From: bewalton17@aol.com (BEWalton17) Newsgroups: alt.tv.quantum-leap.creative Subject: QL: The Enemy (Chapter 15) Date: 2 Dec 1998 05:04:46 GMT Message-ID: <19981202000446.27332.00000947@ng-fc2.aol.com> CHAPTER FIFTEEN He left the Project like a thief, avoiding notice, leaving no word as to his whereabouts. He'd had another long session with Beeks earlier. This time he'd spilled his guts, about everything. She'd listened carefully and sympathetically, even helping him sort out exactly what his feelings were wherever they were unclear. And yet, he felt no different. She hadn't been able to do anything to make the guilt go away. Tina had been in the control room with Gushie and Sammy Jo Fuller, doing a routine diagnostic. Ziggy was submitting with no complaint, which was unusual, but everyone was acting unusual lately, and Al could think of no particular reason why the hybrid computer wouldn't follow suit. He wondered if they knew he'd noticed how they all walked on eggshells around him, or that he thought that if he had to endure that dance of evasion again, he might scream. So he'd slipped along the back wall, and into the corridor that led to the surface. His car was waiting in the sandstone garage; he climbed into it gratefully, turning off the intercom system. And now he drove hellbent through the waste lands, not knowing where he was headed, or caring whether or not he got there. It was the speed that mattered, racing against the devil, against time, and against himself. Against himself most of all. The road wound snake-wise through the sand, the tiny edge lights blinking a bright warning red. The State police would no doubt be alerted to him by now; the road sensors reported every thirty seconds or so. Al didn't mind. There wasn't a Statie in the country that could keep up with the turbo-charged government prototype, even before he'd started modifying her. It wasn't flying, but it was as good as it could get on the ground, and sometimes, if you really put yourself into it, you could almost feel the ground fall away behind you, see the horizon expand, feel the blast of the g-forces as you tore away from the pull of the Earth's gravity... Al had been grounded for nearly fifteen years, ever since his eyes had started to weaken. They still weren't bad; it just took a little adjusting to find a good reading distance, and sometimes he wore glasses for the strain. But rules were rules. He wasn't 20/20 anymore, and his wings were effectively clipped. None of his friends were flyers, and none of them really understood what it meant to give up the sky. Ruthie might have understood, of course; if she'd been born in a different decade, she might have been up there herself. It was Ruthie he'd thought of the first time he'd flown a plane, Ruthie riding pillion on the Harley he'd bought with his summer stock earnings when he was sixteen, her arms wrapped tightly around his waist as she shouted Faster, go faster! into the wind. That had been nearly ten years before he fell out of the sky into the Vietnamese highlands, and nearly thirty before she'd left him standing in the cold florescent light of a faceless courtroom. It was his best memory of Ruthie, the only one that wasn't touched with guilt, and the only one he would never share with anyone except Ruthie herself. He hit a fork in the road and stopped to flip a coin. Heads, right; tails, left. Heads. He eased the steering wheel to the right and blasted off again. He'd called her earlier, after talking to Verbeena -- hoping for what, he didn't know. She'd reached for the disconnect button as soon as she recognized his face on the vuphone screen. "No -- wait, Ruthie. Please." Her hand stopped, but her fingers still hovered over the button. She had aged, he noticed; her hair had thinned somewhat and her face had grown gaunt, but the aging was more obvious in the way she moved, and in the emptiness behind her eyes. "What do you want?" "I'm not sure." She laughed, a harsh, bitter sound. "So, what else is new?" "I've been thinking about you, Ru." "Is that so?" "And about Nate." "You're a little late on that score, Albert. You should've been thinking about Nate fifteen years ago." Al winced, and waited for the disconnect signal to show up on his screen. It didn't. Ruthie just stared into the viewer, waiting for him to go on. He didn't know what to say. Somewhere in the background, he heard a door open. Ruthie's eyes darted over her shoulder. "You're late," she said to someone. A teenage girl with dark hair and eyes appeared at the periphery of the screen. A pair of figure skates was draped over her shoulder. "Sorry. Practice ran late." "You should've called." "My humblest apologies." The girl walked away with a sardonic tip of an invisible hat. "Your daughter?" Al asked. Ruthie nodded. "Miriam. Misi. She thinks she's going to Olympic tryouts for '04." "Why shouldn't she?" Ruthie looked at him blankly. "If you're calling to give me parenting advice, Albert, I somehow suspect I can live without it." "I'm not." "Then what is it? I really don't want to talk to you." Al closed his eyes and thought, then opened them again. "Ruthie, if there was one place in our lives, between us, that you could change, just go back and change, what would it be?" "I'd stay in _shul_ the day I met you," she'd said, and disconnected. Al had stared at the flashing screen for nearly a minute, then turned it off, picked up his jacket, and left. Another intersection, another coin-toss. This veered him to the left. Nate would've been twenty-one the previous February. He'd be finishing college now. Al wondered what school he would've gone to, and what he would've studied there. Would there be some girl, someone special? If so, what was happening to her now? Was she wandering around, lost, drifting from man to man, certain that one of them was the one she was looking for? Hell, he thought. It could be Tina. There were buildings coming up fast on his right, and somewhere or other he had missed the last turn away from the town. With a resigned sigh, he downshifted and let up on the gas. Beeks thought he was crazy. She didn't say so in so many words -- the headshrinkers never did -- but it was pretty clear what she meant. She spent a lot of time trying to cure him, anyway. She talked a lot like Sam did; It wasn't your fault, was a perennial favorite, along with There was nothing you could have done. Many of his friends and a couple of his wives seemed to feel honor-bound to alleviate any guilt he had ever felt. The problem was, this time he really was guilty. There was no way around it, or under it, or over it. And he was getting tired of the people around him telling him that what he felt wasn't valid. Besides, even if it *wasn't* valid, for awhile at least it was *useful*. No one else seemed to understand that. Sam could use it as a lever to pry him away from Nate. He pulled into a gravel parking lot and stopped the car. The silence was suddenly deafening. He got out and gulped cold desert air into his lungs. He reached into the car and pulled the keys out of the ignition, surprised to find that his hands were shaking. The red stone building rose in front of him, light beckoning through the front door. Why am I here? He knew. He climbed the steps slowly, and pulled open the heavy wooden door. Across the foyer, two narrow doors were set into the wall, leaning chummily against each other. His hands were no longer shaking as he stepped inside. He sat, crossed himself, and said, "Bless me, Father, for I have sinned..." *** Misi Weiss had recognized the man on the vuphone screen immediately. He had changed -- pretty drastically -- but there was no mistaking him. He was the boy from the River Ward series, the only paintings of Mama's that were still considered gallery-worthy. And that meant he was Nate's father. And that *further* meant that he was -- Click. -- about to get hung up on. Misi was surprised it had lasted as long as it had. Mama blew through the kitchen like a whirlwind, slamming drawers and cupboards; Misi stayed in the shadows under the stairs, hoping she would remain unnoticed. Her coach, Peter Nagaya, and her partner, Derek LeClaire, who both considered her a grandstander -- she'd cost them five tenths of a point in their last meet, when she'd tried to do a triple axle instead of a double from a throw and landed on her ass -- would be surprised at just how talented she was at becoming invisible. As long as Misi could remember, her mother had been subject to dark, furious moods. She never lashed out at the people around her, but the moods were frightening nonetheless. When her parents had gotten divorced, Misi had originally wanted to stay with her father, but it had freaked Mama out so much that she had acquiesced. Besides, Mama lived closer to the rink, and the rink was always a blessedly cool haven. There was something about the chilled air, or about soaring above the ice balanced on Derek's arms, that made everything else go away. And, to be fair, it wasn't always awful with Mama. She had more good days than bad ones, and Misi never for a moment doubted that she was loved and cared for. Sometimes too much. Mama had started her skating when the doctor had told her a sport would be good for her weak lungs. Daddy had wanted her to try track or baseball, but Mama had watched her watching the skaters on television, and knew that, whatever the financial strain (and it was considerable), this was the right sport. But the first time she'd seen Misi thrown six feet across the ice, she'd tried to pull her from pairs, and her first serious injury (a knee problem that had been fixed to Misi's satisfaction) had brought shrill demands that she stop training altogether. Daddy had defused the situation, but Mama still made her opinion on the subject known at every possible moment. After all, she had Already Lost Nate. That, if anything, was the refrain of Misi's life. Nate the Great, the brother she had never known, who could apparently do anything and everything (except skate) better and sooner than she had. Nate was dead, and Mama blamed his father, although it sounded to Misi like the moral equivalent of blaming the weatherman for a lightning strike. She supposed Mama kept her sense of moral superiority by screaming her head off every time it looked like Misi might break a nail. At least that was what Daddy said, or what he meant when he said, "Your Mama Already Lost Nate, honey. She doesn't want to Lose You Too. One of these days, she's going to see that you know what you're doing." Misi was almost fifteen. She was still waiting for that day. Daddy told her not to give up hope, even though he himself had been a victim of Mama's mood swings (he'd made the terrible mistake of encouraging her to get back to her painting, and she'd slapped him with a mental cruelty charge; he'd left quietly rather than put anyone through the process that would inevitably follow). Mama appeared in the kitchen door, a silhouette against the bright ceiling light. "I see you back there, Miriam." Misi stepped out into the hall. "You're going to wreck your eyes spending all that time in the dark." "My eyes are fine, Mama." "You're spending too long at the rink, Misi. I don't like it." Misi held her tongue. "Did you get a ride home from someone, or were you waiting for a bus out there in the dark?" "Derek's father drove me home." "And if I called him, would he tell me that?" "Yes." This was true. Misi preferred taking the bus -- it made her feel more self-reliant (hell, more *self*) -- and Derek's father had agreed to say he'd dropped her off any time Mama wanted to know. "Was that Nate's father on the phone?" Mama leaned against the door. "Yeah." "What did he want?" "I don't know." She shook her head. "He asked me what I would change in our past, if I could change anything." "And you told him you'd rather not have met him?" Mama nodded. "Is that really true?" She thought about this for awhile. (Oh, man, it's going to be a long one if she's this thoughtful, Misi thought.) "No, I suppose it isn't," she said. "It's sort of a pointless thing to ask, don't you think? Even if you *could* go back and change something, how would you ever know whether or not it was an important thing?" "I don't know, Mama." Mama went into herself for a minute, then came back out. "I'd keep Nate home where he belonged," she said finally, and brushed past Misi into the living room. Home where he belonged, Misi thought. So instead, you want me to stay home where I *don't* belong. Great. But someday, that would change. Daddy had promised. Someday, Mama would learn to live with what happened to her son, and let her daughter go about the business of living. So Misi waited. And waited. And waited. *** Tina was on the phone with her stepmother when Nathan Calavicci's chance of survival edged above fifty percent. There was no great flash of knowledge; there wasn't even an announcement from Ziggy when it happened. It just happened. Jenny had called maybe twenty minutes before, and they'd been chatting pleasantly about this and that ever since. Tina wasn't really paying attention. Jenny was only ten years older than she was, and they had become good friends after the initial shock. Tina just pretended that Jenny was sleeping with someone other than her father, and everything was fine. It hadn't always been; Tina remembered being painfully embarrassed of being seen with her, especially when her father was with them (well, truth to tell, she still didn't like to be with both of them, even though she was in no position to throw stones anymore). She'd thought it demeaning to her father, whose sole interest in Jenny was obvious to anyone who looked at them. It had also seemed unfair to her mother, who, after all, could never be so young and beautiful again (Tina figured another divorce was probably imminent now that Jenny was nearly forty; her father would no doubt want to trade up again). Mostly though, she'd been weirdly jealous. Jenny was so close to her age that the wedding had felt more like an adoption than a marriage, and Tina had never wanted a sister. Out of nowhere, she thought: Sheesh... no wonder Nate hates me. I'm closer to his age than Jenny is to mine. "Chrissi?" Jenny said on the other end. "Christina?" "I, uh... Jenny, I, like, have to go." He likes heavy metal, but he doesn't dress it. He wore an earcuff for awhile, but he never pierced his ear. "Are you okay?" "Yeah, look, something's going on here... " He met me at Al's door once and said "Does your mother know you hang out with him?" "Okay, I just wanted to tell you -- " "Tell me later." Tina hung up with no further ceremony and ran for the door. His eyes are dark blue. You once thought, If he were only ten years older... The thoughts began to get confused as she ran down the corridor, and to fade as she entered the control center. By the time she found anyone to tell, they had dissipated. Nonetheless, she knew it was, like, happening. Somewhere back there or out there or wherever it was that the Leaps really happened, it was happening. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Barbara