An Eye for an
Eye
The Sentinel crossover with
The Six Million Dollar
Man/Bionic Woman
I
think my muse likes to take over my brain when I'm asleep. This story was also born
in my dreams. Don't ask me why, I've only seen one or two other crossovers with
the Six Million Dollar Man. I loved that show when I was growing up. I think
Steve Austin was one of my first TV star crushes. This is a stand alone story,
I don't plan on creating yet ANOTHER AU. Of course, as busy as my muse seems to
be, who knows?
Warnings:
This takes place after TSbyBS and as usual follows my Sentinel Universe,
Blair's a cop, etc… Oh, and Blair owies, so what else is new? Some profanity
also.
In
the Six Million Dollar Man Universe, this takes place after the last movie…
just assume that time has moved on, so that puts Steve and Jaime in their late
fifties, early sixties and married to each other. I also assume that Kate
eventually married Oscar's nephew. If you recall the show, Sandra Bullock
played Kate. One more thing, I tried to be as accurate as possible with the
medical stuff, but… well, you'll see.
Disclaimers:
The usual. Don't own any of them. Would like to, but I can't afford it.
Feedback is always appreciated.
Also,
many thanks to my cousin, Cheryl who is the finder of booboos, fixer of
mistakes, and the most patient, wonderful beta ever! <G>
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jim
laughed at his partner as Blair slicked his hair back for the third time and
tried to tame it into a ponytail.
"What
are you laughing at?" Sandburg asked indignantly as he checked his
reflection in the mirror.
"I
don't know who you're trying to impress, Chief," Jim chuckled. "The
prosecuting attorney is married with three kids. The DA, well," the
Sentinel shrugged, "I don't think he swings that way." Jim ducked the
hand aimed at the back of his head and continued, "And the judge has to be
going on seventy. She's more likely to pinch your cheek and offer you a
cookie."
Blair
stuck his tongue out at his partner. "You're just jealous," he said
raking his hand lightly over the top of Jim's head as he passed him to get his
jacket and keys. "Let's get going or we'll be late for court."
Jim
rolled his eyes. "Just waiting on you, Fabio."
His
Guide flashed him a brilliant grin as they headed out.
***********
"Jim,
we waited in line at Mr. Donut for twenty minutes," Blair glanced at his
watch again. "Don't you think we could have gotten coffee there? You like
their coffee."
The
Sentinel scrunched up his nose in disgust. "They were using yesterday's
grounds, Chief. Besides, you love the fraps here and we have plenty of time.
The courthouse is just across the street."
Blair
nodded distractedly as he read the menu trying to decide what he wanted to get.
Jim's right, I do love their frappacinos.
While
his partner tried to decide what flavor his poison should be this morning, Jim
scanned the area lightly with his senses. Something caught his attention,
almost like an electrical charge making the hair on his arms stand up, and then
it was gone. Jim shook it off as Blair finally made up his mind. The Sentinel
hadn't picked up any sight or sound that indicated trouble so he just filed the
experience away for future reference.
*************
Jim
and Blair exited the courthouse and walked right into the middle of a media
frenzy. For once, they weren't the cause. A group armed with cameras and
microphones mobbed the captain of the Cascade Terrorist Investigations
Department and another older man. The
detectives moved along the edge of the mob as they made their way down the
stairs.
"Captain
Jameson!" one reporter shouted. "Are you concerned that the
conviction of two influential members of the People's Resistance Front will
cause their associates to seek retribution?"
The
captain raised his hand for silence and shook his head. "We have the PRF
under observation. If they try anything, it will only lead to more of them
being arrested. Hopefully today's demonstration of justice will convince the
remaining PRF that terrorist acts will not be tolerated in this country."
"Mr.
Goldman," another reporter called. "Is the OSI satisfied with the
TID's handling of the People's Resistance? Or do you plan to put your own
people on it as well?"
Oscar
Goldman smiled disarmingly at the young reporter. "I'm just here for the
trial. The OSI's involvement ended as soon as Reider and Talbot were
arrested." He tilted his head thoughtfully. "If it becomes necessary,
OSI resources will be at Captain Jameson's disposal."
Off
to one side of the crowd, Blair automatically stopped when Jim did. He was so absorbed by what was going on at
the top of the stairs that he didn’t even notice how in tune he was with his
partner's movements. "What is it about this city that draws the loonies,
Jim?" Blair asked. Having dealt with the Sunrise Patriots, he was only too
glad to let someone else handle this new terrorist threat in Cascade.
"I
don't know, Chief," Jim answered distractedly. He rubbed the hair down on
the back of his neck as he scanned the area.
"Who
is this Goldman?" Blair asked unaware of Jim's focus. "And the OSI?
I've never heard that one before."
"Office
of Scientific Investigations," Jim replied only half listening. He tuned
his sight and hearing onto the two people across the street who were also
watching the media.
"…Steve, I know he's
worried about retaliation. That's why he called us," the older blonde
woman said.
"Well, he's right,
Jaime. I can see half a dozen in hiding from here. What are you picking
up?"
Jim
shook his head and switched his attention to the surrounding area. Sure enough
he could see five people hiding in various locals near the courthouse. He
straightened. One of them had a sniper rifle. "Come on, Chief," he
said grabbing Blair's arm as he headed back toward the top of the stairs.
"SNIPER!"
Jim shouted drawing his gun as he closed on Jameson and Goldman. The Sentinel
then turned, aimed his weapon at the sniper he'd spotted, and fired.
Blair
drew his own weapon and herded the civilians into the building as two shots
rang out. A bullet pinged off a statue near the spot where Jameson had pulled
Goldman down. Across the street a man screamed and fell from the top of the
building. Jim watched as his target plummeted to the ground.
~~~~~~~
Jim
sat in the conference room rubbing his eyes with one hand. They'd been
questioned by TID and OSI operatives, separately and then together and it was
getting old. His head hurt and they wouldn't let him see Blair. The door opened
and Jim raised his head to see Oscar Goldman enter.
"I
understand I owe you a thanks for saving my life, Detective Ellison,"
Goldman said with a fatherly smile.
The man could make a fortune
selling used cars. Jim nodded slightly.
"Well,"
Goldman continued. "Thank you. I'm sorry for all the cloak and dagger, but
I'm sure with your background you're quite used to it."
Jim
frowned. "If you know my background, Mr. Goldman, then you know I'll
cooperate to the best of my abilities." Ellison's frown deepened.
"However, I think that I've come to the end of my ability to be patient. I
just want to collect my partner and go home."
Goldman
chuckled. "You're free to go, Detective. I apologize for keeping you so
long."
Jim
nodded and stood. "Good luck. I don't envy you the job of reeling in the
PRF." He left the room and focused easily on his partner's voice.
"I
can't believe this, Jim," Blair complained from across the room. To all outward
appearances he was just mumbling to himself. Jim grinned. "We're the good
guys! And they grilled us like a salmon steak. I'm so out of here. Let's grab a
bite to eat. I'll even go for that steak house you like."
Jim
continued to grin as he neared Blair. It was fun to have these one-sided
conversations with his Guide from across the room. One of the perks of being a
Sentinel. He replaced his grin with a worried frown before Blair got to him.
Jim looked at his partner critically then grabbed him by the shoulders and
turned him, first one way then the other.
"What?"
Blair exclaimed. "What's wrong?"
"Well,"
Jim replied suppressing his grin. "I don't see any grill marks."
"Ha!"
Blair said smacking his friend on the arm. "You are too funny, man. Don't
quit your day job."
Jim
threw his arm over Blair's shoulders and guided him for the door. "Let's
go get that steak, what do you say?"
Blair
grinned at him. "They have a great salad bar, too, Jim."
"I
don't go to steak houses for the greens, Junior," Jim growled playfully.
********
"Why
does that name sound familiar?" Jaime Austin asked with a frown.
Oscar
Goldman shrugged as he paced the hotel room. "They're going to try
something big to get Reider and Talbot. Maybe during the transfer to the
prison."
"Why
don't you check the files, Jaime?" Colonel Steve Austin suggested to his
wife as he watched the older man pace. "Oscar, sit down, you're making me
tired."
Goldman
frowned at his friend. "I've got ten years on you, Pal, and you've got
bionic legs." He shook his head. "Don't give me that line of
bull."
Steve
grinned. "Come on, Oscar. There's nothing we can do about it tonight. And
there's no way the PRF are going try anything with the security we have set up
here. All we can do is wait for Kate to contact us and let us know their next
move."
Oscar
sighed and turned his attention to Jaime. "Why are you so interested in
Sandburg?"
Jaime
shook her head as she set up the holographic keyboard. "It's not just Sandburg,
but the combination with Ellison that is setting off bells in my head. I don't
know, three, maybe four years ago… Something…"
She
set up the scanner that would display a keyboard of light on any surface and
read where her fingers were hitting, then plugged it into the modified laptop
computer and turned it on. Jaime started typing one handed, but that hand moved
much faster than any normal typist could compete with.
"I
love this keyboard," she said as the information she wanted scrolled down
the screen.
"You're
just tired of replacing the ones you burn out," Steve teased.
Jaime
waggled her eyebrows. "Darned right." She pushed a strand of
silvered-blonde hair back behind one ear and returned her attention to the
screen. "Here it is. In 1999 Ellison was exposed as a Sentinel. Someone
with hyperactive senses. Touch, taste, smell, sight and hearing. Supposedly
Sandburg's doctoral thesis was on Sentinels and was released to the press
prematurely. Sandburg later denounced the work as a fake on national TV."
"What's
he doing still working with Ellison?" Goldman asked sitting down beside
Jaime.
"According
to this, the whole Sentinel paper and fraud statement was a ruse to draw out an
assassin. After the man was killed attempting to escape, Sandburg went into the
police academy and was promoted directly to detective with Major Crimes. He
later finished his doctorate at Rainier," Jaime answered with a puzzled
frown.
"That
doesn't explain how Ellison knew that sniper was up there," Steve said
standing to do his own pacing. "Or how he made that shot with a Sig."
Goldman
nodded thoughtfully. "Jaime, get me everything you can on Ellison and
Sandburg. I think we may do a little recruiting for this assignment."
***********
The next morning
"I
wonder what Simon wants with us so early this morning?" Blair wondered
aloud as he followed Jim into the bullpen only to run into the bigger man's
back as Jim stopped suddenly.
"There
it is again," Jim said rubbing his hand over his forearm to smooth the
hairs down.
"There's
what, Jim?" Blair asked moving around to face his Sentinel.
Jim
frowned. "Yesterday I had the strangest sensation. Like coming into
contact with a light electrical field. It made my hair stand up."
"Why
didn't you say something?" the Guide requested.
"The
first time was in the coffee shop and it went away pretty fast. The second time
was right before I spotted the sniper. I was able to track it to an older
couple across the street. They were talking about PRF people hiding around the
courthouse and that's when I saw the sniper."
"And
you're getting that same feeling now?" Blair asked concerned.
"Yeah,"
Jim replied staring at Simon's office. He smoothed the hair on the back of his
neck.
Blair
followed his gaze. "Maybe that's why Simon called us in."
Jim
tilted his head. "Well, we're not going to find out standing here,
Kreskin."
They
went to the captain's office and knocked then entered at Simon's gruff
"Come."
"Nice
of you to join us this morning, gentlemen," Banks growled.
Blair
grinned. "Sorry, Simon," he replied sending a smile at the other
occupants of the room. "Ran into traffic."
Jim
scrutinized the three people in the room. Oscar Goldman was one of them. The
other two were the couple he'd seen across from the courthouse.
Simon
cleared his throat. "Detectives, I believe you'll recall Mr. Goldman, OSI.
This is Colonel Steve Austin and Dr. Jaime Austin."
"The
astronaut?" Blair exclaimed. "Cool!" he said moving to shake
hands with the Colonel and then his wife.
Steve
grinned at the younger detective then offered his hand to Ellison.
Jim
shook his hand then rubbed his thumb and fingers together briskly before
shaking Dr. Austin's. Her hand gave him the same response and Jim frowned as he
rubbed his tingling right hand down his pants leg. "To what do we owe this
honor?" the Sentinel asked suspiciously.
Goldman
smiled and glanced at Austin. "I told you we wouldn't get anything past
Detective Ellison, Steve."
Blair's
eyes narrowed. "What do you want with us?" he asked, his own
suspicions aroused.
Jaime
raised her eyebrows. Evidently Sandburg wasn't just an academician.
"We've
read your files," Goldman said suddenly serious. "We know about your
participation in taking down the Sunrise Patriots. Frankly, we need your help.
You know the area and the people. And your expertise in dealing with terrorists
will be helpful to our operation."
Blair
frowned at the word 'expertise.' What
exactly does Goldman mean by that, I wonder?
"I
don't buy it," Jim said staring Goldman down. "There are at least a
dozen other people more qualified to handle this situation than we are."
He flicked his eyes toward the Austins. "What is it you really need us
for?"
Goldman
nodded. "Okay. I'll be honest. We need your unique abilities to get past
the PRF's counter-surveillance equipment."
Blair
stepped in front of Jim his eyes blazing. "What are you talking
about?"
Jaime
moved forward. "We know Detective Ellison is a Sentinel."
Simon
joined Blair in front of Jim. "I think it's time you folks leave."
"This
is a matter of national security," Goldman continued. "We believe the
PRF have one or more EMP bombs and are planning to use them to free Reider and
Talbot. Just one of them could devastate communications over the entire city
and maybe the entire state depending on the size of the device."
Jim
put a hand on each of his friends' shoulders and pushed his way between them.
"Tell me something, honestly, and I'll consider it."
"What's
that?" Goldman asked suspiciously.
"Why
do Colonel and Dr. Austin literally make my skin crawl?" Jim asked sending
an apologetic look at the couple.
Colonel
Austin chuckled and slapped Goldman on the back. "That's what you get, Oscar,
for trying to pull a fast one on a man with hyperactive senses."
"I
wasn't trying to pull a fast one," Goldman grouched. He shrugged.
"Show them."
Jaime
pulled out a small box, no bigger than the palm of her hand. "It's an
anti-surveillance device designed to prevent people from listening in on our
conversations. It also emits a charge that will disrupt video equipment within
a certain range." She looked at Jim thoughtfully. "I'm surprised you
were able to sense it."
Jim
frowned. They weren't lying, but they weren't telling the whole truth either.
"Okay. If it's all right with our Captain, and my partner agrees, I'll
help you. Assuming that this information stays between us?" he suggested
indicating the people in the room with a wave of his hand.
"Of
course, Detective," Goldman said smiling again. "Strictly
confidential."
Jim
nodded doubtfully, but turned to Simon and Blair. "Well, Sir?"
Banks
glared at the OSI people then at Jim. "I don't like it, Jim. But I like
having the PRF loose in my town even less. Be sure you call in the cavalry if
you need us."
"Yes,
Sir," Jim replied. He looked at his frowning Guide, and then turned back
to Goldman. "We need a minute alone."
Goldman
nodded and gathered up Steve and Jaime with a glance. The OSI people left the
room and Jim closed the door behind them before turning to face Banks and
Sandburg.
"They're
not telling the whole truth," Jim said watching his friends.
"No,
shit, Jim!" Blair blurted out raking his hands through his hair as he
started to pace.
Simon
glanced out the window and saw the three OSI watching them. He quickly closed
the blinds and turned back to his detectives. "I don't like it, Jim. It's
too risky. You could both just disappear. We've talked about this," Banks
finished pointing toward the bullpen.
Jim
frowned. "I know, sir. But… I don't think that they plan to spirit us
away. They need our help. Whatever their secret is," the Sentinel
shrugged, "that's what they aren't telling us. Something is not… normal
about Colonel and Dr. Austin. I'm not sure what though."
Blair
stared at the closed blinds. "Can you hear what they're talking about out
there?"
"Sandburg!"
Simon exclaimed.
The
Guide turned smoldering eyes on his Captain. "It's Jim's life we're talking
about here, Simon. I'm not going to let a little thing like eavesdropping stand
in the way of his safety!"
Jim
put his hand on Blair's shoulder. "Easy, Chief." He looked at Simon,
who rolled his eyes and nodded. The Sentinel tilted his head, focusing his
hearing on the bullpen.
"I think we should have
told them," Jaime Austin said.
"Eventually,"
Goldman replied, "we probably will have to. But for now, it's still 'need
to know.'"
"For the record,
Oscar," Steve said, "I'm with Jaime on this one. Ellison is offering
his services. It may help him to know what other assets he has to rely
on."
A pause in the conversation
lasted for several long seconds before Goldman spoke again. "I'll think
about it."
"You know," Jaime
said suddenly, "it just occurred to me that he might be listening to
us."
More
silence followed. Jim shook his head. "They've clammed up." He
grinned and tugged on his ear. "Dr. Austin remembered who they were
dealing with."
Blair
grinned but it faded quickly to a frown. "So what do we do, Jim?"
"If
Goldman's right about the EMP device," Jim's face hardened, "then we
don't have a choice."
Banks
and Sandburg nodded reluctantly in reply.
"All
right Jim," Simon said. "But I want you two to check in on a regular
basis. Let us know if you're going to be out of contact for more than six
hours."
Jim
straightened to attention and nodded.
~~~~~~~~~~
A little while later at Goldman's hotel suite
"From
what our contact has been able to tell us," Jaime started.
Jim
interrupted. "You have someone on the inside," he stated.
Jaime
glanced at Oscar, got a slight nod and turned back to Jim. "Yes. Kate was
just going in on a standard Intel op. We weren't really expecting trouble from
the PRF just yet. But when Reider and Talbot were convicted, everything
changed." Jaime slid a picture of Kate across the table to the Cascade
detectives. "The PRF went into high-drive and word on the street was they
found someone to build a powerful bomb."
Blair
lifted the picture. His eyebrows rose with appreciation. The brown-eyed
brunette in the photo was about his age with a knock out smile.
"Wow."
Steve
grinned. "Don't get any ideas, kid, she's married to Oscar's nephew."
Blair
formed a surprised 'O' with his mouth and carefully set the picture down.
Goldman's smile was more reminiscent of a shark than a benevolent uncle.
"Kate
got inside and found out about the EMP device," Jaime continued. "But
that was all the communication we were able to receive. The PRF upgraded their
counter-surveillance equipment shortly thereafter and we were cut off."
Jim
frowned. "Do you know if she's been found out?"
Oscar
sat forward and leaned his arms on the table. "We don't believe so. There
hasn't been any sign of trouble at their strong hold. We have a standard procedure
in place. If the operative misses two consecutive check-ins, then they set up a
cover story to allow another agent to join them."
Steve
continued. "By this point they should be expecting Kate's cousin Bernie to
show up."
"Bernie?"
Blair snickered.
Jaime
shrugged and grinned. "We need Blair to go in as Bernie."
"No,"
Jim said standing, pushing his chair roughly away from the table as he did.
"I'll go in."
Oscar
shook his head. "They would peg you as a cop in two seconds, Ellison. Besides,
we need your ears on the outside to keep us apprised of the situation."
Jim
glared at Goldman. "I need him to help me," he growled pointing at
Blair.
Blair
sat back and watched content to let Jim figure things out to his own
satisfaction. For now.
Goldman
glared back at Jim. "You'll be focusing on Sandburg. From what I've read,
that should be sufficient grounding."
"What
do you mean, from what you've read?" Jim snapped his gaze sliding to Blair
then back to Goldman.
"Smarten
up, Ellison," Oscar replied heatedly. "The minute Graham released
that snippet to the press, Sandburg's manuscript was snatched up by every
government agency in the world. You've got more eyes on you than the President
and Hussein together."
"That's
enough!" Blair declared boring holes into Goldman with his glare. Oscar
backed off and Blair turned to his Sentinel. "We've always assumed that
was the case," he sighed. "Jim, we're here to help them and Goldman's
right," he raised his hand to forestall Jim's protest. "You won't
have any problems with me as the focus." Blair waited until Jim nodded
sullenly and sat down, then he turned back to Oscar.
"There
was no reason to throw that in our faces. Unless there's something you can do
to protect Jim?" he asked hopefully.
"Us,"
Jim growled. "Protect us, Chief."
Goldman
tilted his head acknowledging Blair's question. "If word gets around that
you're working with OSI," he shrugged, "that will protect you from
legal Allied agencies. And if something were to happen, our people would come
looking for you. That's the best I can offer gentlemen."
Jim
and Blair exchanged a quick look and nodded at Goldman. "Fair
enough," Blair said. "So, this is a retrieval mission, correct?"
"Mostly,"
Steve answered. "You'll make contact with Kate, find out what she knows
and pass it to us via Ellison. After that," he shrugged, "it all
depends on the Intel. You may both be extracted right away, or have to stay in
for a little longer."
"Okay,"
Blair agreed catching Jim's eye again. "So fill me in on my cover."
~~~~~~~
Jim
and Blair left Goldman's suite several hours later. As the door closed behind
them Jim stopped and held up his hand to shush his partner.
"They
just turned on a white noise generator, Chief," he whispered. "Can you
help me get past it?"
Blair
nodded placing his hand on Jim's arm. "Focus on the noise Jim," he
said softly, "identify it and push it aside. Now focus on their voices,
you know what they sound like, find them. Jaime, Col. Austin, Goldman… That's
it."
Blair's words faded until the sound of his voice and the white
noise generator were the only things Jim could hear. Gradually he was able to
break through the noise and found the voices he wanted to hear.
"…talked to Rudy?"
Jaime asked.
"Yes," Goldman replied.
"He's concerned that exposure to an EMP will completely shut her systems
down. And he wasn't too optimistic about you two either."
"Damn," Steve
said. "I hate not knowing how far along their plans are. We could be
sending Sandburg into a hornet's nest."
"We don't have any
other choice, Steve," Goldman sighed. "Kate won't be able to complete
this assignment if she's exposed to a pulse. We've got to have Sandburg there
as backup."
Jim
frowned as he pulled his hearing back to normal.
"What
did you hear Jim?" Blair asked.
"Not
here, Chief," he replied catching Blair by the arm as he headed for the
elevator.
Once
they were in the truck and moving, Blair tried again. "Okay, Jim, spill
it."
"What
ever it is that they are hiding, Steve and Jaime," he clarified,
"Kate has the same secret. Goldman talked to someone named Rudy who was
worried about the effects an EMP would have on those three."
Blair
frowned. "From what I know of EMPs, they don't harm living tissue, just
electronic systems."
"Right,"
Jim said pounding the steering wheel with the palm of his hand in frustration.
"Could
they have some sort of implants?"
"But
what? From what Goldman said a pulse would completely incapacitate Kate. And
wouldn't be too healthy for the Austin's either."
"I
don't know Jim," Blair sighed, "but for now we'll just have to trust
that whatever their secret is, it won't hurt us or the mission." He
grimaced. "Well, unless the bomb goes off."
Jim
grunted his dissatisfaction.
~~~~~~~~~
Inside the PRF compound
Kate
sighed to herself. Neither of her last contact attempts had been successful.
Either Steve or Jaime should have answered her, but since they hadn't she could
only assume that the equipment she'd seen unloaded and installed several days
before was to keep people from spying on the compound. So Kate started to talk
up her cousin Bernie, who was supposed to be joining her here in the next few
days. She used their cover story and mentioned him to as many people as
possible planting the seed that she'd been expecting him all along.
Now,
twenty-four hours later, Kate hoped 'Bernie' wouldn't be too late. Somehow
Prior had gotten his hands on a scientist type who could build an EMP bomb.
From what she'd heard the bomb would disrupt communications throughout Cascade.
And
they were working on building another one, a bigger one to ship out of state.
"When's
your cousin showing up, Kathy?" Melinda asked as she passed Kate in the
hall.
Kate
smiled. "Soon I hope," she replied truthfully.
~~~~~~~~~
Blair
took the glasses Jaime handed to him. They looked just like his current pair.
She
grinned. "They are your prescription, but will also act as a headset when
you activate them." Jaime took the glasses back. "Just pull the right
arm all the way out until it's flush with the lenses, this will turn the
headset on. Then the arm goes back to its normal position and you wear them
just like always. The speaker and microphone are very sensitive. You should be
able to hear us easily and vice versa. You turn them off the same way,"
she demonstrated and handed them to Blair.
"Cool,"
Blair grinned, taking the glasses back and putting them on in place of his
regular pair.
Jim
was impressed, but hid it under a scowl. His partner was about to go into the lion's
den without him. The Sentinel didn't have time for fancy toys. "Remember
Chief. Check in every two hours. If I don't hear from you by five after, I'm
coming in."
Blair
met his Sentinel's gaze. "I hear you Jim. Just take it easy and don't stay
focused on me for more than ten or fifteen minutes at a time, big guy."
Jim nodded sheepishly. Blair looked to Jaime and Steve. "Make sure he
rests in between times," he commanded.
"We
will, Blair," Jaime assured him.
"Time
for you to go, Pal," Goldman said opening the door to the van. "Stay
in touch and good luck."
"Thanks,"
Blair replied shouldering his backpack as he stepped onto the curb. He was
several blocks from the compound and would walk the rest of the way. "See
ya soon, Jim," he said softly as he walked away.
Jim
sat back in his seat ignoring the OSI people as he focused on his partner's
heartbeat.
~~~~~~~~
"Kathy!"
Blair exclaimed as he saw Kate Goldman for the first time.
"Bernie!"
Kate replied with a wide smile. She ran and embraced him.
"Goldman,"
Blair whispered returning the hug. "Kathy, I'm so glad to see you. It took
me forever to get here. My car died and I had to hitch over most of the state
of Washington." They pulled back from each other grinning from ear to ear,
looking like nothing more than two long lost relatives. "Then I walked the
last five or ten miles," Blair trailed off with a grin. "Boy, are you
a sight for sore eyes."
"Oh,
Bernie, I'm so glad you made it," Kate continued grabbing his hand.
"Let me introduce you to my friends." She dragged him around making
introductions and small talk until the furor of having someone new in the
compound died down.
Blair
let them search his backpack and jacket as Kate explained they had to be
careful. The 'heat' was on and they couldn't chance that someone had planted a
bug on him. Blair nodded wide-eyed and innocent, agreeing that they couldn't
take any chances.
After
that Kate led him on a tour around the compound, covertly pointing out the
hidden weapons depot, where the lab/manufacturing facility was and the rooms
where the top echelon slept. Blair took it all in, keeping a close eye on the
time.
Just
before the two-hour mark he guided Kate to a bench in the gardens. "Can
they hear us?" he asked casually.
Kate
shook her head. "All their counter-surveillance equipment works in our
favor too."
Blair
smiled and nodded. "I need to make my report in a few minutes. We can just
sit here and pretend to be catching up on family stuff. I'll give you a lead in
so you can give your information."
"How
are you making contact? I told you…"
Blair
interrupted. "Don't worry, Kate, you have your little secrets and I have
mine. Just give them everything you've got." He looked at his watch again
and nodded. "Okay, Jim, I gave you an extra minute, I hope you're
listening. They've got about thirty armed men and twice that many civilians in
here. The munitions dump is in the northwest corner, the small building with
the tin roof. The scientist has been working in a lab on the east side of the
building, maybe halfway down. You should be able to sniff it out, if you get my
drift. All right, I'm going to let Kate give her report, talk to you in two,
buddy," Blair finished, grinning at Kate to go ahead.
"Um,
hi, Jim? Tell Oscar that this thing is going down tonight. Prior plans to set
the bomb off at a power substation. He'll have most of his men with him, only a
skeleton crew will be left here. You may want to send someone in to clear out
the scientist and the device blueprints. The scientist's name is Brice. I managed
to get Bernie," she glanced at Blair, "what is your name
anyway?"
"Blair
Sandburg," he grinned.
Kate
smiled back. "Blair, invited to the party. They think he has experience
with a terrorist group down south. I'll make my own way there." She shrugged.
"That's all I have. Just watch for the trucks to roll out, but don't
follow too close, they have heavy duty weapons."
Blair
nodded and grabbed Kate's hand. "Let's go mingle some more, keep them from
suspecting anything." Kate nodded and they headed back to the main
building.
~~~~~~~~~
Two hours later in the van
Jim
sighed and rubbed his face. Even with taking rest breaks between monitoring
Blair and the rest of the compound he was beginning to get a headache. It was
getting harder for him to stay focused and Jim feared he might zone just when
Blair needed him most.
"Jaime?" Jim asked reluctantly.
"Yes,
Jim?"
"I
could use a little help here," he admitted, "something to ground me
so that I don't zone."
"Zone?"
she asked. "I read about that, but what exactly can I do to help?"
"When
I focus too much on one sense, I can get lost in it. That's a zone. Blair
usually grounds me with a touch or by talking to me, depending on which sense
I'm using. If I look like I'm spacing out, touch my arm, a tap, squeeze, or
pinch if needed should keep me here." Jaime nodded. Jim took a deep breath
and sent his hearing out in search of Blair.
The
traffic noise was cataloged and discarded. He browsed through the voices outside
the building and set them aside. Jim cast out a sensory net to pick up his
Guide's voice or heart beat. The sounds of birds, insects, electronic buzz and
the click of weapons being readied flooded in and overwhelmed the tired
Sentinel.
Jaime
frowned, the last time Ellison had started relaying information almost
immediately. This time he sat frozen. "I think he's zoning," she said
aloud, reaching to touch him.
Suddenly
Jim's world went white, a buzzing noise ripped through him like a tornado
through wheat. He jerked and grabbed his head, an incoherent cry of pain
escaping his lips as he slipped from the chair and crumpled onto the
floorboard.
Jaime
pulled her hand back in shock. "What the?"
Oscar
moved over to Jim and put his hands over Jim's which were still clapped firmly
over the Sentinel's ears. He spoke in a low calm voice. "I think he
responded to your bionics, Jaime. Remember how he sensed them when you shook
hands?" Jaime and Steve nodded.
"I
didn't hurt him did I?" she asked mortified.
"I
don't know, Jaime," Oscar replied softly still focused on Ellison.
"Come on, Ellison, Sandburg needs you. Can you hear me, Jim? Come on,
Pal."
Jim
felt warm hands on his. Real hands. And heard a soft compelling voice. It
wasn't Blair, but it seemed to be cutting through the haze. He blinked and
shook his head, tentatively pulling his hands away from his ears. "What
happened?" he asked weakly.
"I'm
not sure," Goldman replied helping him to sit up. "We think you zoned
and then you cried out in pain."
Steve
offered Jim a bottle of water, which the Sentinel took gratefully. He gulped it
down then looked at his watch. "Damn, I missed the contact
completely."
"That's
okay, Jim," Steve assured clapping him on the shoulder careful to use his
left hand. "I think they probably gave us everything they had the first
time. Prior wouldn't allow talk of the mission if it's going down tonight. Did
you hear anything else though?"
Jim
closed his eyes briefly and replayed the sounds in his head. His eyes opened
bleakly. "Yeah, I heard weapons being readied. We should be prepared to
follow them."
Goldman
nodded. "I've already got teams standing by all around the compound, one
to go in and secure Brice and the plans, the rest to make sure no one gets past
us."
~~~~~~~~~~
"Damn
it, damn it, damn it," Kate cussed as she paced back and forth in her
small room. Blair watched her just as upset, but resigned to the fact that they
couldn't let the others know what was going on yet.
"I
can't believe I didn't catch that sooner," Kate said, continuing to pace.
"It only makes sense that they'd already have moved the bomb, that way if
they are stopped on the way, there's nothing to arrest them for. But how could
I have missed that they already have two devices?"
"More
importantly, Kate," Blair interrupted. "Assuming they do take me with
them, how are you going to follow us?"
Kate
turned to face Blair and grinned wickedly. "Don't worry about either of
those things, Blair. They need every man who can handle a weapon and 'Bernie'
has tons of experience."
"Then
why don't they take you?"
"They
don't think it's a woman's place," she grimaced.
Blair
shook his head in disbelief. "Maybe we should be grateful that these
terrorist groups are so backward. Just imagine if they did 'allow' their women
to fight." He rolled his eyes. "Of course if they actually let those
women know what was going on and listened to them, they wouldn't be doing this
in the first place, would they?"
Kate
waggled her eyebrows. "Yeah, well, nobody ever said they were smart, just
determined."
"So
how…" the door swung open and a man with a rifle motioned to Blair.
"You
coming, Bernie?"
Blair
gave him a cocky grin. "You bet!" he said, standing and catching the
rifle that was tossed at him. He saluted Kate. "See ya, cuz," and
followed the man down the hall.
He
found himself in the courtyard surrounded by the other men. Everyone had a
rifle or semi-automatic and many also had some type of handgun. Blair coughed
and covered his mouth. "Jim, if you can hear me, we're heading out,"
he whispered into his hand.
Prior
jumped up onto the tailgate of a truck and raised his hands. "All right
men. We're finally going to free our brothers and show this country's leaders
that we mean business. You've all got your orders. Do me proud Brothers. Do us
all proud."
The
men around him hollered and whooped in response and then started to load onto
the trucks. Blair hung back and watched to see where Prior was riding, and then
hopped into the same truck.
~~~~~~
Kate
waited for a few minutes then forced open the locked door. She peeked out and
saw that the hall was clear. Using her bionic speed she ran to the front of the
compound and was just in time to see the last truck roll through the gate. She
followed. Once outside the compound Kate could hear the men in the trucks. She
focused on finding Prior's voice and chased after it. Seconds later an
explosion on the street behind her took down an old tree and blocked the way.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Jim
cocked his head. "They're coming out."
Goldman
nodded and moved to the passenger seat as he directed the driver to start the
van. Jim, Steve and Jaime all moved into the other chairs and leaned in to
watch through the front window.
Several
trucks went by and they started to follow. Jim frowned a few moments later when
a strange blur caught his eye. He tried to focus on it and so, was completely
caught off guard by the explosion that dropped the tree in front of them.
The
driver slammed on the brakes while Jim tried to control his dials.
"Damn!"
Goldman cursed. "Steve, Jaime, take care of that, they're getting
away."
Jim
frowned. I must have heard him wrong.
What can they do? He shook his head against the bright spots in his vision
and stared out the front window in disbelief.
Steve
and Jaime Austin had jumped out of the van at Goldman's request and gone to the
top of the tree. They each grabbed a sturdy branch with one hand and proceeded
to pull the tree out of the road.
"How
the hell?" Jim exclaimed.
Goldman
grinned ferociously. "That's our little secret Detective."
The
Austins rejoined them and the driver punched it.
"Can
any of you pick them up?" Goldman asked.
Jim
sent out his hearing and about the same time he found the truck and started to
say something Jaime nodded.
"Turn
right at the next street," she said.
The
Sentinel stared at her.
Jaime
smiled sympathetically. "Ever hear of bionics, Detective?" Jim's eyes
widened. She nodded. "My right arm, both legs and right ear. Same for
Steve, but instead of an ear they had to replace an eye."
"And
Kate?" Jim asked scanning the couple and cataloging the buzz now that he
had a name to put to it.
Goldman
interrupted. "She's a little more complicated. Bionic, yes, but through
nanotechnology that enabled a girl with a degenerative nervous system disease
to walk again." He paused. "As fascinating as this all is, can we get
back to the business at hand?"
Jim
nodded. Time for this later.
"Take the next left," he told the driver. "And slow down, we've
almost caught up to them. They think the tree did its job."
"Yeah,"
Steve said, "it probably did if the rest of the teams were blocked
too." He met Jim and Jaime's eyes. "It means we're on our own."
Jim
shook his head and pulled out his cell phone. "I'll call Simon and get the
troops moving. There are only two substations in Cascade."
Jaime's
eyes narrowed thoughtfully. "Is one of them closer to the jail where
Talbot and Reider are being kept?"
Ellison
nodded emphatically. "Good thinking." The line rang through to
Captain Banks and Jim filled him in.
~~~~~~~~~
Blair
followed Prior along with five other guys and watched as they rigged the EMP
bomb to one of the transformers and set it for fifteen minutes. The PRF men
high-fived each other.
Prior
laughed. "Now, my brother's we will prevail. Let's go!" and he led
them back out.
Blair
followed but fell to the back of the group, slowly so as not to attract
attention. By the time they reached the fence he was far behind everyone and
simply slipped between some machinery as the rest of them climbed into the
truck.
He
primed his glasses/headset. "Hey, can you hear me? We've got less than ten
minutes to disarm this thing." No one answered. "Damn." Sirens
sounded in the distance but Blair knew that sound could travel farther than the
two-mile range of the headset. At least the PRF wouldn't be turning around to
look for him.
He
glanced at his watch. Eight minutes plus. Blair turned to go back to the bomb
and nearly jumped out of his skin when a hand landed on his shoulder. He turned
defensively and stopped at the sight of Kate's infectious grin.
"Miss
me?" she asked.
"How?"
he shook his head. "Not now, we only have eight minutes until this thing
blows." He took off at a run toward the bomb.
"Shit!"
Kate said easily catching up and keeping pace. "Where is it?" she
asked.
"Attached
to a transformer," Blair gasped, pointing ahead as he ran. "Third one
on the right." He almost stopped as Kate suddenly sped past him little
more than a blur, but then he remembered Goldman's concern that she not be
exposed to the EMP blast. "Damn! Kate, wait!" Blair dug deep and
sprinted the rest of the way to the transformer.
Kate
had the device in her hands looking at the timer when Blair arrived out of
breath. She looked up at him. "What now?" The timer said six minutes.
"We
have to put it somewhere shielded," Blair said taking the bomb from her.
"But you need to get out of here. Rudy was worried that the blast would
take your systems off line."
Kate
stared at him. "You know?"
Blair
shook his head distractedly, trying to think some way to shield the device.
"Not really, Jim just overheard Goldman telling Jaime and Steve." He
grinned at her suddenly. "I know where to stash this thing, go!"
"No
way! I'm with you. If you manage to shield it, I'll be safe enough. If
not," Kate shrugged, but there was fear in her eyes, "well, it won't
matter much anyway will it?"
Blair
groaned. "All right, come on." He raced off toward the small lake at
the edge of the property hugging the briefcase-sized device to his chest. Kate
followed. "Jim, man, if you can hear me, I'm gonna dump this thing in the
lake."
He
stopped at the edge of the water and set the case down so he could remove his
belt. The timer read three minutes. Blair reviewed what he knew of EMP bombs
while he threaded his belt through one loop and a handhold on the bomb. The
device had an explosive charge that would detonate to set off the
electromagnetic pulse. If he could get the package far enough below the
surface, the water should absorb most of the pulse.
"Are
you as strong as you are fast?" Blair asked, looking up to catch Kate's
affirmative nod. "Good. I'm going to swim out and take this thing to the
bottom of the lake. Can you lob that rock out so that it lands close to me? I
need something to hold the case down with."
Kate
nodded again and gave Blair a quick hug. "Okay Blair, just get out of
there as fast as you can."
He
nodded, heading into the water carrying the case until he was in deep enough
for it to trail behind him. "You get back Kate, the water will take most
of the blast, but I don't know how much overflow there might be." Blair
started to swim, counting seconds in his head. He stopped and took several deep
breaths then dove for the bottom.
Kate
lifted the rock and watched Blair swim out. "Where did Oscar find this
guy?" she muttered to herself. "If I wasn't happily married…" He didn't even stop to take off his glasses.
Blair dove down and Kate waited a few more seconds before she sighted and threw
the rock, landing it just to the left of where Blair went down. "I hope
you didn’t move," she said, racing away from the lake.
~~~~~~~~~~~
It
was murky and seemed a long way down before Blair rammed his fingers into the
floor of the lake. Fortunately it was covered in a thick layer of silt. He
struggled with his belt and unfastened the bomb. A soft plopping noise from
above got his attention and the rock he'd pointed out to Kate settled to the
floor beside him. Blair grinned and using one hand to hold the case down
dragged the rock with his other. He got the rock settled on top of the case
just as the timer hit zero.
~~~~~~~~~
Jim
heard Blair's ten-minute warning without the use of the communications
equipment. They weren't in range for that yet. "It's on a timer, we've got
less than ten minutes," he relayed, keeping his attention on his partner.
They'd
gotten tied up with traffic and fallen behind the PRF truck. "Kate just
showed up." A moment later Jim grinned at his partner's quick thinking.
"He's going to ditch it in the lake." Jim caught the seat in front of
him as they barreled around a corner. "Can you reach him yet?" he
asked Austin who was working the scanner. Jim didn't want to lose his contact
with Blair if they weren't in range.
Steve
shook his head and kept trying as the van sped toward the substation.
Sirens
plagued the fringe of Jim's hearing. He blocked them out, listening to Blair
give Kate what seemed to be some very strange instructions. "How much
time, Chief?" he muttered, looking at his watch. "Be careful."
Suddenly
the sound of Blair's heartbeat was muffled and he wasn't breathing. Jim caught
his breath as he realized that Blair was holding his while he swam and then
dove for the bottom of the lake.
The
van screeched to a halt and Jim was out the door running for the lake before
the others could stop him. He heard the blast before they saw the displaced
water erupt at the surface of the lake. "BLAIR!" Jim screamed, racing
into the water up to his waist. "Chief!"
The
Sentinel focused everything on the churning water trying to discern where Blair
might be. Fortunately, the lake was forgiving and didn't want to keep the man
who had disturbed the peaceful waters. Jim saw something bob to the surface and
focused his sight. It was Blair. He swam out to his brother and caught him in a
rescue hold lifting Blair's face from the water.
Jim
felt for a pulse. There. Weak, but there. And then listened to see if he was
breathing. A quick application of the Heimlich maneuver brought a gush of water
and a gasp for air. "Thank God," Jim sighed with relief as he started
to pull his friend to shore.
He
glanced up and saw Goldman, Simon, Rafe and Henri heading for the water. The
Austins and Kate were hanging back by the van. "Keep them back Goldman,"
Jim yelled as his feet hit the lake bottom and he struggled to stand. He
changed his grip and continued to pull Blair out of the water. "The EMP
field extends back about twenty feet from the water. I felt it as I got closer
to the lake.”
Goldman
nodded as he turned back to check on the safety of his team. Simon, H and Brian
all helped Jim carry Blair onto the shore then stared in horror as Jim asked
Rafe to get a blanket. Only then did the Sentinel let himself see what his
senses had already told him.
"Oh
God!" Jim cried, taking in the sight of Blair's mutilated hands and
forearms. The Sentinel looked into his Guide's face and gasped again at the
blackened skin around what used to be Blair's right eye and ear.
"Blair?" Jim whispered, leaning down to rest his head against the
uninjured side of his partner's head.
"Jim!"
Simon shouted for the third time, shaking his shoulder. "Let the
paramedics in, we're going to Life Flight him to the Burn and Trauma
Center." Simon pulled Jim away and held the distressed man back as they
watched the medics start an IV line in Blair's leg and temporarily dress the
scorched arms. They got him on a backboard and loaded the younger detective
into the waiting chopper.
Jim
didn't even notice as Goldman, Kate and both the Austins climbed in after him.
~~~~~~~~
In the helicopter
"We
owe it to him Oscar!" Steve growled over the hum of the blades. "He
didn't have to help us. We can give him back his life!"
"Steve,
you know we can't just…" Oscar started.
"No,
Oscar," Kate butted in. "What Blair did down there was a totally
unselfish act of heroism. If only for that reason, we should do whatever we can
to help him." She stared at Goldman. "He truly cares about people and
making the world a better place. Don’t force him to use that energy on just
trying to get by day to day. Really, Oscar, what are a few million dollars
compared to what he might do in the future? Please," Kate entreated.
Oscar
met three hard stares and turned his head to look at Blair and Ellison. Jim was
completely engrossed in his partner, the misery on his face more eloquent than
words.
"Why
else would we all get on this chopper, Oscar?" Jaime asked, regaining
Goldman's attention.
He
sighed and made his way to the front of the bird.
Steve
pulled out his cell phone and dialed Rudy's number.
Jim
raised his head as the chopper banked hard to the left. "What's going
on?"
Kate
smiled softly. "We're taking Blair to an OSI facility. He'll get the best
care there, the care he deserves."
The
Sentinel blinked and returned his attention to his Guide. Live Blair. Everything else we can deal with, but you've got to stay
with me, buddy.
~~~~~~~~~
OSI hospital -Location:
Classified
Jim
prowled the waiting area snarling at anyone who got too close or tried to talk to
him. The doctor, Rudy Wells, was with Blair now evaluating his condition. I can't believe this. This can't be
happening. I can't believe… his thoughts seemed to be stuck in a vicious
cycle.
Goldman
had disappeared somewhere as soon as Dr. Wells went in with Blair. Jaime and
Steve had stayed with Jim, but wisely sat off to one side and did not try to
comfort him. Bionics or not, the Sentinel seemed quite dangerous in his current
state of mind.
Dr.
Wells came out of the room and suddenly found himself confronted by a very
disturbed Sentinel.
"How
is he?" Jim growled.
"As
much as I hate saying these words... Detective Sandburg is doing as well as can
be expected." Dr. Wells removed his glasses and rubbed his eyes briefly
before replacing the specs. "He seems to have been in close proximity to
the bomb when it went off. Both of his hands and forearms are severely
burned." Rudy sighed and met Jim's anxious eyes. "I'm afraid we'll
have to amputate. The hands are burned to the bone and there's nerve damage up
past the elbow."
Jim
paled and staggered back landing heavily in a chair. "Oh my God," he
whispered, covering his face with his hands.
Dr.
Wells sighed. "I'm afraid that's not all. When the device discharged the
electromagnetic pulse, it affected his headset causing a brief power surge
before it burned out. That surge caused the burns to the right side of his
face." Rudy gazed sympathetically down at Ellison. "His right eye is…
well, it's gone. And the high voltage also blew the eardrum and fried the sensitive
hairs in his cochlea. The physical damage to his face can be repaired with
plastic surgery, but he will be blind and deaf on the right side."
Jim
interrupted. "What about his lungs? He drowned a few years ago. He's
already highly susceptible to infection."
Rudy
tilted his head taking in that information. "His lungs are clear now, but
we'll definitely need to keep a close eye on them. I'll adjust his antibiotics.
There's one more thing," Wells paused not wanting to add the last bit of
news, but he had to prepare Ellison just in case. "We won't know if there
has been any brain damage until he regains consciousness."
Jim
looked up at the doctor in anguish. "Brain damage? My God! Hasn't he
suffered enough? I need to see him, to be with him," he demanded, standing
quickly and moving toward Blair's room.
Rudy
nodded and let him pass. The doctor turned to Jaime and Steve. "Any word
from Oscar?"
Steve
shook his head. "Will you be able to help him?"
Wells
tilted his head. "I think so. The damage is… well, I would have to go to
the shoulders. It's the eye and ear that have me worried. I'm not sure what
damage may have been done to his brain. He may not be able to handle the
surgery required to implant the components."
Jaime
gripped Rudy's shoulder comfortingly. "You'll do your best, as always
Rudy. Right now we have to wait for Oscar to work his magic with the
committee."
Rudy
nodded again then glanced around. "I thought Kate was with you."
"No,"
Steve said with a grim smile, "she went with Oscar to help plead Blair's
case."
~~~~~~~~~
"Damn
bureaucrats!" Goldman grumbled as he strode through the halls. Kate almost
had to go bionic to keep up with him.
"Hey,
at least they finally agreed," she consoled.
"Hmph!
Only if he regains consciousness first and isn't impaired," Oscar replied
as they rounded the last corner and saw Steve and Jaime. "Where's
Rudy?" Goldman demanded.
"He
went to check on something," Steve replied standing. "What did they
say?"
"Oh
they agreed that Sandburg's actions deserve a medal," Oscar replied
sarcastically. "But they feel they need more than heroics to justify the
bionics."
Kate
rolled her eyes at her uncle's dramatics. "They want Ellison and Sandburg
to join OSI, if only for specific missions."
"Well,"
Jaime replied, "first we have to sell this to Jim. Then we can worry about
the payback."
~~~~~~~~
Jim
sat by Blair's bed not knowing where to touch his friend. He'd normally hold
his hand or wrist, but that just wasn't an option now. The second most touched
spot would be the top of Blair's head and brow, but the burns, now covered with
bandages, extended up into the hairline and it didn’t feel right to sit on the
left and pretend the damage wasn't there.
So,
the Sentinel found himself resting his hand on Blair's chest above his heart,
monitoring pulse and respiration at the same time.
"Ah,
Chief," he sighed. "This is all my fault. I should have told Goldman
to take a hike when he talked to us in Simon's office. This should never have
happened." He watched Blair's face, hoping his friend would regain
consciousness, but dreading the pain Blair would be in if he did.
"Jim,"
Steve said, poking his head in the door. "Can we talk to you for a
minute?"
Jim
frowned. "I don't want to leave him alone."
"Just
for a minute, it's about Blair's treatment."
Ellison
nodded reluctantly. He rose and brushed his hand lightly over Blair's hair
before placing a soft kiss on his brother's brow. "I'll be right back
Blair." He headed for the door that Steve held
open for him. Jim stopped suddenly and turned back toward the bed.
"Chief?"
Blair moaned softly, his head moving slightly at the sound of
Jim's voice. "J'm?" he breathed out.
Jim raced back to the left side of the bed so that Blair could see
him with his good eye. "I'm right here, Blair," he responded, putting
his hand along the side of his Guide's neck.
Blair's eyelid fluttered and finally opened. The first thing he
saw was Jim leaning over him looking worried to death. Then the pain that had
been eating at him, even in his unconscious state, hit full force. "God!
Jim," Blair cried, his forehead wrinkled with agony and his body strained
upward against the straps holding him in the bed. "Make it stop!
Please!"
"Easy, Blair," Jim soothed desperately. He glanced up at
Steve. "Get Wells in here now!" Jim demanded then turned all of his
attention back to his brother. "Blair, hold on, buddy. The doctor will get
you something for the pain. Just breathe, Blair, that's it."
Blair latched onto Jim's voice and tried to raise his arm to catch
his brother's hand, but that only made the pain worse. "Ahh! Jim!"
Jim fought the urge to gather his friend into his arms, instead he
gently squeezed the side of Blair's neck to let him feel his hand there and put
his other hand on Blair's chest. He leaned over his Guide and pressed his
forehead to Blair's. "I'm here, Chief. I'm not leaving you. Focus on my
voice, nothing else exists, Blair. Just like you do for me, okay, listen to my
voice. Let it drive out the pain."
He could feel Blair trying to do as he instructed. "Good,
Chief. That's it. It's just you and me, kid. Breathe through the pain. I've got
you."
Rudy Wells burst through the door at that moment. He took in the
readings from the various monitors attached to Blair and then went directly to
the IV line with the pain medications. "Steve tells me Blair is fairly
cognizant of his surroundings?" he asked Jim.
Jim continued to speak to Blair for a moment, not moving from his
position, even as he answered the doctor. "He recognized me. He seems fine
except for the pain."
"Good," Wells replied as he injected the last of the
medication into the IV port. "This will help with the pain and then we
need to talk."
Jim,
Steve and Rudy waited until Blair finally seemed to succumb to the medication.
His body relaxed and he sighed. Blair opened his eye, searching and quickly
finding Jim. "Di' th' bomb g'off?" he slurred his eye a bit glassy
from the drugs.
"Yeah,
Chief," Jim answered with a proud smile. "You did real good, kid.
That was quick thinking."
Blair
smiled and his eyelid sank slowly down and was almost closed when it popped
open again. "Kate?"
"She's
fine, Chief. Everyone's okay," Jim ran his palm gently across Blair's
forehead. "Sleep, Blair. It's going to be all right, buddy." He
watched as the medication dragged Blair back into a painless sleep, then sighed
and sat down heavily in the chair beside the bed.
Rudy
checked his vitals again then addressed Jim. "He'll sleep now. We need to
talk, Jim."
Jim
shook his head as he glared at the doctor. "I'm not leaving him."
Wells'
authoritative gaze compelled Ellison's attention. "We need to talk about
his treatment. I don't want to discuss it here in Blair's room. He may be able
to hear us."
Jim
closed his eyes wishing he could just wake up from this nightmare and
everything would be back to normal. When he opened his eyes again Rudy and
Steve were regarding him compassionately.
"All
right," Jim agreed reluctantly.
Steve
held the door for Ellison then he and Rudy escorted him to the doctor's office.
The others were all waiting, Jaime, Oscar, and Kate.
"What's
this all about?" Jim asked impatiently. "I need to be with my
partner."
"We're
aware of that Detective," Goldman said calmly. "However, we want to
help Blair and since you have his power of attorney…"
Jim
glared at Goldman. "You people seem to know an awful lot of things about
us."
Oscar
waved his hand, dismissing Jim's concerns. "Rudy how's your patient?"
"He
regained consciousness," Wells replied. "And although he was in
considerable pain, I have every reason to believe that any damage to Blair's
brain is minimal. Nothing that would impair him in any way as far as I can
tell."
Goldman
nodded and addressed Jim again. "I can offer you a way to make Blair whole
again, but it comes with strings attached."
Ellison
frowned, casting his glance from Goldman to Wells then over to the other three.
"No…" he exhaled weakly, so soft that only Kate and Jaime picked it up.
"Jim,"
Kate said moving to stand in front of the Sentinel. "Once he's accustomed
to the bionics, Blair won't be able to tell the difference between his 'real'
arms and the bionic ones." She shrugged. "Well, except that they'll
be stronger and faster. The same goes for his sight and hearing."
She
caught Jim's hands in hers. Strangely enough he didn’t get the same feel from
her that he did from the Austins. "Please, Jim. Think about this for
Blair's sake. He has so much life ahead of him. I'm not saying he couldn't do
just as much with prosthetics, but the emotional healing time will be much
shorter with bionics and in the long run I promise you, he will appreciate your
choice."
Jim
looked at Kate. "You decided for yourself though, didn't you?"
Kate
nodded, but deferred to Jaime.
"Steve
made the decision for me, Jim," she said. "At first I was furious
that he'd turned me into some side-show freak, then he demonstrated that he too
had bionics. I didn't know about his injuries until that day. Couldn't tell
that one arm was different from the other. That one eye was artificial."
Jaime met Jim's bleak gaze. "I've never regretted Steve's choice. I won't
say we didn't have some tough times, but I wouldn't change his decision."
Jim
finally found his voice and turned to Dr. Wells. "What about my response
to their touch?" he asked motioning toward Steve and Jaime. "Blair's
my Guide, I… we depend on his touch… and the buzz…" Jim shook his head.
Wells
frowned. Jaime had filled him in on the Sentinel. "The technology has
changed since Steve and Jaime received their bionics. Although we won't be
going with the nanotechnology we used for Kate, I think the effects you pick up
with Steve and Jaime will be minimal with the bionics we'll use for
Blair."
Jim
ran his hand through his hair. "I don't know what to do. I wish I could
ask Blair. When will he wake up?"
"I
don't really want him to wake up before we do the surgery," Rudy answered
gently. "His body has had a tremendous shock and is still suffering from
the pain of the injuries, dehydration, and blood loss. The less he has to deal
with the pain, the better."
"Can
I…" Jim paused afraid that his request would seem too morbid.
"Go
on Jim," Rudy encouraged.
"Can
I see the bionics? Before, I mean. Can I see what they'll be like?" he
asked, feeling incredibly selfish, yet at the same time knowing that this
decision would be life-changing for Blair as well as himself. And Blair would
not want to be encumbered with hands that he couldn't use to help his Sentinel.
"Sure,
Jim." Rudy stood and led them all down to the lab where his technicians
were even now working on the parts for Blair. "I had my people get
started, so that the bionics will be ready if you agree," he explained as
they entered the lab.
"The
basic components have to be set into an outer shell that matches Blair's size,
shape, skin tone, hair color," Rudy continued. "We try to make them
as natural looking and feeling as possible, right down to body temperature and
a pulse."
Jim
watched the technicians in a glassed in area working on two disembodied arms.
One of the techs put a probe inside one arm and the fingers twitched.
"Come
over here, Jim," Rudy said. "This arm is a good example and we can
power it up so you will be able to test it against your senses." He
attached two electrical leads into the end of the arm and flipped a switch on
the table.
Jim
concentrated on the arm. He could hear a faint buzz, but it was so much less
than what he heard from Jaime and Steve as to be negligible. He ran his hand
over the arm lightly and was surprised to feel its warmth. The hair on the arm
tickled his fingers, soft and quite natural feeling although he could tell it
was synthetic. Jim trailed down the arm to the wrist and found the pulse point.
He looked up at Rudy. "There's no pulse," he complained.
Rudy
smiled. "No, only when it's all hooked up to a live body. Then the program
will create a pulse to match the person’s actual heart rate."
"How
soon would I need to make a decision?" Jim asked drawing his hands back
from the bionic arm.
"The
sooner the better," Rudy replied. "Less chance for infection to set
in, less shock to his system."
"I
need to see Blair first," Jim said heading out the door.
"Detective,
wait," Goldman called out. Jim stopped and faced the OSI director.
"The oversight committee is willing to allow this for Blair, but they want
to know that we can count on your help in the future if we need it."
Jim
studied Goldman for a minute. "Mine or Blair's?"
"Both
of you actually," Goldman replied. "Your abilities are just as useful
as the bionics. You both have a wide range of experience. You're intelligent
and can think on your feet." He grinned sympathetically. "Together,
there aren't many situations you can't handle. The two of you are just the kind
of people we need on our team."
Ellison
nodded. "Let me talk to Blair and I'll let you know in a few
minutes." He turned and walked more slowly back to his partner's room.
Kate
looked at Rudy. "What does he hope to accomplish? You said Blair is out
for the count."
"I
think he just wants to have a few minutes to get used to the idea," Steve
said, wrapping his arm around Jaime's waist and pulling her close, she leaned
into him returning the hug.
~~~~~~~
Jim
entered Blair's room quietly and just observed him for a moment before moving
to stand by the bed. He rested his hand along the uninjured side of Blair's
neck noting the coolness of his skin over the pulse point. "Jesus, Chief.
How do we get ourselves into these situations? I don't know what to do, kid.
These bionics seem so… I don't know… science fiction. Steve and Jaime seem to
be fine with it. But would you? I love to watch your hands, did you know that?
They're just as expressive as your face, your eyes," Jim choked on the
words and cleared his throat.
"Blair,"
he whispered, leaning forward to rest his head against his Guide's. "What
should I do?"
The
Sentinel closed his eyes and reached for the bond he shared with his Guide, his
soul mate.
The jungle formed around him
and Jim opened up his senses seeking the comforting presence of his brother.
"Blair? Come on, Chief. I need to talk to you." He heard a low whine,
but couldn't pin down the location.
"Blair? Please. Let me
help you. Where are you?" Jim called, casting about for any sign of his
Guide.
A sudden, intense pain in
his hands and head brought Jim to his knees.
And
he found himself gasping for breath as he staggered back from Blair's bed. Jim
rubbed at his hands and shook his head to dispel the lingering sensation of his
brother's pain. "Blair," he sobbed. "God, I'm so sorry,
Chief," he said gently, resting his forehead against Blair's once again.
Tears
leaked from beneath his closed eyelids and dripped onto his partner's face
unnoticed by the Sentinel. He tried to block out the hospital smells and the
smell of burned flesh and just focus on the scent of his friend. Finally,
finding no satisfactory answers, Jim straightened and brushed a stray curl from
Blair's face. "All right, Chief. I'm going to tell them to go ahead. I
hope it's the right thing. I hope it's what you would want. If not… well, I
hope you won't hate me too much."
Jim
took a deep shuddering breath and one last glance at his brother as he opened
the door. "I love you, Chief," he whispered, and then went through
the door to change their lives forever.
~~~~~~~
Cascade Burn and
"What
do you mean he's not here?!" Banks bellowed. He was backed up by most of
Major Crimes and the poor nurse at the admittance desk practically cowered at
the glares she was getting.
"I'm
sorry, Captain," she stammered. "We don't have any record of
Detective Sandburg having been admitted. And I don't believe Life Flight has
landed in the last hour or so." She bent over her computer console.
"If you'll give me just a minute, I'll find out."
Simon
scowled and turned away from the desk. "I knew I shouldn't have trusted
Goldman," he grumbled anxiously.
"What
do you think happened, Simon?" Joel asked quietly.
"I
think they took them somewhere," Simon growled. "Someplace nice and
classified. Damn it!"
Henri
and Rafe frowned. "But Blair needed medical attention," Rafe
protested. "They had to take him someplace to get treatment."
"Right,"
H agreed. "Taking Jim won't do them much good if Blair dies."
"I'll
call Jack Kelso," Joel said. "He may have some insights into OSI and
Goldman."
"Good
thinking Joel," Simon replied. He pointed at H and Rafe. "You two dig
around here, see what you can find out. And I want to talk to the Life Flight
pilot, find out how I can reach him."
"Yes,
sir," the detectives replied.
Simon
turned back to wait for the nurse.
~~~~~~~~
Jim
watched as Rudy and his team rolled Blair into the operating theater. "How
long will this take?" he asked.
"Quite
a while," Steve replied. "Ten, maybe twelve hours. It's a complicated
procedure. Rudy will have two other surgeons working with him at the same
time."
"Jim,"
Jaime said, "why don't you let us take you someplace where you can rest
and get something to eat? Blair will need you at full strength when he wakes
up." She smiled softly. "And to be honest, right now you look dead on
your feet."
Jim
met Jaime's eyes with a dazed look. He felt like he'd been dragged down ten
miles of bad road and any other cliché you might want to use. "Ah,
shit!" Jim said suddenly, dragging his cell phone out of his coat pocket.
"I need to call Simon."
Steve
put his hand on Jim's arm. "What are you going to tell him?"
Ellison
froze for a second then shook his head. "The truth. He can be trusted and
I'll need his help to cover for our absence. I'm not leaving Blair here
alone."
Austin
nodded and dropped his hand.
Jim
dialed Simon's number, took a deep breath and exhaled noisily as the call rang
through.
"Banks!"
"Simon,
it's Jim."
"Jim!
Where the hell are you? We got to the Burn Center and they said you never
checked in."
"Well,
we didn't. Goldman had them fly us to an OSI hospital. They can help Blair
better here, Simon."
"What
are you talking about, Jim? Cascade B&T is one of the best in the
country."
"Yeah,
but they can't replace damaged parts, Simon," Jim replied wearily.
Silence.
"Simon?"
"Where
are you, Jim?" Simon asked softly.
"I'm
not really sure, sir."
"Can
I get there? I think I need to be there with you."
Jim
closed his eyes against their sudden stinging. "I'll check Simon, hang
on." He looked at Steve. "Can…”
Jim swallowed. "I would really appreciate it if Simon could join
me. Do you think that can be arranged?"
Steve
gave him a small smile and nodded. "I'll take care of it. Tell Captain
Banks to wait in his office. We'll send a chopper."
Jim
nodded. "Thanks," and put the phone back to his ear. "Simon, if
you'll wait at the office, an OSI chopper will pick you up and bring you."
"Good.
I'll stop by your place and pick up some things. It sounds like you may be
there a while." He paused. "I'll get the full story when I see you,
Jim. Meanwhile, you hang in there and tell the kid we're all thinking about
him, okay?"
"Thanks,
Simon," Jim said gratefully.
"See
you soon, Jim." Simon ended the call and dialed Rhonda's number.
"Rhonda, I need you to clear my schedule for a couple of days and get hold
of Taggert. Have him call me on my cell. Thanks."
Back
at the OSI hospital, Jim pocketed his cell phone and turned to Steve and Jaime
Austin. "Thank you," he said. "Simon's a good friend. It'll
help, him being here."
Steve
nodded. "Come on, Jim. Let's find you a place to crash for a while and
we'll get something to eat after you've had a nap."
Jim
chuckled sadly, too tired and confused and emotionally wrecked to argue about
taking a nap.
~~~~~~~~~
Four hours later
Simon
stared at Jim unable to believe what he was hearing. That Blair's injuries had
been bad, he knew. He'd seen for himself the charred remains of the kid's hands
and forearms, and the blackened hole that had contained Blair's right eye. But
what Jim had just told him.
"Unbelievable,"
he said, shaking his head.
"I
didn't know what else to do, Simon," Jim met his friend's eyes
beseechingly. "These bionics will give Blair back his hands and sight and
hearing. How could I not want that for him?"
"It's
just…" Banks slouched back into his chair. Jim's face fell, thinking Simon
had a valid reason for refusing the bionics. Simon looked up and saw the
stricken look on Jim's face. "No. Jim, of course you had to accept their
offer," Simon clarified. "What I can't quite wrap my mind around is
that such a thing exists in the first place. Hmph!" Simon rolled his eyes.
"Course the same could be said for Sentinels, I suppose."
Jim
smiled for a brief moment before the worried look settled back onto his face.
"I hope Blair feels the same, Simon. God, I hope I did the right
thing."
~~~~~~~~~~~
Ten hours later
Dr.
Rudy Wells pushed through the doors from the surgery suite, pulling off his
mask and gown as he went. I'm getting too
old for this. He looked up and met Oscar's eyes.
Goldman
smiled. "You did good, my friend."
Wells
returned the smile. "That is one strong young man, Oscar." Rudy shook
his head. "His vitals were all over the place, but he never coded on us.
His brain waves look good and I believe he'll handle the implants just
fine."
"Good.
Ellison will be glad to hear that."
"Speaking
of, I need to go tell him the news," Rudy said, continuing on down the
hall to the waiting room. "Are you coming?"
"Right
behind you, Rudy."
~~~~~~~~~
Jim
glanced at Simon for confirmation that he'd heard Wells correctly. Blair had
come through the surgery fine. Simon nodded slightly and turned his attention
back to the doctor.
"It
will take some time for Blair's brain to learn to interpret the input from his
bionics," Rudy explained. "At first he won't be able to control his
arms. His sight and hearing will be affected throwing off depth perception and
balance until his brain becomes accustomed to the new feedback."
He
smiled kindly at Jim. "Don't worry, Detective. It won't take all that
long. In fact, his nerves are receiving input already. His brain just hasn't
learned what to do with the data yet. It will help if you touch his hands and
arms, talk to him, even before he wakes up."
Jim
and Simon nodded, still a bit unsure.
"When
can we see him?" Jim asked.
"He's
being set up in our ICU ward now," Rudy replied then yawned. "Sorry.
You can see him once they've got him set up. I'm going to clean up and get some
rest. I suggest you do the same after you see him. Blair won't be coming around
for a while. I'm keeping him sedated for the next forty-eight to seventy-two
hours. And the pain medications will also keep him groggy for a few days after
that."
Jim
frowned. "I thought you said his pain would be minimal."
Rudy
shook his head slightly. "His recovery will be quick, but initially his
nerve endings will be raw and extremely sensitive. They need time to make the
connection with the bionics and to heal. His body needs a few days of healing
without the added stress from pain." Wells continued. "When you touch
his hands or arms please be careful not to move them. I don't want him moving
around, even in sleep."
Jim
nodded again and found himself staring at Goldman.
Oscar
smiled softly. "When you gentlemen are ready for that break, just ask the
nurse at the ICU desk. I've instructed them to prepare a semi-private room for
your use. Your bags are already there," he said, shifting his gaze to
Simon.
"Thank
you," Simon said. "I may have to take back some of the nasty things I
was thinking about you," he said with a wry grin.
Goldman
chuckled. "Don't be too hasty, Captain."
~~~~~~~~
Barely
twenty minutes later, Jim found himself following Simon to Blair's room. He was
finding it hard to put one foot in front of the other. Snap out of it Ellison! This is Blair, he needs you. What is your
problem?
Simon
regarded his friend sympathetically. "Blair won't be awake for several
days, Jim. Why don't we take advantage of that and get some rest
ourselves?"
Jim
shook his head afraid that if he didn’t go in now he might not have the courage
to do so later.
"Okay,
then," Simon said, opening the door.
At
first glance, Blair looked pretty normal. They had a strap around his chest and
over his thighs to keep him from falling out of bed. The IV line still ran into
his leg instead of his arm. The blanket was pulled up almost to his chin and
two undamaged arms rested by his sides, two arms that by all rights should not
be there.
"Wow,"
Simon breathed as he moved into the room. Jim followed as if tethered to the
big man.
The
right side of Blair's face and head were still covered in bandages. They’d been
informed that the skin grafts were too delicate to be left exposed as of yet.
Simon could see that they'd shaved almost half of the younger man's head. He
chuckled softly. "Blair's gonna be pissed about that," he joked
lightly, turning to see how Jim was doing.
Jim
stood a few feet back from the bed just staring at Blair. He couldn't quite get
a handle on his senses, they were spiking a bit and the dials kept slipping. He
saw Simon's concern and took a deep breath. "They should have just shaved
it all," he whispered his voice barely cooperating.
"It'll
grow back, Jim," Simon assured the Sentinel, patting him on the arm. The
captain then turned and placed his hand on Blair's new right arm. His eyes
widened as he felt the natural texture of the hair and the apparently normal
body temperature of the skin. "Wells said they would be very natural, but,
I never imagined…" Simon slipped his fingers down to Blair's wrist and felt
for a pulse. "Amazing!" he said softly. "Jim, you've got to feel
this."
Jim
moved forward as if through molasses. His senses started to focus on his Guide
without his permission. He could see the bionic arms, see the all too perfect
skin and hair on those arms, hair that was not in the right place.
The
Sentinel searched for and found Blair's heart beat, comfortingly steady and
strong. What is that? Oh. The slight
whirring, buzzing noises coming from Blair's arms and head distracted Jim from
the well-known heartbeat.
Jim
reached out and touched Blair's left arm, barely putting any pressure on it.
The synthetic hair taunted him. Jim pushed the thought aside and focused on the
warmth of the skin. He put his other hand on Blair's forehead and found that
the temperature of both corresponded well within the normal limits. He too
found his friend's pulse point in the wrist and found that it beat in time to
Blair's heart.
Smell
spiked and Jim easily identified Simon and Blair. The smell of burned flesh was
gone, thank goodness, but now something else took its place. Something
synthetic, alien, not the Guide. Suddenly, Jim's stomach churned as his senses
rebelled.
He
raced out of the room and down the hall to the restroom, making it into a stall
just in time. Jim retched, his body trying to bring up the non-existent
contents of his stomach. Bile filled Jim's mouth as he leaned over the toilet
attempting to control his nausea.
A
warm hand landed lightly on his back as another hand offered a damp towel. Jim
took the towel and pressed it to his face taking deep breaths. He turned,
trembling with reaction, to lean against the stall wall.
"Take
it easy, Jim," Simon said in his best imitation Guide voice.
"Here," he pressed a bottle of water into Jim's hand. "Take a
swig and rinse your mouth out."
Jim
did as instructed, glad for Simon's quiet support and help. Ellison blinked
back the tears that threatened to fall. Blair was the only other person who had
ever offered this kind of unconditional friendship. Jim slipped down the wall,
crossed his arms over his knees and buried his face in his arms.
"God,
Simon. What have I done? What's wrong with me? I can't even…" Jim trailed
off, mortified. Blair's the one who's
hurt here. It's not all about you, Ellison. When are you going to stop thinking
of yourself and put your friend first?
Simon
knelt down beside Jim and draped his arm over his friend's back. "Jim. I'm
sure Sandburg will have some long-winded explanation for what just happened
when he wakes up. But until then, you're just gonna have to take your old
captain's view as gospel. Okay?"
Jim
looked up at Simon in surprise and waited for his captain's revelation.
Banks
sighed. "Jim, you're exhausted, mentally, physically and emotionally. Your
best friend was badly injured and went through radical surgery. Your senses are
spiking, hell, I'm surprised you haven't zoned on something. It's no wonder you
reacted the way you did. It was just too much too soon." Simon gave him a
little shake. "Give yourself a break." He grinned. "Give me a
break. I'm not cut out for this Guide stuff."
Jim
gave a weak chuckle. "I don't know Simon. You seem to be doing a pretty
good job to me."
Simon
smiled back. "Come on, Jim. Let's go make use of that room Goldman set up
for us." He grinned conspiratorially. "Maybe we can convince them to
bring us something to eat too."
Ellison
nodded and took Simon's offered hand to pull himself up. He met his friend's
compassionate gaze. "Thanks, Simon. You're a true friend. Thank you for
coming."
Simon
blinked away the stinging in his eyes as the day's events took their toll on
him as well. He nodded. "You're welcome, Jim. But I really couldn't have
stayed away. I've got too much of my time and energy invested in you two,"
Simon grinned to show he was teasing as he realized that the tired man in front
of him might not be up to catching the subtler signs of his affection for the
unlikely pair.
Jim
smiled shyly back. "A bed does sound good about now. I don't think I could
stay awake through a meal."
"All
right," Simon replied, steering Jim out of the restroom and toward the
nurse's station. "Let's go find that room.
~~~~~~~~~
The
next forty-eight hours dragged by. Jim spent most of the time by Blair's bed,
wanting to comfort his friend, but unable to bring himself to touch the bionic
arms. Simon spent the time silently supporting Jim and providing the sensory
input Dr. Wells said Blair needed.
Jim
watched Rudy as the doctor checked Blair's vitals late on the second day of his
drug induced sleep. Wells nodded to himself and made a few notes on Blair's
chart before he met Jim's gaze.
"I
think we'll start to reduce the sedative tomorrow. Blair's doing well. His
lungs are clear. He does have a low-grade fever, but I expected that and it's
well within the norm. I'll change the bandage on his face in the morning before
he wakes up." Rudy regarded the two detectives. "You have been doing
the sensory exercises I suggested?"
Simon
saved Jim from answering. "Yes, Doctor." He gave a half grin.
"Blair twitched his fingers a few hours ago."
Rudy
smiled. "Good. That's very good. Once he's awake, we'll work on a more
specific program to establish the appropriate pathways." He stared at
Ellison thoughtfully. "You need to get some sleep tonight, son."
Jim
nodded distractedly, his focus back on Blair.
"Jim,"
Rudy said firmly, drawing the Sentinel's attention. "Do you want me to
explain things to Blair?"
Ellison
concentrated on breathing for just a few moments then closed his eyes and shook
his head. "No," he replied softly. "This was my decision. I'll
tell him."
Wells
nodded. "Okay, but if you change your mind or need any help, just let me
know."
Jim
turned back to face his partner and rested his hand on the crook of Blair's
neck. Even Blair's shoulder now hummed with the bionics due to the way the arms
had been attached. Jim swallowed hard and slowly brought his hand down to the
bicep of the arm, Blair's arm. He flinched slightly and took a ragged breath as
he pulled his hand back.
The
Sentinel looked up and saw Simon and Rudy watching him. "I just have to
get used to it, that's all," Jim said, trying to convince himself more so
than the others.
"Of
course, Jim," Simon agreed.
Dr.
Wells nodded. "It'll be easier when Blair is able to use them naturally.
Things will get back to normal faster for both of you then. Get some rest,
gentlemen. Tomorrow's going to be a long day," Rudy said as he turned to
leave the room.
**********
The next morning
Jim
and Simon watched as Dr. Wells removed the bandages on Blair's head. After the
eye and ear implants were in place, the plastic surgeon had worked on restoring
the burned skin and features on the right side of Blair's face while Rudy and
the other surgeon worked on the arms.
Blair's
ear had been melted to a nub. The surgeon had taken a mold of the left ear and
made a new right one with the same tissue used for the skin on the bionic arms,
thus creating an ear that would maintain a normal body temperature.
Replacing
the missing eyelid was a little trickier. There they had resorted to
nanotechnology, grafting a piece of muscle and skin rigged with the tiny
nanites to the healthy tissue. The same device that controlled and monitored
input to and from the bionic eye was going to be used to control the nanites in
the eyelid. This would allow for normal blink responses.
The
tear duct in Blair's right eye had also been destroyed, but was replaced by an
artificial duct to help keep the bionic eye lubricated. The entire area was
bruised and swollen, but Dr. Wells seemed pleased with the results.
The
skin grafts to the rest of Blair's injuries seemed to be healing well. The
surgeon had taken a few small patches of skin from Blair's abdomen to match the
softer facial tissue as well as allow more normal beard growth in the right
places. It might come in a little patchy at first, but with regular shaving the
growth would thicken up and seem more natural.
Rudy
made satisfied noises as he examined Blair's face then replaced the bandages.
He did a few tests on the bionic arms then turned to Jim and Simon. "I
expect the medication to start wearing off within a few hours. He won't be
completely coherent, but will need your reassurances. Let the nurse know when
he comes to, please."
Jim
and Simon nodded and Wells left the room.
Simon
took Blair's hand in his and looked at Jim. "Goldman's going to talk to
the Chief and request the two of you for a special assignment." Ellison
looked up in surprise. Banks shrugged. "It seemed like the best way to
cover for your extended absence. Blair's injuries were only seen by our team,
the OSI people and the emergency crew. Goldman's got that covered and I'll talk
to our guys. Goldman agreed that since you trust the Major Crime unit with the
Sentinel thing, they can be told about Blair's bionics."
Jim
sighed. "We should let Blair decide when he tells them," he offered
wearily. "At least give him some small semblance of control."
Banks
nodded. "Right. I'll just tell them he's here for treatment and let them
know he's okay for now." Simon regarded Jim thoughtfully. "Are you
sure you don't want me to help explain things when he wakes up?"
The
Sentinel shook his head. "It's my responsibility, Simon," he paused,
"and I don't want him to hide his true feelings because he has an
audience."
Simon
grunted. "Yeah, I can see him doing that. Okay, Jim, but once you get past
the first part, let me help, please?"
Jim
nodded. "Thanks Simon. Thanks for being here."
His
friend grinned. "Where else would I be when my family is hurting like
this?"
Ellison
lifted his head abruptly, meeting Simon's dark eyes. A soft, shy smile played
on Jim's lips.
Simon
shook his head amused by Jim's obvious shocked pleasure at his statement.
"I don't know why you're surprised that I consider you two family. You
came after Daryl and me in Peru. Sandburg didn't really know me then. I don't
think we even liked each other at that point." Jim and Simon shared a grin
as Banks continued.
"You
both risked your lives again in Rossberg and when Quinn kidnapped me. And those
are just the really big ones. Besides all the time we spend together off duty.
I spend more quality time with you and Blair than I do with my own family.
Heck, my brother complained when I had to take a rain check on a visit with
them last month because we," Simon made a motion with his hands to
indicate the three of them, "already had plans to go fishing."
Jim's
grin widened. "Well, I can't speak for Sandburg, Simon, but I know I can
count on you in a way my 'family' never provided. I trust you with this
Sentinel stuff and… well, I'm honored that you think of me as family. I
certainly consider you part of my family."
It
was Simon's turn to return the pleased smile.
"And
I'm sure Blair feels the same," Jim added, casting a glance at his
partner.
~~~~~~~
They
spent the time before lunch talking and playing a rather languid game of chess.
Simon went down to the cafeteria for a break and Jim took the opportunity to
try, once again to get a handle on his senses.
He'd
found that by cranking touch, scent, and hearing down to 'normal,' he could
ignore the bionics. But Jim knew he couldn't live like that and Blair would
have a cow when he found out. So, he'd been working at slowly raising one dial
at a time.
Jim
attempted to identify the sound of the bionics then push it aside to a
'background noise' level. He smiled with relief when it worked. Okay, now smell. Jim nudged the dial up
one number at a time until he had the level back to his usual comfort zone. He
identified the smell of the new arms, the synthetic skin and hair, and was a
bit surprised to note an overlaying 'Blair' smell. Hmmm, maybe…
Finally,
Jim put his hand on Blair's arm and started to turn up the touch dial.
Synthetic hairs tickled his fingertips first, not so unexpected now. Then body
heat and the slightly strange skin texture, all still sensations that Jim
thought he could handle.
It
was the next step, where he was able to feel the buzzing of the bionics below
the skin that caused the problem. Jim's fingers began to tingle. He gritted his
teeth and tried to isolate the feeling and relegate it to the background. His
hearing spiked and the buzz became audible as well as tangible. Jim took a deep
breath trying to find his center and the scent dial slipped sending the smell
of the artificial skin streaking to his brain.
Jim
clenched his eyes shut and jerked his hand away. He pulled his legs up so that
his feet were on the chair and wrapped his arms around his knees as he stared
despairingly at his brother's face.
That
was how Simon found him half an hour later. Jim's six foot plus frame curled up
in the hospital chair, his chin resting on his knees, arms wrapped around his
legs, staring at Sandburg.
At
first Simon thought the Sentinel had zoned. He moved quickly to Jim's side.
"Ellison," he said firmly as he put a hand on Jim's shoulder.
Jim
blinked and slowly looked up at his friend.
"What
happened, Jim?" Simon asked, dragging the other chair up beside Jim's. He
kept a close eye on the younger man as he sat and waited for an answer.
"I
was trying to get my senses under control," Jim shrugged.
"Why
don't you wait for the kid to help you with that?"
Jim
exploded out of the chair, wincing as his stiff muscles protested. "He
doesn't need to be worrying about me, Simon! Blair needs to concentrate on
getting well, not nurse-maiding me through exercises I should have well in hand
by now!"
Simon
closed his eyes as he pinched the bridge of his nose. "Jim…" he shook
his head, "yeah, I hear what you're saying, but… I don't know. I just
don't know what to tell you."
Jim
met Simon's frank gaze sympathetically. "Join the club Simon. I really
don't have any idea how he's going to take all this. None at all."
~~~~~~~~~
Several hours later
Familiar
voices filled his ears, seeming close and yet far away at the same time. His
head felt fuzzy and his body heavy. Blair tried to raise his hand and brush
away the irritation against his cheek, but for some reason his arm wouldn't
cooperate.
He
struggled to open his eyes and found himself with a rather limited, blurry view
from his left side. "…'m," he murmured seeing his partner's solid
form leaning over him.
"Welcome
back, Blair," Jim rumbled hoarsely. "Take it easy Chief. Don't try to
move around just yet, the Doc wants to take a look at you first."
Blair
let his eye close. The lid seemed too heavy at the moment. He could talk to the
doctor later. Right now more sleep seemed like a good idea.
Jim
brushed his hand across Blair's forehead as his friend fell into a peaceful
sleep. He sighed, but wasn't really in any hurry to discuss things with his
Guide just yet.
~~~~~~
Early the next morning
Blair
had floated in and out of consciousness for the rest of the day and well into
the evening. Jim stayed by his side except for the few times nature called and
Simon or Dr. Wells insisted he leave to eat and rest.
The
sun was barely peeking over the horizon when Jim detected signs of waking in
his young friend.
"Jim?"
Blair said groggily.
"Right
here, Chief," Jim replied, grasping Blair's hand out of habit. He schooled
his features and cranked down on his dials as the sensory input threatened to
overwhelm him.
"Where…"
Blair asked, turning his head a bit to try and get a look around the room with his
good left eye.
Jim
took a deep breath. "We're at an OSI facility. How are you feeling, Blair?
Any pain?"
Sandburg
frowned slightly. "Not really," he coughed and cleared his throat.
"Drink?"
"Ah,
sorry Chief," Jim said as he grabbed the pitcher of water off the side
table and poured some into a glass. He placed a straw in the glass and held it
so that Blair could take a few sips. "Easy buddy, not too fast."
"Thanks,"
Blair replied. His hands twitched a bit causing Blair to frown. "Jim?
What… what happened?"
Jim
took his time, carefully setting the glass down before turning back to face
Sandburg. "What do you remember?"
Fortunately
for Jim, Blair was still too fuzzy to recognize the delaying tactic.
"I
was at the substation with Kate. We found the EMP device and… I took it to the
lake, dove down with it…" Blair frowned thoughtfully. "I remember
seeing the rock drop down beside me," he looked up at Jim wide-eyed.
"Kate threw it from the edge of the lake," he exclaimed.
Jim
smiled. "I know, I'll explain that in a minute. Go on, Chief."
Blair
stared at his partner for a long moment then continued. "I was trying to
put the rock on top of the bomb to keep it underwater. I hoped the water would
absorb most of the EMP blast…" he shrugged then grimaced, automatically
trying to move his arms again. Both hands lifted slightly off the bed.
"Jim?"
Blair stammered his eye widening with fear. "What's wrong with my arms,
man? They feel… strange. I can't… why can't I move them?"
"Blair,"
Jim said, trying to keep his tone calm and reassuring for his partner. "A
lot has happened and I'm going to tell you everything, but I need to start with
something else. Trust me, Blair? I promise you, you're going to be good as
new," he caught Blair's gaze. "Okay?"
"I
trust you Jim," Blair stammered apprehensively.
Jim
ducked his head briefly, trying to collect his thoughts. He'd spent hours
searching for the right way to tell Blair about the bionics, but in the end
there was no right or wrong way, just the truth.
"The
reason that Steve, Jaime and Kate could be harmed by the EMP blast is because
they all have bionic implants," Jim said bluntly. Blair's expression
changed from apprehension to stunned wonder. "Steve and Jaime actually
have bionic legs and one arm a piece. Steve's eye and one of Jaime's ears are
also bionic." Jim barreled on not giving Blair a chance to speak yet.
"Kate was suffering from a degenerative disease. They implanted
nanotechnology that gave her the ability to walk again, with the slight added bonus
of being super fast, super strong and able to see and hear far beyond the
normal range."
"Sort
of like a bionic Sentinel," Blair said with awe.
"No,”
Jim shook his head, “not really. Touch, taste and smell are still normal. But all
those nanites and the bionic implants are sensitive to EMP waves."
"Is
Kate okay?" Blair asked suddenly.
"Yeah
Chief," Jim replied, running his hand through his hair. "She was well
away from the lake by the time the bomb went off. And you were right. The water
absorbed most of the blast." He took a ragged breath as images of that day
at the lake flashed before him.
"I
didn't get away fast enough, did I?" Blair whispered.
Jim
closed his eyes and shook his head. He put his hand out to capture Blair's, but
pulled away just before he made contact unable to keep his senses under control
with his emotions reeling. He rested his hand on Blair's leg instead.
"Jim.
Jim, tell me," Blair insisted, his hands jerked up off the bed again as he
attempted to reach for his brother. "What happened?" A look of
suspicious realization crossed his face. "What did you do?"
"The
bomb," Ellison croaked, "… I dragged you out of the water," he
stumbled over the words. "I thought you had drowned, but you started
breathing on your own." Jim stopped, he met Blair's good eye and stared
for a second then dropped his gaze, unable to bear the look he knew would be on
his brother's face. "You must have been right on top of it, Blair,"
he said quietly. "Your arms… the right side of your face…"
Blair
moaned as he realized what Jim was trying to say. The bomb had been strong
enough to power an EMP blast large enough to immobilize Cascade. That much explosive… my hands? He
finally recognized his limited view. My
eye? "Jim?"
Jim
looked up and saw the despair in Blair's face. "It's okay. God, Chief!
You're okay!" He lifted Blair's hands so that the younger man could see
them. "See, good as new. It'll take a while for your brain to learn to
communicate with them again, but…"
He
trailed off at the sudden horror on Blair's face. "Blair?"
"What
did you do? Jim? What did you let them do to me?"
"Blair,"
Jim beseeched as he backed away from the reproach emanating from his Guide.
"Please, Blair, I didn’t know what else to do."
Blair
closed his eye. "Leave me alone. Please, just leave me alone."
Jim
backed up all the way to the door. He bumped into it and fumbled with the
handle. "I just wanted you to be whole again, Blair," he whispered through
the tears that streamed uncontrollably down his face. "I love you, Chief.
Please believe that."
Blair
turned his head away from Jim.
The
Sentinel opened the door and slipped out. He stumbled down the hall to the
restroom and made his way into a stall. Jim sank to the floor and pulled his
knees up to his chest as he rocked back and forth. "I'm sorry, Chief. I'm
so sorry," he repeated as he stared unseeing into an uncertain future.
*****
Simon
entered Blair's room carrying two cups of coffee. He'd spent a good part of his
break talking to Joel on the phone about the PRF and what was going on in
Cascade now that the terrorists’ latest plan had been foiled. Unfortunately the
other bomb that Kate Goldman had reported was no where to be found. Joel feared
it wouldn't be long before the remaining PRF tried another jailbreak.
"Go
away," Blair said as Simon set down the coffee cups.
"Blair?"
he asked, moving to the other side of the bed. "How long have you been
awake, kid? Where's Jim?"
"I
don't know," Blair answered sullenly, refusing to meet Simon's eyes.
Simon
frowned. "Did he tell you what happened?"
"You
mean that he's allowed them to do some sort of experimental surgery on me? Turn
me into a sideshow monster?" Blair spat out. "Yep. Sure did."
Banks
took a deep breath preparing for battle. It wasn't easy fighting Sandburg, but
this was one war he had to win. "You didn't listen very well then,
Sandburg." Blair looked up sharply at his captain. "I know Jim told
you that the Austins and Kate have bionics as well."
Blair
nodded curtly.
"So
I guess you think they're freaks too, huh?" Simon jabbed, deliberately
using the 'f' word.
"What?
No! Of course not…" Blair stammered as he realized he'd fallen into
Simon's trap. "Damn it, Simon. Can't a guy have a little time to feel
sorry for himself?"
"What's
there to feel sorry about, Sandburg?" Banks demanded. "By the time
you leave here you'll have two perfectly good arms, you'll be able to see out
of both eyes and hear out of both ears. Not to mention the little fact that
those new arms and hands are stronger and faster than any normal persons are. And you'll be able to experience some of what
Jim does, be able to see farther and hear more with the bionic eye and
ear." Simon threw his hands up in disgust. "I don't see what you have
to complain about. Your partner was looking out for your best interest. And
believe me when I tell you he agonized over having to make the choice for you.
Jim did the best he could. The best he knew how."
Blair
looked away from his boss, shame clear on his face. "I… It was just too
much Simon. God." He met Simon's gaze again. "Can you go find him?
Please?"
Banks
sighed and nodded. "Nothing's ever easy with you two," he mumbled to
himself as he exited the room.
~~~~~~~~
Simon
paused in the hall. Now where did he go?
He knew Jim was hurting. The stoic Sentinel presented the world with a steely
hard exterior, but underneath was a heart of gold. Pure gold, soft and
vulnerable.
"Captain
Banks," Dr. Wells interrupted Simon's thoughts.
"Doctor.
Blair's awake," Simon advised the older man.
Rudy
smiled. "That's great," the smile faded as he saw Simon's frown.
"Jim told him?"
Simon
nodded. "It went about as well as we expected. I think it would help if
you could reassure him while I go find Jim."
"Of
course," Wells replied.
Banks
watched him enter Blair's room then looked back down the hall. "Now where
did you get off to Jim?"
~~~~~~~~
Blair
struggled to turn and look at the door as he heard it open. "Jim?" he
asked with his head turned as far to the right as possible. He could just see
the top of someone's head over the bandage. Too
much hair, thinning, but too long for Jim.
"No,
son," the man said moving around the bed. "I'm Dr. Rudy Wells. I
think you have some questions that I can answer for you."
"You're
the surgeon?" Blair asked, trying to lift his hands to indicate the
bionics. Both arms jerked up off the bed slightly.
Rudy
smiled. "Yes. I'm also one of the designers of bionics. I'm pleased to see
you already have some motor function."
Blair's
eyebrow slid up under his bandage. He opened his mouth then closed it and
sighed. "Jim started to tell me what happened, but…" the young
detective swallowed hard, "I didn’t want to hear it." He met Rudy's gaze
with one determined blue eye. "Tell me."
"How
much detail do you want son?" Wells asked as he levered one hip onto
Blair's bed.
"Everything."
Rudy
pursed his lips. "All right, but I reserve the right to stop if I think
it's too much for you to handle."
Blair
shrugged, earning another grin from the doctor.
"You
were caught at ground zero by the explosion. I believe you may have even still
had a hold of the bomb," Rudy paused to see if Blair could fill in any
details.
"I
don’t remember," Blair said with a frown. "Maybe."
Wells
nodded. "That's to be expected. Anyway, your hands and forearms were
severely burned by the blast. The EMP field affected your headset causing an
electrical overload that burned your face. The wires in the frames acted as a conduit
sending the discharge along the side of your face to your right eye and ear.
The
tiny hairs inside your cochlea were burned and your eardrum burst. The impulse
was hot enough that it melted your ear and eyeball."
Blair
gasped and reached up to touch the right side of his face. He glared at his arm
as it rose off the bed and stopped. This time it didn't fall back to the
mattress, it just hung there. Sandburg glanced up at the doctor then back to
his arm. "How do I control it?" he asked, staring at the arm as if it
were an alien creature.
"Your
own biology controls the bionics. They're hooked right into your nervous
system. Even while you were unconscious your brain was beginning to recreate
the pathways." Rudy pointed at the arm that still seemed to be stuck at
half-mast. "All you have to do is concentrate to make it happen."
"Just
'will it,' huh?" Blair asked with a hint of humor.
"Basically,"
Rudy agreed. "Although it will take some time for you to have one hundred
percent control." He went silent as Blair's arm made a slow, controlled
decent to the mattress. "Very good, Blair."
Blair
grinned at the praise then sobered as he looked at Dr. Wells again. "What
about my sight? My hearing?"
Rudy
cocked his head and smiled gently. "We placed bionic counterparts for the
eye and ear as well, though I haven't turned them on just yet. I want to make
sure you are healed before putting the extra stress on you."
"What
do you mean, Doc?" Blair asked, concerned that he wasn't getting the whole
story.
"You've
been through the equivalent of five, no, six… major surgeries in a very short
period of time Blair." Rudy ticked off the procedures as he listed them.
"We had to amputate the burned limbs," Blair grimaced and couldn't
suppress a shudder. Rudy lifted a second and third finger. "We surgically
attached both arms. We implanted your bionic eye and ear and finally had to set
the initial grafts for the burns on your face."
Rudy
patted Blair on the leg. "I knew that once you woke the first item of
business would be to get control of your hands and arms. A few months with one
good eye and ear won't slow you down much."
"A
few months?" Blair squeaked. "Just how long do I have to stay
here?"
Wells'
sympathy showed on his face. "I expect your recovery to take somewhere
between four and six months," he held up a hand to forestall Blair's
protest. "If you consider what that recovery time would be without the
bionics, I think it's a small price to pay."
Blair
closed his mouth.
Rudy
stood up and gave Blair's leg one final pat. "You've got a lot to think
about and need to get some rest. We'll talk tomorrow about your PT. Steve and
Jaime can give you a better idea of what to expect."
"I
need to talk to Jim," Blair blurted anxiously as Dr. Wells started toward
the door.
"I
know. Captain Banks is looking for him. I'll make sure he knows you want to see
him."
"Dr.
Wells?" Blair said tentatively.
"Yes
son?" Rudy replied.
"Thank
you," Blair managed to lift one hand. It twitched slightly before he
lowered it again. "I may forget to say it later, so thank you for what
you've done for me."
Rudy
nodded. "You're quite welcome. I'm glad we were able to help."
Blair
closed his eye as the door shut behind Dr. Wells. I can't believe this. By all rights I should be a double amputee with a
hideously burned face. AND blind and deaf on one side. He concentrated on
moving his fingers and thought he felt something. God. Jim. What did he have to go through? He had to make this decision
for me. A decision that will literally make all the difference in how my future
will be. And I accused him of… what? Doing what he thought I'd want? Smart
Sandburg. Really smart.
*******
"Come
on, Jim," Simon cajoled, practically dragging the man down the hall.
"Sandburg asked me to find you."
Jim
dug in his heels as they reached the door to Blair's room. "Simon…"
he pleaded.
Banks
took a deep breath and sighed. "Were you surprised by his response?"
Ellison
blinked, surprised by the question. "Well, no." Blair had responded
almost exactly as he'd imagined.
"Well,
you should have been," Simon rejoined. "You know Blair better than
that, Jim. He just needed some time to absorb the whole thing."
Jim
studied the floor as his thoughts whirred. Simon's
right. I projected my own fears onto Blair. I expected him to respond as I
would have. Why shouldn't he be freaked by the news that 'his' arms and hands
had to be replaced by bionic ones? I was all too ready to accept the blame for
the decision and bolted for safety when he kicked me out when I should have
stuck it out and provided the support Blair needs. Jim ran his hands over
the top of his head. Damn. He looked
at Simon. "I just can't seem to do the right thing by him, Simon. I want
to, but I keep screwing up."
Simon
grunted. "Welcome to the human race, Jim." He grinned wryly.
"You know the great thing about friendship? We always get a second chance
when we mess up."
One
corner of Ellison's mouth turned up in a smile as he looked at the door.
"Come
on, Jim. Let's go in and give Blair a second chance."
Jim's
head snapped around to stare in disbelief at his friend. "What?"
"Well,
he was out of line with the whole medical experiment thing…" Simon said.
"Simon," Jim growled half-playfully as he recognized his captain's
attempt to lighten the mood.
"In,
Ellison. Your partner is waiting for you," Banks opened the door and let
Jim go first.
~~~~~~~~
Jim
cranked all of his dials down to one as he moved into the room just far enough
to allow Simon to follow him.
"Jim?"
Blair asked, trying to turn and see the door.
"Can
I come in, Chief?" Jim asked uncertainly.
"Please?"
Blair replied his right hand lifted off the bed a few inches then sank back
down.
Simon
remained by the door while Jim walked around to Blair's left side.
Jim
met his brother’s gaze hesitantly, but saw only concern there.
“Are
you two okay?” Simon asked. Two quick nods assured him that things would work
out. “I’ll be outside if you need anything.”
The
pair hardly noticed as Simon left. Jim felt the pull of his Guide along the
bond they shared and willingly opened his mind. He instinctively grasped
Blair’s hand as he waited for the blue jungle to form around him. Instead a
gray/white noise filled his head, drowning out the beloved heartbeat. Smell and
touch spiraled out of control and the Sentinel fell into a buzzing abyss.
~~
Blair
sighed with relief at the smile that played across Jim’s lips as they entered
the bond. He’d been afraid that Jim would refuse to bond due to Blair’s
injuries. Jim caught his hand and sat on the edge of the bed in one motion.
Blair briefly wondered at the fact that he could actually feel the warmth of
Jim’s hand in his as he entered the jungle.
“This is the easiest way for
us to talk about what happened, Jim,” Blair was already saying before the last
of the real world faded to blue. Blair glanced down at his hands and realized
he was able to see out of both eyes here. Of course. On the spirit plane my
mind would recreate me as I see myself. Whole.
The Guide sighed then frowned.
Where’s Jim? “Jim! Come on, man, I thought you were right behind me.”
A quick scan of the
immediate area proved that the Sentinel was not nearby. Blair closed his eyes
and concentrated for a moment trying to find the presence of his soul mate.
Blue eyes, dark with worry, opened not a moment later. “Jim?” Blair called one
more time before he turned his focus back to the physical world.
Blair
opened his eye and saw Jim sitting stone still. “Jim?” The Sentinel’s eyes were
closed and his head was tilted just a bit, as if he was listening to something.
Blair tried to squeeze Jim’s hand and felt his own fingers move. “Jim. Are you
zoned on something?” he asked aloud. Doesn’t
really look like a zone. The Guide was so focused on his friend that he
didn’t even realize he’d moved his other hand across to grab Jim’s wrist.
“Come
on, Jim. This is not the way to reassure your partner, man.” He gave the
Sentinel a little shake and continued his usual zone mantra, but nothing seemed
to be working. Blair sighed and stopped for a moment, studying his brother
carefully as he thought.
Jim
looked tired. Dark circles under his eyes and worry lines that usually weren’t
so visible made him look older than his years. For just a moment, Blair had a
flash of what it would have been like to be in Jim’s shoes, how he would have
felt and reacted if Jim had been the one injured so severely.
“Ah,
Jim. I’m sorry, my brother,” Blair sighed. “Where are you?” he asked with a
frown. “Simon!” Blair called as he remembered that their captain was waiting
just outside. “Simon! Help!”
The
door opened quickly and Simon walked straight over to the bed. “What’s wrong?”
Blair
lifted his hand toward Jim. “He’s not zoned, but… I don’t know what’s wrong,
Simon. Has he been exposed to anything?”
Simon
got a strange look on his face. His eyes drifted down to where Blair’s hand
still lay in Jim’s. “He’s been having trouble adjusting to the sensory input
from the bionics,” Banks said simply.
The
Guide’s eye widened with sudden understanding. “Damn.”
“He’s
been working on exercises to minimize the input to background noise,” Simon
shrugged, indicating that it hadn’t done much good.
“Simon,”
Blair said softly, “would you move my hand out of Jim’s.”
Simon
frowned. He could see that their hands were clasped. “Didn’t you just move the
other one?”
Blair
nodded. “Yeah, but I didn’t even have to think about it.” He looked a bit
embarrassed as he continued. “Now they don’t want to cooperate.”
Banks
grinned and shook his head as he moved Blair’s hand, separating the Sentinel
and Guide. “You two are quite a pair, you know.”
Blair
nodded again. “Yeah, yeah, so you’ve said.” He took a deep breath. “Can you
tell me what specifically is causing him trouble?”
“You
name it, touch, smell, sight, hearing,” Simon shrugged. “He didn’t say anything
about taste…”
The
Guide’s eye narrowed thoughtfully. “Would you bring that coffee over here,
please?” Simon complied. “Now just put a couple of drops in his mouth.”
“And
how do you expect me to do that, Sandburg?” Simon asked, uncomfortable with the
knowledge that he was the one who would have to bring the Sentinel around, even
if the Guide was assisting.
“The
stir sticks are hollow, Simon,” Blair said calmly. “Just capture a few drops
inside and put the stick between his lips. It shouldn’t take much.”
The
captain followed the instructions and they both watched the Sentinel hopefully.
After just a few moments, Jim’s stiff posture relaxed a bit. He licked his lips
and swallowed, then opened his eyes.
“Jim?”
Blair asked, just barely resisting the urge to touch his friend.
“Blair?
What…” Jim saw Simon standing beside him. “Did I zone?”
“No,”
Blair replied. “At least I don’t think it was a zone. Why didn’t you tell me
you were having trouble with your senses around the bionics?”
Jim
stared at his partner then glanced up at Simon. “I thought that’s what we were
trying to do,” he said, referring to the aborted bonding session. “At least
that’s what I wanted to do, explain everything and let you work through your
feelings about the whole thing.” Ellison surged to his feet unable to remain
still. Frustration flowed off of him as he paced the room.
“I
can’t even bond with you, because when my senses focus on my Guide they overload
on the input from the bionics.”
Simon
moved toward the door. “I’m just going to go back outside,” he said. He closed
the door quietly behind him.
“I
didn’t know you would have trouble, Jim,” Blair explained. “I was just glad you
didn’t protest the bond on the grounds that I was too weak from my injuries.
You should have told me…”
“I
didn’t know it would interfere with the bond, Blair!” Jim denied. He ran a
frustrated hand through his hair and faced his Guide. “Sure, I’ve been having a
little trouble controlling my senses around you. I’m so used to being able to
check in on you, to evaluate your well-being,” he threw his hands up. “It’s
almost second nature to me. Like breathing, I don’t even think about it
anymore.”
“Jim…”
“Wait,
let me finish, Chief,” Jim pleaded. “I knew the bionics might cause me some
difficulties. Jaime touched me while I was trying to find you in the compound
and I had a… a white out. It hurt.” Blair frowned, but Jim just shook his head
and continued. “I made the choice for the surgery knowing that it would affect
us, but…” he exhaled noisily. Desperation tinged his voice. “I had the chance
to make you whole, Blair. It didn’t matter what the cost might be, only that
you have the chance to be everything you’re supposed to be.” Slate blue eyes
met one stormy blue eye, begging for understanding.
They
held the gaze for a long moment before Blair nodded and offered a small,
reassuring smile. “Okay, Jim. It’s going to be all right. We can work through
this. You can do it.”
Jim
half shrugged, unconvinced.
“I know you can, Sentinel. Your Guide
will help you.”
The
Sentinel swallowed. “Your Sentinel, Guide,” he replied with relief. They would
work it out. Together.
***********
Two months later
OSI Facility
Steve
Austin spoke while Blair worked through the hand control exercises.
“Eventually
it will become second nature, Blair,” Steve said. “Your basic control is good,
but the fine motor skills will need a lot of practice.” He grinned wryly as he
glanced at the pile of broken pencils on the table.
“I
know,” Blair groaned as he carefully traced the letters on the page. “It’s just
so frustrating. I can break a four by four with one hand, but I can’t write my
own name without pushing the damn pencil through the desk.”
Steve
chuckled. “Just think of it as a new skill. Practice makes perfect. Maybe Jaime
will hook you up with one of her fancy keyboards. If you type like she does,
you’ll need it.”
Blair
looked up at the former astronaut. “How long did it take you to adjust? For the
bionics to become a normal part of your responses so that you didn’t have to
concentrate so hard on every little move you make? When will I be able to use
my new arms and hands without having to think about it?” he asked urgently, his
arms making aborted motions that were a shadow of his normal expressiveness.
Austin
frowned. “That was a long time ago,” he said thoughtfully. “I’d say it was a
good six months, although I remember a few accidents even after I’d left the
hospital. I don’t think Oscar ever really forgave me for pulling the door off
of his beloved sports car.”
The
two men shared a brief laugh then Blair turned back to the task at hand.
Later
that day, Jim and Blair shared a quiet meal in Blair’s room. They had continued
to work on helping the Sentinel acclimatize to his Guide’s bionics with varied
success. Blair insisted that Jim sleep in a room of his own, so that he could
rest more easily. Simon had returned to Cascade several days after Blair woke,
but managed to visit on the weekends and kept the pair up to date on things
back home.
Blair
had decided to let Simon tell the rest of the Major Crime gang about the
surgery so that they would be prepared when he was able to return to Cascade.
And although no one else was allowed to visit, they did talk on the phone
frequently.
Jim
picked at his food with his fork, glancing up at his Guide periodically then
focusing on his plate again. Blair’s bandages had come off after only a week or
so and the new skin and features looked very realistic to the normal human eye.
Normal.
Jim grunted softly. Normal, right. But
I’m not normal. He couldn’t help but see the fine, almost microscopic line
where Blair’s real skin met the graft. The bionic eye tracked with the left
eye, but only gave Blair normal vision for now. His Guide’s hair, shaved short
all over before Simon had headed home, now framed Blair’s face in tight curls
barely covering the tops of his ears.
Ellison
sighed, pushing his food around.
“Are
you going to eat it or play with it?” Blair asked.
Jim
looked up, startled. “Huh?”
“Your
food, Jim. I don’t think you’ve even tasted it, but you’ve certainly lived up
to your spirit guide’s rep for playing with its food.”
“Oh,”
he replied, pushing the plate away. “Guess I’m just not hungry.”
“What’s
wrong Jim?” Blair asked.
If
nothing else, over the last few months, they’d both learned to answer that
question.
Jim
sighed. “I’m tired of being cut off, Blair. The exercises we’ve done aren’t
helping. I…” he stopped and met Blair’s eyes. “I can be in the room with you
without difficulty now, but I can’t connect with you.”
“You
mean the Guide?” Blair asked thoughtfully.
“Yes!
I need… the Sentinel, needs his Guide,” Jim replied sharply, “and I just can’t
get past the interference. It’s damn frustrating!”
Silence
answered from across the table, but Jim could see the wheels turning as Blair
tried to come up with a solution. Finally the Guide sighed sadly and sat back
in his chair.
“I
guess there’s only one thing we can do, Jim,” Blair said.
“What’s
that?” Jim asked hopefully as he leaned forward.
“We’ll
have to find you another Guide. Someone you can…”
“NO!”
the Sentinel roared. He stood abruptly, his chair tipped over and crashed to the
floor. “You are my Guide. No one else!”
The
Guide stood and stared across the table at his Sentinel. “Then claim me
Sentinel,” he challenged.
Jim
tilted his head to find his focus. The heartbeat he depended on to ground
himself seemed muffled. The Sentinel filtered the white noise and the heartbeat
once again came to him loud and clear.
The
Sentinel’s nostrils flared. Guide scent filled his nasal passages, the scent
tinted with something ‘not the Guide,’ but still familiar.
He
pushed the anomalous smells aside, keeping the important ones and rounded the
table to grasp the younger man’s wrists. Pulses that matched the sound of the
beloved heartbeat throbbed beneath his fingertips, yet felt different through
the strangely textured skin. The Sentinel, again, pushed the inconsistencies
aside as unimportant.
The
Guide stood still, his eyes on the Sentinel as the inventory continued. The
larger man stepped closer, not relinquishing the hold he had on the Guide’s
wrists.
“My
Guide,” he growled softly, leaning in to scent the side of the Guide’s neck.
“My
Sentinel,” the Guide replied.
Their
eyes met and the Sentinel at once noticed that one of the blue eyes was not
real, but the other eye met his gaze with such intensity that it did not
matter.
The
Sentinel brought one hand up to cup the back of his Guide’s head. He gently
pulled the smaller man’s head toward him and briefly pressed his lips to the
Guide’s forehead adding taste to the sensory inventory. Then, the Sentinel
rested his own forehead against his Guide’s and opened the link between them.
“Your
Sentinel, Guide.”
“Your
Guide, Sentinel.”
The blue jungle formed
around him. “Blair!” Jim called out, searching the area with his senses.
“I’m here, Jim,” Blair's
voice came through the trees.
Jim pushed through the vines
and found his brother waiting in a clearing.
“I’m right here, Jim,” Blair
repeated with a smile. “Always have been and I always will be.”
“Thank God,” Jim replied
sincerely as he reached his Guide. He caught the younger man by the shoulders
and pulled him into a rough embrace. “Thank God,” he repeated softly, soaking
up the presence of his Guide, friend and brother.
“I knew you could do it,
Jim,” Blair said softly, savoring their connection. “The Guide missed his
Sentinel, too, you know. I missed you.”
“Can you forgive me, Chief?”
Jim asked backing out of the hug to meet his brother’s confused eyes.
“For what, Jim?”
Jim opened his mouth then
sighed and shrugged not knowing how to explain.
“For saving my life?” Blair
ventured. “For giving me back my hands, my sight and hearing? Or for being an
idiot and fighting your Guide’s instructions?”
The corner of Jim’s mouth
quirked into a lopsided smile at his friend’s wry tone. “Okay, so I’m an idiot.
Can you forgive me?”
Blair laughed. He dropped
his hands onto Jim’s shoulders and shook him gently. “You’re the dork, you know
that, Ellison?”
Jim laughed in return. He
pushed Blair’s hands away and draped his own arm over the younger man’s
shoulders. “Is that an improvement over caveman, Chief?”
Blair snorted and shook his
head, wrapping his arm around Jim’s waist. “I’ll have to get back to you on
that one, big guy.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
One month later
“Just
one more second, Blair,” Dr. Rudy Wells said as he worked with a small tool to
make an adjustment in Blair’s bionic eye.
“This
is like, so weird, man,” Blair said, trying to sit still while the doctor poked
around inside his eye.
“You
think it’s weird for you, Chief?” Jim asked, his expression a mixture of “Oh
God, I can’t believe I’m seeing this” and “Wow, this is too cool.”
Wells
closed the front of the eye and sat back with a grin. “Okay Blair. How’s it
feel?”
Blair
blinked a few times then shrugged. “It feels fine. How do I get the ‘super
vision’ to work?”
Rudy
grinned. “It’s just like with your arms and hands. You’ll have to learn to
control the responses.”
“Okay,”
Blair agreed, nodding his understanding. “What about my ear? I am so tired of
feeling lopsided.”
The
doctor shook his head. “Not yet. You’ll need a little time to get used to the
input from your eye. Give it a few weeks.”
“Weeks?”
Blair blurted. “Come on, Doc. You yourself admitted I’ve adjusted to the
bionics faster than you expected. I want to go home.”
“Blair,”
Jim said softly.
The
Guide turned toward his Sentinel. His eye suddenly focused down to the
microscopic and Blair got a close up view of the threads in Jim’s shirt.
“Whoa!” he said, closing his eyes and shaking his head against the vertigo.
“Easy,
Blair,” Wells said, catching the young man by the shoulders. “I told you, it’s
going to take a little time for you to learn to control the responses. I’ll
keep track of your progress and when I think you’re ready, we’ll turn on the
ear. Not before.” He caught Blair’s defiant gaze with his own determined one.
Finally,
Blair sighed and nodded. “Okay. Geesh, did you take stubborn lessons from Jim
or something?”
Wells
and Jim chuckled.
“Actually,
Chief,” Jim said, “the Doc’s been giving me a few pointers.”
“Ah,
man,” Blair exclaimed unable to keep the grin off his face.
~~~~~~~~
One week later
Dr.
Wells crossed his arms and looked at Blair. “Okay, show me that you have
control of the eye and I’ll turn on the bionics in your ear,” he said
doubtfully.
Jim
stood beside his partner, an equally doubtful look on his face. He was there to
confirm what Blair saw.
“What
do you want me to do?” Blair asked.
Rudy
sighed. “Jim, I’m going to let you control this test. Pick a target, something
you can see and then have Blair describe something about it.”
Ellison
nodded and focused his sight through the window. “All right, Blair, do you see
the red Mazda in the parking lot across the way?” Blair nodded. “What’s the
license plate number?”
Blair
grinned. “That’s too easy, Jim. Z2 WJ74.”
“Now
read the bottom line of that poster on the wall by the door,” Jim requested,
pointing at the poster he was referring to.
Sandburg
followed Jim’s direction and focused on the poster. He squinted a bit then
spoke. “Copyright 1999, Benson Printing Company, Ohio.” Blair closed his eyes
for a split second then looked at Jim with a grin.
The
Sentinel wasn’t through yet. “How many holes are there in the yellow connection
on that machine?” Jim pointed at the blood pressure monitor.
Again,
Blair focused his sight. “Seven,” he responded.
“Now
stand up,” Jim insisted.
“What?”
Blair asked.
“Stand
up. Now!” the Sentinel demanded.
Blair
bolted up out of his chair, frustration and confusion both flitting across his face.
They were replaced by dismay as Blair realized his legs weren’t going to hold
him. Dizziness overcame him and his knees began to buckle.
“Easy,
Chief,” Jim said gently as he caught the younger man by the arm and helped him
into a chair. “I’m sorry, Blair,” he whispered.
Dr.
Wells nodded. “I’m sorry, son, but although you’re able to control the
distances the eye can focus at, you still need to adjust to the effect that has
on your equilibrium. If you think this is bad, wait until you have to deal with
hearing things from three floors away.” Rudy regarded Blair sympathetically.
“Let’s give it another week or two.”
Blair
glared up at the doctor and Jim. He pushed himself carefully to his feet and
stalked out of the room without saying another word.
Rudy
glanced at Jim.
“He’ll
be okay,” Jim said. “He just needs to process.” The Sentinel hurried out into
the hall after his Guide.
“Hey,
Chief,” Jim called. “Wait up.” He jogged down the hall, not having to go far to
catch Blair. “I’m sorry, Blair. It’s for your own good though.”
“I
don’t want to hear it Jim,” Blair said, concentrating on each step as his
balance was still off. “So, talk into this ear,” he continued sarcastically
pointing to his bionic ear.
Jim
snorted then rolled his eyes. “Funny, Junior. Didn’t realize they’d included a
bionic funny bone with the other hardware.”
Blair
stopped suddenly and turned to face his partner. The quick move brought on
another wave of dizziness and Jim reached out to steady his friend.
“Damn
it, Jim!” Blair growled, pushing Jim away.
The
older man slammed into the wall three feet behind him. His head connected with
a thunk and Jim slid unceremoniously down to the floor.
“Oh
God!” Blair exclaimed, rushing to kneel by his brother. “Jim! I’m sorry. Jim,” he
pleaded, cupping a hand behind Jim’s head. He could feel moisture on his
fingers. Blair pulled his hand back and saw blood. “Dr. Wells! Someone! Help!”
he shouted quickly before turning all his attention back to his Sentinel.
“Jim,
come on. God, what have I done?” Blair turned his head to see Rudy and one of
the orderlies running toward them. “Hurry.”
“What
happened?” Rudy asked, kneeling to check Jim.
“I
got angry and shoved him,” Blair replied distraught. “I didn’t mean to, but… I
guess…”
“Your
bionics kicked in,” Rudy said matter-of-factly.
“Yeah,”
Blair replied raggedly. “Is he going to be okay?”
Wells
checked Jim’s pupils. “I want to get some x-rays and a scan.” He addressed the
orderly, “get a gurney over here stat and make sure the exam room is staffed.”
The doctor grasped Jim’s wrist to get a pulse.
Ellison
moaned and started to move.
“Stay
still, Jim,” Blair commanded. “Just stay put and let the Doc look at you,” he
added his voice full of despair.
“Blair?”
Jim muttered.
“I’m
here, Jim. I am so sorry, man.” Blair started to put his hand on his friend’s
shoulder then stopped. He stood up and backed away. “I’m sorry,” he repeated.
“Chief?”
Jim said again, confused by the bump on his head and the absence of his Guide.
“Blair?” He looked around, searching anxiously for his partner, but was unable
to bring the scene into focus.
“I
think he’s got a concussion,” Wells said, keeping a hand on the Sentinel to
keep him from getting up.
“God,”
Blair whispered, afraid to move, afraid to hurt his friend again.
“Blair?”
Jim asked frantically.
“Blair,”
Wells snapped, “get down here and keep him calm. Now.”
“I…”
Blair took a deep breath and knelt beside his brother. “Jim. I’m here Jim.” He put
a tentative hand on Jim’s arm, being careful not to put too much pressure on
it.
Jim’s
hand lurched out and caught onto Blair’s wrist. “Chief?”
“It’s
okay, Jim. Everything’s going to be okay.”
~~~~~~~~
Blair
sat in the waiting area. Dr. Wells had been in with Jim for almost thirty
minutes. Sandburg leaned forward, his elbows on his knees, to rest his head in
his hands. What was I thinking? I could
have killed him. I’m never going to get a handle on these bionics. I’ll have to
be registered as a lethal weapon. A danger to myself and everyone around me.
A
hand fell on his shoulder startling Blair out of his fugue. He looked up and
saw Steve Austin’s sympathetic smile.
“I
hear you’ve had a rough day,” Steve said, taking a seat beside Blair.
“You
could say that.” Sandburg sat back with a noisy sigh. “Damn, Steve. I thought I
at least had control over my hands and arms.” He looked at the ex-astronaut. “I
almost pushed Jim through the wall. I could have killed him!”
“That’s
true,” Steve agreed. “But you didn’t. And now you’ve learned a hard lesson
about control.” He continued when he saw he had Blair’s undivided attention.
“These bionics are a gift, Blair, but they come with a powerful responsibility.
Of course, you know all about that kind of responsibility don’t you?”
Blair
stared down at his hands. “Yeah.” He paused for a long moment. “This is why
Rudy insisted that I recover here, isn’t it? He knew that something like this
could happen.”
Steve
shrugged. “We hoped it wouldn’t, but given our track record,” he grinned wryly,
“yeah, we figured something would happen eventually.”
Blair
shook his head. “He can shut off the super strength, can’t he? Just leave me
with normal strength?”
Austin
frowned but nodded.
Sandburg
stood and started to pace. “I can’t take the chance that I’ll hurt someone
again, Steve. My job is stressful enough. I can’t worry about slamming a perp
against a wall too hard, or maybe tossing some guy out a window when I was only
trying to toss him over my shoulder.”
“You
need to think about this Blair,” Steve cautioned. “Yes, Rudy can turn off the
super strength, but it’s really just a matter of time before you can trust your
responses.”
Blair
turned sharply to face Austin, his eyes burning with guilt. “I can’t take that
chance!” He lifted his hands. “I almost killed my best friend with these hands…
and he was just trying to help me!” Blair faced the exam room door again,
shaking his head. “It’s not worth it.”
Just
then, Dr. Wells came out of the room.
“How
is he?” Blair asked, moving to meet the doctor.
“He
does have a concussion, but so far everything else checks out.” Rudy caught
Blair’s eyes. “He’ll have one heck of a headache in the morning and be stiff
for a few days, but I think he’ll be fine. You can stay with him if you want.
The nurses will be checking on Jim every hour to make sure he’s all right.”
Blair
exhaled with relief. “Thanks, Doc.” He went to the door, pausing for a moment
before he straightened his shoulders and went in.
Steve
met Rudy’s gaze. “Blair wants to turn off the bionic strength in his arms.”
“Damn,”
Rudy replied. He removed his glasses and rubbed at his eyes. “Were you able to
talk him out of it?”
“I
tried. But I think Ellison is the one who will have to convince him.”
~~~~~~~~~~~
Blair
spent the next twelve hours by Jim’s bed, castigating himself. The nurses came
in every hour to wake Ellison and make sure he was able to regain
consciousness. Although Jim’s early responses were slow and mostly incoherent,
they did continue to improve through the night. By the six a.m. check the
Sentinel was almost his normal, grumpy self.
The
nurse made notes in the chart and left the room.
Jim
turned his head slightly to get a better look at his partner. “Go to bed,
Blair. You look like hell.”
Blair
couldn’t even meet Jim’s eyes. He just sat in the chair with his head bowed as
he spoke softly. “I’m sorry Jim. I‘ve decided to have Dr. Wells turn off the
bionic strength in my arms. There’s really no need for it. I’m just grateful to
have two usable hands and arms.” He paused, swallowed hard then continued. “I
can’t take a chance that I might hurt someone like that again. That I might
hurt you.”
“Blair,”
Jim replied gently as he eased himself up on one elbow. “It was an accident.
You didn’t do it on purpose.”
“I
know, Jim!” Blair exclaimed. He stood and walked toward the window then turned
back to face his friend. “It’s because I don’t have control. Can I really
expect to gain complete control? If my emotions are up and adrenaline is pumping,
how can I guarantee that the bionics won’t kick in and cause damage that I
didn’t mean to do? I can’t take that chance with you or my friends, let alone
complete strangers.”
Jim
regarded his brother thoughtfully. “So you’re going to live with normal sight
and hearing too, then?”
“What?”
Blair asked sharply. “No,” he said with a quick shake of his head, dark curls
flying. “I can’t hurt anyone with my sight or hearing.”
“Sure
you can, Chief, if you see or overhear something. Will you act on that information?
If you do, it might change someone’s life, for better or worse, either way,
your decision may cause damage.”
“It’s
not the same, Jim,” Blair argued.
“Yes
it is,” the Sentinel insisted. “I’ve asked you to help me ‘turn off’ my senses
several times since we first met, do you remember what you told me?”
Blair
shrugged, not sure where Jim was going with this train of thought.
“You
told me that they were a gift, something I was born with and that with time I
could learn to use them to help people and do my job better.” Jim paused to see
if he was getting through to the younger man, the frown on Blair’s face told
him he wasn’t. “Don’t you see, Chief? With practice you’ll learn to control
your gifts just like I learned to control mine. In the end, you’ll be glad for
the bionics.”
Sandburg
shook his head. “It’s not the same, Jim. You were born with your senses. They’re natural to you.” He raised his
hands. “These aren’t real, they aren’t part of me.”
Jim
caught his breath and bowed his head. This was what he’d feared, that Blair
would resent the bionics and thus the choice Jim had made for him.
Blair
continued, unaware of his friend’s concern. “The strength won’t matter Jim,
I’ll be fine without it. Really.”
Ellison
lifted his head, his eyes glinting with barely controlled passion. “Fine.
They’re your arms, Blair. Do what you want. But I want you to think about
something for me before you go to Rudy.”
“Okay,
Jim,” Blair said, taken aback by his friend’s intensity.
“Let
me paint a little hypothetical picture for you,” Jim said mercilessly. “We go
back to Cascade. You’re all better, but no super strength. Life goes on until
one day, something happens, an accident, a bust gone bad, it doesn’t really
matter what, but that ‘something’ puts one of your co-workers, one of your
friends… me maybe, in a life threatening situation.” Blair stared at Jim in
horrified disbelief, but the Sentinel kept talking.
“Theoretically
speaking,” Jim said ruthlessly, “let’s say it’s a car accident. Heaven knows
I’ve had enough of those to make it likely. The truck rolls over, I’m trapped
inside and gas is leaking. An explosion is imminent, but no one can get me out
because the door is jammed. Of course, you could
have just ripped the door off the hinges if you had your bionic strength, but you gave that up because you couldn’t control it.”
“Stop
it,” Blair pleaded softly.
“Or
maybe it’s Simon. What are you going to tell Daryl? ‘Sorry, man, if only I’d
accepted that bionic strength.’”
“No,”
Blair stammered. “You don’t understand.”
“Blair,”
Jim said more gently, “you can control them. It just takes time and practice. I
believe you can do it. Listen to me, your friend, your brother. At the very
least, believe your Sentinel,” he implored.
Blair
sat heavily in the chair. “I don’t know what to do Jim.”
Jim
sighed. “Blair, how did you rationalize the fact that you might have to shoot
someone in the line of duty?”
Sandburg
looked up briefly. “I made sure I could shoot what I was aiming for. I also know
that if deadly force is called for, it’s going to save the life of an innocent
person,” Blair answered quickly, he’d worked through all of that years ago.
“So,
what’s so different about this strength you have? You’ll train and gain control
and know when to use it and when not too. The only difference is that you can’t
holster it and put it in a lock box at night,” Jim said adamantly.
Blair
stared at his hands while Jim stared at him wishing he knew what was going on
in the kid’s head. Finally Blair raised his eyes to meet Jim’s.
“You’ll
help me?” he asked uncertainly.
Jim
smiled fondly. “Now who’s being the dork?”
Blair
chuckled.
“Of
course, I’ll help you, Chief, just like you’ve always helped me. Isn’t that
what friends are for?”
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Three weeks later
“Awww,
Jim, what’s that noise?” Blair asked disgusted.
“What
noise, Chief?” Jim asked, his tone laced with amusement.
“It’s
kind of a gurgling, sloshing noise,” Blair described. “It sounds awful.”
Jim
grinned, he had a good idea what the kid was picking up. “Well, follow it to
its source,” he advised sagely.
Blair
closed his eyes and tilted his head. Where Jim tended to tilt his head to
whichever side the sound he was searching for came from, Blair always tilted
his head to the left, turning it slightly to hone in on the sound with his
right ear.
After
a moment, the Guide opened his eyes with a grimace.
“Did
you find it, Chief?” Jim asked straight-faced.
Blair
swallowed. “Uh, yeah. But trust me, you don’t want to know.”
Jim
laughed. “You’ll get used to filtering out normal body sounds, Blair. Just
remember what you taught me.”
Sandburg
rolled his eyes as the gentle rejoinder. He got a thoughtful look on his face
and tilted his head.
“What
are you doing, Chief?” Jim asked.
Blair
shook his head. “Shhhh,” he requested. Suddenly his eyes lit up and a smile
covered his face.
“What?”
Jim asked again.
“I
can hear your heartbeat,” Blair
declared triumphantly.
Jim
raised his eyebrows in surprise then smiled.
“I can
see why you find it soothing to hear mine,” Blair said quietly, his eyes
unfocused as he continued to tune into the sound of Jim’s heart. “This is…” he
trailed off, at a loss for words.
Jim
blinked rapidly, deeply touched by the wonder in Blair’s voice. “Yeah,” the
Sentinel agreed, finding the sound of his Guide’s heart. “It is, isn’t it?”
*********
Six months after the
accident
Jim
pulled into a parking place in the PD garage and turned off the truck. He
looked over at his partner. “You ready?”
Blair
gazed out the front window. “Yeah. It’s a little strange to be back, you know?”
“Yeah,”
Jim agreed. “But good.”
“Definitely
good,” Blair agreed. “It’s just…”
“Kinda
scary too,” Jim concluded. He squeezed his partner’s shoulder then opened his
door. “Come on, Chief. Everybody’s waiting for us.” As they both climbed out of
the truck he continued. “Besides, as fast as your hair grows, no one will even
realize it was all shaved off.”
Sandburg
rolled his eyes.
“Well,
except for Simon,” Jim teased. “And I guess anyone he showed those pictures
to.”
“What
pictures, Jim?” Blair asked. Ellison continued through the door to the lobby.
“Jim?” Blair called as he jogged to catch up. “What pictures, Ellison?”
Jim
grinned evilly, ignoring his partner’s question.
“Well,
well, well,” Sgt. Pat Riley called from the front desk. “If it isn’t Ellison
and Sandburg.”
“Hey
Pat,” Blair said, returning the desk sergeant’s welcoming smile.
“We
were beginning to wonder if you two hadn’t decided to change sides,” Pat teased.
“You know, maybe working with secret agents made you think you’re too good for
us now.”
“Yeah,”
Jim grinned. “That’s it, Riley. Only problem is that the spies didn’t keep us
supplied with donuts, so we left.”
Riley
and other officers in the lobby chuckled at that, allowing the pair to make it
onto the elevator without further harassment.
Blair
chuckled as the doors shut.
“Guess
they missed us,” Jim suggested.
“Sure
they did,” Blair said. “They missed the money they make off the numerous
betting pools they have on us.”
Jim
laughed and ruffled his friend’s hair then led the way onto the sixth floor
when the door opened. “Here we go, Chief.” Ellison pushed the doors to Major
Crime open and stepped inside.
They
stood just inside the bullpen for a moment, soaking up the ambiance. It looked
like the entire crew was in house to welcome back their wayward friends. Henri
and Rafe sat hunched behind a computer arguing softly about something. Rhonda
was talking on the phone. They could see Simon in his office talking to Joel
and Megan.
Several
other detectives were working at their desks as well. Nobody seemed to notice
the two men standing in the doorway.
“Guess
we could just sneak back out and grab a late breakfast, Chief,” Jim said, a
little too loudly for private conversation.
“Sounds
like a plan to me, Jim,” Blair answered with a grin.
All
around the room heads turned and popped up over the tops of computers at the
familiar voices.
“Hairboy!”
H called out as he rushed for Blair, beating the rest of the crowd. Blair
suddenly found himself in a bear hug being spun around by a jubilant Henri
Brown. Rafe was right behind his partner and as soon as H let go, grabbed the
former anthropologist himself while H gave Jim a welcoming hug as well.
Rhonda
knocked on Simon’s window to get his attention. When he looked up she motioned
toward Jim and Blair then hurried over to give her own welcome home hugs before
the three in the captain’s office could cut in line.
After
numerous hugs, pats on the back and general welcome home greetings, Simon
finally called a halt to the celebration and shooed people back to work. He
ushered his core group of detectives into the conference room and shut the
door.
Rafe
and H argued briefly over who would sit next to Blair, only to lose the spot to
Joel. Jim was already seated on the other side.
“All
right gang,” Simon chided cheerfully. It was good to see his crew back together
again. “Just sit down, we do have some business to discuss.”
Megan
and Rhonda grabbed the seats across from Sandburg leaving Henri and Rafe
further down the table. Once everyone was seated, they looked expectantly at
Captain Banks.
Simon
glanced at Blair who was busy pretending not to see the others staring at him
as they pretended not to stare. “I think Blair has some things he wants to
share with all of us.”
Sandburg
met his captain’s eyes for a moment, uncertain why he was so nervous about
discussing his bionics. The people seated at this table already knew, they just
hadn’t seen yet. Blair looked around the table at each of his friends. After a
deep breath that he exhaled loudly, Blair began. “I know Simon already filled
you in on what happened,” he shrugged. “I guess I just want to assure you that
I’m okay and answer any questions you have.”
Joel
broke the silence with a low chuckle. “The tables have sort of turned haven’t
they, Blair?”
Blair
met Joel’s supportive gaze and smiled. “Yeah, now I know how Jim felt telling
everyone about his senses.” He glanced at his partner. Jim smiled reassuringly
and Blair continued. “It’s actually a good comparison because I’m about where
Jim was at that time. I’m used to my new abilities, but still tentative, and a
bit weirded out by it all sometimes.”
H
leaned forward, his head tilted to the left as he tried to see the right side
of Blair’s face better. “Simon told us, but… It’s unbelievable.” He shook his
head as Blair self-consciously pushed the hair back behind his ears. “I’m
sorry, Blair, I don’t mean to stare, it’s just…”
Blair
gave Henri a small grin. “It’s okay, H. You can look,” he pushed up his sleeves
and put his hands out over the table, turning them first palm down then palm
up.
Megan
reached out and caught one of his hands. She looked up at Blair. “It feels
perfectly normal to me, Sandy.”
“There’s
even a pulse,” Blair said with a grin. “But they’re not my originals.”
Jim
grunted and rolled his eyes at Blair’s turn of phrase. Even after six months, he
had a hard time with what had happened. Though his senses had finally
acknowledged the bionics as part of his Guide’s unique presence, his heart and
mind still had a little trouble.
Rafe
stood up and went around to Blair so quickly that Jim instinctively started to
rise in order to block the approach toward his Guide.
Blair
turned in his seat to face the other man. “Brian?”
Being
the closest in age, Rafe felt a connection to Blair that he didn’t with the
others in their tight knit group. He had been right there with H and Simon when
Jim pulled Blair out of the water. Only this time, Blair hadn’t been dead but
horribly burned. To see Blair whole and to all appearances as good as new was a
miracle, but he needed… well, Brian didn’t know what he needed exactly. Now
that he was here, he could only stare.
Blair
stood up, frowning slightly at Brian’s lack of response. He put a hand on his
friend’s shoulder. “Brian, are you all right?”
Rafe
blinked and carefully took Blair’s hand in both of his. He examined the hand,
the fingers, and Blair’s forearm. Then he lifted his eyes to Blair’s face and
tried to see any sign of the injury.
Blair
smiled gently. “I’m all right, Brian. Really.” He took one of Rafe’s hands and
lifted it to his face. “See? Good as new.”
Brian
brushed his fingers against Blair’s cheek then pulled away and ducked his head.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered so softly that only Blair and Jim heard him.
Blair
caught Rafe by the shoulders. “Hey man. It’s okay,” he assured, hoping Brian
would look up.
Rafe
just shook his head. “No,” he replied, his voice low. “I’m glad they were able
to give you the bionics. I didn’t realize how realistic they would be.” Brian
looked up and met Blair’s confused gaze. “All this time, I kept seeing you by
the lake, the burns…” he closed his eyes briefly. “I guess I just couldn’t wrap
my head around what the captain told us.”
“I
totally understand that, Bri,” Blair said with a smile.
Brian
shook his head again, shame on his face. “You don’t understand, Blair. I’ve
been… I don’t know… preparing myself I guess, to treat you like nothing was
wrong, no matter what. I kept thinking, how are you going to get through this?”
Rafe shrugged uneasily. “And now, here you are, looking like you were never
hurt and I’m ashamed to feel so much relief because I won’t have to try to
pretend things are the same.”
Blair
pulled Brian into a hug which the other man returned after a moment. “Thank
you, Brian.”
Rafe
pulled back abruptly. “Huh? Why are you thanking me?”
“For
being my friend. For wanting to help me,” Blair caught him gently by one arm
and answered softly. “I can only imagine what it must have been like for you
all to see me with those injuries. Just like I can only imagine what it was
like at the fountain.” As always, mention of the fountain caused everyone to
squirm uncomfortably in their seats. “I can’t know what it was like for you,
but I do appreciate the fact that you all were concerned for me and willing to
do whatever you could to help.” Blair smiled gently. “I can only promise to try
to avoid causing you such pain in the future.”
“I’m
holding you to that promise, Chief,” Jim said, his voice rough with emotion.
Rafe
held Blair’s eyes. “Me too,” he said finally.
“Okay,”
Blair replied, releasing Brian’s arm as the other man headed back around the
table to his chair.
Simon
cleared his throat a second longer than strictly necessary to get everyone’s
attention. “I think we’d all appreciate it if you do your best to keep that
promise, Sandburg.” Blair grinned at the captain. “And the same goes for
everyone else, too. Now, Blair, can you give us a run down of what we might
expect, performance-wise from your bionics?”
Sandburg
grimaced.
“He’s
not a car, Simon,” Jim admonished.
Banks
rolled his eyes. “I know that. I’m sorry, Blair. I’d just like for everyone to
know what you’re capable of in case the need arises. It’s not any different
than when you gave us the information about Jim’s senses, is it?”
Blair
shook his head. “No. You’re right, Simon. But it’s pretty straightforward. I
can see and hear pretty much the same range Jim can, but only on the right
side, of course. It’s my hands and arms that are the big difference.” He looked
around the conference room for something disposable and finally settled on the
solid, glass ashtray. “Maybe this will convince you not to smoke,” he said with
a wry grin as he took the ashtray in both hands and snapped it in half as if it
was made of cheap plastic.
“Blimey,”
Megan exhaled.
Sandburg
suppressed a grin then using one hand he squeezed one half of the ashtray until
the glass shattered into small pieces. Blair opened the hand and dusted off the
finer shards into the trash can. As he sat back down, Rhonda caught his hand
and examined it for cuts.
“Amazing,”
she said.
“The
skin is a special polymer, small cuts will seal up quickly and larger ones can
be repaired by simply applying a little heat and pressing the edges back
together,” Blair explained. “I also have much faster movement. My typing is up
to almost three hundred words per minute.”
“So
you’re going to type everyone’s reports from now on, not just yours and Jim’s,
right?” Henri teased.
“In
your dreams, man,” Blair shot back with a grin. He sobered a bit and added,
“One of the drawbacks is that the bionics are linked directly to my nervous
system. And, just like anyone else, if I get a rush of adrenaline that may
affect my reactions.”
“What
do you mean, Blair?” Rafe asked.
“Well,
an adrenaline rush increases speed and strength for a short period of time. It’s
part of our ‘fight or flight’ response to danger. In my case though, the speed
and strength could be much greater than the need.” Blair ducked his head
briefly and looked at his hands.
Jim
put a hand on Sandburg’s shoulder and gave a quick supportive squeeze. “It’s a
matter of control, that’s all,” Jim clarified. “We all have to learn to control
ourselves in stressful situations, especially if we are bigger and stronger
than others. But we’ve lived with that our entire lives. Blair’s only had six
months to acclimatize to the bionics. And the strength and speed they give him
are much greater. It’ll take him some time to have perfect control.”
Blair
shook his head as he looked up. “To be honest, I may never have complete
control. But I don’t want to hurt anyone accidentally, so if you see me losing
control, tell me. Please.”
“Blair,”
Joel said, “you’re one of the coolest people I know when it comes to being in a
tight situation.”
Sandburg
snorted. “Maybe on the outside but adrenaline runs regardless of how calm I may
seem. I don’t want to do that,” he pointed to the half ashtray, “to someone’s
arm.”
“Point
taken, Sandburg,” Simon said. “Any questions?” Everyone shook their head. “Okay, then. We are still on a terrorist
alert. There hasn’t been any sign of the PRF in the last six months, but we’re
getting close to the hearing date for the members that were captured during the
attempted jailbreak of Talbot and Reid. Check with your informants and keep
your eyes open. That second EMP device is still out there.”
Grim
faces met his gaze as Simon looked around the table. They were all too aware of
the danger.
“In
the meantime, I want you to go through your case files and hand some of the
newer ones over to Ellison and Sandburg. Might as well put them back to work
ASAP.” Banks grinned at Jim and Blair as they pretended to be shocked at the
thought. “All right you clowns, there are criminals out there waiting for us to
catch them. Move it.”
Everyone
rose and started toward the door, talking and smiling, just like old times.
Simon leaned back in his chair and watched. A small contented smile graced his
lips. It was good to have his family back together again.
********
Several days later
Ellison
kicked at the door again, but it didn’t budge. Sandburg leaned against the wall
with a look of exasperation on his face. “Jim,” he repeated, trying to get the
older man’s attention.
“I’ve
almost got it, Chief, I felt it give,” Jim said, backing up for another kick.
Blair
stepped in front of him, one hand raised to stop his partner. “Jim,” he said
with thinly veiled impatience as he turned and gave the door one sharp hit near
the handle. The door swung open and slammed against the wall. Sandburg stepped
aside and waved Jim in.
Jim
stared for a second then scowled. “Smartass,” he grumbled as he passed. Blair
followed him in with a grin on his face.
*********
Two weeks later
“What’s
he doing here?” Rafe asked as he came
out of Captain Banks’ office.
Jim
looked up and around and saw Oscar Goldman heading toward him. “Detective,”
Goldman said, nodding at Ellison. “Is your partner here?”
Jim
straightened in his seat and nodded slowly.
“Can
you get him? I’d like to discuss something with the two of you and Captain
Banks,” Goldman explained.
Ellison
nodded again and watched as the OSI man went to knock on Simon’s door.
“Wonder
what he wants?” Rafe asked Jim quietly.
“I
don’t know, Brian, but I’m afraid I won’t like the answer.” Jim focused his
hearing on finding his partner as Rafe headed back to his desk. “Blair,” Jim whispered once he found his
Guide’s location. “Can you hear me Chief? You got your ear on?”
After
a moment, Jim heard a whispered reply. “That joke is so lame, Jim.” Ellison
chuckled. “What’s up, man?” Blair asked.
“Goldman
just showed up, Chief. Wants to meet with us in Simon’s office,” Jim replied.
“I’ll
be right up, Jim.”
Ellison
closed and straightened the files he’d been working on then stood and went to
Simon’s office. He knocked and opened the door. “Can I come in?”
Simon
waved the detective in with a barely controlled look of displeasure. Even
though he knew Goldman’s appearance was inevitable, it was hard to accept. The
last time the OSI man had come to his office Simon had almost lost one of his best
friends, not to mention a valuable officer.
“Where’s
Sandburg?” Banks growled.
“On
his way, Captain,” Jim answered, recognizing Simon’s anger for what it was,
redirected frustration. He knew exactly what the captain was feeling. “I assume
this has something to do with the PRF?” he asked taking a seat.
“I’d
rather brief you all at one time,” Goldman said, propping one hip on the arm of
the couch.
“Oh,”
Jim drawled, “I’m sure Sandburg’s listening.
Oscar
pursed his lips thoughtfully. “I’ll wait.”
Jim
shrugged and glanced at Simon. The captain leaned back in his chair and sighed.
A
few minutes later, Blair knocked and strode into the room with a grin on his
face. “Miss me?” he asked impudently.
Ellison
snorted while Banks rolled his eyes, but allowed a small grin to touch his
lips.
Goldman
ignored the antics and dove right into the reason he had come. “We have
information that the EMP device is still in Cascade and the PRF are planning to
use it as a distraction to break their comrades out of jail.”
“How
did you get someone inside after that last time?” Jim asked suspiciously.
Blair’s
eyes widened with apprehension. “You didn’t send Kate back in?”
Goldman
shook his head and waved his hand dismissively. “No, no, of course not. But she
was able to contact one of the women she knew from the PRF and do a little tap
dancing. After she explained that you and she had gotten nervous and headed for
the hills until things quieted down, the woman was swayed to share the latest
news.” Oscar pushed away from the couch and began to pace.
“We
don’t know where the bomb is going to be used, but Kate got the location of
their newest hideout. Steve and Jaime are there now doing surveillance.” He
turned to face the Cascade officers. “The PRF haven’t had a chance to set up
any counter-surveillance yet. We hope to learn their plans. I trust we can
count on your help?”
“Well
of course,” Blair started only to be stopped by Jim’s hand on his arm.
“Officially
or unofficially?” the Sentinel asked. Blair frowned. “Remember the strings I
told you about, Chief?” Jim prodded. His partner’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully
and Jim nodded. “They gave you the bionics, but only with the understanding
that we would help them when requested.” Ellison turned his gaze back to
Goldman. “I just want to know if this is one of those times, or if you are
really asking for our help.”
Goldman
glared at him. “I assumed that since the PRF are in your town, you would want
to be involved. Trust me, when I need you to fulfill your promise, you won’t
have any doubt as to whether it’s voluntary or not.”
An
awkward silence filled the room.
Finally
Blair spoke. “Okay, that was fun. Now why don’t we talk about what we can do to
find this EMP device? I, for one, do not want to wait until the last minute
this time.”
Goldman
gave Blair an apologetic look then nodded. “I came to ask if you would help
with the surveillance. Between the two of you, Steve, Jaime and Kate, we can
rotate shifts and maybe catch some vital information.”
Jim
nodded his agreement then glanced at Simon. “Sir?”
Banks
glared at Goldman for a long moment then nodded. “Just make sure I get them
both back in one piece this time,” he grumbled.
**********
“Gin,”
Blair said laying his cards on the table.
Jim
sighed and gathered the cards to shuffle. As he straightened the deck he
stretched his hearing out to pick up any conversations going on in the house
across the street. Kate’s contact had given them the address of a house in east
Cascade where the remaining People’s Resistance Front were hiding out. On
paper, the property was owned by an individual, but the money trail could be
traced back to a number of dummy corporations that ultimately led to the PRF.
Over
the last three days, Jim, Blair, Steve and Jaime Austin, and Kate Goldman had
taken turns watching and listening on the off chance that they might discover
the PRF’s plans. The Sentinel and Guide had quickly fallen into a pattern of
splitting the surveillance. Currently they were alternating, every other hand
of Gin Rummy. Concentrating on the game as well as the house kept Jim from
zoning and helped Blair work on his fine motor skills. Handling the cards
gently while he focused his hearing across the street was sort of like trying
to chew gum and talk at the same time. If
you weren't careful you could end up biting your tongue, or in this case
mangling the cards.
Jim
dealt the next hand with a frown. He had caught just the briefest portion of a
conversation on his first sweep and was trying to find the two people involved
again.
“What
is it, Jim?” Blair asked, reaching his hand out in case the Sentinel needed
additional grounding.
Ellison
grasped his Guide’s wrist. Although he could center himself and use his senses
just fine now without touching Blair, it was always easier and things seemed
sharper when they were in physical contact with each other. “I heard
something…” he replied distractedly.
“Where,
Jim?” Blair asked softly.
Jim’s
lips turned up in a small grin of success. “Second floor, toward the back of
the house. Two men are talking about… Damn.”
Blair
tilted his head and focused on the location Jim had pin-pointed. He found the
two conversationalists after a moment, but by then they were off the topic.
“What did you hear?” Blair asked.
The
Sentinel sighed and brought his attention back to his partner. “You know the
Tanner building?”
“Of
course,” Sandburg replied with no little sarcasm. Kincaid had tried to take the
building off the map during their first unforgettable meeting. Blair’s eyes
widened. “You’ve got to be kidding!”
Jim
shook his head. “They seem to think that blowing up a building next to the PD
would be the perfect distraction for freeing their brothers.”
Blair
sank back into his chair and stared at the table top.
“Blair?”
Jim asked concerned by his friend’s sudden silence.
“I’m
just… Well, I guess I’m feeling… ah, this is silly,” he said, running a hand
through his hair.
“Come
on, Chief,” Jim urged. “You can tell me.”
Blair was a bit embarrassed
as he met his brother’s eyes. “It is silly, but I sorta empathize with the
building. I know how it feels to always be the one who gets beat up on.”
Jim
bit his lower lip, but couldn’t quite keep the grin from lifting the corners of
his mouth.
“Okay,”
Blair said, tossing his hands up in defeat. “Go ahead and laugh. But if that
building could talk, it would be on my side. I mean what are the chances that
it would be chosen by two different terrorist groups to be blown up?”
“It’s
just proximity, Chief,” Jim said with a grin. “It’s right next to the PD. That
makes it a very logical target.” Ellison stopped and his grin dropped quickly
into a frown.
“Just
stop that line of thought right there, Ellison,” Blair demanded. “My proximity
to the PD has not painted a target on my back. Nor has my being near you,” he
stated, poking a finger toward the older man. “Do I have to list off the times
that the danger came from something related to me or Rainier?” He lifted a
finger. “The drug lab in the warehouse…”
“All
right. All right,” Jim appeased. “I won’t go getting all philosophical if you
won’t get scientific on me.”
Blair
grinned. “Good. Now when are they planning their hit? We need to let the others
know so we can set up a solid defense.”
**************
The
plans didn’t quite turn out the way they’d envisioned. Oscar Goldman insisted
that Steve, Jaime and Kate fly home. He did not want them anywhere near the EMP
device, just in case. Goldman brought in replacement agents to help with the bust. This plan was grudgingly
approved by the three disgruntled OSI agents.
Then
Goldman tried to get Blair to leave with the rest of the bionic contingent. Jim
and Simon backed the OSI man up and they all received a first class glare from
the young Shaman.
“First
of all, Mr. Goldman,” Blair stated, slurring mister into an insult. “You don’t
have any jurisdiction over me. Whatever Jim promised you, it did not give you
the right to dictate my whereabouts. Secondly, I’m not leaving Jim without his
Guide.” With that Blair sat back in his chair with his arms crossed, clearly
considering the matter finished.
“Sandburg,”
Simon growled. “It makes sense for you to be out of harm’s way.”
“We
don’t know what effect the EMP waves will have on bionics,” Goldman concurred.
“Or the surrounding tissue. Getting caught by the blast could kill you now.”
Blair
lifted his gaze to meet Goldman’s. “I’m not leaving.”
“Chief,”
Jim pleaded.
Blair
locked eyes with his partner for a long moment. “Okay,” he relented, “if you
come with me.”
“What?”
Ellison spluttered at the unexpected response. “I need to stay here. I’m not in
any danger from the EMP waves, but you are. Please go.”
“No,
Jim,” Sandburg argued with a shake of his head. “I’m not leaving without you.
Besides, if that bomb goes off anywhere near us, the effect of the EMP waves
will be the last thing we have to worry about. We’ll just have to find the
device before it can be used.”
They
all sat in sober silence for a moment. The intelligence they’d gathered
indicated that this bomb was large enough to take down the entire Tanner
building, not just collapse a few floors. An explosion with or without the EMP
would be disastrous.
“All
right,” Simon sighed. “Let’s get this plan finalized and meet with the rest of
the task force.”
********
The day before the hearing
The Tanner building
“Damn
it, Jim,” Blair cursed under his breath as he handcuffed the two PRF guys to
the stair rail. He listened for his partner, heard running footsteps several
floors below and took off after Jim and the two men the Sentinel had followed. I suppose I should be happy that he trusted
me to take care of those two idiots on my own. Blair snorted as he skidded
to a stop at the next landing to get his bearings.
“Jesus,
Jim. I have bionic arms, not legs.” Sandburg shook his head and continued his
race down the stairs. It sounded like they were almost to the ground floor. Wonder if I could learn to walk on my hands
really fast?
The
door to the parking garage stood partially opened. Blair listened then peered
around the edge. He couldn’t see anyone from there, but he could hear the sound
of a struggle. Blair entered the garage and pinpointed the source of the noise.
Jim and one of the men were fighting hand-to-hand. The remaining man had just
placed a large case on the hood of a car.
As
Blair ran toward the three, he kept most of his attention on Jim’s progress.
The combatants seemed pretty evenly matched, but Blair had confidence in his
partner. Then he heard the sound of a weapon being readied. His bionic eye
zeroed in on the second man, offering Blair a close up view of the gun aimed at
Jim.
Blair
reached for the weapon holstered at the small of his back. Adrenaline and fear
for Jim caused his bionics to kick in. As he swung his gun around into
position, he felt the grip slip from his fingers. His bionic eye locked onto
the pistol as it spun through the air, almost like watching in slow motion
until his gun landed almost two hundred yards away.
“Damn
it!” he swore, making a mental note of the gun’s general location as he scanned
the area for less conventional ammo. He spied several chunks of broken concrete
and snatched them up. Blair threw one golf ball sized piece at the man
threatening Jim with the gun. The concrete chunk hit the guy in the shoulder
with enough velocity to throw the man to the ground.
A
second projectile made precision contact with the thigh of the man struggling
with Jim. Blair didn’t wait to see what happened next, certain that Jim could
handle his man. Instead he raced to his first victim, and found the man
unconscious. The EMP device appeared to be unarmed. Blair focused his hearing,
but found no indication of ticking or electronics to indicate a timer counting
down. He sighed with relief and pulled out a zip tie to restrain the
unconscious man.
“Thanks,
Chief,” Jim said with a grin as he dragged his man over to the car. “Is that
the bomb?”
Blair
nodded. “That’s Prior,” he said, motioning toward the unconscious man on the
ground.
“A
man who doesn’t mind doing his own dirty work, eh?” Ellison scowled. He pulled
out his radio headset and opened the channel. “This is Ellison. We’ve got the
device and Prior in the garage.”
“The
other two are on the fifth floor in the stairwell,” Blair advised.
Jim
nodded and relayed the information.
~~~~~~~~~
Simon’s office
“Well,”
Goldman said with a satisfied smile. “I think that just about wraps up the
People’s Resistance Front.”
“Good
riddance,” Kate Goldman said over the speaker phone.
The
sting, along with Kate’s Intel had allowed them to capture almost all of the
PRF members. Those who had escaped would have their pictures plastered on walls
all throughout the United States.
“What
about the EMP device?” Steve Austin asked. Even though the other three OSI
agents were in California, they still wanted to be involved in the final
debriefing, thus the conference call.
“No
problem there,” Simon assured. “Taggert and his people defused and dismantled
the bomb as soon as we got it far enough out of town to be safe. The component
parts are on the way to OSI headquarters to be analyzed.”
“The
further from Cascade, the better, I say,” Blair mumbled softly.
Jaime,
Kate and Jim chuckled understandingly.
“How
did you do with the bionics, Blair?” Steve asked.
Blair
sat up a little straighter as a realization struck him. “Oh, uh, just fine,
Steve. No problems.”
“Oh,
Chief,” Jim grinned. “One of the uniforms finally found this for you. It was under
a car.”
Blair’s
face turned bright red as he took the proffered weapon. “Thanks,” he muttered,
tucking the gun back into its holster.
Simon
raised an eyebrow in question, but Jim just smiled and shook his head.
“Well,”
Goldman said as he stood, “I’ve got a plane to catch.” He shook Simon’s hand
then turned to Jim and Blair. “I’ll be in touch, gentlemen.”
“No
rush, Goldman,” Jim replied, standing to shake the man’s hand reluctantly.
Oscar
smiled and held his hand out to Blair. “Thank you. You saved my niece’s life at
the risk of your own, and for that I am truly grateful. I hope you and Ellison
will be willing to work with us in the future.”
Blair
smiled ruefully. “You know our number Mr. Goldman. But please, try not to make
it a habit, we do have our own criminals to take care of you know.”
Goldman
chuckled and nodded. “Steve,” he said toward the phone, "I’m on my way to the
airport.”
“Right,
Oscar. I’ll see you in a few hours. Blair, Jim, Simon, it was good to work with
you. Hope to see you again under more pleasant circumstances,” Austin said.
“Thanks
for everything, Steve,” Blair replied.
“Sure
thing, kid. Be sure to call if you have any questions or problems,” Steve said,
ending the call.
Goldman
nodded and with one last look at the Cascade officers he smiled. “Until the
next time, gentlemen,” he said then left the room.
As
one, Jim, Blair and Simon let out a sigh of relief and sat down again.
“Boy,
am I glad that’s over with,” Blair exclaimed wearily.
“Me
too, Chief,” Jim agreed.
“That
makes three of us,” Simon added. “But I do have one question.” Four eyebrows
raised in response. “How did you lose your weapon, Sandburg?”
Blair
ducked his head as Jim chuckled.
“I,
uh, itslippedfrommyfingerswhenipulleditoutoftheholster,” Blair mumbled quickly.
“What
was that?” Simon asked. “I couldn’t hear you.”
Jim’s
grin threatened to split his face as he tried to hold back his laughter.
“I
said,” Blair repeated a little slower, “that it slipped from my fingers when
I pulled it out of the holster. It went flying and I didn’t have time to
retrieve it.”
Simon
suppressed a grin of his own. “So that’s why you beaned those guys with a
rock.”
Blair
nodded, sending a glare toward his traitorous partner.
Banks
shot a glance at Ellison. “What’s so funny? You drop your gun all the time,
Jim.”
“He’s
right, Jim,” Blair agreed quickly. “It’s not that funny.”
Jim
chuckled. “Tell him where the gun landed, Chief.”
“Jim…”
Blair whined.
“What
do you mean, Jim?” Simon insisted.
“The
gun didn’t just slip and fall a few yards from Sandburg, Simon,” Jim answered,
still grinning like the Cheshire cat. “It sailed through the air and landed on
the other side of the garage.”
Simon
blinked, looked at Blair and then started to laugh. Jim joined him.
Blair
crossed his arms with a huff. “Well, I’m glad you think it’s funny.”
“Oh,
come on, Chief,” Jim cajoled, trying to make the younger man see the humor in
the situation.
“It’s
never good to lose your weapon, Blair,” Simon said more seriously. “But at
least you did it with style, unlike your partner here,” he finished wickedly.
Jim
snorted, but saw Blair’s small grin and reached out to ruffle the dark curls.
Blair’s arm shot up and blocked the attack. Jim snatched his hand back in
surprise.
“Not
the hair man,” Blair teased. “How many times do I have to tell you?”
Simon
chuckled at the astonished look on Jim’s face.
The
look was quickly replaced by serious consideration. “Well, I’ve been told I’m
rather hard-headed when it comes to certain things. This may be one of them,”
he replied soberly as he stood and turned to leave.
”Jim?” Blair called out, jumping up out of his own chair to catch up to his
partner.
Jim
spun around and using both hands ruffled Blair’s hair several times then bolted
out the door and across the bullpen. Laughter trailed after him.
“JIM!!”
Sandburg yelled, giving chase. “Not the hair!”
Simon
chuckled and sat down as he pulled out a cigar. He sniffed the stogie and
closed his eyes to savor the aroma and the comforting knowledge that all was
back to normal in Cascade.
The
End.
Feedback
is greatly appreciated. Judy