Mother and Daughter Hallmark Moment -
An HBX Fanfic Challenge, May 06
Author: Gibson
Disclaimer:
No copyright infringement intended. Much to my chagrin, JAG
and all characters belong to The 500lb Gorilla.
Category:
JAG continuation (“I Surrender” Series),
Vignette.
Rating: GS
Summary: It’s been so quiet
on the Fanfic boards lately that I’ve been reduced to wading
through all my unfinished fics and trying to finish them off! Sheesh!
Besides, I watched ATW II last night and was overcome with the need
to make things right! I’m actually writing a multi-parter right
now (yes, exactly what I swore I’d never do again!), but it
will be awhile before it’s finished. I really shouldn’t
be taking the time away from that to finish these, so please,
everyone else come back with more stories! ;0)
Anyway, this one is
simple – Mac and Katie have a ‘moment’. It’s
been so long since I started this one, I have no idea how it was
inspired, but I used the May challenge to finish it. Thanks for
reading!
HARM AND MAC’S HOUSE
248 PARK DR N
ARLINGTON
FOREST, VA
16 OCTOBER 2016.
“Mommy, where did you
meet Daddy?”
Mac sat on the edge of her 8yr old
daughter’s bed and smiled. “Well, believe it or not, I
met Daddy at The White House!”
Katie Rabb took a
deep breath in amazement, “Reeeally?” she gasped. “Was
Daddy the President?”
Mac laughed and tapped her
daughter’s nose with an index finger “No Sweetie, he was
not the President. However, the President did give him a medal –
that’s why he was there.”
“Was it one of the
medals that Daddy got for being brave?”
“Yes
sweetie.”
“And did you know right away that you
and Daddy were going to get married?”
Mac smiled and
shifted slightly on the bed. “No,” she shook her head
sadly “I didn’t know right away.”
“So
how will I know when I meet the boy I’m supposed to
marry?”
“Well Katie, maybe you won’t know
right away – sometimes it just doesn’t work that way.”
She stopped and considered carefully – she didn’t want to
confuse her daughter too much but she wanted to be as honest as
possible. “Maybe if I hadn’t had the experiences I had
when I was a little girl, I would have known when I first met him –
I certainly did feel something when we first met, I just
didn’t know what it was.”
“What did you
feel? Did you feel funny?”
“Yes – exactly. I
felt funny.”
“Like butterflies in your
stomach?”
“Exactly like butterflies in my
stomach.” Mac eyed her daughter suspiciously “How did you
know that? Did you meet someone that gave you butterflies?”
Katie
looked down shamefully. “Yes.” She said quietly. “There
was a new boy in class today – Mark Inglis.” She looked
at her mother and when she did, her eyes were filled with tears.
“When he came up to talk to me – he gave me
butterflies.”
Mac put her hand on her daughter’s
back and rubbed gently. “Why are you crying Katie?”
“Because,”
she sobbed “at recess I was walking with my friend Maria and he
came out from around the corner of the school and tripped me!”
Katie leaned her head into her mother’s stomach and cried. “And
then he teased me about my accent! Why would he do that to me Mummy?
I didn’t do anything to him? And… I… I thought I
liked him?”
Mac bit her lip to hide a small smile and
kissed her daughter’s head. “Oh Sweetie, sometimes boys
do that.” She lifted Katie’s head up with both hands.
“And do you know why they do that sometimes?”
Katie
shook her head silently.
“Because they actually like
you and they want to get your attention.”
“Really?”
“Really.”
“Did
Daddy ever trip you to get your attention?”
Mac laughed.
“Yes Sweetie – lots of times.”
Katie
smiled through her tears. “Then he must really like you”
she teased.
Mac bobbed her head up and down in agreement “Yeah
– I think he does. But I didn’t always know that. It took
me a long time to figure out how your Daddy felt about me.”
“Because
he kept tripping you?”
“Well, yes. And also, like
I said, when I was a little girl, I learned not to trust people so
easily. I didn’t have a Mommy and Daddy that told me how much
they loved me all the time like your Daddy and I do. Because of that,
I didn’t trust people very easily.”
“So you
didn’t trust Daddy when you first met him?”
“Well…”
she considered, “I really wanted to… and I think
in a way I did trust him with most things… it’s just
that I guess I didn’t trust him to be the kind of person that I
now know he is.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well,”
Mac laughed, “you have to understand that your Daddy is a very
good looking man… and when I first met him… although I
liked him… I just assumed he was the kind of man that…
well… had alot of girlfriends… and I
didn’t want to be just one of his many girlfriends.”
“Why
not?”
“Well, because it didn’t take long for
him and me to become friends – very good friends, and that was
something special that other girls didn’t have with him.”
“So
you wanted to stay his friend because then you’d be different
from all the other girls.”
“Right”
“How
many girlfriends did Daddy have when you first met him?”
“Uh…
actually, he didn’t really have any that I knew of.”
Katie eyed her mother suspiciously. “I don’t
understand, Mummy.”
“Oh Sweetie, I know this is
kind of hard confusing, but you know how when Daddy smiles, you can’t
help but smile along with him?”
“Yeah – I
like Daddy’s smile – Evan has it too!”
“Yes
he does,” she sighed and shivered slightly at the thought of
exactly what future problems might arise from that. “Well,
when your Daddy smiled at me like that the first time, I knew right
away that he was used to getting whatever he wanted with that smile,
and because I didn’t know him very well, and because I didn’t
trust people so good, I told him right off the bat that there was no
way he was going to use that smile to get me…”
“So
you told him to shove off.”
Mac laughed “Pretty
much yeah”
“But you still were
friends?”
“Yeah.”
“Even though
you wanted to be more than friends? Why?”
“Because
I’d learned that a lot of times, boys respect you more when
you’re just their friend than when you’re their
girlfriend.”
“So you didn’t want to be his
girlfriend.”
“Not at the beginning. Although I
really liked him, I didn’t think he was interested in the same
things I was.”
“Like what?”
“Like
someday having a house and a family.”
“Why
wouldn’t Daddy want that?”
“I don’t
know Sweetie, some people just don’t. But I was wrong about
your Daddy – he did want those things.”
“How
did you know?”
“Well, eventually he got a
girlfriend. And she had a little boy named Josh who was seven years
old.”
“And that made you realize that he did want
the same things as you.”
“Well, I guess you could
say I started seeing him in a different way. I saw right away what a
great Daddy he would be.”
“Was he Josh’s
Daddy?”
“No Sweetie, Josh’s Daddy had died,
but he pretended to be Josh’s Daddy for awhile, and I could see
how good he was going to be at it.”
Katie considered her
mother’s words for a moment and then looked up at her. “So
you think I shouldn’t worry about when Mark Inglis does mean
things to me, because it might not mean that he hates
me?”
“Exactly.”
“Or it
might.”
“Well… yes… it could be that
too.”
“So how will I know which one?”
Mac
lifted the bedcovers up and waited for her daughter to settle under
them. “Because when it’s very important, he will be there
for you.”
“You mean, if someone else picks on me,
he’ll be on my side?”
“Exactly.”
“Is
that how you knew you wanted to marry Daddy?”
Mac smiled
a sad smile. “I guess so. Your Daddy always tried to protect
me, even when we were mad at each other.”
“Did you
get mad at each other alot?”
“Ohhhh Sweetheart…
you have no idea…”
Katie considered this for a
moment. “But how could you like each other if you were mad at
each other all the time?”
“Well that’s just
the thing. If you didn’t like someone, then you really wouldn’t
care much what they thought, would you?”
Katie looked
dubious. “I guess not.” She said slowly.
“Well
look at it this way, is there a boy in your class who you don’t
really play with?”
“Ummm… sure lots of
them.”
“Well name one.”
“Okay.
Stephen MacMillan, I guess.”
“And has Stephen
MacMillan ever tripped you on the playground?”
“No?”
“Ever
tried to put gum in your hair?”
Katie laughed.
“No.”
“And if he teased you about your
accent, what would you do?”
“I don’t
know…”
“Would you get upset and cry?”
“I
don’t think so.”
“Would you run to me and
Daddy and wonder why he’d done something like that to
you?”
“No… I’d probably just think he
was a daftie.”
“Well see, there you go. You’d
probably just ignore him, right?”
“Probably.”
“See…
if you don’t particularly care one way or another about
someone, then it doesn’t really bother you when they do things
like that. It’s only when you have feelings for someone that
you care about what they think and do. That’s why your Daddy
and I used to get so mad at each other – because we liked each
other so much, we couldn’t just ignore what the other one was
doing.”
Katie thought about this for awhile. “So…
the reason that I’m upset that Mark tripped me is because I
like him… but if he doesn’t side with me when someone
else picks on me, that means he hates me?”
Mac tucked
the covers up under Katie’s chin and bit her lip. “Well…
it could mean that… or it could mean that he really
wants to back you up, but he’s afraid of doing it in
front of his friends. If that’s the case, he’s
just not good enough for you.”
“Really?”
Katie bit her lip sadly in an uncanny replica of her mother’s
habit.
“Yeah… or, you might just have to wait a
bit for him to grow up.”
Katie squinted her eyes and
pursed her lips. “Mummy – this is all VERY
confusing!”
Mac slumped her shoulders and blew her bangs
off of her forehead. “I know Sweetie – why do you think
Mommy didn’t get married until she was almost 40 years old?”
She leaned over and kissed her on the nose. “Don’t worry,
Punkin’. You’ve got LOTS of time to figure this stuff
out.”
Katie sighed. “Funny, that’s exactly
what Daddy said too. He also said I can’t date until I’m
30. Is that a long time away?”
Mac sighed and turned out
the light. “Not nearly long enough, baby.” As she quietly
exited the room and turned the corner, she ran smack dab into a wall
of chest. Arms crossed against his stomach, he leaned against the
hallway wall.
“Never mind Mac, thanks for trying.”
“Are
we even now?”
“Not even close, Marine - I didn’t
hear her swear not to date before she’s 30.” Harm smiled
and rubbed one of her shoulders as they descended the staircase.
“Seriously though, thanks Mac. I didn’t quite know how to
handle that one when she came to me. I have a feeling I’m not
going to be so good with the ‘boy problems’”
Mac
smiled. “Why does that not surprise me? Well, at least she no
longer wants you to bring your sidearm to school and threaten the kid
with bodily harm.”
“I’m still considering
it.”
“Great – I can just see the headlines.
Navy’s Judge Advocate General terrorizes Barrett
Elementary School at gunpoint.”
“You never
let me have any fun anymore.”
“I’ll show you
fun, Squid.”
Harm waggled his eyebrows. “Oh yeah?”
He kissed her on the nose as she stepped into his embrace, then
suddenly sobered and looked into her eyes. “I’m sorry I
used to trip you, Mac.”
“I’m sorry I didn’t
understand that it was only because you liked me.”
“I
guess I was never very good at subtle hints.”
“Well…”
Mac smiled seductively, “You’re getting better.”
“Oh
yeah?” Harm flirted back. “Are you picking up on one of
my hints right now?”
Mac looked mischievously down
Harm’s front. “Well… it’s kinda…
hard… not to…”
Harm laughed
and flushed red as he pulled her against him. “Oh, you’re
funny, Marine.”
“Hey, I’m a funny
girl.”
“Yeah, but you’re my
funny girl.” He whispered.
She reached up and ran her
hand down the side of his face. “Sure am, Sailor.”
The
End