Memory
by Angela
November 2003
Author’s notes: This is the first story I’ve done
from Eiji’s point of view and it feels weird to me, but it’s his story so I had
no alternative. The structure of this
one gives away a spoiler to the end of the series, so please don’t read it if you
don’t want to know yet.
----
We were together--by that I mean really together--only once. It wasn’t on any particular day; it didn’t
proceed or follow any special event. It
happened one lazy morning in the midst of everything and nothing.
Looking back, it was the most precious moment of my
life.
****
We were living in that posh
At night it was different. Ash would come home, world-weary and nearly
broken some nights, and tell me the few things about his life that he deemed
safe for me to know. He would sprawl
out on the couch and tell me stories about growing up, about his gang, about
Shorter. They were all brief and
poignant, free of the lewd details and harsh realities I knew he’d lived. I filled in the blanks.
Usually his green eyes stayed bright and alert,
some kind of insomnia keeping him up long after I surrendered to sleep. That night was different. He’d told me some story--enough like the
others that I can’t single it out--and fallen asleep with his head in my lap. For a long time I was awake, combing his
hair with my fingers and wondering how long he would let me continue living his
life instead of my own. I wanted time
to freeze like that, with Ash breathing softly, his weight and warmth as
familiar as my own. I must’ve fallen
asleep some time before dawn, because when I woke, the sunshine dazzled my
eyes.
Ash was stirring, lifting his head slowly as though
trying to decipher where he was and why he’d been sleeping there.
“Good morning,” I said softly as his startled eyes
met mine.
“Why are we . . . did you sleep all night like
that?” He sat up quickly and reached
for my shoulders. “You’ll get a stiff
neck that way,” he chided as his hands kneaded my tense muscles.
“It’s okay,” I assured him, my heart constricting
at the concern in his face, the way his hair stood up at all angles. I’d loved him for a very long time, and
though I’d come to terms--as I suspected Ash had--with the impossibility of
things between us, I was prone to moments of longing that I’m sure must’ve
shown on my face.
“Don’t look at me like that,” he protested
then. His cheeks flushed and his brow
furrowed, but he didn’t look away.
It was the empty stillness in the apartment that
made me bold, or the way he breathed with his lips parted, the sheen of saliva
making them glisten. “It’s only the way
I feel,” I answered, reaching out a hand to trace the imprint my sweater made
on his cheek. “You make me look like
this.”
“Eiji,” his voice was suddenly shaking. “Eiji, no.”
And it broke my heart that Ash--who had known such
suffering--would suffer most in the face of love. He was afraid. I was
afraid. The whole crazy world was out
to get us and we were afraid only of each other. I almost let it go. I
almost looked away and stood up and left the room, leaving Ash time to pull his
walls back up. Leaving me time to force
myself to forget yet again.
I didn’t.
I leaned close to him, close enough to smell the
stale beer on his breath and feel the pulse of his warmth on my skin. “I want us to say the words we leave
unsaid,” I whispered, brushing my mouth against his. “I want to acknowledge what we both know but never mention.”
His lips trembled.
He put a hand against my face and I leaned into it. “It’s no good,” he told me softly. “Don’t you see how we’ll tear each other
up?”
I shook my head, turning my face to kiss his
palm. “I’m already torn up, Ash.”
I’d had no idea that he was so near the breaking
point.
His kiss was unexpectedly rough. I fell back on the sofa pillows, unprepared
for the pressure of his mouth and body on mine. I fumbled my arms around him, grasping his shoulders, shocked at
the sudden shift.
He pulled back just as abruptly, his panting breath
spilling on my face and my mouth still wet with the taste of him. “It can’t be pretty between us, Eiji,” he
said hoarsely. “I don’t know
how--” He faltered, his eyes shining
unnaturally. “Hell, I don’t know if
I’ll be alive tomorrow. How can I
promise you anything?”
It was the life he lived. And if he chose to live it that way, I chose to be beside
him. I shook my head. “I don’t want promises. I just want--” I looked away, unable to finish.
I’d never kissed anyone before Ash.
I’d never touched anyone. I
didn’t know how to be confident. “I
want you to understand how I feel about you,” I finished quietly.
Ash searched my face, pushing my hair away from my
forehead. “I know,” he told me. “I’ve known.”
He kissed me for a long time then. I closed my eyes and held him close against
me, letting my hands learn the contours of his back and shoulders through his
t-shirt. His muscles bunched beneath my
fingers, tensing and flexing as though each touch were a shock. He took off my clothes slowly, letting his
fingers and then mouth caress each new bit of exposed skin. I grasped clumsily at his shirt and jeans,
unable to keep my shaking hands steady enough to manage without his help.
When we were finally naked he paused to look at
me. I flushed beneath his scrutiny,
partly because he looked at me with raw admiration and desire, and partly
because I had never seen a body so perfect as Ash’s. His skin was smooth and golden in the sunlight, his hair bright
and messy.
“You’re beautiful,” I breathed, unable to contain
my awe. I traced the fine line of a
scar across one bicep, using my lips to caress another beneath his
collarbone. “These scars . . .” Others crisscrossed in jagged lines across
his midsection and back. “How did you
get them?”
“Some are from fighting,” he answered easily,
motioning to the scratch across his arm.
“The others--” he faltered, long lashes hiding his eyes for a
moment. “I was a toy, Eiji. A slave.
I had to do whatever they wanted.”
The thought of anyone being so cruel made my
stomach turn. The lines were faded,
old. He must’ve been just a boy. Hot tears burned my eyes as I bent to trail
kisses along the crisscrosses. “I want
to erase them,” I told him.
He held me tightly, letting long moments pass
before speaking. “I’ve never done
this,” he said, his voice low. “I’ve
never done this like this. For love.”
Inexperience made me hesitant; Ash filled my pauses
with gentle coaxing. He tutored my
fumbling caresses. We came together
slowly. His touch was gentle--as
earnest as it was skillful. As my body
accommodated his, I gasped.
Ash froze, his mouth stilled mid-kiss on my
shoulder.
“Ash,” I whispered, my throat dry. It was almost too much--this feeling was
somehow more enormous than I’d expected.
He didn’t answer, just kissed me again with wide
expressive eyes. We moved
together. His warmth and scent engulfed
me, his face seeming to glow in the morning sunshine.
Afterward we held each other. Ash spoke, his voice low and urgent. He told me to remember that morning. That, no matter what happened to us--no
matter how much we might hurt each other or how far apart we’re torn--this was
how truly was between us.
It was with reluctance that we untangled, but we
both knew that privacy was rare, that any moment Bones or Alex or any other
member of his gang might burst through the door with pressing information. Ash headed off to the shower and I dressed
slowly in the living room, staring out the huge windows into
****
Years later it’s autumn again. Ash is gone--his smell, his warmth, his
taste--faded into memory. I watch the
leaves drift from the trees and remember him.
I have a new lover. He’s young
and strong and compassionate. He’s
touched me dozens of times more and in a hundred different ways than Ash did,
and I love him.
But Ash . . . .
Somehow, even after I showered that morning--for weeks afterward and
still today--I could feel his arms around me.
I don’t even have to close my eyes to see his face, his smile, those
flashing green eyes. It was only that
one morning, but it colored every moment we lived, every look and every
touch. It colors my life still.
The world was cruel and it became even crueler, but
Ash was right. The trust, the passion,
the love--that was how it truly was between us.