Author: ColieMacKenzie
Subject:
Six Months - HBX Challenge May 2007
Disclaimer: JAG and
its characters belong to Bellisarius Productions. I’m just
borrowing them for my, and hopefully other people’s
entertainment.
AN: Boring train ride led to a spurt of
inspiration and the scribbling down of this little piece. My second
answer to the May challenge (and a little late; oh well), this time
with dialog (a little)! :-)
AN: Imagine the last 7.5
min of FW&FS never happened. *gasp! choke!* Yes, I know. But I
believe Harm and Mac were just meant to be. So this is just another
short exploration of the if, how or when they might eventually figure
it out. Told from Mac’s POV.
Warmest Thanks, as always,
go out to Staz for providing the boost I usually need between the
point the writing is finished and the moment I actually put a story
out there.
Please enjoy, and all feedback is very much
appreciated.
* * * * * *
Six Months
It’s been six months. Six painfully-slowly-passing
months. So slowly, in fact, that she sometimes found herself counting
along the seconds with her infallible internal clock as they ticked
by in mocking certainty.
With a sigh, Mac snuggled farther
under the skimpy complementary blanket. A vain attempt at finding a
somewhat comfortable position to catch some sleep. It was fruitless,
she knew. Sleep would allude her, just like it had so often during
those last six months. Those six lonely months. Six lonely months
without a single contact with him.
The last time she’d
seen him had been at his frocking ceremony. His mess dress in
impeccable order, the four stripes on his shoulders had gleamed,
proud and golden, in the warm, artificial glow of the old banquet
hall. She had swelled with pride for him.
Had danced with him
one last time. While time stood still. Feeling that ancient pull
between them once more. So strongly that it robbed her of her breath.
With his hands on her back he had held her close, the imprint of his
fingers burning through her jacket and straight into her skin. She
had fit her head under his chin. Overwhelmed by the realization how
well they fit together.
Had kissed him under the large oak
frame of the door, when he was leaving and neither one of them wanted
to be the first to say goodbye. Or maybe he had kissed her.
Ignoring
all military protocol during that one suspended moment in time, their
mouths had met with such aching tenderness that the tears she had
suppressed for three days welled up and trailed down her cheeks in
hot, salty drips. The world dropped away around them as he moulded
his mouth to hers. As they kissed through the sorrow, preparing for
the heartache. Simultaneously acknowledging that once more, ‘this
thing’ between them would elude their grasp. They had chased it
away. They had missed it. Or maybe it was never meant to be.
When
at last they pulled apart, his hands cradled her face, wiping away
the lingering moisture with his thumbs.
They hadn’t
said goodbye. Neither could. ‘Good luck,’ she had
whispered, trying to add a smile to her face, just like that first
time he had left, all those many years ago. And just like then, she
couldn’t find the words. While she felt as if she was slowly
being ripped apart, torn into marine-green shreds that would never be
whole again.
And when the door had closed behind him, when
the dark, carved, hundred-year old oak wood separated his retreating
form from her forever, her heart had crashed to the floor. And nobody
but her seemed to hear the deafening shatters.
As if by
mutual understanding, neither had contacted the other. She knew he
was okay; common friends subtly tried to assure that she was informed
of his achievements, as she was certain he was of hers. He was a
complete success in his command position, but that didn’t
surprise her in the least. Mattie was with him and doing better, much
better than initial prognosis had predicted. Mac was happy for the
girl, and glad for him. At least he wasn’t alone. Not like her.
‘Self-pity doesn’t become you, Mackenzie,’ she
chided her own thoughts.
Trying to occupy her restless mind,
she grabbed the book she had brought, but the letters swam in front
of her eyes, blurring together into big black blobs. Damn tears!
Six months ago, she had picked up her boxes, and the thousand
pieces of her broken heart, and had moved all of them to San Diego.
Where she unpacked those boxes, moved things on shelves and in
closets, before she attempted to assemble this thousand-piece-puzzle
her heart had once been, only to find that it was impossible. The
largest piece was missing.
Twice before, they had been
separated for such a long stretch of time, but this time, it felt
different. Time seemed to stand still, and every day seemed a little
longer than the last. Instead of getting better, every day she had
felt a little worse for wear. Exponentially growing
desperation.
It’s been six months. Six long,
heartbreakingly lonely months in which she had missed him so much
that her bones ached. In which she found that the sun she had so
craved during long winter months in Washington could no longer warm
her. That the tang of the ocean she had always loved now tasted too
salty, and the air always had a chilling bite. In which this career
she thought she had wanted no longer held its previous appeal,
because she couldn’t share it with him.
In which
memories, sentences spoken and words left unsaid revolved in her mind
like a carousel that never stopped, and every turn on its axis
brought back the same, vivid, mockingly colorful images. Over and
over and over again.
‘Come to me. You know the
reason.’
‘What matters to me is that it happens
between the two of us.’
‘Nothing’s changed,
I’m still here.’
‘When you’re ready,
let me know.’
And then one morning she had woken up
to another beautiful, meaningless sunrise and to the realization that
she had spent almost six months to the day without him. To find that
nothing had changed. And she decided that she would.
Her email
had been short and to the point:
Harm,
United
Airlines, flight # 1227
Departs: San Diego, 28 Oct 2005, 1300
PST
Arrives: London Heathrow, 29 Oct 2005, 0730 GMT.
Sarah.
Then she had erased ‘Sarah’ and replaced it
with ‘Love, Sarah.’ That, too, fell victim to the back
button on her keyboard, until she settled for ‘Love, Mac.’
That was the essence. Her.
She had put her most senior
attorney on staff in charge and had taken an obscene amount of leave
days in one go. Had packed a suitcase full of sweaters and raincoats
and boots while the sun twinkled gaily into her bedroom window.
And
here she was, on a plane with her barely cobbled together heart
jumping out of her throat and her mind in constant turmoil.
He
hadn’t replied to her email. She hadn’t expected him to.
She had made no plans in case he… just in case. There
were options, she knew; a last minute trip to some secluded island
came to mind. Where she would be able to hide from the world,
preferably forever. But she blatantly refused to think about any of
this.
And then it was time. Time to unbuckle her seatbelt.
Time to put on her jacket, and shoulder her purse, and to face
whatever may come of this. The beginning – or the end. With
every minute that passed during that hour she stood around, first
waiting for her suitcase, then in line at customs, she grew more
nervous. Until her hands were shaking so badly that she could barely
hand her passport to the immigration officer, which earned her an
unfriendly glare.
She had gone through so much, yet in that
moment when she stepped through the doors of the arrival’s hall
of the airport, she thought she had never been as afraid before in
her life. Rooted to the spot, she glanced over the masses of people.
Bile rose in her throat when she couldn’t spot a familiar face,
but she gulped it down. Suddenly she felt so silly; flying ten and a
half hours due to a spur-of-the-moment decision, even though it had
been bred for six months… Tears welled up while her mind raced
through the possibility that maybe it had all been imagination on her
part, maybe it was too late, maybe it was never meant to be, maybe he
had already moved on; maybe, maybe, maybe.
Then she felt it.
That familiar tingle on the back of her neck, spreading down her arms
and her spine in warming lassitude. This feeling that had always been
there, even in their darkest hours. The one that told her he was
close.
She spun around and there he stood. Harm. Her best
friend. Her soul mate. Her other half. The love of her life. He
smiled, a warm, tender smile that crinkled his eyes with the soft
lines he had developed over the years. Oh what a fool she had been to
believe that she could ever get over him. He was her destiny.
Their
eyes connected, and then she flew into his arms. Suitcase and purse
dropped to the ground while her arms clung around his neck and his
hands held her tightly around her waist. She needed to feel him
close. Closer still. His shirt absorbed her tears and she inhaled his
deeply familiar scent, revelled in the strength he exuded and the
warmth his hands sent into her skin.
She felt one of his
hands leave her waist, travel up her back, over her shoulder. His
fingertips trailed along her jaw. Until he cradled her chin between
his thumb and index finger and turned her face away from his neck. Up
to face him. She gazed up at him through heavy-lidded eyes, her whole
body infused by a delicious weightlessness that only he could create
in her.
He kissed her then. Fit his lips to hers with soft
touches and nips. She eagerly responded, and then he delved deeply
into the hidden recesses of her mouth. He kissed her slowly,
passionately, and laced with the same gut-wrenching desperation
pouring out of him that she had felt for the past six months. She
matched his strength and catered to his weakness. Waves of pleasure
washed over her body, finally infusing her fingertips and toes with a
warmth that they had lacked ever since their separation. Her skin
tingled and she kissed him even deeper, and the gaping hole in her
heart filled with an almost audible click.
These last six
months of pain and desperation, of loneliness and aching, had only
served to strengthen this thing between them once more, and now it
was time. For them. When at last they pulled apart, Mac cradled his
cheek with her hand, feeling his very light stubble tickle against
her palm.
“I’m glad you came,” she
whispered raggedly, still breathless from his heart-stopping kisses.
“So am I,” he answered with a smile, rubbing the
tip of his nose against hers. Growing serious, he held her eyes with
his and added, “but it wasn’t an easy decision.”
She gazed over his shoulder into the distance, not really
seeing any of the flurry of activity in the crowded terminal. His
kiss had been more revealing than any words ever could. It told her
that whatever she had gone through these past months, her feelings
were matched by his. It was a stunning eye-opener. Why had she always
so desperately needed words?
“I know,” she
acknowledged, and then she turned back to face him and smiled softly.
“But it was right, I promise.”
He nodded, still
serious, and played with a few strands of her hair that fell around
her face in long waves. His fingers then trailed across her cheeks,
down her nose, and across her lips. She wanted to close her eyes,
overwhelmed by his tenderness, but she couldn’t. She was
captured by his eyes.
And then it broke out of him, something
she hadn’t seen on him in a long time – his full-blown
flyboy smile, the one that had captured her heart that very first
time he had ever flashed it at her, even though she would never admit
it. She didn’t think she had ever been this happy before in her
life.
He picked her up under her arms and twirled her around
until she was cheering with joy, feeling free and young and carefree
and ecstatic. When at last he stopped, she looked down on his face
and gave him the answer that had taken her years to reach.
“I’m
ready. You?”
He slowly led her slide down until her
feet were back on the ground, but didn’t relinquish his grasp
on her. Holding her eyes with his piercing gaze, he cemented their
future.
“I love you Mac. Let’s get married.”
THE END