Title: The Ties That Bind
Author:
Pixie
Disclaimer: JAG and its characters don't belong to me.
They belong to CBS, and Bellisarius Productions, and some other
people. This story is for entertainment purposes only.
Rating:
Suitable for anybody
Prompt: Written for Deemus, who said,
"The holidays--a season for love, warmth, and family
togetherness. I'd like to see a story with Harm and Mac, a cozy fire,
some doughnuts and hot spiced cider, and serious discussion about
families. Some gifts might also be exchanged...."
A/N:
This is rather angsty and quite possibly not at all what Deemus had
in mind. Everything works out in the end, but the journey's a little
rough. Also, the basic idea for this was mine, but Harm and Mac sort
of took it and ran. Blame them. ;)
A/N2: M.O. stands for modus
operandi. Loosely translated, it refers to a person's typical way of
doing something.
**********
Firelight shimmered
in her eyes when she told him.
It was three days before
Christmas, and she'd been quiet all evening, participating in the
gift-wrapping with a distinct lack of enthusiasm. He knew she'd seen
the doctor earlier that afternoon, and that her mood meant bad news,
but when she got like this, all stiff and silent, it was better to
give her space until she was ready to talk.
The hours had
piled up, one on top of the other, each one stretching his nerves a
little tighter, wearing his patience a little thinner until finally
he couldn't take it anymore.
She'd been struggling with a
piece of ribbon, and when she uttered a colorful curse and dropped
it, fluttering, to the floor, he took her hand in his.
"Talk
to me."
Her eyes flitted to his and then away as she
reached for another piece of ribbon with her free hand.
"Mac."
Pulling away, she moved to stand in
front of the fireplace, arms folded defensively across her chest. He
followed, catching her by the shoulders and turning her to face him.
Worry wrapped itself around his heart.
"Please, Mac.
Whatever it is, we'll work through it. Tell me what's going
on."
When she met his eyes, her own glistened with unshed
tears.
"I got a phone call from Wyoming today."
He
blinked, nonplussed. Wyoming? Who did they know in Wyoming?
"My
mother was in a car accident." The words came haltingly, and she
turned away, staring into the fire as she continued. "The roads
were wet. There was..." In the fireplace, a log shifted, sending
up a shower of sparks. "A trucker...lost control." She
paused, took a deep breath. "She died on the way to the
hospital."
"Oh, God." He pulled her into the
protective circle of his arms, holding her close. "Mac, I'm so
sorry."
After a moment, she pulled away from him and
turned back to the fire, shoulders stiff. "I don't know how the
hell I’m supposed to feel," she said. "And it's
making me crazy."
"What do you mean?"
"I
spent years blaming my father for her leaving," she said. "But
I made excuses for her. He drove her away, I told myself. The
drinking and the yelling and the hitting.... She left because she
couldn't take it anymore. It wasn't until he died that I realized it
wasn't true." She paused, and he waited for her to go on,
knowing she'd talk when she was ready. Eventually, she did. "But
she didn't leave because she couldn't take it anymore. She left
because she was too much of a coward to stand up to him."
"That's
a bit harsh, isn't it?"
"Is it? She could've kicked
him out, called the cops, contacted a hotline.... But she didn't do
any of those things. Instead she walked out on us. On me."
She was angry now, but not at him.
"She loved you,
Mac."
"I'm not sure she did," she said
bitterly. "Or maybe she just loved herself more."
"I
thought you said you forgave her."
"Yeah..."
Mac sat down, pulling her knees up to her chest and leaning back
against the couch. "In my mind, I did." She looked up at
him. "Apparently my heart felt otherwise."
He sat
down next to her, his shoulder touching hers. "So...you can't
let go."
"God, Harm. I don't know! I'm supposed to
be heartbroken, aren't I? Devastated? But I'm not! I just feel like
the black hole of my past is trying to suck me back in!"
"Your
past is what made you who you are, Mac. You can't run from it."
"But
I want to run. I want to run so far and so fast that it never
catches up to me."
"Why?"
She looked at
him, amazed. "You honestly don't know, do you?" Then,
shaking her head, "I guess I shouldn't be surprised, really.
Your childhood was like something out of a storybook."
He
snorted. "Hardly. And diversionary tactics aren't going to work.
We aren't talking about me."
On the stereo, Bing Crosby
was singing about roasted chestnuts and yuletide carols, while by his
side, silent tears were streaming down Mac's face. "I'm afraid,
Harm." Her low voice drifted through the room. He put his arm
around her, pulling her close, and she dropped her head to his
shoulder.
"Of what?"
"They say that
children grow up to be like their parents - that the cycle of abuse
never stops. What right do I have to bring a child into the world
knowing that?"
"Mac, you aren't your parents."
She
lifted her head to look at him. "I'm an alcoholic, just like my
father was. I have a temper like his. Hell, I shot my own husband!
How do you know I won't abandon my child the same way my mother did
me?"
"Because you don't abandon people. You don't
turn your back on those who need you, who count on you." He
turned to her, cupping her chin in his hand and forcing her to look
at him. He wiped her tears away with his thumb. "You were a
godsend for Chloe. You gave that little girl's life meaning. And what
about Mattie?"
"Chloe and Mattie were different.
They were nearly grown when I got involved in their lives. A
baby...it'd be different."
Harm shook his head. "Not
in any way that matters."
She pulled away from him. "How
do you know that, Harm? You aren't me! You don't know what I'd do any
more than I do!"
"No," he dropped his
hand, resting it on her stomach just above the waistband of her
jeans. "I don't. But I've known you for long enough to know what
kind of person you are, and--" he waited until she met his eyes.
"I can't think of anyone else I'd rather have as the mother of
my children."
He heard her breath catch in her throat.
"You deserve a family, Harm. I may never even get pregnant, and
if I do, I could turn out to be a real bitch of a mother." Her
voice dropped, and he had to lean close to catch her next words.
"Maybe this was a bad idea."
"That's what's
really bothering you, isn't it." The answer was there in her
eyes when she looked at him. "You're worrying that it won't
happen, that we won't get our miracle."
"Maybe I'm
worried that we will."
The words hung between them, heavy
with meaning. Without answering her, he stood to put another log on
the fire. Then, crouching, he poked at the flames while he thought
about what she'd said. She wanted a baby. And she'd be an
amazing mother. He knew these things for facts the same way he knew
the sun would rise in the morning. No, he didn't know every detail
about her past, because she didn't like to talk about it. But he'd
gotten a sense of its grimness from hints she'd dropped and comments
she'd made through the years. Yet she'd always seemed so strong and
sure of the person she'd become. What, then had sparked this sudden
self-doubt?
"What else did they say when they called?"
He asked, chasing the ghost of a suspicion.
"Who?"
"The
person who called to tell you about your mother." She didn't
answer, and he turned to look at her. "Mac?"
"She
was running."
Understanding began to dawn. "From?"
"A man."
"They told you that?"
She
shook her head. "No. They asked what I wanted them to do with
her personal things, and when I said they could donate them to
charity they asked if I was sure. They said it looked like everything
she owned was in the car with her."
"Maybe she was
just moving."
Another shake of the head. "I don't
think so, Harm. She'd written me a few months back to say she'd moved
in with some guy out in Portland. She was all excited, said she
thought she'd finally found 'the real thing'."
"Mac,
you're jumping to conclusions. There could be a thousand different
reasons for this scenario."
"There was a little
boy."
That startled him. "In the car with her?"
She
nodded.
"Was he..."
"Just a broken
leg."
"Who is he?"
"Apparently
he's the son of the man she'd been living with." Mac took a
pillow off the couch and propped it behind her back.
"Which
way were they driving?"
"East."
So...Deanne
had packed her stuff, grabbed the boy, and run. From what, he
wondered. "Social services involved?"
"I don't
know. I don't want to know."
"Do you think
she was trying to protect him?"
Mac snorted. "Not
exactly her typical M.O."
"Maybe she was trying to
make amends."
"To whom?"
He looked at
her steadily. "To you."
With a sigh, she lowered her
chin to her knees, and stared into the fire. "It's a bit late
for that, isn't it?"
"Maybe she didn't think
so."
She cocked a doubtful eye in his direction. "That's
a lot of maybes, Harm."
He grinned. "Maybe."
She graced him with the ghost of a smile, and he saw some of
the tension leave her shoulders.
"I could use some
cider," he said, sensing she could use a few minutes alone. Want
some?"
"Hot?"
"If you
like."
"Sounds good."
Squeezing her
shoulder gently, he got to his feet. "Be right back."
He
took his time in the kitchen, warming the cider and adding a plate of
bite-sized powdered donuts and some napkins. Before he took the tray
in, he ducked into the bedroom to get something out of the closet.
Christmas was still a couple of days away, but he figured giving her
one gift a little early wasn't going to hurt.
When he
returned to the living room, Mac had moved to the couch. Her feet,
clad in a pair of whimsical red and green knitted socks, were
stretched out along the cushions. She moved them aside and gave him a
weak smile as he set the tray on the coffee table.
"Sweet
tooth acting up again?"
"Well, you know... powdered
sugar, snow....It's all good." He handed her the package he'd
gotten from the closet. "This is for you."
"But
Christmas isn't until Monday."
He shrugged. "Open it
anyway."
She gave him a questioning look, but did as he
asked; carefully pulling apart the pretty paper to reveal what was
inside. When the wrappings fell away Mac stared at the cheerful cover
of the thick paperback for a moment. Then she gave Harm a perplexed
look.
"Harm, I'm not expecting."
"Yet."
"Maybe
never."
He shrugged. "So maybe we won't have our
baby the old fashioned way. Maybe we'll adopt. Hell, maybe we'll just
get a puppy." He took the book away and set it aside, then
reached for her hands. "I don't care, Mac. The only thing I care
about is you and me and the family we create for ourselves. Anything
else is just icing."
"You aren't bothered by my
checkered past?"
"The only reason it bothers me is
because it bothers you." He brushed a strand of hair away from
her face. "You're going to be a fantastic mother, Mac, and I
hope we have a child of our own. But if we don't, that's okay, too. I
just want us to be a family - be it a family of two or a family of
twelve."
"Twelve?" Her snort of laughter made
him smile. "You're insane, do you know that?"
"Isn't
that why you love me?"
In response, she leaned over and
kissed him, her lips moving tenderly across his. When she pulled
back, she was smiling. "Yeah," she said. "I guess it
is."
He pulled her into his arms, shifting them both
until he was lying back against the cushions with her soft warmth
resting against him.
"So," he said. "What did
the doctor say today?"
Her smile was mischievous. "To
keep trying."
"Oh yeah?"
"Yeah."
"I
like the sound of that." He nuzzled the hollow at the base of
her neck, pleased when she shifted restlessly against him.
"Harm..."
He felt her fingers tangle in his hair. "Hmm?"
"Kiss
me."
And so he did.
The end