Title: Something Old
Author: Moonshayde
Season: Nine
Category: Ship,
Drama
Spoilers: Only Jack's whereabouts as of Season 9
Pairing/Character: Jack/Sara
Summary: Something old can easily become something new.
Warnings: none
Rating: PG
Disclaimer: Stargate, Stargate SG-1 and all of its
characters, titles, names, and back-story are the property of MGM/UA, Double
Secret Productions, Gekko Productions, SciFi Channel, and Showtime/Viacom. All
other characters, the story idea and the story itself are the sole property of
the author. This story cannot be printed anywhere without the sole permission
of the author. Realize this is for
entertainment purposes only; no financial gain or profit has been gained from
this fiction. This story is not meant to be an infringement on the rights of
the above-mentioned establishments
Another year, another
problem.
Only these days, they were
different kinds of problems.
Jack sighed and leaned back
into the cushions of his booth. All around him people buzzed and chattered about
this and that, lost in the loud hum that typified the bar scene. He couldn't
hear a damn thing on the TV, but that's not why Jack had come here tonight
anyway.
He glanced down at his watch
before he scanned the room for his buddy Chuck. He caught sight of a few young
couples flirting, some college age boys roaring at the game on the tube, and
some singles just hanging around the bar itself. So far, no Chuck. But Chuck
was notorious for being late; it wouldn't be the first time.
Jack remembered the times
when he, Chuck, and their buddies would hit the town and get themselves into
whatever kind of trouble they could. Those were the days before he'd gotten
married. Those days seemed so long ago.
He cleared his throat as he
picked at the label on his beer bottle.
Time had a way of changing
things.
His thoughts turned to SG-1.
Normally, around this time of year, he'd invite them over to watch the big
game. They'd always come up with some lame excuse to get out of it, but they'd
end up at his house anyway.
He wondered how his house
was doing.
He wondered where the hell
Carter, Daniel, and Teal'c were now.
Jack tapped at the edge of
the table and searched the room again. Still no sign of Chuck. Bastard. Well,
there was no way he was going to sit here and wait all night.
After downing the rest of
his beer, Jack started for the bar. He saw a couple of ladies sitting there,
one a brunette, the other a blonde. Jack ignored the flare of pain he felt in
his knees and slid into the seat next to the blonde.
"Hey, Mike," he
said. He held up his bottle. "I'll take another. And how about one for the
pretty lady here?"
While the bartender went to
grab them a couple of cold ones, Jack cleared his throat and put on his best
smile. But when she turned to face him, the smile was wiped clean off his face.
"Damn."
Sara eyed him for a moment
before she turned her attention back to the bowl of nuts in front of her.
"Nice to see you too, Jack."
"What the hell are you
doing here?" he asked.
Sara shrugged. "I could
ask the same of you."
"Yeah." Jack
nodded as he accepted the bottles. He held up the one for Sara and waggled it
invitingly.
She bowed her head,
attempting to hide a smile, as she grabbed the beer. She stared at the bottle
for a moment before she finally looked at him. "So, tell me that you're
still not trying to pick up women this way?" she asked.
"It worked once, didn't
it?"
"You only thought it
did."
"Or maybe I'm just that
good," Jack said, flashing a grin.
Sara rolled her eyes, but he
saw the sparkle in them, a gleam that caused the unwelcome memories to bubble
to the surface again. He felt his grin start to fade, the dull ache return. He
stared at his bottle and tried to push them away.
"So, what brings you
out east?"
Sara shrugged again.
"My dad passed away last year and I wanted a change. So, I made a
change."
Jack nodded, still focused
on his bottle. "I heard about that. I would have –"
"You were busy,"
she said quietly. "I know."
"Yeah."
The two fell silent. Jack
never thought a bar could become so quiet, but in that moment, it seemed like
everyone had stopped talking. He shifted in his seat, just waiting for the din
to block out any of the discomfort he was feeling. Talk about awkward.
At least Sara seemed just as
uncomfortable. She kept glancing over her shoulder, as if she were looking for
some kind of escape. But Jack had to give her credit. She was a strong woman.
She'd always been a strong woman. She'd always stood her ground, no matter
what.
No matter who'd hurt her.
"So," she said, forcing
a smile, "I heard you were promoted. Congratulations. I hope you enjoy
it."
Jack sighed. "I got
some stuffy desk job. I spend my day pushing paper for bureaucratic
assholes."
She shook her head.
"You never were one to take to the humdrum of an office job."
"Desk job," he
enunciated. Then, he took his hand and started making a straight, thrusting
motion as he continued. "I swear, these pencil necks have are so tight,
you'd think they had –"
She placed her hand on his
and brought it down. "As much as you love the field, Jack, you're not as
young as you used to be."
"Hey. I still have what
it takes." He sat a little taller. "I'm like wine. I get better as I
age."
She laughed. "I wish I
could say the same."
"Oh, come on,
Sara," he said, raising the bottle to his lips. "You look the same as
when I first met you."
"I think the beer's
clouded your head."
"Maybe," he said
with a shrug. "But…" He turned away from her, averting his gaze to
the game on the TV. "It doesn't change the way I see things."
She looked away and tucked a
strand of hair behind her ear. He was positive he saw her blush. Satisfied,
Jack leaned back on his stool and took another swig of beer.
"Oh, you can wipe that
smug look off your face," she said with a smirk.
"I have every reason to
be smug," he said.
And he did. He found the
fine lines by her mouth didn't bother him. Neither did the crow's feet by her
eyes. Even now, after all these years, she was the most beautiful woman he had
ever known.
He had to fight the urge to
reach out and touch her hair, just once. Setting his jaw, he glanced back down
to his bottle and fought the sharp pain that suckered him in the gut.
"Jack," she said,
her voice becoming soft and sorrowful, which had the immediate effect of
tensing him. "Do you ever have regrets?"
"All the time."
She reached out to touch his
hand again, but after pausing for a second, she withdrew and ran her fingers
through her hair instead. "Sometimes I wish we could change things,"
she admitted. "Fix those mistakes."
"Me too." He
swallowed hard. "But I can't ever be that man again, Sara."
He thought of all those
promises he'd made. He thought of all the promises he'd broken. There were just
some things he could never forgive about himself.
Jack glanced at her, seeing
the tumult of mixed emotions brewing in her eyes.
"I know," she
whispered. "But I'm not asking for that man."
Jack arched his eyebrows.
She smiled, a nervous but
confident smile, and extended her hand. "Hi, I'm Sara."
A slow grin spread across
Jack's face. "The name's Jack." He squeezed her hand and slid a
little closer. "So, what brings a
pretty lady like yourself here tonight?"
THE END
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