“Are you lost?”
“I’ve been lost since the day I was born.”
Fiery explosions the color of blood brushed
distantly against his skin like waves of flame and heat and hurt, all coming
towards him at a rapid, inescapable pace.
There was a shock of horrified realization as the destruction went just
a little bit too far and engulfed the surrounding buildings. One phrase filled his head: ‘Perfect
Soldiers don’t make mistakes. They
can’t afford to make mistakes.’ And he
knew, with a sinking feeling in the pit of his stomach, that he had just made
the worst mistake of all.
Smooth fur was charred to blackened ash and scraps
of silken white linen was burnt to gray smolders. And through it all, a single golden flower was clenched in his
bloodstained fist; a hot, fiery wave of self-loathing filled him, even more
scathing than the explosion itself. He
looked again at the golden flower, which he could not name, and the blackened
heaps of rubble, and a single question touched his thoughts:
Are you lost?
---
Heero woke from his dreams with a start, his hand searching for a flower that was long wilted and gone and the tiny corpse of a dog long disposed of. Even after he realized that these things weren’t there, that they weren’t anywhere but in his head, it took him a moment to realize he had been dreaming again. It took another after that to jump into a clear state of total alert and awareness and to get his bearings. Nothing, he assured himself, was wrong. He was in the apartment he and Duo had recently acquired and sharing his bed with his braided lover. Nothing was wrong.
These dreams, the ones that reflected on his bloody
past, had been forcing themselves upon him more and more often as days flew
by. And Heero didn’t like that at
all. It seemed to him that he noticed
something more lurid and horrible every time the dream came upon him, an extra
detail that otherwise would have gone unmissed and which only intensified the
brusque, painful knowledge that he no longer possessed any semblance of
humanity and emotion.
Those had been taken from him immediately following the events
the dreams questioned, night after night.
Perfect Soldiers don’t make mistakes.
He peered over Duo’s sleeping body to check the
glowing red numbers on the digital clock.
Four o’clock. Too early for even
the Perfect Soldier to be awake, but he wasn’t willing to succumb to another
troubled slumber filled with the Dream™, so he shifted on the bed and sat up,
easing onto the floor, softly, so as not to
awaken Duo. The braided boy was a
surprisingly light sleeper and made a better burglar alarm than most
machines. Quietly, Heero moved to the
table in the room adjacent to the bedroom, separated by a thin wall and
connected by an open door. There, on
the table, lay his old, battered laptop, his constant companion, sleeping, lid
open, in the light coming in through the closed windows. The light came from the street lamps that
littered the streets outside, all of which were brightly lit from sundown to
sunup. With a sigh, Heero shut the lid
and turned away from the console. Not
tonight.
Glancing back at the bedroom, Heero sat on the old
couch, purchased years ago, after the war.
Back when he was useful, when he actually made a paycheck every now and
then. Before his skills turned out to
be useless in this new world of peace and prosperity. Before The Dream™
Are you lost?
Resting his head in his hands, Heero sighed. Five years.
In only five years, he had turned into something he didn’t want to
be. Was he lost? Well, of course he was! How could he be anything else? He had never been given a route to find his
way, nor did he know what that way was supposed to lead to.
Perfect Soldiers don’t make mistakes. That idea had been engraved into his brain for as long as he could remember, and he had believed it for a long while. He still did, to a point. But he knew better than anyone that he had made mistakes. Relena, for instance. And Noventa’s shuttle. And countless others- Zechs Merquise, Doctor J. The little girl and her dog, Mary. The golden flower. Did those mistakes mean that he wasn’t the Perfect Soldier he had been told to be? The Soldier everyone thought he was? Perfect Soldiers, after all, don’t make mistakes.
Slowly, he felt yet another identity stripped of
him. Not the Perfect Soldier. Just a boy foolishly code-named Heero
Yuy. Was that all he was?
Frustrated, Heero reached for his laptop and tossed
it out the still-closed window, feeling slightly better but increasingly
annoyed as it feel nine stories and crashed to the ground below in a sprinkling
of shattered glass. Folding his arms
over his chest, he leaned against the cushions of the couch, frowning at the
breeze that suddenly drifted into the room.
There was a loud thump as Duo promptly fell out of bed, startled by the
sudden noise.
“What the fuck happened?” he cried, pulling a robe
on over his sleeping attire- a pair of black sweat-pants- and rushing out of
the room. “Are we under attack?” Heero watched him as the braided boy paused
and surveyed the missing laptop and the broken window, then looked at
Heero. “What did you…?”
“I need a new laptop.”
Duo stared.
“You’re fucking messed up.”
Heero watched the braided boy cross to the window and look down at the
smashed computer below. “What’d you do
that for?”
Heero paused.
If he told Duo why he had done it, than he would have to explain the
Dream to him as well. No, it would be
much better if he stayed silent. So
much more prudent to keep his mouth shut.
After a minute, Duo looked back at him.
“Heero?”
“Hn.”
Duo frowned at the Japanese boy and Heero met Duo’s
gaze. Surprised to see Duo scowl, he
frowned, and Duo began to speak again.
“You haven’t tried to keep up your side of a conversation by grunting
for years,” he noted. “Either you’re
regressing or you’re resorting back to monotony.”
Heero was silent, watching the braided boy think all
of this through. With a loud sigh, Duo
fell onto the couch next to Heero, throwing his arm over Heero’s
shoulders. Suddenly uncomfortable with
this familiar touch, Heero shrugged it off, letting Duo’s arm fall. Duo blinked and took back his arm, crossing
it with his other much as Heero was doing, except he cupped his elbows with his
hands, frowning.
“So what’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” Heero lied, eyeing Duo carefully.
“Bull shit.”
Duo leaned back and crossed his legs.
“Throwing your laptop out the window at four in the morning is obviously
a little bit more than ‘nothing.’
What’s up?”
“Nothing,” he repeated. Duo rolled his eyes.
“Fine.
Nothing. Whatever.” Duo sighed.
“I guess it’s too important for the Perfect Soldier to-”
“Don’t call me that,” Heero interrupted in a long hiss. “It isn’t true.”
“What?” Duo
looked baffled.
“I’m not the Perfect Soldier. Don’t say that I am.”
“But you-”
“Perfect Soldiers don’t make mistakes,” he told Duo
coldly, “so I can’t really be the Perfect Soldier.”
Duo shrugged.
“I guess that’s fair enough for the time being. I’ll buy that.” Heero frowned at the braided boy as he continued. “So you’re having an identity crisis, huh?”
“No,” Heero lied again, annoyed that Duo could guess
his problem so easily. “That’s not it
at all.”
“Liar.”
Heero was silent, and Duo paused. Listening to the silence of their voices,
Heero tried to work out the turmoil in his head. There was the sound of a police siren outside, a couple blocks
away, which swooned into life and quickly died away to nothing as quickly as it
had come. Duo sighed.
“Are you lost?” Duo asked, defeated.
Heero jerked away from the familiar words. “What?”
“Are you lost?”
Heero choked on a breath of air, but recovered with
a cough. “I… I’ve been lost since the day I was born,” he answered, lips
forming words so familiar to him yet strange at the same time.
“Then I guess it’s about time you got found. Goody.” Duo groaned, standing up and heading for the
kitchen. “I’d ask if you wanted a soda
or something, but you might throw it out the window along with your computer.”
“Maybe.”
From the kitchen, Duo’s voice continued. “So why do you feel so lost? Really, I mean. Don’t give me any bull shit this time.”
“Get me a soda.”
“Heero,” Duo warned, voice growing firm as the
braided boy peered in at Heero from the kitchen and quickly vanished
again. “I mean it.”
“I don’t know.”
“You don’t know,” Duo repeated, appearing again with
two sodas in his hands. Tossing Heero
one can, he popped the remaining soda and took a long swig. He grimaced and made a face. “Note to me: soda tastes pretty nasty at
four-thirty in the morning.”
Heero ignored him, but he didn’t drink from his own
soda. “I’ve always felt lost, but it’s
gotten worse since the end of the war.
I’m not satisfied.”
Duo pouted playfully, the soda having lifted his
spirits, despite the early morning taste.
“I’m not good enough for you anymore?”
“That’s not what I said.” Heero’s frown deepened.
“I’m not satisfied with myself.”
“I think you’re pretty fucking sat-”
“Duo, stop.”
“Sorry. Go
on.”
Heero paused.
“Do you remember how many jobs I’ve held since the end of the war?”
There was a brief pause as Duo thought about this
for a moment. “No. But you and I didn’t hook up until just
before MarieMaia, really. A whole year
later.”
“Twenty-seven in five years. I’ve had twenty-seven jobs in the past five
years, and I quit every single one of them.
I was a soldier, an assassin, a burglar, a sniper, and a fencing
instructor, not to mention a computer analysist, a chef, a machinist, and all
those others.”
“It was an interesting variety,” Duo admitted. “I remember all that great food you used to
bring back when you were the chef, too.
Kept us fed for a long while.”
He thought a moment. “I think we
might still have a piece of that extra wedding cake frozen in the fridge,
too.” He laughed. “And do you remember when you took that job
as the psychiatrist and told everyone there to jump out a window if they ever
felt like they were being watched? I
think you quit after only three hours; an all time record.”
“Quiet,” Heero snapped. “All of those were mistakes.
Every job I ever took was a mistake.
I wasn’t right for the position and I made several mistakes.”
“And Perfect Soldiers don’t make mistakes, am I
right?” Duo smirked. “Although it was pretty funny when all your
psych patients made a beeline for the door instead of the nearest window. I don’t think loading your gun as you spoke was
a good idea.”
“You would be better off not talking, you
know.” Heero settled back on the
couch. “I make mistakes, so I’m not the
Perfect Soldier. It’s as simple as
that; I no longer have any identity.”
“You’re Heero Yuy.
What else is there to know?”
“I’m not really Heero Yuy. You know that as well as I; for all we know, my real name could
be something like Norman Bates.”
Duo cringed.
“Isn’t that the guy from <u>Psycho</u>?”
“Yes.”
“I think I prefer Heero, really.”
“That’s not the point,” Heero said with a
scowl. “Who am I, Duo? I’m not Heero Yuy, and I’m not the Perfect
Soldier. I think I realized that back
when I killed that little girl and that dog.
I’m lost. She told me so before
she ran off with Mary. Just ask the
flower.”
“What?” Duo
shot Heero a look. “I think I liked it
better when you were catatonic. Soul
searching makes you weird. But I guess
that’s what we call logic at four in the morning.” Heero watched as Duo thought something over, taking another gulp
of his soda and making another face.
Heero stared at the unopened soda in his own hands, expressionless. “Do you really want to know who you are?”
The question surprised Heero, but he answered deftly
and truthfully. “Why wouldn’t I?”
“Good point.”
Duo sighed. “Than get out of
here.”
“What?”
“Get out of here.
Pack you bags and go off to find yourself. I don’t want to see you back here until you’ve figured yourself
out, understand? I’ll miss you like
hell, but keeping you here would be selfish.
You want answers that I don’t have, and the best way to get them is to
go looking for them. You’re the only
who can find them, I guess. Start with
that flower you were talking about. It
sounds vague enough.”
“I don’t understand.”
“You’re lost, right? Go find out whatever it is that flower is telling you. Maybe you’ll find a road map of some sort
from there.”
“And you think that I’m confusing.”
Duo laughed, and to Heero’s ears it sounded like
bells pealing in the darkness. “Look, I
want you to be happy. And you’re not
going to be happy if you don’t think you’re needed or that you don’t belong. So I want you to find out who you are and
get home as quick as you can. With a
bouquet of those flowers you were talking about. Will you do that for me?”
Heero nodded.
“Hai.”
“Good.” Duo
reached over and ruffled Heero’s hair.
“I’m going back to bed.
Disappear before I wake up, because I hate saying goodbyes. Be careful.” He brushed his lips against Heero’s cheeks. “Love you.”
“You too.”
Without exchanging another word, Duo went to the bed
they had shared for almost four years and slept, leaving Heero alone in the
room with two cans of soda, one already emptied, and his memories.
When Duo woke up again, Heero was gone. Staring through the broken window at the new
morning, Duo sighed, wishing his love all the luck God could give. If Heero really wanted to find out who he
was, he was going to need every bit of it.
With a sad smile, Duo turned away from the window, back to the sunrise,
and placed a black vase painted with golden designs on the table where Heero’s
laptop had once sat.
When Heero came back, he’d have a place to put those flowers. And until then, Duo would be waiting.