Title: Course Corrections
Author:
Pixie
Rating: PG
Disclaimer: JAG doesn't belong to me, nor
am I making any profit. This story is for entertainment purposes
only.
Prompt: Vivienne
A different ending to Adrift - one
where Mac makes a decision to be honest with herself AND MIC, and
sticks to it. And Harm realizes what he wants after his near-death
experience.
A/N: This is sort of a prompt and a half (is that
even possible?). The bulk of it is based on the prompt stated above,
but the poem at the end (which comes from a second prompt) seemed to
tie it all together with a pretty little bow.
A/N2: This
story completely ignores fraternization issues. You've been warned.
**********
Telephones disassembled the human
voice--turned it into electrical signals, bounced if off of
satellites and through the air in ways she couldn't begin to
understand, ways both mysterious and magical. Somehow her cell phone
caught only the signals intended for her, performed its own magic,
and suddenly words she'd never thought she'd hear were sending shock
waves through her soul.
"Come to me."
She
froze. The river of people split, flowed around her, and reformed,
oblivious to her existence beyond its passing inconvenience.
"Why?"
"So we can talk."
She
hesitated, her thoughts tumbling over each other in a headlong rush
toward the edge of... what? "We already talked."
"Don't
argue with me."
Mac resisted the urge to stomp her foot
in frustration. "I need a better reason."
His calm
response held absolute conviction--and something else she couldn't
quite identify, something that instantly calmed the white-water
tumult in her mind. "You know the reason."
She did
know. He'd never come this close before, never suggested that they
actually face this thing between them head on. The question
was--could she do it now?
"Mac...."
"I'm
here."
"I'm waiting." The melted chocolate
tones made her heart soar. It was what she'd wanted, a closely held
dream edging toward reality after all this time. But could she have
the dream? Did she even have the right?
Without answering
him, she disconnected the call and turned, looking back at the
departure gates. These past days had turned her life upside down,
leaving her rudderless and disoriented. Harm's crash, the search,
finding him but not knowing if he'd live or die.... All of it had
turned her careful plans into so much sawdust. Now Mic was gone, Harm
was finally reaching out to her, and she was standing in the middle
of a busy airport feeling rather like Dorothy must've felt when she'd
found herself plunked down in Oz. How the hell had it all happened so
fast?
She loved Harm--had loved him for years and would
probably always love him. But after that humiliating night in Sydney,
she'd tried to convince herself she could live without him.
Unfortunately, Mic had paid the price for that bit of foolishness.
The pain in his eyes as he'd looked at her that last time had been
heartbreaking.
He'd been good to her, Mic had. He'd not asked
for the treatment he'd received at her hands, and she didn't think
she could live with herself if she didn't at least try to make things
right.
It took an hour to make the arrangements, and only
when she had the ticket in her hand did she call Harm back. He
answered on the first ring.
"Mac?"
"Yeah."
"What's
going on? I thought you were coming over."
She hesitated.
Would he trust her? Would he understand? More importantly, would he
wait for her? "I'm going after him."
There was a
long pause. Then, "Why?"
"I can't leave it this
way, Harm. He deserves better."
He didn't answer, and
finally, desperately, she spoke again. "He's a good man."
"He
must be," Harm said. "You're going all the way to Australia
for him."
She bit her lip. "I went all the way to
Russia for you."
He was quiet again, and she pushed
ahead, needing him to understand. "He was right to leave, Harm.
I couldn't have been the kind of wife he deserved." She paused,
took a breath. "But he gave up his life for me. The least I can
do is go down there and apologize properly."
"How
long will you be gone?" His voice was subdued, but at least he
didn't sound angry.
"As long as it takes."
A
long moment passed, a moment during which Mac prayed he'd understand.
Finally, he sighed. "There's something I need to take care of
here, too," he said. "Something I need to set
right."
"Renee?"
"Yeah."
"Good
luck," she said softly.
"You,
too."
**********
By the time her flight
landed in Sydney, her eyes were gritty from lack of sleep. As she
waited her turn to disembark, she wondered if she'd done the right
thing. Would he even see her? Or would he turn her away, refusing her
attempt to make amends.
She sighed and stood up, gathering
her small bag from the overhead bin. Regardless of what Mic's
reaction might be, she had to do this. She wouldn't be able to move
forward with her life--with Harm--until she did.
It took an
hour to get to the hotel and check into her room, and another half
hour to shower and change. Then she called a cab. She wasn't sure
where Mic would be, but she knew he had friends in town. She'd check
there first. Somebody had to know where he was.
**********
She'd
thought she'd have to hunt for him, so when he opened the door at her
first stop, she stepped back in surprise.
"Sarah,"
he said, obviously less than pleased to see her. "What the hell
are you doing here?"
She swallowed hard, took a deep
breath and answered him honestly. "I came to see
you."
"Why?"
"Is there someplace we
can talk?" She looked around at the busy suburban street.
"Someplace a little less public?"
Several seconds
passed while he considered her request, and she was half convinced he
was going to refuse. Then he shrugged, stepped back, and waved her
inside. As she brushed past him, the familiar scent of his cologne
wafted over her, bringing back memories of happier days.
"Right,"
he said, closing the door. "You're in." He folded his arms
and leaned against the wall.
Mac didn't know what she'd
expected, but it certainly wasn't this cold distance. She took a deep
breath. "I owe you an apology."
"I don't want
your God-damned apology." There was more warmth at the North
Pole than there was in his voice and eyes. "I don't want
anything from you. Not anymore."
"Mic..." She
reached out to him, but dropped her hand when he flinched away.
"I've known girls who were teasers and manipulators, but
you...." He shook his head in disgust. "You're
unbelievable."
"I never meant..."
"Never
meant, what? To take my ring? To tell me you loved me? To lure me
with empty promises and then humiliate me in front of all your
friends?
"You don't understand."
He snorted.
"Then why don't you explain it to me?" He moved away from
her, into the other room.
Following him, Mac tried to organize
her scattered thoughts. She'd hurt him. She knew that. She hadn't
done it deliberately, but looking back she knew she'd used him, and
she didn't honestly know if she could forgive herself for
that, much less expect him to forgive her. Still, she had to
try.
Mic stopped in front of a large picture window. He didn't
sit down, so she didn't either. They faced each other across the
room, and it occurred to Mac that the ocean she'd just crossed was
narrower than the gulf that stood between them now.
"So
when's the wedding?" he asked.
The question startled her.
"Excuse me?"
"I'm not blind, Sarah. And I'm not
an idiot, so don't treat me like one."
"I'm not!"
"Yes. You are." He turned away, staring out the
window. "I always knew there was something between you, but when
you took my ring I assumed you'd put it in the past." He turned
back, giving her a look filled with pain. "You said you loved
me. I thought that meant something."
"I do love
you," Mac said, crossing the room. "I just... I guess I
don’t love you the way you deserve to be loved."
"And
it took a rehearsal dinner and him ditching his plane in the Atlantic
for you to realize it?" He shook his head. "I thought you
were smarter than that."
She sighed. "Do you
remember that night in Sydney? The night you gave me the ring?"
He
didn't answer, just watched her in icy silence.
"I wasn't
thinking clearly, Mic. I was upset and hurt and feeling sorry for
myself. I came out with you that night half convinced I'd always be
alone, that nobody would ever want me."
"So you
decided to settle for me." He shook his head grimly. "I
deserve better."
"You're right. You do. And I'm
sorry." She felt tears well behind her eyes and blinked them
away.
"Your trips down here, the good times we had, our
engagement... Did you get some kind of sadistic pleasure out of
keeping me dancing on your string?" He shook his head. "I
bet you had a good laugh when I gave up my career and moved to the
states."
A flash of defensive anger stiffened her spine.
"I never asked you to do that, Mic. That was your
idea."
"Because I wanted to be close to the woman I
loved."
"But you didn't even talk to me about it.
And once you were there, I felt responsible."
"It
was my decision, Sarah. My choice. If you had a problem with it, you
should've said something."
"I didn't want to hurt
you."
His eyebrows shot up. "It would've hurt a hell
of a lot less than having you dump me at the altar."
"You
dumped me."
"Would you rather I hadn't?"
The
question lay between them, heavy with painful truths.
She
hesitated. Then, knowing there was only one honest answer, she
swallowed hard. "No."
"That's what I thought."
He turned away. "I think you should go."
"Mic."
She reached out, touching him on the shoulder. "I really am
sorry."
He didn't answer, and as she turned to leave,
tears streamed down her cheeks. What a mess she'd made of his life.
Without ever meaning to, she'd damaged his career, his faith in
women, and his ability to trust. He'd move on eventually, but he'd
always have scars from the wounds she'd inflicted.
As she
closed the door behind her, she dried her eyes and squared her
shoulders. She hadn't been able to put things right, and he'd
probably always think badly of her, but she'd apologized and done her
best to explain. In the end, it was all she could do. It was time to
go home.
**********
For the third time in as
many days, Mac found herself knocking at a man's door. Her mouth was
dry as cotton, and her pulse raced. What if he'd changed his mind?
What if he'd decided not to break up with Renee? What if she'd
misinterpreted the things he'd said at her engagement party, and it
turned out he didn't really want her...that way? What would she do
then?
With a sigh, she answered her own question. She'd
survive. She'd be alone, but her experience with Mic had taught her
that it was better to be alone than to settle for half a
relationship.
Then the door opened, and Harm stood there
wearing baggy sweats and a worn t-shirt, and suddenly it was all she
could do to breathe, much less think rational thoughts.
He
gave her a crooked smile. "Hey." Stepping back, he opened
the door wide. "Come on in."
She stepped inside, and
he closed the door and turned to look at her. "You
okay?"
Nodding, she set her purse down on the counter.
"You?" She wasn't just asking about his physical health,
and by the look in his eyes, he knew it.
"Yeah." He
took a step toward her. "Renee's gone home. She got a call that
her father had died."
"Oh." Did that mean he
hadn't broken up with her after all? She didn't ask. It wasn't any of
her business, really.
"She got the call after I
told her it was over between us."
"Ouch." Mac
felt sorry for the other woman. She'd lost her boyfriend and her
father within the span of a few minutes. The pain must've been
terrible. Still, Mac couldn't help the twinge of excitement that
flitted through her at the news that he was free.
"Yeah."
He stepped closer. The look in his eyes made her heart begin an
insistent tattoo against her rib cage. Thump. Thump.
Thump.
"So..." A few strands of dark hair,
visible above the torn neck of his shirt, caught and held Mac's
attention. Thump. Thump. "What now?"
"I
don't know." The response, low and rough, brought her gaze
up--neck, chin, mouth (oh God, that mouth)--a brief hesitation
there--then onward to finally collide with those gorgeous eyes. The
banked fire in their depths warmed her cheeks, and she almost missed
his next words. "I guess that's up to you."
"Up
to me?" Mac tilted her head, took a step...thumpthump.
"Why do you say that?"
"Because I know
what I want." Harm said, and a shiver skittered up her spine.
"But I don't know what you want."
"I
want what every woman wants..." That smile, Mac decided, was
just about the sexiest thing she'd ever seen.
He slid closer
and his voice dropped. Its resonance vibrated through her heart.
Thumpthumpthump "A great career..."
They
were just inches apart now, and Mac wondered if her grin looked as
goofy as it felt. "A good man..."
"And lots of
comfortable shoes." His eyes crinkled slightly at the corners,
shimmering with gentle amusement.
"I've got the shoes
and the career." She lifted her hand, rested it against his
chest, and felt his heart beat against her palm, its rhythm as
erratic as her own. "Been working on those for a while."
His
chest rose, paused, fell beneath her touch. "And the man?"
She
smiled, looking into his eyes. "I suppose that's up to
you."
Lifting his hand, he slid one long finger through
her hair and tilted his face slowly, too slowly, toward her own. She
felt his other hand at her waist and gasped when his thumb brushed
against her breast. That was when he took her, his lips capturing the
small sound, taking it from her, swallowing it, demanding more.
His
arms tightened, pulling her close in a single smooth motion that
brought them together from chest to hip. She moaned at the contact
and deepened the kiss, learning his taste and texture, satisfying the
curiosity that had nagged at her since that ill-fated night on the
admiral's porch.
The feel of him, all corded muscle and male
power, made her arch her back, pushing her hips more firmly into the
firmness of his. Come to me, she said with her body, love
me.
In response, he gentled the kiss, ignoring her murmur
of frustrated longing. He lifted his head and waited for her to meet
his eyes. When he spoke, his voice was low, rough with emotion. "I
won't be your rebound guy, Mac."
She blinked, nonplussed
by the comment. What made him think...? Oh. Yeah. A week earlier
she'd been planning to marry Mic. It seemed like a lifetime ago. "You
aren't, Harm. He was."
He considered that, holding her
gaze while he rubbed circles between her shoulder blades with the
palm of his hand. At last, he nodded and started to close in for
another kiss.
Putting her finger to his lips, she stopped
him. "I won't be your rebound girl, either." It was only
fair, after all, that they clear the decks completely lest they risk
fouling the lines later on.
With a slow smile, he shook his
head. "You aren't. Renee was."
She grinned suddenly.
"What a pair we are."
He cupped the back of her
head, tangling his fingers in her hair and drawing a random pattern
on her skin with his thumb. Mac shivered. His touch was pure heaven.
It was ice and fire, sunsets and moonbeams, and a butterfly just
emerging from its chrysalis.
"Yeah," he said,
pulling her close again. "What a pair."
With that
he bent his head, brought his lips to hers, and made her forget Mic
and Renee had ever existed. And when the world beyond this moment,
beyond this sensation of warmth and love and passion, ceased to
matter; when all Mac could think about was the way he tasted, the way
he smelled, and the way it felt to be held so close in his arms; she
finally acknowledged the truth... This was the way love should
be.
The End
Let me not to the marriage of true
minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it
alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O no! It
is an ever-fixed mark
That looks on tempests and is never
shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worth's
unknown, although his height be taken.
Love's not Time's fool,
though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickle's compass
come:
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears
it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error and upon me
proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
~~Sonnet 116,
William Shakespeare~~