Will You Always Be There?
Disclaimers: I don’t own any of these characters. They belong to Belisarius Productions. I don’t any product or label mentioned for the purposes of telling this story. Any similarities to situations or persons living or dead are purely coincidental.
Spoilers: Anything up to Hail and Farewell and any spoiler floating around is fair game.
A/N: Thanks to Aerogirl for her beta reading, input and encouragement.
Chapter
1
O900
JAG Headquarters
Colonel Sarah MacKenzie
walked quickly across the bullpen to her office. Staff call seemed to
last forever this morning. She just wanted the day to really begin so
that she could lose herself in her workday. She could shut it all
out, forget that she might be in for the fight of her life and forget
that Webb had lied over and over about so many things. With a bit of
effort, she might even forget the pain she saw in the eyes of her
best friend and partner Commander Harmon Rabb Jr., even when he was
smiling.
She had returned to counseling. She had known even
before she learned that Webb was indeed alive that she needed to get
help or everything she had worked so hard to accomplish in her life
would be ruined. ‘You’re only as good as your last sober
day.’ Before learning the truth, she was able to cry and mourn
Webb; now she felt completely numb. Commander McCool explained that
her feelings were to be expected given her background and coping
mechanisms since she had become sober. What worried her now was that
she didn’t know if she would ever feel anything again.
The
day passed quickly, since she didn’t have court today.
Paperwork was plentiful – She was glad that at least that was
one thing that never changed. Mac turned off her computer, slipped a
few case files into her briefcase and turned off the lights in her
office. ‘I’ve made it through another week,’ she
thought, ‘now to get through the weekend.’
Mac
started to walk toward the elevators when Harm spoke to her,
startling her. She froze mid-stride and turned quickly toward his
voice. “I’m sorry, Mac, I didn’t mean to startle
you,”
“It’s okay, I just thought everyone but the watch was already gone,” Mac continued to walk toward the elevators, not making eye contact with Harm at all.
“Mac, are we ever going to talk about this? You asked me if I would always be there – here I am. Let me in.”
She looked at him then and she saw the pain once again, pain she had caused. She felt as though she couldn’t breathe – she had to get out of there before she completely lost it. She had to get away before she said something, anything to make him stop talking to her. She didn’t want to hurt anyone anymore. She just wanted to get away.
“Harm,
I can’t, not now. Please, I’ve got to get out of here!”
She nearly ran to the elevators and slipped in just before they
closed, taking her away, getting her home.
Harm stood in the
middle of the bullpen, watching Mac slip away from him. He had never
seen her quite like this. There was no light in her at all now. She
barely looked at him when she spoke. This morning in staff call she’d
sat next to him but never turned toward him, even when she was
speaking to him. He had always felt connected to her, even when he
was still with the CIA. When he was in the same room with her, her
presence was such that you knew, whether she spoke or not, if she was
happy or sad or angry about something. It was one of the things he
loved about her, the strength of her personality. Now, it was almost
as though she were a ghost, going through the motions, getting the
job done and interacting with people as little as possible.
Harm
returned to his office, got his cover and briefcase, and just as he
turned the lights in his office off, he heard the sounds of thunder
coming from outside. “Great,” he thought, “just
what I needed.” Harm started walking out of the building, and
it began to rain harder as the storm grew more intense. Harm ran to
his SUV and got in, soaking wet even though he had parked very near
the entrance. “Hope Mac makes it home okay,” he thought.
Harm took out his cell-phone and called Mattie. “Hey, kiddo.”
“Hey yourself,” Mattie answered.
“Just checking in, are you all ready to go?” Harm asked.
“Yeah,
it’s all under control, Jen and I are catching a movie tonight
and my Dad’s picking me up in the morning, first thing.”
Harm asked Mattie to check in after the movie and hung up. Harm
started the car and started toward Union Station. He was nearly
halfway home when he decided to take a quick drive by Mac’s
apartment. “Just to make sure she made it home alright …
besides she’ll never know,” he thought.
1800
Mac’s
Apartment
Mac had made it home without a problem, although
she didn’t really recall the drive. She felt the storm, the
thunder booming so loud that she could feel it in her chest. She
wasn’t afraid. She was almost relieved that she could feel
something. She had gotten away and said nothing stupid or hurtful to
Harm. She could not face him now.
Mac removed her coat and
placed her briefcase or her dining room table. The storm continued to
rage outside. Mac felt drawn to it. She walked toward the French
doors leading to her balcony and opened the doors. The moment she
opened the doors she felt and heard the thunder clap and saw the
lightning streak across the sky. Mac’s breath caught and she
gasped. The rain blew into her face and it was cold. “I’m
not numb after all,” she thought. The storm raged on, and Mac
continued to stand on the balcony, pulling in the storm and willing
away the numbness, trying to feel something, anything again.
Harm
turned his SUV onto Mac’s street. The rain continued to pour
which made the night that much darker. He looked up toward Mac’s
apartment and saw no lights in the windows. Harm pulled into a
parking place across the street and looked up toward her apartment
again. Lightning pierced the sky as he was looking and he saw
her.
“Jesus, Mac!” Harm got out of his SUV and
climbed the stairs into her building 2 at a time. He pounded on her
door and used his key to get in.. He did not remember crossing the
room. He saw her turn slowly toward him.
She looked confused and she was trembling violently. “Harm?” she said as she stepped backward. Harm then took hold of both of her arms and guided her back into the room. “Harm, I can’t feel anything, I … I can’t feel anything at all. I can’t cry, I don’t feel anything at all. I feel hollow. What’s going to happen to me?” Mac said as she crossed her arms and hugged herself as though she were all alone.
“Mac, you don’t have to go through this alone. I’m here. Please let me help you,” Harm pleaded. She still could not look at him directly.
She then realized that she was soaking wet and cold. “I have to get out of these clothes,” she walked toward her bedroom. “You don’t have to stay. I’ll be alright.”
Harm had no
intention of leaving; he had stayed away for 3 weeks after they
learned Webb was alive, no more. “I’m staying until you
talk to me. I’ll make some tea while you get dressed.”
Harm
picked up his cell-phone and dialed the number of someone who might
be able to help.
Chapter
2
1900
Mac’s Apartment
Mac emerged from her
bedroom after showering and dressing to find Harm waiting
expectantly. “Feeling better?” Harm asked.
“Yeah, just a little embarrassed,” Mac looked everywhere in the apartment but at him.
“There is nothing to feel embarrassed about,” Harm walked toward her. He stood in front of her, careful not to get too close, “Do you trust me, Mac?”
She looked quickly up at him, surprised that he would ask such a question. “Of course I do.”
“OK, then
I have an idea, and I want you to hear me out before you say no.”
Harm stepped away from Mac and walked toward her balcony,
stopping at the French doors. He turned and looked back at her and
then down at his feet. Mac could see him struggling with how to say
whatever he had to say. She felt that much more wretched for putting
him in this position. She started to speak, but Harm stopped her with
a raised hand. “Hear me out,” he said. “You may not
have noticed, but I’ve been getting out of D.C. every weekend
for the last month or so. Mattie goes to see her Dad, which makes a
very long weekend for me. I’ve been driving out to Pennsylvania
to see my grandmother. The drive clears my head. The talks with my
grandmother and the work on the farm have really gone a long way in
helping me get through this time.”
Harm walked
back toward Mac again, close enough so that it was difficult not to
look him in the eye. “Look, I get that you don’t want to
talk about this now, but you still don’t have to be alone. Come
out there with me this weekend. I don’t want anything from you
but to know you’re alright. I’ve wanted to get you and my
grandmother together for years. She’s the only other person
besides you who won’t let me get away with anything.”
Harm smiled his smile and Mac had to smile back at him, in spite of
herself.
Mac thought for a long moment. She was not looking
forward to spending the weekend trying to interest herself in a book
or the files she had brought home to review. She had completed
everything she needed to do to prepare for Monday long before she
left work today. Mac had a lot to decide and maybe she did need to
get away. “Harm, I’ve got a lot on my mind, some things
that you don’t even know about yet. I won’t be good
company for anyone. I would hate for your grandmother to have this
first impression of me.” She walked back toward her kitchen to
the steaming mug of tea Harm had made. Harm followed her and picked
up his mug of tea. He leaned against the counter across from her and
studied her for a moment. ‘Patience, Rabb,’ he thought.
He had the
feeling she really did want to come with him, but he was just going
to give her time to decide for herself that it would be good to get
out of here this weekend. “Mac, my grandmother has a working
farm, so she’ll be pretty busy. And she is not someone who
would pry into things that don’t concern her. Although I can’t
promise she won’t put you to work.” He smiled with that
and Mac remembered again why he was such a tough opponent to beat in
the courtroom. He could convince anyone of just about anything. She
looked around the room and walked back into her living room. Suddenly
the room seemed smaller and the thought of staying here seemed
unbearable to her. “Ok, Harm, I’ll go. Let me grab my sea
bag and a few changes of clothes and we’ll get out of here.”
Chapter 3
2400
Interstate
76 West
Somewhere in Pennsylvania
Harm glanced over to see
Mac sleeping soundly. He smiled to himself, remembering how easily
she fell asleep just about anywhere. He also knew that the trick for
Mac was staying asleep. If the dark circles under her eyes lately
were any indication, she wasn’t sleeping much at all. He was
surprised and relieved that Mac had agreed to come with him. He had
called and left a message for Mattie at the apartment and let her
know he was leaving early for Pennsylvania this weekend. He had told
her to call him on his cell when she got in. She did call, right on
time, and Mac didn’t even stir. She had taken a mild pain
medication before they left her apartment. She had undergone a biopsy
about 10 days ago and still had some residual soreness. The biopsy
was the other subject besides Webb that she would not talk about yet.
During the last week she had been so distant that he knew something
was going on – she wasn’t angry, she just didn’t
interact at all.
At last Harm turned into the long drive onto
his grandmother’s property. Oscar, her labrador retriever,
barked a warning then a greeting as he pulled in front of her house.
Mac looked toward the house, then at Harm squinting from the porch light. Harm got out and came around to her side of the car. He opened the door and offered his hand. Mac took it and stood, then, letting go, leaned into Harm for a moment. He slipped his arm around her and guided her up the steps to his grandmother’s front porch. “You okay, Marine?” he asked.
“I didn’t realize how tired I was. I think I was asleep before we got out of D.C.”
Harm laughed a little “I know you were.”
Just then the
front door opened, and a tall, slender woman of nearly 6 feet stood
before them. She was dressed in worn jeans and a loose fitting turtle
neck. She had a shawl around her shoulders and all of her clothes
were different shades of blue. She had long silvery white hair just
past her shoulders and had it pulled back from her face with a clasp.
When Mac looked at her, she smiled and offered her hand. Mac saw in
an instant that Harm and his father had many of her features. Sarah
Rabb’s features were finer, but the striking blue green eyes
and beautiful smile were her gifts to her son and grandson. “Hello,
Mac, I’m Sarah Rabb. It’s great to finally meet
you.”
Sarah Rabb stepped back to allow her guests to
come in. The house smelled of coffee and something wonderful baking
in the oven. Harm stepped up to his grandmother and said, “You
shouldn’t have gone to all this trouble, Grandma.”
“You know it’s no trouble at all. I’ve been such a night owl lately, it was nice to have something to do. If you’re both too tired for anything, don’t worry about it. The cookies will keep and I made the coffee for me.” Harm frowned at his grandmother, and she said, “Don’t worry, Harmon, it’s decaf.” They walked into the kitchen after she offered them a cup of coffee and sat down.
The kitchen
was simple, with older appliances and a deep kitchen sink. It was
neat and clean, without a lot of clutter. The room was warm and
welcoming, and Mac’s anxiety about meeting Mrs. Rabb was
beginning to leave her. They talked about the weather and the trip
out to the farm. The conversation was easy, not uncomfortable. Mac
began to feel sleepy again and said, “If you two don’t
mind, I think I’ll turn in now.”
She began to stand up. Mrs. Rabb also stood, “Here, let me show you to your room and Harm will bring your things in.”
Harm smiled at Mac, “You see who gives the orders around here, don’t you?”. They all laughed as Mac and Mrs. Rabb walked up the stairs.
“Mrs. Rabb, I want to thank you for allowing me to tag along with Harm this weekend. And the coffee and cookies were great,”
“Don’t give it a thought, I’m glad to have you here. I hope you don’t mind that I called you Mac right off the bat. Harm has spoken of you so often that I almost feel I know you and I know you as *Mac*.”
“Not at
all,” she answered.
”Here we are,” said Mrs.
Rabb as they reached the door of the guest room.
Mrs. Rabb
stepped into the room and turned on the lamp at the bedside table.
The room was bathed in warm yellow light. An inviting room full of
quilts, pillows and a wrought iron bed, it also was neat and without
clutter. The mirrored dresser had two framed pictures: one Mac had
seen before of Harm’s mother and father when she was pregnant
for him, and one of a man and woman in an embrace, cheek to cheek. As
Mac walked toward it, Mrs. Rabb spoke. “That’s my David
and I.”
Mac picked up the framed picture and, looking more closely, said, “You were both so young.”
Mrs. Rabb looked at the picture thoughtfully and said, “Yes, we were. That picture was taken just before he went to join the Army Air Corps. I was 17 years old and he was 20.”
Just then Harm
walked into the room and dropped Mac’s bags onto the bed. She
turned and thanked him, and Mrs. Rabb showed her the guest bathroom
and all the ins and outs of using the plumbing in a very old house.
Harm and Mrs. Rabb bade her goodnight and went back downstairs and
Mac got ready for bed.
Harm and his grandmother sat back down
in the kitchen, each taking a fresh cup of coffee.
“Thanks
again, Grandma,.I can’t give you a lot of details. I don’t
even have them all. I just know Mac needed to get out of D.C. and I
felt the need to keep an eye on her right now. She’s going
through a pretty rough time.”
Mrs Rabb studied her grandson for a moment. “Son, I’m glad to have your company, and Mac is welcome too. I have loved having you these last few weekends. I don’t think you’ve spent so much time here since you came home and restored ‘Sarah’.”
“That was a bad time,” Harm said.
Mrs Rabb
rose from her chair and stood before her grandson, who was seated on
the kitchen chair. “You got through it, Harmon; you come from
good stock.” She placed her hand on his cheek and kissed his
forehead. They both smiled, and Mrs. Rabb said, “I’ll
think I’ll turn in too. Make yourself at home, Harmon, and lock
up before you go to bed.”
Harm walked out onto the front
porch sipping his coffee, trying to unwind a little bit before trying
to get some sleep. It was cool but not cold with the smell of early
fall in the air. Oscar padded around the porch and brushed against
his legs. Harm reached down and patted the dog behind his ears, and
he sat down at Harm’s feet. He wasn’t sure what, if
anything, would come of this weekend, but at least he had Mac close
and he could be there for her if she needed him. There was something
healing about this place. Coming here after his ramp strike had saved
his sanity and his career.
He hoped
being on the farm would do the same for Mac. There was so much he
wanted her to know, but didn’t know how he could even begin to
approach her about anything now. He just knew he wasn’t going
to back away and wait for her to come to him, not this time. He
wasn’t going to push, but he wasn’t going away
either.
Harm walked up the stairs to go to his room, passing
the guest bedroom at the top of the stairs. Mac stood in the dark
looking out the window, her arms folded in front of her. The moon was
full, casting shadows outside. They had driven out of the rain in
D.C. and into a clear crisp night in Pennsylvania. “You okay,
Mac?”
Mac smiled her half smile, “Not yet, but I will be. I’m so sorry for scaring you like I did tonight. I really don’t know what came over me. One minute I was walking in my door and the next I was standing on my balcony in the rain.”
“I’m just glad I happened to be driving by and saw you,” Harm said as Mac raised her eyebrows. “Okay, so I decided to drive by and make sure you got home alright.”
Harm walked over to her at the window, and as he did Mac slipped her arms around his waist and pulled him close. “I’m sorry I have avoided you and that I haven’t talked to you about what’s going on. Just give me time and I’ll get this all sorted out. One of the things that has been so hard for me to bear was to see the worry on your face and know I was the cause of it.”
Harm closed his arms around her, and she felt so small and fragile that his impulse to protect her became even stronger. He thought for a moment about what she said and then stepped back from her embrace. “The reason for the worry was because you wouldn’t talk to me and because you seemed less like yourself than ever. Whatever happens, Mac, I’m your friend – we make a good team and I think we could handle anything if we do it together.”
Mac looked into Harm’s eyes, “Thank you for bringing me here with you, Harm.”
You’re
welcome,” he said, kissing her forehead. “If you need
anything, I’m just down the hall.” With that, he turned
and left the room and went to bed.
They both lay in their
separate beds, listening to the sounds of the farm at night: the
leaves on the trees rustling in the breeze, the crickets chirping,
even a far away train rumbling on its tracks. Harm could still feel
her arms around him and could smell the scent of her on his t-shirt.
He didn’t know which was worse, being away from her or having
her so close but not being able to tell her how he felt. He heaved a
sigh, turned onto his side and willed himself to go to sleep. Mac
could feel his kiss on her forehead and felt as though she would
burst into tears at any moment but she could not. She felt a dull
ache in her chest and throat and with that she sighed and turned over
and willed herself to go to sleep.
Chapter 4
Rabb
Farm
0630
Belleville, Pennsylvania
Sarah Mackenzie woke
suddenly from a dreamless sleep and was wide awake at once. She
needed a few moments to remember where she was, and upon remembering
sighed with relief and rose from the bed. She walked to the window
and looked out. The view was breathtaking. The house stood on a hill
and the long drive wound from the road. The land was hilly and thick
with trees. The sky was pale blue and pink above and green with
touches of russet below in the trees and on the ground. The scene was
like a painting in an art gallery. It was so quiet Mac could hear
someone walking outside on the gravel drive. She looked and saw Harm
walking up the hill on the drive with Oscar playfully following him.
He wore faded jeans and old liberty bonds t-shirt with a jean jacket
worn open. He looked like a Ralph Lauren ad out there; why was it
that Harm looked *in place* everywhere he was? He looked as though he
belonged here. He also looked every bit the lawyer at JAG. He looked
like a naval aviator from a Hollywood movie. Why did she feel such a
fierce resentment just now? ‘Do I resent that he belongs so
many places and the only place I feel at home or at least any use is
at JAG?’ she wondered.
Mac shook herself to clear her
head and gathered her things to freshen up before going downstairs.
The coffee smelled heavenly and she suddenly felt very hungry.
Mac
joined Harm outside on the porch with her coffee cup in hand. “So,
Sailor, what are you making me for breakfast?”
Harm turned toward her and smiled. “Well, Mackenzie, what would you like?”
Mac was about to answer when they heard the sound of a truck coming up the drive with gravel and dust flying in the air. “Who in the world is that?” Mac said.
Harm grinned sheepishly “Uh, that’s Grandma.”
“Harm, she’s got to be over 80 years old. What in the world is she doing driving like that?” Mac was incredulous. Harm looked amused at Mac’s reaction to an independent woman of any age.
“Look, Mac, at least she’s driving that Jeep Liberty. I talked her into that about 2 years ago. She used to drive an old Willy’s that was at least 30 years old. She was banging around in that old Jeep all over the county. She went off the road and was thrown out of it. It was a wonder she didn’t break anything. I still can’t believe she didn’t.”
Just then
Sarah Rabb got out of her Jeep and called to both of them. “Glad
you’re both up. I’ll just put you two to work.”
Harm and Mac walked out to the Jeep and helped carry in two bushel
baskets of apples and couple of crates of groceries. “I
convinced Jack to open up for me. He’s up with the chickens,
just like I am,” said Mrs. Rabb.
Harm smiled, “Is Jack still running that little store in town?”
Mrs. Rabb
laughed, “Well, Harmon, I don’t think you could call it a
town anymore. We don’t even rate showing up on the map. I think
we’re more like a gas station, a four way stop and Jack’s
little general store.” They all laughed and went inside to
prepare breakfast.
They had a wonderful breakfast. Mrs. Rabb
baked biscuits served with strawberry jelly that she had made
herself. They had eggs and bacon, and Harm even stole a slice from
Mac’s plate. “Has this country air turned you into a meat
eater, Harm?” Mac said.
“Anything
I eat here is fresh and not full of the preservatives that are in
most things in the supermarket. So no, it’s *not* the country
air.”
True to her word, Mrs. Rabb put them to work. She
sent Harm to the edge of the property to repair a fence, although she
didn’t have any animals to keep in right now. Harm suspected
she was giving him some busy work so that she would have time to talk
with Mac. Mrs. Rabb truly wasn’t the type to pry, but she had a
way about her that drew people out of themselves. He never felt the
need to be any more than what he was with her and that had been his
saving grace after his ramp strike. Harm gave them both a glance over
his shoulder and went to do as he was told.
Mrs. Rabb and Mac
walked down a path to a long building. As they approached, Mac heard
clucking and wrinkled her nose. Mrs. Rabb laughed and said, “It’s
a chicken house, Mac. Why do you think I had it built down wind?”
They both began laughing then and set about gathering eggs.
After a few moments of instruction about how to gather eggs without hurting herself or the hens, Mac said, “I guess you must be wondering what’s going on with me. Harm may have told you.”
“No, Harm hasn’t said a lot. I know you have lost some one you were close to recently and that you are having some health problems, but nothing other than that.”
Mac looked away from her. “Harm is a very good friend to me. In fact, I think he’s the only true friend I have.”
Mrs. Rabb smiled “Rabb men are loyal, that is a fact. My son Harmon, my husband David, and his father Andrew were wonderful people. David’s mother was a small, quiet woman but very kind. She wasn’t much of a talker, but when she spoke, *you listened*.” Mrs. Rabb shook her head after she said that. “I don’t know what I would have done without Mary and Andrew Rabb and that’s the truth.”
Mac listened thoughtfully, “You know, I’ve always wanted to know more about Harm’s family, I’ve been almost envious of how solid they all seem. When Harm has spoken about his family, this farm or his mother and stepfather, I’ve always felt such a loss that I never had anything like that in my life.”
Mac stopped
speaking, surprised that she had spoken her thoughts out loud. Mrs.
Rabb stepped up to her and gave her arm a pat. “I know just
what you mean.” Just then Mac got a little too close for
comfort to one of the laying hens, causing it to squawk and ruffle
its feathers. Mac stepped back quickly, startled, and she and Mrs.
Rabb both laughed and made their way back to the house.
They
came back into the kitchen and put the eggs into the old fashioned
cooler she kept on the back porch, then settled at the kitchen table
with a cup of coffee. “Never enough coffee for me, I’m
afraid,” Mrs. Rabb said.
Mac smiled and nodded in agreement, “Mrs. Rabb, I’ve got some decisions to make about my health, and Harm, being the good friend he is, brought me out here to help me clear my head.”
, “Mac, you don’t have to explain yourself to me.” Mac told her that she wanted to and then told her what her doctors had told her. She had a tumor on her left ovary; the biopsy had revealed a stage II to stage III tumor. There had been some question about which stage she was in; only surgery would confirm that The tumor had to be removed, but options afterward were the most troubling, and a lot would depend on what was found during surgery. If the tumor was ‘encapsulated,’ then she might need to have radiation treatments as a precaution, but her chances of full recovery were about 90% and chances of pregnancy would be 50/50. If the tumor was not encapsulated, more aggressive surgery would be required, with chances of conceiving a family of her own almost nonexistent. It was also very likely she would require chemo therapy. “Harm has been there for me every step of the way since I learned about my problem. I don’t want to put more on his shoulders than I already have. My other issues about the loss of a person close to me, Harm shouldn’t have to take on either. The situation is complicated,”
Mrs. Rabb raised her hand, “You don’t have to tell me more and I really prefer that you didn’t. We can talk about things in general terms if you like and then you don’t have to worry about details or what you should or should not have said. I get the impression that you are weary, Mac. Rest here, relax, you are among friends.”
Mrs. Rabb stood and walked around behind Mac to get more coffee and as she brought the carafe to Mac’s cup, she placed her arm around her shoulder and gave it a squeeze. Mac felt tears stinging behind her eyes. Mrs. Rabb saw them and said, “Oh, honey, it’s okay.”
It was as though a dam had burst and all Mac’s pent up pain over the past few months rushed out at once. She drew a deep breath, trying to compose herself, but trying to hold back only seemed to make it worse. Mrs. Rabb straightened her back and drew Mac to herself. Mac put her arms around her waist and began to cry in deep wracking sobs. She felt foolish and embarrassed but she could not stop. “I’m s-sorry – I …” Mac could not continue to speak.
Mrs. Rabb
hugged her close. “It’s all right, Mac. Cry it out if you
need to.” And she did for some time.
Mrs Rabb looked up
and saw Harm standing in the entry way to the kitchen. Harm’s
eyes were welled with tears and he started to come toward Mac. Mrs.
Rabb stopped him with a look and a nod to go upstairs.
Mac began to calm down and said, “Please don’t tell Harm about my making such a fool of myself. I don’t think I could stand it if I embarrassed him in front of you.”
Harm walked out of the room, and as he walked up the stairwell he heard his grandmother say, “Oh, I don’t think you have to worry about Harmon. Here, I think this occasion calls for a paper towel.” Mrs. Rabb smiled and handed her the paper towel, and they both laughed.
“Mrs. Rabb, I don’t think I’ve laughed and cried this much in a long time.” Mac wiped her eyes and blew her nose.
“Well,
Mac, after all this, I think you can call me Sarah.”
They
laughed again and the sound drifted up the stairs to where Harm was
cleaning up after his work outside. He smiled to himself and thought
‘Bringing Mac here was one of the best ideas I’ve had in
a long time.’
TBC