Daylight

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"When did you get in?"

"About ten minutes ago."

The midmorning sun shone bright through the tall, tinted windows in the reception area. The immaculate blue of the sky, broken only by the reflection of the rays off the tarmac and the faint line of ocean in the distance, cast the polished granite tiles in a glow pulsating with invisible waves of heat, like shadows of ripples moving over the floor.

It provided a small bit of warmth in an otherwise chilly building. Even in his dress uniform buttoned up to the thick, starched collar and sweating from the encounter with his superiors, Mueller felt a shiver and his fingertips were frozen in his white gloves. The hum of the air conditioner could be heard easily over the click of booted footsteps and the murmur of other officers, only interrupted by the occasional roar of a jet or mobile suit taking off. The biting odor of ozone was stronger out here than in the meeting rooms; it disagreed with his nose and added to the difficulty he already found breathing in the stiff, close-fitting suit.

He found Alex relaxing in one of the overstuffed chairs by the window, one leg thrown over the other, resting his head against one hand, an elbow on the back of the chair, his eyes closed against the sun. He looked every bit the spoiled academy brat Mueller himself had been accused of being.

Alex forced one eye half-open. "Why? Am I late?"

Inside Mueller couldn't help but chafe at his nonchalance. It had been almost six months, although with the new year the time seemed longer. It was long enough for a person to change, and the changes were what stood out in his mind. The longer hair. The wider shoulders. The thinner face. The uniform was the same, and the effect was as if an imposter had tried to copy Alex's graduation photo. Although the cocky smile and familiar voice stayed Mueller's doubts, he still was unsure how to act.

When he received no answer, Alex opened both eyes and lifted his head with a vague, "Hm?"

"They're not ready to see us yet."

Mueller let out a sigh. His gaze flitted unintentionally to the exits, betraying his thoughts. His friend's blue-gray eyes did not waver from his face, and he had no thoughts that needed hiding.

"Do you want to go for a walk?" Mueller asked him.

The air in Berbera was hot and dry, but at least it was fresh, and Mueller was used to the heat. A warm breeze was blowing off the ocean and smelled vaguely of brine and the mustiness of the desert. They kept their eyes downcast as they walked, following the skybridge, squinting when the need arose to look up. In the distance, Aries stood in silent rows, glinting black and white on the tarmac. Perfect soldiers, their blank stares saw everything and nothing. The heat coming off the pavement made them waver like mirages and their disproportionate feet seemed to balance on only water.

Alex didn't ask him how he had been the last few months, nor did he say much of the action or lack thereof along the Mombasa coast where he had been stationed until that day. He listened patiently to the news of the recent terror attacks and the coming war that Mueller related to him, and of their old instructor Noin's business at Victoria and the new Taurus suits being gathered for OZ's takeover of space operations. Alex nodded vaguely at everything, smiling distantly every now and then, and if Mueller didn't know him so well he would have thought his mind was somewhere else.

"Look," Alex said mid-topic.

They stopped and he slipped his hands in his pockets. On the other side of the skybridge, beyond the marked concrete and piled crates and chain link fence, the Gulf of Aden glittered faintly. The dark gray-blue of the water faded seamlessly into the blue sky on the horizon.

"If all goes well, two days from now the sun will be rising on a free Africa."

"Yes," said Mueller. "God willing."

"God has nothing to do with it."

Mueller was used to his old friend's dismissive tone of voice, and he half expected some old, familiar wisecrack about his zealousness being derivative of Khushrenada's rhetoric. "The UESA's a lot of fools," Alex said instead. "That's all there is to it. They're too set in their ways, too oblivious to adapt. And after all, it's the tree that bends in the storm that survives."

Mueller glanced up at Alex, who still squinted into the sun. The wind off the water ruffled his blond hair and the short cape draped over his left shoulder; and he seemed much older than seventeen, carrying the responsibilities of an OZ officer as easily on his shoulders as he did the gold-threaded epaulettes. His poise implied some passion, some drive just below the surface too serious and refined for his matter-of-fact character.

Still, his rank became him, Mueller thought with a pang of self-consciousness and irrational, nostalgic disappointment. Now which one sounded like Treize?

"That's true," he said. "It's for the good of the Earth Sphere we're correcting this stagnation."

But his distant, half-hearted tone gave away the direction of his thoughts.

Alex snorted.

And Mueller started as his friend grabbed his arm and guided him back into the shadow of the skybridge. He leaned trapped against a pylon, cool through his sun-warmed uniform. The jet engines of a plane taking off roared in the thick air, drowning out all sound but the pounding of his own heart.

"'The good of the Earth Sphere,' hm?" said Alex as the roar faded. "That brings back memories, doesn't it?"

He let go of Mueller's arm, bringing his hand to his friend's face. The material of his spotless white gloves felt so soft against Mueller's skin as Alex brushed the back of his fingers over his temple, put his palm to his cheek. How he could still manage to do it so platonically was a mystery.

The warmth of his hand inside the glove was so real and so elusive that for a moment, despite the shade and a shiver that ran down his back, Mueller felt overwhelmed by the heat. He closed his eyes as his vision briefly darkened, bracing himself against the concrete pylon, all the while mentally cursing himself for lapsing into old feelings so quickly, so easily. But it had almost felt like they were back at the Academy, sneaking away from the watchful eyes of their instructors. "It's been a long time," Mueller muttered to the pavement.

When he looked up again he saw Alex smiling at him, trying to pretend he hadn't noticed that little slip of character.

"I hope you haven't been working yourself too hard," Alex said, and almost seemed genuinely concerned for his old friend's health. "Haven't been stressing out over this Operation Daybreak?"

"Mm, I have had plenty of time to think about it."

"Then they don't keep you busy enough up there."

"Who, us Specials? Don't you know we're just lazy, self-centered Academy brats?"

Alex laughed. Somehow the tension between them instantly vanished, whether to Mueller's relief or disappointment he couldn't quite say. The transience of the moment bothered him. The times really were changing. It would be pointless to try and resist.

"We should probably start heading back," Mueller said with a renewed professionalism. "They weren't going to start for a little while yet, but . . ."

Alex nodded. "We wouldn't want to miss anything."


He felt like he was swimming. Surrounded and at the same time heavy and weightless. Drifting on a tide.

In reality, grounding Mueller was the terrible mattress, which dipped and groaned under their weight. Some time ago it had stopped annoying him.

Alex preoccupied him now, breathing steady next to his ear, leaving distracted, half-assed kisses along the back of his neck. Filling Mueller with long, deliberate strokes. His hand at Mueller's waist burned, tormenting him every time it seemed as if to move to relieve him. Mueller braced himself against the pillow as though, when he closed his eyes, that was an extension of Alex too.

He managed to get his knees under himself, and Alex sliding deeper inside him left him seeing stars. Mueller pushed back against Alex's hips. His dogtags dangled down to brush the pillow, rattling against each other with each thrust and glinting in what little light penetrated the thick curtain. Mueller's heart was pounding overtime in his chest and his limbs threatened to cramp from tension; but the rest of him didn't give a shit, his need was so narrowed to one goal.

Alex was close. His thrusts came slower and more focused, driving them both to the edge. A satisfied groan, half smothered against the crook of his arm, dragged itself out of Mueller as he came, wondering how it could get any better than this. Remembering that tomorrow, it would.

When Alex withdrew, shaky and breathing hard, Mueller collapsed. His mind was adrift in the afterglow. The springs protested as he turned over onto his back on the narrow cot and tried to catch his own breath. It was stifling in the room, even with the window cracked and the ceiling fan on its one slow setting.

His head felt like lead as he turned to watch Alex, who without a word pulled on his trousers and then the undershirt he picked up off the floor. It was not without some difficulty as he was sweating enough for both of them. His pale skin was flushed and his bangs wet and sticking to the side of his face. But some instinct kept him on his feet long enough to preserve his dignity as an officer.

Mueller couldn't care less. Though physically drained, he felt recharged, needed, and he would have liked to sleep on that. It was the knowledge that he would only be enjoying Alex's company for a while that bothered him. "This time I'm making damn sure we're in the same squadron," Mueller muttered with a small smile, not meaning much else by it than perhaps gratitude.

He was a little surprised that Alex would take him so seriously.

"I don't fly Aries," Alex said, shooting a glance at his friend as though he should know better.

But he added after Mueller's irritated sigh, "Anyway, you're the only one I'd trust to do this right." Mueller might have been flattered, but that was not Alex's intent. It was merely the truth. Judgment forged by all those months together at Victoria. "Everyone else is too bogged down in etiquette and don't realize Africa's not going to . . . free herself with niceties. It's a fucking revolution. If you're going to change anything you have to be prepared to use any means necessary."

Suddenly wide-awake, Mueller's heart skipped a beat at those words. "Any means necessary. . . ." Strange how they produced the same yearning excitement in the pit of his stomach as the thought of sex. He blinked slowly in the silence.

A smile was evident in Alex's voice. "Mueller?"

"Mm?"

"Put some goddamn clothes on. Anyone could walk in here."


The desert was a sea in the darkness before daybreak, at this moonless hour when all that lit the crests of dunes was starlight and a faint bluing of the sky from the east. Somewhere out there beneath the waves of a real sea was Alex's Cancer, awaiting the signal that would herald a new dawn.

Mueller's stomach was in knots in anticipation, to which the recycled air being pumped through the mobile suit was only fuel. That same upward tug, like when one descends too quickly, pulled at him as thoroughly as if he were strung on a line. At the same time it was a strange sense of calm the solitude of the desert brought over him—that funny calm before battle when time slowed down to eternity and the thought crossed his mind untroubled that he might die today. The rush of adrenaline caused by that single thought was better than any drug.

The squadron of Aries flew silently through the pre-dawn, the only thing for miles to break the sacred emptiness between continent and sky. This morning they were making history. Whether they triumphed today or went down as martyrs, the promise of glory managed to capture each pilot on this the first flight of the No. 33 Independence Troops of Northeast Africa. The anticipation was evident in their relays back and forth and their nervous laughter. Their burden was a large one, but history was on their side.

His wingmates were hardly any older than he was, some only weeks out of the Academy, but that didn't lessen their chances. It was the young who were taking action; it was the young who should be leading the way, free from corruption and minds set on the future. He remembered what Alex had said two days ago, that when the sun rose it would be on a freed Africa. And was it not the destiny, Mueller thought, the divine right of an oppressed continent to rise and rid herself of false masters? For the new and driven to overcome the old and stagnant? That he would be there at the birth of this new and enlightened age, leading the charge, filled him with immeasurable satisfaction. This was truly the beginning of something good.

A golden light rose abruptly in the distance along the coast, swelling as they watched and brightening the sky around it with fiery tendrils. Dawn had broken.

But as they neared they saw it wasn't daylight.

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Independence Day, 2003.