Falling Into You
Companion Fiction to Riding Out the Storm
A Gundam Wing Fan Fiction
Cunningly Considered by The Manwell
...
It’s been more
than two years since I’d last seen him so I’d known that he’d probably
changed. A lot. But it’s only when I’m standing on his
doorstep, absorbing the sight of him—both familiar and new all at once—that I
realize I hadn’t truly appreciated the impact peace had had on him.
Heero Yuy has grown up.
I mean, he’s always been somber and intense, mature beyond
his years with a gaze that can see straight through concrete (well, it had
seemed like it sometimes). There’d been
not a few uncomfortable moments during the war when I’d been sure he’d see
right through my smile and uncover a whole shitload
of stuff I’d been trying to hide. From
both him and myself.
But there’s something different about him now. Something a little less... resigned. Yeah, I guess that’s the word I’m looking
for. He almost looks... pleased to see
me. But I can tell he’s having just as
difficult a time processing this older me as I am processing the older him. And I can’t stop myself from smiling over
that. It’s not my typical smile and I’m
well aware that I’m leaving myself open to that probing gaze of his. I don’t mind.
I don’t want to hide who I am anymore.
At least, not from him.
I’ve made this trip to see if he and I could manage to be
friends without a mission or battle strategy to hold us together. So far so good, I suppose. But I start to get a little nervous when I
remind myself of the other reason for
my visit: to get over my odd attraction and fascination with him. I’d begun to realize, over the last few
months, that my infatuation with him had become increasingly distracting. So I’d suddenly decided a reality check had
been in order. That evening, I’d called
him up and asked to visit. He’d said
“okay.” The first step in getting Heero
Yuy out of my system had been implemented.
I’m still not
sure how I feel about that.
I notice the slight frown creasing his brows and even as I
wonder what it is he’s thinking about, I decide to say something; we’re in
danger of standing here staring at each other all evening.
“Well, hell, Heero,” I drawl, “it’s only been two and a
half years. Did you forget what I look
like?”
The frown vanishes and my grin widens. I’m rather pleased with myself that I managed
to find something fun and relatively charming to say. And I’m really
pleased that I’ve managed to erase that little frown. All too often, Heero thinks way too hard about things. He needs to lighten up, enjoy the moment a
little more... Well, I guess the last
two years hasn’t changed everything.
I watch him struggle with a tiny grin for a very brief
moment before giving into it. Damn, but
that man has a beautiful smile.
“Hold on while I get the retina scanner,” he tells me and I
nearly fall over. Heero Yuy just made a joke!
My God, the sky must be falling.
I let my happiness show through my smile and quip, “Why
does it not surprise me you’ve got one of those things just lying around?”
His response is simple and complex at once: he steps back
and opens the front door wider in invitation.
There aren’t many people who can fully appreciate the significance of
Heero Yuy inviting someone else—anyone
else—into his home. I cross the threshold,
set my bag down and toe off my shoes. I
know I really ought to take a good look around his place, do it justice. But I can’t.
I watch Heero’s gaze sweep over his living room. That critical, appraising look is in his eyes
and I think I see a flicker of something... disappointment?... at what he
sees. I can’t help myself; I’m
fascinated. And that’s when he turns and
catches me staring at him.
And, God help me, I can’t stop. He’s amazing.
For a long moment, we just look at each other. Heero seems frozen in place and I think,
maybe, he’s feeling it, too: the attraction.
He moves away, stretching the moment. “Something to drink?” he asks, wandering into
the kitchen.
“Sure,” I say, forcing my voice to stay light. I am here to visit a friend, I remind myself. A friend.
“Whatcha got?”
“Whatcha want?”
I cannot believe
I just heard Heero Yuy say that in his characteristic monotone. Oh, man.
“Water’s fine,” I manage to say through a mouth that must be stretched
to the max in an ear-to-ear grin.
He glances over his shoulder at me, not quite believing
that I’m this easy to please. I just
keep on grinning and shrug. I’m a simple
guy, really.
I watch him pull down a glass from the cupboard and fill it
from the filtration system in the refrigerator.
I idly notice the physical changes in him. There aren’t too many. He’s still insanely strong. His hair is still the messy bird’s nest it’s
always been. His shoulders are broader
and...
He hands me the tumbler and our fingers brush as I accept it. I don’t think he notices. But I do.
“You’re taller,” I blurt, finishing my interrupted thought
aloud. Wow, witty conversationalist I
am.
“Not as tall as you,” he returns while getting a glass down
for himself. I don’t attempt to argue
with him about it. I think I’ve got an
inch on him now, maybe two. The
difference is hardly worth mentioning.
“Looks like you’re still cutting your own hair, too.” I almost snort at the thought of Heero Yuy
going to the barber shop and sitting with one of those checkered aprons draped
over him. As if Heero would let just anyone that close to him with anything
that can be used as a deadly weapon.
“Looks like you still haven’t cut yours,” he says with a
hint of amusement in his voice.
I cannot seem to get over the sight of him. I just stand there, glass of water in hand,
staring. I can’t remember a time when
he’d put this much effort into a casual conversation. Damn, how much did I miss out on during the
war because there’d been “better things” to talk about?
“You noticed,” I say, my mouth on autopilot. As usual.
“What don’t I?”
I feel myself falter.
Oh, crap. It had
never occurred to me that he’d noticed the way my eyes had followed his every
move during the war. So what the hell
did that little comment of his
mean? That he’d known about my
infatuation? And if so, did he agree to
my visit now because he’s willing to ignore it and maintain a friendship or
because he feels similarly about me?
Ah, screw it. I’ll
think myself black and blue later.
“Yeah...” I muse, attempting to segue into another, safer
topic. “What don’t you notice?” I stall by taking a sip of water. Luckily an idea occurs to me and I tell him,
“But I seem to recall surprising you enough to get you to drop your gun a few
years ago...”
“I didn’t make that mistake a second time, did I?” he
reminds me and that small, shy smile pulls at his lips.
“Yes, well,” I admit, grinning, “I was rather reluctant to
shoot you again.”
“It’s nice you tell me this now,” he says with a mild glare.
Soft laughter rolls out of me. “Better late than never.”
“Right.” He doesn’t
sound convinced.
A moment of silence settles between us. We watch each other sip at our respective
glasses of water and I just can’t take my eyes off of him. I’m beginning to debate the wisdom of my
visit. I don’t seem to be working Heero
Yuy out of my system.
“Where are you staying?” he asks, breaking the silence I
hadn’t noticed yet.
I fidget a little.
It’s not that I don’t want to answer his question. It’s just I don’t want it to sound like I’m
looking for a handout. But... it would be really cool to hang out with
him as much as I can during my layover.
“Not sure yet,” I admit. “I just
grabbed a cab from the spaceport.”
He takes a moment to think about that. I don’t say anything to try to sway him one
way or the other. If he offers...
well...
“The couch is a futon...”
I hesitate even though I’d been hoping to hear those exact words. “You sure?”
He looks a little peeved at my wariness. “I’m offering aren’t I?”
“Sounds like it to me.”
I try to keep the huge grin off my face but, hell, even I can hear it in my voice.
Heero smiles, too, and I’m thankful I had the good sense to
accept his invitation. Very thankful.
...
Heero orders pizza.
We arrange ourselves around the coffee table in the living
room on matching cushions. Aside from
these and the couch/futon there isn’t much else in the room. I don’t dwell on the feeling of emptiness in
Heero’s home. I’m here to see him, not
bemoan his grudge against frivolous electronics and wall art.
After a moment of careful consideration, I ask him, “Why’d
you come back to L1?”
He’s quiet for a long moment. From past experience, I’d say it’s not one of
his “I’m ignoring that irrelevant question, you idiot” silences. I think he might actually be thinking about
answering me. But, just in case, I rely
on my old habit of ignoring the fact that I asked just in case Heero decides
not to say anything.
I concentrate on fighting for a mouthful of pizza. Damn, but I think cheese has a vendetta
against me. Ever since that time I’d
passed up the real thing for that processed cheese product in a spray can it’s
been impossible for me to eat the stuff gracefully. I’m in the middle of glaring at the gooey
strings of mozzarella dangling from my lips when Heero decides to talk to me.
“Connections,” he says, his mouth twitching.
I must be quite the sight: bent over my plate, cheese and
sauce suspended between my mouth and the mother slice, looking up at him
through my brows. Maxwell, thy name
means “elegance.”
Still almost smiling at my on-going wrestling match with my
dinner, he continues, “Living here helps me remember who I used to be before J
took me in.”
I win this round and vengefully enjoy my hard-earned
bite. I nod but I don’t say anything. I don’t, in all honesty, share that sentiment
about my own past. And I think Heero
senses this. His next words confirm my
suspicion.
“Why’d you take a job working for Quatre?”
With a wry grin, I say, “It’s not like he offered it to
me. I applied like everyone else.”
Looking rather amused, Heero drawls, “Something tells me he
didn’t bother to interview any other candidates.”
I shrug. “I had a
hunch I’d get the job if Q was checking over the applicants himself. And after storming X18999 with you I realized
how much I missed piloting. But I didn’t
figure a commercial shuttle company would bother with me since I’m not
certified and I’m kinda underage. So yeah, that’s why I’m flying one of
Quatre’s personal shuttles for him.”
“Doesn’t sound as exciting as crashing into a colony,” he
comments.
I have to laugh at that.
“There’s not much that is,” I say.
“Not many occasions for an adrenaline rush in this day and age.”
“I guess neither of us were thinking that far ahead when we
were busting our asses for peace.”
My brows arc upward.
“Heero Yuy? An adrenaline
junkie? Pull my other leg.”
And then, to my complete
surprise, he reaches under the glass coffee table. I blink at him while his hands hover over my
ankles. “Which would that be?” he
inquires with a gleam in his eyes.
“Right or left?”
Pizza is forgotten.
Neighbors and neighboring colonies are forgotten. I lean back on my elbows and laugh.
I mean, yeah, I know it isn’t that
funny but this is Heero Yuy. Being
playful. Oh, man. Never in a million years would I have
guessed...
After abusing Heero’s ears with my mirth for a good minute,
I force in a deep breath. I pull myself
upright again but go a step further by leaning my arms on the coffee table and
confiding the first thing that pops into my head. “I have missed you, Heero Yuy.”
Maybe I shouldn’t have said that, but it’s true. I have
missed him. A lot. But what I’m
discovering more and more is that my missing the guy I knew during the war
doesn’t begin to compare with my missing this more open, witty friend.
God, what had taken me so long to call him up?
“You gonna eat that breadstick?” I ask. I have got
to stop thinking about all the time I’ve wasted. A change of subject is mandatory at this
point.
He shakes his head and I notice that tiny frown is back. “You have it.”
I reach for it and take a nibble. Damn, he’s still thinking about what I’d
said. I can see him trying to force a
reply together. I don’t need to hear
it. Really, I don’t.
“Whatcha doing tomorrow?”
Heero pauses at my blatant redirection of the
conversation. The frown disappears and
he relaxes a little. I can’t help but
feel relieved.
“Nothing,” he says.
“Cool,” I reply with exuberance. “You can give me a tour or something.”
Rather flatly, he says, “I suppose I could do that.”
I’ve got to smile at that.
“You’re blowing me away with that overwhelming display of enthusiasm,
Yuy.”
“Ah,” he returns with a grin that’s becoming less hesitant
with every use. “I please to aim.”
...
He’s watching me
again. I’d been noticing it all day
and it’s been making it really hard for me to concentrate on keeping things
casual. I decide I just can’t ignore it
anymore.
“Whatcha looking at, Heero?” I watch him back from the corner of my
eye. How he manages to lean against a jungle gym of all things and still project a poised air, I have not a
clue.
He says frankly, “You.”
Woah. Maybe I shouldn’t have asked. I mean, this could take things in a whole new
direction and I’m supposed to be trying to get over him, for the love of God.
I end up giving him my complete and undivided attention. I don’t say anything because I sense that his
next words will establish just where we are in relation to one another.
He glances away.
“You’ve changed a lot.”
Now where had that
come from? I examine his nervous tension
and feel myself start to smile. At this
point, I’m pretty sure the attraction isn’t completely one-sided. That’s enough for me. I’m more than happy to continue with this
little dance of ours.
“Not so much,” I reply, still studying him. “You on the other hand...” I gesture toward his shadowed jaw and then
slide a finger along my own smooth chin.
He winces. I watch
him lift a hand and trail his fingers along his 5 o’clock shadow. Sometime tomorrow morning, if I’m really
lucky, I might have a dusting of what Trowa calls “duck fuzz” on my chin. I can’t remember how many times I’ve glared
at him for reminding me of the fact that I’ve been short-changed in the “manly
hair” department. At least I’m not
alone. Quatre and Wufei and I make up a
rather nice trio of hairless wonders.
Three against one, I often tell Tro, aren’t the best odds. But he just gives me that little grin of his
and says, “Bring it on.” The jerk. One day I will. I really will.
I blink out of my reminiscing when Heero very quietly tells
me, “For a long time I thought I was Japanese but...” He rubs his chin again and his eyes sparkle
with a hint of amusement. “Right now,
I’m feeling a bit more... Slavic.”
I laugh so hard the jungle gym has to hold me up. Oh Christ.
He says that like a guy’s ethnicity is as interchangeable as his
moods. I laugh even harder as I imagine
Heero casually saying to me, “You know, Duo.
I’m feeling rather Slavic today.”
When I finally manage to catch my breath, I look up at him
from my ungainly sprawl against the metal bars.
“Well, it’s only fair, I guess,” I tell him. “If I get to be taller, then you get to be
hairier.”
He doesn’t buy it because he says, “I think you got the
better end of that deal.”
“Aw, being hairy’s not such a bad
consolation prize.” I finally decide I’d
better stand up and, in the process, almost miss Heero’s response.
He mutters, “Should have picked what was behind door number
three...”
I have to chuckle. I
am seriously liking this wry sense of humor he’s been keeping under
lock-and-key. “Tro’s
got the best deal out of all of us, I think.”
He gives me this look that says “Oh?” and I’m forced to
elaborate. “Very tall... and he’s
growing a goatee.”
I can tell he can’t visualize that. Trowa with facial hair is a rather amusing
sight. I think he’s trying to compete
with the lions. And the guy has the
nerve to think I have issues...
Heero gets quiet again and the both of us end up gazing out
at the city as the streetlamps and commercial signs twinkle to life. Only when darkness has fallen and the city is
fully illuminated before us do I decide to comment.
“Well,” I say, “you’ve shown me the modern art museum, the
chamber of commerce, the engineering college, the L1 historical society, and
the library with the largest collection of electronic data files in all the
colonies.” I pause and direct my
attention toward him again. “I hate to
ask,” I say slowly, “but what do you do for fun around here?”
“What?” he asks flatly, “A FTP file upload session not
enough for you anymore?”
“Don’t tell me you
still find it oddly fulfilling?”
“Doesn’t everyone?”
I lean back against the jungle gym and grin
affectionately. “You are such a geek.”
“You say that like it’s a bad thing.”
“It is a bad
thing if you know more about the latest Linux update than where to take a guy
out on a Sunday night.”
Oh, crap. I did not just say that. No, wait.
I did. Oh, crap. I can feel his gaze on
me. The x-ray vision is back and I can’t
stop myself from toying with the buttons on my jacket. I realize that if I were to say something now
I would just be babbling and that would make everything worse, so I’ll just
have to pretend that my last comment didn’t sound like I wanted him to take me
out... like, you know... on a date.
Heero seems a little surprised and somewhat amused by
either my words or my display; I can’t decide which. He consults his watch and starts off down the
path to the city. Before I can ask him
what the deal is, he calls back, “Come on.”
I just blink at him.
Oh yeah, all those amazing stories you’ve heard about the
lightning-quick reflexes of a gundam pilot are so true.
“You don’t want us to be late, do you?” he inquires.
Dude, is he...? Ah,
screw it. I’m not going to ask. If Heero wants to surprise me, I’ll let
him. Who knows; I might actually enjoy
it.
...
“The Math and Science Center?”
Okay, I have to admit I’m a little disappointed.
All right, all right... a
lot disappointed. But then I catch
sight of the very obvious smirk tugging at his lips and I feel hope blossom
anew.
“Trust me,” he says.
And I do, so I follow him up the steps and into the
building. He leaves me idling next to a
wide, winding staircase and crosses the lobby to the ticket counter. I’m really wondering now. I mean, I’m in a math and science museum so how interesting can it be? I almost pull an imaginary muscle trying to
think of something more entertaining that those huge funnel things you can race
pennies into. But before I can convince
myself Heero’s idea is going to be a monumental failure at entertaining me,
he’s back.
I almost open my mouth to ask “Hey, what gives?” but he
just sort of shakes his head at me and starts to climb up the stairs. Well, it’s not like I’m not going to follow. I’ve at
least got to figure out what he’s planned.
I can tell he’s keeping an eye on me, waiting for my reaction.
And, boy, does he get one.
My first thought is: “L1 has an Omni Theater?” And then, as the current production’s poster
comes into view, my second thought is: “I think I love him.”
He’s almost laughing at me, but I don’t care. I’m absolutely overwhelmed by this
surprise. I don’t think I’d ever
mentioned how much I love the Earth’s storms.
I don’t think I’d ever even had a conversation involving weather with
Heero Yuy. But... damn. This is perfect.
I glimpse a hesitance in his expression right before I
smile. I can’t remember the last time
someone gave me a surprise as cool as this one.
In this moment, Heero Yuy has managed to earn my complete, unwavering
trust.
His shoulders relax slightly and I realize he hadn’t been
as sure as he’d let on. He nods toward
the theater and I follow him in. I’ve
never been inside one of these before.
I’m always too busy to be a chaperone for one of Q’s nieces’ school
field trips so even though L4 has a massive, state-of-the-art Omni Theater, I
still haven’t had the pleasure of experiencing it. Something tells me it won’t hold a candle to
this first time with Heero.
“Where shall we sit?” I ask.
“Wherever you want,” he replies.
I take a second look around, this time with a goal in
mind. I estimate the center of the
curving screen and decide on a pair of seats in the center of the theater about
two-thirds up. Heero nods in acceptance
and then... and then the weirdest impulse comes to me and I reach down to grasp
his wrist. I don’t even think about
doing it until it’s been done and I’m leading him up the stairs like he’s some
sort of child.
Heero Yuy is not
a child.
But he doesn’t make any sort of motion to disentangle
himself from my grip and I don’t attempt to remove it. Even after we’ve settled into our seats I
don’t let go. I’m too engrossed with the
slightly elevated rhythm of the pulse in his wrist. My fingertips are pressed just so against his
warm skin and I softly count off his heartbeat in my head.
If there are other people here, I don’t bother to notice
them. I’m grinning softly up at the
projection of stars across the screen, waiting for film to start, thinking
there’s nowhere else I’d rather be right now, no one I’d rather be with when an
ear-splitting crack slams through the room, nearly peeling me out of my own
skin. A blinding bolt of lightning
divides the screen and I feel a strong breeze against my face. The storm has arrived.
The angle shifts until we’re among the clouds and spinning
down with the rain. I’m only marginally
aware of my hand moving over Heero’s. He
shifts beneath my questing fingers and I trail the very tips over his thumb,
across his palm, and then they somehow find their way to rest between his.
We’re racing the raindrops to the ground. I can feel the wind in my face and hear the
fury of the storm around us. It’s
exhilarating and awe-inspiring and I can feel a strange, unsettling pressure in
the center of my chest. But, through the
whole thing, Heero’s holding my hand.
And I’m...
...falling.
...
I’m awake, but
I’m just lying here. It’s too early to
get up and I care too much about remaining cocooned inside my warm blanket, remembering
the night before, to convince myself otherwise.
Last night had been...
Wow. How can I possibly describe
it? Something had happened while we’d
been holding hands in the Omni Theater that I just can’t put into words. It’s like I can feel him now. Like a part of him had settled into me and
something of me had seeped into him. We
hadn’t said a thing during the show nor afterward when we walked back to
Heero’s place, hands still linked.
And we’d held on as he’d unlocked the door and reset the security
system. We’d kicked off our shoes in
silence and wandered into the living room.
I remember the stripes of ghost-pale light that had painted his hair and
face. I remember the way the lines of
shadow had followed the curve of his cheekbone.
I remember his gaze and it had felt like he was crawling inside me.
It’s just as well we’d parted then. If he’d stared at me for much longer, I
probably would have kissed him.
Ah, who am I trying to kid?
I would have kissed him. Quite soundly. And I would have ruined the chance to be
friends with him.
A change in the air draws my attention and I stop trying to
imagine Heero’s reaction to an amorous overture. Without looking, I somehow know Heero’s
awake. In careful silence, I peek over
the edge of the blanket just in time to glimpse him drifting into the
kitchen. With his eyes half-closed and
jaw dark with stubble, he has—without even trying—managed to motivate me into
getting out of bed. Call the Vatican;
there’s been a miracle.
I hover in the
doorway, watching him rub at his bare chest.
He’s frowning again and I wonder what it is he’s thinking. As I cross the hardwood floor on quiet feet,
I take in the white-and-navy striped flannel pajama bottoms riding low on his
hips. Keep it casual, I tell my rampaging hormones.
I consider warning him of my presence but I can’t seem to
bring myself to break the comfortable silence we’d initiated the night
before. So I glide up next to him and
carefully slide an arm around his shoulders.
I almost shiver at the feel of his skin against my inner arm. There’s no way I’ll be getting over this man
in the near future. I think I’ve finally
accepted this as a fact.
He doesn’t pull away, which is nicely encouraging. He does turn his face toward me and I know
he’s discovering a soft smile curving my lips.
I can see the shift in his expression that tells me he’s pleased by my
greeting. My gaze wanders over his features
and—without thinking—I lift my free hand to his jaw. But then, seeing what I’m about to do, I pause. And I wait.
If he doesn’t want me to touch him, I’m sure I’ll see it reflected in
his eyes.
I see an invitation.
My fingertips make contact with his beard-roughened
skin. The feel of the tiny hairs against
my sensitive fingertips is almost painful but I slowly drag my hand along his
jaw anyway, fascinated by the sound of the friction. And then I remember my own duck fuzz. My smile shifts to one of embarrassment as I
trail those same fingertips over my pathetically smooth skin. Oh well, at least I’m taller.
Heero shares my silent joke and I play it up, shaking my
head and sighing with dejection. He even
lets me push him onto a stool while I take over his morning routine. One pot of green tea, comin’
up.
I can feel him watching me and discover that I actually
like the sensation. I glance over my
shoulder at him—a small, knowing smile on my lips—to let him know just
that. As I set the kettle on the stove,
I try to imagine what I’d be doing right now if I hadn’t arrived in L1 early,
if I were still in my own apartment in L4 waiting for my flight plan to go
through...
Heh. I know exactly what I’d be doing. I’d be rolling over trying to have a dream
half as good as the reality I’m experiencing right now.
...
“I have to head back soon.” Damn, that came out rather blunt. I glance up to soften my words with an
expression of regret and feel a knot tie itself up in my chest at the look on
Heero’s face. He’d assumed I’d be
staying for a while longer. Perhaps,
he’d even been hoping I was.
“I checked on the shuttle this morning,” I continue, not
really sure of how to reassure him.
“It’s all loaded and fueled up.
My flight plan’s gone through, too.”
“When?” he asks me, his voice gruff.
He had hoped I’d
be staying longer. I can see it in his
eyes. “This evening. 19:40.”
I play with the mound of pasta on my plate as stiff,
expectant silence makes a stop by our table.
“Will you visit again?”
I look up and smile, elated that he really wants me to. “Maybe,” I reply, going for the smirk I know
I’ll get if I tease him just a little.
“If you ask real nice.”
And there it is. The
corner of his mouth quirks up for me.
“I’ll send you a postcard,” he says in that monotone I used to hate.
I laugh. “You do
that.”
I attempt to spear another bite of spaghetti, aware of
Heero’s gaze examining my every move. I
really can eat like a normal human being.
I hadn’t been raised by wolves or three-toed sloths
or anything. Really. But, for some reason unbeknownst to myself, I
cannot accomplish this with Heero watching me.
Yet another strand of spaghetti smacks me in the chin and I can feel the new puddle of sauce on my
face. Grumbling, I reach for my very
abused napkin.
Seeing my predicament, Heero contributes, “You wouldn’t
have that problem if you’d eat spaghetti like a civilized person.” I watch him gracefully twirl a forkful of
pasta into a neat buddle with the help of a large spoon beneath the tines.
I arc a brow at him, highly amused by his little
demonstration. “What makes you think I want to be civilized, oh great pasta
guru?” I challenge.
He meets my gaze as he chews and swallows. I can feel my brows hiking higher in a look
of silent expectation. He doesn’t say
anything, just gives a little huff of defeat, signals our server, and asks for
another napkin.
I laugh. I never
would have figured Heero for a “if you can’t beat ‘em,
join ‘em” kinda guy.
So, the second napkin offers up its life to keep one Duo
Maxwell relatively sauce-less and the rest of lunch proceeds easily. I’m rattling my complimentary mint against my
teeth as I follow Heero’s lead out onto the street and I wonder where he’s
going to take me now. After the Omni
Theater, I don’t dare underestimate him.
We’re meandering along when a collection of colors catches
my attention. I stop and turn toward the
display window in order to drink in the sight of a warm-looking flannel shirt
comprised of a pale caramel and bitter chocolate plaid. I think what’s struck me about this
particular garment is that the colors are almost the exact shade of Heero’s
skin and hair.
Oh, man. Somebody,
launch me into orbit. I am so gone for this man. The mere thought of how he’d look in this
shirt while sporting that late-evening beard of his is causing my hormones to
do seriously naughty things...
I can only imagine the look I must have on my face at this
moment. And it must be rather scary
because Heero sounds rather worried when he asks, “What is it?”
“Oh, nothing.” I
strive for nonchalance. Judging by the
full-blown suspicion in Heero’s expression, I don’t quite make it. I watch him study the store’s façade over my
shoulder and I have to laugh; he doesn’t have a clue as to what’s set me off.
He attempts to discourage me with a glare then latches onto
my arm and drags me down the street.
Heero apparently prescribes to the “out of sight, out of mind”
philosophy as well.
We end up in another park of sorts. One with fountains and benches and small
tables artfully scattered around. A park
for grown-ups. I can see a few patches
of grass where—it’s likely—folks do Tai Chi in the morning.
“Sit,” he tells me.
I recognize it for the command it is.
I feel a little guilty about weirding him out
back there, so I meekly obey. But I
can’t quite keep the amusement out of sight.
I know he doesn’t trust me any further than he can throw me at this
moment, but he doesn’t say anything else before he stalks off to have a chat
with an older man at a vendor.
When he turns back to our table, I spare the object under
his arm the tiniest glance. I’m actually
more entertained with painting that flannel shirt on him and attempting not to
drool all over myself.
Dear God, I am so buying
that shirt...
He carefully places the small box he’d carried over in
front of me on the table. I send him a
questioning look as he takes his seat across from me. I disengage the brass latch and slowly lift
the lid. And what I see inside...
I grin. My predatory
instincts roar to life as I lift out a worn, wooden pawn and take in the
convenient, checkered tiles decorating the table’s surface. No, I don’t think I’ll underestimate Heero’s concept
of entertainment ever again.
“You really are a masochist,” I say, completely thrilled.
I notice he doesn’t deny the accusation. “How long has it been since you’ve played?”
I have to think back a few years. “Peace Million.”
“Hm.”
“White or black?”
He doesn’t have a preference so I claim white and, as avid
chess players know, white always
makes the first move. And I intend
to. Heero doesn’t know it yet but this
chess game is a mere warm-up exercise.
Not on this visit—and perhaps not even during the next one—but soon I’ll be taking this game of ours to
a whole new level.
...
I lean back into the
seat, close my eyes, and let the cabbie do the driving. I still ache from what had felt like the
hardest good-bye I’d ever had to say.
I’d had to force myself to walk away.
Damn, but that had felt like I’d been physically tearing myself away
from him.
And, for a minute, I’d almost walked out the door without
telling him... something. I’d stood there, ready to step over the
threshold, and I’d known I couldn’t just walk away without saying any part of
what I’d been feeling. Without further
thought, I’d whirled around, dropped my bag, and pulled him to me. At the last possible moment, I’d managed to
keep my grip from becoming painfully tight.
I’d breathed him in deep, lowered my mouth to his ear, and whispered,
“Thank you.”
Thank you for opening your home to me. Thank you for opening yourself to me, for
letting me in, for showing me this side of you I’ve never seen before. Thank you for knowing me so well, for
appreciating my weirdness, and for wanting to know even more. Thank you for everything that you are... But, most of all, thank you for letting me
be... well, me.
Those two words just don’t seem to be enough now that I
think about it. I open my eyes and grin
at the cab driver. “Hey, man. I’ve changed my mind. Do you think we could take a short detour on
the way to the spaceport?”
The man shrugs. “Sure
thing. It’s your dime,” he tells me.
That it is. I direct
him to the men’s clothing store I’d seen earlier. During the short scenic tour, I open my
duffle, tear a piece of paper from my journal, and scribble out a note to
Heero.
When we arrive at the small store, I promise my driver I’ll
only be gone five minutes and hop out. I
stride into the shop, my gaze sweeping the racks in search of that shirt. A flash of caramel-and-chocolate draws me
near and I’m so intent on reaching my destination that I almost don’t see it.
I pause in front of the rack, my eyes riveted to a
blue-on-blue plaid shirt that surpasses my previous obsession. I pull out a likely size and slip it on over
my T-shirt. I’m able determine that
there’s more than enough room for it to be a comfortable fit on Heero. Happily, I shrug it off and start toward the
cash register. But I pause. If I’m going to get this blue shirt for
Heero, then I’m damn well gonna buy the caramel and chocolate one for me.
I ask the clerk to box up Heero’s flannel and while she’s
taking care of it I comb through the shelves of snack items. I can’t forget my friendly cabbie now can I?
As my credit card number is being savored by the machine, I
make one final request. I turn on my
most charming grin and ask her, “I don’t suppose you know anyone who might be
interested in making a little money on a rush-delivery, do you?”
...
I breathe a sigh
of relief and allow myself a moment. I
lean against the inner hull of the shuttle I’ll soon be piloting back to L4 and
sift through my memories of the last two days.
I manage to reaffirm my initial impression of my time spent in Heero’s
company; it had been... incredible, enlightening, priceless.
However...
I am so glad it’s over.
I need some space. I need to
reevaluate my feelings. I need to build
up the walls that contain all the emotions I absolutely, positively cannot show Heero.
God, I’m completely exhausted. I sigh again and rub a hand over my
face. Time to get to work. I push myself away from the wall and head for
the cockpit. I’ve still got a good
portion of my pre-flight checklist to get through before I—
“Heero?”
It really is him. Damn.
Wearing the shirt I’d just bought for him no less. And, man,
does he look good in it...
I’m completely taken aback and unprepared for this
surprise. I just stare at him, my brain
processing the presence of his duffle bag slung over one shoulder. He thinks he’s going somewhere? With... with me? Oh, Christ...
He hesitates and so do I.
He looks unsure of himself and I don’t have enough information about
what he intends to do to attempt to help him out. But then the most formidable expression of
determination settles over his entire being.
He turns away and swings the shuttle door shut with a resounding slam!
Then, crossing his arms over his chest, he informs me, “I’m coming with
you.”
I can’t think of anything to say. I’m too busy trying to keep my two, distinct
trains of thought from slamming into each other in a head-on collision. The first is whooping for joy that I don’t have
to wait weeks to see him again. The
second is screaming at me to get him the hell out of here before he figures out
how I feel about him. Which one to
choose?
Iny, meeny,
miney, moe...
“Okay,” I hear myself say happily. Woah, wait a
minute... When did I decide to go along
with this?
He blinks at me; I’ve surprised him with my complete lack
of argument. Good, at least I’m not the
only one off-balance. Now’s as good a
time as any to establish those “friend” boundaries again, I guess.
“Nice shirt,” I say, attempting to lighten this whole thing
up with a joke or ten.
“Isn’t it?” he replies.
And for a minute, I think maybe I can do this. Maybe I have the strength to get through a
sixteen hour flight with Heero next to me the entire time. But then he looks up at me through his brows
and states through that damn sexy smirk of his, “If you ask nicely, I might let
you borrow it.”
I want him.
The need slams into me and I marvel at how I honestly
thought I could control this. I don’t
even bother to struggle with the desire, to shove it back into its rusty
box. I stare back at him, letting him
see exactly what’s in my gaze. Can he
see the fantasy in my mind as I “borrow” that shirt right off of him? As I slide it from his shoulders? Chase the fabric down his arms? Leave the cuffs buttoned around his wrists so
that the flannel becomes a pair of soft restraints?
Heero simply stares back at me. Maybe he can’t see it. But maybe he does and maybe I don’t want to
know what his answer is. I retreat and
attempt to calm myself. If he’s
determined to come with me, I’d better give him the ten cent tour.
“I’ll show you around, then.”
I can hear him behind me as I narrate points of interest:
the kitchenette, the head.
“And here’s the bunk room,” I continue in a carefully
neutral voice. I open the door and turn
on the light. “Go ahead and secure your
stuff and then I’ll show you the cockpit.”
I think maybe I know how he must have felt right after he
invited me in and found me staring at him
rather than his furniture. Heero’s gaze
has yet to leave me and I’m starting to get really nervous. I’m kind of amazed I haven’t jumped his bones
yet. Ah, well, there’s a good dozen
hours left for me to resist him.
Heero makes no move to stow his bag and I find myself
looking at him. Big mistake. Monumental.
Mount Everest comes to mind. I
feel that fire flare back to life again and I know I can just not
pretend anymore. Maybe on another day,
after I’d rebuilt the barriers... But
not today.
A long breath hisses out of me as I abruptly give in. “Why?” I ask.
I can barely hear my own question over the rush of my own blood.
He’s quiet for a moment.
An eternal moment. And then he
says, “Why not?”
And blessed control floods back into me. I’m actually a little angry with him. I am not some interesting novelty. I will not
be some spontaneous curiosity for him.
What I want from him is far more than a “Why not?” can provide. I’m perversely pleased that this has been
said. I’d been so close to screwing
things up very badly.
I’m about to continue the tour when he cuts me off by
amending his earlier rationalization. He
confesses, “Because I need to.”
Does he mean it? Do
I want him to? Jesus, can I manage to
make up my God damn mind?
His bag slides from his shoulder and he reaches out. His hand brushes mine and I feel him
deliberately interlace our fingers. He
doesn’t say anything. He doesn’t have
to. I can see he’s still unsure, but
this much—my touch—he knows he
wants. And, by God, if he doesn’t back off
now he’s going to get a hell of a lot
more than just a little hand-holding.
Heero thumb caresses the back of my hand in blatant
invitation. My breath slams to a
stand-still in my lungs. I lean closer
to him. I wonder if he has any idea of
what he’s initiating. I almost don’t
want him to. I’m so close... If he backed off now I doubt anyone would be
able to hold me legally responsible for my actions.
His name pours past my lips on a breath. I’m almost touching him. I can feel the heat of his skin radiating
through the nearly non-existent space between us.
There’s an ache in my voice when I say, “Stop me.”
Stop me from ruining our friendship. Stop me from making this massive
mistake. Stop me because I cannot stop
myself.
And his response comes in the form of a gesture. An infinitesimal movement of his head as he
soundlessly tells me, No.
I would have groaned if I’d cared to waste the time drawing
the sound out. I don’t. An instant of sound signals my defeat and
then I’m kissing him. And he’s so warm
and smooth against my mouth and I can feel the urgency building in me but I
beat it back down. This is our first
kiss and, if I manage not to screw it up, hopefully not our last. I slide my lips over his, caressing. I even exhale against his mouth, introducing
that sensation to him as well. I hear
his abrupt intake of breath and know I’m on the right track. Reluctantly, knowing there won’t be any
turning back, I complete the circuit between us and touch my tongue to his
lower lip.
Let me in, Heero...
I wonder if he can hear me because he does. His dark eyes slide closed completely as I
enter him. I stroke his mouth and offer
him my soul on my breath. I’m his. If he pushes me away now...
He doesn’t. His
strong fingers twist into my shirt and pull me closer. And now that I know that he really wants
this, I loosen the reins on my passion just a bit more. I cover his mouth completely, allowing him no
escape from me. A rough purr rumbles out
of his throat and I respond by completely invading his space. My thigh slides easily between his and the
feel of him against me is exquisite. My
fingertips dance along his throat, measuring his pulse. He’s as far gone as I am.
It hurts to do so but I lean away from him. This is our last chance. I can still stop. I’ll never be able to just be his friend
again, but I can stop before we submit to each other. Dragging in ragged breaths, I look down at
us, intertwined. Our hands, our legs,
his fingers in my shirt. Finally, our
gazes merge and I have to ask him. I
have to know that he’s completely sure.
He glares back at me.
That does it. How can I not
respond to that need in his eyes? I
stare into his perfectly blue eyes for a moment longer and know, without a
doubt, that I’ve crossed the line. Dear
God, I hope he really, truly wants this, too, because I’m pretty sure this
ticket is one-way only.
And then he rocks his hips against my thigh and I can feel him so hot and hard through the
fabric of his jeans. Oh, hell yes, I want him. But I’m able to take that desire and contain
it. The burn of it is not a little bit
familiar. What isn’t familiar is the
humility. I gaze down on him, seeing the
passion glittering in his eyes. Feeling
his body offer itself to me. And I’m...
honored that he would allow me to see him like this, to touch him like this, to
trust me to stoke his passion until he’s weak with it. I have never received a gift parallel to
this.
I groan as I lower my mouth to his neck. And my entire body tightens as he leans back
and allows me full range of his throat.
This little bit he has freely given but I desperately need more. I pull my other hand from his grasp and start
at the bottom of the flannel, freeing each button reverently. My lips nip at the skin hidden beneath his jaw
and his fingers thread into the base of my braid in reply.
He stretches like a cat as I slide his undershirt up to his
collarbone. Those wet, swollen lips fall
open as the fabric catches on his nipples.
I smile as I taste the soft skin of his earlobe. I want to tell him to just wait. I want to tell him that it gets so much
better. But I don’t have to. I show him instead.
I hear his teeth snap closed, biting back a helpless sound
of pleasure as my fingertips whisper over his nipples. His hips begin a steady rocking against my
thigh and I know he’s not going to last much longer. I can hear it in his breathless pants. Taste it in the perspiration dotting his
flushed skin. He lowers his chin and I
look into his eyes.
Am I inside you yet,
Heero?
He stares at me, his crotch rocking against me. He seems surprised by the heat, the
intensity, the breathlessness. I’m not
surprised. I’m honored, amazed,
entranced. But not surprised. I’d hoped—for a very long time—that we would
be like this together.
Very deliberately, I shift my leg, generating a lazy friction
through the fabric of his jeans. His
breathing becomes harsher and I smile. He’s
so beautiful. I listen to his breath
hitch as my knuckles ghost down his abdomen to gently tug on the first button
of his jeans. I dip two fingers past the
waistband and rub small semicircles against his skin.
Will you let me,
Heero?
I lean close enough to kiss him but refrain. I want to watch him, inhale his hot, shallow
breaths as I slowly slide each button free.
His jeans droop on his hips and I become very aware of the fact that he’s
completely open, exposed to me. I have
to look down, imprint this moment on my memory.
He resettles his formidable grip on my shoulders and I’m
glad for it. Heero can bend steel with
his bare hands. I do not want those
hands clutching at my neck as I attempt to drive him out of his mind with
pleasure. I close the distance between
our mouths again and kiss him slowly and deeply. The fabric of my uniform slides against his
overheated skin and he shudders.
Let me in...
I curl my fingers around him and shiver as a long,
breathless moan tumbles from his mouth and into mine. I caress him slowly, steadily. The feel of him is... beyond words. My body reacts to his display of trust, my
hips moving against him in a matching rhythm.
He pulls away from my mouth. I
watch his lips forming my name and I know I’ll never be able to let him go
now. He’s claimed me.
And then he’s trembling in my arms. Gasping.
Grasping. I attempt to lick the
breath from his lips as I feel his release shivering through his entire
body. His eyes stay open, watching me
witness the storm of his completion.
As long as I live, I will never forget this moment. His eyes, dark and heavy-lidded. His mouth, open and panting. His skin, hot and damp. His smile...
I will never forget that Heero had taken my face in his trembling hands
and smiled for me. And the feel and
sight of him had been so beautiful that I’d ached in the glow of his radiance.
...
“This is your
copilot?”
I have to stop and think about Heero’s question. I pause in my rush to get the shuttle ready
for launch and remember my silent passenger.
“Um, yeah,” I tell him, feeling kind of stupid for having a doll of him
strapped to the neighboring seat for company.
I attempt to explain. “One of
Quatre’s nieces made it for me in her crafts class.”
He studies the Heero Doll for a long moment. “Where are my shoes?”
He doesn’t seem too freaked out by its presence. That’s reassuring. “Those puke-yellow monstrosities?” I reply
after resuming my launch preparations.
“I got rid of those, first thing.”
Then I think to add with a suggestive leer, “The tank top’s next.”
Heero seems impressed by my promise. He reaches out and plucks the doll from the
seat then deposits him in the navigator’s chair. “You’ve been demoted,” he says.
I have to laugh.
“Shuttle 839, you have been cleared for launch.”
“Roger that,” I report back. “Commencing launch sequence.”
He sits back and watches me work. Luckily I have an easier time with piloting a
shuttle under his intent gaze than I do eating.
All four of us—shuttle, doll, Heero, and myself—escape the docking bay
without any casualties.
After things have calmed to a moderately crazed pace, I
remember my manners. “Why don’t you
kick back and catch some sleep, Heero?
I’ve got everything under control here...”
He hesitates and I tease, “What? You don’t trust me?” Considering what we’d just shared, the idea
is laughable.
I hear him snort beside me but he doesn’t argue with my
suggestion.
“Just put an astrosuit on first,
will you?” I remember to ask.
“You expecting trouble?”
He seems a little surprised by my request. I can’t figure out why. As if I’d knowingly endanger his life when
precautions are readily available.
“Nah. Procedure, you
know? I’ll get mine on after I’ve
finished these calculations.”
He gets up and pops open the locker. I can hear him pulling on the astrosuit somewhere behind me. I try not to envy that astrosuit. I try very hard.
“Shall I take over?” he offers, sliding back into his seat.
I shake my head but don’t look away from the computer
screens. “Naw,
I’m good. I’ll be finished here in just
a few more minutes.”
“Hm,” he says. Out
of the corner of my eye, I sense him settle into the chair, cross his arms, and
close his eyes. Within moments he’s
asleep.
...
God
damn it. Why can’t I get these thrusters up past 85
per cent? I’ve tried everything and I’m
starting to get really pissed off, here.
I decide to reroute the necessary power through the back-up
circuits. That should do the trick. And it would have if the back-up circuits
hadn’t protested the command by spitting sparks out at me.
Oh, crap.
“Heero!” I put as
much force into his name as I can. In
the chair next to me, he jerks awake.
“Get your mask on! Now!” It’s a struggle to keep the fear out of my
voice. I cannot let anything happen to him.
He doesn’t comply with my request after getting an eyeful
of the crackling terminal. I’m not really
surprised. Heero’s got this thing about
taking charge of dangerous situations.
He reaches for the terminal himself and I’m simply incapable of allowing
him to help me until I know he’s protected.
“Mask! Now! Yuy!” I bark.
He doesn’t like it, but he flings himself out of the chair
and rips open the locker. I can hear the
seals snapping together as he dons the helmet and oxygen system. The deathgrip
around my heart loosens just a smidgeon.
“Get your suit on!” he barks back and I remember I never did
have the chance to get into my own gear.
Too late now.
He attempts to garb my wrists but I wriggle free. “I’ve almost got the access panel off!” I
shout. Damn it, his “helping me” is so
not helping me.
“God damn it, Duo, I’ll do it! Get your suit on!”
I hear the desperation in his voice but before I can dwell
on it the panel pops off. “There! I’ve got—
Shit!”
Okay, this is bad. I
can’t see the wires and circuit boards for all the smoke pouring into the
cockpit.
“Duo!” he shouts.
“Get your suit on! I’ll deal with
this.”
Heero Yuy is nothing if not tenacious and with a sinking
feeling I realize he’s going to get both of us killed trying to save me. I won’t let him do it. I’d been careless; I should have made both of
us put on those damn astrosuits before I launched,
but I hadn’t. Heero is not going to pay for my screw-up with
his life.
“Heero.”
He turns at the sound of his name and before I can
reconsider my own actions, I lean toward him and slam my fist into his
gut. The air rushes out of him in a
single gust and I wince in sympathy; I know
what it feels like to take one in the stomach.
Through the visor of the helmet, I see his lips move around
the word “Why?”
And I have to answer him.
“It’s for your own good.”
I lower him to the copilot’s chair, already regretting my
actions but knowing there hadn’t been time for an alternative. I quickly belt him in and jump back into my
own chair. This next bit’s gonna be
tricky. I buckle down and weave my way
through the smoke and sparks, typing in the command to close the oxygen
tanks. Okay, that’s done. Now...
Now I have to decompress the ship. I don’t hesitate as I enter the codes. I remember to exhale as I press the enter
key.
The effect is immediate.
Air rushes against my ears as it’s sucked out into space. I try to keep my eyes open, try to watch the
smoke. I’m pretty sure I’ll only get one
shot at this so I need to be sure the fire’s completely out before I close the
vents.
Black spots begin to dance around my field of vision and I
hurry to get everything ready for my next command. All I have to do is press a single key and
adjust a lever. But first I have to be
sure.
So I wait.
My lungs are screaming at me. My vision is graying. I think
the fire’s out but I’m too far gone to be sure.
If only I could have trusted Heero to let me do this, then he could have brought the life support
system around when it’s safe to do so.
I start to pass out.
I can’t wait any longer. I press
the final key and the vents slam closed.
I reach for the oxygen release and attempt to push the lever up to
maximum. I think I manage to nudge it,
but I’m not really sure. At that moment,
the blackness reaches up and drags me away.
...
“Wake up! Duo!”
I choke on the breath in my throat and start coughing. Pain explodes in my chest. Holy...
What the hell? Did we crash? Did I get slammed against the controls? Did someone do a few dozen jumping jacks on
my sternum?
With a small shake of my head, I blink open my eyes. I continue gasping for air but the vision
above me—Wait... How did I end up on the
floor of the cockpit?—shocks the rest of me into complete silence.
Heero leans over me with his helmet gone, suit peeled down
his chest, breathing unsteady, and tears just pouring out of his eyes and racing down his cheeks. I don’t even have the chance to ask him what
happened when I feel his arms snaking around me and I’m suddenly in his lap
being held onto for dear life...
And that’s when I get it.
The pain in my chest... chest compressions... artificial
resuscitation... The decompression had
almost killed me.
My arms don’t feel so steady but I reach for him anyway and
tangle my limbs into the bundle of flesh and fabric we’ve become. God, I’d almost lost him. I shiver and clasp him tighter. I hope Heero really likes me because I’m
never letting go. Never.
...
I can’t sleep.
Carefully, I slide out of bed and wander out into the
living room. Heero’s living room. I’ve lost count of the number of nights I’ve
meandered by to visit these stripes of pale lamplight but I know it’s a
lot. My fingers rub against my chest
through my T-shirt as I attempt to massage the ache away. I know it won’t work, but I still try
anyway. I know the only way I’ll
eventually get to sleep is to pace and think and worry myself into
exhaustion. It’s not the most healthy of
sleep aids, but it usually works.
God... It’s been two
months since that almost-accident on the shuttle and the memory of it still
shakes me. At first, I couldn’t figure
out why. I mean, after all the times I’d
almost died during the war why am I having such a hard time with this? But then I think I figured it out.
I’d found Heero. I’d
just found Heero. And I’d almost lost him.
And he’d almost lost me.
Damn... That look on his face
when he’d been trying to call me back...
Those tears... I’d never seen
Heero cry before. Jesus, what had I done
to him? I think this is what keeps me
awake at night: knowing I’d caused him that pain.
I am such an ass.
I sigh and try to remember something good... like the night
we’d gone to the Omni Theater. I
remember that moment when we’d stood in this room with bars of silver and
shadow painting our bodies. I remember
that perfect silence...
My thoughts grind to a halt. Something’s changed. I think I hear a sound coming from the bedroom
but I’m not sure. I’m careful not to
make too much noise on the hardwood floors as I creep back to check. I peer into the gloom and what I see makes me
forget about being quiet. Heero sits up
in bed, his face buried in his hands, his entire body shaking. Another nightmare. And I hadn’t been here for him when he’d
woken up. Can I do anything right lately?
I say his name as I crawl back into bed and slide an arm
around his shoulders. He doesn’t make a
sound but he sort of collapses on me. I
wrap both arms around him and close my eyes.
I shouldn’t have left the bed. I
should have been here for him. God knows
what he must have thought waking up alone...
“That dream again?” I whisper against his temple.
He nods against my neck.
I can feel his breaths pour over my skin. “I couldn’t bring you back,” he murmurs. His voice is so soft I almost don’t hear him.
I begin to rub my hands over his damp clothes and
skin. “But you did, Heero,” I quietly
remind him. “You did bring me back.”
He curls around me and even though it makes it all that
much more difficult for me to get his sweat-soaked clothes off of him, I don’t
ask him to let go of me. I don’t
particularly want to let go of him. I
close my eyes and concentrate on sending my body heat into his shaking
muscles. And I feel like if we just
stayed here—tangled around each other—long enough it would happen: the universe
would stop spinning, our breaths would eventually combine, our heartbeats would
synchronize, and we would remain in this perfect, warm, safe moment
forever. The very image of it is so
powerful that I can actually feel myself falling... into him.
The End