Hero Worship
by Diana DeShaun


Disclaimers:  Rysher and Panzer/Davis Productions own all things Highlander,
I'm just giving them a bit of exercise.

Warnings:  Rated NC-17, m/m same-sex sexual content.  If that's not what you
thought you would find in a slash story on a slash list/page, leave.    And, finally, I am not an entomologist, nor do I play one on t.v.

feedback welcome!   
[email protected]

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Hero Worship


  "Ow!  Bloody hell!  Would you stop that?"  Methos was feeling extremely
exasperated  with the behavior of a certain Scotsman.  And, to top it off,
that was the third time Mac  had stepped on the back of his heel.

"Sor-ry.  God, you're in a mood today.  Not as if I hurt you."

"That's not the point, MacLeod.  You're in my space.  I can't bloody
breathe."

As the two of them were striding down the sidewalk of Seacouver, Mac
couldn't quite  see the respiratory difficulties Methos claimed.  "Oh sure,
next thing you know, you'll be  saying I'm interrupting your aura."

"Well, now that you mention it..."

"Enough, Methos.  I get the point."  Mac stepped two paces to the side and
back, deliberately creating an excessive amount of distance between the two
of them.  Raising his voice, as if he now had to shout to be heard, he
continued, "There.  Is that better, your highness?"

Undaunted, Methos merely inclined his head regally, "Much.  You don't have
to herd me, you know."

"No, I don't know!  I wouldn't have to if you'd quit trying to take these
detours.  I just don't get it, Methos.  Why don't you want to go visit Joe?"

"I just don't.  Okay?  I have nothing to say to Joe."

"Oh for...good grief, man!  Are you *still* mad at him?  It's been two
weeks, Methos. Get over it."

Stopping so abruptly that Mac had to do a fancy back pedal to avoid stepping
on the old man yet again, Methos folded his arms decisively.  "That's easy
for you to say, MacLeod. You aren't the one who's been humiliated ever
since."  As Mac opened his mouth to answer, Methos jabbed one hand into the
air between them.  "Not another word, Highlander.  I think you've said more
than your quota on the subject."

Placing his hands on his hips, Methos puffed his chest out at a ridiculous
angle, threw his  head back and began to declaim in an atrocious Scottish
accent. "'Ach, it will pass, Methos.  Sure, and you can take a wee bit of
teasing, can't you, Methos?  You wurra too much,  Methos.'"

By this time Mac was sputtering in protest.  "What is that supposed to be? 
I never said  any of that!  And I sure as hell don't sound
like...like...some sort of a drunken parrot!  Although, you've just proven
their point all over again."

Methos frowned fiercely.  "What do you mean by that?"

"Face it, old man.  Just because Joe and Richie have been indulging in a bit
of harmless teasing ever since they caught your starring role in our little
video, you can't take it.  It's not my fault that you, er, stood out more
than I did.  Of course,"  Mac had to chuckle a bit, "you were the only one
actually standing now that I think about it.  And, you were the only  one
making any noise."

For the briefest instant, Methos' lips twitched, but then he frowned again,
"All right, fine.  So I made a little noise.  Under the circumstances, any
*normal* man would have.  You,  on the other hand, didn't make a peep.  Now
why is that, I wonder?"

Mac's eyes were dancing now as he fought the bubble of mirth rising to the
surface.  "Manners."

"Manners?"

"Manners.  I was taught never to speak with my mouth full."

A moment passed.  Then Methos bowed his head and turned away.  The smile
dying on  his face, Mac approached the other Immortal slowly.  His lover's
slender form was  wracked with tremors.    Joining him, Mac draped an arm
over the old man's shoulders  and squeezed.  "Come on, now.  I thought
nothing embarrassed you.  Just because Richie  has made a few remarks is no
reason to take it out on Joe.  And it's certainly no reason to  get upset
about it."

Still avoiding the Highlander's questioning gaze,  Methos shrugged and
muttered  one  last protest.  "Ah, but Joe is encouraging him.  Plus, Joe
made the original comparison."

"He did?"  Mac thought back to their last ill-fated video night at Joe's. 
"I can't quite  remember."

"No doubt some sort of convenient drug-induced amnesia.  Besides, as I
recall, you had  long since fainted from embarrassment yourself."

"What?"  Mac grabbed Methos' chin and forced the other man to raise his
head.  "Methos!"  The old man was wracked with tremors all right, but they
were tremors of  laughter.

Mac laughed too.  "Nah.  I was faking it.  Believe me, I was awake for every
glorious  technicolor moment.  At least all the camera really showed was the
back of my head, but  when you made that sound..."

"Don't you dare even say it."

"But, Methos, that sound.  I mean, it's no wonder Joe said what he said. 
Make it for me  again."

"I will not!"

"Come on, Methos.  Please?"  Mac leaned over and began nibbling on the older 
Immortal's neck.

"MacLeod!  We are in broad daylight here.  Back off!"  Methos shoved the
Highlander  away with enough force to send him careening off at an angle.

Mac staggered back to him still snickering.  "Joe was right, you know.  You
did sound  like a dog baying at the moon."

At that, Methos growled and slammed Mac against the wall, pressing him into
its rough  surface.  His eyes glittered and he snarled in mock anger, "Oh is
that right?"

Far from being perturbed at the rough treatment, Mac just waggled his
eyebrows at the  man crushing up against him.  "That's right.  A dog baying
at the moon...in heat."

Unable to hold his outraged pose, Methos snorted with mirth.  "What kind of
a dog?"  He leaned forward to nip at Mac's ear lobe.

"Oh I don't know,"  Mac shivered and tilted his head accommodatingly. 
"Um....a  Chihuahua...ooww!"  He yelped as Methos bit down with a vengeance. 
"Okay, okay!  A  big dog.  A big, powerful, beautiful example of the canine
species...a wolf maybe.  How's  that?"

"A wolf, huh?  I suppose I can live with that, and, more importantly, so can
you."  He  tugged on Mac's ear lobe on last time,  then stepped back. 
"Well, come on then.  We  might as well go get it over with and let Joe get
in his little jabs."

Stepping away from the wall, Mac fell into step beside his companion.  "Joe
hasn't said  anything about your, er, tendencies since that first time.  He
sounded positively contrite  over the phone.  I think he wants to make it up
to us."

"Yeah, right.  He just lets Ryan say it for him.  That's fine, but, mark my
words,  MacLeod.  One of these days the opportunity will present itself for
payback, and when it  does..."

"Now that's the Methos I know."

"What?  Aren't you going to try to talk me out of it?"

"Nope."

Methos stared at the Highlander in surprise.  "I don't believe it.  Duncan
MacLeod is  agreeing sight unseen with something nefarious, underhanded, and
downright sneaky!  A  turn of the screw.  A hoist on the old petard."

"Petard?  Now hang on a minute, old man.  I'm not at all sure Joe even has a
petard, and  I'm sure Richie doesn't."

Methos stopped in mid-soliloquy, a pained expression on his face.

Mac shouted with laughter.  "Oh come on, Methos.  I'm joking, okay?  God,"
he laughed  again, "the look on your face."

Methos grabbed his chest and staggered back in mock weakness.  "Can I stand
the strain?  You're scary when you're like this, Duncan.  A man after my own
heart."

Looking fully into the older Immortal's eyes, Mac smiled seriously.  "As
are you,  Methos.  As are you."  After a moment, Mac visibly gathered
himself and started off again.  "Now stop shilly shallying.  Think beer,
Methos.  Beer."

"Shilly shallying?  Gods, you've been rereading that romance book you're the
star of  again, haven't you?"  Methos hurried to catch up.  "Besides, there
are other places to get  beer."

"Not free."

"Well, there is that."  Stepping on the back of Mac's heel , just for good
measure,  Methos smiled to himself as he began to plot.   



Having sensed the presence of another Immortal while approaching the bar,
neither Mac  nor Methos was surprised at all to see Richie Ryan lounging at
their usual spot.  The young  man grinned across the empty room and waved
them back.

As the two older Immortals approached, Richie stretched elaborately and
gestured at his  booted feet propped up on the table.  "Mac.  Adam.  Good to
see you guys.  Sorry about  the  feet."  Richie yawned effusively.  "I was
just resting a couple of minutes.  You know  how it is when you're *dog*
tired."

With a warning frown, Mac swept Richie's feet off the table to land on the
floor with a  thump.  "Richie,"  he said sternly as he took his usual seat. 
"Where's Joe?"

Not at all daunted, Richie replied, "Oh, he's around here somewhere, Mac." 
Turning his  attention to Methos, Richie shook his head and  continued, "I
don't see how you put up  with him when he's in his 'dour Scot' mode, Adam. 
I mean, look at him, sitting there all  bowed up and frowning.  Worrying at
god knows what, kinda like a...dog on a bone.  Wouldn't you say?"

Mac reached out a restraining hand, as Methos drew breath to speak. 
However, just at  that moment, Joe's voice boomed out from behind them. 
"Richie!  I thought you'd be gone  by now."  The tone of voice left no doubt
that Joe heartily wished that were so.  Walking  up to the three at the
table, Joe made an elaborate play of scooting the remaining chair out  and
arranging himself in it.  "Mac.  Adam.  Glad you both could come down."

"So much for free beer,"  Methos muttered.

"What's that?"  Joe ask quizzically.

"Beer, Joe.  How about something to drink?"  Mac repeated.

Joe waved his hand dismissively.  "Oh that.  It'll be along in a minute. 
First, there's  something I really need to talk to you two about."

Sitting forward, Richie was ready for round two.  "I'll be right back.  This
calls for some  music."

Joe looked torn between stopping Richie from doing whatever it was he was
about to do  and hoping he got lost on his way back.  Shaking his head at
the jaunty twist the young  Immortal put into his walk, he grinned a bit
then turned back to his guests.  "Like I said,  I'm glad you came down.  I
have to tell you something, and before I do, I just want you to  know that I
did everything in my power to prevent it from happening.  I mean, hell, even
if  they're right, and I'm not saying they are mind you, considering the
circumstances, I just  really think it would've been better all around to--"

"--Joe!"

"Yes, Mac?"

"Is there a point there somewhere?"

Richie slipped back to the table as Joe replied.  "Hell yes.  That's what
I've been trying to  tell you.  I did everything but quit to keep them from
giving her back to me, but they just  wouldn't listen."

Methos spoke up clearly for the first time since entering the bar.  "Her?"

"Er, yes.  You see..."  At that moment the opening strains of the song
Richie had selected  at the juke box began playing over the speakers.  It
had a beat that was somewhere  between old fashioned rock and roll and
country--rockabilly they'd called it back then.  Joe  knew which song it was
before the first dozen notes were out, and looking from the  grinning Richie
to the dawning horror on MacLeod's features, he steeled himself for the 
explosion.  Somehow, he couldn't see Methos sitting still for being called a
hound dog,  even if it was by Elvis.

It was gonna happen, and it was gonna be bad.  So much for getting on their
good  sides...He surged up from the table and crossed to the juke  box,
intent on pulling the plug.  From the sounds behind him, it was only a
matter of moments now before the war began.  He just hoped they took it
outside for the Quickening.

Straightening from his task, cord dangling from his hand, Joe turned back
towards the  incipient crime scene.  He couldn't bring himself to move  as
he realized another player  was about to enter the game.

The three Immortals had been so intent on each other, they hadn't even
noticed the  waitress bringing the long lamented beers until she began
plonking  bottles down in front of  them.  "Here.  Joe told me to bring
these over.  I figure you can open them yourselves,  being big macho
Immortals and all."

Joe felt as if he were watching one of those pivotal moments in a bad horror
movie  where everything suddenly flips into slow motion.  As the waitress's
familiar sibilant tones  washed over the two older Immortals at the table,
Richie was already looking up, his mouth  hanging slack in disbelief. 
Methos froze in mid-grab for the beer, unable, or at least  unwilling, to
look up and confirm what his ears were assuring him was true.

As for Mac...Mac knew all too well what Joe had been trying to tell them
even before  the first words came out of the waitress's mouth.  He'd know
that perfume anywhere--a  slightly off kilter combination of florals and
aromatic oils that would forever  more shout  'predator' for him.  As he was
the one sitting nearest her, Mac judged himself as the one in  the most
immediate danger.  Reaching up slowly, his eyes never leaving that well 
remembered face, Mac slowly buttoned the remaining buttons on his shirt.

His lover's  surreptitious movement jerked Methos from his frozen reverie. 
Or rather,  Mac himself jerked Methos from his frozen reverie.  After
securing his person as best he  might, Mac reached over with one long arm
and dragged Methos, chair and all, to his side.

Methos blinked once, then again, unable to believe what his eyes told him
was true.  In a  thousand years, in another five thousand years, Methos
would never have expected to see  Taphelia Desmond again, and certainly not
happily ensconced in Joe's Bar.  Finding his  voice, he turned his
disbelieving gaze on the mortal and asked in a deceptively mild voice, 
"What's she doing here?"

Ignoring the two older Immortals entirely, Taffy finished delivering the
drinks by setting  a beer in front of a thoroughly bemused Richie.  Her
bland expression soften in a smile,  making her seem young and pretty. 
"You're Richie Ryan, aren't you?  I don't think we had  the chance to be
formally introduced before, but Joe talks about you a lot."

Frowning suspiciously, Richie looked at Joe, "He does?"

"Yes."  Taffy didn't seem to notice Joe's frantic attempts to silence her. 
"You're my new  practice case."

"What?"  Richie jumped up to stand behind Mac and Methos.

The smile melted off Taffy's face as she realized Richie was just as
skittish in her  presence as the other two.  Schooling her face to mild
distaste, she slowly and deliberately  raked her eyes the length of first
Duncan MacLeod and then Adam Pierson.  Last, she  turned expressionlessly to
Richie and replied, "Oh, don't worry.  Believe me, I'm only  interested in
your chronicles.  I'm going to be practicing ferreting out information in 
preparation for my real work."

"Which is?"  Mac couldn't stop the question.

"Ahem!"  Joe interposed loudly.  "Thank you, Taffy.  That'll be enough." 
She frowned  as he chuckled self-consciously, "Can't go around divulging
Watcher information to just  anybody, you know."

With a shrug, Taffy acquiesced.  "Sure, Joe.  I'll be at the computer."  And
with that, she  was gone.

Methos let out a breath he hadn't even been aware he was holding as the
three of them  relaxed, and Richie headed back to his chair.  Mac sat back
slowly,  unable to even trust  himself to speak to his Watcher.  Richie just
shook his head, rolled his eyes and took a long  overdue draught on his
beer.

After enduring the stony silence for a few minutes, Joe couldn't take any
more.  "Mac,  Adam, please!  I had no choice.  They said it was my fault for
not supervising her better."

Methos snorted in disbelief.  "Supervising what, Joe?  Her kidnapping and
torture  techniques?  That woman is certifiable!"

"Don't you think I know that?"  Joe rubbed one hand wearily over his face. 
"Adam,"  the question seemed to come from left field, "what's the name of
the retired  Director-in-Chief?"

Looking at his friend as if he'd lost the last few marbles out of his bag,
Methos answered,  "You mean Raymond?  Why?"

Joe looked at him expectantly.  "Raymond...what?"

"Raymond...Desmond.  Oh no, don't tell me."

Joe nodded.  "Yep.  Granddaughter.  She may be crazy, but she's not stupid. 
Little  Taffy went running to grandpa with some crazy story about how I'd
all but abandoned her  to your and MacLeod's wicked ways, and *voila!*  I'm
under orders to train her right this  time or else."

Everyone jumped as a big fist slammed onto the table.  Duncan MacLeod was
livid.  "Our 'wicked ways'!  You have got to be kidding.  Don't you remember
what she did to  me?   Why that, that..."  Words failed him as he slowly
turned redder and redder,  thinking  about just what the girl was capable
of.

Methos patted his friend's broad shoulders as he joined the protest.  "He's
right.  She's  positively diabolical.  I mean the nerve, the unmitigated
gall to tie me up in that,  that...torture rack."

Suddenly, with a loud expulsion of mirth, Richie leapt into the
conversation.  "Ha, ha.  I  believe that's 'shoe rack', Old Man."

"What?"

"Not torture rack, shoe rack!"  And Richie was off again, laughing so hard
tears were  streaming down his cheeks.

Sputtering in outrage, Methos turned back to Joe, only to discover the
Watcher was  fighting a valiant but losing effort to control his own
laughter.

"Joe!"

"Oh, come on, Adam!  You too, Mac.  I'll admit, she did get a little carried
away, but she  didn't actually hurt you.  Step back, and look at it from our
point of view for a minute,"  Joe gestured at the young redhead who now had
his head buried in his arms, struggling to  control himself.  Joe chuckled,
"I mean really, you're both grown men, and then some.  You can surely take a
little harmless mischief.  Besides, you know, I've been thinking about  it."

Mac sat bolt upright in his chair, obviously preparing to take the battle
forward.

Joe continued quickly, "No, no!  Not that!  I've been thinking about her,
er, surveillance  techniques.  I mean, Watchers have been following
Immortals around, peering into  windows for thousands of years.  Maybe it's
time we joined the modern era.  A few  harmless bugs might be just the
thing."

Mac couldn't believe what he was hearing.  "Harmless bugs?  Are you insane? 
Since  when did the Watchers become a branch of the CIA?"

  Suddenly, Methos lay a warning hand over Mac's forearm and squeezed, hard. 
If they  were going to get their very satisfying revenge, it was necessary
that  the others didn't  suspect a thing.  "Now wait a minute.  Maybe he's
right.  I mean, it is all in the past now, I  suppose.  Come on, Duncan. 
We're bigger men than the types who hold silly grudges,  aren't we?"

Mac looked into Methos' carefully schooled expression for a long moment
before  shrugging minutely and saying grudgingly, "I guess so.  But, Joe, if
she comes after me  again--"

"Oh she won't, she won't!  I'm going to keep her way too busy to even
mention your  name--or yours either, Adam."

Having finally gotten control of his gross motor skills back, Richie looked
up and asked,  "Hey, wait a minute.  She mentioned my name.  Joe!  She's not
gonna come after me, is  she?"

Reaching over to cuff the side of Richie's curly head, Joe hastened to
reassure him.  "Of  course not.  She's just using your chronicles to
acquaint herself with my specialized system.  Then it's right into her real
search."

"And that would be?"  Methos inquired with bland courtesy.

"Er,"  Joe looked uncertain again.  "You remember.  I actually set it all in
motion a  couple of weeks ago."

"A couple of weeks ago..."

Richie spoke up.  "Oh yeah.  Right before she got away from us."  He nodded
sagely.  "Still a great idea, Joe."

Methos stiffened as he remembered just exactly what the great idea was. 
Looking from  one man to the other, Mac was still puzzled, "What? You know a
lot of that time period is  a little fuzzy.   I don't remember any great
idea."

Richie grinned in delight.  "Methos.  She's gonna be looking for Methos. 
Right, Joe?"

"Right.  Now guys, before you get all bent out of shape again, it's
perfectly safe.  Methos, you know she'll never find you.  Hell, I can never
find you, and I kinda know  where to look."

"Joe's right, you guys.  Don't worry about it.  This will work out just
fine."  Richie waved  a hand casually in the air to emphasize his point.

"My, if it isn't the font of all knowledge."  Methos drawled sarcastically. 
"Since when  did you get so old...and...wise..."  His words sounded so
familiar, Methos paused to  consider just when he'd voiced them before.  Oh
yes, of course, then he'd been talking  about himself.  If Richie Ryan
considered himself comparable in any way to Methos, well,  obviously the
young whelp needed some help in correcting that misapprehension.

"Well, okay then.  I guess that's settled."  Mac spoke quickly, distractedly
patting the  hand still  gripping his arm.  "Joe, I trust you.  Richie's
right.  In the circumstances, this is  the best possible solution all
around.  Right, Methos?"

"Hmm?"  Methos seemed to come back to his surroundings with a start.  "Oh,
right."  Looking right at Richie, Methos suddenly smiled.  "Good call, Ryan. 
Best possible  solution.  Smart of you to see that."   Standing up from the
table, he tugged the Highlander  up with him.  "Well, it's been...different. 
Gotta go."

"So soon?"  Now that everything seemed to be settled, Joe was anxious to
spend more  time with his friends.

Taking his cue from Methos, Mac nodded in a friendly manner.  "Yeah, sorry,
Joe.  Um,  I've got to take Methos to the mall.  Big shoe sale.  Imelda
Marcos has nothing on Mr.  Shoe Horse here.  See you two later."

"Yeah,"  Joe spoke to the rapidly retreating backs of his two friends.  "See
you later."  Turning back to Richie, he fretted, "Is it just me, or was that
a little strange?"

"For those two?  Joe, remember who you're talking about.  God only knows
where  they're goin' after the shoe store."

"True."  Joe smiled.  "There's no telling, at least if I'm lucky."  He
waggled his eyebrows  at the young man at his side.  "I think I've had just
about all the chocolate covered surprises  I can stand for the next decade
or so."

Laughing, Richie turned and made his way behind the bar for another beer.



When Methos tore back into the loft short minutes later, Mac was hard on his
heels.  The  old Immortal  had been thinking furiously the entire way home,
and, recognizing the signs,  Mac had left him to it.  Now though, he had to
know.  "Methos?"

Showing absolutely no indication that he'd even heard the other man, Methos
sat down at  Mac's desk and turned on the computer.

"Methos!"  Mac spoke a bit louder.  Still no response.  "Methos!!"  The
yell,  accompanied by a firm hand grabbing the older Immortal's wrist,
finally did the trick.

Frowning irritably, Methos looked from his captive hand to Mac.  "What?"

"Tell me."

Not even pretending to misunderstand, Methos suddenly grinned toothily. 
"Ten minutes,  Mac.  Give me ten more minutes.  Then, I'll explain
everything."

Drawing a deep  breath, Mac nodded reluctantly and released Methos' wrist. 
"Okay.  Ten minutes.  Hurry up!"

"Patience, Highlander.  Good things come to those who--"

"Just do it, Methos."

Chuckling, the old man turned his attention back to his task, murmuring,
"That's what  you said last night too."

Mac forced himself to stay away from the desk area while Methos worked. 
Instead, he  paced.  Back and forth.  Back and forth.

At last, Methos looked up in exasperation.  "All right, MacLeod.  It's done. 
Gods, I had  no idea you had so much nervous energy.  Obviously, I haven't
been giving you enough of  a workout."


"Methos!  This is no time to be talking about our sex life."

"I was referring to our spars in the dojo.  Carnal minded, aren't we?"

Closing the distance between them in three long strides, Mac placed both big
hands  around Methos' neck and squeezed.  "More like 'charnel' minded if you
don't hurry up and  tell me what's going on."

"Oh cute!  A pun."

Mac tightened his grip even as a smile lowered the possible terror quotient
considerably.  "I know you thought of something wicked.  I could tell the
moment it came to you in the  bar.  I want to know too."

"You're not going to stop me?"

"No, I told you.  In fact, I want in on it.  So, what are we doing?"

Getting up from the desk, Methos dragged the Highlander over to the couch. 
"Actually,  it's brilliant, if  I do say so myself.  And, like all great
plans, blindingly simple.  At this  point, it only affects Richie directly,
though given the way Joe clucks over him like a  mother hen,  Joe will be a
player as well."  Pursing his lips thoughtfully, Methos pondered. 
"Hmmm...we'll have to work a little more on something special for Joe, but
no bother, I'm  sure something will come to mind."

Mac's eyes narrowed as he thought back over the conversation in the bar. 
"Tell you  what, Methos.  How about you leave Joe to me."

Methos rolled his eyes.  "Oh by all means, MacLeod.  You take care of Joe. 
A frown,  couple of stern looks...that'll put him right in his place."

"We'll see,"  the Highlander said cryptically.  "You take care of the
details with Richie,  I'll handle things with Joe."

"Uh huh.  Right."

"It will be.  I'm flattered you have so much confidence in me."

Noticing signs of unrest in his audience of one, Methos hurried along.  "I'm
sure  whatever you come up with will be suitable, MacLeod.  And dignified. 
Let's not forget  dignified.  Your way, my way, the highway...whatever. 
Now, I want you to tell me a few  things.  As far as your former charge,
I've certainly set the ball in motion, but there is  always room for
refinement."

"Like what?"

"Like...what's Ryan's favorite food?  His favorite color or favorite movie
maybe?  Oh,  and how about...any odd little quirks you may have noticed."

"Quirks?"

"Yes, you know.  Like, does he have any habits?  Any sayings or gestures he
makes so  often they've become almost subconscious?"

Mac nodded slowly.  "Yes, all those things.  And just as soon as you tell me
exactly why  you need to know about them, I'll fill you in."

Smiling fondly at his lover, Methos leaned over and kissed him on the cheek,
then he  began to talk.



Late the  next afternoon, a confused Richie Ryan burst into Joe's bar. 
"Joe!  Joe!  Where  are you?"

A loud thump followed by a muffled curse sounded from somewhere in the back. 
"Damnation!  Keep your shirt on, Rich.  I'm coming."

By the time Joe got to the front, Richie had grabbed a beer and flung
himself onto a stool  at the bar.

"Hurricane Richie, I presume."

"Sorry about that.  I guess I got a little excited.  Wouldn't do to be
late."

"Late?"

"Yeah," the confusion on the expressive young face grew more pronounced.  "I
have an  appointment."

"With who?"

Richie looked at Joe with speculative eyes.  "Adam."

"Adam?  What for?"

With a shrug, Richie admitted, "I really don't know.  I can't quite figure
it out.  I guess,  it's like he said, just to hang out."

"'Just to hang out' with Adam?  We are talking about the same guy, right? 
Tall, big nose.  Has a couple years on ya?"

Richie flushed a bit.  "Yeah, so?  He said he wanted to get to know me
better.  Why is  that so hard to believe?"

Joe snorted, "Oh, right.  Like you're so fascinating."

Richie was hurt.  "Thanks a lot, Joe.  I didn't realize I was so boring."

Contrite, Joe patted the young Immortal on the shoulder.  "Aw, I'm sorry,
Rich.  I didn't  mean it like that.  You're a great guy.  But, come on now. 
You've been a great guy for a  long time.  Why is he so interested now?"

With an engaging grin, Richie shrugged again.  "I know.  Something's fishy,
and it ain't  caviar.  I figure, definitely, it has something to do with
Mac."

"Right.  What else?"

"Well, it is barely possible that it's just what it seems to be.  I mean,
between you and  Mac, you are my family, and now that he and Methos are,
well, now that the two of  them..." Richie trailed off.

Joe chuckled.  "Yeah, they certainly are, aren't they?"  Considering, he
finally gave up  with a little shake of his head.  "Maybe so, maybe so.  But
still...better watch your step,  kid.  Remember, you're dealing with a man
whose ulterior motives have ulterior motives."

Richie laughed, "Don't worry, Joe.  I can take care of myself."

"Under normal circumstances, I agree.  But you should never trust a man you
can't drink  under the table."

"Joe, you can't drink him under the table either."

"Exactly."

At that moment, Richie got that patented far away look in his eye that Joe
knew heralded  the approach of another Immortal.  As Methos strode into the
bar, Joe squinted his eyes  against the sudden encroachment of sunlight then
drawled, "Speak of the devil."

Casting Joe a sidelong look, Methos eased himself onto the stool beside
Richie.  "Hello  to you, too, Joseph.  Well, Ryan, you're here.  Good."

"Ah, yeah.  I'm here, but to tell you the truth, I'm not exactly sure why."

With an affable expression of amusement, Methos clapped Richie heartily on
the back.  "Oh come on now, Ryan.  It's just past time for us to get to know
each other better.  Don't  you think?"

With a speaking look at Joe, Richie grinned back at Methos, "Sure.  That's
what I  figured.  Maybe I should be calling you Uncle Adam or something. 
After all, I guess we're  almost family now."

Only the tiniest of tics marred the old Immortal's expression, before the
mask of affability  returned.  A loud snort from Joe drew a quick frown from
Methos before he turned his full  attention back to the young redhead. 
"Family.  Yes, I suppose you could say that...Richie."

As Taphelia Desmond came from the back to begin readying the bar for the
day's  patrons, the conversation continued.

"So, Richie, to tell you the truth, I did have a special reason for wanting
to speak to you  today."

"Aha!"  Joe's sotto voce exclamation was studiously ignored by the other two
men,  though Taffy did send a puzzled glance in his direction before turning
her attention back to  polishing the beer taps and listening to the
conversation taking place right in front of her.

Richie looked apprehensive, "What's going on?  Is something wrong?"

"Oh no, no.  It's nothing like that.  In fact, I need your advice."

"*My* advice?  Wow.  About what?"

"I want to buy MacLeod a gift--something special.  You know how much he
likes old  things.  He's been an antique dealer, for gods' sake, so I don't
want to get him just anything.  I need something original, unique.  And,
since he's always going on and on about how well  you know...the Elizabethan
Age for instance, I thought maybe you could help me out."

"He does?  I mean, well, yes, I suppose I do know a lot about things back
then.  I made it  my business to find out about a lot of different time
periods.  Actually, it was business."  Richie chuckled at his own joke.

Methos joined in and nudged him companionably.  "And why wouldn't you, eh?"

"Well, yeah," Richie laughed, "why wouldn't I?"

With Taffy listening intently, Methos pressed further.  "In fact, you could
help me out no  matter how far back I want to go."

"Er, well, yeah.  Maybe so."

"Oh I know so...you've been around, my friend."

"But, Adam..."

"No, no.  I have been accused of many things, Richie, but stupidity isn't
one of them.  I  know when to bow to superior knowledge and experience."

Steadfastly resisting the urge to look at Joe, Richie couldn't help a small
flush of pleasure.  "I--Thank you.  Um, okay, let's see, have you thought
about a piece of art?  I do know for  a fact that Mac has a fondness for
busts."

Methos went for the coup de grace with an easy smile, "Hmm, that's a
thought, but you  know, Rich, I've also been considering some kind of
jewelry.  Got any suggestions there?"

"Oh, sure.  Jewelry would probably be a good choice.  You mean like a ring
or  something?"

Caught by surprise, Methos found himself snorting his last drink of beer. 
After taking a  few moments to get himself under control and resume
spontaneous respiration, he shot a  quick glance at his watch and  asked, "A
ring?  You think I should give him a ring?"  Methos paused to consider the
startling thought from all angles.  "You think he wants one?  Has he said
anything?"

"Well, I don't know, of course.  I mean, I'm only on the outside looking
in..."

With a shake of his head, Methos dismissed the notion and the unsettling
emotions that  accompanied it, and focused back on his real goal.  "Well, at
any rate, for right now, I was  thinking more along the lines of a neck
chain with some sort of token on it."

"Token?"

"Yes, like a medallion maybe."  Twisting on the bar stool, the wily old
Immortal forced  Richie to do the same, bringing the young man more into
Taffy's direct line of sight.  "Say,  Mac told me once that you had a
medallion that was really special.  Maybe I could see it  sometime.  Get
some ideas."

"Oh sure.  Actually, you can see it right now."  Richie reached to pull the
chain around  his neck  up and over his head, but froze in mid-motion when
Methos reached over and  slowly began to undo the  buttons on his shirt to
reveal a medallion nestled against Richie's  breast bone.  Casting a wide-
eyed look at Joe, Richie rolled his eyes, wondering what  Methos would do
next.

Intent on displaying the younger Immortal's wares for Taphelia's inspection,
Methos  listened with smug amusement as Taffy drew a sharp breath, no doubt
properly bedazzled  by the smooth expanse of masculine flesh on display. 
Richie's chest was pale and smooth  and firm looking--the scattering of
freckles only serving to highlight the planes of his nicely  defined pecs.

Highly entertained, Joe raised mirthful eyes to the young Immortal's. 
Richie grinned  back at him, relaxing into the game enough to let his
fingers idly trace a line up and down  his breast bone.  "So," he asked a
little breathlessly, "you like what you see?"

"Wha-what?" Methos' voice sounded befuddled even to his own ears.

"The medallion," Richie's voice echoed the laughter coming from Joe.  "Do
you like the  medallion?"

Taken by surprise that his quarry showed every sign of enjoying himself,
Methos  was  caught up in  the performance, only jerking back to himself
when the first tenuous wisps of  another Immortal's buzz caught his
attention.  Leaning forward quickly, he pulled the neck  chain up and clear
of Richie's chest, bending the young Immortal's neck forward at an  awkward
angle and taking a couple of curly red chest hairs along with it.

"Ouch!" the young Immortal yelped.

"Oh, sorry."  Methos couldn't resist making a show of examining the chain
for flaws,  then leaning forward to examine Richie's chest.  "Did it scratch
you?"

Trying fruitlessly to lean away from the old man, Richie shook his head. 
"No.  It didn't  scratch me.  Forget it.  You could have just ask me to show
it to you, you know?"

"Sorry, I was eager."  The Immortal signature was stronger now.  Methos was
a bit  amazed Richie couldn't feel it too.   Duncan was apparently lurking
just outside the door,  no doubt trying to gauge the exact moment to enter
and play out his little part in the  melodrama.  Turning his attention back
to the medallion, Methos held it at eye level, letting  it twist slowly. 
After making sure Taffy got a good look, he dropped it back down onto 
Richie's chest with a thud.

"Ouch!"  Richie said again.

  "Sorry."  Methos said casually.  "Duncan was right, that is a nice
medallion.  Etruscan  isn't it?"

Feeling a bit testy, Richie answered shortly.  "That's right.  It's a symbol
of one of their  war gods.  I've had it--"

"Yeah, a war god.  Hmmm....you know, I kind of thought your war days were
over.  I  mean, I know there was a lot of strife in your past--"

Opening the outside door noisily, Mac rushed into the bar.  "Oh there you
are, Methos!  I was just looking for you."

Walking up to his friends, Mac clapped Richie on the shoulder and seemed to
notice the  medallion hanging around his neck.  "Richie!  What are you doing
with that out here?"

  With a speaking glance at Taphelia, now simply standing with arms folded,
blatantly  watching the four men, Mac made it clear where the core for his
objection lay.  Making an  elaborate play of tucking the medallion back
inside Richie's shirt, Mac continued, "It's not  like you to be so
thoughtless, *young man*."

Rising from the bar stool, Methos pulled Mac away from Richie and headed
them both  toward the door.  "Now, Duncan.  To say that Richie is a grown
man is to state the  obvious.  Obviously, the medallion is one of a kind,
but I, for one, have every confidence  that our friend can take care of
himself."  With a little chuckle, he concluded, "After all,  you must
remember he was taking care of himself long before you came along.  Isn't
that  right, Richie?"

"Well, yeah, he's right, Mac.  You worry too much.  Hey, where are you two
off to  now?"

Distracted when Taffy suddenly headed back for the office, Joe finally spoke
up, "Yeah,  seems like every time you come in here lately, it's only to go
haring off again.  It's not  another shoe sale is it?"

"Shoe sale?"  Mac was confused for a moment, then remembered their most
recent  excuse for flight.  "No, no.  Methos and I just have to get back to
the dojo, that's all."

"But why?"

Staring hard at Richie, Mac allowed himself a sly little grin, "Do you
really want to  know?"

   Methos stepped closer to Mac and deliberately raised one hand to caress
his broad  chest.  All pretense aside for the moment, the old man's eyes
fairly glittered as he ask,  "How about it, Ryan?  I'd be happy to fill you
in."

"Haarrmmph."  Joe walked forward to plant himself firmly at Richie's side. 
"Get out of  here, MacLeod.  And take the him-bo with you."

Laughing, the two older Immortals shrugged and wandered out.

Joe cast a wry look at Richie.  "You okay, kid?  Those two..."

Richie snorted.  "I'm fine, Joe.  But I swear, the next time one of them
asks me if I want  explanations, I'm gonna tell them I want to watch."

Joe gave a shout of laughter.  "Watch!  Richie, you wouldn't!"

"Well..."

"Richie?"

Laughing himself, Richie relented.  "I guess not."  Noticing that Joe was
still looking at  him with amazement, Richie decided it would be politic to
change the subject a bit.  "Forget that, you know, Mac was standing outside
the door for at least two or three  minutes before he swooped in, what do
you think they're up to?"

Allowing himself to be diverted for the moment, Joe scratched at his beard. 
"Something's up, that's for sure.  All this interest in your medallion, and
the way Methos  kept talking about your past..."  After a couple of minutes
he shrugged.  "We'll figure it  out.  The day those two clowns can outsmart
us, is the day--well, let's just say it ain't here  yet."

Laughing over the look on 'Uncle Adam's' face, Joe led Richie over to a
table where they  could rehash the strange encounter over a beer.



Out on the street, Duncan and Methos were in high spirits.  "My god, Methos. 
That was  perfect!  I can't believe Richie fell for all of that."

Quite pleased with himself, Methos agreed smugly, "Yes.  I was good, wasn't
I?"

"You?  What about me?  I pulled your ass out just in the nick of time, and
you know it."

Methos looked at Duncan for a long moment, then grinned engagingly.  "Okay. 
You  pulled my ass out at just the right moment.  *We* are good.  How's
that?"

Laughing, Duncan thumped Methos on the back.  "That's better.  Now come on. 
We  have some more work to do."

Making an elaborate play of staggering under Duncan's playful blow, Methos
drawled,  "Down, Simba.  What do you mean 'we have work to do'?  You're
confused again,  MacLeod.  I don't *do* work."

Opening the passenger door of the Thunderbird, Duncan gestured Methos inside
with a  courtly show of leg.  "I do beg your pardon, Sire.  I forgot myself
there for a moment.  Wrong choice of words.  I have a phone call to make
while you sit and admire how well I  do it."

"That's more like it.  Sitting and admiring, I can do.  Especially with a
beer--we do still  have beer don't we?"

"Fresh stock in the back seat."  Duncan gestured over his shoulder as he
stepped inside.

"Perfect."  Methos yawned and stretched expansively.  Tangling his fingers
in Duncan's  long, dark hair, he added, "You know, I'm a bit fatigued from
all these machinations.  It  might take more than just watching you make a
phone call to keep my attention.  What will  you be wearing?"

With a sideways glance, Duncan wondered just what his perverse lover was
getting at,  "Wearing?  To make a phone call?"

Now those same long fingers that had been tangled in his hair began tracing
the veins and  chords in his neck.  Shivering a bit, Duncan tried to
concentrate.  "Methos!  What  difference does it make what I'll be wearing? 
The person on the other end of the phone  can't see me."

"But I can."

The fingers abruptly moved away, leaving Duncan a bit bereft.  Before he
could protest  though, they returned, stroking down his inner thigh.  When
they reached the bend of his  knee, they began their return journey.  As
they approached his overheated crotch, Mac  fought to keep his mind on the
road and his hands on the wheel,  "Methos!  Joe was right,  you are a him-
bo."

"That's just fine, Highlander.  You keep right on with the verbal abuse." 
Withdrawing  the offending digits, Methos made an elaborate ritual of
crossing his arms and turning to  gaze out the window.

As seconds stretched to minutes, Duncan began to worry.  He hadn't meant to
make the  old man stop, much less mad.  "Now,  Methos.  You don't have to
get sulky.  I happen to  be very partial to him-bos."

"Hmmpphh."

Bridging the intervening space, Duncan rubbed his fingers along the exposed
nape of  Methos' neck.  "Come on.  We'll  be home in a couple of minutes." 
His fingers began to  tease under the edge of  his lover's collar.   "I
thought you wanted to watch me make that  phone call."

His curiosity astir, Methos turned back to face the other man.  "Oh yes,
that phone call.  Just who is it you're calling, anyway?"

Relieved that he'd averted a possible brood, Duncan gave Methos' nose a
playful tweak  before answering.  "An old friend of mine.  Actually it's
more along the lines of a follow  up to a call I made yesterday."

Methos snorted.  "Gee, that's a new one.  An old friend of yours--imagine
that."

"Keep it up, smart ass. You want to hear about this or not?"

"By all means. Do tell. This old friend have a name?"

"Gregor Powers."

Methos frowned.  He'd read about Greg Powers in Mac's chronicles.  They'd
seen each  other through some rather harrowing times.  "Just how good of an
old friend is he?"

Slanting a quick look at his companion as he pulled the car to a stop at the
dojo, Mac  grinned.  "Oh, pretty good.  Why?"

"No reason.....Hell!  How good?"

"Why Methos, you're jealous."

Methos was silent for a long moment, a flip denial dying on his lips. 
"...I...Fine, perhaps  I am--a little.  But only in the sense that I'd
rather know if he might decide to come after  my head."

"Methos, why on earth would Greg Powers come all the way here from Florida
just to  take your head?"

"Well..."

"Nope.  You already admitted it, old man.  You're jealous, pure and simple. 
I'm  flattered."

"Oh good.  As long as you're flattered."  Methos snarled sourly.

Deciding he'd let Methos stew long enough, Mac got out of the car and waited
for  Methos to do the same.  Pressing him back against the closed door, Mac
rested a hand on  each of Methos' shoulders and leaned close.  "Methos, you
have nothing to worry about.  Dr. Gregor Powers has more important things to
do with his time than beheading old  friend's lovers."

Methos had to smile.  "I suppose you're right, MacLeod."

"Of course, I'm right," Duncan smiled in return.

"After all, if Powers did make it a habit to remove all your lovers, he'd
certainly have no  time for medicine."

"Methos!"

"What?"  The old Immortal was the picture of innocence.  "He is still a
doctor of  medicine, I presume."

"Yes, he's still a doctor of medicine."  Mac backed away in amused
exasperation.  Methos was impossible to repress.  Thank god.  "These days
he's into research."

"Oh?"  Methos was mildly interested as they entered the dojo.  "What sort of
research?"

  "Well, something about diseases and how they're spread.  Parasites,
pathogens, all that  sort of thing.  Which is why he's the perfect choice to
help us."

"You know, MacLeod, that's a bit harsh, don't you think?"

Mac turned to face his companion as they entered the loft.  "What do you
mean?"

"You're going  to get someone who specializes in diseases to help us?  Okay,
Ryan I can  see--beri beri, scurvy....nothing wrong with a little scurvy now
and then to keep a guy  humble.  But, Joe..."

Shaking his head and rolling his eyes, Mac walked over to the phone.  "Oh
brother.  I  said I wanted to get them back, not kill them.  Listen, old
man.  Listen and learn."

  As Methos flung himself into the nearest chair, Mac dialed the good
doctor.  "Yes.  Dr.  Powers, please......Duncan MacLeod."

Waiting for Gregor to be located, Mac began to tap idly on the desk in time
to the  muzak.

"Ahem!"  Methos exclaimed loudly.

Turning milady inquisitive eyes to his lover, Mac shrugged and covered the
mouthpiece.  "What is it?  I'm on hold."

"You promised me a show, remember?  I'm waiting."

"Oh for..."  Mac trailed off as he thought about it.  Suddenly, a decidedly
wicked grin lit  up his face, and he deliberately turned his back to the old
man.  At first, Methos assumed  Mac was ignoring him, but then he had to
clap a hand over his mouth to stifle the laugh  when Mac's hips began
swaying to a beat only he could hear.

Next, Mac cradled the phone between his cheek and one shoulder as he moved
his hands  to the buttons on his shirt.  Methos sat very still, not quite
able to believe that the  Highlander, *his* Highlander, was about to treat
him to his very own strip show.

Just as Mac eased his shirt off his free shoulder and twisted his neck to
cast a look of  exaggerated provocation at Methos, Dr. Gregor Powers
answered his page.  Mac had been  so wrapped up in the music, that when it
stopped abruptly, he did too.  Jumping as if  Gregor could peer through the
receiver and see just exactly what his old friend was doing,  Mac barely
caught the phone as it slid off his shoulder and down his chest.

Turning a dusky red, he quickly jerked his shirt up into place as he
replaced the receiver  at his ear and said in a brightly cheerful voice,
"Greg!  Hi!  Good to hear from you........"

"Shit."  Methos grumbled soto voce.  "There's a moment that won't come again
in this  millennium."  Snickering when he realized it was 1999,  he subsided
to listen to the  puzzling one-sided conversation.

"...Well, yes, I know I just talked to you yesterday, I just meant.....Ha. 
Right........You  did?  Wonderful....Perfect!.....How soon will they
arrive?.....That soon?....yes, Greg, I  know things have speeded up a bit
since the Pony Express.....So, tell me again what I have  to do when they
get here......uh huh....uh huh....right....Amazing.  Freeze dried....ha, 
you're right...hm?  Oh fine, fine...Handsome?...oh come on now, Greg...yes,
still just as  long....uh huh....Of course, who could forget you?....Oh?  I
understand.  Duty...I owe you  one.....anytime.  Bye."

Turning around with a big grin on his face, Duncan began, "You'll never
believe..."

His voice trailed off uncertainly when he realized that Methos would
probably not hear  him.  One of the old man's legs dangled over the arm of
the chair, while his head was  thrown back across the other.  His mouth was
slightly open, and his eyes were slightly shut.  Asleep.  Methos was asleep. 
Disgruntled, Mac wondered whether the old coot had dozed  off before or
after his little dance.  With a humph, Mac turned away and stalked into the 
bathroom, intent on taking a shower before the package from the good Dr.
Powers arrived.

As soon as the door closed behind the highlander, Methos opened his eyes and
sat  upright.  Less than pleased with the turn of events, he had bought some
time to examine  the new developments in peace and quiet.  *Well,* Methos
winced as the sounds of a  fatally fractured aria tumbled out of the bath. 
He quickly scowled again at the thought that  Mac's good mood no doubt had
very little to do with him and everything to do with  Gregor Powers.  "Still
just as handsome, MacLeod?  Still just as long?" Methos mocked in  a high
pitched voice.  Handsome was a given, but *long*?  What was just as long?  A 
steely glint entered Methos' eyes as he thought that Powers had damn well
better be talking  about MacLeod's hair.

A brisk knock at the outside door disturbed Methos broiling thoughts of
torture and  vengeance.  Not that MacLeod would let him carry any of them
out anyway--which gave  him all the more reason to enjoy this little caper
they were embroiled in now....with a  dissatisfied sigh, Methos slung the
door open.     The young man standing there gave a startled yelp, nearly
dropping the small box he was  holding.  "Ulp!  Excuse me, sir!  Delivery
for Duncan MacLeod."

Snatching the box from the trembling youth, Methos fairly snarled, "I'm
MacLeod."

"Y-yes sir.  Um...please, sign here."  Wanting nothing more than to get away
from the  frowning man with the strange caterwauling coming from behind him,
the young man  thrust a clip board and ink pen forward.

Plucking the proffered ink pen from the delivery man's fingers, Methos
signed Mac's  name with a flourish.  He winced as a particularly toneless
baritone refrain began to repeat  with gusto.  Shedding his bad mood like
last year's winter coat, Methos smiled  conspiratorially and said, "Sounds
terrible, doesn't he?  The doctor says he's getting better  though."  He
sighed dramatically.  "We live in hope."

The young man's eyes grew impossibly wide, "Of-of course.  Thank you." 
Turning, he  rushed down the stairs, sans tip and sans ink pen.  Twirling
the pen in his fingers, Methos  shrugged and closed the door.

Crossing to the desk, he rummaged around until he found the letter opener
and carefully  slit the center seam on the box.  Pausing before he pulled
the flaps apart, he examined it  more closely.  According to the return
address, it was from one Dr. Gregor Powers.  No  surprise there, he'd
gathered that much from that insipid phone conversation.  It did strike  him
as a trifle unusual that it was covered with all sorts of symbols and 
warnings....hmmm...*biohazard*....*do not crush*....*Hermetically sealed--do
not open  except under sterile conditions*....Whoops.

*Oh well*, the old man thought to himself, *too late now.*  Unconsciously
whistling the  counterpoint to the grand finale coming from the shower, he
carefully opened the flaps and  looked inside.  Nested inside amongst the
inevitable packing materials was a small  container.  Never considering that
this was the actual sealed matter, much less that it had all  been addressed
to a certain four hundred year old Scot and not himself, Methos gave the 
top of the jar, cylinder, whatever it was, a firm twist.

With a slight whoosh, the lid came off, and Methos leaned over the box to
get a better  view.  He looked,  and then looked again.  Lowering the lid
back into place, he stopped  and peered inside one more time, giving the box
a tentative shake.    Blanking his  expression carefully, he finished
replacing the lid, sat down a bit heavily in his favorite  corner of the
couch, set the box on the floor at his feet, and waited for the re-
appearance  of Duncan MacLeod.

  When Mac emerged from the steamy bathroom several minutes later wearing
nothing but  a towel and a smile, he wasn't at all surprised to find a wide
awake Methos waiting for  him.

"Ha.  I knew you weren't asleep!  Why didn't you join me?"  Mac leaned over
the back  of the couch and began to nuzzle the old man's neck.

Never one to pass up a friendly nuzzle, Methos willingly submitted to the
caress, but  before Mac got more than a couple of nibbles, Methos arched his
neck away from the  meandering lips.  "Duncan?"

"Umm...yes, Methos?"  Mac whispered as he leaned even further over,
diligently chasing  his goal.

"Duncan."  Methos voice was a bit more forceful.  "Stop that for a minute,
and come  around here."

Standing up, Mac made his way around to the front of the sofa.  "Okay, I'm
here.  You  know, old man, I could use..."  His voice trailed off as he
focused in on the box.  "What's  that?"

"A box."

"A box.  Really."

"Give it up, MacLeod.  You don't do ingenuous well.  It was delivered while
you were in  the shower reminding Carmen why she was glad to be dead."

Mac leveled a frosty stare at his lover as he bent to examine the markings
on the box.  "I  thought Greg sent this special courier."

"Um hmm, that's right, he did."

"But only the recipient can sign for that sort of thing.  How..."

"I said I was you."

"You said...didn't they ask for ID?"

Methos just smirked and stayed silent.  Mac shook his head in exasperation,
then noticed  the opened state of the package in question.  "Methos!  What
have you done?"

"Recently?  Not much actually.  Why?  You have something in mind?  I'd hate
to  interfere with any plans you might have pending with the good doctor."

"What?  I have no idea---you're just trying to divert me from the fact that
you opened  my private mail."

"Oh that.  True.  I did."

"And that's all you can say?  That you did?"

Not even gracing the question with a reply, Methos ask the question that had
been  begging to be ask ever since he'd seen the contents of the package. 
"Why?"

"Why what?"  Mac ask grouchily.  He might've known  the old Immortal
wouldn't feel  guilty about a paltry thing like invading someone else's
privacy.  Methos seemed to think  that most rules just didn't apply to him. 
The longer Mac thought about it, he ruefully  acknowledged to himself, they
probably didn't.  But, he saw no reason to let Methos know  he thought that.

Reaching down, Methos pulled the box onto his knees.  "Why am I sitting here
holding a  box full of dead bugs in my lap?"

"Because you're too nosy for your own good?"

"MacLeod."

"Okay, okay."  Mac took the box off Methos' knees and placed it carefully to
the side.  With a glint in his eyes and a twitch of his lips, he positioned
himself so close to Methos  that he was all but in the older man's lap. 
Deliberately bouncing up and down a few times,  Mac squirmed unmercifully
until a strong hand grasp him firmly by the waist and shoved.

"Mac!  You're crushing me here.  My god, man, you're a bit large for this
don't you  think?  You're avoiding the question. What's with the dead
ladybugs?"

Chuckling, Mac eased himself over a bit so that most of his weight was
resting on the  seat of the sofa.  "They're not dead."

"MacLeod.  They're dead.  I shook the box.  They bounced around like tiny
little red  popcorn kernels for a moment then nothing.  They're dead.  D-E-
A-D....Wait a minute,  tell me again, they don't have some sort of dread
ladybug disease, do they?"

"No, Methos.  I told you.  No diseases.  And, they're not dead.  They're
just kind of  asleep right now."

"Asleep.  So, Gregor Powers sent you a box of what--a thousand sleeping
ladybugs.  Care to enlighten me?"

Still laughing softly, Mac leaned back in and began kissing and licking his
way down  Methos' throat.  "Oh, I don't know, Methos.  Seems to me there are
a couple of other  things we could do that might be a lot more interesting
than a bunch of freeze-dried  ladybugs."

"Ummm..."  Methos was caught up in the delicious sensations, dragging the
Highlander's  legs up off the floor and  into his lap.  Running his fingers
teasingly around the edge of the  towel still encircling Mac's waist, Methos 
pulled it open, revealing his lover in all his damp  and glistening
splendor.  Following the traceries of liquid still clinging to the flat
abdomen,  Methos smiled as he heard the quick intake of breath and felt the
ripples beneath his  fingertips.  When his hand closed softly over Duncan's
straining shaft, Methos had to agree  that there were times to discuss
ladybugs and there were other times to...not discuss  anything at all.

How they got from point A:  one damp, naked Highlander draped across Methos'
thighs,  to point B:  two equally naked men lying entwined on the couch, was
unclear.  However,  Methos wasn't about to spend time thinking it through
when there were several other  activities he could be engaged in.

Devouring the lush, full lips that parted so willingly beneath his own,
Methos continued  to stroke and pet along Mac's length.  When the Highlander
was reduced to breathy  moans, Methos pulled his mouth back just far enough
to whisper, "Duncan?"

"Mmm...yes, Methos?"  Mac tossed his head back and forth, arcing his hips in
time to  the rhythm of Methos' hand.

Pausing in the caress, Methos squeezed gently.  "Duncan," he said a bit more
forcefully.

Forcing himself to focus, Duncan answered with a bit more asperity, "What?"

Pulling Duncan more snugly against him, Methos maneuvered carefully until
his lover  was lying stretched atop him, pressing him down into the
cushions.  Smiling up into the  startled brown eyes, Methos whispered again,
"Fuck me, Duncan."

Letting his actions answer for him, Duncan's mouth  ravaged Methos' lips. 
One hand  grasped the lube Methos pressed in it, while the other began
stroking between the firm legs.  Wrenching his mouth free, Mac sat back on
his heels and stared down at his lover.  Methos, given over to pleasure, was
a beautiful thing.  An elemental from the dawn of time  refined to his
clearest essence.  Sometimes, like now, Duncan wondered how he'd been 
chosen by this man, by this singular passion.

Then, Methos stirred restlessly beneath him, and Duncan knew it really
didn't matter.  Fate, cosmic whim, or the tossed heads or tails of a beer
cap, Methos was his, and he  intended to keep him.  Opening the lube, Duncan
squeezed a generous amount into his  hand and set about to prepare his
lover.

After working slowly and carefully for several eternal minutes, Methos
raised his legs and  locked them around the Highlander's waist.  "Now,
Duncan.  Now!"

Positioning himself, Duncan slid all the way inside with a strong sure
stroke.  "Ahhh..."

At Methos' answering groan, Duncan began to move.  Carefully, almost gently
at first,  he retreated and advanced, like a wily general employing a
complicated strategy.  But his  opponent was no stranger to this type of
battle either.  Methos began raising himself up to  meet Duncan's thrusts,
making satisfied little grunts when Duncan's control began to erode  until
he was pounding into the older man, driving him deeper into the couch with
every  stroke.

It was good.  Too good to last  long.  Duncan's hips pistoned in and out as
Methos  tightened his legs even further and pulled Duncan deeper than
before.  With a cry, the  Highlander stopped, trembling at the apex of his
thrust, then plunging over the edge into  the waiting arms of his lover.

  Sated and content, Methos struggled  for breath under the Scot's limp
weight and thought  back to the end of the previous conversation.  Mac's 
words finally seeped into an active  part of his brain.  Sitting up 
abruptly, Methos so unbalanced his partner,  that the unwary  Scot found
himself dumped  peremptorily on the floor.  "Freeze-dried?  You mean like
that  coffee?  How intriguing!  So what...we just add water and stir?" 
Methos chortled a bit as  he lifted the box, totally ignoring the hand
thrust up at him from his recumbent lover.

Placing the box on the coffee table, he began peering at it intently, even
going so far as to  poke a finger cautiously inside.  "You know," he
continued, "I wonder if those two are still  together?"

Realizing he was a far second to freeze-dried bugs at the moment, Mac
levered himself  off the floor, located his towel, and plopped down beside
Methos.  Leaning over to have a  look for himself, he wondered lazily just
whom Methos was referring to.  "Hmmm?"

"That couple on those coffee commercials."

When Mac just continued to stare at him blankly, Methos signed noisily.  "I
swear Mac,  those commercials...on television!  You know, I always thought
that guy looked like  someone...never could quite place him.  I always meant
to check the Watcher roster..."

"Methos.  They were commercials."

"Oh right. Silly me. Not as if they were soap operas or anything really
important."

Coloring slightly, Mac turned his attention resolutely back to the box.  "At
any rate, you  don't add water."  He snorted.  "We just want them to wake
up, not become some sort of  soup dish."

"Okay,"  Methos was still sifting a finger through the tiny red forms.  "So
how do we  wake them up?"

"That's the easy part.  Once they're exposed to the air, they absorb the
moisture  necessary through their shells.  Just like they do in normal
circumstances."

At last, Methos had the grace to look uncomfortable.  "Er, MacLeod.  How
long?"

"How long?"

"How long before they wake up?"

"Now that you've exposed them to the air, you mean?"

"How long?"

"Relax, Methos.  Gregor said it could take up to forty-eight hours,
depending on various  factors.  That gives you plenty of time."

Methos narrowed his eyes.  "What?  How does that give *me* plenty of time?"

Turning his best beseeching look on his lover, Mac explained.  "You got to
have all the  fun setting up  Richie, right?"  At Methos' wary nod, he
continued, "So, it's my turn.  I get  to distract Joe while you..."

"While I...?"

"While you...planttheminhisstorageroom."

"Now wait just a minute, MacLeod.  Talking fast and mumbling isn't going to
help you  with this one.  Why in the world would I want to skulk around in a
musty storage room  making intimate contact with a bunch of disease-ridden
vermin?"  Jerking his hands out of  the vermin in question, Methos made a
show of wiping his hand vigorously on his  jeans-clad thigh.

Struggling not to laugh outloud at Methos' outraged expression, Mac blinked
his big  brown eyes slowly, trying to convey how deeply Methos' words had
wounded him.  "Because I ask you to.  Is it so impossible to do this simple
little thing for me, Methos?  Don't I..."

"Oh shut up, MacLeod.  I'm sure there must be a lot of people out there
who'd believe  your 'woe is me' act, but I'm not one of them."

With a bark of laughter , Mac gave up and decided to go for the 'this is
really not as  weird as it sounds' approach.  "Okay, okay.  Just listen. 
For the last time, the lady bugs  aren't diseased.  In fact, they're a lot
more germ free than you are.  These are special lady  bugs, lab born and
bred.  Sterile.  In both senses of the word.  They're harmless, old man. 
Harmless.  All you have to do is sneak into the store room and find them a
nice new  home."

Methos tapped his foot on the floor as he thought it over.  "That's all,
huh?   And you  really, really want to be the one to hoodwink Joe."  At
Mac's eager nod, Methos rolled his  eyes and acquiesced.  "Oh all right. 
But I'm warning you , Mac.  I have a bad feeling  about this."

Dire imprecations aside, Mac just grinned and leaned forward to thank his
recalcitrant  lover with a quick buss to the cheek.  As Methos reached for
him again, however, Mac  bounced up, flicking  his towel at his insatiable
lover.  "No time for that right now, you just  hold that thought for later."

"I'd rather hold this," Methos growled, lunging for a convenient handhold on
Mac's  exposed personage.  "Uh uh uh,"  Mac shook his finger playfully,
"now's the best time to  catch Joe unawares.  Strike while the iron is hot,
or in this case, while the bugs are still  asleep.  Later, Methos."

With a disgruntled shake of his head, Methos observed sourly, "Something
tells me, I'm  going to regret this."

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----

  Joe popped up from his desk at the sound of a loud clatter near the front
of the bar.  Hurrying to the door of his office, he was stopped by the sound
of two voices:  one a bit  shrill, the other masculine.  .

"Miss Desmond!  I don't know what to say!"

"Oh...Richie, I can call you Richie, right?  You don't have to say anything. 
I want to do  it."

Joe's eyes widened as he inched forward another step.

"But, Miss Desmond--okay, okay, Taffy, I can't just accept personal gifts
from you like  this..."  Richie's voice trailed off as Joe strained forward. 
"But, god, it's beautiful.  Where--how did you know?"

  Taffy's bright bubbly voice suddenly had a darker thread that had Joe
frowning.  "So, I  guessed correctly?  You are into antique motorcycle
parts?"

Richie laughed, still a little uneasy.  "Oh yeah.  But, really, Taffy..."

A soft rustle and suddenly Joe heard a muffled yelp.  Unless he missed his
guess, it came  from Richie.  Determined to find out just exactly what was
going on, he walked out into  the main bar, only to be brought up short by
the sight of Taffy Desmond wrapped in  Richie Ryan's arms, kissing him like
there was no tomorrow--and Richie was kissing her  back.

"Ahem...Ahem!" Joe had to do it a couple of times before he could get their
attention.  When at last the two young people parted, Richie flushed red
while Taffy's eyes were  sparkling triumphantly.

Not the least bit fazed, she smiled casually, "Oh, hi, Joe.  I didn't see
you back there.  But, since you're here, I just came by to thank you again
for giving me the day off."  Turning back to Richie, she ran one red
fingertip down the center of his body from his  chin to a point just above
his belt buckle.  "And, to see if Richie here would like to take me  out to
lunch."

"Me?" Richie was so shocked, he couldn't help but blurt, "Why?"

"I've been studying your chronicles, remember?"  Taffy purred as she stepped
even  closer to him.  "You and I have a lot in common.  Seafood, right?"

"Er, right."

Reaching down to touch a small box Richie was clutching in his right hand,
she  continued, "And we've already established your love for motorcycles."

"True."  Richie seemed lost in thought for a moment.  "Sure, I'd love to
have dinner  with you."

"Great!"  Taffy was all smiles.  "Just let me drive home and change.  Joe
can give you  directions, okay?  Bye, Joe!"  Laughing, Taffy rushed out the
door, leaving an obviously  disapproving Joe to confront one young, slightly
embarrassed Immortal.

As the seconds dragged on in silence, Joe finally spoke up.  "Well?  Don't
you have  something to say?"

"Umm...sure, Joe.  What's her address?"

"That's not what I meant, Richie, and you know it.  Are you or are you not
the same guy  who sat right in here a day or so ago worrying about that
little gal?"

Richie seemed to be searching for words, then, "Yeah, Joe, that was me.  I
know  she's...well, she's maybe a little...."

"Off her beam?"

"Joe!  That's not very tolerant coming from you.  Maybe we misjudged her."

"Misjudged her!  God, I sound like MacLeod now.  No, Richie we didn't
misjudge her.  She may or may not be harmless, but she's definitely, to use
Methos' vernacular, a couple  a brewskies short of a case."

Holding the box out to his friend, Richie opened it reverently.  "But, look,
Joe.  She gave  me this.  Isn't it gorgeous?"

Leaning over to get a good look, Joe looked askance at the young Immortal. 
"What is  it?"

"Joe!  It's a gas cap."

"A gas cap?"

"Not just any old gas cap.  It's a genuine original equipment Harley gas
cap.  They only  made 'em like this the first coupla years.  I can't believe
she found one!"

Joe was puzzled.  "I can't either.  And, how in the world..."

"Joe,"  To Richie it was obvious, "she's been reading my chronicles,
remember?"

Joe shook his head slowly.  "I know that, Rich.  I assigned them to her. 
Well, that and  the Methos' chronicles and speculations, but....they're  not
that detailed.  Okay, it's not a  big leap to go from your recorded love of
motorcross to a love of antique Harleys, but  seafood?"

"Lucky guess.  What about it?  Joe, I don't have time to debate this with
you right now.  Just give me her address, and I'll take off."

Still feeling a strange, forboding reluctance, Joe moved over behind the bar
and wrote  Taffy's address on a convenient napkin.  Handing it to his young
friend, he kept his grip on  the paper until Richie looked up at him.  "Just
do me one favor.  Be careful, okay?"

Smiling, Richie was quick to assure, "Of course, Joe.  You know me.  I'll be
fine."

"Yeah, I do know you, Casanova.  That's what I'm worried about.  Just, if
she suggests  anything to do with whipped cream that isn't in a dessert
dish, don't.  Okay?"

Richie laughed.  "Okay, dad.  Sheesh."  Still chuckling, Richie waved and
trotted out the  door.

As Joe watched him go, his answering smile faded.  "Seafood."    He muttered
to  himself.  "I know it doesn't say anything about seafood.  I wrote the
damn thing..."  With  worry creasing his brow, Joe moved back into his
office to do a little investigating of his  own.



Less than an hour later, Joe was more perplexed than ever. Richie's
chronicles  looked...different somehow.  When the young man had begun making
the racing circuit,  Joe had been forced to assign him a separate watcher,
and, admittedly he hadn't read any  of the more recent reports since Richie
was here to tell him about his adventures in person,  but still....why in
the world had Lefkowitz put in all those details?  He couldn't shake the 
feeling that he needed to delve a little deeper.  Richie might be the
Immortal, but Joe knew  himself to be far more mature in the ways of the
world, and this was all just a little too pat.

As he picked at the puzzle, turning it first this way, then that in his
mind, he was glad  he'd decided to close the bar for the day.  Too many odd
things were going on.   Shaking  his head in exasperation, he looked up in
surprise as Mac burst through the doors.

"Joe!  Good to see you!"  Mac shouted.

Wincing a bit, Joe said wryly, "I thought I locked that door."

"Ha ha, very funny, Joe."  Mac's voice was still several decibels north of
normal.

"MacLeod!  What's the matter with you?  I haven't suddenly gone deaf, you
know."

Looking a little sheepish, Mac lowered his voice as he stepped away from the
door.  "Sorry, Joe.  Was I shouting?"  He chuckled, "Blame it on Methos."

Gesturing to a chair, Joe took a seat and asked, "Okay, I can do that.  er,
why?"

"You know how he is.  Shouting is usually the only way I can get his
attention.  When he  gets his head in one of those musty old tomes of his,
he wouldn't hear a volcanic eruption.  I am amazed he escaped Pompeii."

With a half grin, Joe agreed.  "That's true.  Tell me, Mac.  If there was
something going  on, you'd tell me, right?"

Mac shifted in his seat.  "Something going on?  I don't know what you mean,
Joe."

Waving his hand dismissively, Joe got up and went around the bar to get them
both a  drink as he continued, "I know. I know. You're not the type.  Of
course, if you weren't  around to keep a rein on that old--What was that?"

The 'that' in question was a low thud from the direction of the bar's store
room followed  by what sounded like muffled curses and the tinkling of
breaking glass.  Raising his voice  again, Mac began to talk.  "What was
what?  Oh, you mean that little thump?  Sorry, Joe,  that was me, stomping
around under the table.  My foot's asleep."  To emphasize his  point, Mac
began to stomp noisily.  "Damn foot.  Don't you hate it when..." Rolling his 
eyes, Mac shook his head sheepishly.  "Well, that was stupid."

Joe stared at him a minute, then blinked a couple of times, picked up two
beers and came  back to the table.  "Yep, I do."

"You do what?"

"I hate it when one of these puppies goes to sleep."  He rapped his cane
sharply against  his left prosthesis.  "Of course," he winked, "I just beat
on it a bit and it perks right back  up."

Mac's lips twitched and he shook his head.  "Yeah.  Sorry, Joe.  So, what
was it you  needed anyway?"

"MacLeod!  I didn't call you!  You came here to me, remember?  Good god,
man, if the  old man has you this addle-pated, I'm gonna have a talk with
him."  Holding up a finger in  admonition as Mac began to protest, Joe
continued, "No.  Don't even try to sit there and  make something up.  Let's
just say you're here and leave it at that.  Besides, the truth is, I  am a
little worried about something.  Well, someone."

Sitting forward, Mac asked, "Who?"

Sighing, Joe replied, "Richie.  Now before you get all righteously
indignant, I want you  to try and remember how you felt when you were
twenty-three years old."

"Joe, what are you trying to say?  Where is Richie?"

Rubbing a hand wearily across his face, Joe was slow to answer, "He's with
Taffy, and  that's not even the weirdest part..." his voice trailed off as
Mac sat up straighter in his  chair.

"What?"  Mac rose from his chair, rubbing his forehead as he strove for a 
reasonable  tone.  "What do you mean he's with Taffy?"

Joe was saved from making an immediate response when Mac's head whipped
around to  the door just as Methos sauntered in.  Joe's eyes narrowed,
something....Methos looked  disheveled, downright dirty.  Joe wondered where
the old man had been, suddenly certain  that a very big piece of the puzzle
was bearing down on him with an innocent smile on his  face.

"Hail, hail the gang's all here."  Methos said cheerfully.  "What are you
doing here,  MacLeod?"

"Never mind that now, Methos.  We have a big problem.  Richie is with
Taffy."

"Oh really?  Well, well, isn't that interesting."

Mac stared down at the other man as Methos settled himself comfortably in a
chair.  "Is  that all you can say?  Interesting?"

"Well, Mac," Methos spread his arms to show his helplessness.   "What else
can I say?  Richie is a grown man, after all.  If he wants to consort with
loons, that's his prerogative."

"Methos,"  Mac growled.


"Look, Methos.  Something odd is going on here, and it occurs to me that
you're part of  it."  Joe stood up too and gave Methos a menacing look.

If anything, Methos just sank a little more into his chair.  "Me?  In the
first place, I take  serious umbrage at your implication, and in the second,
why do you automatically assume  I'm involved?  What about MacLeod here? 
He's not exactly pure as driven snow you  know.  The things I could tell
you....Quit staring at me like that!"

Mac was really fuming now.  The old fink was going to rat him out to Joe! 
"Methos,  I'm warning you!"

"Yeah, really, Methos.  Who are you trying to kid here?  The very idea that
MacLeod  would be involved in, in whatever nefarious scam you have going
here is ludicrous!"

"That's right!  Thank you, Joe!  Really, Methos, I'm hurt."

"Keep it up, MacLeod.  You're not hurt yet, but you're gonna be!  Joe!  Stop
staring at  me!"

"There's something....Where have you been, old man?"  Leaning over the now 
squirming Immortal, Joe sniffed.  "What's that smell?  I know that smell..."   

Methos was spared from answering by the timely ringing of the telephone. 
Pinning the  old Immortal with a glare, Joe said, "Stay right there!" and
went to answer it.    As he  moved to  pick it up, he turned  back to face
the two Immortals at the table,  just in time to  see Mac sit down and begin 
sweeping his fingers through Methos' hair.  *Hell of a time to  get frisky,*
Joe thought as he prepared to answer.   Then, Joe realized that Mac was 
sweeping something out of Methos' short locks, string or...spider web!
Suddenly, another  piece clicked into place.  That smell, it was bourbon!    
Joe shook his head and lifted the  receiver.   "Joe's Bar....Richie!  Where
are you?.....Yes, I know you're with Taffy, but  Rich....but
Rich....yeah....yeah....SHE WHAT?.....Whadda ya mean she thinks you're 
Methos??"    If looks could kill, Joe knew two Immortals who would be busily
regenerating  about now. As Mac and Methos surged up from their seats and
headed for the door, Joe  rapped the top of the bar sharply with his cane,
pointing it at them like a wand or a scepter.  Both men stopped in their
tracks as Joe tried to get a word in to Richie's running  monologue
"...Ri....Ri....RICHIE!...Yes, I had to shout!  Listen to me!  When she
finds out  you're not Methos, there's no tellin' what she'll do.  Believe
me, you don't want her mad,  Rich....Yes!  You have to tell her!...How much
later?  Where is she now?...No!  Richie  Ryan you listen to me!...Richie?
Richie?  Damnation!  He hung up!"

Turning around, Joe slammed the receiver down and struck the bar sharply
with his  palm.  "I want some answers, Methos!  And, I want them now!  Why
does Taphelia  Desmond think Richie is you?"

"Lack of taste?  Poor judgment?"

"Why, I oughta..." Joe shook his fist in the air.  "MacLeod.  I want the
truth, and I want  it now.  Do you know what's going on or not?"

"Well now, Joe.  I guess that sort of depends on what you mean."

Methos snorted.  "Oh good answer, MacLeod.  Decisive and clear."

"You shut up."  Joe turned back to Mac.  "Mac, I know whatever your
involvement with  this, that unlike certain people,"  he glared at Methos
who shrugged defensively, "you  would never lower yourself to putting
another person in danger.  Especially Richie."

"Danger!  Oh come on, Joe.  Don't you think you're doing it up a bit too
brown?"  Methos was less than flattered with Joe's portrayal of his
character, or lack thereof.  "So  Richie is with Taffy.  Big deal.  What in
the world could she possibly  do with him?  Ride  motorcycles?  Go to a drag
race?  Play frisbee in the park?"

Still fuming, Joe practically snarled.  "I'll have you know, Mr. High and
Mighty, they  were supposed to be on a lunch date, but somehow, they ended
up staying at Taffy's  apartment.  Richie took a minute to call in because
she went on an errand, and he knew I  would be  worried.  Which I am."

Finally, Mac spoke up.  "Joe, I really don't see what you're so upset about. 
I'll admit, I  don't like the idea of Richie with that woman either, but
really, so he's having lunch with  her.  Richie has more brains..."  Mac
trailed off as Joe shook his head.

"Twenty-three, MacLeod.  He's twenty-three."

"A walking wad of testosterone."  Methos volunteered reluctantly.

"Exactly, and that's not even the worst part."

"The worst part?"  Mac was beginning  to looking vaguely horrified.

"That errand Taffy is on?  She's gone to the grocery store.  They're having
lunch at her  place."



Twenty-four hours passed.  No one, not Joe, not Mac, and certainly not
Methos had  heard anything else from Richie.  At last, unable to stand the
inertia any longer, Joe  peremptorily summoned the two Immortals back to the
bar.  As they came in the door, Joe  gestured them back to his office, away
from the commotion of the early 'after lunch,  before dinner' crowd.

As Mac pulled the office door quietly shut behind him, Joe moved around
behind his  desk.  Methos thought he looked amazingly affable for a man
who'd been accusing him of  all sorts of dire things just a day ago.  His
suspicion increased when Joe smiled and said,  "Glad you could make it, Mac. 
You too, Methos.  Don't guess either of you have seen  hide nor hair of
Richie?"

Methos shook his head as Mac answered regretfully, "No, Joe.  I'm sorry." 
He sighed.  "I hate to admit it, but I'm beginning to think you were right. 
We should have heard  something from him by now.  How long can one lunch
last?"

Ignoring Methos' snort, Joe just smiled again, "My point exactly.  I'm
especially  interested in how long it could last after she figured out he
wasn't Methos."

"Now, Joe, are you still on that?"

The atmosphere in the room changed abruptly as Joe leaned forward, all
traces of  amiability gone.  " Yes, I'm still on that!  I spent the last
twenty-four hours going over all  of Richie's chronicles again.  Nothing in
them should have led Taffy to that conclusion.  I  was totally baffled. 
Then, I thought, 'maybe I'll just have a little look-see at Methos' 
chronicles.  God knows, it's pretty stale reading but still...', and, would
you like to guess  what I found there?"

Looking from the man in question to Mac, Joe repeated, "Well, would you? 
Would  either of you like to guess?"  At the continued silence, Joe swore
softly, "Goddammit, if I  thought for one minute that either of you was
actually trying to hurt Richie...but, I don't.  I  even understand why you
did it, Methos.  Richie was riding you pretty hard over that  whole video
thing.  But, dammit!  It worked a little too well!  What's she gonna
do...no,  make that what's she done now that she's figured out Richie is
just Richie?"

Sitting forward, Mac began, "Joe, I--"

"--No, Mac.  Let me."  Methos grimaced slightly.  "I am sorry, Joe.  You're
right, it was  just supposed to be a bit of revenge.  A joke."  Shaking his
head and shrugging, Methos  added, "It doesn't seem quite so funny from this
end of it.  Have you tried calling her?"

Wordlessly accepting Methos' explanation and apology, Joe nodded.  "Yes,
several  times.  There's no answer at her apartment.  Nor at Richie's.  I
was hoping maybe you two  could..."

"Right."  Mac jumped up, glad to be doing something.  "Give us the address,
we'll go  right now."  As Joe handed him  a slip of paper, Mac said, "I'm
sorry too, Joe.  It wasn't  just Methos, you know."

The first genuine smile since Mac and Methos had arrived flitted across
Joe's face.  "Oh,  I know.  Richie and I both knew you two were up to
something.  Now, go on.  I won't be  easy with this thing till I know he's
okay."

With swift good-byes and promises, Mac and Methos were gone.  Joe told
himself the  best thing for him to do was to sit tight.  Wait.  Let them do
whatever had to be done.  He  argued with himself for ten minutes, until
finally he shoved wearily up from the desk and  started for the door. 
*Wait?  Let them handle it?  Yeah, right.  That's what had gotten  them into
this mess in the first place.*  As he told Mike he'd be out for a while, Joe
flicked  absently at a small red spot on the bar surface.  The ladybug flew
off to search for a safer  landing pad as Joe hurried out to find his
friends.



Mac and Methos were led to the door of Taffy's apartment by the soulful
croonings of  Hank Williams declaiming about "Your Cheatin' Heart" to pretty
much everyone on the  entire fifth floor.  Wincing as the tuneful twangings
seemed to reverberate inside their  skulls,   both men nevertheless  heaved
a sigh of relief at the Immortal signature coming  from within.  Pulling
back on Mac's arm, Methos stopped him before he pushed the  buzzer.  Putting
his lips against Mac's ear to be heard over the din, he said, "Mac, Duncan. 
You're not...I mean, you don't..."

Smiling gently, now that it seemed pretty clear that Richie was fine, Mac
kissed his lover  lingeringly on the lips.  A sudden silence let him answer
in a normal tone, "Don't what?  Blame you?  Methos, how could I?  We're in
this together, remember?  I may not  necessarily like having to admit it to
Joe,"  Mac chuckled, "but it'd be pretty hypocritical of  me to blame you
for something I helped engineer."  Turning to press the doorbell, he 
stopped again, "Methos, what if they're, er, occupied?  I mean, Richie isn't
gonna be too  happy with us if we bust in on the middle of something."

Leaning around Mac, Methos solved the dilemma by pressing the doorbell
himself.  After a few minutes, when no one answered, Mac pressed it again. 
Still nothing.  Looking  apprehensively at Methos, Mac raised his fist to
bang on the door.  At the first touch, it  swung open, creaking slightly on
its hinges and revealing a dark, lightless interior.

The two Immortals exchanged a look, both drawing their swords as Mac,
followed  closely by Methos, edged inside.  "Richie?  You in here?  Taffy?"

The only answer was the opening notes of yet another song, so loud Mac
imagined he  could sense the very walls vibrating in protest. Then, just at
the cusp between introduction  and verse, a voice came from inside the
doorway on the left.  "Who's there?    I'm warning  you, I have a gun!"

  Mac tried again, "A gun!  Richie?  That you?"

"Mac, oh god..."  The sounds of Johnny Cash lamenting about his "Folsom
Prison  Blues" rose again as Richie shouted at the top of his lungs.  "Mac,
yes!  It's me!  Don't  come in!"

Methos hurried on down the hallway towards the mammoth stereo system
blinking  against the back wall.  When he'd poked and prodded until blessed
silence reigned again,  Mac stepped forward until he was just outside the
room where Richie seemed to be, then  called, "Rich, we're not here to
bother you.  Joe, well, all of us were worried and just  wanted to be sure
you were okay.  Is Taffy in there with you?"

"Oh god.  Does that mean the old man is here too?  Oh no..."  The sentence
trailed away  into such a pitiful moan that Mac had to force himself to stay
put and respect his young  friend's privacy.

"Okay, okay, Rich?  Don't worry about it, okay?  We'll just leave.  Right
Methos?"

Grinning, but feeling a sneaking sympathy for the youngster and his
paramour, Methos  agreed.  "Right.  See ya, Ryan."

"No!  Don't leave!"

"Richie.  Which is it?  Do you want us to leave you two alone or not?"

"Taffy's not here.  She--she's gone.  I just , I just....oh god."

"Richie?  What's the matter, kid?"  Another voice sounded from behind Methos
as Joe  stepped into the apartment.

"Joe?"  The relief in Richie's voice was palpable.  "Could you help me
please?"

Mac started forward again, "Richie, I told you, we're all here to help you. 
Let me just  get the light switch."

The yelled, "No!" came a split second too late as Mac located and flicked
the switch on  the wall. Raising his head to look for his former student, he
felt his mouth falling open as  he stood rooted to the spot.

"MacLeod," Methos sounded impatient as he pushed his way past his lover,
only to  brought up short, speechless.

Grumbling, Joe was the last to get a clear view, "I swear, people pushing
and shoving  their way in somewhere then stopping dead right in the
middle....Rich?"

"um...hi, Joe."  It was hard to say exactly what was going through the three
rescuers'  minds just then, but it wasn't difficult at all to see that
Richie was mortified.  The vast  expanse of exposed flesh left little doubt
as to just how embarrassed he was as an angry red  flush spread  from his
cheeks down to where  his feet disappeared in a pile of fluffy pink  pillows
that almost covered the entire floor.

*Of course,* Joe thought wildly, *I can't  actually see all his body--I
guess it's possible  that the parts hidden by the serape or the bars are
some other color.*   

The serape, striped with some really nice colors, Joe noticed in a tiny
corner of his mind,  was obviously a child's size.  Far from covering his
entire torso, it hung in a long narrow  strip down the center of Richie's
chest, ending just below his, er, masculine credentials.  Unfortunately, Joe
noted, this was only because it was hiked up in the back so that it would 
drape as far forward as possible.  Most of Richie's hips were totally
exposed, as, no doubt,  were the rest of his buttocks had anyone cared to
look.   Again, in all fairness, Joe had to  acknowledge that Richie wasn't
totally nude beneath the dinky drapery, a black leather belt  complete with
two holsters that appeared to contain six-shooters was slung low around the 
kid's waist.  Lying off to the side was a huge, white ten-gallon hat, no
doubt intended at  one point to top  the ensemble.

Forbearing to comment for the moment, and, Joe admitted to himself, being
totally at a  loss for something to say anyway, he turned his attention to
the rest of Richie's  predicament.  The young Immortal was, for all intents
and purposes, in jail.  As Mac and  Methos continued to stand and stare
behind him, Joe cautiously approached  Richie's...cage.  For cage it was. 
Richie was standing in the biggest birdcage Joe had ever  seen.  Richie
strove for a sickly grin, but at the continued silence of his erstwhile
rescuers,  he finally shrugged and sank down into the pile of cushions. 
Now, Richard  Ryan was  sitting like a demented member of Alice's tea party
beside a scattering of bowls and  utensils, looking as at home as a human
being could look in a seven foot tall golden  birdcage.

Still waiting for his friends to breech the silence, Richie munched on a
handful of tortilla  chips as he looked from one man to the next, almost as
if it was a game to see which  would dare a question first.   Mac was still
waiting for his vocal chords to catch up with his  sight.  Methos was
apparently not afflicted to the same degree, as he began to inch his way 
forward, whistling a merry tune as he went.

"Methos!  Stop that!" Joe was not pleased to recognize the theme from
"Bonanza".  Luckily, he was fairly certain Richie was too young to be
familiar with it.

Pinning the old Immortal with a look that basically ordered him to stand
quietly or else,  Joe turned back to the resigned looking young man. 
"Rich," Joe said gently, "Why don't  you come on out of there, and we can
talk about it, okay?"

Richie just shook his head and tried to tuck his serape more demurely around
his person.  "I can't do that, Joe."

"Wh--" Mac's voice failed him, and he had to clear his throat to try again,
"Why not,  Richie?"

Richie just sat there, unable or unwilling to answer.  It was Methos who got
it first,  breaking his stasis and striding forward right up to the bars. 
Locating the door, he gave it a  little shake, "You can't get out, can you? 
She's locked you in here!  My, my, what a  predicament, and you all dressed
for the occasion too.  Tell me, Ryan, or should I say  'Hoss', does she have
this place wired as well as she had the loft?"

Looking around wildly, Richie appeared to shudder at the thought, telling
Methos all he  needed to know about what had probably been going on earlier. 
Then, suddenly, Richie  was up and snarling in Methos' face.  "Yes, you're
right!  She locked me in here and she  left; no doubt, to secure the
distribution rights and market my video in all the porn shops  from here to
Calcutta!  Does that make you happy?  She took the key and left!  Isn't that 
funny?  How about it, Joe?  You gonna laugh?  You were right and I was
wrong.  Richie  messes up again.   Does that make everybody happy?"

Before Mac or Joe could address the outburst, Methos laughed outright and
held up a  hand to stop Richie's two outraged protectors.  "Gentlemen, I'll
handle this."

Joe allowed himself to be restrained by Mac, who seemed willing to give his
lover the  benefit of the doubt.  Methos smiled warmly at Mac for a moment,
gratified that the  Highlander apparently trusted him enough, *finally*, to
handle some things himself.

Turning back to the cage, he leaned in close to whisper, "Oh, good try,
Ryan.  'Distraught Innocence' might work on Paw and Little Joe back there,
but no way it's  gonna work on me, *pardner*."  Raking a speaking glance
down the length of Richie's  body, Methos continued, "Trying to divert them
isn't really going to work for long.  You  know that, right?  I mean, it's
like this, chum, you're standing here, worse than naked,  looking like the
next act in the Chippendale's Review,  as casually as if you were waiting 
for the bus, and as soon as the two of them get a good look at what's on
that table over  there," Methos jerked his head back towards a corner of the
room, " the gig will be up."

Richie's blue eyes widened in dismay, and he reflexively made an abortive
move to cover  his groin as Methos bit back a grin and said, "Don't worry,
Ryan.  Those two will believe  anything if you tell it right.   I don't know
why, but I actually feel kind of sorry for you,  so....Just follow my lead."

Richie was shocked but quickly recognized that Methos was his best hope of
getting out  of the situation without imparting a lot more knowledge to Mac
and Joe than they needed  to be burdened with.  "Okay...um, thanks."

Methos stepped back from the cage and raised his voice, a little
uncomfortable at all the  bon homie himself.  "That's all settled then.  The
thing to do would be to find something to  open the cage with."

Stepping forward, Mac suggested, "How about a sword?"

Richie shook his head, "Nope, won't work.  I've already tried it."  He
hefted his sword  which had been leaning against the bars behind him.

With a last long look at Methos, Joe spoke up.  "She left you your sword?"

"She said she didn't want me to get hurt just cause I was stupid.  The sword
is for if the  guns aren't enough."  Richie managed another sickly grin. 
"There's no way to get enough  leverage to pry the door off though."

Joe reached through the cage and patted Richie gently on the shoulder.  "She
was pretty  mad when she found out you weren't Methos, huh?"

"Oh boy, was she ever.  I didn't want to tell her, but she didn't really
give me any  choice."

Before Joe could ask  what he meant, Mac spoke up from where he'd been 
canvassing the room looking for something to free Richie.  "My god, what is
this!!"

In a parody of their earlier reactions, all Mac and Joe could do was stare
at the object  dangling from Mac's katana blade.

Turning back to Richie, Methos gave him a big wink then asked in mock
surprise.  "My  god, indeed!  Richie, I'm sure you were shocked when Miss
Kitty brought out that very  inappropriate item?"

To Joe and Mac's amazement, Richie didn't even seemed fazed at this latest
discovery.  "Oh yeah,"  he agreed readily.  "Totally shocked.  And outraged. 
Shocked and outraged."

"I don't believe I've ever seen anything quite like it."  Joe sounded dazed.

  "It's a Do-It-Yourself Strap-on Dildo...with a big pickle on it."  Richie
volunteered  helpfully.

"A WHAT?"  Joe's yell was loud enough to wake the dead, or at least the
neighbors.  "What did that woman do to you?  I can't believe even she would
buy that, that..."

"Relax, Joe.  Nothing happened.  In fact, everything was fairly routine up
until, well, for  a long time, but suddenly she started talking about how,
since I had no doubt been  around  when the first one was invented, I
shouldn't object, and then she said that I probably *had*  invented them so
in a way it was mine..."

Methos winced.  This was all gonna be a bit harder to pull off if Richie
didn't shut up  very soon..."Yours!"

"Yours!!"

"YOURS!!!"  That was Joe again.

Methos went to examine the sex toy more closely, noting the four clamps
arrayed around  the base that seemed to be gripping the gherkin tightly in
place.  Looking over the rest of  the items on the table, Methos whistled
silently at the  astonishing array of fruits and  vegetables:  the
inevitable banana, a huge cucumber, a carrot, and a rather spectacular 
specimen of crook-necked squash.

Turning back to the jailbird, Methos sidestepped plan A and went directly to
plan Z,  which consisted of...well, he'd just have to see what developed. 
Meanwhile, it was time a  certain caged bird began to sing, "You want to
tell us how you  that little contraption came  to be all loaded up and ready
to go, Dead-eye?"

Staring hard at Methos, Richie seemed to calm after a moment then began
talking  swiftly,   "Don't worry, don't worry!  God, we didn't, I didn't...
Nothing happened! She  told me she had a present for me and made me close my
eyes.  The next thing I knew, she  was prancing around waving  that thing
and talking about how important it was to get your  daily requirements of
fruits and vegetables.    Even then, I thought she was just  goofing 
around.  I mean..." Richie paused and cast a sheepish look around the cage,
"we had been  having a really good time.  We'd just had the most amazing
Tex-Mex feast, complete with,  um, entertainment. I thought she just wanted
to... well....when she started trying to  attach  that pickle, well, that's
when I had to tell her I wasn't Methos."

Rising from a close examination of the carrot and the odd indentations
around it's  circumference, Methos' eyes met Richie's for a moment.  Certain
he had the young man's  attention, he palmed another item on the table and
slipped it into a pocket.  Then he asked,  "And she just believed you?  Just
an 'oh by the way, I'm not Methos' and she bought it?"

Coloring again, Richie hedged, "Well, no, not exactly."

"Well, what exactly?" Mac asked as he continued his search for an extra key
in the  drawers of the desk.

Pulling the big cowboy hat into his lap, Richie began to knead its brim 
nervously."Okay, so she didn't believe me no matter what I said at first. 
Methos, did you  know there are apparently a lot of things you and I have in
common?"

"Oh he knows all right," Joe said sourly.  "So how did you convince her?"

"Well, it finally occurred to me that there was one thing that Methos and I
most certainly  did NOT have in common.  Not me and Mac either for that
matter."

"Aha!"  Mac looked up in triumph as he held up a large ornate key with a
dangling tag  that said 'birdcage' attached to it.  Hurrying to the cage, he
paused in the act of turning the  key, "What was it that we don't have in
common, Richie?"

"You know,"  Richie looked first at Mac's crotch, then his own.

"I...", Mac's eyes were drawn to follow the younger man's almost against his
will.  "I  know?"

A snort from Methos, followed by a sudden choked guffaw from Mac told Joe he 
was the only one still in the dark.  "What??"

Methos was grinning from ear to ear.  "Think, Joseph.   What is it that Mac
and I have  that Richie doesn't?  Besides good looks, pleasing
personalities, charisma, and each other I  mean.  You might say it's
something unique to our place in history."

Mac opened the door with a flourish then stood aside while Joe handed Richie 
the jeans  he'd found nearby and thought out loud,  "Besides....Oh!
Ha...very clever, Rich.  So,  Taffy left then?"

Richie tugged the pants over his long,  muscular legs, and  sighed in
relief.  "Um...not  exactly."  he replied as he unbuckled his gunbelt and
tossed it back into the cage.  "She was  still totally convinced that I at
least knew where Methos was."  Richie stared pointedly at  the old man.  "I
mean, I had to tell her something."  He ended on a defensive note.

"Oh no," Methos groaned.  "Tell me you didn't set her back on me."

"Nope!"  Richie grinned, his usually cocky confidence reasserting itself. 
"And I wouldn't  send her back to Mac either.  I sent her off to the one
person who will know exactly how  to handle her."

Now it was Mac's turn to groan.  "Richie, you didn't!"

"Sure did.  Mac, I had to do something."  Richie gestured toward the dildo. 
"Do you  know how much something that's been soaked in  vinegar and salt
would probably sting?"  Oblivious to the pained winces from his rapt
audience, the young Immortal continued, "I  told her that while I didn't
know Methos personally," he smiled, "I did know someone who  claimed to be
intimately acquainted with him in the past."

"Intimately acquainted?"  Mac turned to Methos with raised brows.

"Well, yeah, you know.  All those stories Amanda tells about when she and
Methos first  met."

"What stories?"

Making shooing motions towards the door, Methos decided it was time to
conclude the discussion.  "You mean she never told you, Mac?  Hm...well,
maybe some other time. Sending her off to Amanda like that was quick
thinking, Ryan."

"No, she never told me, and neither did you."  Mac allowed himself to be
pushed out the  door, but he wasn't about to let the matter drop.  "Well,
Methos, sounds like we have a  couple of things to talk about.  But, Richie,
I still don't see why, you sent Taffy to  Amanda."

"I do."  Joe spoke up.  "Who better to handle a predatory female than
another predatory  female?  And, let's be honest boys, have you ever seen
anybody, male or female that  Amanda couldn't handle?"

Mac chuckled.  "When you put it that way, no, Taffy doesn't stand a chance. 
I'll just  call Paris and give Amanda a quick heads-up on the situation. 
Tell you what, Joe, can you  take Richie home?  Methos and I will go by the
loft, and then we'll meet you both at the  bar around eight, all right?"

"Sounds fine by me.  Rich?"

With a last lingering look around the little room where he'd spent one of
the most  memorable days of  his life,  Richie shrugged. "Great.  And, Mac,
Methos...thanks guys.  Both of you."

"You're welcome, Rich."

"Yeah, Ryan.  No problem.  See you at eight."  Whistling, "Rockin' Robin"
Methos  followed the others out, firmly shutting the door behind him.



After riding along in near silence to the dojo, Mac wasted no time in trying
to pin Methos  down about his amatory adventures with Amanda when they
entered the loft.  After several  minutes of non-answers like "it was a long
time ago, Mac" and "if Amanda had wanted  you to know, she would have told
you", Mac decided more drastic action was called for  and pinned his lover
down a bit more literally.

Huffing from having picked Methos up bodily and tossed him onto the bed, 
Mac settled himself more comfortably on his favorite interrogation location,
Methos' chest,  and smiled at the slightly red-faced man beneath him. 
"Well, well, here we are.  Why is it,  do you suppose, that two of my best
friends in the entire world, one a former lover and  one my current one,
would neglect to tell me of a past history that no doubt was good for  more
than a few laughs over the centuries?  Now, why is that, Methos?"

Cocking his head inquiringly, Methos stared into Mac's brown eyes for
several beats.  "You're jealous."  A grin creased the aquiline face.  "You,
Duncan MacLeod are jealous!"

"Ppffttt.  Dont' be ridiculous.  Why would I be jealous of anything Amanda
does?  'She  has ever been constant in her inconstancy'."

"Oh, nice quotation.  Granted, you and Amanda have always been...well, you
and  Amanda.  But, if you're not jealous of Amanda, that must mean you're
jealous of..."  Methos let his voice trail off suggestively, almost daring
the Highlander to finish the  thought.

"Of you."  Mac agreed softly.  "I must be jealous of you."  Leaning forward,
he captured  the wry, witty, wonderful mouth with his own.

When at last the kiss ended, Methos tried to collect his thoughts as he
tried to collect his  breath.  "Duncan, you have nothing to be jealous of. 
Not then, and certainly not now.  Amanda and I--well, there never really was
an Amanda and I--more like an Amanda and I  and Rebecca, you know?"

Feeling absurdly happy that his lover was so eager to reassure him about
something that  was apparently  hot gossip over a thousand years ago, Mac
allowed the levity rising in his  chest to burst forth.  The thought of
Rebecca and Amanda fussing busily over a Methos  sandwich, knowing what he
knew of those two....well, he had to laugh.

Edging over onto his side, Mac continued to chuckle as he ran a finger over
the finely  wrought features of Methos' face.  "Now that I would have liked
to see."

"Really?  I hadn't realized you were quite that much of a voyeur, MacLeod." 
Methos  was amused too.  The combination of good memories and the
overwhelming proximity of  a great deal of warm, firm Highland flesh made
him unusually expansive.  "Ah, the stories  I could tell you..."  Pressing a
hand firmly over the Highlander's partially open mouth,  Methos continued,
"...but I won't.  Think about it, Duncan.  I know you and Amanda have  been-
-gods I don't really know what to call you--but the point is, I only know
that because  I know both of you and have been around when you've been
together.  And, I'll wager  that whatever the Casanova Kid thinks he knows,
it's probably very little.  How many  times have you or Amanda given me
detailed accounts of your little tussles between the  sheets?"

Nipping at the hand still covering his mouth, Mac grinned at Methos'
euphemisms,  "'Tussles between the sheets'?  How old worldly polite of you,
old man."  At Methos'  growl, Mac hastily continued, "No, no, you're right. 
Amanda doesn't go around doling  out blow by blow accounts," Methos winced
at the bad pun.  "However, our man Richie  does.  So tell."

Affecting a look of perplexity, Methos asked, "Richie and Amanda?  You have
got to be  kidding, Highlander.  Now that's an unlikely couple if I ever
saw...mmpphh."

It was Mac's turn to staunch the flow of words, only instead of a hand, he
used his lips.  When Methos had been effectively kissed into silence, Mac
decided further discussion  would best be facilitated if he maintained
control of the situation.  Yes, he was definitely in  control, he thought
with smug satisfaction, as his lover relaxed beneath him.

Pressing fervent kisses on the face of the man who had come to mean so much
to him,  Mac ever so slowly made a trail of fire across Methos' finely
planed cheekbones  to his left  ear.  "Methos," he hissed, using his tongue
to punctuate his inquiry.

"Hmmm?"  Methos found he couldn't be troubled to actually speak, too busy 
concentrating on the delicious sensations tingling through his nerve
endings.

"Perhaps we should make an agreement about this jealousy thing" Mac
continued, his  lips now searing across collarbones laid bare by a shirt
that had miraculously  vanished.

Twisting and turning beneath the marauding lips, Methos ran his own hands
down Mac's  back to tug at the shirt that was keeping them from pressing
flesh to flesh.  "Anything,  Duncan.  Anything, just..."

"Just what, love?"  Mac seemed unaware of the endearment as his hands worked 
languidly on the belt around Methos' waist.

With a frustrated curse, Methos heaved upwards tossing Mac back onto his 
side.  "Your clothes, Duncan.  Take off your clothes!  Now!"  Matching
actions to orders,  Methos stripped his own pants away with careless haste,
watching with hot eyes while Mac  did the same.

When at last both of them tumbled nude back onto the bed, they moved
together like  iron being pulled to a  magnet.  Rolling, hips surging
forward to thrust frantically against  each other, both Duncan and Methos
could feel the rising tide of arousal that flowed  between them.  Still, Mac
struggled to think. He wondered vaguely how Methos had  suddenly become the
one on top.   There was something...unfinished, something they'd  been about
to--"Methos!"

Instead of a verbal response, Methos went for something a bit more
subliminal.  A  sound, at once both threatening and caressing, rose from his
throat.  Raking his hands in  great sweeps from Duncan's shoulders to his
thighs, Methos considered himself far too  busy to be bothered.

Shivering, torn between continuing their fascinating conversation about,
well, whatever it  had been about, and giving in to the persistent man who
seemed bent on pleasuring him,  Duncan decided that perhaps allowing Methos'
non-response to stand was, in fact, an  answer in itself.  Just as soon as
he could remember what the question was, he'd certainly  give it due
consideration.

Pleased with that notion, he gave up his last vestiges of self-control, and
turned his full  attention to his partner.  Just then Methos decided to put
a bit more force behind his curled  fingers...."God, Methos!"

"Like that, do you?  You, my dear Duncan, are a born Sybarite."

Wrenching himself out of the very pleasurable fog that he felt like he was
floating in,  Duncan opened on eye, "Eh?"

Laughing out loud, Methos swooped down to kiss the eye closed again, "Never
mind,  Duncan.  You are so eloquent during sex."  Reaching between them,
Methos grasped  Mac's erection in a sure grip.  Hot and hard, that was the
way the Highlander seemed to  prefer it these days.   Methos shuddered with
pleasure of his own as Mac's big hand closed  in a similar vise around his
own shaft.  Hot and hard...definitely something to be said for  that
approach.

"Oh...yessss..." Methos found he could get fairly eloquent himself.  Pumping
in rhythm  to the staccato beats of their hearts, both men soon brought each
other to completion.

Later, with the evidence of their passion spattered on the svelte torso
beneath him, Mac  sighed and levered himself up on wobbly arms.  His lover
lay in boneless disarray.

Leaning down, Mac nuzzled the stubbled cheeks, "Methos...Methos."

"Ummmm?"

"Open your eyes, old man.  We have to get up."

With the barest hint of a frown, as if even that much effort was all but
untenable, Methos  sighed as well.  "You would have to promise to meet them
at Joe's."

"Oh come on now," Energized, Mac bounced up and headed across the room to
their  coats.  "Surely you want to hear the real version of 'Ride'em Richie
and the Loco  Senorita.'"

Suddenly galvanized himself, Methos leapt from the bed and rushed past Mac
to grab his  long coat before the Highlander could go through its pockets. 
"Whoa there, MacLeod.  Just what do you think you're doing?  And what do you
mean the real story?  Surely,  you're not implying that little Richie was
less than forthcoming."

"Methos, let's examine the facts here."  Holding up a hand, Mac began to
count off his  fingers.  "One, Richie is found, basically naked, sitting in
a big bird cage.  Two, he  wouldn't even have been particularly concerned
about it, except that it was us who found  him.  Three, he never did
actually explain how he wound up in said birdcage.  Four, he  knew what a
Do-It-Yourself Strap-on Dildo was and only seemed concerned about *it* 
because of the pickle.  And, four--"

"Five."

"What?"

"You said four twice.  You're ready for number five."

"Fine!"  Mac made a sudden grab for Methos, succeeding in bringing the old
Immortal  and his coat up flush against him.  "Five!"  He twisted his now
grinning lover's arms  behind his back and thrust his hand into a pocket. 
"Aha!"  In triumph, he held up a  well-used tube with the dubious name of 
Liquid Sex. "I don't think he was using this to oil  his six-shooters, do
you?"

Laughing, Methos shook his head.  "Oh, I don't know, Duncan.  He's still
young. I  suppose it could possibly be a six-shooter."

Groaning at the old man's never ending supply of ribald wit, Mac loosed his
hold.  "Like  I said, we need to meet Richie at eight, and, if we're gonna
maintain our cover as the  mature Immortals in the group, we need a shower." 
Tossing the lube back to Methos, Mac  asked over his shoulder, "Why'd you
pick that up anyway?"

Shoving the twisted, half empty tube back into his pocket, Methos tossed his
coat away.  "Future reference, Highlander.  Future reference.   Now, lay on,
MacDuff."

With a playful cuff to the side of Methos' head, Mac led the way to the
shower.  "That's  MacLeod, ye daft git.  MacLeod.  Though,"  he said
admiringly, "the whole 'not of  woman born' part does kinda fit, doesn't
it?"

Rolling his eyes, Methos silently resigned himself to a long homily on the
likelihood of  William Shakespeare knowing about Immortals and shoved Mac
inside.   



Mac and Methos entered Joe's bar promptly at eight, still squabbling as they
crossed the  floor to their waiting friends.  "Are you satisfied now,
MacLeod?  It's just now eight  o'clock.  I told you we wouldn't be late. 
After five thousand years, I've developed quite an  innate sense of time,
you know.  Never forget a date."

"Oh really.  If you hadn't suddenly had to rush back upstairs, I wouldn't
have had to  worry about it in the first place."  Rolling his eyes, he
turned to address the two men at the  table, "Hi guys!"  he said brightly. 
"How's it going Rich?"

"I'm okay, Mac."  Richie assured his mentor as the two Immortals sat down. 
"I still feel  kinda stupid, but heck, it coulda been worse."

"It certainly could have," Methos began ruminatively.

With a frown and  a discreet kick to the shin, Mac spoke up quickly, "I
called Amanda.  She says to tell you she'll take care of everything.  In
fact, she says we should have called  her in the first place."  He chuckled,
"She's probably right."

"She probably is, " Richie grinned back.

"Still," Methos took back the conversation firmly with a well placed kick of
his own.  Raising his voice over Mac's muffled "oomph", he continued, "you
must be a little sorry to  see her just ride off into the sunset like that."

Rubbing his shin under the table, Mac leveled a glare at his lover then
shrugged. Fine.  So much for subtle build-up.  "He's right, Rich.  You know,
it occurred to me you never  did really tell us how you came to be locked in
that cage."

Beaming approval at Mac, Methos closed in, "Yes, Richard.  I'd have thought
her  earthier aspects would've appealed to a maverick such as yourself.  How
is it the little lady  managed to lasso you?"

Leaning back a bit, Mac fell into the spirit of things.  "Ah yes, you were
caught slicker  than a beaver in a lard bucket."

Methos mumbled, "Oh brother."

Sniffing, Mac decided to cut to the chase.  "Spill it, Richie.  What
happened?"

Richie knew the time of reckoning was at hand, and he determined to be as 
matter-of-fact about it as possible.  No matter what the rest of them
thought, it wasn't his  fault that Taphelia Desmond had ...had....Looking
over at Joe, hoping for a rescue, he  realized the old bartender looked very
uncomfortable.  "Joe?  Are you all right?  What's  wrong?"

"Nothing," Joe said distractedly.  "I think."  Squirming in his seat, Joe
was bending this  way and that, engaging in incredible contortions as he
grabbed first at his back and then  dug in around his collar.  "I mean--
Hell!  There's something in here with me!"

Standing up with a jerk, Joe began tugging at the top of his shirt in
earnest.  "Here, no  here!  Gotcha!"

Realizing that almost every patron in the general vicinity was watching him
with the avid  interest they'd accord a new floor show, he colored and
grinned sheepishly as he brought  his now closed fist out of the back of his
shirt and slowly sat back down at the table.  "Methos, no doubt your bottle
is already empty.  When I open my fist you get ready to  whack it.  Ready?"

Opening his fist and jerking his hand out of the way before Methos could
crush his  fingers as he and his trusty weapon rode into the rescue, Joe
waited for the blow.  And  waited.  In the deathly quiet that descended on
the table, Joe stared in bemusement at a tiny  red lady bug, sauntering
across the top of the table as if it was right at home.

"What the?"  Richie raised his mug up to eye level and tried to peer inside. 
"Yuk!"  He  sat it down with  a thunk and pushed it carelessly across the
table.

"Richie!" Mac jumped back from the table as a golden stream of beer made its
way  across the surface to drip off the sides.  He had a sick feeling in the
pit of his  stomach as  he followed the direction of Richie's fascinated
gaze.

Joe had jumped for a towel as soon as the mishap occurred.  Now, he had
returned,but  instead of wiping up the spill, he too was looking at the
table with a deepening frown on his  face.  Half a dozen lady bugs were
trying to do the backstroke in the puddle made by  Richie's spilt beer.

"Oh no."  Mac moaned.  Rounding on Methos, he snarled.  "So you never forget
a date,  huh?  A human chronometer, huh?  Well, Mr. Perfect, you forgot
about the lady bugs!"

Methos stood up so fast his joints snapped, "I forgot!"

Hearing Joe's gasp of outrage, Mac agreed.  "I'm glad you admit it!"

"Why you--"

"STOP!"  Joe's voice quivered with suppressed outrage.  Turning to the man
who he'd  known in one form or the other for years, he said just two words,
"Why, Methos?"

As Methos stared in momentary stupification, Mac cast a dispairing look 
around the bar,  knowing he was going to have to tell Joe the truth. Mac saw
ladybugs at all compass  points.  There were bugs on the tables, bugs on the
light fixtures, and, worst of all, bugs on  the customers.  It was only a
matter of time--Mac's morose ramblings were interrupted  when a woman near
the front door screamed and began clawing at her hair.

That was all it took.  Within minutes, the entire bar was emptied, customers
running  screaming and cursing into the night.

"Well, if that doesn't just tear it!"  Joe would have said more but he
gagged suddenly.  With a terrible grimace, he grabbed a napkin and swiped it
across his mouth. "Shit.  I can't  believe this.  I still don't
believe...Methos!  What have you done?"

"Now that is enough.  I have sat here day in and day out, Joe Dawgghhaagg!" 
Choking  and gagging, Methos rid the world of one ill-fated ladybug.  Eyes
streaming, he whirled on  his heels and stalked toward the door.  "Coming,
MacLeod?"

"MacLeod!  You're not gonna leave here with that--that incubus, are you?"

Before Mac could offer any explanations or possible confessions, Methos had
turned  back around.  "Incubus!  Me?!  Who do you think unleashed this
little plague on you  anyway, Joe?  Hmm?  Why don't you check with Gregor
Powers?  Or, no, I'll just tell  you.  It was your pet Immortal, Duncan
MacLeod of the clan MacLeod, that's who.  Now,  I am leaving.  Alone. 
MacLeod, if you're interested, I'll find my own way home."

With that, Methos vanished into the night, leaving a very ill at ease
Highlander to face  two very suspicious faces.  Realizing Richie had been
abnormally quiet ever since the  invasion had begun, Mac wondered briefly if
he might find an ally there, but a quick look  told him Richie had, if
anything, an even more accusing look on his face than Joe did.

Falling back on the old 'best defense is a good offense' stratagem, Mac
began, "I really  don't know who I'm madder at, you for calling my lover a
succubus, or Methos for calling  me your pet Immortal!"  Crossing his arms,
Mac stood in martyred silence, the picture of  outraged innocence.

Recognizing it as the same look he'd tried to use earlier in the day, Richie
began to grin,  "Incubus," he murmured.

"What?"  Joe turned a startled look on the young man.

"Methos is an incubus.  Mac said 'succubus'.  That's a girl demon.  I'd say
all of us here  can vouch for the fact that Methos is 100% boy.  Isn't that
right, Mac?"

Feeling the heat of a blush rising up his neck, Mac could do nothing but
wait.

Wondering if the skewed reality he'd been living in the past few weeks was
permanent,  Joe flicked his towel to sweep a couple of lady bugs out of his
chair and sat back down.  Rubbing his hand across his face, he gave Mac a
long look, then began to laugh helplessly.  The big Scot had several lady
bugs scurrying about in his hair, and as Joe watched, one  tumbled over the
front of his forehead to land on the long slope of his nose.

As Mac began to brush frantically at his head and clothing, Joe smiled up at
him. "Aw,  give it up, MacLeod.  Was this your idea or wasn't it?"

Reaching over to pick a couple of bugs off Richie's back, Mac admitted
ruefully,  "It was  mine.  When you said that bit about bugs being a good
idea..." his voice trailed off as he  shrugged.  "I guess I got a little
carried away."

"Well," Joe shared a look with Richie, "Maybe we did carry that video stuff
a little too  far.  Wouldn't you agree, Rich?"

With a deep breath, Richie nodded.  "Yeah, we did.  It didn't seem quite so
funny when  I thought it was happening to me.  When Methos ask me if Taffy
had filmed...well," he  gave an exaggerated shudder, "let's just say, I
won't be making anymore dog jokes for a  while."

"Thanks, Rich."  Mac clapped his young friend on the shoulder.  "I
appreciate that. So  does Methos."

"Speaking of the old man," Joe spoke up, "when you catch up with him, tell
him I'm  sorry for that incubus crack, would you?  I'll just call the
exterminators in the morning..."

"Oh don't do that, Joe." Mac protested.  "It's really not necessary.  Gregor
said they'll  seek the nearest vegetation.  As soon as the sun rises in the
morning, just open up the  doors, and they'll be safely in the park by
midday."

Joe nodded slowly.  "Still, all these bugs.  I better shut 'er down for a
couple of days till I  can clean everything properly."

Mac shook his head again.  "Nope.  These are sterile lady bugs.  The only
place they've  been in the outside world is right here.  I'd wash the
glasses and table tops, but otherwise,  it should be fine."

Joe was admiring.  "Leave it to you, Mac.  Even when you 'get' me, you take
care of the  consequences.  Methos is right, you know."

"I am not your pet Immortal!"

"No, not that.  About you being a boyscout."

"Har har.  One of these days, you just may be surprised."

"Oh yeah."  Joe laughed.  "Let's get out of here.  I'm getting tired of
picking ladybugs  out of my teeth."

"Yuk."  Richie snickered, hurrying to the back hall to shut off the lights. 
"Hey, Mac?"

"Yeah, Rich?"

"You talked to Gregor Powers, right?"

Remembering Gregor's questions about Richie, Mac grinned as he led the way
out of the  bar, "Yes, I did.  He asked about you, as a matter of fact." 
Turning his head, Mac wasn't  surprised to  see Methos leaning against the
corner of the alley.

At the mention of Gregor, the old man moved closer.  "What about Gregor
Powers?"

Richie answered.  "Mac says he asked about me."

"About you?  Is that right?  Do tell, MacLeod."

Hooking an arm around his lover's neck, Mac drew him into the little group
that now  stood on the sidewalk while Joe double locked the door.  "Seems he
remembers you quite  well."

"He does?  Wow.  Where is he now anyway?"

"Florida.  I could give you his phone number if you like."

"Great, Mac!  Thanks."

"No problem.  Only come by to pick it up tomorrow, okay?  Right now, I have
a certain  crotchety old Immortal succubus to soothe."

"Incubus!" Joe shouted as Mac's mouth twitched with suppressed laughter.

"Dawson!"  Methos fairly growled the name.

"Now, now, Methos.  You took it totally the wrong way."

"Oh?  And just what is the right way?"

"I meant it as a compliment actually."

"A compliment?"  Mac was amused, but skeptical.  "How so?"

"You read much about incubi, Mac?"  At the negative shake of the
Highlander's head,  Joe continued, "Some very interesting traits--very
interesting, especially in the area of  sexuality.  If you know what I
mean."  Gesturing at the old Immortal still snug in the crook  of Mac's arm,
Joe was relieved to see that Methos was trying very hard not to smile.  "Ask 
him yourself.  I'm sure he'll be more than happy to tell you all about them. 
No doubt with  visual aids."

"No doubt."  Methos did smile then.

"Oh, and boys?"  Joe waited until he was sure he had the older Immortals'
attention.  "The next time one of you amateurs decides to play a practical
joke...don't. Otherwise, you  might just find yourselves up to your ass
cheeks in something a lot more interesting than  ladybugs."

As the two Immortals bristled in renewed outrage, Joe chuckled.  "No
offense, boys.  You're just outta your league.  Hey, Rich, if you come over
to my place, you won't have  to wait till tomorrow for the good Dr. Powers'
number.  I happen to recall it's right by my  phone where I left it when his
Watcher called me with a special report this morning.  Seems he knew
something strange was going on and he just thought I should have a head's 
up since he'd heard my name being tossed about."

Expounding on the efficiency of Watchers in the modern world,  Joe led a
grinning  Richie down the sidewalk, leaving 5500 years worth of chagrined
Immortals staring after  them.

Finally, Methos shrugged and turned towards the car.  "Hey, MacLeod?"

"Yeah?"  Mac still sounded disgusted.

"How do you feel about zucchini?"   


=the end=

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