~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
<< Prologue/Chapter 1 <<
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Chapter 5: "The Jungle"
The sun had finally emerged in all its glory, sailing high above the forest on its journey across the cloudless sky. Light split open the lattice of branches to uncover a resplendent world beneath. The woods teemed with life in every direction: the perfect conditions for dispelling darkness in all its forms.
Still, it did little to cut through the jungle inside Warriorsās head.
He plodded through the dense Faron Woods, keeping pace behind Sky and Zelda. The two Skyloftians walked abreast on the trail, following a route known only to them. They were gabbing away about a mishmash of topics, smiley and spirited and brimming with good humor. But Warriors couldnāt keep up with any of it. Arcs of fire kept shooting through his midsection, partially relieved by the ice rod strapped to his hip. With his friends paving the way to the spring, his mind was freed up to its own devices, sorting through the noxious weeds entangling his sensibilities.
Darkness must not taint these hallowed grounds.
The voice bounced around inside his skull until it became thoroughly lodged in the snarl of weeds. He turned it over, picked it apart, parsing its every word.
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~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
<< Prologue/Chapter 1 <<
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Chapter 2: "Sky High"
āYou know, if you would have told me two years ago that weād be living down here on the Surface, and that youād be the one sending me wake-up letters every morning, I would have pushed you off Skyloft all over again.ā
Sky laughed, lacing his fingers with hers. āYouād push me off Skyloft even without all that.ā
āWell, yeah, but thatās because youāre a goofball.ā
āA goofball you canāt keep your hands off of?ā
āHmmā¦ā Zelda nuzzled into his neck. āYou caught me there.ā
Closing his eyes, Sky nuzzled her back, nose buried in her long golden hair. He breathed in her sweet, euphoric scent, wishing he could bottle it up and take it with him as his constant companionāat least, if he couldnāt take her first.
~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
<< Prologue/Chapter 1 <<
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Chapter 3: "Communion"
The touch of first light came incrementally, washing the darkness in gray, then all at once as the sun breached the horizon, banishing the gloom. Shadows fled and birdsong filled their place, reanimating the sleepy forest. A new beginning.
Warriors drew in the earthy air, sending it to his stiff lower back, to his heart that drummed away in his chest. With hands resting on criss-crossed legs, he checked in with himself, identifying needs, providing strength and support to his ailing parts. It was a routine that came second nature to him now, an indispensable practice that had stayed with him since the war: a communion between his mind and body.Ā
Like always, he had risen early that morning. Heād slept fitfully during the night, unable to get comfortable no matter what heād triedābut he had ridden it out, trusting in the daylight to set him straight. The predawn hours were his most productive by far, offering him the chance to recenter himself before the world woke and the distractions of daily life kicked in. A chance to start the day right. The morning sun against his eyelids warmed him from the inside out, bringing him back into alignment.
~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
<< Prologue/Chapter 1 <<
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Chapter 4: "Raising the Bar"
Sky wasnāt sure what happened, but he was confident it could be classified as emotional whiplash.
He had been saying his last goodbyes to Zelda, wrapped up in the paradise of her arms, making good on his promise to maximize the precious time stolen away from them, when suddenly a bang and a staggering shock wave shook the ground. His body reacted involuntarily. Whirling around, he put his back to Zelda, one arm shielding her figure and the other smoothly drawing the Master Sword. He raised the gleaming blade, eyes peeled for whatever threat had managed to get the drop on themābut when he saw Warriors hurtling through the air to smack the ground some twenty feet back, bent double as he clutched at his midriff with no threats in sight, bewilderment struck Sky over the head. He rushed forward with Zelda, intent on helping his impaired friend, whenā
āDARKNESS MUST NOT TAINT THESE HALLOWED GROUNDS.ā
It came as a bolt from the blue. Sky spun about, standing over Warriors with the sacred sword held aloft. He sought out the source, scanning the grounds, the forest, the heavens.Ā
But the voice grew silent, and only the ambient noises of the woods gave themselves away.
āShe bestowed upon him a green tunicāthe sign of the legendary hero. Link did not believe himself worthy of the honor, but he was determined to helpā¦ā
~ ~ ~
Warriors was no stranger to adversity. The War Across the Ages had scarred him and broke him down more than anything had before. He would even say that it brought out the worst in him.Ā
Still, the war had refined him. It sharpened him, tempered him into the capable hero his kingdom needed. It led him to lifelong friends and allies that he couldnāt imagine his life without.
But even with an army of friends at his back, what could Warriors possibly do when his fiercest battles werenāt physical?
~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Prologue/Chapter 1: "The Overlook"
There was something seductive about total self-control.
He tore through the undergrowth, darting between grasping branches like a skilled acrobat. Dodging and swerving, he slashed aside the bramble curtains obstructing his path. Leaves went flying, dust muddled the air, the cackle of fiendish pursuers hot on his heels. A machete came pinwheeling at him from the forest depths, but he batted it away with his blade. It was a dance he knew well, a choreography that came to him by rote. He could keep this up for hours, for milesāa seasoned war captain pitted against some ragtag bokoblins?
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~A deep dive into Warriorsās search for healing, and how Sky has something to do with it.
<< Prologue/Chapter 1 <<
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
Chapter 6: "Between Extremes"
The air crackled and reeked of ozone, thrumming with ancient energy. Clouds gathered until the miasma slipped inside under the doors. Moss carpeting the stone corridors withered and blackened in its wake. The inky blackness crept deeper and deeper, through the chamber, up a flight of steps until it terminated in a dark vortex. Concentric rings of vivid violet spun atop the stairs. The gateway called, consumed, beckoned to the ominous unknown. Spellbinding.
Sights swirled within the darkness, conjuring up gaping mouths and grasping claws⦠a stench of decay⦠glittering jewels⦠red rings, gold rings, violet ringsā¦
Circles⦠circlesā¦
A deafening crack cleaved the temple dais in two, shattering the circles into a million piecesā
Sky jerked awake as his face smacked into tree bark. Groaning, he rubbed his forehead. A hard slab of wood stared back at him in the dim light. He rolled onto his other side, disoriented.
A tangle of blankets lay deserted on the ground. By some means, he had managed to roll entirely out of his sleeping bag, circling until he reached the wall of the stump. Thoughts jumbled, he continued to lie there, scraping together every last crumb of energy; then, without bothering to change, he grabbed his gear and crawled out of the hole on leaden limbs, squinting as the light outside assaulted him.
āNo matter where I go to offer aid, Link remains at my sideā¦ā
~A brief exploration of Zeldaās personal journey toward home, and how she finds it in Link.
Read on AO3 or continue below.
<< Chap 9 <<
~o~o~o~o~o~
Chapter 10: "Wherever You Go"
The small hours of the night are nothing small at all when one is confronted with a total lack of sleep. Minutes creep by inch by inch, each one lasting years. Tossing and turning offer no relief whatsoever. Eventually, the prospect of sleep is given up on altogether, and one must surrender to the tedium of insomnia. So was Zeldaās situation.
In the early half-light, time seemed stationary. After waging its furious tantrum, the storm had finally worn itself out around midnight, leaving behind an eerie stillness. The slow and steady drip of residual rainwater running off the eaves created a rhythmic staccato, interrupting the silence.Ā
Inside, Zelda hunched over a steaming cup of milk, a heavy fleece blanket thrown across her shoulders. She had naively hoped the warm drink would restore her to her senses or, better yet, lull her back to sleep. It appeared to do neither. Sighing, she heaved herself up from her chair, abandoning the milk and blanket, and headed out to begin her chores.
The morning light revealed a cloudless periwinkle sky. She made for the stalls, head down to avoid treading in muddy puddles, and it was as she was turning the corner of the house that she ran headlong into Linkās chest.
āOh!ā Zelda gasped and tottered backwards, arms windmilling. But she neednāt have worried; Link didnāt miss a beat, his hands shooting out to hold her steady. Zelda put a hand to her startled heart, suddenly very awake. A couple of shallow breaths passed between them, both taking in the other in dumbfounded shock.
āYouāre not supposed to be back yet!ā
It was all she could think to say in the moment. Linkās surprise changed to brow-furrowed confusion. āI said two or three days tops. Itās day three.ā
Zelda blinked. She did the mental math and found that he was right.Ā
Link shifted his weight. āTried to make it two, butā¦ā
She stared at him. How Zelda had not heard his approach on horseback, she hadnāt the foggiest. She took in his filthy tunic, the dried mud on his cheek. His hair was windswept, as if he had ridden hard to get there. A bouquet of silent princesses was gripped in his hand.
He followed her line of sight to the flowers. He seemed to only just remember them. Hastily, he thrust them out to her.
Zelda gaped at them, their cloying scent enveloping her. With a swell of affection, she accepted his offering into her arms, a modest smile turning up her lips.
The daylight was breaking, and with the return of her dearest friend, so was the light within her spirit. With the horses thriving under Linkās care, both princess and knight retreated to the house together, each with extra pep in their steps. Zelda placed the silent princesses in the vase on the dining table, saving one for the nightstand upstairs. Reverently, she ran her finger across the dainty blue and white petals. Contrary to all expectations, sheād seen them springing up unrestrained across the countryside ever since her return. To think there had ever been a time when theyād been threatened by extinction was unbelievable. They were a miracle. Almost too good to be true.
Mercifully, Link had returned to her in one piece. Aside from his monster-clearing mission, he had also somehow found the time to bring back a satchel full of freshly hunted meatāa marvel to Zelda, especially considering yesterdayās storm. While he planned to sell most of it in town, they kept a considerable portion, and after a quick wash-up out back (it took ample convincing, but convince him she did, during which she began boiling some eggs), Link got to work cooking up a succulent breakfast of wild boar rashers and sweet buttery buns to share.
It was delicious, and Linkās company even more so. Her eggs were a hit, and Linkās sugared sweet buns practically melted in her mouth. As they dug into their heaping plates, they took turns recounting their time apart. Zelda relayed the progress made at the lab, going on about Purahās zest, Syminās kindness. As was his custom, Link summarized the details of his mission in succinct form. Thankfully, everyone in his crew walked away with only minor cuts and bruisesāthough he did tell her an amusing tale about a runaway wagon. Zelda couldnāt take her eyes off him. With his cheeks scrubbed pink and his mouth full of bacon, he positively glowed, and the longer she looked, the more everything felt right.
It was a golden time. Link had returned to her, and along with him returned the color in her world. The sky was brighter; food tasted richer. She had everything she could have wanted.
But still the heaviness in her heart remained.
While the storm outside had departed, the turbulence within Zelda stubbornly hung on. The looming cloud that had taken form at the back of her mind continued to grow, expanding until it completely enshrouded her. The temporary high that had infused her at Linkās homecoming trailed away like a falling star. Simple tasks once more required great effort. The downpour lived on.
Link showed his care for her time and time again. It was all in the little things: watering the flowers, preparing meals, looking after the horses. Tirelessly earning their keep. Still, it was plain to him that she was stuck in the doldrumsāso, being the selfless soul that he was, he resorted to the old tried-and-true: retreating to the outdoors.
This time, he brought her to the small pond beside the house; not far, since her energy had largely dried up, but far enough to breathe the open air and feel the sun on her skin. They settled down by the water, as they had many times before. But instead of basking in the balmy weather, Zelda was in a world of her own. She stared unseeingly at the water, mired in melancholy.
She could feel his eyes on her. That bright, electric gaze. Kind and penetrating. Zelda ached. It was almost too much to take, his concern, his all-consuming care. His regret that for all his physical strength, he still couldnāt protect her from herself. Inexorably, she looked overāshe could never resist his pull, neverāand immediately zeroed in on a spot near his hairline.
The bruise stuck out like a blemish on flawless skin. It looked multiple days old, all blotchy and purplish like a painterās palette. No doubt heād received it during his monster expedition. It must have blended in with all the mud on his face⦠He hadnāt told herā¦
A flash of guilt raced through her.
How had she not noticed before?
āThat must hurt.ā
Link automatically shook his head, eyes still on her face. They sat close, shoulder to shoulder, close enough for her to see every detail: The fine hairs at his temple seemed to tug at the bruised skin, gathering tightly at the back of his head. It couldnāt have been comfortable.
Her body responded impulsively. Zelda stretched forth her hand, brushing back his fringe with fairy-light fingertips. On full display, it was bigger than sheād thought, an angry welt the size of a small rice ball (though thankfully not so round). Her fingers followed the flow of his hair then came to a hesitant stop.
āMay Iā¦?ā
Almost imperceptibly, he raised a brow. Zelda was once again struck by the crystalline flecks in his irises. In a clear sign of assent, he dipped his head, exposing the back of his neck.
With careful fingers, Zelda took hold of his hair tie, slowly pulling down. His hair sprang free like a clipped bouquet, falling to his shoulders in a gentle wave. She rolled the little blue band up her wrist, barely giving it a second thoughtāand before she knew what she was doing, her fingers were in his hair.
It was feather soft, thick and silky like fields of Tabantha wheat. Everything sheād imagined it would be. A vivid memory assailed her mind of happier times: those long sunshine days idled away on the castle grounds; the stolen moments outside the Royal Ancient Lab with her appointed knight, searching for hidden treasures in the grass, their friendship still so young and fragileā¦
She looked at him now, this knight-turned-confidant sheād grown as attached to as her own right arm. Linkās eyes were closed, his blond eyelashes dark crescents against his cheeks, his head drooping ever-so-slightly with every stroke of her hand. It was a strange look for him, this dropping of his guard; a rare instance indeed where Link, chosen hero and protector, consciously chose to do anything as unorthodox as letting down his hair.
But nowā¦
Zelda followed his lead, shutting her eyes to the worldāand hoped, prayed, that maybe someday, somehow, there would come a time where she could shut out her inner world as well.
ā³āā³āā³āā³āā³
The ribbon was soft between her fingers, blue as the summer sea. Even indoors, it seemed to radiate its own light, dangling from the sturdy limb of the Great Eagle Bow. She knew this cloth well; it was a cloth handpicked and handwoven by no other hand than her very own, imbued with her steadfast pleadings and prayers over a period of who-knew-how-long. A symbol of the Royal Family of Hyrule. Her family. The blue had long since imprinted itself into every sinew of her life: the Championsā garb, a princessās petals⦠eyes like sharpened steel, vast as the open skyā¦
A tinkling laugh wafted in from the open doorway. Zelda released the ribbon and stepped back from the wall, peeking out at what lay beyond.Ā
On the front lawn, a small child stood brandishing a stick. She recognized him: He was the boy who had stopped them on the road to the laboratory her first day there. He was joined by two others, both jumping and cheering wildly. A fourth larger figure knelt close by, raising a battered old shield in time to deflect each of the boyās swings, much to the uproarious delight of his challengers.
How long had she tarried at the village now? Two, three weeks? Four? An entire month, slipped away like loose grains of sand. An expendable luxury.
It was easy to see why. Who wouldnāt wish to live out their days here? Here, in this beautiful, sleepy town, where the most pressing problems were garden-variety monster camps well outside its walls? This town was a paradise, with its fertile pastures, the bighearted villagers, the mighty snow-capped mountains concealing the destroyed castle from viewā¦
Her eyes drifted over to the window, looking past the golden shafts of evening light. She knew she was being irresponsible. Childish, even, to go on like this, avoiding the proof of her failure. Nevertheless, sheād been grateful to be hereāso incredibly gratefulāeven when that same gratitude caused guilt to coil unforgivingly around her.
For so long, sheād lived in fear, burdened by the crushing expectation placed upon her since the tender age of sixāher motherās passing. All alone, she had worked tirelessly to come into her power, to unlock her divine potential, to access this professed birthright sheād been promised ad nauseam. Awaken your ancient power. Save them all. This, of course, only resulted in failure after failure, adding to the weight upon her shoulders day by day.
And then came Link.
He had arrived into her life like a ticking time bomb, ushering in an age of calamity. Galvanized into utter panic, Zelda had thrown herself into study, into work, into prayer, prayer, prayer, cleaving to the distant hope that all was not lost. That her fruitless efforts would finally be vindicated. All to no avail. The waves of self-loathing that inevitably followed were agonizing, intolerable in every wayāand were only ever directed at him.
She regretted it every day.
The sound of pounding wood pulled Zeldaās attention outside again. The duelists had disbanded and were marching their way across the bridge. In front trotted the children, happily gabbing away. The shield-bearer made up the rear of their procession, escorting the others back to town. As their chatter faded out, Zelda watched their retreating outlines, her chest tightening.
Now that she had the benefit of hindsight, she could see clearly. At last, she could take a good long look at herself, getting up-close and personal with the ugly parts of her history that sheād turned a blind eye to for forever. It was time to come clean.
The facts were undeniable: she had hurt Link. Back then, she had resented him, rejected him, used him. She had taken advantage of his long-sufferance by running roughshod over his every kindness.
And the worst part was she was still using him today.
A bitter draft blew inside, fluttering the ends of her uncombed hair. Her arms came up to hug her middle.Ā
With the entirety of her fortune obliterated alongside the castle, Zelda had nothing; no asset nor rupee to her name. Naturally, being the class act that he was, Link had taken her under his wing, allowing her to fall back on his own savings heād so painstakingly accumulated since his revival. But now, with their combined expenses, with all the unoccupied time theyād frittered away, Linkās savings were dwindling. Rapidly. It was no secret; she wasnāt that dense. Heād turned to odd jobs and hunting in recent days to make ends meet, picking up the slack. Still, with the bulk of his attention directed on her, there was little room for other engagements.
It wasnāt right for her to leech off him. It wasnāt right for her to mistreat him all over again.
If she wasnāt contributing, it was time for her to leave.
Zeldaās jaw clenched, the tightness in her chest rising to her throat. Her gaze wandered back to the Great Eagle Bow.
Of all Linkās many virtues, Zelda had always been touched by his charity. Whether in the modern age or in days gone by, this sterling trait remained unchanged throughout all the epochs of his lifeāeven within the crucible of Calamity. Revali (rest his soul) was proof enough of that; he had treated Link so poorly in the past, taking a sick sort of pleasure in acting as Linkās personal tormentor. Zelda could easily recall the snide comments, those below-the-belt character attacks deliberately intended to provoke a response. Yet astoundingly, even amidst all the Rito warriorās heckling, Link had never once risen to the bait. Heād still treated him with civility, as someone to honor and rememberāeven to the point of displaying the Ritoās prized possession in his home.
All of this and more spoke to the goodness in his heart.
The storm that had been brewing on the outer limits of Zeldaās consciousness rumbled in warning. She could feel it rolling in, casting its dark shadow over her psyche. With a gut punch of shame, she harkened back to her own spiteful treatment of Link. Not once had he retaliated with vitriol against her either. No, not once.
Zelda didnāt want to turn into another Revali. She didnāt want to exploit his benevolence, his noble hospitality, any longer.Ā
She had trampled over his compassion in times past, and it had proven to be everyoneās undoing. She couldnāt make that same mistake again. She wouldnāt.
No more.
The outline of the Great Eagle Bow turned to watercolors in Zeldaās vision, blurring unrecognizably. Another image swiftly manifested itself in her mindās eye: one sheād been wrestling against for over a hundred years.Ā
Her friends were dead. Her father, dead. Her kingdom, done for. Irrevocably altered in the blink of an eye.
Her appointed knightāher dearly belovedāas good as dead, collapsed in the dreary marshes of the Ash Swamp. The finishing blow. Desperation seizing her as she finally, finally acted upon the far-fetched, private visions sheād been pushing down for too long. Launching herself in the path of destruction.
Light.
The light transitioned to reveal a new spectacle. In another age, in another corner of the world, the Great Deku Tree spoke to her, and she to him. She told him she was leaving. She had unfinished work. She asked him to relay a message. But in his infinite wisdom, he had counseled her gently, like a close friend would:
āWords intended for him would sound much better in the tones of your voice, donāt you think?ā
The scene switched, and she watched with rapturous grief as her voice, and only her voice, sparked his awakening when nothing else would. Moved, she watched a revitalized Link scour the kingdom, searching high and low to piece together the scattered lyrics of those pivotal ancient songs. His desire to find himself, to know her, was palpableāa thirst that couldnāt be slaked. Under the cover of night, perched far above the land, the Rito bard had revealed the culminating verses to him under an endless, starry sky: āThe Song of the Hero.ā
His song.Ā
Their story.
The storm had reached her, roaring and crashing and throwing the room into a dizzying spin. Reeling, Zelda drew in a ragged breath, her hand clutching at her heart.
She knew it. She knew it like she knew the sun would rise, with unequivocal certainty. In all honesty, sheād known for a while.Ā
The ancient songs. The Great Deku Tree. Her activated sealing power.Ā
All attesting to the naked truth.
Gasping, Zelda stumbled to the stairs, floundering about on sea legs. Her feet were flying, ramming into the banister, blindly carrying her up to the loft. Her ears were ringing, like a sudden drop in atmospheric pressure, muffling the noise of everything except her tempestuous thoughts. Awash with emotion, she began grabbing items at random and haphazardly throwing them into her travel bag, consumed by the frenzy that had overcome her senses.
After a hundred-plus years of fretting and fighting, these past few weeks with Link had been a dream, a fantasy come to life. But sheād been much too idle here. And it was disgraceful, utterly reprehensible, that she had ever considered hiding away for such a prolonged absence in the first place. Indeed, she thought with a sob as she crammed a weekās worth of dirty laundry into her bag, she had been grossly negligent, which was unbecoming of a princessāespecially a princess whose kingdom was in ruins. Sheād grown slothful in her duties and callous toward her people; her dear people, whoād suffered and sacrificed immensely under her failed leadership.Ā
She loved her people. She yearned to protect them.
Protect them all.
Her fingers spasmed, and her case of writing implements slipped from her hands, bursting open on the floor. She dropped to her knees, her mind a whirlwind.
What frivolous musings sheād had. She couldnāt establish a school here. She couldnāt settle down anywhere. There were places to be, nations to contact, mistakes to set right. A mountain of problems caused by her own hand.
The sharp tip of a quill sliced her finger, dotting it with red, but she couldnāt feel it. She couldnāt feel anything. She was too busy corralling her thoughts, plotting away at the half-baked plans that were running amok in her head. Abruptly, she looked down and saw the glimmering little opal clasped in her hand. She tossed it inside the case with a handful of inkwells and snapped it shut, rising to her feet.Ā
Once all her things were packed, she would wait for Link to return. Sheād thank him for everything, of courseānothing sheād say or do would ever serve as adequate compensation for everything heād doneābut hopefully he would understand. Heād always been very forgiving in this way. She bit down on her trembling lip.
She wasnāt entirely sure what sheād tell him. She hadnāt yet worked out the detailsāthose would come in timeābut she was certain Purah and Symin would take her in for the meantime, at least for a little while. Perhaps also Impa and Papaya somewhere down the lineā
She turned around, her brain in two places at once, and froze at the sight of him at the top of the stairs.
Ridiculously, the first thought that came into her head was that his hair was downāa growing phenomenon, though still no less of a novelty. But almost as soon as she had the thought came the recollection of a bright sunny day, exploring uncharted territory with a little blue hairband. She could still feel it now, snugly secured to her wrist.
The second thing she noticed was his face.
The bruise on his forehead had faded, but his look of alarm struck Zelda like a physical blow. Slack-jawed and pale, he stared back at her with something akin to panic, taking in her rumpled appearance, the topsy-turvy state of the roomānothing like his customary inscrutability. How long had he been standing there? Had he been calling her? His wide eyes shifted down to her hands, and she watched his features twist into a wince. It was only then that she recognized her fatherās journal in her white-knuckled grip.
Zelda spun around, putting her back to him. She set the journal in her open bag, hastily rubbing at the wetness on her cheeks. āI apologize for startling you. I know this isnāt what you expected to find. In fact, there are likely many things that havenāt lived up to your expectations, and IāI am to blame for that. I am to blame for⦠a lot of things.ā
She stuffed her stationery in with her undergarments. āThe reality is Iāve been holding you back. I can imagine youāre restlessāI saw you out there with the childrenāand you have every right to be. Youāre confined in your own house with someone who isnāt⦠who doesnāt evenā¦ā
She came to a breathless halt. Gripping the edge of the nightstand, she stood hunched over the solitary silent princess flower, still unable to look at him.Ā
āI left you alone for too long.āĀ
His gentle voice hit her like thunder. Zelda sucked in a searing gulp of air. She couldnāt stand it. She couldnāt stand his undue remorse. Jockeying for control, she sprang back into action.
āBut thatās just it, isnāt it?ā she trilled, bolting to the chest of drawers and yanking clothes from its depths, the words tumbling out like the first few stones preceding a rockslide. āHere you are, admitting fault for a matter that is solely my doing. Iāve grown much too dependent on you. Iām a hindrance, an imposition in every sense of the term.ā She dashed back to the bed, cramming a few jumpers into her bag. āYouāve been working overtime when you must be at the end of your rope. Not only have you been keeping us afloat these weeks, but youāve also been shouldering my weight on top of it all.ā Back to the drawers. āAnd you absolutely deserve better. Youāve already walked through fire and water. Itās not fair to always be asking more of you, and Iāā
Her breath hitched, and suddenly Zelda was free-falling, her speech devolving into a paroxysm of weeping.
āAnd Iām sorry, Link. Iām s-so, so sorry.ā
The final nail.
With her breaths coming in shuddering gasps, she commenced her zigzagging across the room, her vision obscured by tears.Ā
āIām sorry for everything. And I know I can never repay you, but I want you to know how grateful I am, so eternally grateful, so much that I will not abuse your generosity anymoreāāher voice was a frightful mess, wavering and warbling all over the place, and she knew how unhinged she sounded, how painfully disastrous, but it was about time he heard this, she needed to get it out before she choked, before she shattered irreparablyāānor will I tie you down in any way. You are bound to me no longer. You are free to live out your life as you wish, and IāI have to go.ā She was hiccuping, spiraling, but she couldnāt stop, she had to keep going. āStaying here has been sublime, a precious gift in the highest sense, and I will remember it alwaysābut Iāve wasted time. My duties remain unfulfilled, but you can reap the reward of your labors. Youāve built yourself a lovely home here, truly itās wonderful beyond imagining, and Iām so very happy for youāāshe had come undone entirely, her heart breaking in two, tears falling into her open bagāābut I cannot abide here one minute more, I wonāt keep taking your belongings, I wonāt burden you in your own homeāā
āItās yours.ā
Zelda wheeled about, wobbling on her feet. The room was swimming, and she could barely make him out, could barely hear past the frantic thumping of her heart. She swallowed thickly, blinking away the burning in her eyes.
āWhatāWhatās mine?ā
āThe house,ā Link clarified at once. āItās yours.ā
His words came to her garbled, as if they were passing underwater. Slowly, he came into focus: his smudged cheeks, the grass stains on his shirt. She shook her head, eyes shimmering brightly.
āI canāt take your house, Link.ā
In all the time sheād known him, Zelda could confidently say that sheād never witnessed him look as close to falling apart as he did now. She watched it unfold before her eyes: With a convulsive flinch that traveled the length of his body, Linkās face fell into utter devastation, as though she herself had administered his death warrant. Stricken, he began to pace, his strides covering the short distance between the desk and the opposing wall, his hands scrubbing at his face, running through his hair.Ā
Zelda watched him in shock. Never had she seen him so outwardly conflicted, so distressedānot even at deathās door. It felt wrong, as if she were intruding on a private moment. To think that she could be the cause of such pain in himā¦
As Link continued pacing, Zelda stood patiently by, heart aching as he brokenly attempted to explain himself, stumbling over his words, huffing in frustration. After a string of curses and multiple false starts, he finally drew to a halt and faced her, his hands raised entreatingly.
āThis house is yours. I bought it for you. You havenāt⦠Itās notā¦ā He took a deep breath to collect himself, then began again, leaning in toward her. āBy law, you own it. It was always meant for you. Thatās why I put my name on it, so no one could take it. I gave it to you.ā
Zelda stared dumbly back at him. An impression suddenly entered her mind: one of freshly turned earth, a friendly construction worker, and a distinctive missing sign. When it became apparent that nothing more was forthcoming from him, she made her own attempt at speech, her voice sounding feeble in her ears.
āBut Link⦠I canāt just take your house from you. Youāve poured so much of yourself into it, and Iāā
āZelda.ā
It was this, above all else, that brought her slamming back to him.
Zelda gasped as the single sound rushed into her, filling every cell. For the first time, she could see him properly. Link looked at her with unbridled emotion, his blue eyes blazing like tempered fire.
āYou are the most deserving person I know.ā
The back of her legs hit the nightstand, and she nearly crumpled. Another memory besieged her, this time his voice, shy but sure, relaying the words that heād told her from the beginning, that had never been hyperbole:
Anything, everythingāitās yours.
āAnd Iād walk through fire any day for you.ā
She could see that fire now, gleaming in his eyes clear as day. Those eyes held nothing back, exposing the wildness heād kept firmly shut away for so long, that sheād agonized over since day one, wishing so desperately to scale his walls. Head spinning, her complexion surely a blotchy, unsightly mess, she croaked out the question sheād asked him once before.
āBut Link⦠where will you go?ā
A fleeting shadow passed over him. In an instant, she was transported back to their first night under this roof. The same look that had crossed him then also crossed him now, except now she recognized it for what it was. And yet, while he visibly steeled himself for what came next, there was no doubt in his voice when he spoke to her.
āWherever you want me to go.ā
Suddenly she was out of place, out of time, hurtling through the expanse of space, everything around her burning away, reduced to ash until there was nothing left except for himāLink, her steady rock in the midst of raging turbulence. The two of them had fought back the fire together, succumbed together. He had seen her at her very worst, her most vulnerable, wailing and writhing on the floor, had glimpsed the most shameful, hideous parts of her, and instead of scorning her secrets he had guarded them with his life. He had witnessed her cracked open, prostrated on the floor and groveling for mercy, a pitiful husk of a person who could barely draw breath for herself. And still he hadnāt run. Instead he had consoled her, honored her, kept her close to his chest. Received her for all she was worth. And now she could finally see it in his eyes: that this was what he wanted. That there was nothing he wanted more than to continue receiving her for as long as she would let him.
Words intended for him would sound much better in the tones of your voice, donāt you think?
āI love you,ā she spluttered.
Looking back, it was impossible to say who had moved first. Both princess and knight bounded toward each other simultaneously, closing the gap between them in no time. In a moment redolent of an age long past, Zelda threw herself into Linkās open arms, wrapped tightly up in him. There was no hesitation, no stiffness in his frame as he clung to her, stroking her gently, swaying softly, both trembling violently. They had never held each other like this before; she had cried on him, reveled in the feeling of their entwined hands, clutched him as he died. Still nothing came close to this tender caress, this warm embrace, and it filled her with such peace that there was nothing in the world like it, this all-encompassing love. All at once his lips were in her hair, a tender pressure at the side of her head, speaking everything theyād left unspoken for years: that she could rest, that it was okay to rest. As she buried her face in his neck, the scent of blue nightshade enfolded her, and she melted into him, safer than sheād ever felt in her life.
And when his lips finally, finally moved to meet hers, setting her heart alightāsetting her freeāZelda knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that here, watched over by the immortalized Champions in their frame, she was exactly where she was supposed to be. Safe, right here, with Link.
Her comfort. Her sanctuary.
Her home.
END OF PART THREE
FIN
~o~o~o~o~o~
A/N: These two stole my heart back in Breath of the Wild and sealed it away in the Final Catch⢠of Tears of the Kingdom.
āNo matter where I go to offer aid, Link remains at my sideā¦ā
~A brief exploration of Zeldaās personal journey toward home, and how she finds it in Link.
Read on AO3 or continue below.
<< Chap 8 <<
~o~o~o~o~o~
Chapter 9: "Weathering the Storm"
āUm, hellooo? Yoohoo, Princess? You in there?ā
Zelda shrank away from the window, directing her attention back to the tiny, jabbering researcher. āYes!ā she blurted, tucking her hair behind an ear. āEr, yes, Iām here. My apologies, Purah. I seem to have allowed my thoughts to wander a bit too farā¦ā
Purah held her scowl, all scrunched-nosed fury, until her mouth drooped into a pitying frown. āYa know, if you donāt like any of my ideas, you can just say so. I know Iām small and cute, but weāre old friends, remember? No need for any of that tiptoeing business with me!ā
āI know,ā said Zelda, her shoulders sagging. āAgain, I apologize. I agree with you, truly. Providing additional functionality to the travel feature should take precedence over all else. It would prove marvelously useful in our efforts to dismantle ancient technology across the land. Transporting large groups of people with the Slate would be⦠It would really beā¦ā
āAw, there there, Princess, itās okay!ā Purah soothed, her tone softening at Zeldaās sudden breathlessness. She sprang from her stool and scurried over to the opposite side of the table, patting Zeldaās hand in consolation. āDeep breaths, now, alright? I didnāt mean to upset you. We can take things in any direction you like, promise! Just say the word and Iām with you.ā
Disoriented, Zelda gave a weak nod, barely feeling her friendās touch. āIām sorry, Purah. Iām not sure whatās come over me. I suppose thereās been a lot on my mind latelyā¦ā
A cup of herbal tea appeared before her. Symin took her gently by the elbow, easing her into a seat at the table. āOf course you have, Princess,ā he said, tossing Purah an accusatory look that said, Really? āYouāve just gone through a major life change. Itās quite understandable that you would feel this way. Youāve had so much on your plate for so long, and I canāt imagineā¦ā He shut his eyes with a sigh, shaking his head in empathy. āWhat I mean to say is that you are in safe hands. You should go at whatever pace feels most comfortable.ā
Zelda gave their hands a grateful squeeze. She had only just met Symin, barely even knew him at all, but already the old Sheikah researcher felt like kin. āYou are too kind. I canāt express to you both how much I appreciate your support. But really, Iām managing fine. Devoting myself to this work is just what I need right now, and⦠and what the country needs as well.ā
āHmmā¦ā Purahās mouth twisted, her expression turning skeptical. āWell, as long as you know weāre here for you, Princess, okay? A happy princess makes for a happy Purahāand youād better remember it.ā She gave Zeldaās hand another reassuring pat. āAnd far be it from me to talk you out of Slate experimentation! What do you say, Princess? You ready to knuckle down? Just like the good olā days! If we plug this baby in, I can tinker with the transportation setting and see what weāve got to work with. See what kind of mess Linky left us with.ā
Nodding along, Zelda reached for the device at her hip but pulled up short at Syminās hum of uncertainty. āAh, Ms. Purahā¦ā he said, face blanching, āI realize this is a bad time, but⦠well, it appears the guidance stone has grown dark againā¦ā
The rate at which Purah switched from coolheaded to scandalized was so true to form that it snapped Zelda out of her reverie. With an appalled gasp, the little researcher bolted to the window, skidding on loose papers as she leapt onto the desktop. Her jaw dropped open.
āAGAIN?! Are you serious?! Blast it all! You little miscreants, get back here!ā
Zelda turned in her seat to peer out the window. Sure enough, a band of cackling children scampered away down the hill, the telltale blue flame held high in the air by a single torch, flaunted like a prized trophy.
āYou think youāre sooo clever, donāt you?!ā Purah screeched, face smooshed against the glass. āOh yes, very awfully clever, stealing our power source out from under us like that! A real hoot! Donāt think I wonāt come out after you this time, ācause I will! I absolutely WILL! Only naughty children play with fire, you know!ā
āMs. Purahā¦ā Symin sighed in resignation. āPlease, Ms. Purah, letās be reasonable. Remember they are only children. Shouting isnāt going toāā
āāReasonableā?! Iām the most reasonable six-year-old youāve ever met! Theyāre the ones who are unreasonable here!ā
āWhile that may be so, letās keep in mind that they are true six-year-oldsānot centenarians-in-disguise who look a lot younger than they actuallyāā
āBut the guidance stone, Symin! The guidance stone!ā
Symin put a weary hand to his brow, and Zelda winced in sympathy for the poor man. āMs. Purah⦠I thought you had said that⦠that there was more to life than the guidance stoneā¦ā
Purah wheeled around, looking aghast at her assistant. She stomped her foot in frustration. āThereās more to research than the guidance stone, Symin! Not life!ā Suddenly, she broke from her tirade, putting a hand to her chin. āAlthough now you mention it, our research is life-giving, so what difference does it make, reallyā¦ā
Accepting his plight, Symin groaned and returned to his spot in the back of the room cataloging books.Ā
Zelda took the risk and, speaking as delicately as possible, asked: āIs there⦠anything I can do to alleviate the situation?ā
Letting loose a plaintive wail, Purah flopped down onto her back, her limbs sprawled out amongst pages of notes. āIām sorry, Princess⦠I didnāt mean to spoil your day. We shouldāve nipped the problem in the bud long before you got here, I know, I know.ā
āThere is nothing to apologize for, Purah,ā said Zelda, giving her friend a genuine, conciliatory smile. āYouāre not spoiling my day at all. Iām elated to be here with you, no matter what. I suppose Iām just surprised that this is an ongoing problem.ā
āI justā!ā Purah raised her arms and legs and let them fall back onto the desk with an exhausted thud. āI donāt know what to do about them! Itās not like I can go out like thisājust look at me! Iām like them! But they canāt keep getting away with this either. They think itās so hilarious to tamper with tech beyond their comprehension levels, and itāsāargh!ā
āDo they really have no other daily preoccupations?ā
Symin cleared his throat from across the room, books stacked high in his arms. āI donāt believe so, Princess. Either the children help out at their familiesā businesses or they find their own amusements. Itās always been this way.ā
āWhat about an educational institution? Is there one of those they attend?ā
āNo, not even that.ā
Zelda adjusted the tea saucer in front of her. The thought that had been niggling at the back of her brain since her first visit to the lab burst from its hiding place, clamoring for attention. As a child, sheād rather enjoyed her private sessions with her tutors, honing her needlework and diving headlong into history books, learning more about the vast kingdom she was to serve and protect; the same kingdom sheād grown to love with her whole heart. Those were different times, in disparate circumstances, yesāthe lives of farmers and erstwhile princesses were practically separate worldsābut Zelda couldnāt help but feel that strengthening the connecting thread that bound them all was of utmost importance.
āWhat if⦠we were to help with that?ā
Purah shot her an inquisitive look. āAlright, Iāll bite.ā She turned onto her side and propped up her head with a hand. āWhatcha got cookinā up there in that scholarly brain of yours?ā
āI just meanā¦ā Zelda ran her finger along the rim of her saucer. āIāve been thinking about the state of the kingdom lately. So much has happenedāthe world has been irrevocably changed in such a short span of time, and yet⦠I feel as if the general populace remains unaware of all thatās transpired. We owe our welfare to those who have come before. So many brave souls have given their all so that we may be free today, so many who have paid the ultimate priceāā She swallowed back the lump in her throat. āThey deserve to be remembered. I believe it is our duty to ensure their memory lives on. By providing educational opportunities, we not only honor our forebears, but help people everywhere build a safer, brighter future. Especially the children.ā
Symin wiped at his eyes underneath his glasses. āThat is very admirable, Princess. I couldnāt have said it better myself. You have my full support.ā
āAaaand that would take care of the little rascals pestering us all the time too, snappity snap!ā added Purah, eyes sparkling. āEveryoneās happy!ā
Symin gave her a deflated look.Ā
Zelda sipped her tea. Now that sheād voiced this particular idea aloud, it was feeling more and more right by the second. Their prosperity as a people was tied to the fate of the land; so it had been since time immemorial. Thus, it was vital that they did all they could to inform Hyrule of its history. Without structured institutions to aid in the endeavor of knowledge, they would find themselves in the same position they were in prior to the Great Calamity, adrift in a fugue of fear and uncertainty. But having these institutions, these schools⦠They had research centers for the scientists, so why not learning centers for the childrenā¦?
āAnyhoo, since weāre dead in the water, howās Linky Love?ā asked Purah out of nowhere, flipping onto her stomach and cupping her chin in her hands. āYou finding all sorts of top-secret knick-knacks of his while heās away?ā
Zelda nearly spilled her tea. āDedicated as always,ā she answered after a speedy recovery, ignoring the latter question. āHis level of productivity knows no bounds. He inspires me to achieve the same.ā
āOh, come now, Princess!ā whined Purah, kicking her feet childishly in the air. āDonāt hold out on me like this! I know I age-reversed myself, but I wasnāt born yesterday! Give me all the details, the good stuff! Iāve seen his photo album, I know the monkey business he gets up to! Does he still make muscles at himself when he thinks no oneās watching? Does he sleep with his sword at night? Tell me!ā
The memory of Linkās self-portrait with the bokoblins resurfaced in Zeldaās mind, followed by sun-kissed golden days by the water. She set down her cup, avoiding eye contact. āIām afraid I must disappoint you, Purah. All I can say is that Iām forever grateful for his hospitality. These past weeks have been an adjustment, Iāll admit, but heās so very patient with me, and heās made it all the easier to bear. I am⦠very indebted to him.ā
āI am certain the feeling is mutual, Princess,ā said Symin kindly. āYou were a guiding light to him in the early days of his memory loss. You mean the world to him, just as you mean the world to us all.ā
āYes, wellā¦ā Zelda shifted in her seat. āI am very fortunate to count myself amongst friends like you. There are so many logistics to work through at the moment. I struggle to think where Iād be without you all.ā
āAnd thatās why youāll be back tomorrow so we can make headway on that travel feature!ā cheeped Purah. She hopped down from the desk and skittered over to a pile of books on the floor. āThose troublemakers might have stalled us today, but they havenāt completely sunk us. Once we get the guidance stone back up and running, we can dip into the Slateās files and unravel its teleportation mechanism, lickety-split!ā She twirled enthusiastically on the spot. āNow, if we can just reverse-engineer that travel medallion Linky left usā¦ā
They were so immersed in scientific deliberation that by the time the setting sun turned the windowpanes ruby-red, it was well past dinnertime, and before Zelda could run out the door, a small loaf of bread was pushed into her hands, along with Syminās assurances that he would accompany her home. Unable to persuade him otherwise, she said her goodbyes to Purah and made the downhill trek back to Linkās cottage, this time in the goodly company of a friend.Ā
With Symin close, she could easily cast her worries to the wayside. With him, she paid little heed to the encroaching darkness, hardly noticed the prying villagers peeking out at her from their doorways, where a murmured āKarin, stop staring and get back inside!ā rang out a touch too loudly near the chiefās house, followed by a patter of tiny feet. Instead, she inhaled the mountain air, kept her chin up, and lost herself in pleasant conversation.
Night had properly fallen when they arrived, and after her heartfelt thanks for his generosity (āIt is my pleasure, Princess, and the perfect excuse to get my daily steps in. I canāt be cooped up with my books all day, you know!ā), Zelda bid the old researcher good night and they parted ways. After a couple slices of the bread with wildberry preserve and leftover cream of vegetable soup, she tended to her horse then headed off to bed, her mind teeming with thoughts of geographic coordinates and travel medallions, hoping they would fend off the lingering shadows.
Her hopes were dampened, unfortunately, when the next morning brought a thunderstorm.
She jolted awake to the crack of lightning and a volley of hail striking the roof. Startled, she shot up in bed, clutching the comforter to her chest until her racing heart returned to a pace resembling normality.
Itās just the weather⦠Just the weatherā¦
Shaken, Zelda rose and readied herself for the day, going through the motions. With every wall-shuddering crash from outside, though, it became increasingly apparent that there would be no visiting the lab today. With the Slateās forecast showing nothing but lightning bolts, it seemed she was destined to spend her day indoors. Alone.
She tried to keep herself busy. She saw to her morning toilet, prepared a light breakfast, made the brief but water-logged run outside to her horse (he was dry in his shelter but understandably spooked, which was soon forgotten once she replenished his feed). Business as usual. But the foul weather only reflected her mood, and the present moment seemed locked away from her.
Minutes trickled into hours. The raging tempest kept up its battery, wailing against the facade of the house. Zelda clasped the covers at the foot of the bed, her anxiety spiking with every clap of thunder, watching heavy raindrops purl down the window.
Sheād promised him. She had promised Linkāand Purah and Symināthat she would be okay on her own. That she could spend a night or two by herself. And she had. Against all odds, she had stayed the course, true to her word. But the flashing and the crashing and the constantly falling rain dredged up dreadful memories, and suddenly Zelda was carried back to another rainy day, the lightning-forked sky illuminating a field of carnage and twisted metal. In place of a cottage was a swamp plagued with Malice, tainting everything and everyone with Calamity. Scores of soldiers and civilians cut down like puppets with severed strings. Even Link, her immovable pillar, toppled like an empty shell, slick with rain and sweat and blood alike, mixing with her tears as they streamed profusely down her face onto his lifeless bodyā¦
Zelda forced herself to stand. No. She wouldnāt do this. She couldnāt afford to keep doing this. For her own sake, for her kingdomās. For Linkās.
Link was just fine. He had to be. His company was surely bunkering down this very moment, keeping themselves and their supplies safe from the elements. Yes, their reunion would likely be delayed now⦠but Link had spent many a rainy day in the wilds, fending for himself even in the harshest of storms. Heād be back soon enough. He was fine. She was fine.
Smoothing out her dress, she left the window and descended the stairs, heading for the bookshelf by the kitchenette. Ever since childhood, books had been there for her when no one else had, the most reliable of companions. Certainly that wasnāt about to change now. She picked through Linkās hotchpotch library, seeking a gripping tale or historical accountāsomething to get lost ināsheād even take the one on interior designāwhen her eyes settled on the bottom shelf.Ā
A collection of thick tomes sat undisturbed, their spines cracked with age. It looked as if they hadnāt seen the light of day in years. Stooping, she chose the largest in the row. The cover was warped and brittle, and it felt like it might fall apart in her hands. There was no title.Ā
Cautious, but curious, she blew away the coating of dust and gently thumbed it open. She skimmed for clues that indicated its origin. She sincerely doubted it came with the house. Link must have picked it up somewhere during his travels⦠but from where, was the questionā¦
She studied the worn pages of text. Dark blots rendered the script illegible in places, but it wasnāt entirely a foolās errand. Her fingertips grazed the writing, a belated sort of recognition rising up at the blocky penmanship. Slowly, distinct words began jumping out at her: research⦠relics⦠Hyrule⦠sacred power⦠her own name, multiple timesā¦Ā
It struck her as forcefully as the lightning rampaging outside. Zelda staggered back, her legs smacking against the dining room table, and it was all she could do to keep the book from slipping from her fingers.
Breathing heavily, she scrounged together every last whit of her strength to stand on her own two feet, pushing away from the table. Like a wraith, she ascended the stairs, the book clenched in her unfeeling hands. She crawled into bed, huddling beneath the sheets, and, under the yellow lamplight with the storm howling outside, she commenced reading her fatherās life account: the writings of Rhoam Bosphoramus Hyrule.