Author's notes: Happy 25th (unless he is 28) Birthday to everyone's favorite fictional animated character (besides Tom from Daria, of course... ::sighs::) Thank you Lelu, MK, and Jayhyun aka W.Bymeeh. The latter wrote a few lines of this her very own self, and only charged me 50 yen per letter. If you want to know what lines she wrote, they are the good ones. Disclaimer: I don't Sailormoon. Surprise! Fleeting Dreams By Antigone Sighing with deep exhaustion, Kasuga Moemi lifted her hand to press the buzzer on the green apartment door before her, then paused, lowering her hand as the familiar beating of her heart echoed in her ears. "One more," she murmured to her aching feet, "then we rest." Who knew this would be so hard? Then again, she was always doing spontaneous things like this: a need would grip her, and she'd have to follow it, obsessively, determinedly. Moemi could only hope this wasn't as fruitless and emotionally draining as her recent search for her biological parents. Green eyes closed for a moment, and Moemi rested her lean body against the wall. Hazy images of her childhood haunted her, pulled her on this stupid search. All she had to work off of was a name. A name and a vague indication of 'the Tokyo area'. But she had to find him. Even all these years later, she could still see him in her mind: quiet, withdrawn but very kind. Thoughtful. Moemi still flushed remembering the pout that tugged on his mouth when his too-blue eyes stared into space, pondering something, or maybe wishing for something. He had always let his hair grow slightly more than it should, it fell around his face, black as night and straight as can be, save a few random curls that would gently brush his forehead. It was the sort of hair that begged to be familiarly tousled by the workers, or the other children. But Chiba Mamoru was never the type of child to let strangers touch him in such a loving way. Even his close friends. Even one of his closest friends... her. This is stupid, Moemi almost said out loud. Searching high and low for her first love, who never returned her feelings, who *ran away* from the orphanage... and let her find out the same way as everyone else. Who made the biggest decision of his life without her. No one had been close to Mamoru. But she had been closer than anyone else. Friends, she'd thought, maybe even best friends. Both lonely. Both outcasts, him despite of his beauty, her because of hers. How could she help but fall in love with him? But how could he fail to return her feelings? Moemi had always been told she was an adorable child, who naturally grew into the rose of the municipal home for children, the most beautiful young teen. Long, brilliant chestnut hair, a few dark freckles, soft almond eyes. 'My goodness,' she could still hear, 'my goodness, it makes you wonder why they ever abandoned her.' She cried to him for hours, sitting cross-legged on the floor, pouring out her heart, braiding and re-braiding her hair absent-mindedly. He sat still, on his bed, head rested on his hand, listening to her. Silently. Eyes that always looked to startlingly bright looking at the wall, but not seeing it. Moemi sighed. They were both loners, even when together they were each alone, truly. She had never, actually, opened up to love. But she wanted to open up to him. So that's why I'm here, she thought dryly, in Tokyo, in the fifth apartment building I've tried today. And a week to finish my search. 'I wonder if I'm crazy.' Groaning with frustration, she pressed one delicate finger on the buzzer. "Here goes nothing." The door flew open and shut nearly all the way behind a small woman with a baby blanket across her shoulder and a bottle-milk dotting the sleeve of her soft pink sweater. "SHHHHHHH!!!" she hissed, blue eyes wide and disheveled blonde hair escaping it's strange knotted style, graceful wisps across flushed cheeks. "I just got her to sleep," the smaller woman admitted apologetically at Moemi's shocked face. The blonde shrugged sheepishly. Then looked up curiously. "Can I help you?" Moemi looked at the younger person before her and felt a familiar mix of disappointment and embarrassment fill her. "I'm sorry," she murmured, "I have the wrong person." Again. But the other girl caught her sleeve as Moemi turned to leave. "Who are you looking for?" she said, and Moemi couldn't help noticing what a soft, sweet, little-girl voice she had, "Can I help?" Moemi paused, "My name is Kasuga Moemi, and I'm looking for a Chiba Mamoru." "He lives here," she said automatically, "but won't be home from work for a while." "Iie," Moemi laughed slightly, "you don't understand. I'm looking for someone of that name. But there are so many... I've been wrong before. It's okay." For a moment light blue eyes regarded Moemi thoughtfully, then a small, warm little hand grabbed Moemi's sleeve and tugged slightly. "Come in and rest. You look so tired." Before she could protest, Moemi found herself standing in the doorway of a small, homey little apartment. Baby toys scattered across clean, vacuumed floors, the sink was full of clean, drying dishes, and flowers adorned the small family table. The window had a lovely view of the park. "I'll make tea." The pretty blonde said, adding as an afterthought, "My name is Chiba-Tsukino Usagi." The girl gestured to the small sofa, offering Moemi a seat. "That's a mouthful," Moemi said, forcing a slight laugh as she took off her shoes and slipped her feet into soft guest slippers then walked to the sofa and sat down. Usagi grinned as she set the teapot on the stove, "Hai, I know. I go by Chiba Usagi every way but officially. I'm a bit attached to my family name, though." A blush stained her cheeks, clearly she was slightly embarrassed by this lack of convention. The girl gestured to the small sofa, offering Moemi a seat. Changing the subject, Moemi asked about the baby who obviously shared living space with the young woman. At the subject of her 6 month old daughter, Usagi beamed, and flushed with pride and happiness. "Her name is Usagi, too*," Usagi said, running a hand over her forehead, "it was Mamo-chan's idea. I would be so confused if it wasn't for her nickname, ChibiUsa." "Is it confusing having to call her by a different name?" Moemi asked. Usagi raised her eyebrows, giggling her little-girl laugh. "I'm very used to it." She said, a statement Moemi could make no sense of. Now, though, it was Usagi's turn to change the subject. "Why are you looking for this Chiba Mamoru of yours?" Moemi paused. For some reason, she had this strong feeling the young wife before her was the sort of person who would completely swoon over the idea of searching for a lost first love. But, that felt like too much of a lie. "He was... an old friend of mine." Suddenly, her green eyes were studying her hands with extreme interest. "How old are you?" the sweet voice asked, bluntly, and Usagi blushed again, deeply, when Moemi raised surprised eyes to her. Pressing light pink painted fingernails to her forehead, Usagi muttered under her breath, "Baka, always have to say the wrong thing..." For a moment Moemi took in the sight this girl made. Jean skirt, soft pink turtle-neck sweater, soft blonde hair. The hand pressed to her forehead glittered with the diamond sparkle of her engagement ring, the graceful gold wedding ring sitting above it. She was thin, small, but glowing with contentment and happiness. She had married her own Chiba Mamoru, 'Mamo-chan', had a daughter, a family, a loving home. Moemi felt jealousy so fierce it hurt like longing. She never desired to be a housewife, but to share her life with someone forever, to have a family... those were wishes she never expressed but were never so strong as now. Suddenly, she wanted to continue on her search. "I'm twenty-four," Moemi said, with a smile, to ease Usage's discomfort. "And he is my age." The squeal of the kettle interrupted them, and Usagi ran to turn it off before it woke her sleeping baby in the next room. She stretched on her tip- toes to get two tea-bags and cups from the cabinet and shakily lifted the tea pot to pour the tea into the stylish floral ceramic cups. Moemi swore she heard a sigh of relief as Usagi placed the kettle on the stove again, and passed the mug of frequent liquid to Moemi without spilling a drop. Sitting on the sofa with Moemi, Usagi said, "Tell me about him." Moemi blinked, then smile. "He was my friend, when I was growing up. But we... lost touch when we turned 16. I heard he went to Tokyo." Usagi stared open-mouthed at this beautiful, but obviously insane, woman before her. "A name, and Tokyo? That's *all* you have to go by after eight years?" Moemi nodded ruefully. Biting a fingernail slightly, Usagi turned, seeming deep in thought, a little frown of worry across her forehead. "Be right back," she said, placing her teacup on the coffee table and padding away on the carpet. Moemi leaned back into the sofa. No, this wasn't the right Chiba Mamoru. The man she knew would never, ever be married. Not this young. Not to someone as open and sweet as 'Chiba-Tsukino Usagi.' She remembered walking along the path outside the children's home, between trees and plants overgrown with weeds. The garden was unloved and under-cared for. Just like the children. Which was probably why they loved it so much. It housed many bug hunts, games of rather violent tag and tackle, and many, many fights. No, the orphanage was never a friendly place. But she remembered walking there, and always coming across Mamoru, sitting under a tree, or curling his thin body to find solace under a large bush or shrub. He wasn't hiding... people like Chiba Mamoru didn't hide. Moemi asked him once, what he was doing out there. The 13-year-old gave her a look that was years too old for his face, "I'm knitting a sweater." Since that day, Moemi always learned this was one of many times to leave Mamoru alone. She figured he had gone their to find some sort of peace. Once or twice she tried it, but her body was already too curvy to hide under a bush comfortably. And besides that, the branches gave her a freaky feeling of being trapped, claustrophobic. The same sort of feeling would come and lock around her heart when she realized later that year that she was falling in love with her dark-haired friend. "Moemi-san?" Usagi's voice was gentle, but Moemi's eyes snapped open immediately. "Gomen," she said quickly, "I wasn't asleep I..." But her impromptu hostess was smiling forgivingly. "It's alright." Her small hands untwisted and Moemi saw what the young woman was holding, a silver picture frame, which she trust into Moemi's hands, her expression serious again. Still trying to figure out why Usagi's blue eyes held a bit of worry deep beneath the kindness, Moemi didn't realize what she was looking until she had stared at the picture in her hands for a few long moments. It was a wedding portrait, and a beautiful one. The woman now standing beside her was decked out in white, lace, and roses, her blue eyes sparkling with joy out of the frame. "You look so beautiful," Moemi said, but Usagi just shook her head, tapping a slim finger on the glass over the photograph of the man. "Is that him?" Usagi asked. Usagi's Mamoru was grinning up at the camera, his eyes alight. Eyes that were too-blue against his light olive skin and dark black hair. His face was shaped slightly oval, eyes wide spaced and slightly slanted, the smile splitting his features so brightly, though, that Moemi couldn't be sure he even resembled the boy she grew up with. The fact that he was smiling with such an open, loving look, though, told her the truth. "Iie," she said, giving Usagi a rueful smile, "I doubt it." Usagi frowned, nodding. Moemi wondered about the relief deep hidden in the lightness of her hosts' eyes. "Gomen nasai," she said, "you are the same age, so I thought.. maybe..." Then she turned, "I'm going to see if I can find anything less recent." Moemi got up, too, wanting to give Usagi back the photograph but stopped at the slightly open door into a darkened room at the end of the hallway. Feeling like a criminal, but unable to stop herself, Moemi slipped through the door and walked slowly to the crib in the center of the room. Light from the closed shades fell across the baby's face and Moemi couldn't help sighing. The little girl was adorable. Blonde-red curls framed her round face, her eyes were closed but her lashes were black and thick. One tiny hand curled around a soft stuffed bunny rabbit. Lucky, loved little baby. Moemi felt a burning behind her eyes, felt a welling in her heart. 'May you always be happy' she thought the sleeping child. Before Usagi could see her snooping, Moemi slipped back out through the door and waiting for Usagi to return from her bedroom. When she did, she carried something in her hands. "This was all I could find." A wooden frame was handed to Moemi, and the older girl flipped it over. "That's late 1992. He's eighteen." Usagi was younger, much younger in this picture. Bubbly, grinning at the camera, the same style in her blonde locks as it was today when she answered the door. The man beside her wasn't smiling as widely as bouncing, peace-sign giving girl beside him, but he was smiling. Slightly. His eyes, larger than in the wedding picture, his face, rounder, younger, his hair falling slightly into his eyes as if he had avoided getting a haircut. Again. "Mamoru..." Moemi whispered soundlessly. 1992. Two years after he ran away. Two years after... Moemi had asked about his dreams. Innocently enough, but her heart was ramming in her chest. If he asked her about her dreams, she promised herself to tell him the truth. That her dreams were only to be with him. Forever. He was sitting, as he had recently taken to doing, on his window sill, his arm resting on his knee, his face gazing up into the evening sky. It was a dreamy pose, especially for Mamoru, so Moemi asked the 16-year- old what he was dreaming about. Startling a little, he looked at her. Had she ever noticed how cold and detached those heavenly eyes were? Mamoru shrugged in response to her question, and returned to watching the moon rise, the stars come out one by one. "What are your dreams, Mamoru-kun?" Moemi was in her mid-teens, now used to being told of her beauty, being begged by boys, being able to talk her way into and out of everything with a blink of her lovely green eyes. It made sense that the best looking boy in the place would eventually gain interest in her. Didn't it? There was a long time passed before he answered, "I want to be free." Moemi was silent. Free? "Of this place?" she had asked. They all called the children's home a 'place'. He didn't answer. Years later she would look back at the conversation as a major sign of his running away to Tokyo. But sometimes, late at night, remembering how the kindness shone through his eyes beneath the coldness, she wondered if that wasn't what he meant at all. Maybe he didn't only want to leave the orphanage, but to leave his detached, lonely state behind as well. And that was what she thought that night, and that's when she threw her arms around him, the first time she ever got up the courage to do something like that. He was warm. So much warmer than she'd thought he'd be. His hair tickled her face... it was soft. Like black silk. "I love you, Chiba Mamoru." Moemi never remembered if she had even said that out loud, or just screamed it in her heart. Mamoru pulled away, gently, and smiled at her, kindness in his smile, frigidness in his gaze. "Gomen nasai, Moemi-san," he said, softly, and left the room. She saw him again. Once or twice that week, only briefly. The night before he left, she had asked him if his dreams ever included love. His answer turned out to be the last words she ever heard from him. "I don't think I can believe in love." His voice had broken, his eyes were so sad. The ice had melted into almost-tears, if Chiba Mamoru could ever cry. She concluded his dreams did include love. But she knew when he answered her, he wasn't lying. Two years later, this picture was taken. His eyes were kind. They were subdued, but they were light. That's when he started to believe. Six years later, he married. His eyes, still too damn blue, glowed with a life all their own. That's when his dream finally came true. Moemi lifted her eyes to Usagi's. The young mother's eyes were shiny, her voice hoarse. "It's him, isn't it?" For a minute Moemi only saw Usagi as a swirl of color. Gold, pink, blue. Beautiful, open, kind, loving. Always, this was Mamoru's dream. Moemi could never, ever come close. The boy she knew... the person she fell in love with was empty, with a void that begged to be filled. She loved him as a lonely, painfilled little boy, longed to be the dream that lurked deep in his eyes. But he had found someone else, who melted his heart and resolve. And it was not her, could never have been her. Slowly, she turned the picture over, pressing the frame face down into Usagi's ring-adorned left hand. "Iie," Moemi said, firmly, "It's not him." The tea was cold by then. So she left. "Good luck," Usagi said softly from the doorway. Moemi just looked at her, a small smile across her face. 'He is happy', she thought, 'now I should make myself so to.' "Thank you." The door shut behind her. Usagi leaned against the door, her eyes filled with a shimmering layer of tears. Shaking her head, she walked slowly into ChibiUsa's room and lifted her child to her, wrapping her arms tightly around the whimpering baby. Clutching her daughter in her arms, Usagi lowered her head to rest on ChibiUsa's sweet baby-smelling curls. ChibiUsa's tiny hands pulled and curled around her mother's hair, pulling a few glittering strands into her mouth, and Usagi let her, not moving for a long, long time. That night, Usagi picked at her food, watching ChibiUsa sleep beside her in the baby carrier. Mamoru asked her gently what was wrong, and for a long moment blue eyes searched his. "Did you know a Kasuga Moemi when you were a child?" Her husband was silent for a few seconds, blue eyes thoughtful. "Hai," he said after a while. For a moment he started to continue, then stopped, shook his head. "She was here today," Usagi whispered. His eyes met hers, and she could see the questions burning in them. For a moment she shook her head, she'd answer them later. Now, she just wanted to know... "I knew her from the children's home," he said, "She was my friend... in a way." "And?" Usagi prompted, trying for the forth time to grasp a rather slippery clear noodle with her chopsticks. "I haven't thought about her since I left the orphanage, but..." Usagi met his eyes, waiting. "Now, I wonder if she ever found her dreams," he admitted. "You think she didn't?" Usagi looked so sad, Mamoru reached around the table and pulled her into his embrace. She shut her eyes, leaning her head on his warm shoulder. His hair slightly tickled her face, he needed a haircut again. "That place wasn't exactly a breeding ground for healthy dreams," he murmured, brushing some wayward strands of blonde off Usagi's face, "but I think there is hope." Usagi looked up at him from her place in his arms. Slowly, he lowered his head to hers and kissed her, slowly, softly. It was a long moment before Mamoru pulled back and looked at his wife and daughter. "After all, I found mine."~ E-mail me. Or I'll send a huge wheel of cheese (courtesy of Jayhyun) to run you over while I laugh at you. "Ha ha! Look at the loser covered in cheese!" I will say. "If only she/he had e-mailed me!" * ChibiUsa's full name: Usagi Small Lady Serenity. ^^;; I think it might be Usagi "Small Lady" Serenity, Small Lady being a nickname... but you never know with Naoko...