PROLOGUE TO FOREVERby Ash Wednesday Lee The characters of Shin Kudoseki Gundam Wingbelong to Sotsu Sunrise Agency. I am sure they arewonderful people who I don't want to mess with ^.^. GENRE: one-shot Fluff, sappiness and all that crap you hide in your closet *gryn* PAIR: 3xRRATING: GWARNING: A very strange Trowa-Relena dynamics 0_oSUMMARY: An adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut's Long Walk To Forever from "Welcome to the Monkey House." He stood there, wondering how long it has been since he stood in frontof this very door, pretty much like how it was now. It was a long timeago, two, maybe three years ago. He remembers so little of it now,save for Heero's last instructions before he left for that mission toL1 and Relena sobbing quietly in the background. That was how he met her. She was crying. It was barely a year after the Eve Wars then. Insurgencies were plaguing both the earth and the colonies, keeping the Preventers busyat that time. He had just been to an operation in L4 with Wufei andQuatre while Heero's just been assigned to lead the infiltration ofthe rebel's base in L1, relieving him from his duties with Relena.To this day, he wonders why Heero chose to entrust his favoritemission to him until the assignment was completed. Now they were twenty, though they've not really seen each other fornearly a year. More of his doing, actually. In his few months' stayin Cinq Kingdom, and even beyond when Heero returned, there had alwaysbeen a playful, comfortable warmth between them. A friendship fosteredin that brief period of time when he worked for her. But never any talk of love. For another or for each. He cleared his throat and knocked on the door, his lines for Pagan well-rehearsed in his mind. Relena came to the door, carrying a thick, glossy bridal magazine. "Trowa!" she said, surprised to see him, "would you like to come in?".The bride on the cover of the magazine was watching him under her veil.He gave it a momentary study before asking, "could you come for awalk?" He was a shy person. Even in the comfortable friendship he andRelena shared, he would have to cover his shyness by speaking so fewwords, or when he does speak, its rather absently. As though hisconcerns where anywhere but close-- like he was briefing a mission tohis subordinates pausing and stressing beautiful, distant and sinisterpoints. A manner of speaking that distinguishes him from Heero'spreferred silence. "A walk?" she asked, hugging the magazine to her chest. The bride's eyes were twinkling at him. "One foot in front of the other," he answered, "through leaves, undertrees--" "I had no idea you were in town," she said. "Just got here," he said. She gave him a look over, "still with the Preventers, I see. I thoughtyou've gone back to the circus." His uniform was rumpled, his shoescaked with dirt. He had a shadow of a beard. He held out a hand for the magazine, "let's see the pretty book." She had the smallest of smiles when she opened the door, somethingunrecognizable was dancing in her eyes. That something faded whenshe handed him the magazine, "I'm getting married, Trowa," she said. "I know," he said, not opening the magazine, "let's go for a walk, Relena." She laughed nervously, "I'm quite busy, right now," she glanced brieflybehind her, "the wedding's in four days." "If we go for a walk, it'll make you rosy. It will make you a rosybride. A rosy bride like--" he paused, remembering the magazine andheld the cover to her, "like her." He then turned the pages, "and her--and her--" he said, showing other rosy brides. Relena blushed, thinking about rosy brides. She tipped her head to theside and regarded Trowa for a while, wondering where this strangenesswas coming from. She was smiling at him. "That will be my present to Heero," he said, "by taking you for a walk,I'll be giving him a rosy bride." Her smile wavered, "how'd you knowwe were getting married?" He was still flipping through the pages, "Catherine wrote," he saidabsently, "St. Martin's Cathedral, 8 a.m, Friday." She looked down,straightened her skirt upfront, "I had an invitation ready for you.I just didn't know where to send it to, since I don't really knowwhere you disappeared off to in the last year." He didn't look up from the pages, still looking at the rosy brides.He never saw so much white in his entire life. "Can-- can you cometo the wedding, Trowa?" she asked. "Maybe, though I doubt it," he answered. She raised her eyes and watched him skim through the magazine, "oh."she said, "you have a new mission?" "I have one right now," he was looking at a two page ad for some chinaand silver. She now raised her eyes to him steadily, the crease betweenher eyebrows deepening, "Trowa, does anyone know you're here?" He didn't answer that. "Why are you here Trowa?" she asked, impatience getting a bit moreevident in her voice. He smiled, "I had to find what your silver pattern is," he read names of silver patterns from the magazine. "Albemarle? Heather?" he flipped a page, "Legend? Rambler Rose?" Helooked up finally, humor twinkling in his emerald eyes, "I plan togive you and Heero a spoon." Relena was caught off-guard with his answer, forgetting his odd humor.She shook her head, trying hard not to smile again, she's been smilingtoo much around him. "Trowa, really," she said instead. He closed the magazine and tossed it aside, "I want that walk." She wrung her hands in anguish, "You're not fooling me about that mission, Trowa." "Why not?" he asked, shoving hands into his pants' pockets."Because its not you," she answered, almost in a wail.It was his turn to smile, "L5, sector 4," he said. "What?" "I was with Wufei. We were supposed to sneak into this artillery room."The way he said it, it was impossible for her to doubt any more. "DoesCathy know?" she asked instead. "I didn't come to see Catherine.""Then why are you here?""I came to see you.""Why?"Because I love you," he said. "Now can we take a walk?" he asked, "onefoot in front of the other-- through leaves, under the trees--" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- They were taking a walk now, their feet crunching against the fallengolden leaves of the woods, not too far from her house. He remembersdoing this with her a couple of times in the morning during his staythere as her Chief Security Officer. She wakes up before the crack ofdawn, something her fears taught her. He, on the other hand, wasn'treally one who had much care for sleep. They'd pass through the clearing, talking about everything and nothing, the trees mute witnesses to her laughter, and sometimes his own as well. Relena wasn't laughing now. She was rattled, trembling with anger andclose to tears. "Trowa, this is insane!" How so?" he asked, their pace comfortable, though the beat of her feetsounded a bit more errant than his. "Why are you doing this?" she asked stopping on her tracks. He stopped as well, "you're acting strange! You're talking strange. Trowa, you don't talk like this!" "Let's keep walking," he answered instead. "No!" she kept her feet planted to where she stood, "So far, no farther. I shouldn't have come with you at all!" her cheeks were prettily flushed, her lips trembling. "You did," he pointed out, making her all the more furious. "To get you out of the house!" she exclaimed, "if somebody walked inand heard you... heard you, saying these things... the wedding fourdays away--" "What would they think?" he finished."They'd think you're crazy!" she answered."Why?" he asked again. Relena pressed her eyes close, already her temper's getting the betterof her. She took a deep breath and said, "okay, Trowa. I'm deeplyflattered by this insanity," she paused for another breath, "I don'tbelieve there's really a situation in L5 and you were with Wufei.Maybe you were in L5 with Wufei, sniffing strange chemicals or whateverthat made you come here and acting just as strange. I can't believeyou really love me, but maybe you do. And--" "I do," he said. "Well, I'm deeply honored," she said, "and I'm very fond of you as afriend and I treasure our friendship more than anything. But it'sjust..." words felt like they were running away from her. The sheerlogic of her and Trowa was just so profound and complex and.. "it'sjust too late, Trowa." He was regarding her patiently, with mildconfusion. She took a step back, "you've never even kissed me!" she said, thenimmediately protected herself with her hands. "Not that I'm saying youshould kiss me now," she said quickly, "I mean, this is all such asurprise, so unexpected, I haven't got the remotest idea how toaddress this situation, much less respond!" "Has Heero kissed you?" he asked. Her cheeks colored some more, "that is none of your business!"He stared at her, then a smile broke on his lips. "Just walk some more,Relena," he said, "have a nice time." They started walking again. One foot in front of the other-- through the leaves and under the trees. "How'd you expect me to react?" she asked, her voice more calm thanfifty paces ago. "How would I know what to expect?" he said, "I'venever done this before." She laughed ruefully, as melodious as thosemornings before, "did you think I'd throw myself into your arms andcall the wedding off?" He shrugged, "maybe." "I'm sorry to disappoint you," she said.He shrugged again, "I'm not disappointed," he looked at the endless canopy the trees made ahead, "I wasn't counting on it." Relena stopped again, "you know what happens next, right?""No," he stopped as well, two paces ahead of her."We'd shake hands," she said, "we'd shake hands and part as friends.Then you'd come to my wedding on Friday," she took a sharp breath, "that's what happens next." Trowa nodded, "Alright," he said, "remember me from time to time then.Remember how much I loved you." Relena suddenly burst into tears, freely reminding him the day theymet. She was crying that day too. "What does that mean?" he asked, almost non-comittal."I'm angry, damn you!" she said, turning her back to him, her smallhands, closed to fists on her sides, "you have no right to--" "I needed to find out," he said, watching the wind play with hergolden hair, swaying it this way and that. "If I loved you..." shebegan, waiting if he would cut in again. He didn't. He was waiting aswell. "If I loved you, I would've let you known before now." "You would?" he asked. "Yes," she said firmly. She faced him, her face still wonderfully flushed. "You would have known.""How?""You would've seen it," she said, "women aren't that very good at keeping things to themselves, you know." Trowa was looking at her closely. Her cerulean eyes, patrician nose,lips pursed close in anger. And she knew she's been telling the truth.That a woman can't hide love. Trowa was seeing it now. On the nextbreath he kissed her. She didn't speak as soon as he pulled back. He realized she had closedher eyes. "You're hell to get along with!" she exclaimed.He blinked, "I am?"She held her cheek against her palm, her blush still hadn't let up."You shouldn't have done that," she whispered."You didn't like it?" he asked. She waved the hand from her cheek, "what'd you expect? The wild, unbridled flames of passion to devour both of us in ecstasy?" He smiled at her sudden turn of language, "I told, you, I don't knowknow what's going to happen next.""We say goodbye, Trowa," she said decisively.His smile faltered slightly to a frown, "alright." She stared at him for a moment then shut her eyes tightly. As thoughblotting everything with darkness. She then sighed and opened themagain. "I'm not sorry we kissed, Trowa," she said, "it was sweet ofyou. We should've kissed, we've been so close in those few months. I'llalways remember you, Trowa." She smiled, "good luck." "You too," he said."Thank you," she said. Six months," he said.The smile in her face didn't budge, "what?""Lady Une will probably put me out of commission for six months forleaving duty without permission. Then there's still Wufei...""I--I'm sorry," she stammered, "but it's not like I asked you to dothis, Trowa." "I know." He said. Then he laughed ruefully, "it's really not easy tobe so perfect for everyone you know," he met her eyes, she wasn't smiling anymore, "you know?" he repeated. Her voice caught somewhere in her throat and she had to satisfy his question with but a nod. Shenoted uneasily that they were walking again. Without him asking her ifshe wanted to anymore. The farewell went forgotten. "You really love him?" he asked, he was looking at something in her hair, watching the sunlight play with the flaxen strands. She looked atTrowa, blinking once, "Trowa, I've been chasing him since I wasfifteen.""Yes," he said, urging her to go on."I've gone through so much. Prayed so much for this," she said."You really love him?" he repeated."Ofcourse I love him!" she exclaimed, not liking his questions. "Whywould I be marrying him if I'm not in love with him?" But Trowa went on, "what's good about him, Relena? I mean," he waswatching his feet as it playfully brought along with it some of theleaves as he walked, "what made you fall in love with Heero?""Honestly!" she stopped again, him stopping as well. "Do you have anyidea just how offensive and annoying you're getting with thesequestions? Heero is a good, good, good man," she said, "he takes goodcare of me. There may be some things he falls short on but that's noneof your business. I love Heero and I don't need this conversation!""Sorry," he said."Honestly!" she said.No sooner had she exhaled, Trowa kissed her again. He kissed her againbecause she wanted him to. They went through the canopy and even the stretch of the forest withwild flowers on either side of the trail. "How did we get so far, Trowa?" she asked, looking around the unfamiliar surroundings. In their walks, they'd usually stop in thecanopy and head back home again. He shrugged, "one foot in front of theother, through the leaves, under the trees--""They add up," she said, her voice far away, "the steps."They heard the faint sound of a bell ringing from a distance."The school for the blind," she muttered, seeing the spires of the school emerging from another thickening of trees several meters fromthem. "The school for the blind," he murmured, just as absently.She snapped into attention, "I've got to get back now. Noin might belooking for me already.""Say goodbye, Relena," he said."I would," she said, then frowned, "but everytime I do, I seem to getkissed." Trowa stopped under one of the few apple trees, pulling Relena's by theelbow to stop as well. "Sit down." he said."No." she said, already pulling her arm back.He released her, "I won't touch you." "I don't believe you," Relena took several steps back from him. The next tree was several feet ahead of him. She went and sat thereinstead. She leaned on the tree's trunk and closed her eyes. Trowa said something to her that she didn't quite understand in theirdistance. "Dream of Heero," he repeated, "dream of your wonderful husband-to-be.""That I will do," she answered, turning away from him. Already, she wasseeing Heero in her mind's eye.Trowa yawned and leaned on the apple tree's trunk as well. Crickets began to hum an errant melody somewhere in the bushes, almostlulling Relena to sleep. Almost. She turned and saw Trowa sleepingsoundly, his exhale and inhale faintly audible. She let him, nearly for an hour or so. And while he slept, she adoredhim with all her heart. Her thoughts drifting back to those few monthsthey spent with each other. The shadows of the tree began to take agreater space of the ground, the bell from the school for the blindrang again. Leaves rustled above them, the sounds of birds escaping to the sky. Relena got up and knelt beside where Trowa slept. "Trowa?" she asked, nudging him slightly on the arm."Hmm?" he said."Late," she said.She watched his eyes flutter open. His head was tilted in such a way that allowed her to see the other. It had the strangest shade of green,with flecks of gold revealed only by the sunlight. "Hello, Relena," he said softly."Hello, Trowa," she said, just as soft."I love you.""I know," she said.He smiled, "too late.""Too late," she agreed.He got up, holding his hand out for her, "a very nice walk, Relena," hesaid."I thought so," she said."Part here?" he asked."Yes," she said sadly, "where will you go?" "Preventers Headquarters," he plucked a fallen leaf from her hair. Heloves her hair. The way it curves gracefully on her shoulders in moltengold."Good luck, I guess," she said."You too," he said. "Marry me, Relena?" "No," she answered.He smiled and studied her intently. He was thinking of whether to kissher again or not. He didn't. Trowa turned and walked opposite where they came from. She watched him grow smaller, the shadows slowly engulfing him withthem. She knew that if he stopped and turned, she would run to him.She'd have no choice. He did stop. He turned. He called. "Relena," he said. She ran to him, her head plowing against his chest, arms wound tight around his waist. Words, again, escaping her. ~owari------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AUTHOR'S NOTES: 1. I'm extremely familiar with Mr. Vonnegut's works (Breakfast of Champions, Slaughterhouse Five) but I've come across this storyin one of the fanfiction MLs I've been to. This has been adaptedin Rurouni Kenshin and Yu Yu Hakusho and gave me an idea to doone for GW. Some of the original dialogues have been adapted inthis fic. But I did adjust some of them to suit the premises ofthe GW universe. Anyone interested with the original story... er,wait, the link will follow soon *gryn* 2. In all of the anime I've been hooked into, I'm more of analternative pairing fan, save for GW since I'm so intrigued withthe complexities of 1xR relationship. Aoshi-Kaoru, Kurama-Botan,Ken-Aya-chan (WK)... anyway, I fell in love with 3xR when I reada handful of them in ff.net, particularly Kysra's and lately,War Dove's works. I was going to have this as 1xR but I reallywanted a 3xR tucked under my belt ^.~ 3. Oooh! My first one-shot! Ever! Thanks for the read.