McQueen had finally left his window and gone to bed, but he tossed and
turned before falling into a restless sleep. He woke a few times during
the night. Twice he thought Dr. Kirkwood was standing over him as he
slept. If they were dreams, he was glad they were peaceful ones. She
had starred in too many of the violent ones he had had when withdrawal
from the Greens had his mind raging out of control.
“Major?” Dr. Kirkwood woke him early the next morning. If she had
really been in his room during the night, she didn’t look it. She was
her usual neat self. Hair in a fancy braid down her back. Lab coat
over a soft looking blouse that was tucked into pleated wool slacks.
“How are you feeling this morning?”
“You probably know the answer to that better than I do!” He growled.
“Ohh, not a morning person, are we?” Jen teased. “Okay, here’s the
deal, McQueen. I checked with Dr. Werner and he agrees with my
assessment. You need to get out of here for a few days. Then it’s back
to work to get you fit.”
“I get a pass?” McQueen schooled his face to hide all he was feeling.
The terrors of detox were fresh in his memory, but he would do anything
to get out from behind these walls for a while.
“Well, a conditional pass. It’s really more of a supervised outing.
And I’m the supervisor,” Jen pointed to herself. “I’ll pick you up
around 1400 hours. Pack a bag for four days. I have to have you back
by lights out on Sunday night.”
“Where are we going?” McQueen asked as Jen headed for the door.
“It’s a surprise, but don’t worry. Your reputations is safe,” she
laughed as she talked. “The woman who raised me will be there.” Jen
made it as far as the door before turning back to the scowling man in
the bed, “by the way, dress in layers. You’ll need it.”
Eight hours later they were maneuvering out of the harbor at Newport
Beach, in Jenny’s 36 foot sailboat, Windswept. She waited until they
cleared the outer marker buoy. Then she cut the motor and talked
McQueen through raising the sails.
“Ever been sailing before, McQueen?” Jenny tugged the bill of her
scruffy old, UCLA Sailing Team hat lower on her forehead and pulled her
ponytail out of the opening in the back. McQueen settled on the seat
beside her in the aft section of the boat, where the helm was located.
“No,” he looked over at the gleaming wood deck and polished brass
fittings. “She’s a beautiful craft.”
“Thanks, she’s an old lady of the sea. The man I bought her from told
me she was built in the 1920’s. Her original owner used her to run rum
up from Jamaica during Prohibition.”
The thunder of heavy guns could be heard to the south of their
position. McQueen jumped to his feet, tense, ready to throw Jenny to
the deck. His hand going for his right pocket where his knife would
have been if he wasn’t in detox.
“It’s okay!” Jenny reached out a hand to him, “it’s the Marines on
Camp Pendelton. There’re a number of islands owned by them in this
area. They often use them for war games. You can hear the guns when
the wind is blowing in the right direction, but only for a few more
miles.” She watched as he forced himself to relax. “Sorry, I should
have mentioned it.”
“Are we going to launch an attack on Pendelton?” McQueen grunted, his
arms crossed over his chest and legs splayed. The Greens had robbed him
of his iron control. It had caught him by surprise that it wasn’t back
yet. He had learned early, jumping at strange noises could get him
killed.
“No, not today.” Jenny laughed, remembering a childhood incident that
had gotten her grounded for months. “We’re going to Catalina for the
next few days. And before you make a face like that, no we aren’t going
to play tourist. I grew up there. My home is above Catalina Harbor on
the Pacific side of Two Harbors. At the Isthmus end of the Island.”
McQueen’s eyes ran over the sails and churning water. It felt good to
have the wind and sun on his face. The quiet speed of the sailboat was
like a different kind of flying: soothing. He felt his muscles
relax. “This seems familiar and.....better.”
“I had hoped it would. I can’t give you your sky and stars,” Jen
pointed upward. “So I thought I’d share mine with you.” She watched the
compass and the sails as she talked. Her hands sure and steady on the
small wheel. Careful to give McQueen time to digest her words.
The man was stunned at the gift she had given him. He stood there,
his body swaying, as they moved through the water. Trying not to watch
the woman whose casual words could reach in and touch a piece of his
core.
“There’s a thermos of coffee in the galley, if you want to get it
before you sit back down.” Jen motioned toward the open hatch with her
chin. “I think you’re ready for a bit of caffeine to be reintroduced
into your diet. Though if you prefer, I’m sure there’s some herbal tea
down there, somewhere.”
“Hump,” McQueen grunted as he watched the grin spread across her face.
“I’m sick and tired of that tea you’ve been serving me.” He was glad
for the excuse to go below. The artillery fire had caught him by
surprise and he didn’t like it that it had. Getting his control back
had moved to number one on his list of priorities.
Minutes later the Major was back with two cups of coffee. “Here you
go, Doctor.”
“Thanks,” she looked at him from under the brim of her hat as she
sipped from her cup before placing it in a holder by the wheel. “We
could spend the weekend stumbling over ranks and titles. Would you find
it disrespectful if we were on a first name basis for the next few
days?”
It was seldom that anyone worried about his feelings. “No, I guess
that would be all right, Jenny....Jen?” It felt awkward to call her
anything other than doctor, but after all she had done for him, he
wasn’t going to be surly.
“Okay,” she smiled at him. “Okay....Ty? Is that all right?” She asked
tentatively.
He shook his head in the affirmative. A half smile on his lips. The
only other person who had ever called him that was Glen Ross. Even Amy,
his ex-wife, had called him TC. It had always made him feel
impersonal, distant, lacking in a name. He realized that he had begun
thinking of himself in that manner, as well.
“You want to try this?” Jen indicated the wheel.
McQueen looked at the smooth wood in her hands. It was about the same
size as the controls on his Hammerhead, though it was round instead of
the broken oval he was used to. His fingers itched to try it.
“It’s okay,” Jen said softly. She saw the longing in his eyes. “Slide
closer, and put your hands over mine until you get the feel of the way
this moves. Keep your eyes on the bow of the boat. Line it up with the
compass heading.” His arm went around her as he reached for the
wheel. “This will probably feel sluggish after a Hammerhead, so no
sudden movement.”
She felt his hands cover hers and heard him take a deep breath. Yes
this is what he needed, she thought. He was like a caged panther in
that room last night. Looking up she saw pure ecstasy cross his face
and realized how close they were sitting. Not a good idea Jenny, this
one is different.
“Let’s switch places with our hands,” Jen ducked down under his arm,
so he no longer surrounded her. Kneeling in front of the wheel and
compass box, she reached across to place her hands over his as she
talked. “That’s it. Can you feel the sea moving?”
“It’s like I’ve done this before, but in a dream,” McQueen felt free
for the first time in weeks. Though, there was something familiar
about all this.
“That may be my fault.” Jen looked sheepish. “During your worst night
in detox, the sound of my voice seemed to keep you calm. I recited
every sea poem I know, then started on sailing in general. I wouldn’t
be surprised if you could sail this strip of ocean from memory.”
“You were in that room with me?” Jen could feel his hands tighten on
the wheel beneath hers. “That wasn’t another of the nightmares?”
“Easy Ty, the Windswept likes a light touch,” she could feel him force
his hands to relax beneath hers as he glared into her eyes.
“Then those,” McQueen looked at the bruises on her arms, peeking out
from the sleeves of her t-shirt. “I did them?” He remembered what had
happened that night. It hadn’t been a nightmare, he had really tried to
hurt her.
“Keep your eyes on the compass and the bow of the boat,” Jen ordered.
“Damn it, Jen! I could have killed you,” he spat. “What were you
thinking being alone in that room with me?”
“I was thinking that you were going to tear yourself apart if we didn’t
get those restraints off of you,” Jen’s voice rose. “For that I owe you
an apology. You didn’t come out of it unmarked, either.” Her left brow
rose as she indicated the bruises on his wrists. “It never should have
happened.”
“Doctor, do you know what I could have done to you?” McQueen was
horrified when he remembered slamming her against the wall. His voice
getting lower and quieter as his anger grew.
“Answer me this, Ty.” She looked him straight in the eyes. Her hands
still gripping his on the wheel. “Could you kill me right now?”
“That's differ...”
“Answer my question.” She spoke each word as if it stood alone. “Do
you or do you not have the ability to kill me as we sit?”
“Of course I do. But I never would...”
“I know you never would.” She held up her hand as he was about to
interrupt her. Her body swayed gently as the boat moved over swells.
“That’s just the point, Ty. You never would! Lesson number one of
phyllophetamine addiction: it doesn't change the basic character of a
person. It often brings out a darker side, but.....”
“What basis did you use to risk your life with my ‘darker side’?”
McQueen was furious.
“I’d read your service record. That says a lot about a man.” Jen’s
temper was rising right along with his. “I had been working with you
for three days before that night. I knew you pretty well by then.
Besides, there was a guard outside the door at all times.” She didn’t
tell him about the ketamine hypospray, deciding it would only weaken her
argument. Jenny didn’t know why she had believed in him that night.
All she knew was that she had. She doubted that argument would
strengthen her case.
“What if you’d been wrong. You’re a petite woman, Jen. You would have
been dead before the guard keyed in the code, if I had wanted you dead.”
“My point precisely, you didn’t want me dead.” Jen slipped back behind
the wheel taking control of the boat. “And my size is an advantage in
these situations.” McQueen looked at her as if she had lost her mind.
“There was a time when you had a choice to attack either my Corpsman,
who is 6' 2", or me. You went for him.”
“That’s supposed to make me feel better?” His hands low on his hips.
He stood, leaning over her, using his size to press his advantage. His
eyes cold and distant.
“Yes, it proves my point,” she shot back, not intimidated by his
stance. “You would never hurt anyone smaller or weaker than you.
Besides, he deserved the scare. He was the one who strapped you down,”
McQueen could hear the venom in Jen’s voice. “Lesson number two of
phyllophetamine addiction: it slows the reflexes as it binds with
oxygen receptors. You never laid a hand on him.”
“No, but I did you.” McQueen reached for her arm, but pulled back
before he could touch her. “I’m sorry.”
“Apology accepted, if you accept mine?” She held out her hand to him.
“Pax?”
He shook her hand, “Pax. But I still don’t like what happened.”
“Neither do I!” Jenny and McQueen knew they were talking about
different things. Both decided to ignore it. “Do you want to try
sailing the old girl again?” Jen invited. “You looked like you were
getting the knack.”
McQueen felt his soul brushed clean as they sailed toward the hazy
smug on the horizon that grew into an island. It wasn’t flying a
Hammerhead, but riding the back of the wind had a lot to be said for
itself. With the wheel in his hands, as the sun set and stars came out
he felt new again. Jen sat by his side watching and giving a hand
where needed, but for the first time in a long time, McQueen felt in
control of something.
Hours went by as they sailed in companionable silence. Jenny keeping
them on course with a gentle word. McQueen letting the experience wash
over him. He had to give her credit, Dr. Jennifer Kirkwood had him
pegged. This was what he had needed. He was feeling a connection with
a part of himself he hadn’t felt in a long time, if ever.
Looking back he realized that during the early days of his marriage, he
had lost himself along the way. His control over his personal life had
slipped further and further out of his grasp, until the only time he
felt in control was when he was in a cockpit. The disaster his marriage
had become was a given after that. Then he had even lost the cockpit by
going back to the Greens. No wonder he had thought about putting a
bullet through his head.
“I’m going to radio our position, so Patsy will know when to expect us,
but I’ll be right here if you need me.” Jenny broke the silence between
them. “Come in Cliffhouse. This is Windswept calling.”
“Windswept, this is Cliffhouse. How’re you doing kiddo?”
“We’re doing great. Had a following wind all the way. We rounded the
Isthmus not long ago. We should be docking in about 45 minutes. I hope
you have something hot for us to eat. Ever since the sun went down,
it’s been cold out here. Windswept, over.”
McQueen heard a woman’s bright laughter over the radio. “Jenny, you
say that everytime.” The silver toned laugh came again. “Dinner’s on
the stove and there is a fire in the fireplace. See you two soon. I’ve
got the lights on at the slip, but I’ll be waiting at the house.
Cliffhouse over.”
Jenny looked at the radio transmitter in her hand, wanting to ask more
questions, but decided now wasn’t the time or place.
“You okay?” McQueen had caught her worried look. He hadn’t missed the
affection between the women as they had talked, so he couldn’t
understand why Jen was bothered.
“Patsy usually comes to the dock when I’ve been away, but even with
steps, it's steep. She only stays away when her leg is giving her
trouble. Her knee was crushed in an accident while helping to build The
James Lovell Orbital Assembly Facility. I’ve told her we can completely
replace the joint. The surgery would leave her pain free and give her
back the mobility she lost, but she just won’t do it.” Jen shook her
head, dismissing the accident and focusing on the cure.
“Hold it a second,” McQueen frowned. “The woman who raised you helped
build the Lovell?” McQueen was beginning to see the pieces of the
puzzle that was Jen fall into place. “Most of the labor for that was
done by in-vitros, working off their indentured servitude.”
“Yes, Pats was about 1 1/2 when it happened.” Jenny had taken over the
wheel for the entrance to Catalina Harbor. “That's why she was in
Sickbay when my mother went into early labor. My father and mother
were spending time on the Lovell working on his research project.”
“You’re telling me that a natural-born was raised by an in-vitro? What
about your father?” McQueen didn’t know if he was more startled by the
casually affectionate way Jen talked about Patsy, or the apparent lack
of a father in her upbringing.
“I’ve heard it said dad had two loves, his work and his wife.” Jen was
concentrating on her sailing, and spoke more freely than she normally
would have. “When mother died giving birth to me, he bought out Patsy’s
contract from Aerotech and moved the two of us to Catalina Island.”
“Where was he?” McQueen had always wanted to be a father. The idea of
a parent not raising his own child was unbelievable to him.
“He moved back and forth between the Lovell Facility and Berkeley where
he taught courses on the impact of space phenomenon on particle
physics.” Jen used the gears at the helm to lower the sails, then
started the motor for the last few miles to the dock. She had
forgotten about McQueen, as she sailed her boat as she usually did: all
by herself. “He would make a flying trip to the Island to check up on
us about twice a year.”
“Your father was Harrison Kirkwood? The man who won the Nobel Prize for
the discovery of the Black Hole Inversion Phenomenon?” McQueen watched
her work, independent, capable, and alone. Something about it felt
familiar, but he couldn’t place it.
“One and the same,” Jen shook her head as she squinted into the
distance. “See that light to the left beyond that point? That’s where
the Windswept lives. The house on the bluff above is where we’re
headed.”
That night McQueen met Patsy Howard. An in-vitro, like none he had
experienced before. She was tall with chestnut hair streaked with
gray. The lines around her dark brown eyes and mouth were laugh lines,
instead of the usual worry lines present in most in-vitro faces. If he
had to guess, he would bet that she had been produced to be a soldier.
She had the tall long bones and finely chiseled features that spoke of
warriors. Her neck-navel peeking out from her fashionably cut short
hair and stiff right leg were the only clues that she was one of his
kind.
They had eaten dinner in a many-windowed kitchen, that was Patsy’s
obvious domain. It was warm and cheery and the two woman chatted away,
including him in the conversation. A small black cat, named Cinders was
curled-up, asleep, under Jenny’s chair.
“So Major, does Jenny still drive that blue bomb of hers as if she
owned the L.A. freeways?” Patsy grinned at Jenny, whose eyebrows had
risen.
“I kept checking the dashboard for a LIDAR display to warn for in-
comings,” McQueen picked up the teasing tone of Patsy’s voice and joined
in. “It was definitely ‘fangs-out’ all the way from L.A. to Newport
Beach.”
“I know when I’ve been insulted.” Jen stood, fists on her hips. “I
think I’ll take the last two slices of this pie, across the lawn, to
Lars and Magda. And I’ll have you know, there is nothing wrong with my
driving!” Jen left in mock insult.
“Lars and Magda were the housekeeper and groundskeeper when we were
growing up,” Patsy explained. “They live in the gatehouse at the foot
of the lot. Lars keeps that boat of Jenny’s ship shape.” Patsy grinned
at her pun. “And Magda is my bridge partner.”
“You grew-up here?” McQueen was struck by the incongruity of the
statement. In-vitros didn’t grow up, they were born as adults.
“When I was born, my body may have looked like an adult’s, but my mind
and emotions weren’t. You remember what it’s like when they take you
out of the tank?”
“That’s not something I’m likely to forget,” McQueen repressed a
shudder. Being born at 18 years old was a disadvantage. You remember
every sensation and they were all unpleasant. You’re wet, cold and
confused. Strong feelings that no one had taught you to control, surged
through your body. Then you were taught that your only purpose in life
is to obey and then to die. Why bother to live, at all?
“I can see from your eyes that you remember it, vividly,” Patsy looked
guilty. “Sorry about that, Jenny would have my hide if she knew. This
is supposed to be a pleasant few days for you.”
Schooling his face, McQueen turned to Patsy. “You’re secret is safe
with me.”
“This place, that woman, a bit overwhelming, aren’t they?” Patsy
smiled at McQueen as she sipped her tea. “Though Jenny and I have been
together since she was born. Believe me, for an 18 month old in-vitro,
that was the definition of overwhelming,” Patsy laughed.
“Overwhelming?” McQueen wasn’t used to being talked to as Patsy was
doing. He wondered if it was the effect of the Greens, or if there was
a kinship between Jenny and Patsy that gave them the ability to
blind-side him. Always know who wants what from you, he thought,
still working the problem in his mind.
“Remember I’ve been there too, Ty. Is it all right if I call you that,
like Jenny does? Or would you prefer Major?” Patsy got up and
refilled his coffee cup. “It was a long time ago, but I still
remember.”
“Ty is fine, and thanks for the coffee.” He watched the stiff movement
of her right leg and it sunk in that she really did understand. “That’s
why you won’t let Jen fix your knee, isn’t it?”
“Yes,” Patsy turned around in surprise. It was obvious Jenny had
told this man about the accident on the Lovell, and he understood how
Patsy felt about it. “But can we keep it between ourselves? Jenny
understands on an intellectual level, but her emotions, well...” Patsy
shrugged her shoulders. “Let’s hope she never has to find out for
herself.”
For a moment Patsy’s eyes darkened and McQueen knew she was seeing
into the distant past. The two in-vitros exchanged a knowing look, that
spoke of badges of courage and a tribute to those who hadn’t been as
lucky as they had.
“Have you and Jen always lived on Catalina?” McQueen wondered what it
was that made Patsy so different from the other in-vitros he had met.
“Jenny was born on The Lovell. The Professor was doing a research
project there. I’ve never understood why he had his wife, Emma, with
him. But because of that, my life was changed,” Patsy shrugged. “Jenny
told you about this didn’t she?”
“A little bit, but what I’d really like to know is what it was like for
you.” McQueen’s eyes met Patsy’s in a look of complete understanding.
One in-vitro to another. Each seeing, in the other, what their life
could have been.
“I had been on the Lovell for five months, when I was in an accident on
one of the construction sites. My knee was crushed. The doctor did
what he could for me, but I’m an in-vitro, and our Sickbay was rather
primitive.” Patsy could see that McQueen understood. “Afterword, I was
petrified that they would send me to one of the pleasure palaces,”
Patsy confided, ignoring the ghosts that haunted McQueen’s face. “It
was a given that I wouldn’t be doing heavy labor again,” she pointed to
her damaged knee.
“I was working in Sickbay while they were trying to figure out what to
do with me, when Emma Kirkwood was brought in. She was in an advanced
stage of labor and bleeding badly. The Professor refused to leave her
side, even when the doctor ordered him out.
“They handed the baby to me as soon as she was born. The doctor was
too busy trying to save Emma’s life, to deal with the living. But it
wasn’t to be. Emma died an hour later. Jenny was left in my care for
the next three days. I didn’t have a clue what to do, but I figured it
out fast enough.” Patsy could only shake her head as she remembered
fumbling with the tiny girl-child that would change her life.
“The next thing I knew I had agreed to help the Professor with the
child, if he bought out my indentured servitude. I found myself on a
shuttle to Earth before the ink could dry on the papers.” Patsy gave
McQueen a knowing smile. “My plans at the time, had been to get back to
Earth then run off somewhere. That all changed the night before we
landed. It was late, I had just fed Jenny and was rocking her to
sleep. She felt warm and good against me. I looked down and that tiny
baby opened her eyes and smiled at me. It was as if she looked deep
into me and tugged at my heart. I’ve been with her ever since.
“I get the feeling you didn’t think much of Professor Kirkwood?”
McQueen had been listening to what Patsy hadn’t said, as much as to what
she had.
Patsy stood to get herself another cup of tea, using the time to
think. “Exactly how much has Jenny told you?”
“Not much really. She mentioned growing up here, and you of course.
She did say that her father had provided a home for the two of you. I
think she was too busy keeping an eye on me, making sure I didn’t
capsize her boat, to do much talking.” That wasn’t quite the truth, but
it would do.
“Jenny let you sail her boat?” Patsy was caught off guard. Not only
had Jenny talked to this stranger about her childhood, but she had let
him sail her beloved Windswept. No one but Jen ever sailed that boat.
This man’s presence in her kitchen took on a new meaning. Patsy wasn’t
sure how she felt about it.
“Most in-vitros think we have it pretty rough because we don’t have
parents. No one to love us and guide us as we mature. But having a
parent isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, if it’s the wrong kind of
parent.” Patsy looked McQueen straight in the eyes. Jenny seemed to
trust him. The older woman was going to see if he was worth that
trust.
“There are parents that don’t love their natural born child. They
don’t care about her as a person. They may blame the child for the
death of someone they loved deeply. Blame her to the point of blocking
out any feelings or paternal caring.” Patsy’s anger was boiling over.
“Yes, you could say I didn’t think much of Harrison Kirkwood. May his
soul never find peace in hell!”
“He felt that way about Jen?”
The anger that was present on McQueen’s face was gratifying to Patsy.
Maybe this man wasn’t so bad after all?
“He provided for her material needs. She had a home, a very good
education, and he made sure I was here.” Patsy laughter bitterly. “But
even that, was for his own convenience. He knew nothing about me,
except I was an injured in-vitro. I needed a place to go when he
happened to need someone to care for his child. For all he knew I
could have been an ax murderer. The Professor planted his daughter here
with strangers and took off. He visited about twice a year, to make
sure she was progressing as the daughter of Harrison Kirkwood should,
but that was it.
“I’m only 18 months older than Jenny in real years,” Patsy smiled as
she remembered the good times. “I was savvy enough to keep us from
dying young, but just barely. We terrorized this end of the island for
a while. Thank goodness for understanding neighbors, and Magda and
Lars!” She shook her head as she thought of the foolishness of Jenny’s
father.
The kitchen door rattled and Jenny came in with a gust of wind and rain
at her heels. “I thought I was gone long enough for the dishes to get
done?”
“No such luck, my girl. I cooked. You clean up. House rules still
stand.” Patsy grinned as she picked up the small black cat that had
begun complaining because Jenny’s noisy entrance had disturbed its nap.
After Jenny and McQueen had headed to their respective rooms for the
night, Patsy sat in the living room, watching the dying coals in the
fireplace. Her tea left to grow cold on the table beside her. What’s
going on in that head of yours, Jenny? Something wasn’t right here.
McQueen sailing the Windswept. Jenny bringing him here, and telling him
about her childhood? Patsy remembered the summer when Jenny was 11 and the two of them had
decided to check out San Clemente Island. They had known that the
Marines used it for war games, but had decided it would be fun to play
Marine for the day. They had ended up as ‘guests’ of the Marines for a
number of hours. Harrison Kirkwood had been summoned from Berkeley.
When he had finally secured their release, they had each received a
severe dressing-down and were grounded for the rest of the summer. It
had broken Jenny’s heart to spend three months on dry land. That was
when Jenny swore, that one day, she would have a boat that no one could
take away from her. The Windswept was that boat.
Patsy didn’t know what threats Harrison had used to keep Jenny in
line, but they must have been something drastic, because she finally
gave up trying to gain her father’s approval. Though the habits she’d
formed over the years were so ingrained, that Jen was still the classic
overachiever. Graduating from high school at 15, UCLA at 17 1/2, and
UCLA Medical School at 21. It had been a relief to Patsy when Harrison
had died in Jenny’s last year in medical school. It was one less
graduation the Professor didn’t attend because he was ‘too busy.’
Patsy had watched Jenny carefully construct a wall to keep the small
hurts the Professor aimed at his daughter from hitting their mark. Over
the years that wall had extended to include men in general. Now
suddenly, Jenny shows up with a man in tow. Why this man? Why out of
all the men in the world, did Jenny choose him to open-up to? She had
plenty of men friends, but she kept them at arms length. Anytime a man
tried to get too close, Jenny would jump back behind her wall.
Patsy was sure, that Jenny was blind to the significance of McQueen’s
presence in their home. He was Jenny’s patient and that was all there
was to it. The doctor in Jenny would stay in command of the woman.
Unfortunately, the woman behind the doctor was peeking out. And she was
a woman who didn’t trust men easily. Why him? An in-vitro who looks
to have had a rough time of it.
The next morning, McQueen came down to find Jenny working in a study
off the living room. She was seated at a large desk. Her back to one
of the many bookshelves that lined the walls of the room. There was a
stack of wood, in the fireplace opposite the desk, waiting to be lit.
The small cat that followed Jenny around was daintily licking her paws
in the sun that beamed through one of the floor to ceiling windows at
either end of the room. Like all the rooms McQueen had seen so far,
this one, had a comfortable lived-in look. The chairs and small couch
were placed in a way that invited people to sit and read.
“Good-morning,” McQueen called out. Jenny had been lost in whatever
she had been writing and didn’t hear him enter the room.
“Hi there, how did you sleep?” She looked up. Her mind making the
transition from her writing to her patient.
“Fine, great,” he looked a bit sheepish. “I haven’t slept like that in
a long time.”
“Good, I like to hear things like that,” Jenny stretched in her chair.
“What are you working on?” McQueen wondered what could have Jen so
absorbed. “Is it a Navy secret and if you tell me, you would have to
shoot me?”
“Pleeaassee!” Jen rolled her eyes. “That’s a Marine thing. The Navy
is too honorable to shoot you. We would send you swimming with hungry
sharks.” She kidded as she decided if she would show him what she was
writing. No one but Patsy and the agent from the publisher knew about
the book. “Have a seat,” Jenny indicated the chair on the other side of
the desk, as she handed over a stack of paper, her decision made. “This
is only the first two chapters. Let me know what you think.”
McQueen’s eyes began scanning the first page: In 1978, in England,
Dr. Edwards, an embryologist, and his research partner Dr. Steptue, a
gynecologist, succeeded in the first In-Vitro Fertilization. This
break-through allowed thousands of couples who had been considered,
until that time, infertile to conceive a child. By the year 1999, more
than 20,000 IVF babies were born worldwide.
This step in the fight over infertility was looked upon as a gift,
greeted with great joy by thousands of couples that couldn’t conceive
through ‘natural’ means.
After the first few babies were born via IVF, as it was called then, no
one looked askew at the practice. How a child was conceived, wasn’t
important. There was no prejudice or glory. There was just a child.
McQueen looked up, his eyes blue ice, “are you writing what I think
you’re writing?”
“I have no idea. What is it you think I’m writing?” Jenny stood,
leaning across her desk at the angry man.
“It’s a history of in-vitros!” He stood and moved around the desk, as
he tossed the pages on the chair he had been sitting in.
“You’ve got it in one, Major,” Jen met his anger with her own. “It’s
about time people learned the truth.”
“And what truth is that?” McQueen stood nose to nose with the woman
who had made his insides jump with fear. If the book ever saw the
light of day, it would bring a firestorm of hate down on her head.
“The truth that a precious gift was bastardized along the way for
in-utero born’s convenience.” She was hurt that McQueen didn’t
understand. Way to go, Jenny. And Patsy wonders why I have trouble
trusting men, when they all let me down.
“What are you trying to do?” McQueen ground out, “paint a big red
bullseye on your back for every bigoted son-of-a-bitch to take aim at,
Lieutenant?”
“Don’t be ridiculous, and don’t try to pull rank on me, Major. You’re
still my patient!” Jenny was flushed with anger. “Did you know that
the first in-vitro gestation, in 2025, was only nine months long? There
is no need to extent it to...”
“That’s not the point...”
“Yes it is....”
“Jennifer! I can hear the shouting from the garden,” Patsy walked in
to the study. Jenny and McQueen were nose to nose. He was leaning over
the smaller woman in an attempt to intimidate her, but it didn’t seem to
be working. “I can see that she’s decided to show you her book?”
“Patsy, please I already know your opinion.” Jenny didn’t shout, but
her voice was strained.
“You’re letting her write this?” McQueen was shocked that the in-vitro
woman didn’t understand the trouble Jen could be in if this book was
ever published.
“In the kitchen, both of you. Now! And no more fighting or I’ll send
you to your rooms.” Patsy turned and headed to the back of the house.
McQueen and Jenny followed.
It had been useless. McQueen couldn’t talk Jenny out of writing the
book. He was relieved to find out that Patsy agreed with him, but there
was nothing that either in-vitro could do to stop the stubborn
natural-born woman. It was a point that they had to agree to disagree
on and let it drop.
“I’m going for a walk. I’ll be back in about an hour.” Jenny grabbed a
mug filled with espresso, as she headed out. Patsy and Ty were left
with the echo of the kitchen door as the angry woman banged out of the
house, heading toward the cliff and the path to the beach.
“I’m afraid we disappointed her badly.” Patsy met McQueen’s eyes, still
stormy from the recent argument. “You don’t usually come out on the
losing end, do you, Ty?”
“No, I don’t,” he sighed. “I worry for her safety. She doesn’t
realize the trouble that book will cause her, if it ever gets
published.”
“No, she doesn’t,” Patsy touched his arm to get his attention. “You
see McQueen, she really doesn't see the difference between in-vitro and
in-utero born. To her it’s just a form of child neglect that in-vitros
are born at eighteen. And she considers the in-vitro training schools
to be nothing short of child abuse.”
Four weeks later Patsy gave a sigh of relief when Jenny arrived home
alone. McQueen had been released form the detox program earlier in the
week and was recertified to fly. Though he had proven himself the
morning when he had found out about Jenny’s book, Patsy was glad there
was distance between Jenny and the Marine Major.
McQueen shook himself. He had let his mind wander back over the trip
from Newport Beach to Catalina. It had been the start of many changes
in his life. The most important being the ability to kick the Greens
with a sure knowledge that he would never touch one again. He felt
Jen’s head resting on his shoulder and knew she must be asleep. She was
always careful to respect his personal space, except when she was coming
at him in ‘doctor mode.’ When that happened, all hell broke lose and
short of physical violence, he was never able to keep her at bay.
“Jen, you need to wake-up.” He talked softly as he admired the tousled
head resting on his shoulder. It took all his control not to put his
arm around her and bury his face in her hair. His eyes moved to her
slender neck. The scar only half covered by curls made him stiffen.
NO! Never again, the words echoed in his head. Never will their
anger at my kind be spilled onto you.
“Hmmm,” Jen looked up at him, smiling, thinking she was dreaming. “Hi
there,” her voice sounded soft and sexy.
“Wake-up, Jen,” McQueen put ice into his eyes and voice, he needed to
put some distance between them before he ruined their friendship and
took them back to where they had been before war broke out.
“Oh oh, sorry,” flustered, Jen came instantly awake. “I didn’t mean
to...”
“It’s okay,” he could relax a bit now, that she was no longer leaning
against him. “We need to get back, it’s very late. You go on ahead,
I’ll follow in a bit.”
“But...”
“No buts, Doctor,” McQueen was back in control. “It’s not just the
in-vitro issue this time. I am your commanding officer.” He knew his
argument was a thin one in Jen’s case, but he was damned if he was going
to go over the same old ground with her.
She stood to leave. Then turned to him in a huff. “My commander? Sure
you are Lt. Col. McQueen, Sir. Until the next time you end up in
Sickbay, Sir. Then I’m the one in charge, Sir.” Knowing a good exit
line when she heard one, she did just that.
She was descending the almost vertical stairs from the alcove when she
heard a voice like ground glass. “Payback can be a bitch, so I’ll be
sure to watch my six.”
Damn him!She thought as she blinked back a tear. I can be just
as tough as you McQueen!
He heard Jenny’s footsteps as she pounded down another flight of
steps. She was angry. He had chosen his words carefully. Knowing it
was easier for him to deal with an angry Jen, than the soft vulnerable
woman she had been moments earlier. Hopefully, his parting shot would
keep her good and mad for a while. He stood slowly, wondering how this
would all work out.
It was after 0230 when McQueen made it back to his quarters. He felt
unsettled. Now was when he would learn how much of his peace of mind it
was going to cost him to have helped Jen. He was having trouble keeping
his thoughts from the past.
Reaching under his bunk, he pulled out his footlocker. Moving his hand
caressingly over the Angry Angel insignia on the gun metal gray trunk,
he took a deep breath and opened the lid.
Buried deep under his flight suit was a 5X7 envelope. He reached in
and found the photograph inside. He shook his head at the nine people
in Angry Angel jackets in the picture. It had been taken three months
before they had died. They were all smiling and laughing. Even McQueen
had a grin on his face, as he looked down into the face of Jen
Kirkwood. He wondered if the casual observer would see the intimacy he
saw in the picture.
It was one of the few times Major McQueen had joined them when they had
gone out on the town. The Angels had taken Lieutenant Jennifer
Kirkwood, M.D. out for her birthday to a hole-in-the-wall Mexican place
for tapas and sangria. The picture had been taken after too many
pitchers of the red-fruity wine. Collins had danced on the table and
had challenged Jenny to do the same. Jen had smiled and suggested the
picture, instead.
“Come on, you too, McQueen.” Jen had moved to the end of the table
where he was sitting and pulled him to his feet. “I want a picture with
all of us wearing our jackets.” They had given Jen an Angry Angel
jacket and cap for her birthday and she was thrilled.
“Down off that table, Gloria,” Jen called out, her arm still tightly
around McQueen.
“Angel-Doc, how many times do I have to tell you not to call me that?”
Collins jumped from the table to join her friend. They all knew that
Collins and Jenny had become good friends, but Collins loved to play
hard-ass in public.
With one arm around McQueen and the other around Collins, Jenny was the
center of the picture.
“You’re drunk, Jen,” McQueen whispered.
“Look who’s talking?” She giggled up at him. That was how the picture
was taken. McQueen looking down into Jen’s laughing face, his arm
around her, holding her snugly against him. Collins pulled close on her
other side and everyone laughing, gathered around them.
Dr. Kirkwood had been assigned to the Angels nine months earlier. The
official version was that it was a test program. It was stated that
many of the specialized flying groups needed better medical care and
since the only thing they wanted to do was fly, most pilots avoided
doctors. If a group had it’s own doctor, someone they could trust,
then the problem would be solved. The Angels had been picked as the
test group. At least that was the official story.
McQueen had his own theory on Jen’s assignment. He thought, it was
another thing the Navy was using to sideline her career. As if sending
her to the Moon’s training base on the Sea of Serenity, for the previous
six months hadn’t been enough. He found it interesting that her posting
on the Moon coincided with the publishing of her book, The In-Vitro
Chronicles.
No one had expected her to be able to make a go of it with the Angels,
but she had. Most of the them had tried to freeze her out when she was
first assigned to them, but she had worn them down. McQueen could
remember the first time Collins and Jen had come to the Asteroid
together. Webb had made a pass at Jen in the bar. Collins had tried
to take a swing at him to protect her. Jen had stepped between the two.
Telling them she had no wish to patch up any bruises again tonight, and
thank you very much Collins, but if anyone would take a swing at Webb
for that pass, she would do it herself.
The change in the attitude of the Angels toward Jenny had started the
previous night. As always, McQueen was sitting at his place at the bar,
while his squadron was partying at their favorite table. That night
things had gotten mean and a fight broke out. Fights were nothing new to
the Angels, but this one was rougher than most. McQueen made it a habit
to stay out of the way when his squad fought. He had learned early on
that when an in-vitro joined in a bar fight, it gave some bigoted
son-of-a-bitch an excuse to take a swing or two at him, often using more
than fists. But tonight his help was needed, so he waded into the
foray.
When they staggered out of the Asteroid, they were bruised and
bleeding, but victorious. McQueen had a cut on his head thanks to a
bottle someone had used to slow him down.
“Guys,” Collins snickered. “They gave us a doctor to ‘take care’ of
us. Why don’t we pay her a visit? If we go to the infirmary, they’ll
tip the MP’s for sure.”
“Way to go Collins!” Webb grinned as he swayed on his feet as much from
beer as the punches he had taken.
McQueen wanted no part of what the others were planning so he headed
home alone. He wondered if he should call Jen and let her know that she
was about to be descended on by six drunk and beaten-up Angels. But
decided against it. If he called, it might tip his hand and he didn’t
want her to know he had been in on the fight.
An hour after he had gotten home someone was beating on his door. “Go
away!” He called out. His head was pounding and he had a cold cloth
pressed against it trying to stop the bleeding.
“Open up, McQueen!” Jen called out. “Now!”
When he didn’t answer her, Jen pounded harder “You have two choices,
McQueen. Let me in to check you over, or I’ll have two MP’s ‘escort’
you to the infirmary. If you make me go to all that trouble, I may
just forget to use Lidocaine if stitches are required on that thick
head of yours. Now, open up, damn it!”
“Oohh such language,” McQueen swung open the door, realizing that she
wasn’t going away. “I don’t need a doctor.” He blocked her way, hoping
she would give up.
“Let me be the judge. That’s why I get the big bucks and the juicy
assignments,” Jen pushed against his chest to move him into the room.
“Lieutenant, I said I was fine.” McQueen tried pulling rank.
“Well it doesn’t look like it from here.” Jen had grabbed his chin and
turned his head to the left so she could get a better look at his right
temple. “Why don’t you sit down before you fall down?” She headed him
toward a table and chair where he had been sitting. There was a bowl of
ice water and a bottle of scotch on the table.
“I really am okay, Jen.” His voice softened as she pushed his hair
back. “I’ve had worse and taken care of it myself.”
“You shouldn’t have to,” she sighed. “It’s going to take at least
five stitches to close that wound.” The Doctor dug in her gear bag for
what she was going to need.
“Thanks, Jen.” McQueen wanted badly to touch her, not sure why.
“I thought you told me once that you didn’t join in bar fights, for
just this reason.” Jen concentrated on injecting the Lidocaine. McQueen
concentrated on not wincing.
“I usually don’t, but the Angels were getting their tails waxed. I
couldn’t just sit there and let that happen.” McQueen shrugged his
shoulders. “How did you know I had been in on it?”
“Webb was giving me a play-by-play of the fight, as I patched up
Collins and he mentioned that someone got you with a bottle.” Jen’s
anger was on the boil again as she carefully sutured. “Marines! You’re
all a bunch of macho jerks! I had you pegged for someone with some
sense, Ty?”
“What can I say? It goes with the uniform.”
“There you go. It’s going to leave a small scar, but I don’t think
it’ll ruin that pretty face of yours.” Bending down in front of the
seated man she reached for his rib carriage. “Sit up straight, please.”
She ran her hands up and down, checking for broken or bruised ribs.
“You know, Jen,” McQueen’s voice came out a husky growl. “You should
warn a man before you do a thing like that.”
Jenny froze, her hands on McQueen’s sides. She couldn’t take her eyes
away from his. She wasn’t even sure she was breathing. “I...a...I..I
was just checking to see...”
“I know that.” McQueen took one of her wrists in each of his hands and
removed them from his sides. He pulled her to her feet, as he stood.
He didn’t think she realized he was still holding on to her, or that his
thumbs were making gentle circles on the soft inner skin of her wrists.
“Just remember what you said earlier. Marines can be macho jerks.”
“I...a..a don’t suppose there’s any sense in doing a neuro check, with
all the booze you’ve got on board.....” Jenny’s voice trailed away as
she stumbled over the words. They were standing much too close and Ty
was still holding her hands. The smoldering blue of his eyes had her
caught like a moth to a flame.
“No, I don’t suppose,” the Major whispered. He could feel her breath
on his face and smell the soft rose fragrance that always said ‘Jen’ to
him. McQueen saw realization hit her as she turned stark white then
flushed. They stepped back at the same time.
“I think that should take care of it. Lay off the booze for at least
the next 24 hours.” Jenny babbled as she gathered up her gear. I’ve
got to get out of here before I make an even bigger fool of myself than
I already have! The words tumbled in her mind as she grabbed her
things, afraid to look him in the eyes again.
She made it out the door before her hands began to shake. What have
I done. He’s my patient and I almost kissed him. Hold it Jen, get a
grip. He’s no longer in detox. Things are different now. The battle
raged in her head as she tried to control the emotional wave she was
riding. When she had worked with Ty before, her emotions had been under
complete control. Or had they? Even as her patient in detox, she had
trusted him, when trust wasn’t something she gave easily. Now she
understood Patsy’s dark looks whenever his name was mentioned.
McQueen had seen the shocked expression on Jen’s face, when she
realized he was about to kiss her. He thanked the powers that be that
he had gained control over himself in that final second. Poor Jen, she
was just being the thorough doctor that she always was. She had no way
of knowing that when she had touched him tonight, it had awakened
something in him. If that kiss had started, there was no way he would
have been able to stop there. He slammed his eyes shut to keep from
picturing them on the floor, a tangle of limbs. “Control, McQueen!” He
muttered through gritted teeth.
He remembered in detox that he had found her attractive. But had
assumed it was because he had been too long without Amy. Jen wasn’t the
kind of woman that he usually desired. Tiny, Jen, too slim, with big
gray eyes and freckles on her nose. No, Amy had been the epitome of his
desires. Tall, blue-eyed, very blond with ripe luscious curves, the
kinds that filled a man’s hands to overflowing. It had been a long time
since he thought of Amy as fire and sex. Grunting, he knew those were
just one of the things she had used to bind him to her. Not that he had
fought it! It was a relief to let that part of his life go.
Tonight, all he had wanted was to touch Jen and feel her under him.
Gentle Jen, all sweetness and light. When had he begun to feel this
way? Moving to his dresser he opened a small box that had been in among
his shirts for almost 2 years. The light danced on the slim gold rope
bracelet that he had bought in Newport Beach after he left detox.
When he and Jen had returned from Catalina, she had seen the bracelet
in the window of a closed jewelry shop. He had gone back and bought it
for her, but had never had the nerve to give it to her. Running a
finger over the fine rope, he realized he hadn’t sent it because it
reminded him of Jen. He remembered thinking when he bought it, that it
looked like a miniature version of one of the lines on the Windswept.
One that had been captured in white and yellow gold.
The next day, Jenny went into town to shop. Christmas was just around
the corner and she decided shop-therapy was just what she needed. She
was tired of worrying about feelings that were surfacing for McQueen.
She would handle things as they came. That was the day she ran into
Gloria Collins at a shoe sale at Nieman’s, one of the more fashionable
department stores in the area.
Collins was about to go to battle with another woman over a pair of
stylish black sling-back evening shoes, from the sale rack. Jenny
jumped in and distracted the other woman with a pair green pumps.
Giving Collins a grin, as the tall Angel walked off with the prize.
“Kirkwood, between last night and this morning, you’re proving your
worth.” Collins waved the purchased shoes at the smaller woman.
“Thank you, Gloria.” Jen snickered as she watched Collins rock back on
her heels at the casual use of her first name.
The two ended up spending the day scouring the stores for good buys.
By the time they returned to base, a friendship had been formed.
That night when Collins showed up at the Asteroid, Jenny was with her.
No one ever questioned Jenny’s place in the group again.
A few nights later, as the Angels were sitting in the Bar tossing
around ideas about the Christmas holidays, Jenny realized this was a
perfect chance to mend her fences with McQueen. He had been a bit
standoffish since she had almost kissed him, and she could hardly blame
him.
“Major?” Jen moved to the bar where he was sitting alone. “May I join
you?”
“Have a seat.” He motioned to the empty stool next to him. “Can I buy
you a drink?”
“No thanks. When I finish this.” She indicated a half empty wine
glass. “I’m heading back. I can’t keep the hours you guys do.” Jen
took a sip from her glass, then looked McQueen in the eyes. She was
relieved that there was no knee weakening sensation throbbing through
her body, just a nice little buzz. Smiling to herself she thought she
must have been over-sensitive the other night.
“I’m going to be sailing to Catalina for Christmas. I’d like you to
come along. Patsy and I would like you to join us for the holidays.”
Jen offered her invitation with a smile. “That is, unless, you have
other plans?”
“No, I was planning on spending the time here, like I always do.” He
turned on his stool and looked her over from head to toe. There was no
gut-wrenching reaction, just a pleasure at seeing her.
“Come on, Ty, it’ll be fun. Besides it’ll keep Patsy from driving me
crazy. I can sail that boat alone anywhere, anytime, but Pats worries
at this time of year, because there are squalls and the seas can run
rough. If you come along as crew, she can’t give me a hard time.”
“This could be asking for trouble.” McQueen’s voice was rough and low,
not sure Jen understood all the levels he was referring to.
“Trouble has never frightened me.” Her chin shot up and her eyes
darkened.
“That’s obvious.” McQueen’s oblique reference to the publication of
Jen’s book the year before, was the only comment he had made about it in
her hearing.
“Don’t you think two bar fights in three days is pushing it, even for
an Angry Angel?” Jen threatened, not missing his meaning. “Besides, I’d
only have to patch you up again. I, for one, would rather sail than
fight, how about it, McQueen?”
“Here I thought you were offering me an invitation and all along it was
a threat.” The sound of McQueen’s laughter turned heads at the table of
Angels ten feet away. The idea of Jen beating him in a fight was
ludicrous.
Jenny’s eyes turned to black in an instant. McQueen remembered them
that color the other night in his apartment, though it hadn’t been from
anger. “It was an invitation. It still is. I just don’t want to argue
something that can’t be changed. The book is out. Yes, you were
right. It did cause me trouble. Is that what you wanted to hear?”
“I’d never wish you any trouble.” McQueen sighed realizing he had hurt
her feelings by laughing. “But going with you for the holiday, could do
just that.”
“I’ll consider myself warned. Pax?” She held out her hand to him as
she had done once before.
“Pax.” He shook her hand. Not sure if either of them were aware of
what they had just agreed to. “I’d like to spend the time with you and
Patsy.”
“Good. The transport leaves for L.A. on December 22 at 0600.” Jen put
down her wine glass and left the Asteroid Bar.
The Christmas trip to Catalina was different from the trip two years
ago. There were heavy winds and the sea ran high. The wheel bucked and
kicked in McQueen’s hands as they fought their way to Catalina. Both of
them enjoyed it greatly. By the time they reached their destination
they were tired, wet and cold. But had had the time of their lives.
McQueen’s eyes were alive from the battle with the sea. Jen could see
it in him and gave him a knowing smile.
The Saratoga, McQueen’s quarters 2063
Sighing, McQueen pulled a slim volume of illustrated poetry from his
footlocker. Jen had given it to him that Christmas morning. He read
quietly for a minute, letting the words fill him:
“Sea-Fever” by John Masefield
I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
I must go down to the seas again for the call of the running tide
I must go down to the seas again to the vagrant gypsy life,
He could remember being glad that he had bothered to wrap the slim box
with the bracelet and put it under her tree. The giving and receiving
of gifts was foreign to him, but he had wanted to give Jen something
that Christmas. She had been wearing the gold rope when he open his
gift. He had been smart enough, to have enclosed a note with the
bracelet, telling her that when she wore it, she would always have a
piece of the Windswept with her. Making the gift as much from the boat
as from him.
In the back of the book of poetry, he found another picture. One he
thought he had lost. Patsy had taken it of McQueen and Jen sitting on
the Windswept. His arms lightly around her, as her hands covering his
on the wheel. They were looking into the camera and laughing. Looking
closely he could see the gold rope bracelet on her left wrist with her
watch, where she always wore it. Flipping the picture over, it was
dated May 2063. It was a picture of the last time he had gone sailing
with Jen.
Loxley, Catalina & Houston 2063
In early January the Angels were sent on a mission on the Yorktown.
There were pirates raiding the mining communities and playing havoc with
the shipping lanes. It was the first mission that Jen was sent on with
the them and it was hard on her. She had come to care about all of the
squad. They would see her face above the landing bay when they got into
their pits and she was there again when they returned hours later. She
never expressed her worries to any of them, when she was awake. But in
the early hours of the morning, Jen would talk in her sleep. That was
when her new squad learned just how worried she really was.
While they were gone, the Doctor helped out in the Yorktown’s Sickbay,
but when they returned she was there for them, to patch up any bruises
or injuries they might have received. Always giving each person a
post-flight check. It hadn’t taken her long to figure out that the
Angels would hide an injury from her if they thought they could get away
with it.
“Jenny,” Gloria Collins whispered to her friend, who was sleeping on
the bunk above hers in the quarters shared by the Angels on the
Yorktown.
“Hhmm, Gloria?”
“Ssshhh, wake up Jenny. I need a favor,” Collins whispered. “Get
into my bunk and pretend to be me. The upper bunk is easier to make it
look like someone is sleeping in it. When it’s really empty. Besides,
no one would ever think it’s not you in bed. If my bed looked suspect,
they’d know I wasn’t in it.”
“I’m not sure if you insulted me or complimented me.” Jen frowned as
she crawled out of bed.
From the next bunk over, McQueen saw a flash of a bare leg as Jen
slipped down. Just what he needed. Jen sleeping inches from him.
“Why did you insist I take the upper bunk, if we were just going to
exchange them in the middle of the night?” The smaller woman shivered
as she got between the sheets. “And where are you going?”
“You know where I’m going. He finally asked me.” Collins looked really
happy for the first time since Jenny had met her.
“You and the Colonel are going to get in so much trouble!” Jen worried.
“Only if we’re caught,” Gloria smiled back. “I’ll be back before
reveille.”
“He had better be worth it.” She muttered after Collins had left. It
was then, as she readjusted her pillow that she saw the silver-haired
head on the pillow that was inches from hers. I can’t do this, she
thought, her hand moved involuntarily to the top of her pillow, almost
touching McQueen’s. Her eyes closed, and she willed herself to sleep.
The Angels were gone from Loxley for three weeks. It had taken them
that long to track down and destroy all the pirate strongholds in and
around Saturn. When they returned they were to have five days leave.
Jenny would have used the time to work at the In-Vitro Health Facility,
but the Navy had made it clear to her that she was to stay away until
she was reassigned there. McQueen had been right, her book had had
consequences that she had never figured on.
“How about a trip to Catalina?” McQueen suggested as he looked at a
very tired Jenny on the flight deck of the Yorktown. He and the Angels
were flying their Hammerheads back. Jen was going by ISSCV with
personnel going on leave. They had just entered Earth’s orbit and were
waiting for lift-off clearance.
“You’d really like to go?” Jen’s face lit up at the prospect. She had
spent a number of restless nights sleeping in Gloria Collins’ bunk.
Since Gloria always went to bed in that bunk and appeared to wake up in
it, Jenny couldn’t tactfully make up the bed with her head at the other
end. Besides, she felt safer sleeping inches away from Ty, than inches
away from Webb.
One morning Gloria had awakened her to climb back in bed, and Jenny’s
hand had been almost touching McQueen's. Each seeming to reach for the
other in their sleep. Gloria had pointed this fact out to the shorter
woman, not realizing that she had hit very close to the truth.
Jen and McQueen left Newport Beach early on a Tuesday morning, as the
sun was beginning to silhouette the city behind them. They hadn’t been
underway long when they ran into the first of a line of storms that were
blowing down from Canada. The sea ran high. There was rain and some
hail, along with high winds. Jenny was glad to have McQueen along with
her on this trip. She hadn’t realized how tired she was from the last
few weeks and the extra hands and eyes were a big help. When they
finally tied up at the dock, eight hours later, she was shivering and
blue.
“You go on up to the house and get warmed up, I’ll close down the boat
for the night,” McQueen offered after getting a look at Jenny in the
dock lights.
“Ty, I can take care of it!” Jenny’s teeth were chattering.
“I know you can, but you don’t have to.” He was rubbing her hands
between his to try to warm them up. “Jen, you trust me to sail your
boat. You can trust me to lock it down.”
“Okay, thanks,” Jen smiled. She did trust him with her boat, she
realized, and that thought scared her. She grabbed her dufflebag and
headed up the hill, not wanting to think about it.
Two hours later, after they had showered, and eaten a hot meal, Jenny,
McQueen and Patsy were in the living room drinking cappuccino and
cognac. A fire was roaring in the fireplace. Patsy was digging the
story of the last few weeks out of a reticent McQueen. Jenny was curled
up in the corner of the couch. She could feel the rhythmic purring of
her cat, who had promptly plopped herself down on her feet and fallen
asleep.
“That sounded like quite an adventure you two had,” Patsy smiled at
both her guests. “Jenny?” She shook her head as she saw that the young
woman had fallen asleep with her head on the pillow on the arm of the
couch. Her knees pulled up. “Would you grab the cognac before she
drops it?” Patsy indicated to McQueen. He was sitting on the floor
his back to the couch, his legs stretched out in front of the fireplace.
Turning, he took the delicate, balloon shaped crystal out of Jen’s limp
hand. He froze for a moment as a memory of that hand touching his as he
slept on the Yorktown, flashed through his mind. It had been twice as
shocking to realize that she slept wearing the bracelet he had given
her. Though, he had said for her to wear it to remember the Windswept.
He quickly recovered by reaching for the throw at the back of the couch
and covering her with it.
“Is she going to be all right?” McQueen looked over his shoulder,
watching Jen sleep.
“She’ll be fine.” Patsy didn’t miss the look Ty had given the sleeping
woman. “When she gets too cold on a trip over here this happens.
Particularly if a little cognac is added.”
“That’s why you worry about her when she sails in bad weather?”
McQueen was remembering what Jen had told him a few weeks ago.
“She told you about that, did she?” Patsy smiled and shook her head.
“That’s part of it. I don’t like her sailing in rough seas by herself.
I don’t care how many safeties she and Lars have rigged on that boat.”
“You love her very much don’t you?” It was an emotion that McQueen
didn’t understand.
“Of course I do.” Patsy moved to the raised hearth. Her stiff right
leg resting close to McQueen’s feet. “Just because I’m an in-vitro,
doesn’t keep me from giving and receiving love.”
“But how do you control it? Make it happen or go away?” McQueen was
swamped with feelings from Amy. Though he was beginning to realize that
he had never loved her.
“You can’t,” Patsy nodded toward Jenny. “I guess it would be handy to
be able to turn love on and off like a water faucet, but that’s not how
it works.”
“How does it work then?” McQueen finished his cognac and picked up
Jen’s glass to take a sip. “I can quote from poets and philosophers,
but real life is another thing all together.”
“I can only tell you how it’s been for me.” Patsy looked McQueen in the
eyes. She remembered the empty look she found there from when she was
much younger. “Love is like the fire behind me. It keeps you warm. It
adds light to your life. But like this fire, it needs tending and
care. It can also be destructive, if one isn’t careful. The trick is
learning how to take care of yourself and the fire.”
“The trick can be finding the fire,” McQueen smiled.
“Remember, a fire starts out as a small spark.” Patsy wondered if
McQueen was talking about his ability to love, or to be loved. “You
have to keep your eyes peeled for that spark. Do you remember a few
years ago I told you about Jenny as a baby, looking up at me and
smiling? That was the first spark for me. It burned straight to my
heart and changed me forever.”
“You were lucky to have recognized it when it happened,” McQueen
sighed.
“I didn’t. It felt so good after all those months of being alone. I
just let it happen.” Patsy shrugged. “I guess that’s the secret, Ty.
You have to let it happen.”
“The problem is that when you do that,” McQueen was looking into the
past. “You don’t know if it’s a destructive fire or a warming one.”
“That’s not exactly how I said it. You think on it a bit.” Patsy
looked at her watch. “Time to wake that one up, before she ends up with
a stiff neck.” She pointed toward Jenny. “Hand me the snifters. I’ll
lock up. Would you help her up stairs?”
Ty sat on the floor watching the woman sleep as he heard Patsy’s
shuffling footsteps in the kitchen. “Jen, wake up.” He touched her
shoulder as he spoke.
“Hi there,” gray eyes blinked, then met blue ones. “Sorry, I didn’t
mean to fall asleep. Jenny put her feet on the floor and shoved the
throw aside, much to the complaint of her cat. “Sorry about that
Cinders, but you’ve got to watch where you fall asleep.” She grinned up
at McQueen and stood, not very steady on her feet.
“Look who’s talking?” McQueen reached for Jen, afraid she would lose
her balance.
“I’m okay. Just not quite awake yet.” Still half asleep she reached
for his cheek and gently caressed him. “But thanks for worrying.” She
turned and went upstairs. Leaving McQueen thinking about sparks, fires,
and a burning desire for a woman he had no business wanting.
Jenny and McQueen spent that winter and spring sailing. When they had
leave they would head for Catalina. As the months past, he became as
proficient at handling the Windswept as Jenny. Lars, the shipwright who
worked for Jen, interested McQueen in a set of blueprints for a racing
sloop the older man had tucked away years ago. By the end of April, the
two men had begun bringing their design to life with wood and
figerglass.
The two officers kept a strange balance in their relationship. When
they were in Loxley, they treated each other with professional courtesy
due their rank and positions. The man and woman were always careful to
be the Major and the Doctor. When they were sailing, they became
friends, and were Jen and Ty
McQueen kept a tight reign on the building desire he felt for Jen. It
had become a test of his self-control. He had pulled out his wedding
picture and put it back where it used to stand on his desk. That was
another kind of self-control. Every time he looked at that picture he
reminded himself of what had happened when he let his emotions get the
better of him. Making himself look and remember became a mental
exercise.
If Jen remembered caressing his cheek that night in January, she never
mentioned it. He knew that they were growing closer to one another, but
he couldn’t put a name to their relationship. He doubted she understood
what was going on between them anymore than he did. The only
certainties he had regarding Jen were that she cared about him, was his
friend, and that she didn’t trust easily, but for some reason she
trusted him. The desire he had felt for her at Christmas was building,
but always under the surface. He didn’t understand it and refused to
acknowledge it most of the time.
In late May, Jen decided to go to the In-Vitro Rights March in
Houston. McQueen tried to talk her out of it, but she wouldn’t listen
to him. He was worried about her safety, but couldn’t get away that
weekend, so Jen went alone.
“McQ!” someone pounding on his door woke him from a sound sleep. He
had been Officer Of The Day for the last 24 hours and was beat. “Open
up McQ!”
“Collins?” A sleepy McQueen was surprised to find a furious Gloria
Collins pounding on his door at an early hour, on a Sunday morning.
“What the hell do you want?”
“Jenny’s been mugged in Houston. We’ve got a transport leaving in 20
mikes.” She glared at him. McQueen didn’t need to ask how Collins
knew. It was an open secret. When the call came into Lt. Col. Smyth’s
quarters about the mugging, Collins was in bed beside him. That was how
she had been able to pull strings and get them a transport so fast, as
well.
“Is she all right?” McQueen felt his insides heave, but his expression
turned to ice.
“We don’t know, but we’re going. ALL of us!” Collins wasn’t taking no
for an answer. “Be at the airstrip in 15 mikes, McQ!”
It was a quiet flight from Loxley to Houston. McQueen sat in the back
of the transport. His insides turning to ice. When they arrived at the
hospital, the nurses didn’t stand a chance. Eight, very angry Angels,
dressed in signature black, descended on the nurses. In no time at all
they were let into Jen’s room.
“Jenny, hon,” Collins reached for her friend’s hand. “You’re safe.
We’re here now.”
Jenny looked small in the hospital bed. She had a black eye and her
left arm was in a cast from above the elbow to the tips of her fingers.
Ty could tell by her shallow breathing that something was wrong with her
ribs as well.
“I’m okay, really.” Jen tried to reassure the group of men and women
around her bed. “Really I am.” She smiled, her eyes meeting McQueen’s.
“McQ,” Collins looked over her shoulder. “You stay with her for a
while, the rest of us will keep the nurses out of here. We’ll take
turns so she isn’t left alone until we can take her back with us.”
“Sure thing.” McQueen didn’t know if he should curse Collins or thank
her. She had given him the time to talk to Jen alone and made it seem
like a natural thing.
“Ty? You came?” Jen held out her right hand to him.
“Of course I did.” He checked her over carefully, seeing more bruises
and dressings than he had before. His eyes cold, as he fought the urge
to hit something.
“It’s okay. I was mugged. It could have happened to anyone.” Jen
smiled, but the effect was ruined when she winced.
“Damn it all Jen, I told you not to go to this thing!” McQueen was
furious. “Ever since you wrote that damn book, you’ve been a target for
every idiot with a grudge against in-vitros. You’re living in the real
world now, not that safe little Island of yours!”
“It’s something I had to do!” Her breath caught as a sharp pain from
her broken ribs caught her unawares. “I would think you, of all people,
would understand.”
“Well I don’t.” He ground out. “Not something like this!” He paced
the room, trying to contain his anger.
“I’m sorry, Ty.” Jen watched his fury grow. “I didn’t mean to, well to
cause...you....”
“Don’t ever apologize to me! Not for this!” He turned, feeling hollow
and empty. “I’m the one who should be apologizing to you.”
“No, never you.” Jen whispered as her eyes filled with tears. “Haven’t
you figured out by now that I don’t see a difference between in-vitro
and in-utero born!”
“Oh Jen.” His anger was contained by something stronger. He picked her
up from the bed and sat in a chair with her on his lap. Jen was in his
arms and for a moment that was all that mattered. He wasn’t a man who
gave comfort, so he wasn’t surprised when he moved to kiss her. His
hand ran through her hair and she snuggle closer. That was all the
invitation that he needed. His lips were millimeters away from hers
when his hand in her hair moved against her neck and touched the clear
gel covering over the burn.
“What the hell!” McQueen pulled back as he found the dressing on her
neck. “Those sons-of-bitches!” He ground out.
Jen felt him stiffen and grip her tighter. Looking up at his grim face
she sighed knowing she would have to tell him what happened. But that
was all she was going to tell. Not what might have happened. After the
telling, McQueen had piled her back into bed and paced the room again.
His anger in complete control of him. Jen watched him. When he had
pulled back from her, it left an empty ache deep inside, she didn’t
understand.
“It’s okay, Ty.” Jen shook her head as his anger grew.
“It’s okay?” McQueen turned to her. His face a frozen mask. Not only
was his anger worse because of the burn, but he was feeling guilt
because he had used her injury to take advantage of her. “That wasn’t
just an ordinary mugging. It was a terrorist attack against an In-vitro
Rights worker. A personal attack against you! You can sit there and
tell me it’s okay?” It made his stomach clench to picture what had
happened.
“I’m alive. The wrist will heal. The ribs will heal.” Jen looked him
straight in the eyes. “And the burn will heal. This is a kind of war.
There are casualties in war.”
“Lieutenant, this needs to be taken seriously.” McQueen fell back on
rank to shore up his eroding feelings. It wouldn’t take much and he
would be holding Jen again. This time he wouldn’t let her go, no matter
how bad an idea it would be for her.
“You’re feeling guilty?” The truth was beginning to pierce the fog of
painkillers Jen was on. “You think because we have had a friendship the
last months, it has brought attention to me?”
“We haven’t been very circumspect about it.” Let Jen think that was
where his guilt was coming from. In fact, the more he thought about it,
there was truth to what she had said. He knew that the Angels were
aware of something between them. They were gone at the same times to
often for it to be coincidence, but none of them would have hurt Jen.
But they were seen together regularly when sailing, so anyone could
know.
“This is ridiculous.” Jen sputtered. Feeling Ty pull further from her
with every second that passed.
“That’s something we can agree on!”
“Hey, guys, what’s all the shouting about?” Tom McDougall stuck his
head in Jenny’s room. He had heard Queen Six and Angel-Doc fighting
from the hall.
“Nothing. It’s your watch. McDougall!” McQueen turned and stomped out
of Jen’s room.
He checked at the nurses’ station to make sure Jen was going to be all
right and to borrow paper and an envelope. It was when he was speaking
with one of the nurses that he found out her blouse had been torn off.
His blood turned to ice as he guessed the muggers real intent.
“Collins!” McQueen called out. “Give this to Jen.” He handed her an
envelope with a quickly scribbled note. “I’m heading back to Loxley.”
“You’re what?” Collins couldn’t believe this was the same man that
Jenny was slowly pulling out of seclusion. He was as grim as she had
ever seen him.
“You heard me, Captain.” McQueen’s eyes were deadly.
“She’s being released in a few hours. Then will be on medical leave
for the next month. We’re going to take her home to Catalina. Aren’t
you coming with us?” Collins squinted at the man in front of her.
“Why would I want to do that?” He stood very straight. His hands
gripped into fists at his sides.
“But I thought....?”
“Well you thought wrong!” McQueen turned on his heel and left.
“You cold bastard!” Collins hurled at the retreating figure.
“That’s a medical impossibility.” McQueen mumbled as he pushed through
the doors to the hospital. With every step he took, he pounded harder
on anything he was feeling. With any luck, by the time he got to
Loxley, he would have his emotions beaten into submission.
That was the last time he saw Jen, until he looked out of an ISSCV and
recognized a dirty-faced doctor moving toward him. Jen had been on
medical leave when war broke out.
The Saratoga 2063
Looking at the picture in his hand had brought it all back. Now
what, McQueen looked around his quarters as an idea formed. Putting
everything back in the footlocker, except the sailing picture, then
sliding the trunk back where it belonged. He reached for the framed
wedding photo on his desk. Carefully opening the back of the frame, he
placed the picture of Jen and himself behind the one that was already
there. Yes, that should do it. Smiling at the irony of the hidden
photo.
McQueen had kept up the mental exercises that Amy had come to
represent, even after he thought Jen was out of his life. It had
helped him in the months that followed. When his life was torn apart
again: the Angels dying; being grounded permanently; and then finding a
group of young Marines that meant a great deal to him. Now, Jen was
back again. His life seemed to move in a circle.
Looking back, he knew that he felt more than desire for Jen. If it had
only been desire, he would have acted on it. He couldn’t say he loved
her. He wished it were that easy. Love was an emotion he couldn’t
identify. He couldn’t find the spark, as Patsy would say. There was a
time when he thought he loved Amy. If that was love. It wasn’t all it
was cracked up to be.
What he felt for Jen was different than anything he had ever felt and
it didn’t make any sense. Walking away from Amy had been hard because
it hurt him. Walking away from Jen had been easy, even though it hurt
him. When he walked out of that hospital in Houston he didn’t doubt for
a minute that he was doing the right thing. Involvement with an
in-vitro man would only make Jen that much more of a target. That was
something that hadn’t changed.
Smiling he placed the framed picture back on his desk. To every one
else it looked like it always did. McQueen could see the truth beneath
the lie. Now he had to go back living the lie to hide the truth. He
had promised General Savage that he would keep Jen safe, and he would.
That included safe from him, as well.
Previous : Part One
Next : Chapter Three
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