Author's Note: My favorite kind of romance is the kind where the lovers don't need to slobber over each other or spout sappy sentences to say, "I love you." A couple perfect examples of this are the major romance of M. Night Shyamalan's movie The Village (where the camera actually turns away from them when they kiss), and - surprise surprise! - Roy Mustang and Liza Hawkeye's romance from FMA. I love how they never say anything very close to "I love you," yet no fan seems to be in doubt that they do, in fact, love each other.
This one-shot is born from that appreciation of their romance. I was rather disappointed with how the anime ended, to be honest, especially the way they left Mustang hanging by a thread with little to console him. And the movie only made it worse. So, this one-shot is how I think Mustang's part in the story should have ended.
There are spoilers in this story for the anime episodes 48-51 and the manga chapter 60.
"Colonel! Colonel Mustang! Roy!!"
Colonel Mustang lay on the front steps of the Fuhrer’s residence, blood pouring from countless wounds all over his body. His military coat was hanging from him in blood-drenched tatters and his white gloves were mere shreds of cloth clenched between his fingers. He laboriously clutched the next step to haul himself further, just as Liza ran up to him. He lifted his head, trembling, to look up at her. "Lieutenant Hawkeye...."
Liza dropped her pistol and knelt by his side. Grabbing him under the arms, she heaved him off the steps, laying him flat on his back on the ground. She hastily threw off her coat and began ripping it up into strips to bind his wounds. She worked as fast as she could, but her hands were trembling. A lump was growing in her throat, and her breath came in short gasps completely unrelated to the distance she had run to get here in time. Her blood pounded loudly in her ears as the Colonel panted weakly beneath her. She soon ran out of bandages, and started ripping off the sleeves of her shirt.
Prepared to strip down to her underclothes to provide bandages, willing to spill her own blood in the hope that Colonel Mustang would survive, she was not ready when his bloody hand clutched at hers, stopping her frantic fingers. Liza looked down at him, into his dark eyes lit with a feverish sheen. They were surprisingly clear.
"Liza...." he murmured, calling her by her given name, a name he had never called her before.
Liza gripped his wet and sticky hand with both of hers, seeing a terrible something in his eyes. It was something she had seen several times before, in the eyes of people she had shot. People...who were dying. "Don’t worry, Colonel," she urged, as much to reassure herself as her senior officer. "The others are coming. We’ll get you to a hospital. Just save your strength, sir!"
But Colonel Mustang had not seemed to understand any of her words. He only gripped her hand harder, with the strong grip of a soldier. "Liza...." the Colonel repeated, his breathing shallow. He coughed violently, flecking Liza’s face with blood as a new crimson streak made its way out of the corner of his mouth. "I’m glad...that you will be...the last person I see."
"No, Colonel!" Liza cried in anguish. His eyes had started to cloud over and take on the leaden look of a corpse. "You’re not going to die here! You can’t!"
Colonel Mustang smiled wearily, his eyelids tugging downwards. "I didn’t become Fuhrer.... I’m sorry, Maes...."
"No!!" Liza screamed as his eyes closed and he let out a long sigh, as though he were laying down a heavy burden. His strong grip loosened between her hands. "Colonel Mustang! Roy! Roy!!"
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Liza woke in a cold sweat, and it took her several breathless minutes to realize that though her dream had been horrible, that was all it was – a dream. She was warm under the blankets, and the Colonel was perfectly safe, probably still asleep in his bed in the military hospital. Yawning widely, Liza rose from her bed and went about preparing for the day.
As Liza stood under the steamy spray of water in the shower, she felt the familiar feeling of glumness falling over herself again. Every night, she was haunted by the same nightmares, and every morning she experienced the same relief that the dream had not been real, before the hopelessness of her reality set in. True, the Colonel had not died on the Fuhrer's front steps. She had reached him just in time to prevent Archer from killing him. The bullet had grazed the Colonel's scalp, leaving him with nothing worse than a nasty scar. Liza should have been relieved and happy, but instead she felt as though all the happiness was slowly being sucked out of her life.
Black Hayate trotted by her heels as Liza walked briskly down the street. The sky was clear and the sun bright, but Liza's face was downcast as she made her way to the hospital. It had been a month since the incident with the Fuhrer, and the Colonel was still bedridden. The Fuhrer had cut the Colonel's left shoulder to the bone, and he was only now regaining use of that arm. He had sustained many other injuries as well, and while the doctors had said he would make a full recovery, it would be a while before he returned to active duty.
Liza left her dog outside and made her way through the white, sterile hallways to the Colonel's room. She reflected on how she always thought of him as being the Colonel. He had been promoted to the rank of Brigadier General by the Fuhrer King Bradley, but Liza, along with the other of Brigadier General Mustang's subordinates, always referred to him as simply 'the Colonel'. Somehow, that title seemed to fit him much better than any other. Liza passed by the open door of a room and paused in the doorway. The Elric brothers had stayed in this room while they recovered from their excursion into the 5th Laboratory. Even when he had been propped up on pillows in his bed, Edward had always been lively. He and his brother had always pressed on towards their goal, and a few wounds had never been able to stall them for long. Liza smiled a small, reminiscent smile and continued on her way.
Liza stopped again in the doorway to the Colonel's room, but this time she did not smile. His nurse had just finished changing the bandage around his shoulder and appeared to be trying to persuade him to take off the large black eyepatch that covered most of the left side of his face. Liza's heart slowly sank when she heard the Colonel's monotone protests.
"No...I want to keep it on."
"But there's nothing wrong with your eye, Roy," the elderly nurse argued, exasperated.
"I know...." the Colonel replied, his voice quiet, disinterested. "But I want to keep it on...."
Liza's frown deepened. From the moment he had awoken in that hospital bed wrapped in bandages, the Colonel had been lethargic and emotionless. At first Liza had passed it off as his way of coping with the great ordeal he had gone through in the Fuhrer's mansion. But as the weeks dragged on and he remained disinterested, staring listlessly at the ceiling for hours on end, Liza had come to realize that something else was bothering him. She thought she knew what it was, too: By the Colonel's reasoning, he had lost all chance of becoming Fuhrer when he killed King Bradley. For years, the Colonel had been living solely for his goal of becoming Fuhrer, and now that this seemed impossible, he had lost interest in life. She watched him argue detachedly with his nurse for a few more moments, then marched purposefully into the room. Before the Colonel had time to even turn his head, she had pulled off the ugly black eyepatch and thrown it onto the floor.
The scar that ran from the Colonel's left eyebrow to his hair was an ugly, brownish thing; Liza could hardly blame him for wanting to hide it. But she was not going to let him hide behind that eyepatch anymore. She was pleased to see his expressionless face suddenly fill with surprise; he blinked several times as though waking from a deep sleep. Before he could react any further, Liza threw off his covers. "We're going for a walk," she said firmly. "Get dressed."