Hellsing belongs to Kohta Hirano, Pioneer
Entertainment and others, not to me. No copyright infringement intended or
implied.
A. N.: This story is set in the animeverse and
is theoretically a sequel to Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen, but that need not be read
first. Yes it is a Walter x Seras story in the end, so if that bothers you it
would be best not to read. Many thanks to my beta, dasAoD, and also to Sad WTF.
The Brightness of the Afternoon
Seras tried to treat the ghouls like a
shooting gallery. Get one in the head, reload, get the next in the chest. They
were so slow, anyway, it was no problem. But now and then anybody might
remember that until recently they were people. That this body with a giant hole
in it woke up this morning and took a bath and said good-bye to his wife and
went to work. But it was best to make it target practice and forget about it.
There was always the other route of course. To
give in completely and destroy them not out of mercy but because they were
another vampire's ghouls. That worked even better and she could get into it
with her bare hands just like her master. But it was teetering on the edge of
the abyss, of course. It was a short step from there to wanting her own ghoul
army, a few vampire servants, and a mind without a bothersome conscience. Like
Alucard, she would only be waiting until the end of Hellsing and its seal would
make it a reality.
Tonight had been just too damn long. She had
been up since the early evening, as soon as the harsh summer sun had faded
enough to let her outside without wrapping up and wearing dark glasses. Integra
had instructed her on the purpose of the mission until she wanted to scream.
Seras had hoped that when the number of chipped FREAKS had been reduced there
might be less urgency, but it seemed there was always a new threat, this time a
vampire who had deliberately set up near one of Hellsing's secondary offices
miles from London.
Then there was a long ride over in the truck
with the troops, with all of them staring at her and sitting as far away as
they could possibly get. She hadn't even been grinning to annoy them as she
sometimes did. But they still whispered behind her back, as if everyone didn't
know what she was by now.
Finally the ghouls were gone and only the
vampire was left to be destroyed. Alucard wished to leave this one up to her,
so Seras burst through the final door.
Facing her was a dark-haired child. He looked
about six years old, and was staring placidly up at Seras. He was too aware to
be a ghoul, and Seras was about to lower the Harkonnen when she realized his
eyes were as red as hers.
"Nice gun, big sister," the boy
said. He gave her a fanged grin.
"He's not cute," Seras thought to
herself. "And he's not a little boy." She remained ready to fire.
She could see that he held a knife as large as
a cleaver.
"What do you lot at Hellsing have against
me?" He lowered his head and blinked at her through his long eyelashes.
Seras could recall most of her master's speech
about pathetic upstarts but was too tired to give it. She still had so much
internal disgust at the idea of killing this young being, despite everything
she now knew of vampires and the world.
"That's a throwing knife. Don't be
stupid," she thought to herself, and fired. She closed her eyes for the
briefest instant, then viewed her handiwork: a small child with not much left
of his lower body. The eyes were still moving, though. She told herself that it
wasn't a pleading look. She shot him in the head then, and lowered the gun and
headed back out the door.
Her master was waiting outside for her, his
arms crossed over his chest.
"What took you so long?" he asked
brusquely.
Seras shrugged. "Nothing, it's over. The
vampire's destroyed."
Alucard nodded.
Her legs were weak now. She sat down on the
floor with her back in a corner and wrapped her arms around her knees. She told
herself that soon she wouldn't even remember that fact and those eyes. They
were red eyes anyway, weren't they? But then again, so were hers... This was too
much to think about. She wanted to go back to Hellsing manor and forget this.
No, she wanted to go back much further than that and forget everything.
Alucard put a hand on her shoulder then.
"You're not well, police girl. Brace up."
Seras nodded, and looked up to see Integra.
"What's going on?" was the young
leader's first question.
"Nothing," said Seras firmly.
"The vampire's dead, and I want to leave now."
"That vampire was too young. We're going
to have to investigate here; it will be a while before the troops can
leave."
Seras looked up at her curiously. "You
saw the body? You can look at that?"
Integra nodded brusquely. "I can look at
what I need to. But it seems you can't, even now."
Seras stood up. "Stop overanalyzing. I'm
fine."
But she still felt she needed to lean against
the wall, and both her masters noticed.
"She can rest in the office until we're
done, it's just around the corner," Integra finally said. "Alucard,
take her over there and wait with her."
The vampire shook his head. "I thought
you needed me to look at that body and see if I can tell how old the thing
really was? It can't be a chipped one this time. But if you'd rather I
baby-sit..."
Integra sighed. "Never mind, it will have
to be Walter then."
Seras felt resentful to be passed around like
a package. But if Walter minded, he would be too well-bred to show it, and in
any case there was no use protesting. The butler came in the room and accepted
a pair of keys from Sir Integra with a nod.
"I hope this is all right with you, Miss
Seras?" he asked.
"Nice to see someone cares," she
muttered. Then, louder, "I'm fine, Walter, but I might as well get out of
here."
He nodded and opened the door for her, and
they walked out into the night.
"It's just up here, around the corner."
They climbed a flight of stairs and opened the
door.
"Can I get you anything?" he asked
politely.
"No, as I said I'm fine." But she
headed for the couch immediately to sit down.
Walter stood in front of her for a moment.
"It's not for me to say, I'm sure, but if you are disturbed over that
child, it's hardly something to be ashamed of."
"All I need is for Alucard or even
Integra to catch me even bothering to think of it."
"They aren't here."
Seras nodded.
"Some of the chipped ones were pathetic.
Then it was our own troops as ghouls. Now it's children. What's the limit on
what I have to teach myself to enjoy? When do I get to finally break
down?"
Walter opened his mouth to reply but she
gestured at him. "I know, I couldn't ever do that, not even if I wanted
to. It's not even a part of what I am anymore, to fail, or to wonder."
The butler shook his head. "It's not so
simple, to give up one's humanity. Integra knows that. Alucard, somewhere deep
in his memory, probably does too."
"And you understand what I'm saying as
well."
Walter reached toward her, but dropped his
hand. "I try to."
"I'm tired of being seen as a
weapon."
Walter nodded. "I can relate to that.
Believe it or not."
The young vampire stood up and moved across
the room, finally standing in front of a mantelpiece facing the wall. "I
can believe it. You're the faithful old retainer, and they keep you in reserve
yet."
"But for me there will be an end to it,
one way or the other."
"So you'll have some relief." Seras
stopped. "That was wrong of me to say that."
She could hear him moving closer, and he spoke
to her back.
"No, it's not wrong. Do you think I would
trade places with you? Do you think, for that matter, that I never had the
opportunity?"
She nodded, almost afraid to speak further.
Finally she did.
"And you don't have to worry you'll ever
be what he is. What I'll be. Bloodthirsty..." she trailed off, expecting
him to interrupt, but he only waited.
"Very well, I'm that already. But I still
see the humanity. The innocence, even. Not in that vampire back there, he was
way too far gone. But I still can't look at a six-year-old who's taken two
Harkonnen rounds and laugh."
"You never will."
"How would you know?"
"I've lived as long as anyone around
Hellsing has managed to, and I've seen a great deal."
"Not many vampires."
"Not on our side, no."
"There's no such thing as a vampire on
the good side. There's just Alucard, who serves the seal and his own vanity.
And me, just waiting for the evil and emptiness to take over."
Seras felt a hand on her shoulder.
"It's still not something I see in
you."
"Do you watch me so much?" Seras
regretted saying it immediately. "Maybe it's just as well that someone
does."
She heard him sigh then. "Shall I bother
denying it? But that isn't my point at all. I'm telling you there is something
in you that won't be denied or destroyed. That will always cry for that
child."
"I can't cry for anything anymore, and
that child was a monster. Just like Alucard, and me." Seras felt ready to
cry despite her words.
"What you have Alucard never had. Not
that anyone can prove that, after all these centuries, but I'm certain of
it."
"What I have? What would that be? With
everyone screaming at me that the one thing I don't have is a soul."
"That strikes me as a technicality under
the circumstances. But I don't do that sort of theology anymore. My convictions
on souls died in the war."
Seras continued to face away from him.
"It's all slipping away, slowly. The memories of being human. The way real
food tasted in my mouth. The brightness of the afternoon. It will all be gone
soon."
Finally she turned to face him, noticing that
his face showed an uncharacteristic tenderness.
"I'll be just another night creature, a
no life king. What the chipped ones were after and never got. Am I the only one
who doesn't want that title, who wants a life that isn't constant death and
blood?"
Walter shook his head. "No, you're not. I
did stay human, but I wish myself that things had been different. But that
doesn't matter."
Seras looked at him curiously, and briefly
covered the hand still resting on her shoulder with her own.
"What do you mean?"
"Who knows? I could have had a different
life, a family of my own even like some of our soldiers go home to. Instead of
just generations of Hellsings to serve."
"I can never have that either.
Obviously."
Walter leaned in toward her almost
imperceptibly. "I at least had many years to accustom myself to this, to
realize that devotion to Hellsing was my only future. Not just a sudden decision
made dying on a church floor."
She leaned forward and said almost into his
shoulder, "And then there's knowing I have a potentially endless future as
a pure thoughtless killer."
She felt him move as he removed his right
glove and buried his hand in her hair. She put her arms around him and leaned
against him.
Eventually he said softly. "You will be
an angel of death such as I have never been and I only wish I could live to see
it."
She stood as she was for a moment, with her
face in his shirt, then looked up at him. His look was almost intense now. He
was still looking gently at her. Slowly, he leaned down toward her. She did not
pull away, and he kissed her.
She responded by pulling him closer, seeking
the contact and thinking this might be her last chance at the sort of kiss she
would ever want to remember. Then she heard the key in the door.
They pulled back from each other and she
turned to see Integra in the doorway. She was staring at them with an intense
curiosity. Eventually however she merely shrugged and walked into the room.
"I'm ready to go, you can both ride back
in the car I suppose."
Walter nodded. "Very well, Sir
Integra."
Alucard's voice was heard from outside then.
Integra muttered something about complaints and walked outside again.
Walter replaced his glove and spoke.
"Miss Seras, if I have presumed in any way..."
"Don't you dare apologize." She
walked out to the waiting car, wondering whether this would ever be spoken of
again, and listened for his footsteps as he followed.