Laura smiled and shook her head. "That girl. She amazes me every day. Although I gotta say, I maybe wish she wasn't so drawn to someone like Garret. But...he seems different with her. Gentle, almost. It's like..." She turned back to the stove and shrugged. "I don't know. There's just something special inside him, deep down. I just hope it can be unlocked." She glanced over her shoulder at Nate with admiration. "You're being more than a handler. You're being a friend. And I don't care what anybody else things...you're doing a good job with him."
She put the lid back on the pot and wiped her hands on a towel.
"Okay. You go talk with Maggie. I'm going to check on our feverish house
guest and see if he needs anything before I put supper on the table."
Wandering
down the hall a couple minutes later, Laura tapped lightly on the
bedroom door that was almost closed. "Garret?" No response. She paused a
moment then just decided to go on in. Seeing him seemingly asleep with
such a pale face and still shivering, she frowned with compassion. She
couldn't imagine being sick and not having anybody to help care for her.
She'd always had her brother, then Nate.
Taking his
jacket and cap, she set them in the extra chair, and grabbed a second
blanket. She thought she was careful in spreading it over him, but she
wasn't quite careful enough. Without even time to blink, she was on her
back on the floor, with Garret on top of her. It took all of her might
not to scream or kick as she felt her shoulders pinned to being the
floor. "Garret," she said sternly but calmly. "It's just me. Laura."
Garret
had been half asleep when he'd felt someone leaning over him and had
reacted without even thinking. Now suddenly realizing his mistake, he
instantly rolled to the side and sat up, putting his hands to his
throbbing head. Wincing at his own pain, his eyes were half open as he
looked at Laura picking herself up. "Are you okay?"
Was
that...compassion in his voice? Laura tried to hide the fact that she
was trembling all over. "I'm fine," she lied. "It was my own fault. Come
on. Back in bed."
Garret sighed and closed his eyes.
He felt absolutely horrible about physically reacting to Laura. He could
have really hurt her. What would Nate say? "I shouldn't be here."
Laura swallowed her fear. "Enough whining. Get back in bed."
He opened one eye. "After that?"
"I've
had worse." She leaned down to take his arm and prompt him back up and
into bed once more before putting a hand to his forehead. "You're
burning up. I'm going to bring a cold cloth, okay?" Even though he
didn't respond, she went to the bathroom and soaked a washcloth in cold
water before wringing it out and bringing it to the bedroom. She wasn't
going to make the same mistake twice though.
"Garret?"
She remained a couple feet from the bed until he looked at her again to
prove he was awake. Only then did she approach. "Here. Lie on your
back." When he didn't move, she threatened him. "Hey. Do I have to call
my husband?"
Something close to a smirk emerged, and he rolled over onto his back.
"Thank you." Laura put the cloth on his forehead, then pulled up the blankets.
Even though he didn't respond, Garret wasn't sure anything had ever felt as good as that cold cloth.
Laura finished and sighed. "Think you can manage something to eat in a while?"
He shook his head.
"Have you had anything to eat all day?"
He shook his head again.
"Well...
you need to eat something. I'll have some brought in in a while. Just
rest." Leaving him be, she closed the door and returned to the kitchen.
Once there, though, she just leaned on the sink and tried to keep the
tears from coming. How could he have been so stupid? She'd just finished
warning Nate to tell Maggie to be careful, and what had she done? Left
her self completely vulnerable. She didn't blame Garret. She blamed
herself. But being pinned to the floor had brought on an old wave of
terror she had tried so hard to forget. That wasn't Garret's fault
either, but now she wasn't sure she was going to be able to hide her
fear. But she had to. For Garret's sake. For Maggie's sake. She could
fall apart later, but not now. It had been a long time since old
memories of Bryce had surfaced - she needed to stay in control of this.
Gritting
her teeth, she wiped her eyes and went to check on the soup and waited
for Nate to return. She just wanted to make sure Maggie knew not to
touch Garret unless she knew he was aware of her presence first.
A knocking made Reese spin around in his chair and look to the door. "Come in."
It
was Kirk. He'd been trying all day to talk to Reese, but had been
interrupted countless times. It was evening already, but he had to do
this. He had to finish this case. "Got a few minutes?"
Reese's eyes narrowed. "That depends."
Kirk
pursed his lips and finally entered, closing the door behind him, then
taking a seat in an empty chair. "This should be my last day here."
"Then forgive me for any excitement that might slip out."
Kirk
gave him a dry smile. "I know this hasn't been easy. I have to finish
my final report though, and I need some straight answers."
This
wasn't sounding good. Reese picked up a pen to play with and cleared
his throat. He'd like to boot Kirk out on the street, but that would
only make things worse. "How bad is it?"
"It's not great."
"Well you've already terrorized half my staff. What more do you want?"
"Terrorized would seem a rather strong word."
"Not to Scott." Reese had heard what had happened and was not pleased.
Kirk
shook his head. "I'm here to do this job to the best of my ability, and
sometimes that requires stepping on toes." Before Reese could respond,
he spoke again. "Where's Garret tonight?"
Reese sighed. "He's in Nate's custody."
"Where?"
There was a long pause. "At his home."
"You see?" Kirk frowned. "This is what's harming you guys the most. Garret -"
"He's sick, and Nate thought he would recover faster in a more suitable environment."
"You
don't have medical staff here? He belongs in a cell, and you not only
let him loose to run the building, but you actually release him into the
public with nothing but the hope he won't kill someone." He paused.
They'd been over this countless times just within the short period he'd
been assigned here, and nothing had changed. "What if Garret was the
only thing between you and an
actual future for the Elite? What if you could have a real chance at the
Elite surviving all this scrutiny if you simply sent Garret to prison
where he belongs?"
Reese swallowed hard. Despite his anger, he knew he was at the mercy
of the FBI. "With everything I've heard from you, I find it hard to believe that Garret's
presence is the only thing you disagree with."
"Answer my question."
Reese
wasn't sure he could. "Is that what it's going to come down to? Are you
going to recommend we shut down, unless I send Garret to prison?"
"What if I did?"
"Then...I would give Garret the option. And if he didn't want to be sent to prison then... I guess I'd turn in my badge."
Kirk
lifted an eyebrow. "You'd give up everything here? Your
job...livelihood...passion... your wife's job? Your son's job? Your
niece's job? All for the sake of an assassin?"
"No. I'd give it up all for the sake of a man who just needs a chance to show the world what he can become."
"You realize compassion doesn't keep law enforcement branches alive right?"
Reese
took a deep breath. "Just make sure when they decide to kill us off,
that they do it quickly, alright?"
Kirk leaned back in
his chair and cocked his head, just studying Reese. "This place used to
lie a lot to stay under public radar. Old habits die hard. Are you still
withholding information from the board in order to protect your
agents?"
The question was offensive to say the least, but
Reese did his best to keep his cool. "If you're asking me if I lie in
my reports, the answer is no."
"What about leaving out
certain particulars? Like...oh, I don't know...the recent killing of a
man during a rescue mission - committed by none other than your
aforementioned prisoner."
Reese's jaw tightened. "It was in my report that it was found to be self-defense."
"Even though you don't believe that's true."
"Are you going to take me to court over this? If not, why don't we move on to something other than Garret?"
Kirk
made a note on his notepad while shaking his head. "Okay. You have one
agent who is your son, one who's your niece, and you're married to
another. How does that affect the structure of this establishment?"
Reese bristled. "What are you implying?"
"Well you can't tell me you treat them the same as anybody else. You're only human."
"I
try to treat everyone here as equally as I can," Reese answered
sternly. "Everyone here is different and has different needs. But as a
whole I think I've done a pretty good job."
Kirk
frowned as he flipped through some notes. "Isn't it true that you're
basically chief of the Elite by default? I mean...no one really
appointed you, correct?"
"I...it... no one was opposed to the idea."
"Except Jason."
"We
worked that out and in the end he agreed I was the better man for the
job. There was no way he was even close to being ready to manage this
place, maturity wise or experience wise. He-"
"I don't
really care how you and Jason compare. I'm just pointing out the fact
that...you've been leading this place on the assumption that no one else
should be able to handle it."
"Carter disappeared.
Austin walked away." Reese's face was growing red. "There was no one
else to pick up the pieces. I did what I had to do in order to keep this
place running for the sake of innocent lives."
"What if you found out that your agents would really prefer someone else be their leader?"
Was that true? Reese sat back a little, as his heart dropped. "Then...if that's what they wanted... I...would step down."
"You'd just give up all your power?"
"It's hard to run something without the support of your staff. So...yes. I... I would do anything for the good of the Elite."
Kirk stopped writing and looked up at him. "Anything?"
Reese swallowed hard. "For the good of the Elite."
"Why?"
"I..." Reese wasn't sure what the question meant. "I don't understand. Why what?"
"Why would you do anything for the good of the Elite?"
"Well because. It...it's a cause I believe in and-"
"Not
good enough." Kirk shook his head before looking Reese square in the
eye. His voice was stern. "You better do a heck of a lot better job
convincing me why you're so willing to put your neck on the line than
just 'I care.'"
Reese's expression turned into a scowl.
"Do you know how many lives the Elite has saved? Do you know how much
good this organization has done since it's very beginnings? We've gone
beyond the call of duty. We have gone beyond just the cases that deal
with the Agency. Case after case has been dumped on us by local law
enforcement just because we don't have the luxury of saying no. These
agents work their tails off and are on call twenty-four/seven just to
keep people and their families safe. They risk their lives just as much
as any policeman, fireman or FBI agent, and I dare say sometimes their
job is more dangerous because we're working against a crime organization
that is barely even recognized as being real." He paused to catch his
breath. "If I'm the problem here, then take me out of the equation. But
don't you dare let this place take the fall for mistakes I've made. I
know I'm a crappy leader. I was a cop and a private investigator - and I
wasn't all that great at either one. When I joined the Elite, I had no
intention of ever being in charge. It was dropped in my lap and I have
done my best ever since to do what I felt has been right for this place.
These people. This family." He was shaking, he was so upset. "Shame on
the FBI for even thinking about ending the careers of these people
rather than utilizing the astounding talents that exist here. We were
not named the Elite for no reason. We are an elite team. And if you let us die, heaven help society as the Agency takes over civilian lives."
...It
was several hours later. The sun had just set. It was a little chilly,
but not too chilly to wear a jacket and sit on a park bench. And that's
exactly where Kirk was. He'd changed out of his dress pants and shirt,
and back into more comfortable jeans and tshirt, and his old brown
leather jacket. He hadn't been back to the office though. He hadn't had a
nap either. And he had yet to write his final report so it could be on
Barnes' desk by morning. And he felt...stuck.
Movement
on the little pond caught his eye, and he realized it was just a duck.
He sighed. He really should eat some supper, but he wasn't all that
hungry. Not when so many people's livelihoods were riding on the words
he would choose to use.
Travis smirked at Ashlee, but handed her the kitten. "Okay, fine. But when I'm better, I'm gonna go up there 'cause that's the best seat in the house any day."
Standing with her, he stopped her before she walked away. "Oh. Wait." A new grin emerged and he reached over to pluck a piece of hay from her hair. "There. Now you're good to go."
"I don't know what to do." Lane cupped a coffee mug between his hands and looked at his sister across the table in the main house while breakfast was being cooked. "Chance said the threat here is over, but...is it with me? Or Travis? I don't know where to go from here, or if I should move, or...what."
He sighed. "I thought finding him was the answer to everything, and now I'm just as lost as I was before. What would you do?"
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