Hickory Dickory Dock…The
Cat Ran Up the Clock by Maddie & doc
AN:
This is my answer to the August HBX Fanfic Challenge.
This
snippet occurs approximately four months after my July HBX challenge,
‘Nothing Stays the Same: A Dog’s Perspective.’ For
those who haven’t read the challenge and the preceding long
story, Harm and Mac are married and in private practice together as
child advocacy lawyers in San Diego. They have three children, Ben,
Conner and Ellie…ages 7, 4 and 3 years.
When I first
saw the selected challenge lines for this month, I knew I would have
to write a story that involved Harm and Mac arguing, or at the very
least, reminiscing about a disagreement. My week had already been
rather hellish (leaking pipes, a bathroom under water, long hours,
extremely critical patients, deaths), so I just couldn’t make
myself write a story about a serious ‘Rabb Row’ that
didn’t include some mild form of humor. Writing has become
something of a therapy for me, and I needed something to make me
smile. As it turned out, my writing partner in crime had the perfect
solution…a story involving the family pets, a ridiculous
spousal argument and a scheming resolution perpetrated by a cunning
canine, a devious feline and a wily rodent.
‘Starring’
as allies in this particular misdemeanor are Molly, the faithful and
intelligent family pooch; Suzy-Q, the former ‘Spawn of Satan’
now rehabilitated for the forces of good; and a new four-legged
friend soon to be introduced. My co-author thought it would be fun to
have the family pets outsmart the 2-legged alpha-leaders;
particularly when said alpha-leaders are being obstinate,
inarticulate and unheeding…as they have want to be on numerous
occasions. Sometimes children or pets need to take matters into their
own hands.
By the way, my co-author is my 4-legged furry
child, Maddie. She is the mastermind behind this particular story.
I’ve often thought that our pets are more sensible and
intelligent when it comes to dealing with interpersonal issues…they
just want to be loved, fed, acknowledged and occasionally walked.
Life would be so much simpler if we humans took our cues from them.
Once again, I’m merely the scribe who translated animal-speak
to people-speak and typed the text into the computer. Maddie claimed
her muse and inspiration took a heavy toll on her energy stores…after
narrating her tale, she retired to a plush down-covered, four-poster
bed to take a nap while I completed the word processing task. We hope
you enjoy the scheming shenanigans of a newly formed matchmaking
trio. And if life slows down, I might actually put my other more
dramatic anecdote to paper…who knows, more unlikely things
have happened!
Special thanks to Mom my faithful finder
and keeper of all things related to spelling and
grammar.
Disclaimer: I don’t own JAG or any of the
characters. I just take them out and play with them on occasion
before replacing them safe and sound back on the
shelf.
***
Hickory Dickory Dock…The Cat
Ran Up the Clock
19:15
Friday
15 February
2013
The Rabb House
Mac sliced the remaining shitakes and
dropped them into the sauté pan with the other wild mushrooms,
stirring through the earthy blend with shallots, garlic and thyme.
Adding a quarter cup of white wine, she inhaled the fragrant bouquet
of the mushroom stuffing. Reaching for the first of the boneless
chicken breasts, she beat it until paper-thin, taking advantage of
the physical activity to dispel some of her pent up frustrations…and
fear.
The sun had just dipped below the horizon, giving the
room a rosy glow. The fire in the family room popped and crackled in
time with the lilting melody of the flute and harp composition that
serenaded her culinary preparations. She’d hoped that the
promise of a tantalizing romantic dinner, the warmth of the fire and
the peacefulness of the music would quiet her tortured soul. She and
Harm had been quarreling for the last four days. She wasn’t
sure they even knew what the inciting event had been for the current
clash of wills. She only knew that they’d never remained angry
and at odds for such a long period of time.
Well, that wasn’t
quite true, in their ‘old days’ they could banter and
squabble unendingly, but somehow back then their flesh had remained
intact. It was more of a tortured dance or choreographed foreplay
that stood in the place of the words and emotions that neither one of
them could quite seem to express. Even then, she’d never
worried that they would truly separate or declare an end to the
rhythm that was uniquely theirs…that was until Paraguay. She
rubbed her hands up and down her arms to still the shiver of cold
that tugged at her soul. The events and aftermath of Paraguay had
rocked her faith in the perpetuity of their relationship to its very
core. Of course, Paraguay paled in comparison to the despair she
experienced in the year and a half of their exile to opposite ends of
the world. But since that miraculous Christmas Eve some six years
ago, they’d waltzed in near perfect harmony rarely missing a
beat. That’s not to say they didn’t argue, but their
spats were restrained and short-lived…more of a prelude to
quiet moments and exchanges of love. They rarely ever went to bed
angry; squabbles were settled or set aside in the quiet of the night.
She’d learned her lesson from those rare glimpses of near total
loss and desolation to never take for granted those she loved.
She
glanced at the grandfather clock in the foyer for the ten or
fifteenth…or twentieth time. They had made a special date for
Valentine’s Day, promised and arranged a month prior. Since the
romantic holiday had fallen on a Thursday this year, they’d
both decided to celebrate that ‘special day of lovers’ on
Friday the 15th. The children had been collected from school and
daycare and whisked off for a special movie night with Gummy and
Papa. She and Harm were to celebrate the occasion without the
interruptions of food fights, whining, unending requests for ‘one
more’ glass of water, and the inevitable trips to the bathroom
in the middle of the night.
Tonight was supposed to be just
about them. She knew they had a rough road to mend, but she had faith
that their shared joy of cooking would once again work its magic and
carry them to that exotic place that always healed their souls and
communed their hearts. She’d planned the menu with great care,
taking the day off to shop, clean and prepare. Traversing the tiled
floor, she opened the refrigerator door to retrieve the bottle of
chilled sparkling cider. She studied with pride the chocolate
decadence of her already completed dessert. She’d spent the
afternoon baking the flourless chocolate torte covered in a thick
layering of ganache. Her hips seemed to expand at the very thought of
the ounces and ounces of rich imported chocolate. She fooled herself
into believing that the indulgent confection wasn’t really that
bad; after all, it was to be served with fruit…never mind that
those luscious red raspberries had been reduced to a deep burgundy
colored sauce compliments of a heavy sugary syrup.
With a
heavy sigh, she slammed the fridge door shut. Where was he? He knew
they had a special night planned. He should have arrived home an hour
ago. Calls to his cell phone had gone unanswered; she didn’t
know if that meant he was busy with clients, or was avoiding her,
or…she didn’t want to dwell on any of those other
‘or’s.’ He’ll be here any moment and probably
with a bouquet of exotic flowers, she chided herself. Placing the
bottle of cider into the sterling ice bucket, she adjusted the china
and crystal on her ornately set table. The candles stood tall and
proud, clustered around an arrangement of delicate blooms. Everything
was perfect and ready, everything but…him.
She heard
the grinding of the garage door opener followed by the squeal of
tires as his car rounded the corner. The sudden sound of a slamming
car door filled the quiet of the night and she grimaced when she
recalled the placement of her car. She had planned to maneuver the
SUV into its appropriate stall once she’d unloaded the
groceries, but in the excitement to start her food preparation for
their special night, she’d forgotten to reposition the vehicle.
She listened to the noise of revving engines, squawking brakes and
muted curses, and knew that their evening had taken a definite turn
for the worse.
He stomped into the kitchen and tossed his
briefcase across the floor. Leafing through the mail, he never turned
to acknowledge her presence and she felt her heart skip a beat as it
sank a little further into the dark recesses of her soul. Tossing the
envelopes aside, he threw over his shoulder, “Where are the
kids?”
Her eyes dropped to the floor as she studied her
feet. She tried to mask the tears in her voice, “They’re
at your mother’s.”
“Why?”
She
chewed at her bottom lip. He’d forgotten all about their
special night. Turning off the burner beneath her mushroom stuffing,
she pushed the chicken breasts aside. “Movie night…Trish
thought it would be fun.”
“Huuh,” he grunted
his gruff response. “When’s dinner?”
She
glanced across the counter at the carefully selected ingredients
intended for their shared evening of culinary bliss and shrugged to
the profile of his back, “Don’t know…I’m not
really hungry.” A tear escaped her lash and slid down her cheek
despite her best efforts to keep them at bay.
He grumbled
under his breath, “You had the day off and you couldn’t
even plan dinner?” He cleared his throat and voiced a little
louder, “I’ve been dealing with clients and Child
Protective Services all day, surely you don’t expect me to
cook?”
“Why would I expect that?” she
snapped then cringed at the tone of her voice. She hadn’t
wanted to incite a further battle.
He exhaled heavily through
flared nostrils, “I’m going to take a shower.”
Pausing in place for a moment, he grabbed at his tie with agitated
fingers, “Scratch that…I think I’ll go for a run
first. I need some time alone to clear my head.”
Before
he could take two steps into the front hall, he heard her anguished
voice whisper to no one but the empty room, “How did we get to
this place?”
He paused mid stride and spoke with solemn
resolve, “I think…I think, you honestly resent me.”
The
room became quiet and cold as his dominating presence retreated
toward the master suite. Molly slowly stood from her place of repose
by the front door and crept toward the kitchen. All day long, she’d
watched her Ma’am nervously flutter about the room preparing
wonderfully smelling treats. She had taken the dinner preparations as
a hopeful sign of a declared truce. Her people had been speaking with
cold loud voices for the last few days…well that was if they
spoke at all. She’d heard them angry before, but she’d
never felt the cold last this long. She could sense the discomfort in
the quiet of Her Boys and the whining cries of her Little Miss. Her
family was in pain like she’d never experienced before. Staring
at Ma’am from the kitchen door, she watched as her Mistress
swiped a hand across her eyes brushing away tears of pain. Ma’am
covered the meat and returned it to the fridge. The lettuce and
greens were left to wilt in a bowl on the back counter, forgotten in
the gloom of the night. Molly swung her eyes back to the heaping
plate of meat wrapped spears. She knew the vegetable was one of Sir’s
favorites. Ma’am had gushed about her ‘new twist’
on an old dog and ruffled the fur behind Molly’s ears; as she
laughed at her own silly joke…was that only a few short hours
before? Many suns and moons had come and gone in the chill of this
house.
She sighed and dropped her head as Suzy-Q approached
and wound her body around the old dog’s legs. The kitten
shivered and leaned in for comfort from her canine friend. “Molly,
I’m so cold…how come the house doesn’t feel warm?
Where are the boys and the girl? How come no one laughs or
hugs?”
Molly leaned down to give the kitten a nuzzle and
a lick. “It’s because of the fighting. I think Ma’am
and Sir have forgotten what is best for the pack. I haven’t
seen Ma’am this sad since…” Molly stopped mid
thought and stared off into the distance.
Suzy batted a paw
against her snoot, “Since when, Molly?”
The old
dog closed her eyes at the memory, “Since before Sir came to
join the pack. Before that night of Santa Dog Treats and dancing
under the moon, Ma’am was sad and lonely all the time. You
should have seen her, she…on second thought, I’m glad
you never did…she had no spark, no life.” Molly glanced
back to the kitchen in time to see Ma’am sink to the floor.
Arms wrapped around knees and head bowed; Molly watched Ma’am’s
body shake with silent sobs. Nuzzling the kitten once more, she
whispered, “Stay here…I’ll be right back.”
Suzy
started to follow close behind, “But I’m scared.”
Molly
fixed her with a silent stare of command, “I said to stay…you
don’t want to see…. I’ll be right back, don’t
move.”
Molly approached Ma’am and wiggled her head
between her knees. Once she felt the warmth of Ma’am’s
breath and the dampness of her tears, she licked and whined in an
attempt to comfort her Mistress.
Ma’am patted the dog’s
head and then turned away in pain, “Not now Molly. Please, just
leave me be.”
Molly slunk back to the front hall and
dropped to the floor. Suzy-Q cuddled in close, “What do we do
now, Molly? We can’t give up…our people need us.”
Molly
snorted sarcastically in response, “You’re right,
sometimes the alpha-leaders get so caught up in the struggle to be
first that they ignore the good of the pack.”
“I
don’t understand?”
“Ssshh,” Molly
whispered, “…I’m trying to think of a plan.”
Suzy
bounded up from the floor, “I can help!”
Molly
sighed, “Suzy, you’re too little. You haven’t lived
long enough to understand.”
The kitten dropped back to
the floor with a pout, “And you have no faith in me…I’m
just trying to save my family.”
Molly gathered the small
feline close, “You’re right, little one. It’s about
time you learned the secret ways of the family pets. People think we
don’t understand what’s going on, but any self-respecting
family companion knows how to work our charm.”
Suzy’s
eyes grew wide, “What do you mean by charm? Is that like a
magical power?”
Molly nodded her assent, “Very
special powers. Sometimes it’s just a look or a whine.
Sometimes we have to play to our human’s misguided notion that
animals are just simple pets. They don’t understand the full
extent of our knowledge or our drive to keep them safe and
content.”
Suzy’s little mouth formed a perfect
‘O.’ “Whoa…how did you learn all
this?”
Molly beamed with pride, “The wisdom comes
from years of observation and standing along side of those we love.”
The old dog rose to her full height and ambled down the hall with
head held high. “Come Suzy, we have work to do.”
The
kitten danced on her hind legs, batting at the air, she crowed, “I
get to help…I get to rescue the day!”
Molly
cleared her throat, “Do you want me to change my mind?”
Suzy
dropped back to all fours and looked appropriately contrite, “No
Ma’am, I’m falling in right behind.” Two steps down
the hall, she paused to ask, “Where are we going anyways?”
“To
the Boy’s room to enlist Toby in our scheme.”
Suzy
stopped once again, indignant at the dog’s response. “Why
do we need that rat?”
Molly stopped and turned around
with a sigh, “He’s not a rat…he’s a
hamster.” She saw Suzy lick her chops, “Don’t even
think about it. If you so much as take a single lick of that rodent,
I will knock you into next week. Now come along, you and Toby have a
little play acting to do.”
***
Mac lifted her
head from her knees and wiped the tears from her eyes. Glancing down
at her now wrinkled and wet dress, she smoothed her fingers over the
soft material. The silk was probably ruined, so much for ‘knocking
his socks off,’ she would settle for just speechless now…heck,
a smile of acknowledgment would even be nice. All of her painstaking
preparations for a romantic evening had gone south…talk about
a FUBAR. Even their screwed-up CIA missions didn’t disintegrate
this fast.
Resting her head back against the cabinet door, she
peered out the window into the darkness of the night. The eeriness of
the pitch black and the howl of the bitter wind matched her
melancholy mood. What was she supposed to do? ‘Storm the
beaches’ of their bedroom, throw him on the bed and hold him
down until he surrendered? The corners of her mouth turned up in a
slight smirk at that mental image. Hadn’t she wanted to do
exactly that all those years ago? She waggled her brows at the
thought. It just might work. She was a marine after all…she
could probably still kick his six from here to Tuesday…Semper
fi and all that! It was time to claim what she wanted!
Her
heady bravado deflated as quickly as it came. Who was she kidding?
She hadn’t been a marine for years; and even when she was,
she’d never been brave enough to stake her claim…at
least not for him. Neither one of them were, hence all those years of
dancing and foreplay. And who could forget the ‘Annie’s
and Jordan’s’ and ‘Mic’s and Webb’s’…the
names alone left a bad taste in her mouth. What she wouldn’t
give for a little help from Trish and Evie, they’d certainly
done their share in the past. She shook her head in despair. No, this
was her…no, their problem; it was best to keep their dirty
laundry at home.
So what was she supposed to do? What could
she do? She reached up and snagged an asparagus spear from off the
counter. Chewing on the tip, she contemplated her lot. She needed to
sort things out…go back to the beginning. Think like the
lawyer she was. Question #1, when did it start? That was easy, last
Tuesday…the dreaded day that she walked in on…. She
shook her head, ridding her mind of the memory. Tears stung at her
eyes but she determinedly blinked them back. If she started down that
road toward the surreal memory of…. No! She silently screamed
to herself. Don’t think about Tuesday, not yet. Besides, this
all started way before this current week.
Searching her
memories and fears, she settled on a time period that commenced about
a month prior. Everything was fine and wonderful over the Christmas
holidays. And New Years, well that was…a satisfied smile
played at her lips. New Years was in one word…fabulous! Then
the kids went back to school, work became routine, and their lives
returned to normal…until the middle of January. Something
happened in January. Harm grew quiet and sullen. When she tried to
engage him in conversation, to understand his silence, he just
withdrew. He stopped talking and touching and caring. At first, she’d
tried to give him space, but when the children began to ask why Daddy
was mad at them; she been forced to confront him. He shrugged off her
inquiry as insane, but he did make a concerted effort to become more
animated with the kids. The problem was, he just ignored her. Outside
of work, their only conservations were about the children or school
activities. Who was to drop whom where, shopping lists, doctor’s
appointments, budgets and bills. Somewhere in the minutia of their
everyday life, there had stopped being a ‘them’. When the
kids went to bed, he retreated to his study. He spent hours alone
staring at papers and files. When he came to bed, it was in the early
morning hours before dawn. He would silently drop to the mattress,
careful never to wake her. Turning his back to her slumbering form,
he curled upon himself into a fetal position. When she reached out to
touch him, he jumped from her grasp as if burned by the touch. She’d
eventually stopped trying, unable to face the pain of the constant
rejection. She figured he was just trying to work through a problem
and if she ignored it, all would return to normal in a short period
of time. She was wrong! She’d forgotten how long he could
brood. It had been years since she’d seen him like this. The
deafening silence and the lack of physical contact continued
undeterred, until…Tuesday.
She banged her head back
against the cabinet. Tuesday, she couldn’t even remember how
the verbal feud had started. She dropped her eyes, chagrinned. Yes,
she did…she’d started it. She’d made some inane
comment about him never cleaning up after himself, and that had
progressed to arguments over socks on the floor and toilet seats left
up. But none of those things were the real impetuous for Tuesday’s
brawl. No, the real reason was ‘the woman’. She was tall
and thin and blonde. She giggled in that annoying high-pitched way
that made Mac want to throw her from the nearest window, and she was
draped over Mac’s husband. Well, not really draped, but
close…too close…personal space close. And she was
flirting with Harm…and Harm was flirting back.
A tear
escaped unbidden once again. She wouldn’t have given the
encounter a second thought, if Harm hadn’t been so withdrawn
and distant over the last month. Harm flirted all the time. Well, not
that he would admit to, of course. He honestly didn’t know he
was doing it. Or maybe, a more accurate assessment was, he had no
idea the effect he had on humans of the female persuasion. His eyes
would light up in conversation, he would flash that flyboy grin and
shake his finger in your face…and if you were of the XX
chromosome half of the population, you were tagged, hooked and reeled
in. Snorting, she threw her hands into the air with disgust…she
should know; she had been his primary target for years. Hooked and
gone from that first moment he said hello. One touch of a hand and a
flash of those baby blues and that was all she wrote. Of course, she
couldn’t let him know that. No, she bristled and huffed and
claimed his smile had no affect on her. Fat chance. Life would have
been so much easier if she’d given up and flung him into the
back of that truck in the deserts of Arizona.
So why was she
so threatened by the dumb blonde from Tuesday? She bowed her head as
the tears fell. Because he hadn’t touched her, embraced her, or
kissed her in over a month. A month was long time to never hear the
words…’I love you.’
***
Same time at
the other end of the house….
Harm stomped down the hall
toward their bedroom. Halfway to his destination, his footsteps lost
their strength. By the time he arrived at the door to their bedroom,
he was shuffling with his head hung low. Tossing his suit coat onto a
nearby chair, he fell backwards onto the bed and threw an arm over
his face. Who was he kidding? Going for a run, he’d barely made
it down the hall. His exhaustion was overwhelming. He hated to fight
with Mac. He didn’t even know what started the latest row.
Something about breakfast dishes in the sink, or the toothpaste cap
left off. He knew that wasn’t the real cause, but he didn’t
have any idea what had set her off. And the sad thing was, he was too
tired to care.
Pushing up to a sitting position, he toed off
the heel of his shoe and kicked it across the room. That would
probably tick her off too! Pulling off his sock, he wadded it into a
ball. Glancing at the inside-out mess, he shrugged his shoulders and
tossed it onto the floor…in for a penny, in for a pound. He
hated this feeling that had settled in on him like a dark shroud.
Ever since.... No! Don’t think about it. Block it out! If he
could just get his mind to stop thinking…to forget. He hugged
his arms to his chest and closed out his surroundings. Taking a deep
cleansing breath, he blocked out the memories and the emotions and
the feelings. How long had this been going on? He glanced at his
watch as if it held the answer to that question. The date caught his
eye. The 15th…something about that date rang a bell. February
15th, the day after the 14th…the day after…Valentine’s
Day! He and Mac had a date. The image of their dining room table flew
forward into his consciousness. It was set with linens, china,
crystal…and flowers. He’d forgotten all about it. They
were going to prepare a special meal together as a couple. Come to
think of it, the kitchen had smelled wonderful when he’d
entered the house. And what had he done? He grumbled about her having
a day off and not cooking dinner. She’d probably spent all day
on the preparations.
Tears flashed in his eyes. What was he
doing? He was killing his family, but he couldn’t stop. If only
he’d told Mac about the events back in January, he might not be
stuck in this miserable, lonely place, now. But he couldn’t
tell her; he didn’t want her to share the horrible….
STOP! Don’t think about it. He already saw those eyes in his
nightmares. He didn’t want to see them when he was awake! It
was why he couldn’t sleep, couldn’t feel, couldn’t
dream. He needed to protect his family from the ugliness…he’d
failed her…he couldn’t fail them too.
The
memories came once again, despite his determination to keep them out.
She was so beautiful…young, vibrant, alive…trusting,
those eyes. She’d won him over with her eyes. He’d
promised to keep her safe, but he’d failed and now she was
dead. She was tiny and scared, no older than Ben. Her father had
brought her into the office, hoping to prevent her return to her
mother. It wasn’t the mother that was the problem, but the
stepfather. Harm had fought valiantly against the CPS worker and the
mother’s attorney to keep the little girl in her father’s
care. The judge had not been swayed by the testimony of the girl, her
father or a string of expert witnesses. She’d been returned to
her mother’s care, only to be brutalized and killed a few days
later. When the call came in, he’d insisted on visiting the
crime scene and what struck him most were her eyes. They were open
and lifeless, but they accused him just the same. He’d failed
in his promise to protect her. He couldn’t shake that thought
or the image of her face. Why did he deserve to be alive and happy
when she was dead? Why did his children, his wife…he thought
if he could sequester himself away that Mac and his kids would be
safe. It made no sense; he could admit that intellectually. But
emotions were another issue. Apparently, the Admiral had been right;
he was ruled by them. And if he didn’t get them under control,
he stood to lose all he strove to protect and love.
Since her
death, he’d been working overtime to cover every angle for his
clients. Even if it included flirting with that last CPS person they
called a social worker. She was tall, blonde and dumb as a stump.
She’d been assigned Henry’s case, and Harm was determined
that Henry was not going to be reunited with his family. The child’s
case file read like a textbook example for physical and mental abuse.
He’d spent days consulting with and convincing Barbie, Bambi,
whatever her name was, to recommend for permanent parental
separation. Then the blonde Einstein had insisted he take her to
lunch. He’d flat out refused, resulting in Blondie recommending
for parent-child reunification. He’d spent all day with
Josephine trying to get the order reversed. He’d finally been
successful in arguing his case before a juvenile court judge late
that afternoon. Henry would be permanently living with his foster
parents, who planned to adopt him within the next year. And the
Blonde Stump, well her days were numbered…Thank God! The CPS
system didn’t need a worker like her.
The case was a
much-needed victory. He finally felt at peace for the first time in a
month. Of course, in all the excitement of the day, he’d left
his cell phone at the office. He’d realized too late that he’d
missed all of Mac’s calls. Figuring, he’d catch her at
home and hoping to avoid another confrontation, he’d not called
back before he left the office. Enter cars out of place, his
exhaustion and a short fuse on his emotions, a forgotten romantic
event, and…. He rubbed a hand over his eyes. He was in serious
trouble. He figured he was due to grovel and make amends, but he just
couldn’t make himself take the first step. She was at fault
too! Oh great, that attitude was certainly going to win him points as
‘husband of the year’.
He stood up from the bed
with great effort and lumbered toward his walk-in closet. First order
of business…change clothes.
***
Part
1/1b
Molly pointed her front paw toward the master
bedroom, “Come on, Suzy. No dawdling, we have work to do!”
The
kitten pouted like a petulant child, “How come Toby gets to
ride and I have to walk?”
Molly sighed, quickly losing
patience, “I already explained. Toby is too small to move as
fast as us. Now, do you want to help Sir and Ma’am, or do you
want to go in time-out?”
That got her attention; Suzy
hated it when Molly put her in time-out. Time-out meant Suzy got
ignored. “I’m coming, Molly. I promise no more
whining.”
The animals paused just outside the bedroom
door. Three heads peered around the opening. Sir was nowhere to be
found. Just as they became worried about the success of their plan,
they heard Sir muttering to himself from his closet.
“Perfect!”
Toby exclaimed from atop Molly’s head.
The trio crept
quietly toward the closet door. When they reached the threshold,
Molly leaned down and deposited Toby on the floor. “Alright
Toby, you go first. Everyone understand their task?”
“Yes
Ma’am,” was exclaimed in two soft voices.
“Alright,
go ahead. Suzy, give Toby a few seconds to get set up.”
The
hamster scurried into the closet and began to climb the tall shelves.
His maneuvers were slow going as he climbed the piles of shoes,
sweater and clothes. As he reached the very top shelf, he peered over
the side. His eyes widened in fear, “Are you sure this is safe?
I don’t think I can climb down.”
Before Molly
could voice her encouragement, Suzy piped up, “Don’t
worry Toby, I’ve got you covered. I’ll make sure you get
down safe. Just don’t get to close to the edge.”
Molly
smiled with pride; her little kitten was growing-up. Nudging Suzy
with a gentle tap of her snoot, she prodded, “Go ahead, Suzy…do
your stuff.”
Suzy stood tall and flicked her head, “I’m
on it, Molly.”
The kitten arched her back and hissed.
Just as Harm turned toward the noise, Suzy screeched a loud ‘meow’
and lunged into the closet. Jumping off her back paws, she agilely
landed on the fourth shelf.
Harm eyes widened as he caught
sight of Ben’s hamster backed-up and shivering amongst a stack
of sweaters on the top shelf. Toby was too far up for him to easily
reach. He glared at the kitten, “No, no Suzy…leave Toby
alone.”
Suzy scrunched her eyes in a mischievous glare
and licked her lips. Just as Harm reached for the cat, she swiped a
paw across his hand and drew blood with her claws. He pulled back in
pain and then watched in horror as the kitten scaled the shelves and
stalked toward the hamster. He waved his hands back and forth trying
to halt the progress of the lunging beast. When his attempts at
submission failed, he yelled at Mac for help. Seconds passed as he
jumped and glared at the cat. Suzy hissed her response and stalked
closer to the sniveling rodent. Toby dropped a few surprises on the
shelf; he was executing his role of fear to perfection.
As the
cat drew within swiping distance of Toby, Harm bellowed once again,
“MAC!” He glanced toward the door expecting her arrival
at any moment…’NOW’ was not the time to hold a
grudge. His eyes fell on Molly’s pacing form; she was issuing
short growls of warning. His eyes widened, begging the dog in
command, “Molly! Go get Mac!”
Molly yelped a short
bark of understanding and ran from the room.
***
Mac
wiped the tears from her eyes. She needed to stop crying. There was
work to do and tears never solved anything. She was a Marine,
dagnabit! In the distance her foggy mind registered the noise of a
commotion. Molly ran into the kitchen and skidded to a stop. Issuing
a series of sharp staccato barks, she tugged on Mac’s
skirt.
“What’s the matter, Girl?”
Molly
barked again and turned to flee the room. Mac heard a loud yelp and
registered Harm’s scream.
“MAAACCC!”
She
bolted to her feet and ran toward the bedroom. Grabbing the
doorframe, she used her momentum to swing around the room. Racing
toward the noise coming from Harm’s closet, she paused just
inside the door and gasped in horror as she saw Suzy nab Ben’s
hamster with her teeth. “Suzy, no, no…drop Toby!
NOW!”
Suzy glared back and inched away from the edge.
Toby, for his part, shivered and shook while hanging from the
kitten’s mouth. “You’re just kidding right? This is
all part of the plan? You’re not really going to eat me?”
Suzy
gently shook her head from side-to-side, “Ssshh, and hold
still…I don’t want to drop you.” Toby went limp in
her teeth.
Harm’s eyes widened further as his eyebrows
disappeared into his hair. “Mac, we have to get the hamster
away…he’s not moving anymore.”
She paced at
his side, “What do you want me to do? We can’t let the
cat eat Toby; Ben will never forgive us.”
He reached for
her hand and pulled her in close. Circling her waist with his hands,
he hefted her up in the air. “See if you can reach them.”
She
lifted a hand high in the air, but Suzy batted it away. “I
can’t get a hold of them.”
He sighed in
frustration, “Maybe if you climb up the shelves to their level,
I can shoo them your way.”
Mac kicked off her shoes and
carefully climbed the shelving. Her stocking feet slid amongst the
clothing and the shelves started to shake. “Are you sure these
shelves will hold me?”
“You’re fine,”
he barked, “…just get a little closer.”
As
Mac reached out to grab the cat, Suzy bounded over her back and down
the closet shelves. The cat’s acrobatics threw Mac’s
balance off kilter. Leaning backwards off the shelf, Mac held on for
dear life as her toes tried to find a steady perch. Harm turned
toward the door and saw Suzy scurry across the floor. Just as he
attempted to give chase, Mac cried out, “Harm, I’m going
to fall!”
“Hang on, Mac…I have to get the
cat.”
With his attention diverted toward his wife, he
didn’t register the movements of his pets. Suzy gently set Toby
on the floor and nudged him with her nose. “Hurry Toby, we have
to escape. Molly’s waiting for you right outside the
door.”
Harm lunged at the cat’s retreating form
just as the closet door slammed shut in his face. He grabbed the
handle and gave it a shove. The door stood firm. Muscling his
shoulder into the barricade, he barely moved it an inch. “Mac,
did you ever notice that this door sticks?”
“Whaaaaat….”
Her scream filled the air as the shelf broke, sending her tumbling
backwards into the room.
Harm turned just in time to extend
his arms and break her fall. The pair landed flat on the floor. Harm
gasped for breath when his back hit the hard surface. Mac landed on
his chest, knocking the wind right out of him.
He wheezed in
and out, “Geez Mac, did you put on some weight?” She
rolled to the side and curled into a ball as the tears began to fall.
Her tearful reaction quickly gained his attention. “Sarah, are
you hurt?” He gathered her into his arms and raised both of
them into a sitting position on the floor. Once she was settled in
his lap, he began to palpate her extremities looking for breaks and
cuts. “Mac…Mac, talk to me. Did you hurt
something?”
When he pulled on her leg to shift her
within his embrace, she wrapped her arms and legs round his body and
held on. The tears continued unbidden as her body racked with violent
sobs. Harm could do nothing but embrace her and hold on tight. His
large hand splayed on her back and rubbed gentle circles over the
smooth plane.
***
Suzy stared at the closed door. She’d
heard Ma’am scream for help and then both of her people hit the
floor. The kitten gasped, “Molly, did we break them?”
The
old dog leaned more firmly against the door and listened for sounds.
“I don’t think so. Ma’am is crying, but I think Sir
is making it better. Hurry up and grab some things to place against
the door. We can’t let them out until we hear the
slobber-sharing and mating groans.”
The kitten tugged at
pillows and shoes and clothes, dragging them into the pile by the
door. Molly dropped on the mound adding her 80-pound weight to the
growing barricade. They were not getting out until they surrendered;
Molly decided enough was enough. She wanted the warmth and laughter
back.
***
Mac’s anguished cries slowed and
quieted over the next five minutes. She turned her face into his neck
and inhaled his spicy scent. Her lips moved of their own volition
against his skin. His fingers unfastened a few buttons at the back of
her dress and slipped inside, starved for the contact of skin-to-skin
touch.
When she finally calmed to the point of shuddering
breaths, he spoke, “What’s going on, sweetheart? I’ve
never seen you this upset?” She shook her head against his
shoulder, unable to speak.
“Ssshh, it’s OK…I
didn’t mean that crack about your weight. I was just kidding.
You’re smaller now than when I first met you.” She didn’t
utter a sound, but cinched her arms more tightly around his neck.
“You know, I’m starting to get the feeling this is more
than just a bump in the road. I know this isn’t about
toothpaste tubes, dishes in the sink or socks on the floor. You need
to tell me what’s going on…what happened last Tuesday to
set you off?”
She murmured against the skin of his neck,
“I’m not tall, blonde and young.”
He tugged
on her body, trying to seek her face and look in her eyes. She
wouldn’t let go of his neck. Holding on by brute force, she was
too afraid to see the look of disgust or worse, the apathy in his
eyes.
“Mac, what are you talking about? Why would I want
you to be a blonde?” When she didn’t respond he sighed
and let his arms drop to the side.
She slowly leaned away from
his body, but when she attempted to slip from his lap, his hands held
firm to her thighs. Her eyes dropped to her chest, “I saw her
in your office…on Tuesday…she was hanging on you and
flirting. Her eyes rose as far as his lips, “And you were
flirting back.”
His body tensed and his hand reached up
to cup her chin. Pulling her face up to met his eyes, he tersely
replied, “Woman, do you know how beautiful you are? Why in the
world would I want someone else when I’m already lucky enough
to have you?”
Her lip quivered at the initial anger in
his voice, then the tears tracked down her cheeks when she
comprehended his words. “But….”
He pointed
his index finger in her face, “Sarah, you are all I’ve
ever wanted. How could you think I would get involved with someone
else? Do you think so little of me?”
She violently shook
her head, “No…but….”
“But
what,” he hissed.
“I didn’t mean…I
just…but you…the last month….”
His
expression softened as he remembered the events of the last month.
Whispering, he asked, “What about the last month?”
She
inhaled deeply to control the trembling in her voice, “You’ve
been so withdrawn. First with everyone, but then you started to
interact again with the kids.” Her lip began to quake, “But
you kept ignoring me. You didn’t talk, you didn’t touch,
you didn’t hold me. Do you know what an eternity it has felt
like, since I last heard you express your love for me?” He
dropped his eyes in shame. This time she reached out a finger to draw
his gaze to hers, “What did I do wrong? Why did you stop loving
me?”
A tear tracked down his cheek, “I’m
sorry…it wasn’t you.”
She tried to push
away and maneuver off his lap. He grabbed her arms and squeezed the
flesh holding her tightly in his grasp, “That didn’t come
out right. What I mean is, you didn’t do anything wrong…I
screwed up. Sarah, I love you more than life itself…I always
will.”
She stared into his eyes, gauging the
truthfulness of his response. “What did you do?”
He
tried to look away, but she followed his eyes, “I failed her.
She was so small and young and trusting…and I let her
down.”
Mac stared back dumbstruck,
“Who?”
“Anna.”
“Where did
you meet her? Oh Harm…why?”
He noticed the tears
in her voice again and looked sharply into her eyes. “No Mac,
you don’t understand…she was a client. She was Ben’s
age and I didn’t protect her.”
Mac deflated
against his chest in relief, “A client? A little girl? Harm,
you scared the life out of me. Why didn’t you tell me when it
happened…I could have helped? You didn’t have to go
through it alone.”
“I didn’t want to expose
you or the kids to that ugliness. I thought if I kept it to myself; I
could keep my family safe.” Tears tracked down his cheeks,
“Mac, it was awful. The judge, the CPS worker, no one would
listen to her or to me. They sent her back to her mother and
stepfather…and he beat her to death a few days later.”
He gasped in a breath, “I went to the murder scene. Her eyes.
Mac, her eyes…they haunt me.”
She pulled his face
to her lips and kissed his forehead, “Ssshh sweetheart, don’t
think about it. I’m here…I’ll listen and try to
help. You don’t have to be alone anymore.”
He
muttered into her chest, “That’s why the blonde was there
on Tuesday.”
She ran her fingers through his hair, “I
don’t understand. What does she have to do with a case that
happened a month ago?”
“New case,” he
continued, “…it involves a toddler named Henry. The
blonde idiot is a new caseworker for CPS. She was assigned Henry’s
case. I’ve been trying to convince her to sever parental
rights. I’m sorry I was flirting, but that’s all she
responded to. I didn’t even like her…she’s dumb as
a stump. When she insisted I take her to lunch, I refused. So she
found in favor of Henry’s biological parents just to spite
me.”
Mac tipped his face up, “Harm, we have to
stop her!”
He smiled despite himself; that was his
Marine, take charge, gung-ho and Semper fi. “Power down Marine,
I already did. Josephine and I spent all afternoon in the courts. The
judge finally sided with us. Henry is going to be adopted by his
foster family.”
Mac glared, “What about the blonde
tree stump? Surely, CPS won’t keep her on.”
Harm
shook his head, “Josephine and the judge talked to her
supervisor.” He waved his hand in the air, “Barbie,
Bambi, whatever her name is, is history.”
He stroked a
finger over her cheek, “I’m sorry I worried you. And I’m
sorry I didn’t confide in you. But most of all, I’m sorry
I gave you a reason to doubt my love. I’m in this for life, and
it would be a very short one if I lost you. I love you, Sarah.”
Her eyes welled with tears. “Why are you crying?”
“Because
I wasn’t sure I’d ever hear you say that again.”
She brushed her lips over his, “I love you, too.”
He
deepened the kiss. When he pulled back, he caressed her cheek, “I’m
sorry for ruining our Valentine’s dinner. With the excitement
around Henry’s case, I forgot all about it.”
Her
face lit up, “It might be a little late, but we could still
try.”
He chuckled in response, “I don’t
think so…the closet door is jammed. I think we’re stuck
in here until someone comes to our rescue.”
***
Suzy
danced with pride, “We did it Molly! Should we let them
out?”
Molly grinned in mischief, “Not yet. I heard
the ‘love’ word and I think I heard slobber-sharing going
on, but I haven’t heard any laughter or mating groans. I’m
not letting them out until they fully surrender. The cold went on for
too long this time…I’m not taking any
chances.”
***
“Harm, who exactly is going
to come looking for us? We can’t stay in here forever?”
He
laughed for the first time in weeks…it felt good. “If
push comes to shove, Mom or Frank will eventually show up. I don’t
think they will be able to stand our kids for more than a week or
two.”
She waggled her brow, “So what do you want
to do until then, Sailor?”
He grabbed her hands before
they could find trouble. “You could tell me about the dinner
you planned.”
She sighed in mock frustration, “Alright,
if you insist. First,” her fingers tried to wiggle from his,
“…there was the salad. And not just any ordinary salad,
either…there were mixed greens and asparagus.”
His
eyes lit up, “I love asparagus.”
She grinned, “I
know! I roasted them your favorite way…with olive oil and
freshly shredded aged-parmesan cheese.” His tongue slipped out
to lick his lips. “I also wrapped them in prosciutto before
roasting and then drizzled them with balsamic.”
He
actually caught himself whimpering, “What else? How about the
main course?”
“Boneless chicken breasts filled
with a wild mushroom stuffing, white cheddar and roasted garlic
mashed potatoes, and spicy green beans.”
He shuddered,
“That’s enough…I don’t want to hear
anymore.”
She leaned in to whisper in his ear, “Not
even the dessert?”
His shoulders sagged, “Alright,
tell me.”
“A flourless chocolate torte,” she
trailed her lips down his neck, “…covered in chocolate
ganache….”
“With raspberry syrup?” he
groaned.
“Oh yeah.”
“That’s it!
You’re killing me!” He flipped her onto the ground and
ravaged her neck. “I love it when you talk food! I swear you
could make plain white bread sound sexy.”
She giggled
and pushed him away…slightly. Stroking his cheek, she smiled
the smile that she saved just for him. “Maybe we could cook
tomorrow night. I think Trish would be willing to keep the kids until
Sunday.” She frowned, “I think your folks were a little
worried about us.”
“Why do you say that,” he
brushed his fingers through her hair.
“Trish was kinda
hinting around about you being unhappy.”
“I’m
sorry, sweetheart…I’ll talk to her.” His stomach
growled loud enough to fill the room. Grimacing in embarrassment, he
dipped his head. “Sorry, I haven’t eaten much
lately.”
Her eyes reflected love and concern. She ran a
hand down the firm plane of his t-shirt clad abdomen, then darted
underneath the soft cotton hem for the return trip. Her fingertips
counted ribs just under the skin, “I noticed…we need to
work on that.” Her other hand gently cupped his cheek as her
thumb traced the dark circles under his eyes. “You haven’t
been sleeping either.”
“I couldn’t,”
his voice cracked, “…I kept seeing her face.”
“Are
you going to be alright? Do you need to talk
someone…professionally?”
He shook his head, “I
don’t think so. I feel better since I won Henry’s case.
And besides, talking to you usually makes everything right.”
She
smiled, “Smart man…next time remember that. We’re
stronger as a team than as individuals.”
“Oh
yeah…definitely.” He grabbed a thick down comforter and
two pillows from the shelf. Spreading them out on the floor, he
waggled his brows and threw her a wicked grin. “I’ve
missed you. Happy Valentine’s Day, sweetheart.”
She
grinned back, “What did you have in mind?”
His
tongue peeked out, “Well, now that you mention it.”
***
Suzy
jumped up from the floor, “Molly, what was that?”
Molly
beamed with pride, “That’s the mating call. Our work here
is done.”
“Really? We did it?” The kitten
jumped around the room, “Did you hear that Toby? We saved the
day!”
Molly scooped the hamster onto her head and
corralled the celebrating kitten, “Come along kids…let’s
give them some privacy.
***
Mac squinted into the
bright light. Stretching her arms overhead, she stifled a yawn. As
her eyes adjusted to the light in the closet, she noticed the door
was opened a crack. “That’s odd. Harm said it was stuck.”
She shrugged and slowly rose from the floor. Even with the padded
comforter, her back was going to pay a heavy price. Dancing around in
the cool air of the early morn, she reached for Harm’s robe on
the back of the door. Glancing back at his slumbering form, she
smiled when she took in his relaxed and contented face. He hadn’t
slept this well in weeks. She kissed the fingers of her right hand
and gently placed them against his lips. His mouth puckered at the
soft touch then slackened again in sleep. Mac slipped from the
closet, careful not to make a sound.
Stepping outside the
door, she almost tripped over a pile of clothes and pillows and
shoes. Shaking her head perplexed, “That’s even stranger?
Where did all the clothes come from?” She pushed them away from
the door with her foot and continued on to the bathroom.
Ten
minutes later, she was whisking up eggs in a bowl. Setting a sauté
pan on the burner to warm, she added a pat of butter to melt. She
wandered over to the refrigerator and grabbed some cheese and the
asparagus spears. Walking back toward the cook top, she placed the
ingredients aside. Frowning in thought, she crossed to the fridge
once again and withdrew the mushroom filling. She smiled when she
heard some noise coming from down the hall. Cracking two more eggs
into the mixing bowl, she whisked them up light.
Harm found
her perched atop the kitchen counter enjoying an omelet, a short time
later. He sauntered up in front of her, slipping in between her legs.
Fingering the sleeve of her robe, he smirked, “I wondered where
this got to. You have your own robe you know.”
She
grinned with satisfaction, “Nope, mine was hanging behind the
bathroom door. I didn’t have any clothes in your closet.
Besides, I like wearing your robe…it smells like you and makes
me feel like I’m wrapped in your arms.”
He
shivered in the cool air, “Well, it’s cold in here. Mind
sharing my robe?” He grinned as he released the cinched tie and
slid his arms around her naked form.
She closed the robe
around his bare back, “You should’ve worn more than
boxers.” She offered him a forkful of her midnight snack.
His
lips parted and slowly accepted the bite. “Why? Don’t
plan to wear them for long.” His eyes rolled back and he licked
his lips, “This is really good. What’s in it?”
She
offered another bite, “Fontina cheese, the prosciutto asparagus
and the wild mushroom stuffing.”
They ate in silence for
a bit, before he began shuffling from side-to-side. “Harm,
what’s wrong?”
“Feet are cold…this
tile is like ice.” He reached out and grabbed her slippered
feet. “Someone stole my slippers, too.” He pulled off the
footwear and dropped them to the floor. Sliding his feet into their
warm depths, he grinned, “Much better!”
“Hey,
now my feet will get cold,” she scolded.
He set the
omelet plate aside and lifted her into his arms. “No they
won’t…I’ll carry you.”
She locked her
feet behind his back and wrapped her arms around his neck. “You’re
right, this is better.”
He placed his lips beside her
ear, “To the bedroom?”
“Oh yeah, but can we
use the bed this time?”
“Well shoot, I was just
getting used to the closet.”
She inhaled deeply to
gather her thoughts. His lips were doing things to her neck. “Harm,
you said the closet door was stuck, right?” His mumbled a
‘mmhuh’ against her skin. “Well, this might sound
strange…but there was a pile of clothes and pillows outside
the door. You don’t think? No, that’s just crazy.”
He
pulled back to look in her eyes, “What’s crazy?”
“The
animals…Molly, Suzy, Toby…it’s like they
plotted…. Never mind, it’s crazy.”
He
grinned at her silliness. “Mac? What time is it?”
She
frowned, “I don’t know?”
“Oh, Thank
Goodness! You were getting too good at telling time without a watch
in the last few days. I’m glad to see I haven’t lost my
touch.” He leered wicked at her lips.
She giggled in
response, “To the bedroom, Jeeves!”
“Yes
Ma’am!” He paused at the kitchen door, “What about
the dirty dishes?”
“Leave them!”
“Living
dangerously…I like it. By the way, I left my socks on the
bedroom floor. Inside-out no less.”
She grinned, “That’s
OK, I squeezed the toothpaste from the top instead of the
bottom.”
Their laughter could be heard throughout the
moonlit house. All was right in the world again…at least in
the home of the Rabbs.
***
Molly and Suzy studied the
lovers from the front hall. “Molly, where are they going? We
don’t need to lock them up again, do we?”
Molly
pushed the kitten along toward the kitchen, “No they’re
fine now. We did our job.”
“But…”
“Just
you never mind, little one. You’re too young to know.”
The old dog ambled into the kitchen and paused by the sink. Looking
around in both directions, she placed her front paws on the counter
and quickly nabbed a piece of lettuce from the glass bowl.
“What
are you doing, Molly? Ma’am doesn’t allow us on the
kitchen counter.” Suzy bounced on her hindquarters trying to
steal a peek.
Molly whispered back, “Ssshh, do you want
to get caught? I'm sneaking a reward for Toby.”
The
kitten bounced around the room, “What about me? I did a good
job, too. Don’t I deserve a reward?”
Molly glanced
around the kitchen and then reached up to steal a piece of cheese.
Tossing the slice at Suzy, she grumbled, “There…are you
happy now?”
Suzy mumbled around the cheese in her mouth,
“Mmmm, dis mmm good.”
“The old dog sighed,
“Don’t talk with food in your mouth!”
The
kitten swallowed, “Sorry Ma’am. Don’t you want a
treat, too?”
Molly shook her head, “No, that’s
okay…I already got my treat. My people are happy again. The
house feels warm.”
“Yeah it does. I like it much
better when Sir and Ma’am laugh instead of using loud
words.”
Molly picked up the piece of lettuce with her
teeth and mumbled, “Come looong...we neez tak dis to
Toby.”
Suzy giggled, “Don’t talk with food
in your mouth, Ma’am!”
Molly rolled her eyes.
‘Kids.’
The End…for now?