COMMENT: It wasn't going to be this long. Oh well. I think they're in Washington (state) or Oregon in this story. It fits with some of the details, but it's just a guess.
BGM: "When It Rains In America" from Sarah Brightman's album "Dive".
WARNINGS: shonen ai, moody
When It Rains
by LoneWolf
It is raining outside.
I can't see the rain. I can't hear it. I can't even feel it in the air.
But I know it is raining. It was raining when we first came in, and every
time one of us sneaked out for supplies, and every time we walked to the
lobby to pay for our next day and get a newspaper. Growing up on L2, rain
was rare and water precious. But now... Now, I wish it would just go the
Hell away.
I feel trapped. I feel like I'm in a cage, waiting for someone to come
get me and take me to the slaughtering pen. If I stop and think about it
too long, I'll panic and... Breathe, Duo. Just breathe.
Rex Ho el. That's what the sign said. They should have rearranged the
last four letters to spell "hole".
We are wanted. Our pictures are plastered all over the city. Oz knows
they have us in the net along with the other four million people here,
they just need to sift us out. That's why I brought us to this part of
town. At the Rex Ho el and any of a hundred other places like it, no one
asks questions as long as you pay your bill in advance. It's a dump, but
that's what makes it a good place to hide.
It was Heero who maneuvered us into a basement room with no windows.
Safer that way. But incredibly claustrophobic. Don't think about it. He
also mapped three escape routes and drilled me on them so many times in
the first two days I am sure I can follow them without thinking, even in
the dark.
I wish I knew what the deal is with him. I know I love him. I just don't
know if it goes beyond a "deep friendship" love or not. I'm open to the
idea if it happens that way. He... I just can't figure out what he's thinking.
I mean, on the one hand, he's looking out for me -- like the escape routes
-- but, on the other hand, that could just be part of the mission. It is
so hard to tell with him. Where does the mission end and Heero Yuy begin?
He's sitting there, fingers flying over the laptop. There isn't a phone
in the room, so I know he isn't checking for assignments or anything like
that. Maybe he's writing up reports or, Hell, for all I know, maybe he's
writing a novel. He won't talk to me. Not that that is surprising. He never
talks to anyone much unless he has something important to say. And I...
I need someone to talk to me and say nothing right now. The silence is
oppressive.
Yeah. I might as well be alone for all the company Heero is. I'm depressed.
Oz is on my tail. The Colonies have abandoned me. Deathscythe needs major
repairs. I hope to God I hid him well enough before skulking into town
to meet Heero. I am completely out of touch with everyone who might be
able to help me. And all I can do is sit and wait and pray that it'll all
blow over so I can get away. This is the part of being a terrorist that
I hate the most. The waiting.
Damn. Even the Colonies have turned against me. Is there even a reason
to keep fighting?
I don't want to fight. I don't care about the Colonies. I just want
out of this box. I want to be somewhere where I can see for more than fifteen
feet without running into a wall. I want to be somewhere where there's
air to breathe. I want -- Slow down, Duo. Keep breathing. Nice and deep.
Steady. That's it. Don't panic.
Duo.
I wish I understood you. Sometimes I see you start to say something
to me, then you back away or say something that I know isn't what you started
to say. I don't know why you do that. Isn't it almost a lie?
I know why I want to understand you, though. You can make me almost
laugh -- come closer than anyone else ever has. Or almost cry. Or want
to live. Or be willing to die for you. It scared me at first, then, over
the months, I realized it was because I feel something for you that, somehow,
made it past years of careful conditioning as if they never happened. I
realized that what happens to you matters to me. I don't understand how.
I don't even know what to call it.
Do you hate this place as much as I do? Do you wish it would stop raining?
What do you really want? How many times have I seen you come too close
to me? So close I thought you were going to touch me. Not to carry me because
I was injured or to bandage a wound, but just because I was there.
But you always stop. I understand. You don't want to touch me. You might
get blood on your hands. That sounds strange, but it is true. You call
yourself an Angel of Death, but I could stain you because I am soaked in
the blood of thousands of people I never knew, except as "enemy". You...
that just washes off you. After the battle, you pick up and go on with
the art of living, but I am always painted in shades of death and destruction.
Isn't that why you always draw back?
What do you want? What do I want?
How should I know? All I've ever done is fight and kill or learn how
to fight and kill. I talk and walk and move and act like a human, but I
don't think I really am. The Perfect Soldier. A machine designed for war.
And after the war? Well, maybe the solder can fit into the new world he
brings about or maybe not. But it doesn't matter. I am just a machine and
I can always be shut down.
Is that true? If it's true then how can I care --. That's the word for
what I feel -- I think. How can I care about Duo? Or anyone? Maybe it isn't
true. Or maybe it isn't what I think I feel. Or maybe I just think I feel
and it's nothing more than a bunch of neurons firing in a random pattern
that I don't understand. If that's true, then why bother? If nothing matters,
even missions are meaningless.
There must be something more. There must be something worth something.
I need someone to show me. I need someone to help me understand what I
feel, because I don't. I never learned that. It isn't part of war. Soldiers
and machines aren't supposed to feel.
But I feel something. I can't believe it's nothing. And you, Duo...
you are part of that feeling.
Maybe I'm not a machine after all. Or maybe only part of me is a machine.
The part of me that can type mission reports and assessments of Oz's tactics
while the rest of me is thinking about feelings and futures and... friends?
Are you a friend? That could help. Friends feel certain things for each
other. That could limit my choices for what I really feel.
No. That doesn't help. I've never had a friend before. I don't think
I'll ever know if you really are my friend unless someone tells me. Maybe
you'll tell me someday. Maybe you'll tell me if I'm your friend and what
I feel.
Maybe you'll tell me what you feel. I know you feel. You weren't programmed
like I was. I've heard enough from you to know your childhood wasn't normal,
whatever that is, but at least you had one. I have always been an adult.
Even now, I think I'm much older than you and the others, except, perhaps
Wufei. Or maybe I'm younger. Maybe I haven't made it to childhood yet and
I just think I'm older. Why do I want to know what childhood is?
I wonder what he feels right now.
He's laying on his bed, staring at the stained ceiling, glancing over
at me occasionally. He looks miserable. I never learned miserable either.
I guess that's good, because he looks like it is very unpleasant. It's
too cramped for him. I never learned that either. I grew up in tiny rooms
and cells. I know he isn't happy here. I can tell because he's so quiet.
I am too. This is a bad situation. Oz has every way out of this city locked
down. I know. I've been looking for a way out for two weeks, and every
time I think I've found one, I see something. A checkpoint I missed, an
inspection procedure I didn't notice before, a piece of paper we don't
have. Something that makes it a trap instead of an escape.
This is why I don't like being partnered with him. If it was just me,
I could take Wing and fly out shooting and take the risk. If I died, well,
I would be just one more statistic in the war. Another dead soldier. But
Deathscythe can't fly out. And even if it could, it's too badly damaged
right now.
But we've got to get out of here. He's going crazy. I think I might
be going crazy. Maybe that's what needs to happen. Maybe I need to go crazy
and do something only a crazy person would do.
Oh, shit! He's hyperventilating again.
"Duo!" Heero slapped him gently on the face, getting his attention.
"Duo! Breathe. Look at me. Breathe. See how I'm breathing. Breathe with
me." Heero took long, slow, steady breaths and, held Duo's face, forcing
him to watch. "Breathe with me." After a moment, Duo tried, struggling
to join Heero's rhythm until he was in control again, breathing normally.
"Thanks, Heero," he said, then looked away, ashamed.
We have to get out of here. That's the third time today. It's getting
worse. Something crazy. That's the only way. Something crazy.
There's only one way. And it is crazy.
"Get up. Get your stuff. We're leaving."
"Naaniiii? We can't leave. Oz has all the roads closed off. We -- We'll
never get --." He began gasping again.
"Breathe, Duo." Heero breathed with him again, guiding him back to regular
respiration, then said, "Fuck Oz. We're leaving. Get your stuff." He shut
down the laptop and put it in his bag with the few clothes and books he'd
brought with him.
"You've lost it, haven't you. You --"
"Hn. Maybe. But it's the only way we're going to get out of here." He
began stuffing Duo's clothes in Duo's backpack.
"OK! OK!" Duo took the backpack from him and pulled the clothes out,
folding them neatly before putting them back in. "Don't want to wrinkle
them." Heero didn't say anything. He knew Duo was as close to insanity
as he was and needed to grab at bits of the usual to keep himself together.
He handed Duo clothes from the bedside table, letting him fold them and
pack them.
"Ready?"
Duo nodded. "Where are we going?"
"To Wing."
"And then?"
Heero looked at him, cold, uncertain. "I don't know yet. Just away from
here." He saw the apprehension in Duo's eyes. He understood it. It wasn't
like him to have a plan that only went as far as "get to Wing and leave".
He'd work something out on the way. The walk would be at least half an
hour. Plenty of time to think about where to go.
"Wait." Heero said. He ran upstairs to the lobby and paid for one more
day. It might throw off any pursuit. Not that they'd left any clues, but
just in case. Returning, he found Duo, leaning against the wall, eyes closed,
breathing carefully. "I'm back." Duo nodded at him, opening his eyes. "Now.
Let's go."
He led Duo out by the second escape route -- a basement window. It had
been painted closed, but he'd taken care of that the first day. Now, before
closing it again, he pulled the can of paint he'd found in the basement
and repainted the edges of the window. He could hear Duo's impatient pacing
and nervous "C'mon. Hurry.", but ignored it. He finished the paint job
and closed the window. It should take them a while to find that.
He knew he was being paranoid. There was no way knowing they'd left
through the basement could help Oz find them, but he wasn't taking any
chances. And he was a little afraid of the risk he was taking -- going
off without a plan. He clung to the details he knew, seeking the security
they offered. They were all he had right now.
Ducking into shadows and alleys and side streets, hiding in doorways,
running when they had to, always staying out of sight, they made their
way across the city to an abandoned submarine base in a part of town no
one used anymore. Heero had flown Wing in literally centimeters over the
waves, bringing it into one of the old boomer berths where it now floated,
half-submerged. A roof designed to protect the subs from prying enemy satellites
hid Wing from Oz's eyes. By the time they got there, Heero knew where he
was going next and how he was going to get there. He could pull the specific
coordinates once they were out of the city.
"Shit, Heero. How did you get him in here?" Duo asked, incredulous.
Heero didn't answer, just took Duo's bag and leaped from the quay onto
the wing and cat-footed to the cockpit. He punched in the access code and
the canopy opened. "Get in."
"Uh. There's only room for one. What about you? I'm not sure I can fly
that thing."
"There's a jump seat behind mine. Get in or stay here." He knew it was
a cruel, insincere threat, but Duo was about to talk himself out of it
and Heero was damned if he was going to leave him here. He'd knock him
out and stow him in the jump seat if he had to. It would be easier if Duo
did it himself, though. The jump seat faced backwards and had less leg
room than most airline seats. He dropped their bags behind his seat and
folded the jump seat down over them.
Duo considered for a moment, then hopped across the water onto Wing.
He was a good enough seaman that the waves rocking the Gundam didn't throw
him. He walked casually over and inspected the space. It was tiny, cramped,
and had no view. "Uh. Maybe --"
"Shut up and get in. Just think about how we're going to be out of here
and it won't seem so small." Heero glared a warning at him. This was not
an option.
It seemed Heero knew he didn't like small places. Duo frowned. Well,
what could he expect after his display at the hotel, especially today.
He took a deep breath, steeling himself and dropped into the space -- barely
enough room for him to stand -- and sat in the seat. Heero adjusted the
harness around him, tying him in so securely he could barely move. "Does
it have to be this tight?"
Heero pushed a helmet onto Duo's head and nodded. "I don't want you
bouncing around the cockpit distracting me if we get into a fight." And
if he's strapped in tight, his movement will be limited so he might not
notice how cramped it is. He jumped into the pilot's seat and began the
pre-startup checklist. Close canopy. He skipped that step, leaving the
cockpit open as he ran through rest of the checks, letting Duo get some
of the fresh air they'd both longed for these past two weeks.
"What about Deathscythe?"
He began the engine startup list -- battery, generators, fuel pump,
internal engine air supply, mix, throttle, ignition. A soft whine as the
engines came to life. He listened to them for a moment. They sounded odd,
but it was only because they were half underwater, muffled. He punched
down the canopy and clipped the oxygen mask/microphone onto his helmet.
"We'll come back for it after they realize we've escaped." It was so obvious.
He should have done this a week ago. He looked in his rear view mirror
and saw the back of Duo's head nodding. "Talk to me. I need to know you're...
breathing." He'd almost said "not panicking", and knew Duo knew what he
really meant, but "breathing" didn't sound as bad, and, Hell, with all
his training, even *he* was on edge. He was surprised Duo had held together
this long.
"OK. What do you want me to talk about?" Duo's voice was staticky over
the intercom. He'd never really tuned the jump seat gear because he'd never
thought he'd need it.
"Hn. I don't care. Just talk. But if I interrupt, listen and respond.
It means something important is happening."
"OK. How are we getting out of here?"
"Same way I came in, just ten meters lower." Heero wasn't sure it would
work. Wing wasn't really designed for underwater operations, but he couldn't
just bolt out the same way he'd come in. Two weeks was plenty of time for
Oz to get a dedicated bank of satellites aimed at the city. A fast-moving
craft running just above the waves would get their attention in a heartbeat.
He edged the Gundam back from the dock and let it settle into the water,
listening for sounds of an impending engine stall. Still the soft purr.
Good. The water closed over the cockpit.
"Uh, Heero. How low is ten meters lower?"
"About ten meters under the surface."
"Oh, shit."
"Don't think about it. Talk."
Duo talked. Heero let the machine part listen to Duo, monitoring him
for signs of hysteria, and turned most of his attention to driving Wing
slowly through the water. He didn't want to leave even a hint of a wake
that Oz's satellites could follow.
After thirty minutes and twenty kilometers, he noticed he was burning
too much fuel. Well, not surprising. There was a Hell of a lot more friction
in water. He ran a quick estimate. Another ten minutes, then he'd have
to break the surface and hope he was out of the focus area or getting them
away would dig too far into Wing's reserves. Life would have been easier
if he'd had Deathscythe's countermeasures. In some ways, the other Gundam
was superior.
"Surfacing."
"OK." Duo said, then continued talking about playing soccer on L2 with
the other children in the orphanage. Heero listened, really listened, envying
the moment of childhood, then turned his attention back to the controls.
Gently, he raised Wing in the water, bringing it back to the surface,
then over the ocean. He activated the terrain scanners and bumped up the
throttle until Wing raced over the wave tops, occasionally jumping up as
they faced a larger wave. Fourteen minutes searching maps, a set of coordinates
chosen, he set their course and let the autopilot take over. He also set
the controls so alerts would go to his helmet and visor display, but not
Duo's. Duo didn't need to hear or see them.
"We're away," he said.
Duo sighed. "Good. I was getting tired of talking."
"Hn." Heero almost laughed. That reminded him of his thoughts earlier.
"Where are we going?" Duo asked.
"Somewhere safe."
Twenty minutes later, they crossed the beach and Wing began jumping
up and down violently.
"Shit, Heero. What the Hell is going on?"
"Autopilot terrain following."
"Yeah, but even I know it shouldn't be this rough."
"It should if you're running a meter off the ground."
Duo was quiet for a moment, contemplating the almost non-existent margin
for error. Then, "You're sure it works?" There was a hint of nervous and
nausea in Duo's voice.
"We're not dead yet." Heero knew that wasn't exactly what Duo wanted
to hear. "Yes. It works."
He reached under his seat and pulled out the knife he kept there to
cut the parachute off of him if he had to eject. He held it against his
side, feeling the edge sharp against his skin as he slit his tank top.
He squirmed in his harness, pulling on the fabric.
"What're you doing?" The panic was building again.
At last, the strip of shirt tore free. "Here." Heero flipped it back
to dangle over Duo's visor. "Blindfold yourself and keep your hands on
your lap. It helps prevent motion sickness." And claustrophobia attacks.
There was silence for a moment, then Heero felt a tug and let go. He
watched in his mirror as Duo struggled with the helmet. It touched the
canopy before it cleared his head, but he was able to balance it against
the back of the seat and tie the blindfold over his eyes. The helmet slipped
down again. A moment later, Duo said, "That does help. Thanks."
He sounded calmer. That was good. "Hn. Don't want you puking in my cockpit."
Heero thought for a few minutes, an idea forming, then said, "Tell me what
feelings feel like."
"Naaniiii?"
"No one ever taught me about feelings. How would I know if I, say, cared
about someone?" He waited, listening to the quiet again as Duo considered
his question.
"I can only tell you how I would feel. When I care about someone, I
want to see them happy and safe..."
They passed the time as Wing jerked over the ground, Heero learning
how Duo felt things and correlating it with his own experience. He was
missing some of the details Duo described, but Duo missed some of the things
he did feel. Maybe that was what Duo meant when he said it was how *he*
felt. Maybe different people felt the same emotions differently.
An hour later, an alert drew his attention from Duo's description of
happiness. They were nearing the coordinates he'd chosen. "We'll be landing
in one minute." Duo fell silent as Heero maneuvered Wing up a vertical
wall, into the rocks, and side-slipped the Gundam under an overhang. He
heard Duo moving behind him as he began the shutdown checklist. "Stay put.
I'll help you out in a minute."
A few more switches and buttons, and the canopy lifted. He unbuckled
his harness and pulled himself up in the seat, inspecting their hiding
place. It should do for a few days. That should be enough. He looked around
and had another idea. He was certain it was born of the something-not-the-machine
in him, and chose to claim it as a sign he might be more than the sum of
his training. He felt a faint upward twitch pass briefly over his lips.
"OK," he said, standing in his seat and pulling Duo's helmet off. As
he reached for the strap releases, Duo's hands moved to the blindfold.
Heero caught them. "Wait." Please. "You'll like it better if you wait."
Do you trust me?
Duo frowned, then shrugged, too tired to argue. "OK." He let Heero lift
him up and guide him out of the cockpit to the ground. They were on a hard
surface of some kind. He could feel the wind blowing. It was warm. It smelled
dry -- a welcome change from the rain. Heero led him to face into the wind.
Then he felt Heero's hands in his hair, undoing the braid. "What the Hell
are you doing?" he asked, uncertain.
"Wait."
"Damn it, Heero! I hate waiting!"
"Wait." Trust me.
He sighed, frustrated, then felt his hair blowing free in the wind,
the strands whipping around his face, his body, flowing behind him, then
coiling back against him again. It felt good, actually.
"OK," Heero's voice. Maybe three yards to his right. "Take off the blindfold."
Duo raised his hands and lifted the strip of green cloth -- To see the
sun setting before him. He was standing near the edge of a small butte
overlooking a sea of twisted rock formations and undulating sand which
seemed to burn with the golden light. He watched it, awed for a moment,
then turned to see Heero looking at him and -- Damn! He was smiling.
"Heero?"
"You were tired of small places and rain. So was I. This seemed like
a good change."
"I... Yes." He smiled. "It is." He beckoned. "Come stand beside me."
Heero shook his head. "I like watching your hair in the wind. It's like...
something. It makes me feel... something I like feeling." He shrugged.
An hour was scant time to learn everything about feelings.
"Come stand beside me." Duo said again. "And be my friend."
Heero's smile vanished. His lips parted slightly. It was the closest
Duo had ever seen him come to drop-mouthed shock. He beckoned again and
Heero walked over slowly, as if under a spell, and stood beside him.
He felt Duo's hair twining against him, around him. Then Duo's arm closed
around his waist, pulling him closer. Duo had said they were friends. "The
view is... better here," he muttered. If they were friends, what he felt
could only be one of a few specific things. He began comparing Duo's descriptions
to his new, smaller list.
"The desert gets cold at night," Duo said, looking straight up to see
the darkness racing after the sun, his eyes following as it crept down
to the horizon.
"I have a tent and a sleeping bag," Heero said. He'd added them to his
survival kit after seeing Duo's. "I'll keep you warm."
Duo chuckled. If he had said that, there would probably have been another
meaning under the words, but Heero's statement was utterly guileless. "I
love you," Duo said. He still wasn't sure how much.
"I care about you. Maybe more." But he wasn't sure if there was more.
Duo leaned against him, hair settling as the sunset wind began to die.
"That's good enough." Good enough for friends. Good enough for now.
Good enough to drive the rain away.
The End
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