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Disaffection
By LoneWolf (kodoku na okami)
COMMENTS:
All the GWML angst-hounds listened to me moan about this story and encouraged
me to finish it. Thanks (I really mean that). "Disaffection" starts two
to three weeks after "Dissatisfaction".
BGM: "Once in a Lifetime" from Sarah Brightman's album, "Dive", especially
the part up to the bridge.
WARNINGS: !!!! DANGER, WILL ROBINSON !!!! Read at your own risk. Yaoi
and other stuff.
Disaffection
They had both known that, one
day, they would have their first major argument. That didn’t make it any
easier when it came. It came upon them unexpected and Heero watched all
the careful plans he'd made to deal with any disagreement between them
evaporate in a hot flash of anger.
"Iie. I have to do this alone." The anger was in his eyes, not his voice.
Duo didn't bother trying to hide his anger. "Like Hell you do!"
"Duo--"
"No! I want to come with you. You shouldn't be going on this mission without
backup."
Heero heard a hint of fear in his voice. He tried the hard way first.
"Duo, look at where the target is located. It's over a thousand kilometers
away. Trucking Deathscythe that far is inefficient, dangerous and unnecessary.
I can take Wing and be done and back before you could get there." It was
the perfectly rational explanation.
"I don't care! I want to go with you."
Duo wasn't being rational. "Iie." Cold voice, cold eyes. That was the
simple way to handle it.
Duo knew he wasn't going to move Heero now. The anger that had merely
sparked before caught in the dry tinder of his fears and burst into flame.
"Damn you, you rock-headed, cold-hearted bastard! Damn you to Hell!" He
stormed out of the room.
+
Damn him. Damn him. Damn him. Damn him. The words were a repeating bass
line of frustration running through the bottom of his mind. He can't do
this to me, Duo thought as he stomped along the sidewalk. He was just
trying to protect Heero. Why couldn't he see that? He loved him. He didn't
want him to be hurt or killed.
It was a dangerous mission. All of them were dangerous missions. He sighed.
Heero could get into a situation where his meticulous plans would fail
him. He might need to improvise his way out of it, and they both knew
Duo was much better at that than Heero.
Oh, sure, he knew that Heero had been improvising well enough before they
had teamed up. Well enough to survive. "With a little help sometimes",
he mumbled, thinking of their escape from the hospital. Heero wouldn't
have made it out of there without his help. Then again, maybe he would
have.
He knew he shouldn't worry about him, but he did.
"God," he whispered, "everyone I love dies. I don't want it to happen
again." Maybe he should quit loving people. Maybe he should just be a
cold machine, like Heero had been before they met. Before that first,
sweet night when Duo had seduced him out of his icy shell and into a warm
bed.
Maybe if he quit loving people, he wouldn't feel it when they died. He
knew it was a lie. Love wasn't something you could turn on and off like
a switch. And simply because he didn't love someone didn't mean their
death wouldn't hurt. He merely liked Howard, but he'd be sad if Howard
died.
"I should become a hermit and go live by myself in a cave," he muttered.
Then he'd never meet anyone to love, never know anyone he loved had died.
Yeah. He snorted. Like Duo "The Mouth" Maxwell could live by himself with
only a rock to talk to and not go stark raving mad.
Of course, sometimes Heero wasn't much more responsive than a rock. But
the times he was, they were what made all the difference. A rock couldn't
hold him in a tender embrace. He couldn't imagine waking up looking at
a rock and thinking how lucky he was. And a rock could never be such a
careful, attentive lover.
"Damn, I wish he wouldn't be this way." He wished that, just once in a
while, he could get Heero to change his mind once he'd set it. But Duo
knew Heero was right this time. Going alone was the only way he could
accomplish the mission quickly and safely. Sometimes he hated it when
Heero was right.
Damn, why couldn't they have made Deathscythe a flyer too? Stupid Dr.
Mushroom-Hair had been in space too long. There you just pushed off in
the right direction and, with maybe a few minor corrections mid-course,
you got wherever you were going. In a gravity well, transportation was
much more difficult.
He looked around him, angry, but not at Heero anymore. He didn't recognize
this area. It was a run-down, nothing neighborhood. Probably why he'd
never seen it. He knew the better parts of town. He'd crashed a few parties
and acquired a few prizes in the process -- a nice hairbrush, a true-blue
shirt that looked perfect on Heero, a bar of cinnamon-scented soap that
probably cost more than his lunches for a week. Nothing expensive enough
to get attention, just a little something here and there to keep in practice
and have a little fun.
This place wouldn't have much to tempt him. They probably didn't have
fancy parties either. It reminded him of the parts of his childhood he
preferred to forget.
He looked at his watch. "Shit." Nearly three hours he'd been out walking.
There was a small grocery store on the corner -- the kind you found on
every third corner in run-down, nothing neighborhoods. He'd be able to
get directions back to the school there and maybe acquire a beer to drink
on the way back. As he walked in, he changed his mind about the latter.
He had the money and the owner looked like a hard-working guy. He flipped
through his wallet looking for his fake ID.
Besides, he told himself, paying was faster. He needed to get back to
school so he could give Heero a ride out to Wing.
+
One more and... I'm in. The computer on the other end of the Net yielded
to his touch on the keys, offering itself to him as freely and completely
as Duo would have given the right hint.
"Where the Hell did that come from?" he mumbled. He was mad at Duo. "Ninmu."
He had a mission to plan.
According to the inventory there were thirty Leos and a dozen Aries at
the base. Not much of a defense force. Then Heero remembered Duo wasn't
going with him and reconsidered. It was a respectable defense force, but
nothing he couldn't handle with a little planning.
Why did Duo have to take some things so... personally? This was a mission.
Heero didn't doubt his abilities, it was just more effective to take care
of this one with Wing alone.
Here was the topo-map of the area. Mountains rose in furious concentric
curves on the northern edge of the base. They would provide protection
from the base's scanners on the way in. On the way out it would be best
to fly low, fast and straight. Have they got any anti-aircraft artillery,
he wondered and keyed the request.
Heero knew Duo could do the job, given the chance. He was a damn good
pilot, almost as good as Heero. But this mission was clearly an air mission,
something Deathscythe just couldn't handle. Duo would get over it. Heero
would make sure he did. He let his lips curl into a faint smile for a
moment. Yes, he'd make it up to Duo.
No AA on the inventory. He should be able to fly in undetected. Surprise
was a powerful ally on any mission. He found a pass through the mountains
and clicked a point on it, then zoomed the map on the base and marked
the other end of the line. "Forty-five klicks at one-two-one." He noted
the distance and heading in his mission plan. Twenty of those kilometers
were inside the base perimeter -- a long stretch of empty desert. Exposed,
but even if they detected him when he crossed the outer fence they would
have less than five minutes to scramble. He should be able to take out
most of the Aries on the ground.
Why doesn't he want me to do this alone? Heero considered that for a moment.
Duo was probably afraid he couldn't complete the mission by himself. Conceited
baka, Duo-koi. Heero had been completing missions before Duo had ever
heard of the word. Why should he think Heero was incapable now?
That had to be the assembly hangar for the new transport prototype. The
building was huge. The specifications said the new transport would carry
twice as many mobile suits as the current models, but he'd never visualized
exactly how big it was until he saw the building relative to the rest
of the base. He scanned the layout again. There were fuel tanks buried
all over the place. If he could detonate them they should take out everything.
He'd save a few rounds for the hangar -- for insurance. There should be
something explosive in there.
Maybe Duo was afraid he wouldn't come back. Heero thought about how he'd
feel if Duo didn't come back from a mission, then stopped. He didn't want
to think about that. It would be worse if he knew he could have made a
difference but wasn't there. This wasn't like that, though. He was sure
he'd come back. Probably. As sure as he ever was. The mission wasn't that
difficult, just long.
He finished gathering the information he needed from Oz's computer. After
noting the network address and the access codes he'd used to break it,
he logged out and put the disk of aviation maps into the drive. He began
building the flight plan, clicking out his route, marking a long diversion
to the west to avoid the base's sensors before turning north again to
come at it from the back way. Zooming the map, he followed along the path
he'd marked, picking instrument and visual waypoints to track his flight.
Finally satisfied, he printed the flight plan, map and a half dozen insets
before cutting a disk with detailed information about the base, it's defenses
and the locations of the fuel tanks. He slipped everything into his backpack
along with his kneeboard and Whiz-Wheel. He wanted to fly the inbound
route the old-fashioned way, just to stay in practice. The disk was for
Wing. Once he cleared the mountains, he wouldn't have time for practice.
He'd need everything the Gundam could give him.
He looked around the room, expecting to see Duo and remembered Duo was
mad at him. He should know I'll come back, Heero thought. He'd always
come back before. This target was too simple to mess up. Duo just didn't
think he could do it alone. That was easy enough to prove wrong. Then
they could make up and make love and everything would be OK again.
He didn't know when Duo would be back and didn't want to wait. The flight
would be nearly four hours each way and they had classes tomorrow. Duo
wouldn't mind if he borrowed the bike.
+
"Heero?" Duo called as he opened the door.
Silence.
That wasn't unusual. "Hey, Heero." The room was empty. Damn, he's gone.
That could only mean he was riding the bike out alone. Duo raced back
out the door, slamming it behind him in his haste.
When he reached the unused maintenance shed where he hid the bike, Heero
wasn't there. Neither was the bike. There was no scent of exhaust in the
still air. He was at least an hour too late. Heero had left about the
time he bought his beer.
He sighed and started the walk back to the room, still breathing heavy
from the run, wiping the sweat from his forehead. God it was hot out today.
Dammit Heero. Why couldn't you wait for me?
He had just wanted to see him before he left and wish him luck and apologize
for shouting at him -- and tell him he loved him. That was the most important
part. He knew he shouldn't worry. Heero could take care of himself.
But he couldn't help it. When they went out on missions together he had
the mission to distract him. That and watching Heero's back was enough
to keep his mind occupied. Now, he was alone with all the "what-ifs" and
"might-happens". It was going to be a long night. He hated waiting. It
was a Hell of a lot easier to fly off and blow up a base than to wait
for someone to come back from flying off and blowing up a base.
"Be careful, you cold bastard," he mumbled. "I love you and I need to
remind you of that. I can't have you dying on me wondering, can I?" When
Heero got back, they would talk. Maybe more.
+
He was still twelve minutes from the target when the missile lock warning
screamed him out of his last minute checks. They had spotted him.
Shit, why didn't they list those SAM's on the base's inventory?
He evaded the missiles and blasted the launchers to Hell, but he was sure
they'd gotten a call off, warning the base. If nothing else the explosions
in the pass would get someone's attention.
Fuel? Not enough to kick in the afterburners and make it back. He'd just
have to do it the hard way. He remembered that there was a time when he
had seen his life as just another tool to use to complete the mission.
Expendable. Duo had changed that.
Eight minutes later he crossed the base perimeter. Warnings lights flashed,
telling him he'd tripped the detection grid. It didn't matter now. He
punched them off. A minute later, more lights and alarms. Aries taking
off. He studied the constellation on his screen as they approached and
laughed. "Nice of you to line up for me." So much for Aries pilots being
Oz's best. He let them close for a minute more, then the beam rifle took
out ten of them in a single blast. He turned it on a group of Leos clustered
too close together and swept them into oblivion. "This is too easy."
The remaining two Aries were coming at him from different directions.
They were smart enough to learn from their tactical mistakes, but they
hadn't found the mistake in their strategy -- coming after a Gundam. Heero
showed them their error when he dodged their fire and let them take each
other out. It meant taking a few hard hits, shaking him violently against
the safety harness, but he and Wing could handle it. The rest was a simple,
but tedious exercise in mopping up. Enemies fell one by one before the
beam sabre and guns, victims of the overriding imperative of the mission.
When it was over, the base engulfed in recurring fireballs as the fuel
tanks exploded, Wing streaked south toward home, flying nap-of-the-earth.
Heero pulled out the Whiz-Wheel, calculated the maximum speed that would
get him home with a little fuel to spare, and adjusted the throttle. Then
he punched the calculation through Wing's computer. Almost half a klick
faster. It would only gain him two minutes. Better to save the fuel.
+
The internal clock told him was 3:14 AM.
He was exhausted. He hadn't been sure he'd be able to make it up the stairs
to the room. The long flight in and out. The fire of battle. The jarring
hits the Aries and a few lucky Leos had gotten in. The wrenching that
ran from his hands, up his arms, through his shoulders and into his back
and chest as the beam sabre tore through metal. The mental strain of tracking
dozens of targets, managing the cockpit and manipulating the controls
all at once. They conspired to drain him of his strength. He wanted to
crash into bed and sleep for a few hours before he had to go to class.
"Heero?"
Duo? What was he doing up this late?
"Heero, you're back!"
"I'm tired, Duo. I need to sleep." He could feel his knees struggling
to bend and straighten without giving way as he walked toward the bed.
He could feel his brain already beginning to shut down on him.
Duo grabbed him. Hugging him. "I was worried. Are you alright?"
"You thought I couldn't handle it without you." Part of him knew that
the anger came so easily because he was so tired, but that part was buried
deep under a mountain of fatigue and could do nothing to stop it. "You
thought I'd die. Disappointed?"
"Heero, what are--"
"Damn it, Duo. Just leave me alone and let me get some sleep." He pushed
Duo away and pulled off his tank top.
"Leave you alone?" He heard an answering flare of anger in Duo's voice.
"Is that what you want?"
"Hai." He sat on the bed. A moment of vertigo swayed him as he bent to
untie his shoes.
"Damn you, you bastard!" Duo snapped. "I've been sitting around for over
twelve hours waiting, worrying, hoping, damn, even praying that you'd
come back so I could tell you I love you one more time and you want to
be left alone?" He stalked toward the door shouting, "Go to Hell!" and
slammed it behind him.
"Duo?" Heero said, too late. He forced himself off the bed and to the
door, legs screaming at him with every step. The hallway was empty. "Shit!
You blew it, Yuy," he mumbled to himself as he closed the door again.
He pulled off the Spandex pants and his underwear as he stumbled back
to the bed and fell on it. Duo had to go walk off his anger now. Heero
knew there was no way he could catch him and doubted he could do any good
if he did. His body was betraying him with every step. He couldn't think
clearly. He desperately needed to rest. I'll fix it in the morning, he
thought as consciousness crashed into sleep.
+
Duo walked along the sidewalk toward the dorm. Dawn was tinting the east
with rose and gold. A good stomp around the campus always helped him clear
his head. He had been angry. Heero had rejected him -- again.
He knew that wasn't what had happened. Heero was just beat from the mission.
He'd seen the flight plan and the other notes Heero had left on the computer.
If he'd been there, it would have been easier, but the distance stretched
Wing's fuel reserves for itself alone. If he and Deathscythe had been
along, they never would have made it to the base in the first place.
Heero was going through the classic post-battle crash they both knew so
intimately. The adrenaline vanished. Your muscles felt like they had been
stretched out and run over by a truck as all the post-surge toxins flooded
them. You had trouble seeing straight, much less thinking straight. Tremors
came and went as memory dodged in and out and you weren't sure if you
were safe or still in the battle. It was a horrible feeling, far worse
than any hangover. You just wanted to fall onto any vaguely flat surface
you could find and sleep it off.
Duo had been tired too -- still was. He'd been awake for almost twenty-four
hours now, most of them spent worrying about Heero or angry at one or
the other or both of them for being such stubborn idiots.
Well, Heero had had his few hours rest. He needed to get up if he was
going to his first class. Duo opened the door and walked into the room,
about to say, "Ohayo," when he saw Heero was still asleep. He must have
been more worn out that Duo thought. He never slept through the door opening.
Closing it didn't wake him either.
Duo walked over to the bed and stood, looking at his naked lover sprawled
on the sheets. He smiled. He knew the perfect way to wake him up and apologize
and tell him that he loved him all at once. He went over to his bed, the
bed they usually shared, and began unlacing his shoes.
Naked, he knelt beside Heero and gently coaxed his legs open, sliding
his hand in to reach the soft pouch of skin with the treasures it held.
He rolled them tenderly in his hand. This was Heero's favorite touch in
foreplay. He heard Heero's breathing shift and looked at his face, expecting
to find cold blue eyes watching him. They were closed, but he could see
them moving under the lids.
A dream? Duo grinned. It was going to be a very good dream.
His hand continued massaging as he lowered his mouth to the growing flesh
before him, tasting the tip, touching it with his tongue, gentle teeth
grabbing the head and tugging on it.
Heero's body begin to stir in response. A soft moan. "Duo."
He glanced up again. Still asleep. Still dreaming.
Inch by inch he swallowed it, teasing the throbbing mass with his tongue
and teeth, moistening it, moving his head up and down to massage it with
his lips, preparing it for the next step, sucking out the sweet, liquid
precursor of pleasure. Heero's sighs grew more frequent, louder. Duo thought
he would wake up any minute, be surprised, then go along with the pleasure,
but he was disappointed. He stopped as he felt Heero begin to buck against
him. Just a little more and he'd be too far gone for what Duo had in mind.
He climbed onto the bed, careful so he wouldn't wake Heero, straddling
him. One hand slipped a quick finger into himself to open the door, another
squeezing Heero to keep him enthralled in his dream. They both liked watching
each other as they made love. This position was Heero's favorite.
Duo knew he hadn't prepared well enough, but he pushed Heero's hardness
against him, remembering how Heero had always been gentle with him, even
in the rush of passion. Even that first night, when Heero hadn't been
sure what to do, he had followed Duo's lead, carefully stretching him
until Duo had finally told him he didn't have to get his whole hand in,
just the thing between his legs. He'd caught Heero off guard with that,
but only for a moment.
He knew this time, for the first time, it was going to hurt.
He didn't care. He willed himself to relax, the muscles to open. It still
wasn't enough. Supporting Heero, lest he injure him, he pushed again and
let his weight carry him down.
He felt the tearing and hissed. A small whimper escape his throat. SHIT!
That hurt! It had been a long time since he'd felt that pain. It was worse
than he remembered. He moved his hand and the burning continued its way
inside him.
He felt the blood -- his blood. He didn't care. He wanted Heero to enjoy
this. He'd endured worse than this for people he didn't give a damn about.
He could take a little pain and bleeding for Heero. He waited, tensing
and releasing the muscles to fit them around the welcome intruder that
was inside him, each pulse drawing another sigh from Heero. He watched
the hidden blue eyes fluttering rapidly under their lids as he slowly
raised himself up and slid back down. It didn't hurt as much now. A few
strokes later he was enjoying it as he moved Heero inside him.
Heero's breathing was rapid now, gasping, calling his name. His eyes opened,
blue clouded with ecstasy. He saw Duo. "Duo? Nani... O. Nnn. Tsu. Nnnnn.
Aaaaaa!"
Duo loved it when he came in Japanese. He felt the warm, liquid explosion
inside himself and squeezed, drawing more and another "Aaaaa!" from Heero.
His face was beautiful as he poured out his pleasure.
When the release ended, Duo leaned back catching himself on his hands,
head thrown back, feeling Heero inside him, pressing against him, then
shrinking. He grinned and looked at Heero's face.
And met horror.
"Shit, Duo, you're bleeding on me. Oh, shit! Get off of me!" He grabbed
Duo and pushed him off onto the foot of the bed. "Get off of me!" An edge
of hysteria twisted Heero's voice.
"But Heero--" He was speaking to Heero's back. Heero was running for the
bathroom.
"The blood! Duo! Shit! Get away! You raped me!"
Duo didn't understand. "Dammit, Heero," Duo stood, heedless of the red
and white mixture of himself and Heero that dripped onto the sheets, the
floor. "I was just--"
Heero slammed the bathroom door. Duo heard the shower start. He tried
the door, but it was locked. He beat on it, but there was no response.
"Open the fucking door, Heero!" Was that the sound of vomiting? Then the
hiss of the shower changed as Heero moved under the spray.
Damn him. "Damn you, you fucking bastard! I bled for you!" Nothing. "Shit!"
He felt the tears on his face and raced to his bed, telling himself that
boys don't cry, but crying nonetheless. He jerked on his pants, then ran,
shirt unbuttoned, belt undone, hair flying free as he slammed out the
door again.
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