Author: keru
Subject:
HBX Challenge December 2008 - Crossed Wires
Disclaimer: Don't
own'em
A/N: Guess what? With this story, I've written
something for each challenge month in 2008! In fact, I think I've
written one for every month since I started writing. Well, except
September '08 but let's pretend that doesn't count because I have
used those lines in a story before, somewhere, I think... Anyways. My
resolution (fingers crossed) is to do the same this
year.
--
Crossed Wires
Harm leaned back
in his chair as he stared out the window. He couldn't concentrate. To
be honest, he'd had a hard time concentrating on anything for some
time now. Ever since Mac had requested that TAD assignment on the
Guadalcanal. He'd been losing her and nothing he did seemed to bring
her closer to him. In fact, all his efforts seemed to have the
opposite effect. He'd been fed-up enough to suggest that they'd
reached the end at the JAGathon. To his never-ending surprise, Mac
had offered him her hand and suggested they start back at the
beginning.
He'd been too relieved at the time to process the
full implications of her words.
What the hell did she mean,
back at the beginning?
Did it mean that the slate was wiped
clean of the animosity tainting their more recent interactions, or
did it mean that they were back to a point before things got too
complicated for them to be in a relationship? After all, if he
thought about it, when she'd suggested they go for it back in Sydney
it could have worked, couldn't it? She seemed to think so, if her
comments at her engagement party were anything to go by.
Things
had been a lot less complicated back then. They'd been the best of
friends and he'd liked her and she'd liked him. But then, were things
really so complicated now? He still liked her. A lot.
But they
barely spent much time together and were unsure around each other,
either trying too hard to feign familiarity or not trying hard enough
to revive the solid foundation of their friendship. Maybe that was
the problem.
They were over-thinking it.
She'd asked
him once what he really wanted, and he'd said to never lose her.
Truth was, what he really wanted was to actually have her.
Maybe
he needed to be a bit more spontaneous and a lot less tentative with
her.
He was so concerned about being her friend that he wasn't
really being himself around her. And since when was he so wishy-washy
about things? Hell, he knew one of the reasons he'd been upset with
her after their meeting on the Guadalcanal, one of the reasons he'd
been such a jerk before the JAGathon was that he didn't want to be
tentative with her. It was all or nothing. He'd wanted her –
all of her, the whole of her – and she'd put him off, saying
she needed time, assurances. He didn't get it all, so he'd told
himself he wanted nothing.
Well, no more of that. He wanted it
all, and he was going to get it.
In fact, he was going to go
ask her out this very moment, consequences be damned. He wouldn't
even let himself think about it.
Harm abruptly stood up from
his chair and marched out of his office.
Game on.
--
Mac
leaned back in her chair, staring out the window. She'd been working
on a deposition, but was feeling rather uninspired. Her thoughts kept
drifting, so she finally gave in and just took a break from work to
indulge in the musings that were holding her attention
hostage.
Musings centered on her best friend. She wondered if
he still considered himself her friend. After her failed relationship
with Mic, Harm's dip in the Atlantic, their horrendous encounter on
the Guadalcanal, his callous remark about her personal life to a
co-worker who was a stranger to her, and then their tentative
agreement to start at the beginning – an agreement reached at
her insistence when he was ready to call it quits – she didn't
think he saw her as anything near a close friend.
Maybe a
colleague. A passing acquaintance. Or the dreaded 'someone I once
knew'. They didn't spend much of any time together, and never unless
it was work-related. The latter netted her a few awkward, stilted
dinners where they were out of sync with each whenever they weren't
actively talking about work.
She missed having someone whom
she could just talk to, feel comfortable around. She had never really
had that kind of a connection with anyone. Except perhaps with her
Uncle Matt, and that was a relationship he'd worked very hard at
forging when he was making her dry out. She'd been mad as hell at him
at the time, downright mean to him, but he'd persisted and she'd had
no choice. Red Rock Mesa was a hard place to carry out a successful
escape from after all – she had tried to run away more than
once, in fact, driven by her addiction. But he'd been steadfast and
in doing so had taught her one of the most important lessons of her
life.
She'd realized it only when she'd joined boot camp. He'd
taught her the essence of any meaningful relationship: sticking out
the bad times. After all, not everything was rosy all of the time. No
one was perfect and all relationships had their weak points. This
meant that the true test of one's regard for another, the true
measure of one's loyalty to another person was not raising the white
flag when giving up was the easier thing to do.
So Harm would
remain her best friend through this horrible time when it seemed they
existed on different planes and their paths rarely crossed. She'd
wait this out until he was amenable to actually being her friend, in
practice and not only in theory. In the meantime, she'd be his best
friend in act and word, and hope that he cared enough to acknowledge
it. One thing she did know, their overformal behaviour around each
other was exhausting. At least for her.
A loud knock sounded
at her door, causing Mac to swivel her chair around.
Speak of
the devil.
"Harm," She smiled warmly, as a best
friend would.
"Hey, Mac." His eyes flitted from her
face to the poster on the wall to the leafy tree just outside her
window. He shifted from one foot to the other, and placed his hands
on his hips.
It reminded her of their exchange at the office
after he'd kissed her at her engagement party, when he'd tried to
apologize. Hope fluttered in her heart. He was going to reach out.
She'd just been thinking about it, and here he was actually doing it.
"You, um..." He trailed off studying her face
carefully. "You look tired." He finally said.
It was
as though he'd read her thoughts. That hadn't happened in a long
time.
She wondered if he felt the same way as her. He looked
like he did. "So do you."
"How about dinner?"
He asked suddenly, his eyes darting from hers to the floor. "Tomorrow
night? Saturday." He cleared his throat.
Mac's smile
widened, suffused with genuine affection. It was amazing how they
were suddenly so in sync, so on the same page. She'd wanted her best
friend back, and now here he was offering his friendship to her.
Although he didn't need to feel so nervous about it: she'd genuinely
meant it when she'd offered to start back at the beginning and work
on building their friendship from there. If his refusal on the ferry
hadn't been enough a clue, his readiness to call an end to whatever
romantic interest may have developed for him after that refusal made
it clear enough to her. At this point, she'd be happy just having his
friendship back.
"I'd love to," She readily agreed,
wanting to put him at ease.
It worked. Her quick acceptance
brought a wide grin to his face. The familiar spark of arrogance
returned to his eye, even as he loosened with relief.
"Great."
He crossed his arms over his chest, cocky as ever. "I'll pick
you up at 1930."
She hid her confusion at that last bit.
Normally, they met at the restaurant on those rare occasions they
weren't just sharing take-out or a Rabb's Famous something-or-other
at his place.
One day she'd ask him why he named everything he
cooked after himself. But for now, she simply nodded.
"Okay.
Sounds great." She knew she sounded far more enthusiastic than
she'd ever done in the past over invitations for shared platonic
dinners, but she really wanted to encourage this sudden shift in his
behaviour.
"See you tomorrow, Marine." He gave her
his most charming smile.
"Tomorrow." She almost
called him Flyboy, but decided it might be too much, too fast.
He
turned around, and headed back to his office with a bounce in his
step.
Mac smiled at his retreating form. Finally, things were
getting back to what they'd been.
--
Harm stood outside
Mac's door. He adjusted his tie, checked to see that his suit jacket
was buttoned up properly and that his shoe laces were tied. He
fluffed the bouquet of flowers in his hand, but it just caused some
leaves and sundry to fall off their perches and onto the hallway
carpet. Harm frowned. He should've bought her normal flowers like
roses instead of listening to the woman behind the counter. She'd
said this was the latest rage in bouquets, but it just looked like
some freak art exhibit to him. And now crap was falling on the floor
and onto his freshly polished shoes.
He took his handkerchief
out of his pocket and bent down to wipe his shoes. He also brushed
his hands over the carpet to disperse the bits of stuff that had
fallen, hoping Mac wouldn't notice.
He straightened himself
and returned his handkerchief to its pocket. He adjusted his tie,
checked to see that his suit jacket was done up right and that his
shoe laces were tied.
Satisfied, Harm took a deep
breath.
Alright, Hammer. Charm her socks off.
With that
pep talk in mind, he put a smile on his face and knocked on Mac's
apartment door.
--
Mac tied the knot to her halter
dress behind her neck. She gave herself an appraising glance in the
mirror. It was a very casual dress, but probably still too much for a
friendly night out with Harm. The last time she'd worn a dress –
well it was a skirt, really – to a dinner out with Harm, it had
been in Australia. And he'd shot her down.
Mac sighed. Maybe
she ought to change into something like overalls.
But she'd
worn a starchy uniform all week, and she convinced herself she
deserved this. She loved the feel of a loose hem floating about her
knees, her shoulders bare. Besides, she had the cutest shoes to go
with this dress. She'd just forego any jewelry and heavily understate
the make-up. Just some blush and lip gloss so Harm wouldn't think
she'd gotten the wrong idea and run right for the hills. Maybe she'd
forego the lip gloss, too, just to be safe.
Mac slipped on her
really cute shoes just as his knock sounded at her door. She smoothed
the front of her dress with her palms and took a deep
breath.
Alright, MacKenzie. Remind him why he used to like
having you as his best friend.
With that pep talk in mind, Mac
marched out of her room to open the front door. Well, she didn't
actually march. Her dress made her feel too feminine, and her shoes
were too cute for marching anyways.
Mac pulled open the door,
grinning at the thought of a comfortable, casual evening in the
company of her best friend.
What she saw made her jaw
drop.
Harm was standing at her door in a full suit – tie
included – carrying a really odd flower arrangement. His shoes
even looked freshly polished.
She was mortified. He'd asked
her out on a date? And she'd misread that? What kind of moron
was she? And now she was underdressed and he'd think she wasn't
interested and he'd be embarrassed and this was going terribly,
horribly wrong.
"Am I early?" He looked thoroughly
confused, and just as surprised. "That hasn't happened before."
He added. He glanced at his watch, and his frown deepened.
"I
did say 1930, didn't I?" He looked her up and down. His
confusion faded, replaced by admiration. "You look beautiful in
that dress," He said reverentially.
She stared at him
wide-eyed. How the hell had she missed these kinds of signals? She
was truly an idiot of the first order.
"I, ah, I thought
you said 2000," She lied through her teeth. "Just let me
get changed. I won't be a minute," She said hurriedly, already
turning to go back to her room and find something to wear on par with
his full suit. With a tie.
His frown returned. "You're
doing that lip upturn thing..." He trailed off as realization
dawned. "Wait. You thought I ... You thought we..." His
face fell, his bouquet-laden arm dropped to his side sending a
flutter of green bits to the floor.
Harm looked at the guilt
on Mac's face, the embarrassment in her eyes, and tried to mask his
own embarrassment. He'd just made a complete and utter idiot out of
himself. He'd put on a full suit – and a tie, dammit –
and bought her flowers which he never, ever did for a woman unless he
called her by someone else's name in bed, and he'd come knocking on
her door all set to charm her socks off ... and she was wearing an
incredibly casual – though stunningly beautiful – dress.
He was completely overdressed.
He was such an idiot. He'd
ruined everything. She was probably trying to decide whether to pity
him or laugh at him.
"Maybe I should just, uh, go."
He figured he should leave before he turned to spite to cover his
utter humiliation. How the hell could she do this? He'd been pretty
clear, hadn't he, when he'd asked her out? And she'd smiled at him as
though she knew exactly what he'd meant.
He'd have to
completely overhaul his game plan. If he ever got over the
humiliation of this attempt. He hadn't felt this embarrassed since
his junior year of high school.
He turned around before he
made any more of a fool of himself, set for his walk of shame down
the hallway, when Mac's hand wrapped around his arm holding him in
place.
"No! Wait," She said hurriedly. She tugged
his arm, and he summoned his pride to turn around and face her.
She
searched his eyes. "Harm, I thought you didn't ... I mean, you
said we were at the end." She stumbled over her words, something
she rarely did, looking helpless. It gave him a measure of hope.
"I
thought it was what you wanted."
Shock registered on her
face. "What?!" She exclaimed. "Me? I thought it was
what you wanted."
"But you blew me off on the
Guadalcanal!" He protested with a swipe of the bouquet. A flurry
of flower and plant bits shot out before spluttering to the
ground.
"You were still dating Renée." She
rebutted.
"You put off our talk indefinitely." He
pointed a finger at her.
"You didn't tell me you and
Renée broke it off. I thought you didn't want me pressuring
you!" She crossed her arms over her chest.
"Me! You
said you felt pressured!"
"I just wanted some
time!"
"You stopped talking to me!"
"You
stopped talking to me!"
They looked at each other
for one long moment, assessing the other, before suddenly breaking
into a joint laughter. Both had the grace to look ashamed.
"I
guess we messed up, huh?" He said fondly. They really were
terrible at this kind of thing.
"Big time," She
replied, eyeing the flowers.
"Here," He offered her
the flowers. "These are for you."
She smiled a bit
shyly as she took the bouquet. She fluffed the arrangement and he
watched as more bits of plant fell to the ground and onto her shoes.
Very nice shoes, he noted. Stupid flowers. She'd think he was too
cheap to by the good stuff.
Her smile wavered slightly with
confusion at the mess the stupid bouquet was making. "They're
... different." He lip did that upturn thing.
Next time,
he decided, he was going to go with roses.
"The lady at
the flower store said this is all the rage in horticultural circles."
Harm defended.
"Oh, right." She nodded. "I
think I read about it in a magazine." Her lip was still doing
that upturn thing. Harm rolled his eyes. Women. They could be so hard
to please.
She looked up at him then with a genuine smile,
full of warmth. "Thank you."
He grinned. Or maybe
they weren't all that hard to please.
"You're welcome."
He realized he was still standing in her doorway, one foot in the
hall. He entered her apartment and shut the door.
"So,"
He arched an eyebrow, eyeing her up and down. He really did like the
dress she was wearing. He wanted to kiss her bare shoulders. "Either
I'm overdressed or you're underdressed."
She cocked her
head to the side, giving him a once over. With a brisk nod, she set
the flowers on the table by the entrance and stepped up to him. She
began unknotting his tie. Suddenly, he was very glad he'd worn it.
The way her slim hands were moving around his collar, and the way
silk fabric of the tie slid from around his neck as she removed it
felt very ... nice.
She unbuttoned his top two shirt buttons,
looking him in the eye with a mischievous glint as she did so. He
took the liberty of putting his hands on her hips, his lips twitching
with an involuntary smile. This was going incredibly well for their
first date, he thought.
She slid his jacket off his shoulders,
her eyes still not moving from his, and he was all set to untie the
knot at the back of her neck to free her from her dress.
He
removed his hands from her hips as she slid the jacket off his arms.
He bent down and placed light kisses up her jaw. Her skin was so
soft. She tasted so good, so sweet.
She dropped his jacket on
the back of the couch, and he slid his hands up her arms towards that
tempting knot.
"Roll up your sleeves." She
instructed.
Her words pulled him from the fog of arousal. He
looked at her blankly.
"What? Why?" How would that
help him remove his shirt, he wondered. Or maybe this was part of
some fantasy of hers.
She frowned at him, amused by his
confusion.
"It'll look more casual," She said,
indicating her dress. "Then we can go out for dinner." She
paused as a thought struck. "Unless you made reservations at a
black tie restaurant?"
Harm stared at her. His eyes
drifted towards her bedroom. He thought...
She slapped his
arm, realizing where he was looking.
"Harm!" She
said indignantly, "I was fixing your clothes! Not, you know,"
Her hand gestured towards her bedroom.
Oh. He took a deep
breath to calm himself. He tried very hard not to look towards her
bedroom again.
She watched him thoughtfully as he brought
himself back to reality. Unexpectedly, she started to laugh. "We're
terrible at this."
He chuckled. At least they could find
the humour in this.
"Well, maybe practice makes
perfect." He suggested.
She nodded, still laughing.
"Or
maybe," He cupped her face in his hands, looking intently at
her. "Maybe we just need to get back in sync with each
other."
"How?" She whispered, her intensity
matching his.
He brought his lips to hers, giving her a kiss
that contained the full measure of his intentions. She melted at his
touch, her hands slipping around his waist.
He pulled back to
assess the success of his attempt. She was breathing a bit heavily.
Her tongue darted out to lick her lips, her eyes were glazed.
He
raised an eyebrow in query.
"Mmm," She murmured,
looking up at him. "Good plan."
"I thought so
too," He grinned, "And we agree, which means it worked."
He kissed her again.
His hands drifted to the knot of her
dress. He tugged lightly at it, and Mac immediately grabbed his
hands. He looked at her, confused to find her once again laughing. So
much for his plan working.
"I don't come that easy,"
She teased, dark eyes dancing with delight.
He thought that
nothing about getting to this point had been easy. This was the most
comfortable he'd seen her be with him in a long time; his best friend
was right in front of him
"You'll have to take me out to
dinner first," She was flirting with him in a way he found to be
irresistible. The woman of his dreams was right in front of him.
The
least he could do was feed her, he conceded. She'd need it for later
anyways.
"Alright." He gave her a dramatic sigh,
which elicited the laughter he was looking for from her. He grinned.
"Let me just roll up my sleeves."
"There,"
She said once he was done. "We match."
"We do,"
He agreed. "Shall we?" He offered her his arm.
She
accepted, wearing a warm smile.
"Let's."
--
The
end.