Title: Doesn't (2/2)

Author: Miru

Rating: T for some language

Warning: Spoilers for chapter 99, and if you don't know who Matt is

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He's horrible at remembering faces and names, but that's okay, but he doesn't need to know people for very long anyway. Feigning recognition is easy - just a simple "Oh, hey" and casual chatter - and his business acquaintances think that he's trustworthy, loyal, ready to stick by them through thick and thin. They're all the same, no matter what job he takes: programming, hacking, accountant, even some drug dealing. They go "Hey, man, nice seeing you again. You ready for work today?" But none of them hold his attention for long, and the longest he's gone without quitting is two and a half weeks, and that was only because he needed to work that long in order to get his paycheck.

Money-wise, he doesn't have any worries, because he's long since perfected the art of draining money from the rich bastards out there - just a little bit at a time so that no one notices the money vanishing - and he has enough to live without worry for the rest of his life, as long as he's not pining for a trip to the Bahamas or anything. But the neighbors were getting suspicious when he ordered a full set of speakers including a hi-tech sub-woofer on a whim, but never had a job. The last thing he needed was the police snooping about his house, so he started wandering from job to job, fleeting, here and then gone, never long enough for anyone to pin down. He has seven different fake identities, twelve different identification cards, and more aliases than he cares to count.

No one knows him, or at least, no one that he's connected to, and he's happy that way.

He spent the first fifteen years of his life trying to become this one person - L, the nameless, the legend, the mysterious figure they had all adored - but hadn't tried too hard, so now he was content with being a nameless person, a nobody, just one more person in the crowd that slips between your fingers and dissipates like so much smoke.

His apartment is littered with ashtrays filled with cigarette stubs, but he doesn't worry about dying from cancer. If he's going to die, he's rather it be quick, painless, something that doesn't leave a trace.

Anonymity is his weapon, his shield, his vice, his addiction.

He doesn't exist.

-----

He has no idea what the fuck he's doing, and keeps brooding over that question as he makes his way through the twisting alleys and back to the apartment from the pharmacist's. A bag of assorted medication swings from the tips of his fingers; he has no clue what they do - he's long forgotten, or doesn't want to remember, the plethora of chemical names and functions that he'd had crammed into his head way back when - but he knows that they'll work. The internet is his domain, and he's done enough to research to know that what he's bought will help against third-degree burns and infection and fever and whatever else the fuck Mello might have.

The door bounces off the wall when he slams it open and nearly closes back on him, but he slips into the apartment, locks it behind him - two deadbolts and a chain - and kicks off his boots, shaking snow off his hair and vest. His first few breaths fog up in front of him before the apartment warms him up. He's had the heater up on full blast - not for himself, he's pretty resistant to the temperature - but for Mello, who looks like he'll die unless he's incubated, or something.

Mello looks like a mummy, a horrid, macabre, but beautiful one. Made of bandages, sweat and curses, blond hair strewn wildly over the pillow and blanket twisted haphazardly about sinewy limbs. When Matt approaches, he twitches, eyes wild with feverish rage. "What took you so fucking long." It's posed as a statement, a threat, a demand rather than a question, and it makes Matt feel funny inside as he sets down the bag of medicine on the floor next to the bed.

"The pharmacist kept asking what I needed so much for."

"...shit." The swear word has been repeated numerous times already over the course of the past day and a half, and Mello hisses it again, covering his face with his arm, as if the very air were an eyesore he wanted to avoid. It probably is. The burns are still red and raw beneath the bandages, painful enough to even just look at.

"Here." Glancing back at his laptop to make sure he'd gotten the names of the various pills and powders right, Matt holds out a half-dozen pills and a glass of water. "Take these. Then sleep. Should make you feel better." After a brief pause. "Supposedly."

By the time he's done talking, Mello's already bolted down the medicine, draining the glass of water of every last drop with his tongue, before letting it clink to the floor and slumping back onto the bed. His back's also crisscrossed with scars that peek out from the bandages, and Matt scours them with his eyes as he sits down on the floor, leaning back against the wall, rummaging his pockets for a lighter. He probably shouldn't smoke next to a person in such critical condition, but he knows that Mello would rather set himself on fire than die of cigarette smoke.

As the nicotine soothes his nerves, Matt closes his eyes and leans his head back, breathing out a thin ribbon of smoke that swirls up to the ceiling before dissipating. In twenty-four hours - even less, actually - he's been ousted from his quiet, anonymity-driven life and somehow into the clutches of this blond hellion. The distress call he's gotten at three in the morning - he'd been awfully tempted to hang up then - had startled him into action. A voice barely familiar through the static and feverish hoarseness, hissing orders in a low voice.

Come to Las Vegas. Rent an apartment. Anywhere. Cheap. Quickly. Then come to the first alleyway right of 34th street. Then call.

Even as he shang-haid one of his old acquaintances - one of the guys he'd programmed and hacked for for a while - into lending him a cheap-ass apartment somewhere in the dirty ghetto area, he wasn't quite sure of why the hell he was helping this man who he hadn't seen in four - or was it five? - years. Maybe it was the urgency in the other's voice, or the sight of the horrid wounds, or the fiery determination, or--

Giving a small, humorless laugh, Matt glances over at the sleeping blond, a smile on his lips. "Long time no see."

-----

He's playing some game he's already beaten five times, sitting on the dilapidated couch, hair still tousled from last night's sleep, a cigarette in his mouth and the ashtray on the floor next to him half-filled. The sound of rustling comes from the bed, but he doesn't look up, instead concentrating on the screen of the PSP to make sure he isn't making his little man jump into any endless pits. Partly because he wants to try and get a perfect score this time. And partly because he's worried that he'll end up changing his mind if he looks over at Mello.

The conversation from the night before took place while Mello was choking down a chocolate bar, and he was nursing a cigarette. To each, their own addictions.

"I want you to help me."

"So I've noticed."

"I'd expected so much. You know what this is about." Again, stating instead of questioning. Matt smirked.

"Kira. Mafia. Building explosion. I did my basic research."

"So what's your answer?"

Some ash dripped to the floor, and Matt got up, hitching on his vest and waving a hand in that careless way he'd perfected.

"You know what I'm going to say."

-----

His goggles are still the same ones that Mello got him so many years ago. Sure, he's changed the straps three or four times as the elastic stretched and tore, and he had to change one of the lenses after it cracked in some street fight he got involved in, but, in essence, they're still the same ones that he'd received as a Christmas present way back then at Wammy's. The frame is scratched in various places from general wear and tear, but he still likes them. He'd briefly tried to wear sunglasses or something else, but the goggles fit best, and he felt strange if he had to go for too long without them.

Figures.

It was just a pervasive as Mello. You were dependant before you knew it.

He's picking at the lenses, wiping away some of the dust that's accumulated near the edges, when Mello walks in, all business and seriousness, red bomber jacket layered on black leather, a rough-and-deadly package just exuding lust and rage. Matt can't help but quirk an eyebrow.

"You'd think people on a secret mission would dress a little more discreetly."

"You're not much better."

"Meaning I am a little better."

"Oh yeah. Goggles and Hot Topic outfit. Discreet indeed."

"Less noticeable than a leather hooker."

"Shut up. We're going. Turn the goddamn game off."

The screen flashes white, then black as Matt flicks the power switch, stuffing the console into his pocket out of habit, even though he knows he won't be playing it against any time soon. The casual attitude they're keeping up makes him grin - morbidly, grimly - because it's so ridiculous. Like soldiers acting manly and keeping up with bravado when they know they're going off on missions that they might not come back from in one piece.

It takes him three tries to get the car started, since the it's cold out, and the engine isn't too good. Mello's motorcycle is gunning - rumbling, like a rabid cat - just at his side, and when the car finally kicks into actions, the two vehicles growl in unison. Lighting a cigarette, Matt takes a deep drag, leaning back into his seat, listening to the bustling of the city just a short way away.

"Nervous?"

"Oh no, of course not. I'm going to go kidnap the most famous celebrity in Japan at the moment. Of course I'm not nervous."

"Thought so." He doesn't look, but he can hear the wry smile in Mello's voice.

Tapping out a spot of ash from the tip of his cigarette, Matt looks over at the blond, a lazy grin on his face.

"See you in Nagano, then."

"Don't keep me waiting."

"That's what I should be saying."

Mello's rosary gleams in the dull light.

"...alright, let's go."

"Hey, Mello."

Mello's just about to put his helmet on, but pauses, glancing over at Matt, his gaze partly curious, partly serious, partly unreadable.

Matt knows he's being a sap, but he doesn't care, because he's never bothered to lie, and isn't going to start now; he's lived his facade of anonymity and ghostliness for long enough, and, before the whole bang-bang-shebang mess starts, he wants to leave just one thing behind, just one.

"Thanks."

Before he can hear Mello's answer - he's partly afraid to hear it, because that would be almost like a soldier's farewell, admitting that he's going to go and die and never come back - he slams down on the accelerator, and the car jumps forward, lurching onto the road and weaving from lane to lane. The studio's quite a way off, and the end of his cigarette glows orange - bright then dim then bright again - the entire time he's driving.

The interior of the car has long since been permanently stained with the smell of cigarette smoke, but it no longer even fazes him; nothing would have, at the moment, as he presses down on the accelerator, watching as the needle of the speedometer creeps up the dashboard. The speed limit here is 80km/hr, so he pushes it all the way to 85, then realizes that getting caught by the police for breaking the limit really wouldn't be convenient and pulls it back to a 75. There.

The traffic light up ahead turns red ? tinted to a dull orange by his goggles ? and he screeches to a halt just short of the pedestrian crossing, taking the chance to lean back and breath in a lungful of nicotine. '…what the fuck am I doing here…' Going off to kidnap a celebrity, that's what, and no, not just any celebrity either, but the celebrity of the day, that Takada woman, "Takada-sama". Kira's spokeswomen. She isn't even that pretty.

The smokescreen gun rests heavily in his lap, bulky and forbidding; it almost makes him miss the gun he'd had back in the States, but it'll have to do. Japanese law is strict, and that was the best he'd been able to procure. 'Fat lot of good it's going to do if I ever get caught.' The light turns green, and he slams down on the accelerator, the car jerking forward and speeding down the road.

The tip of his cigarette glows brightly, and a grim smirk crosses his face as the promised location looms up ahead, black Sedans crowded around the limousine like ants around their queen. Adjusting the goggles around his head one last time, he picks up the gun, steering the car with one hand, aiming straight for the bustling crowd.

There are so many bodyguards, it makes his head spin, his breath hitch in his throat, and he can't help but think, 'I am going to get slaughtered out here, shot down like a dog.' But there's someone out there who counts on him, and he can't stand to break that one tiny bit of trust he's managed to procure - after nineteen years of apathy and pretending that he didn't exist - and he fingers the trigger guards, biting down on his cigarette. If he's going to die like a dog, he'll finish living like one, too, and fight for his goddamn hellion of a master, the hellfire, the maniac, the leather-clad enigma that he wouldn't dare call a friend, but isn't quite his master either, that one person that he wants to talk to one last time before he goes, but probably can't, because now they're so fucking far apart.

He thinks back to the orphanage, to those nameless faces that took the children and tried to force them into the mold that was L, tries to make them someone they were not. He thinks back to faceless parents, his mother a redheaded blank and his father an invisible ghost. He thinks back to the five years he's lived alone, drifting from place and place, person to person, and leaving nothing behind but a whiff of smoke. He thinks back to the one person whose ever made him stay in one stop, chained him down with straps of leather and chocolate and adrenaline, Mello, a presence that's always there, in the very golden lenses that his eyes depend so heavily on.

He pulls the trigger.

-----

The first bullet misses him and hits his car with a hollow plwing!, as does the second, and he smirks, thinking that even he would have better aim that these lousy bodyguards; he only gets halfway through this train of thought when the third bullets homes in on its target and hits him in the stomach. Even though he's braced himself for the impact, he staggers back, his knees buckling and the air leaving his lungs in one large gasp. Oh god, it hurts. He's only dimly aware as two more bullets hit him (one on the right shoulder, the other in the stomach again; fuck, these guys can't even be symmetrical).

Falling back a step, he slumps against the side of his car for a moment before sliding down to the ground, his legs giving in to the pain. A couple more bullets have hit him by them, mostly around the chest and neck, but he's more concerned about the bullet that's gone brushing past the side of his head, because it's nipped his goggles, shattered the left lens and marred the smooth golden surface with a cobweb of cracks.

His last thought is "Fuck, this hurts like hell."

His second-to-last thought is of a name that starts with M, and it sure isn't his own.