason for her being here in the first place. If she couldn't talk
to Barret she couldn't talk to anyone, and if she didn't talk to anyone
she thought she would go crazy.
"It's just that he's so distant," she said finally. "Sometimes it seems
like he's in another world, and it's happening more and more lately. He
can sit there for hours just staring into space. And the dreams. He doesn't
discuss them, but I can tell he has them almost every night. He's convinced
she's trying to contact him."
Barret nodded sympathetically. Tifa didn't have to tell him who 'she' was.
Aeris death had hit them all hard, and no one really got completely over
it. He had seen so many good people lose their lives. He still thought
of Jessie, Wedge and Biggs often, and how they had talked about the good
times they would have after it was all over. That would never happen now,
but what could one do but go on?
"We all lost people we were close to," he said softly.
"But he's convinced she's alive," Tifa said.
Barret looked at her sharply.
"How could he think that?" he questioned. "We were all there. We all saw
it. Sephiroth ran her... well, you know. No one could have survived that."
Barret shuddered at the memory.
Tifa bowed her head, obviously remembering also. But then she looked up
again.
"No human could have survived it," she responded. "But Aeris was an Ancient,
a Cetra. Who knows whether the same rules apply."
Barret looked at her in surprise. He had never thought of that.
"So you think it may be possible?" he asked.
"I don't know!" she answered. "I don't know what to think. I don't see
how she could have survived, but what do I know about the Ancients? All
I know is that Cloud is convinced she is, and he won't be whole until he
finds out for sure, one way or the other."
Barret sat back in his chair. He had never been able to follow all that
Ancient Cetra stuff that Aeris had spouted. It had all seemed much too
complicated and not worth the effort, not when there was a gun in his hand
(or on his hand, as the case may be) and a clear enemy to fight.
"So what do you want to do?" he asked.
She didn't answer at first. She got up and walked over to the window. Dusk
had faded into night, and a few brighter stars now twinkled in the sky.
When she spoke her back was still toward him.
"I want to find out if it is possible she survived. And if it is, I want
to help Cloud find her."
Barret had kind of figured that was coming.
"How would you feel about that," he said slowly. "I mean, if it turned
out she was alive?"
Tifa continued looking out the window, and for a moment he thought she
wasn't going to respond. But then she turned and looked at him.
"I don't know," she said. "But Cloud can't go on like this. He has to be
whole, even if it means..."
She fell silent, but Barret could finish the sentence easily enough. Still,
it seemed unlikely to him it would ever come to that.
"Well I can see your dilemma, and I have to say I admire your decision.
Of course I'll help you any way I can, but I don't see that there is much
I can do. I never paid much attention to all that Ancients talk, and I
certainly wouldn't have the slightest idea of how to look for Aeris, even
if I thought there was even the slimmest chance that she was still alive."
"I know, " she said, nodding. "I didn't come here to have you find me a
solution. It may be that there is no solution. I just needed someone to
talk to."
"I understand," he said, then stood thinking for a moment. "Is Cloud with
you?"
"Yes," she said. "I left him at the Inn. I wanted to come see you first.
I was going to make some excuse but he didn't even ask me where I was going."
"It'll be good to see him again," Barret replied. "You know, I have no
clue what you should do, but I think I know someone who can tell you, if
anyone can. I think it might be time for us to visit another old friend."