All
The King's Men
by Kcountess
Rating: PG-13
Warnings: Angst. Brief violence.
Spoilers: Slight Spoilers for Season 3,
up to 3x24.
Disclaimer: Not mine, belongs to FOX, for love
not money, yadda, yadda. You know the drill.
Summary: My somewhat AU possibility for
an end-of-series twist.
HUGE thanks to Midge, Rachel, Yvonne and Bridget for beta-ing.
Jack Bauer paused as he
entered the warehouse, carefully listening for any noise
that might give away the location of his quarry. His
heart was beating loudly in his ears, adrenaline urging
him forward, prodding him to move quickly so that Brian
Cartwright wouldn't slip through CTU's net once again.
But he knew from his experience that it was sometimes
best to move slowly. Sometimes speed didn't do anything
but cause mistakes and accidents. Better to move in when
they knew it was safe.
"I don't hear anything," Andrew Taylor, head of
Field Ops at CTU, whispered beside him. Jack gave a quick
nod in agreement. No sounds--Cartwright might have
escaped already, or he might be holed up somewhere,
waiting it out. Cartwright had patience; he'd proved that
yesterday. It had doubtless taken a great deal of
patience to wait three years to enact his revenge on the
justice department, three long years of waiting and
planning just how he would gain access to department
headquarters, three years of planning where to place the
bomb for maximum effect.
Patience. Jack just needed to have a little more patience.
Glancing back at Taylor and the CTU SWAT team, he
gestured for them to fan out, check for booby traps. If
Cartwright was here, he may have set up incendiaries to
take out anyone who came after him, maybe to take himself
out as well.
They crept in, each step as silent as possible. Jack
swept the hall with his firearm and flashlight, ready to
shoot should there be any hint of a target.
He never heard the gunshot or the ricochet, just felt the
impact in his head, as though someone had just punched
him just above his left ear. For a second he staggered,
before his knees gave way and he slumped down the wall to
the floor as gunfire erupted around him. Down the hall,
he saw a body flop to the floor, red blood oozing from
innumerable wounds. Cartwright. They'd got him. He could
feel something warm on his face and lifted his hand to
his temple, surprised to see blood on his fingers when he
pulled them back.
"Jack? Jack?" Taylor hovered over him and Jack
looked up, tried to respond but he couldn't force his
mouth to make the words. Everything was fuzzy, dreamlike,
and he had the oddest sense of watching everything from
outside himself.
"Someone get a medic in here now!" Taylor
turned to the SWAT team, and one of them picked up a
radio. Jack tried to get Taylor's attention; there were
more important things right now, things he wanted to say,
but he felt numb all over, couldn't move, and suddenly he
just felt so tired.
The light was fading, and a voice in his head urged him
to try and stay awake, but there seemed little he could
do to stop himself from falling asleep. Taylor's voice
calling his name faded, leaving him in silence.
Kim Edmunds looked up at
the familiar plain, unadorned windows with the same
feelings she always did: dread and doubt. The grounds
were well-kept as usual, patients and their families
going for walks in the late afternoon sun. It should have
looked peaceful, should have been reassuring, but somehow
the trees and bushes couldn't liven up the sterile
concrete and glass. So many visits, and yet so little had
changed. Sometimes she had to wonder why she even
bothered. There were always other things she could be
doing on a Sunday afternoon, but somehow she could never
stop herself from coming.
Reflexively, she checked her watch: 4:45 in the
afternoon; precicely on time. She always arrived promptly
for the last fifteen minutes of visiting time. Fifteen
minutes every two weeks; it seemed so awful to spend so
little time with her father, but then many people
probably wouldn't have bothered coming at all.
The routine was the same: sign in, take the elevator up
to the third floor, then the familiar walk down the hall
to her father's room. Never a variation. Had he known
about the routineness of these occasions he'd probably
have approved. He'd always had his routines, she'd always
assumed it was his military background. Some of it had
rubbed off on her, some hadn't. She was always punctual,
never late for anything, but she wasn't quite as
particular as her dad had been.
Now his whole life is one big routine, she
thought, Awake at the same time, asleep at the same
time, meals at the same times every day, physiotherapy
with the same person at the same time, the same rooms,
the same people, day in day out. The thought was
oppressive and she mentally shook herself, trying to
appear natural, not wanting her father to know how she
felt. Though again, she had to wondered why she even
bothered hiding her emotions; chances were he'd never
notice the difference.
As she walked in the room, one of the technicians was
just packing up the EEG machine. Electroencephalography:
the measurement of brainwave activity, and a process she
was fairly familiar with. There had been a few times her
father's doctors had asked her to speak to him, while he
was hooked up to an EEG, to see if her presence had any
effect. It was another of the words she'd become uneasily
familiar with, thanks to her father's condition. There
had been a time when she couldn't even pronounce it, and
there were times she wished she still couldn't. When she
wished that she didn't have to know these things.
The tech turned, and she recognised him: Kerry. He had
talked her through that first time she'd seen her father
with electrodes stuck all over his head, like some
creature from a science fiction movie.
"Hey," he said, with a smile and nod in her
direction, before addresing her father as he wound the
EEG's power cable around the cart. "Hey, Mr. Bauer,
your daughter's here to visit." Turning back to her
as he pushed the cart out of theroom, he said in a lower
tone, "He was pretty active for a while, but about
ten minutes ago his activity dropped. It looks like he's
in one of those dormant periods." He shrugged
apologetically. Kim just nodded in response. It didn't
seem to matter whether her father's brain activity was
"active" or "dormant"; she could
never tell any difference between the two. She waited for
Kerry to leave before tunring back to her father; she
preferred to face him alone.
He was sitting in his chair as he always was, staring at
his hands folded in his lap. Kim took the chair across
from him, taking one of his hands in hers. She sat there
for a moment without speaking, the silence heavy around
her. In the hall she could hear the squeaking of an
orderly's sneakers on the tile floor, the footsteps a
steady, regular rhythm in the background.
"Hi, Dad," she said, clearing her throat,
"I hope you're feeling okay. I see you're wearing
the sweats I brought you last time, they look comfortable.
Chase wears his whenever he's hanging around the house,
so I knew you'd probably like them.
"Work's been pretty busy--we had a hacker try to
break into our server last week, which locked up the
entire system as it tried to keep them from getting
access. They didn't get in, but no one got any work done
all day--we were all trying to put up firewalls and re-route
information so they couldn't do too much damage. Things
have been pretty quiet since then, though. It's just...well,
work, you know?
"Uh...Chloe and Angela couldn't come today. Chloe
had a ballet practice, and I've told you about Angie--she
wants to do everything her big sister does. They said to
say that they love their Granddad though, and they'll
come see you next time, I know they will." Her mouth
felt dry, as it always did when she lied, and she
wondered if he could still tell when she was lying as he
always had when she was little. She couldn't understand
why she always made up these elaborate excuses why no one
but her came to visit; the doctors said he probably
didn't hear or understand anything she said. But she
always felt she needed to explain. Maybe it was her own
guilt for not telling the girls about their grandfather,
but really, how do you explain something like catatonia
to five- and three-year-olds? How do you introduce them
to a grandfather that doesn't know they exist?
She swallowed, her fingers running over his wedding band.
"I...I got a Christmas card from Mr. Chappelle last
week. He said to say hello. I called him to let him know
about the card and we, uh...talked about you for a while.
He's doing better, still on inhalers, but he can go for
long walks again. He said it's helped a lot now that the
military has finally recognised Gulf War Syndrome as a
disease--they're paying his medical bills now.
"I know you and he never really got along very well,
but...I don't know, I think everything that happened just...changed
him. I mean, he told me that he was just a stupid kid
back then. He stood up for you all through the hearing
about the incident. Didn't really help much, but he did
what he could. He said that he still doesn't understand
how they could blame it on you. You'd think in a friendly
fire incident they'd blame the ones that did the firing,
especially as you were injured, but I guess it was just
easier to blame the person who couldn't answer back. I
mean, a lot of commanding officers probably reported the
wrong co-ordinates for their units, only nothing bad ever
happened, so they were never reprimanded for it."
She swallowed, trying to dislodge the lump in her throat.
"Oh, he also said he's been emailing back and forth
with Sergeant Palmer. He's back in the Gulf--he was
supposed to come home last month, but they're holding his
unit over for a while, as an added security force in
Baghdad. He's not too happy about it, but what can he do?"
Kim looked at her watch: four-fifty-five. Five minutes
before she could leave, go home to her family and try and
put this behind her for another two weeks. Looking back
at her father, she squeezed his hand. She wasn't sure why
she did it--she'd long given up getting any kind of
response--but if there was any way he could tell that she
was there...well, she wanted him to know. All the years
she'd been coming, she'd never received any kind of
response from him. It didn't matter what she told him
about: the death of his wife--her mother--in a car
accident, her marriage, the birth of his grandchildren;
there was never a response of any kind. No movement, no
sound. He barely even blinked. Somewhere inside that
hollow shell was the man she'd run to with scraped knees,
teddy bears and storybooks, the one she'd planned on
walking her down the aisle on her wedding day. The one
who'd gone off to war when she was eleven, and who had
never come back.
Letting go of his hand, she gently touched his face,
ruffled his short hair with her fingers. She traced the
line of the three-inch scar that ran in a horizontal line
back from his forehead, two inches above his right ear.
They'd been able to remove the bullet from his skull, but
they hadn't been able to unlock whatever door had closed
between him and the world. Humpty Dumpty, forever broken
despite the best efforts of the king's horses and men.
Her hand dropped, finding his once more. She followed his
gaze to his wrist, to the watch she'd bought him years
ago for Christmas, when she still had been struggling to
accept that he wasn't going to come back to her. It had
seemed like a good idea at the time. He'd always been so
concerned with the time, with being punctual. She'd
thought it would drive him nuts to be in a room with no
clocks, to never know the time.
She watched him for a moment, watched him blink slowly,
watched him breathe in and out. Routine. It never seemed
to matter what was going on inside his head, there was
never any changes in his breathing, his heart rate, in
any physiological response. It was the same whether his
brain activity was going wild, or whether it was slow and
sedate. There was always at least some activity in one
spot near the creative centre of the brain, even during
those times the doctors called "dormant"; as
though his mind had gone to sleep for a while. From what
the doctors had said, there had to be something
going on in there, and perhaps some of the outside world
was getting in, though it was impossible to tell. A long
time ago, she'd hoped that maybe that meant he'd start to
react to the outside world, but years of unresponsiveness
had taught her not to hope.
"You know," she said quietly, conspiritorially,
"Sometimes I have to wonder what goes on in that
head of yours as you stare into space all day. I can't
imagine that there's just nothing--no thought, no sound,
nothing. Is there a whole other world in there? And don't
you ever notice that it's not real?"
She jumped as his watch beeped, and she glanced at it.
Five o'clock. As though on cue, one of the nurses knocked
on the door and popped their head in. Kim recognised her:
Taylorle, the senior floor nurse, and a favourite.
Taylorle seemed to understand that while she and Kim
could discuss their families and their jobs, Kim never
liked to talk about her visits to her father.
"Hi, Kim. Visiting hours are up," Taylorle
said, with an apologetic smile. Kim nodded her thanks and
Taylorle retreated, letting Kim have a final moment alone
with her father.
Picking up her purse, Kim kissed him on the cheek and
squeezed his hand one last time. At one time she would
have held his hand a moment longer, hoping to feel his
fingers closing around hers in response, but she didn't
do that anymore. Instead, she gently placed his hand back
in his lap and stood up, closing the door softly behind
her as she left with only a single look back.
Signing out, Kim pulled her car keys from her bag, taking
a deep breath to try and calm herself. She never cried
after these visits. Instead, as she walked to her car she
thought of what she'd do when she got home. She'd get
dinner for Angie and Chloe, give them baths and put them
to bed, after curling up with them and reading them a
story, listening to how their day had gone. She'd hug
them tightly, hoping they knew how precious they were to
her.
Then she and Chase would sit down to a late dinner
together, talk about things, before snuggling on the sofa
and watching a movie before bed. She'd be with her
family, she'd be surrounded by love and comfort.
And she wouldn't let herself think about her father.
"Dad? Dad?"
Jack felt as though he was drifting awake after a very
long sleep, the throbbing pain in his head helping to
break through some of the mental fog. Opening his eyes,
he could see Kim looking down at him, concerned. Taylor
was right behind her, and he realized he was moving. Of
course; they were still at the warehouse, and he was
probably being taken to a waiting ambulance. Kim had been
co-ordinating the data transfer between the insertion
team and CTU headquarters from a support truck, she would
have heard the entire thing.
He tried to talk, but there was something covering his
mouth: an oxygen mask. But he needed to let her know
everything was going to be fine, that he was going to be
all right. He always was, in the end. She need to know
that. She worried too much, particularly after Teri's
death.
He felt her take his hand, and he squeezed it as hard as
he could, trying to tell her all the things he couldn't
say aloud. She gave him a teary smile in response, and he
knew that though he couldn't say those things at the
moment, she knew them already.
END
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