Disclaimer: Don’t
own’em
Title: Fighting the Odds
Author: Keru
Prompt: Give up for a second
and that is where you will finish. You face a major challenge now,
but persist and you will win the admiration of one most important to
you.
Word Count: 4, 931
Category: Romance
Rating:
PG
A/N: Season 10, following Four Percent
Solution.
Summary: Mac resolves to fight for her four
percent. Now to muster her resolve and inform the other
party.
--
Fighting the Odds
Mac stood
outside Harm’s apartment, hand suspended in midair, unable to
knock on his door. This was silly. She'd been in this exact same spot
not too long ago and had found the courage to knock. That time, Harm
hadn't answered the door; Alicia Montes had. And it had sent her
courage scuttling to the dark corners of the hallway. She'd hoped
that it would slink back to her tonight. After all, a lot had
happened since that night, including one meaningful conversation with
Harm and many more with Commander McCool. Which were why she was
here. If only her cowardly courage would find its way back to
her.
This time, Alicia Montes wouldn't answer the door. And
even if she did, Mac wouldn't walk away. She would invite herself in
for dinner—hopefully they hadn’t gotten beyond dinner
yet, it was still early—and find a way to tell Harm that four
percent wasn't too much of a gamble. And then convince them both
their futures were worth staking on those odds.
But first she
had to knock.
Mac rapped her knuckles against the wooden door
and held her breath. Please let him be alone. It would make this so
much easier. She'd never really fought for a man’s attentions
before, let alone Harm’s. Tonight, however, was about more than
fighting for Harm’s attentions. She was fighting for herself.
The last year and a half had shown her that giving up on a sure
friendship hurt a hell of a lot more than hoping for an unsure love.
And sessions with Commander McCool had shown her that she was
suffocating her chances at happiness. That was even sillier than
searching the dark corners of a hallway for courage.
The door
swung open and Harm stood before her. Alone. She released her breath.
Her heart resumed beating.
“Mac. Hi.” The surprise
was evident in his tone. He studied her warily, concern creasing his
brow.
“Hi.”
She waited for him to invite
her in, but he just kept staring at her. She fought the urge to
straighten her clothes or check her hair.
“Umm, am I
interrupting something?”
He shook his head quickly,
ending his unnerving scrutiny of her. “What? No, no.” He
opened the door for her. “Come on in.”
“Thanks.”
She took two steps into his apartment and stopped, unable to go any
further inside. Awkwardness rooted her feet to the floor and made her
skin itch. This was hard, and he didn’t even have any company
over. She threw a glance behind her, catching a glimpse of the
hallway before the door shut. Her courage had chosen to stay outside.
Wimp.
“Let me take your coat,” he offered.
Mac
hesitated before shrugging out of her jacket and her discomfiture.
She handed Harm her jacket, but couldn’t shed the
discomfiture.
Harm took her coat and hung it up. “Can I
get you anything? Coffee? Tea? Maybe some …” He trailed
off, raising an expectant eyebrow.
She bit her lower lip,
waiting for him to finish. They both knew which drink she would
choose.
“… Hot chocolate?” He continued, a
smile lit his eyes.
“Yes, please.” She nodded,
finding herself excessively pleased by the inane exchange. It seemed
that some things about them would never change. Some things, on the
other hand, needed to.
“Hot chocolate it is,” he
said gallantly.
He headed to the kitchen. She followed two
steps behind and sat on one of the barstools, watching him as he
worked. It was comforting to know that such normal activities as
making a warm drink on a cold day still took place in the world.
His
voice brought her attention back to him. “So, what’s
up?”
This was it. She took a steadying breath. “I
had an appointment with Commander McCool today.”
“Do
you want to talk about it?” He glanced at her over his
shoulder, a guarded look on his face.
She saw expectation coil
itself around his frame as he waited for her answer, tightening his
grip on the spoon he was holding. She hated that he had to go through
all of this on her account; she wished things were simpler.
“She
said I should interact with people. Talk about things. Anything, that
is. Not necessarily about …” Her words anchored
themselves to her tongue. She wanted to say, ‘And I can only do
that with you’. But the words wouldn't let go.
Harm
nodded. He opened his mouth to say something. She cut him off
quickly, not yet ready to relinquish control of this conversation.
“How’s Mattie?”
He turned his gaze back to
the saucepan in front of him, stirring its contents steadily. “She’s
doing well. School’s out for Christmas, but she won’t be
able to visit until well into the New Year. Tom’s taking her on
a ski trip to Vermont. Mattie plans on snowboarding. It’s way
cooler than skiing, apparently. But I’m just paraphrasing. Her
actual words were: ‘It’s sick’. I assumed that was
a good thing.”
She heard his smile and swallowed the
wave of nostalgia that roiled her heart. She had missed him so much
this past year, his easy-going tone, his devil-may-care smile. She
struggled to keep her voice light. “Better snowboarding than
aerial skiing.”
Harm laughed and shot her a warning
glare. “Don’t you go giving her any ideas.”
“Me?”
Mac threw up her hands in exaggerated innocence. “Wouldn’t
dream of it. My hands get sweaty at the mere thought.”
“I’m
with you, there. I prefer to fly with wings strapped on.”
They
both laughed at the image that conjured.
“Hey,”
he continued after a moment, “I have sugar cookies in the
cupboard by the fridge.”
“Really? I love sugar
cookies!” She paused. “But, since when do you stock
them?”
His shoulders rose and fell in a casual shrug.
“Consider it my attempt at getting into the holiday
spirit.”
“But you don’t even like sugar
cookies.” Maybe he'd bought them before he found out that
Mattie couldn’t make it. “Does Mattie—”
He
stopped stirring and turned. Their eyes locked and the intensity of
his gaze caught her off guard. Maybe this would be less of a fight
and more of a mutual surrender. Maybe he'd already surrendered and
was waiting for her to put her weapons down. The idea of facing him
without any defences unsettled her. She looked away, breaking eye
contact.
She wanted to kick herself. Attempt number one:
failure due to retreat. She'd have to try again.
She thought
she heard him sigh, but when he resumed speaking she detected no sign
of regret. “I also have ginger snaps. And chocolate
fingers.”
“Ginger snaps.” Those brought back
memories. “As a kid, I always wanted to make a gingerbread
house. Well, not make it as much as decorate it.” She looked up
to see Harm watching her, his eyes awash with tenderness. She fought
the urge to fidget and instead shifted her gaze to the saucepan
behind him. “I always knew exactly how it would look, too, with
icing, gummy bears, candy canes, smarties, chocolate squares.”
The idea of a house made of candy always warmed her. It seemed to be
one of those dreams she'd never outgrown.
Harm’s chuckle
drew her attention away from herself, “You’ve given this
a lot of thought.”
She shrugged, “Christmas in our
house wasn’t the stuff of fairytales. I liked to imagine what
it could be like the next year, if maybe I …” She
stopped, catching herself before she said too much. “Well, the
next year.”
What had she been about to do? She didn’t
want to talk about the litany of regrets and sadness that littered
her life like driftwood after a receding tide. As it was, she could
imagine the look of pity on Harm’s face; she couldn’t
bear to see it. So she kept her stare on the saucepan full of warm
milk and chocolate. And it wasn't as though every Christmas had been
bad, either. There'd been good things in her life, too.
“But
when Uncle Matt was around, it was great.” For the first time
tonight – hell, for the first time in a long time – she
felt genuinely happy. “One year, he got a permit to go to
Prescott National Forest to cut a fresh tree. He took me with him,
let me pick the tree.” She laughed wistfully. “I picked a
beauty, too. Full and tall. Right out of a story book.”
Her
smile faded as the rest of the memory took shape.
“My
father had a fit, though, when it came time to throw out the tree
after Christmas, at the mess it made. It was an unpleasant Thursday
night.” She paused, remembering. “Friday was when the
city collected the trash. Thursday was when my dad got his pay
check.” Mac took a breath. She was rambling.
“Anyways,
Uncle Matt stopped coming over for Christmas after that.” She
sighed. “I always wish I’d asked him for a gingerbread
house, instead.” Remembering that she was in Harm’s
kitchen, Mac shook her head lightly, dismissing the memory.
She
looked at Harm and found he was still watching her. She refused to
acknowledge the look of pity she knew he would be wearing. This was
the first time she had ever talked about her Christmas tree or her
secret wish to decorate a gingerbread house. Her gut felt like lead
at having parted with something she had kept hidden for so long. Yet,
oddly she felt ten pounds lighter. So instead of trying to figure out
what Harm was thinking, she grinned. The room really did seem a
little brighter. It felt good to talk. Well, more good than bad.
Maybe McCool wasn’t such a quack after all.
“I’ll
get those cookies while you finish up the hot chocolate. Cupboard by
the fridge, right?” She waited for his nod.
“Right.”
Mac
headed to the cupboard and pulled out several packages of sugar
cookies wrapped in cellophane and ribbons.
“Wow. You
really did go all out.” She reached into another cupboard for a
plate and began arranging the cookies, amused by Harm’s sugary
flight of whimsy, “You got all kinds of shapes here: Santas,
reindeer, snowmen …” she trailed off, puzzled.
“What?”
His question cut through her confusion.
“What is this
supposed to be?” She stared at the oddly bent cookie she was
holding. If she squinted, it might pass for a candy cane.
“Which
one?”
She held up the cookie for him to see.
He
barely spared it a glance.
“It’s a sleigh.”
He answered without hesitating and returned his attention to the hot
chocolate.
“You don’t think it looks like a candy
cane?” She looked at it again. “It looks like a candy
cane.”
He came up to her and took the cookie, examining
it carefully. “Definitely a sleigh.” He turned it around
in his hands and took another look. “Oh, now I see the candy
cane.”
“Poor workmanship.” She shook her
head in disapproval. “But hey, it’s not like you’re
an expert at buying cookies.”
Harm grinned. “There’s
one way to solve this puzzle, Mackenzie.”
She paused in
the middle of arranging the Santas to look at him. “And what’s
that?”
He held her gaze as he slowly brought the cookie
to his lips. He took a small nibble, and then a larger bite. He
chewed thoughtfully before giving a decisive nod. “Definitely
tastes like a sleigh to me.”
She laughed at his
silliness while he kept grinning at her, watching her arrange the
cookies. As the seconds stretched, the weight of his stare made her
self-conscious. His eyes had the same look they'd had at the
admiral’s Dining Out, when he'd told her he was willing to cash
in on their five-year old deal. Deliberately, Mac lined up the last
of the Santa cookies on the plate to buy time.
“All
set.” She forced a genial tone. “How’s that hot
chocolate coming along?”
Now she really wanted to kick
herself. Attempt number two: failure due to retreat. She'd have to
try yet again.
Harm pushed himself off the counter. “It’s
ready to dazzle your taste buds. Bring the cookies with you.”
He grabbed two mugs, poured the hot chocolate into them, and headed
to the couch in the living room, cocoa in hand. Mac followed with the
cookies, wondering at his mood. He was being incredibly patient with
her. She wished things were simpler.
They made themselves
comfortable on the sofa, and Mac picked a snowman-shaped cookie off
the plate, only because the snowmen had more icing sugar than the
other shapes. She noted the small tree in the corner of the room, its
branches bent under the weight of the ornaments. It must be a
remainder from his Christmas last year, with Mattie. He didn’t
usually decorate his tree with such gusto. She glanced at Harm. He
seemed to be searching his hot chocolate for the answers to life’s
mysteries.
“The hot chocolate is great. Thanks, Harm.”
Mac bit back a sigh and stared at the coffee table. Wonderful,
Mackenzie. That was a shameful way to kick off her third attempt. She
wondered just how far down the hallway her courage had
retreated.
“My pleasure.” Harm set his mug down
and sat back. She felt his eyes resting on her.
Silence crept
back into the space between them. Mac sipped her cocoa and tried to
formulate another earth-shattering comment.
Harm beat her to
it. “Have you spoken with Chloe recently?”
“I
haven’t been much good at …” Mac sighed, her gaze
shifted back to the tree. “That is, after all that happened, I
needed to regroup. I haven’t made any social calls in a
while.”
“Hence McCool’s recommendation,”
he said slowly, in that way he did when he was processing new
information.
“Hence.” She nodded, grateful that he
understood and yet worried about what he would say next.
“I
don’t know if you want to hear this, Mac, but I admire
you.”
Abruptly, she turned in her seat and stared at
him. “Admire me? I’ve left a trail—” Mac
stopped herself. She was doing it again. Saying too much. If she kept
this up, she would end up spilling everything to him and she didn’t
know if there were enough paper towels in the world to clean up this
kind of mess. She looked away.
He brushed her hair away from
her face, his fingers gentle against her skin. She froze, startled.
Her need to lean into his touch vied with her instinct to jerk away,
leaving her paralyzed. It was a disconcerting struggle. She hoped he
couldn’t see it.
“But you’re here, Sarah,
aren’t you?”
Good point. She was here. She had
knocked on his door. Now she had to fight. Or surrender. She was too
nervous and off-balance to remember what exactly she was supposed to
do, beyond take a gamble on her four percent.
“Harm.”
Mac cleared her throat. “Can I ask you something?” She
could do this. She would see this attempt through.
“Sure.”
He sounded wary, and she considered withdrawing her question. But his
fingers were still in her hair and his hand was resting on her
shoulder, so she plowed ahead. She would see this through.
“Umm.
Just answer. You don’t need to comment or say anything. Just
yes or no. Okay?” So far so good. She didn’t think she
sounded too nervous. She fiddled with her mug while he considered her
request. Harm took the mug away and set in on the table before
speaking.
“Yes,” he paused. “How am I doing
so far?” He was trying to put her at ease but she could see the
apprehension lurking behind his grin.
Mac tried to smile but
failed. She tightly clasped her empty hands together and rested them
on her lap.
She took a deep breath. “When I came by the
other night, Professor Montes was here and I … well …”
Suddenly, Mac wasn’t sure what exactly she was doing. Was she
allowed to ask Harm what he was doing with Alicia Montes, what his
plans were with her? Did she even have the right? Over the years of
their friendship and that nebulous spectre of something more, so many
lines had been drawn and blurred and erased and redrawn that she'd
lost track. She didn’t know where she stood anymore. She wasn’t
sure what she could ask without intruding or where she could intrude
without being unwelcome
To hell with courage. She’d work
with her fear of failure: she’d be damned if she screwed up
three times at the same mission. She braced herself. “I was
wondering if you and she were …” The tremor in her voice
irritated her. “Are you seeing her?”
“No.”
He sounded amused and yet, somehow, cautious.
Mac held relief
at arm’s length. The feel of his fingers in her hair was
shoring her resolve. Maybe her courage had just needed a little
coaxing. “Are you interested in her? In seeing her?”
“No.”
The note of finality in his tone caused her to glance at him. He was
watching her again, in the same way he had at the admiral’s
Dining Out.
Now she welcomed relief with open arms, embraced
it like a long-lost cousin. She closed the distance separating her
from Harm, pulled her legs up under her on the couch and laid her
head against his shoulder.
He put his arm around her, rested
his cheek against her crown and sighed, the tension in his bearing
seeping away.
She stayed where she was, her head on his
shoulder and her gaze on the small tree in the corner. “Are you
still here?” It seemed to her that her voice had been robbed of
any certainty, any strength. She cleared her throat.
“Yes.”
His spoke just above a whisper. She closed her eyes and concentrated
on how his words felt against her hair.
His answer inched open
a door that she thought had been shut. “You’ll always be
here, won’t you?”
“Yes.” It was a
promise and a confession. She fought back the tears.
“You’re
still waiting.”
“Yes.”
She sighed.
All this time wasted in doubting. “And I’m being unfair
to you.”
“No.” He was emphatic, his tone
sharp with conviction.
She turned her face up to him, knowing
that he wasn’t being honest. She was being unfair, letting her
insecurities and the trauma of the last year govern her behaviour and
question his.
The wariness she saw in his eyes saddened her.
She vowed to make it up to them both. “I’m sorry. Thank
you. I’m ready.”
“What?” he stared at
her, looking genuinely startled.
She felt the urge to laugh;
all that came out was a tremulous breath. “It was really hard
to say the first time. Do I really need to say it again?
He
took her hand in his, his other arm still wrapped around her. “No.”
The way he said it made her suspect he was the one now hugging relief
like a long-lost cousin.
This time, she did manage a quiet
laugh. She turned in his embrace and placed a hand over his heart.
Her tone was serious, her words even more so, “I’m
working on all this.” She waved a hand over her shoulder in
acknowledgment of the things she couldn't yet name, “It's a
lot. And I … And sometimes I think that I don’t deserve
your support after all that happened. I handled it badly. Whatever I
felt, I shouldn’t have said it to you like that. I should've
done better by you. I should've tried harder.”
His
expression was serious, but his eyes were warm. “No.”
She
frowned, “What does that mean?”
He remained
silent.
She studied his face; she was sure she could see
humour hiding behind his solemnity. “For god’s sake,
Harm, say something.”
His eyebrow quirked, amusement
twitched one corner of his lips, “That wasn’t the kind of
question I could say yes or no to.”
She nudged his
shoulder playfully. “Jerk.”
He took her teasing in
stride and grabbed her hand before she could pull it away completely.
Then, he glanced down at their joined hands and sobered. “Mac.
We haven’t been at our best for a long time. And,” he ran
his fingers along her cheek, “you deserve everything the world
has to offer, Sarah.”
She leaned into his touch. “I’m
working on trying to believe that.”
His eyes roamed her
face, “Through this entire screw-up, or maybe because of it, I
realized something.”
She waited for him to continue, but
he remained silent, his attention riveted on her face, “What?”
she prodded.
His gaze focussed on her eyes, “I’d
rather lead a completely screwed up life with you in it, than a
perfect one without you.”
That might just have been the
most sweetly dysfunctional compliment she'd ever been given. “With
our track record …” She trailed off, looking away. No,
she wouldn't hide behind banter tonight. She was surrendering her
weapons, taking a chance. She tried to memorize the way anticipation
and warmth lit his eyes in the moment when she finally took the
gamble for her happiness, for their happiness. “I’ll
always be in your life, Harm—however you want me.”
“I
just want you.” He leaned towards her and brushed his lips
against hers. Deliberately, they deepened the kiss, trading doubts
and confusion for promises and declarations.
When they pulled
apart, Mac rested her forehead against his, yet again fighting the
sudden urge to cry. He tightened his embrace, pulling her closer. He
must have sensed her distress. She tried to shrug it off. She would
not cry. She would not cry. “This is silly. I don’t know
what …”
“Not silly, Mac.” His soft
voice chipped away at her tenuous resolve, “Hey, it’s
going to be okay.” He pulled her closer still, rested his cheek
on top of her head.
With those words, with the feel of him
around her, the dam broke. She wanted to believe it so badly. Wanted
to believe in the comfort he was offering, the words he was giving
her. She burrowed deeper into him, wishing she could just crawl
inside him, wrap herself in his scent, feel the coarseness of his
cheek against her temple and the low vibration of his voice against
her ear forever. And he was offering her forever. She couldn’t
hold back her tears. She buried her face in his neck and curled her
fists into his shirt, trembling as she cried.
He held her
tightly, silently.
Long minutes later, her tears slowed and
she wiped her face with the back of her hand. She rested her head
against his shoulder. Her nose grazed the damp column of his neck. It
seemed to her as though her skin had been shed along with her tears,
leaving her exposed and vulnerable.
Silence settled over them
again, but it was a different kind of silence—heady with hope
and promises and glimmers of sunlight. Another memory surfaced,
unbidden. This one of her grandmother telling her about the magic
that floated in this world—magic that skirted the edges of
disbelief and hung in the air like fairy dust, suspended and
sparkling and waiting to be seen through the eyes of faith. She'd
never believed her grandmother’s tale before this moment. She'd
never had reason to look for magic before. But tonight she could see
it.
It was spellbinding.
Mac pulled back to look at
Harm.
He was watching her fondly and she thought that right
now, maybe he believed in magic, too.
She trailed her fingers
along his jaw, traced his lower lip.
Suddenly, fondness
transformed into playful smugness.
“What?” She
asked indulgently, waiting for the punch line.
“I’ve
never felt like Georgie Porgie before.”
“What?”
She frowned, perplexed. Georgie Porgie?
“Pudding and
pie.” He grinned. “Kissed the girls and made them
cry.”
Mac laughed, shaking her head. It never failed to
amuse her how he could wear cockiness like a second skin.
He
sobered slightly. “I hope to get different results next
time.”
Mac arched an eyebrow as her fingers resumed
tracing his lower lip. “And when would that be?”
His
eyes darkened with intent and he leaned in to offer another kiss,
this one warm and deep.
Mac smiled at him as the kiss ended.
“How’s that?”
Harm shifted against the sofa
and turned her to face him. She was pleasantly surprised to find
herself straddling him as he reclined along the length of the couch.
He rested his hands on her hips and sighed with satisfaction, “Much
better.”
“Well, I think we should give it another
go. I know what a perfectionist you are.”
He happily
complied, bringing his lips to hers.
A few minutes later, Harm
murmured between kisses. “This is shaping up to be a wonderful
Christmas.”
Mac draped her arms over his shoulders and
laid a trail of kisses along his jaw. “I had hoped it
would.”
She felt his pause and knew that he was about to
put the pieces into place.
“You planned this ...”
She
pulled away and studied him. She was feeling ...euphoric. The mission
had been a resounding success. Hell, she could probably use the
momentum from this win to take over the whole damn world. She
informed him of the obvious, “A Marine always has a plan.”
She
noted that he was gleefully grinning away, arrogance brightening his
eyes. “And if I'd said that I was seeing Alicia?”
She
knew he was teasing, but she suddenly felt the age-old insecurities
latch onto her happiness and squeeze. She dropped her gaze and
counted the buttons on his shirt to give herself time to regroup.
McCool definitely wasn’t a quack—this wasn’t easy
and it definitely wasn’t a quick fix. But, she reminded
herself, she was sitting on Harm’s lap and they were making out
like it was going out of style. She looked up and gave him a
mischievous wink. “Oh, I was ready to fight for you.”
Harm
raised an eyebrow. “Really?” He stretched out the
syllables, sounding surprised and pleased.
“Yes.”
She nodded. “Not only am I an expert marksman, I’m also
trained in hand-to-hand and kickboxing. Taking on a law professor for
you is small fry.” She was dismayed by the note of
vulnerability in her voice. Well, she reasoned, he'd seen her at her
worst and then three notches beyond that, and he was still here. It
was time to stop worrying.
His next words surprised her.
“You’ve had me for a long time, Sarah MacKenzie.”
Mac
traced his eyebrow with her finger, her other hand resting on his
chest. “That was sweet, Harmon Rabb.”
He grinned,
brushing her hair from her face before returning his hands to her
hips, “It was, wasn’t it.”
She laughed,
partly distracted by how the slight stubble on his cheek felt under
her fingers. It occurred to her that in all the years she had known
him, she had never really touched his face or, for that matter, felt
his skin against hers. There had always been a barrier. Unless, of
course, one or the other of them was in mortal danger. This was a
nice change.
“So you had a contingency plan?” His
thumbs were tracing slow circles on her hipbones.
“Yes,
a plan B.” She ran her fingers through his hair, massaging his
scalp, enjoying the feel of it. They had so much of each other to
explore. So much to touch and to feel, so much to give.
He
closed his eyes and sighed as she continued her ministrations. “And
what was plan B?”
She stilled her motions and waited for
his eyes to open and focus on her. When they did, she beamed at
him.
“Handcuff you to your bed and have my way with you
until I was all you could see.”
“You already are
all I see,” he said matter-of-factly.
She hadn’t
smiled as much in the last six months as she was tonight. And the
night was still young. “Wow, Rabb,” she swatted his chest
playfully. “That’s the second sweet thing you’ve
said to me tonight.”
“Only the best for you,
Sweetness,” he winked.
She hadn’t laughed this
much in the last six months, either, “Hat trick!”
“Well,
don’t get used to it, Marine,” he warned, his hands slid
up her waist.
“Don’t you worry, Sailor. The day
you become predictable is the day I become a vegetarian.”
He
mulled over her comments for a moment. “I think we could work
on that.”
“How about we work on other things.”
She leaned in for another kiss but he stopped her, their lips inches
apart.
His expression was intent. “I love you, Mac,”
he whispered. Then he bridged those last inches and kissed her,
pulling her down until she was lying on top of him. The kiss was
ardent and consuming and ended too quickly, by about twenty
years.
She struggled to catch her breath, and stared at him,
memorizing the way happiness and affection lit his eyes when they
took their first step in beating the odds. “I love you. So
much.” Her voice trembled and was unsteady, but she had never
been more certain of anything.
He caught her lips in another
searing kiss, his hands gliding down her back, around her hips and
along her waist, caressing her sides. She was halfway through
unbuttoning his shirt when he asked, his lips never leaving hers,
“Did you really bring handcuffs?”
Her laughter
floated through the magic surrounding them.