From: Coast2C@aol.com Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 21:33:33 -0400 Message-ID: <960430212516_387222389@emout12.mail.aol.com> Subject: Convergence: Part 17 of 25 Convergence by Dana Anderson Part 17 of 25 (Author's Notes and Disclaimer found in Part 1) * * * * Ziggy was every bit as reluctant to run the search through the past as Jenna had thought she would be, and then some. It took every bit of persuasive power that Sam and Al together possessed to convince her they were serious. And a good swift kick at the base of Ziggy's main console, Al thought. His foot still ached. Sam had been enduring a nanosearch for three hours when he reached the point where his nausea had overwhelmed him. Al had helped him out of the Imaging Chamber and deposited him in a chair in the Control Room with his head between his knees. While a janitor worked on the floor of the Imaging Chamber, Al worked on Sam. He retrieved a cup of water and had Sam drink it slowly. When Sam put his head back between his knees, Al draped a cool, wet towel over the back of his neck. "How far did he get, Gushie?" Al asked. "December 23rd, 1957, Admiral" Gushie responded. "A year and a half in three hours" Al grumbled. At this rate, it might take months to find Jen, Al thought. He looked down at Sam. Al didn't see how anyone would be able to endure more than one session like that a day, if that much. He still wasn't sure how long it would be before Sam recovered sufficiently from this state to try again. Sam stirred slightly and leaned back. He had a glazed look in his eyes. Sam swallowed and blinked. "Al, could I have some more water?" Sam asked. "Sure, pal. Hang on" Al replied. Al walked out to the water cooler in the hallway. He returned with a full cup and handed it to Sam. "Slowly," he cautioned "you don't need to see it twice." Sam took a careful sip. He looked at Al. "I think I'll be ready for another go in a few minutes" he said. His voice was even less certain than the look on his face. "Not likely" Al shook his head. No one knew better than Sam what that denial had cost Al to make. Sam took another small drink of water, then cocked his head. A glimmer of an idea shone in his eyes. "Maybe we're going about this all wrong" he thought out loud. "What do you suggest?" Al asked. "Jenna ran the calculations on the retrieval program herself; by hand she said. They were obviously correct. If she wrote the calculations down, where would they be?" Sam asked Al. Al thought for a moment. "In her lab" he answered definitely and bolted for the door. Al returned in a few minutes with a thick sheaf of computer paper that was covered with precise, neat mathematical equations written with a thin leaded mechanical pencil. He deposited the stack on a counter near the main console and barely got out of the way in time to avoid being knocked over by Dr. Sam Beckett's charge to throw himself into the problem. Hours later, he looked up from the last page of calculations. Al's heart sank at the fact that he saw no confident glow of triumph in his friend's hazel eyes. "No dice, huh? Do you think it would work for me to try the nanosearch? It would cut the search time in half" Al said hopefully. "Maybe," Sam said "but hold on a minute." He patted the stack of papers. "This didn't give me an answer, in fact I have some questions about her notation, but it did give me another idea." He turned back to the main console. "Ziggy" Sam began. "Have you completed an analysis of the observations you made during the most recent activation of the Accelerator Chamber?" "Yes, Dr. Beckett" the computer replied. "Display, please" Sam said, and nearly stumbled trying to get to the screen fast enough. Al took a peek at the screen as well, but the symbols displayed there meant nothing to him. They obviously did to Sam, though. He was running his finger down the screen and scrolling forward and back through the data like a bloodhound on a difficult trail in a dense forest. When Sam's head jerked suddenly and his eyes widened, Al jumped back to his side. "What did you find?" Al asked. Sam didn't answer him, but he picked up a light pencil and circled a line of symbols on the photosensitive screen. "Ziggy, the vector I circled on screen one; can it be projected in a meaningful dimension?" Sam asked. "Yes, Dr. Beckett" the computer repeated. "Do so. Then scan along the vector for any sign of brain wave patterns that match Admiral Calavicci's" Sam ordered. "Dr. Beckett," the computer began "There is no rational..." "I don't care if it's the most insane request you've ever been given" Al roared at the computer. "Do it!" "Complying" the computer responded. Silence descended over the room. Sam and Al stood motionless, barely breathing. Long moments later the computer's voice announced, "Brain wave pattern confirmed." Sam and Al locked glances. "Come on, Al" Sam said. They entered the Imaging Chamber together. Al had expected to see a scene from somewhere in the past forty years. Instead, there was only a formless pattern of pale blue light upon which the eyes could not focus. Sam had halted as the Imaging Chamber door closed behind him. His eyes were wide and staring. Al spared him a glance, but only that. His concern, at the moment, was almost wholly for the figure lying, apparently unconscious, on the floor. Al knelt next to her. Her eyes were closed and the muscles in her face were working as though she were in the throes of some kind of fit. Al howled at the ceiling of the Imaging Chamber. "Ziggy, confirm brain wave lock and run the retrieval program." He did not receive immediate confirmation of his order. "Do it now!" Al roared. "Or, by God, I'll personally melt every one of your components down to slag!" "Brain wave lock confirmed. Retrieval program running" Ziggy confirmed. A pattern of blue light, like a visual display of electrical discharge, surrounded Jenna's prostrate form and she disappeared. The plain, white walls of the Imaging Chamber reappeared. Al leaped to his feet and charged past Sam, who was shaking his head as though to clear it. Al left the door of the Imaging Chamber open and ran to the Accelerator Chamber. Jenna's body lay motionless on the floor. Al threw himself down next to her. He lifted her carefully and cradled her body in his arms. Al shifted the support of her to his body and one arm. He put his ear next to her nose and mouth and his free hand on her chest. She was breathing, but very slowly, unevenly and faintly. Al checked for a pulse at her neck and just as he was about to decide there wasn't one, he felt a faint throb in her carotid artery. At that moment, Sam knelt at Al's side. "She's alive" Al said in a strangled voice "but just barely." When they arrived at the infirmary, Dr. Ambrose lifted Jenna out of Al's arms and carried her into the exam room. When Al attempted to follow, Sam held up one arm to block his way. "Stay here" Sam said. "I'll come back as soon as I can and tell you what's going on." Al was enraged. He tried to push his way past, but Sam put his back up against the door and refused to budge. The battle of wills went on and Sam was at the point where he thought he might have to deck his friend when his final appeal to reason sunk in. "Please, Al" Sam implored. "You're just delaying her getting the help she needs." Every trace of combativeness disappeared from Al's expression. Behind it were eyes full of despair and fear. Sam put his hands on Al's shoulders and gave them one quick squeeze. "We'll do everything we can, Al. Don't worry." Sam released his grip on Al, turned and entered the exam room and shut the door. When Sam reemerged from behind the door, Al leaped to his feet. Sam held up a hand. "You can go in, but wait a minute" he said. Al gulped. "How...how" he couldn't finish. "I don't know, Al. I just don't know" Sam admitted. "She's in a deep state of shock." Sam walked over to the coffee maker, poured two cups and handed one to Al. "She's in good physical condition and Dr. Ambrose tells me she has a will of iron" Sam said, then sighed deeply. "There just isn't much in the way of precedent in a case like this." "But she is there, right?" Al managed. Sam nodded. "Oh, she's there all right." Sam watched Al's eyes close in relief. They snapped open again when Sam added, "And if there's anyone who can reach her and bring her all the way back it's you, Al." By the time their conversation had ended and they crossed through the exam room to the ward room beyond, Dr. Ambrose had settled the patient into one of the two hospital beds the room contained. Fear clutched at Al's heart as he was confronted once again with Jenna's condition. Her face was pale and had a pinched expression, as though she were in pain. There were tubes and wires strung from, seemingly, every part of her body. Al recognized the ones designed to monitor her heart beat, respiration and brain waves. There was an I.V. tube in her right forearm and an oxygen line across her upper lip. He decided he didn't care to know what the rest were for. As Al approached the bed he heard Sam tell Dr. Ambrose that he would stay in the office for the night. Dr. Ambrose agreed and said he would be in by eight a.m. to relieve him. Al sat down in the chair next to Jenna's bed, took her left hand in both of his and settled his gaze on her face. *Now it's Al's turn to wait,* Sam thought, as he walked back to the infirmary's office. Sam activated the remote alarm that would notify him of a dangerous change in any of the patient's vital signs and settled himself at the desk with Jenna's medical records. Sam checked on her at frequent intervals during the night. Every time he entered the ward room, he could hear Al's voice speaking softly and gently to the patient. As he became aware of Sam's approach, Al would fall silent and remain so while Sam examined Jenna for any sign of a change in her condition; but his voice would resume before Sam closed the door behind him as he left. Dr. Ambrose arrived at the infirmary at seven thirty the next morning. "How did she pass the night?" he asked. "No change at all" Sam answered, handing him the chart on which he had recorded identical vital signs throughout the night. "Pupils fixed, no response to light, sound or pain. Minor reflex reactions. No signs of consciousness. I've been reducing the oxygen flow gradually all night. I ran a blood gas on her half an hour ago and it's normal." Dr. Ambrose nodded. "I can discontinue the oxygen then. I'll run another blood gas this afternoon just to be on the safe side. Well, at least she's stable." "Don't try to tell Al that" Sam suggested. "I'll leave the Admiral to you, Dr. Beckett" Dr. Ambrose replied. "And you can start now. Do you think you could drag him out of here for an hour or so while I make the changes in her treatment?" "There's only one way to find out" Sam said. Al was not pleased, to say the least, with the idea of leaving Jenna's side for a second. "I don't want her to wake up alone, Sam" he insisted. "She needs to know I'm here." Sam decided to use the tactic that had succeeded the previous night. "She needs you period, Al. And if you don't take care of yourself, you won't be able to take care of her. I doubt you've checked the mirror this morning. If you keep this up she'll wake up, take one look at you and go back into shock." Sam received only a deep sigh for an answer, so he continued. "I'm not talking about taking a day trip to Santa Fe, Al. Grab a shower and a change of clothes, then I'll meet you for breakfast." When Al began to object, Sam held up one hand to cut him off. "If, and only if, I see you eat a healthy breakfast I'll know you're serious about being a help instead of a hindrance to her care." Al had dealt with his share of doctors over the years and knew that human considerations came in a far distant second to the care of the patient. If he didn't go along he was pretty sure Sam would find a way to kick him out of the infirmary. Dr. Ambrose would be even less sympathetic. "Okay, Sam," Al agreed. "You're the doctor." "How good of you to remember" Sam said. * * * * When Al caught sight of his reflection in the mirror of his bathroom he saw Sam's point. He had almost scared himself. His eyes were dark pits with red rims. They, along with his two day's growth of beard, gave him a decidedly Satanic appearance. Al showered thoroughly and shaved. When he opened his closet, the vivid color combinations of his wardrobe assaulted his weary eyes in a mockery to his state of mind. Al decided to dress for comfort instead of style. He pushed his way to the back of his closet and pulled out a pair of tan slacks and a navy blue open necked shirt. *I hope the marine guards know they're supposed to challenge strangers first before they open fire,* Al thought to himself. * * * * If Sam was surprised at Al's choice of apparel, he didn't show his reaction. The same could not be said for Al's reaction to the breakfast Sam had selected for him. "You don't expect me to eat all this, do you?" Al gasped, as he seated himself opposite Sam. Sam nodded. "Yes, I do. You don't see the inside of the ward room again until I see the surface of those plates." Al looked back down at the table in front of him. Sam had loaded a tray with half a grapefruit, a large bowl of cereal, two soft boiled eggs, several pieces of toast, pancakes, some orange juice and a huge glass of milk. "No coffee?" Al questioned. "You don't need it" Sam said. Al picked up a spoon and started in on the grapefruit. Sam returned to his own breakfast and they ate together in silence for a time. Then Al broached a subject he had been mulling over all night. "What was that place she was in when we found her Sam?" he asked. "You recognized it, didn't you?" Sam washed down a mouthful of pancakes with several swallows of milk. He put the glass down and stared at it for a moment before he answered. "Yes, I've been there many, many times." He looked up at Al. "It's the place I went between leaps." Al gave him a startled look. "You never told me you were aware of where you were between leaps." "I didn't remember it while I was leaping. In fact I didn't remember it until I stepped into the Imaging Chamber yesterday, then it all came back in a flash. The pale formless patterns of light, complete silence and then the voice." Sam explained. "Voice? What voice?" Al inquired, looking at Sam's face closely. "The voice that kept asking me over and over if I was ready to leap and telling me, when I asked, that I wasn't ready to go home yet" Sam intoned softly. He kept his eyes locked with Al's, hoping to see belief, if not understanding, in his friend. What he saw was alarm. "Did you hear the voice when you were in the Imaging Chamber?" Al asked. "No" Sam said. "But we weren't really there." "It would have been asking Jen if she was ready to leap" Al said, in a horrified whisper. Sam closed his eyes briefly in relief. He had hoped Al would accept his word. To return the same support he had received from his friend he nodded. "Evidently," Sam answered simply "she said 'No'". Al finished his breakfast and Sam nodded approvingly. "I'll walk down to the infirmary with you" Sam said. "I want to talk to Dr. Ambrose again before I get some sleep." "I'll meet you there" Al said. When he arrived at the infirmary a few minutes later he had an overnight bag with him and a determined look on his face. "I know you just want what's best for Jen," Al said to the two doctors "but I'm not planning to be shooed out of here so easily next time. Can we make a deal?" Sam and Dr. Ambrose held a quiet consultation in the corner while Al stood near the doorway that led through the exam area to the ward room. Finally, Sam turned back to Al. "Okay Al, here are the rules" Sam said. "You can stay here, use the bathroom adjacent to the ward room, eat your meals here and even sleep in the extra bed. But, if either Dr. Ambrose or I feel it's necessary for you to leave the room you'll go, with no argument, and not come back in until we say it's all right." Al agreed. * * * * When Sam returned to the infirmary at six that evening, Dr. Ambrose's first question was "What did you slip him?" "He slept?" Sam asked, relief evident on his face. Dr. Ambrose nodded. "He fought it, but he dropped off about two hours after you left this morning. Got about three or four hours rest. It must have been something mild." "A hearty breakfast and a huge glass of milk" Sam replied. "I didn't want him to wake up feeling groggy and doped up, that would have put him on his guard. We might have to sedate him before this is over." "We might at that" Dr. Ambrose sighed, picking up Jenna's chart. "She's worse?" Sam asked. "The changes in her condition are slight, but all negative" Dr. Ambrose said, handing Sam the chart. Sam looked the chart over and was no more pleased with the trend than Dr. Ambrose. Jenna's respiration, temperature and brain wave activity had remained at a below normal, but steady, level for nearly twenty four hours. Over the past eight hours, her heart rate and blood pressure had dropped slightly but steadily from the readings Sam had been getting the night before. None of her involuntary reactions had improved and her reflex action was marginally weaker. Sam looked at Dr. Ambrose and neither of them liked the prognosis they saw in the other's face. Sam was careful not to let his reactions to the test results he got over the next fourteen hours show in his face. That, in itself, was enough to give Al an answer to the question he couldn't bring himself to ask out loud. Al remained in the chair next to Jenna's bed all night, holding her hand, stroking her face and hair and speaking softly but insistently in her ear. When the shift of doctors changed in the morning, the look on Sam's face was enough to tell Dr. Ambrose what to expect on the chart. Twelve hours later, Sam saw the same look reflected in Dr. Ambrose's face as he wordlessly handed the chart over and left the infirmary. Sam got a cup of coffee and sat down at the desk before subjecting himself to the news. All of Jenna's measurable responses and vital signs were further depressed. Sam rested his head in his hands for a moment. He prepared himself for the fact that, in the next few hours, he would likely be faced with what was sure to be an angry and severe bereavement in his best friend. Sam finished his coffee, rose from the chair, straightened his shoulders and headed for the ward room. The obvious signs of a clean shave and change of clothes were the only evidence that Al had moved a muscle since Sam had seen him twelve hours earlier. He sat in the same position in the chair next to Jenna's bed. When Al met his eyes, Sam saw that exhaustion was starting to overcome the hope that had once held sway there. Suddenly, Jenna went rigid for a moment. Her body shuddered all over and the vital signs on the monitors dropped off completely. Al jumped up and Sam had to move him aside to get to the patient. Slowly, the muscles in Jenna's body relaxed slightly and the vital signs resumed, but at an even lower level. "What's going on?" Al said. "Is she waking up?" Sam winced. *I can't let him go on like this,* he thought. *He has to hear the truth.* Sam turned back to face him. "No Al," Sam said. "She's tired. I don't think she can keep up the fight much longer." Al stared back at him in shock. "Then _do_ something!" "There's nothing I can do" Sam admitted, waiting for Al to respond with even more fury. Instead, Al regarded him with a calm but forceful stare. "Yes there is. You can help me take this crap off her." He waved his hand to indicate the tubes and wires leading from the equipment to the bed. "Then you can leave us alone." Sam remained motionless, gazing at his friend uncertainly. After a minute or two, Al moved past Sam and began to remove the wires from Jenna's chest. Sam finally stirred and stepped over to the bed to help him. When they had finished removing the medical paraphernalia from her body, Sam left the room and closed the door behind him. "He may be a genius" Al said aloud to Jenna "but this time he's wrong. I'm not giving up and you're not either." Al undressed and climbed carefully into the bed. He took her body gently in his arms and rested her head on his shoulder. Al turned his head so that he was speaking directly into her ear. "Please don't leave me" he pleaded. "I need you. I love you. Come back to me." He fell silent for a few moments then added, with a little more strength, "That's an order, Colonel." * * * * End Part 17 of 25