From: kitkin@aol.com (Kitkin) Newsgroups: alt.tv.quantum-leap.creative Subject: WHATEVER IT TAKES 7/9 Date: 10 Jun 1996 22:21:51 -0400 Organization: America Online, Inc. (1-800-827-6364) Message-Id: <4pil7v$55p@newsbf02.news.aol.com> WHATEVER IT TAKES PART 7 "He went back and changed it so Beth waited for me, didn't he?" He paused with that expression of remembering back to something, then continued, "Like before, when he leaped into that undercover cop. I tried to get him to make it happen back then," he said with a tinge of guilt to his voice. "....but,....but he couldn't." The bartender was listening compasionately, as Al continued. "So what you're saying, is that Sam chose to make THAT leap INSTEAD of coming home." The bartender nodded, and said softly,"No greater gift has man than this, that he lay down his life for a friend." "Lay down his life?" Al asked with a stricken look in his eyes. Putting up his hands in a gesture of quelling Al's worst fear, the bartender broke into a smile and said, "No, I didn't mean his physical life Al, ...more like his life as he knew it back home." Al closed his eyes and sank visibly against the bar with a loud sigh of relief. "Oh, thank God." he said, and then quickly looked at the bartender with an uncomfortable smile. "So, if everything is jake with me and Beth, then why didn't he just come home after that?" The bartender thought a minute, then said, "When Sam decided to make that change for you and Beth, he saw it as a sacrifice that he was willing to make for you." "Sacrifice? I don't follow." Al said shaking his head. "Well," the bartender said, pulling at his chin as if in deep thought."I think Sam figured that if Beth were there for you when you were repatriated, that you'd both live happily ever after, and your life would take a completely different course. " Al listened with growing interest, as the bartender explained further. "You would no longer have been the bitter Ensign Calavicci, who stayed in the navy because he didn't care what happened to him anymore, and so, you wouldn't have gone on to become the highly respected and decorated Admiral Calavicci--- retired, who ..." Al picked up the drift of where this bit of logic was headed, and finished," Who..., with all his clout, made the funding possible for all those expensive projects, like Star Bright." Here, he checked his theory with the bartender who was solemly nodding his consensus, then continued, "So, no clout, no working at Star Bright, no out of control drunk beating up a vending machine, drawing attention from 'Good Samaritan', Sam Beckett. So, now we don't meet, no funding for project Quantum Leap, and......BOOM! NO PROJECT TO COME HOME TO!" Getting up to tend to the customer who was now holding up his empty glass, the bartender paused in front of Al, "I'd say give that man a cigar, but you've already got one." When the bartender returned, Al said,"Now, let me get this straight. Sam hasn't come home, because he thinks that by changing up the events that originally led up to the two of us meeting, he created some sort of paradox, where he figures he's trapped himself in time?" "Essentially." the bartender concurred with a slow nod. "So, if there's no more Project Quantum Leap, then what would have become of Sam?" The bartender gave a slight shrug, and then commented,"I think to Sam, he would just physically wink out of existense and memory back there, and simply begin a new life of leaping for all eternity." Al's face fell into an expression of despair, "Aw Sam", he said out loud,as if his best friend were the one sitting next to him, "it didn't turn out that way at all." he finished, and then looked hopelessly at the bartender. "No, that's true." The bartender stated. "You continued to make the Navy a career, the two of you still met, and the Project was still built. Destiny can be funny that way" With his elbows propped on the bar, Al ran his hands wearily through his hair, and let his forehead come to rest on his palms. "He just should've come home when he had the chance." After a minute, the bartender said, "Even if things didn't turn out the way Sam thought they would, at least he did get Beth to wait for you." Looking ashamed, Al now said something he thought would never have occured to him to say, " I wish he hadn't. HE just should've come home, and lived happily ever after with Donna." "But what about you and Beth?" the bartender asked."Aren't YOU happy now?" Al now sat upright,and stated, "No, as a matter of fact, I'm not. I SHOULD be, I love her; I've always loved her. We even have kids! But....," He paused and his expression became one of hopelessness. "for some reason, something went a little ca-ca when Sam made that leap. Beth is with me all right, but I don't have any memories of our life together." Not wanting to wallow any further, he pulled up out of his own pit of dispair, and turned his thoughts to someone else. "Then, there's Donna. She's still waiting for Sam to come back. All she has is this HALF-Sam, and THAT'S dying! And...and.." Al motioned wildly, his hands making small circular movements. "And?" the bartender prodded. "And,....I just don't think Sam would have meant for it to turn out this way is all." Al said and then made a gesture sort of like an umpire declaring the runner 'safe'. It seemed to say,"There it is, all laid out " "You sure that's all?" the bartender asked. The question caught Al off guard momentarily, and he struck a wide-eyed pondering expression. When Al had been in the orphanage as a child, he had a teacher, Sister Margarite. When ever he had done something bad, but not been caught at it, she had a way of asking him if there was anything he wanted to tell her, about the incident. He always got the feeling that she already knew about it, but just wanted to hear it from his own lips.And although he never would have ratted on a friend, when he himself was the perpetrator, he always ended up telling her. Feeling now the same way he had back with Sister Margarite, and suspecting that the bartender too already knew the answer, Al added with a sigh, "I told Sam the last time I saw him, that what ever it took, I'd get him out of this." "Well," said the bartender with a warm smile, "It sounds to me like there's a wrong that needs to be put right." Al started to question the comment, but began to feel a strange tingling sensation all around him. The last thing he saw, before he leaped was the bartender's smiling face. ......................................................................... ............ September 1968 "Don't say a thing to him Jennifer, he just wants money so he can buy some cheap wine or dope." The woman with the green coat said to her daughter. "But mom, he really looks hungry, and it's only a dollar." Jennifer countered, as she came up to Sam and put the money in the hat he held out in front of him. As the woman in green pulled Jennifer away, and up the street, scolding her as they went, Sam looked down at the hat. Besides the dollar, there appeared to be about 65 cents in assorted coins. "Oh boy," Sam whispered with a touch of disgust,"I'm a bum." He gathered up the money, and slipped it into his pocket."At least I won't be a penniless bum." he thought as he walked down the alley. Just as had been told to him, the leaps had indeed become harder. Not because he had to try and figure out what to do all by himself now, from what he could remember, there had been times before when he had had to do just that. Deciding who he was supposed to help presented a challenge sometimes, but some how, he always managed to piece it together. He glanced skyward with a smile, and was more than just a little convinced that it wasn't simply his keen deductive powers at work, he knew he wasn't in this alone. But loneliness is what Sam felt most of the time, and THAT'S what made it harder for him. If he saw a man from behind, who was dressed kind of out of the ordinary, he found himself checking them out, just to make sure. Once, he had even gone into a tobacco shop just to smell the cigars, but left fairly quickly when he remembered that he didn't much care for the smell of them. No, it wasn't the cigars or the clothes or even the flamboyant tales of conquest that he missed, it was just Al. Reading a discarded newspaper as he continued down the alley, Sam read, "The San Fransisco Herald, 1968. Well, that takes care of where and when." He started to page through the paper, and suddenly stopped as he remembered."1968? Oh my gosh! Senator Robert Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King will both be assasinated! I can telephone the FB...." In mid thought, Sam flipped back to the front page."September,...Damn it! So much for either of those wrongs being put right." he said in angry frustration, as he let the newspaper fall from his hands. Emerging from the alley, Sam made his way up the street, trying his best not to look like a pan-handler. About half way up the block, he saw a rotating neon sign that read, "BUS". As he headed toward the brick building, it occured to Sam that being a homeless person had it's obvious drawbacks, one of which was finding a public facility when nature called. He stood in front of the bus station, debating whether or not to go inside and use their restroom. As he weighed his options, he watched the people getting off the bus that had just pulled into the unloading zone. One in particular caught his attention. She was pretty, dressed in jeans and one of those gauzey peasant shirts with the embroidered sleeves and neck. Sam remembered Katie having one like it once. He saw too that she was very young, probably 14 at the most. Her eyes were wary of everyone, and Sam could see how out of place she looked here."Probably the way I look most of the time." he thought to himself. He also noticed that besides a denim jacket decorated with studs, she carried only a purse with her, sort of a large leather pouch really, slung over her shoulder, and no luggage. She had all the ear marks of being a runaway, Sam thought, and he watched as she made her way into the terminal. Unfortunately, Sam was not the only one watching the girl. Rick Waters also had his eye on her, as she headed for the ladies room. He was medium height, with greasy blonde hair pulled back in a ponytail. He always dressed in cheap flashy shirts that he wore tucked into the skinny waistband of his equally cheap polyester bellbottoms. Snakeskin cowboy boots and a cowboy hat completed his fashion statement."Now ain't that jus' the bes' lookin' piece you seen today." he crooned to himself."Bet she's lonely too. Well, ol' Rick the Slick'll take care of you." He moved to a bench closer to the hallway where the bathrooms were, to wait for his prey. Sam hadn't noticed the thin blonde man in the ugly clothes, but he had seen where the young girl had gone. He decided that it would be a good idea to keep a watchful eye open. He tried to wait in the little hallway, but he noticed that several of the bus terminal's personel were keeping a watchful eye on him too. "Of all the times NOT to leap into a woman," he thought to himself. "at least then, I could go right in there with her." Sam finally broke down and went in the mens' room, not only to keep from causing any further suspicions, but his immediate needs were becoming pressing. ...................CONTINUED IN PART 8................................