Darkness Series
Part 13:...Down, Dark Places...
The psychiatrist disconnected the
call and stared down the surface of his desk, struggling to deal with what he
had just heard. Jarod is dead. The three words made their way to the forefront
of his mind, forced themselves on his attention, but he couldn't take in their
meaning.
"Sydney?"
Slowly raising his head, he saw Miss
Parker in the doorway. She walked in and shut the door.
"Did she say... what I think she
did?"
"That depends, Miss
Parker." His voice was gentle. "What do you think she said?"
She looked up at him, seeing the
shock in his eyes and a lack of emotion on the rest of his face.
"We should go there. Tomorrow.
Perhaps we can..."
"Can what, Parker?" Sydney
looked up. "It's too late to do anything now. Jarod's dead." He
stated the words without really believing them, staring down again.
"We need to be sure - see a
report or something. The Triumvirate won't be convinced without it."
"The Triumvirate..." His
voice was a faint whisper and she looked at him sharply.
"Sydney, are you okay?"
"I'm alive, Parker."
"That wasn't the question,"
she told him sharply.
"No." He looked up at her.
"But that was the answer."
* * *
Sydney slipped into the back seat of
the car, the autopsy report still held firmly in his hand and his eyes fixed to
the floor of the vehicle as his mind went back over the conversation in that
room.
"... Personally, I’d say the chances of him knowing anything after the building came crashing down on his head were pretty remote…"
Those harsh words, that grim reality,
forced him to open the folder and extract the photos, eyeing every mark, every
wound, every bruise and finally the picture showing the man lying on the bed,
surrounded by machinery, his head and face marred by the injuries that the
falling structures had caused.
"Syd?"
He raised his head as Miss Parker
slid onto the seat beside him, leaving Lyle and Broots to take those in the
front. Gently she took the photos out of Sydney's hand and looked at them while
he read the report. Jarod Hamilton. Deceased. Still, the term had no meaning.
It wasn't that he was denying it. Just that the word had no meaning. Nothing
did. Not anymore.
As she felt the car stop, Miss Parker
lifted her head to see a pile of rubble in front of them.
"Well, that's it."
"That's what, Lyle?" She
looked sharply at him and he held up a slip of paper.
"That's where it happened."
"How do you know?"
"Only building to collapse in
this area five days ago."
She nodded, her eyes traveling over
the heap of stones and twisted metal, trying to imagine what could have
prompted Jarod to go inside it. Looking back down at the photos, her eyes wandered
over the bruises and cuts on his face, the closed eyes and the tube that
vanished into his mouth, the other end having been cut off several inches above
his lips. She managed to prevent herself from looking at the misshapen head,
the twisted limbs and the deep cuts that were shown on the other photos,
focusing only on that showing his face, which bore an expression that could
almost be called peace, if it wasn't already more accurately described as
death.
* * *
He stepped out of the vehicle and
stood for several moments, staring blankly up at the building in front of him.
"Sydney?"
"Major." He turned and held
out one hand. "Thank you."
"For?"
"Trusting me enough to meet me
here."
"You said it was
important."
"It is." Sydney pulled the
folder out from under his arm. "I think, though, that you should sit down
before you look at this."
Major Charles narrowed his eyes.
"What are you trying to tell me, Sydney?"
Sydney swallowed hard and then looked
at the man again. "That your son is dead."
"No…" The man's voice was a
faint whisper and he put out a hand, grasping at the top of the car, trying to
hold himself up.
"I'm sorry." Sydney offered
the report. "I really am so sorry."
"But... when?"
"Fifteen days ago."
"And you waited until
now?!" A tone of anger came back into the father's voice as he reached out
a hand and seized the folder.
"I couldn't tell you before now,
because I didn't believe it myself." The sadness in Sydney’s voice broke
through the anger in that of the other man. "I couldn't try to convince
you of something that I wasn't able to believe."
Major Charles looked up, pain in his
eyes but calmness on his face. He waved towards the house and blinked away
tears. "Come in, Sydney. Come in and help me tell the others."
* * *
"So... why did you come, Sydney?
Why not just..."
"Just what?" The
psychiatrist looked up as the young woman asked the question. "I couldn't
have sent it to you because there was no guarantee that you would have received
it."
"Why?"
"The Centre's tightened their
controls on us - on all of us - since we first heard about it. If I'd sent it
to you, it would simply have led them to you."
"But - you aren't leading them
to us now?"
Sydney looked over at the young man
who sat quietly in the corner, the pain he felt increasing as he eyed the boy’s
features, forced to remember the man he came from. "I took a chance that I
had while out with the others in the hunt for you all to slip away and made my
way here." He wearily passed a hand over his eyes. "I've been driving
for three days trying to make the path as complex as possible, so that they
wouldn't find you."
"So... if they're not looking
for him anymore, does that mean...?"
"The hunt for all of you has
been intensified. They're determined that they won't get the chance to 'lose'
any more of you." Sydney's lips twisted as he said the words, struggling
to maintain control. "That's all they view it as - a simple loss of a
'project'. Nothing more."
"What are we going to do now?"
Sydney looked at the older woman, who
hadn’t spoken before this since his arrival, tears pouring down her face as she
absorbed the news of her oldest son’s death.
"I know what I'd like to
do."
"And that is?"
He met Major Charles' eye as the
other man asked the question. "Avenge your son's death in the only fitting
way."
"You mean...?"
"The Centre's destroyed lives
for forty years. I think it's time they stopped." He paused. "That
they were stopped. By us."
"Five of us?"
"Nine of us," stated a new
voice.
The group turned, as one, towards the
doorway to see the other four that stood there. Sydney got to his feet, feeling
the others tense.
"Please Parker, no."
She shook her head, understanding. "No, Sydney. I'm
here for the same reason you are. If you’re going to destroy the Centre, I want
to be a part of it. We all do."
* * *
Sydney looked over at Angelo and
Ethan, seeing the expression of frustration on the latter's face as he read
through the article that had come about as a result of the weeks of hard work.
"What is it, Ethan?"
"It's not true, Sydney. He's not
dead."
The older man leaned forward. "I
know that it's hard to come to terms with..."
"So why is she telling me that
he isn't?"
The psychiatrist’s eyebrows rose.
"I… I don't understand."
"Ever since my sister turned up
one my doorstep, I've heard her voice saying to me that he isn't dead, but that
there's a good reason for the whole thing."
"Ethan, much as I want to trust
the voice you hear, I can't deny what was in front of me. I saw that report and
heard what the doctor said." He swallowed painfully. "Jarod is dead,
Ethan, and we're just going to have to accept that."
"Not... dead..."
The two looked over at the empath and
a tear dimmed Sydney's eye as he shook his head. "Yes, Angelo. He
is."
Ethan turned on him angrily
"Doesn't it tell you anything that both of us are being told he's
alive?"
"It tells me," Sydney said
quietly, "that you're in denial, and that Angelo is absorbing that
emotion. It's the same sort of denial that I was in for the first two
weeks."
"No, Sydney, I..."
"Ethan, please." The older
man looked up. "She’s got no reason to lie. If the Triumvirate had told us
that Jarod had died and I’d seen an autopsy from them, I might have had my
doubts, but this is from somebody totally unconnected with the Centre. She has
no reason to make something like this up and that convinces me more than
anything else that it's true."
As he got up to leave the room, he
saw the expression in the eyes of the woman who had silently entered some time
before and obviously heard at least some of what had passed. With an effort, he
avoided Miss Parker's eye and Sydney closed the door softly behind himself as
he left.
* * *
Sydney felt the pain in his head before he was fully awake and squinted into the bright sunlight as it streamed through his bedroom window. Struggling into a sitting position, Sydney waited for his eyes to adjust and then slowly got out of bed. He could feel vicious throbbing in his temples as he headed into the bathroom and moaned softly. The pain, which had begun soon after finding out about Jarod, had been gone for the last couple of weeks but it was clearly now back, and worse than he remembered it. As water filled the sink in front of him, he leaned his head against the tiles for a moment and then looked up at himself in the mirror.
"Sydney?"
Turning, he saw Michelle in the
doorway. She walked over and slipped her arms around him. "Are you
okay?"
"I'll survive."
"That pain's back, isn't
it?"
He nodded silently.
"Why don't you go and see
somebody about it?"
Shrugging, Sydney turned away.
"It's probably nothing."
"But it might be something.
Something serious."
"If it gets worse, I'll think
about it."
"If it gets too much worse, you
might not be able to think at all." She cast a frustrated look over her
shoulder as she left the bathroom. "I'm going to start breakfast. Don't be
too long."
* * *
"Dad, are you okay?"
Sydney looked up to meet his son’s
concerned gaze. "I'm fine. Really."
"Well, you don't look it."
Nicholas looked up as his mother entered the room. "Have you noticed it
too?"
"Of course I have."
Michelle's tone was sharper than usual. "And I've been trying to persuade
him to see someone about it for a year now."
Nicholas looked startled. "A
year?"
"A little over, in fact,
yes." Michelle got up as there was a knock on the door and opened it.
"Miss Parker! How nice to see you."
"Hi, Michelle. We were in the
neighborhood..."
"We?" Sydney glanced up to
see Broots in the doorway behind Miss Parker and tried to smile.
"Hi, Syd."
Broots spoke before he looked at the
older man, and then his eyes widened. A subtle nudge from Miss Parker made him
keep silent as she spoke.
"We brought something that you
might be interested in seeing."
She pulled a magazine out of the
former technician's hand and, opening it at a certain page, gave it to Sydney.
"Debbie left it on the kitchen
table when she went to school and I saw it." Broots sat in a chair that
Michelle indicated, his eyes fixed on Sydney's face, seeing the emotion that
appeared in the older man’s eyes. "I told Parker about it and she
suggested we bring it to show you."
Michelle looked over his shoulder to
see the two models on the page. She couldn’t recognize the woman, but thought
that she would have known the man anywhere, having seen, every morning, a photo
of Jarod that sat on a shelf in Sydney's room. The psychiatrist’s voice, as he
gazed down at the face, was choked.
"And… is it...?"
"It's an old shoot, Syd. Almost
fifteen months old. We rang the magazine to be sure, but I thought you might
want to see it anyway."
Sydney's eyes seemed caught in those
of the man who stared out of the pages at him. Emotions that he had been
suppressing for so long, aware that they swirled just below the surface, were
now rising up and making it difficult to breath. Finally a movement from the
other side of the room broke the spell and he looked up.
"Thank you."
Miss Parker nodded, her eyes on his face
as he slowly rose. Michelle placed a hand on his arm.
"Where are you...?"
"I'll be right back."
* * *
It was Miss Parker who found him,
slumped unconscious in the doorway of his bedroom, his face chalk-white, nearly
twenty minutes later.
"Sydney?" She dropped to
her knees and shook him. "Syd, wake up. Come on, look at me."
Placing one hand on his wrist, she
found his pulse and was reassured that it was still fairly strong as she raised
her voice and called for help.
"Dad?"
Nicholas knelt beside his father and
rolled the man onto his side, feeling for pulse and respiration, before looking
up at Broots. "Call an ambulance."
"No…"
The man’s voice was faint and
Nicholas looked down in time to see his father's eyes open as he slowly shook
his head and struggled to sit up. His son prevented it. "Dad, you're not
well. Surely you can see that. Let us take you to a doctor."
"No, I'm... fine." Sydney
swallowed with difficulty. "I just need... rest."
"You'd rest better in a
hospital. Then we could find out what's really wrong with you." He looked
up as Miss Parker placed an arm around Michelle's shoulders. As Nicholas
nodded, the younger woman led the older one back into the living room. The
young man looked again at his father.
"Dad, please. We're worried
about you."
"No, Nicholas." Sydney
pulled himself into a sitting positing, leaning against the doorframe.
"I'll be fine."
"You don't look fine." With
nobody to stop him, Broots spoke the words that were in his mind. "In
fact, you look terrible."
"Thanks." Sydney smiled
faintly and then looked at his son. "Just... help me into bed and then go
check on your mother."
Nicholas raised an eyebrow, his eyes
traveling over his father’s white face. "Sure?"
"Positive."
* * *
Sydney glanced at Michelle,
frustration evident on his face. "I think this is somewhat needless."
She looked at him. "Sydney,
you've fainted four times in the last four months and that's four times too
many for my liking. I'm tired of finding you lying on the floor." As
emotion came into Michelle's eyes, she covered his hand with hers.
"Please, I'm worried about you. We both are. Let's just see what she
says."
He nodded slowly, slipping one arm
around her shoulders. "All right."
She leaned back, resting her head on
his arm and looking up at him. "And you'll do what she tells you to,
right?"
"We'll see."
Michelle pulled away. "You'll
what?!"
Sydney tried to smile. "I was
only joking."
She narrowed her eyes. "I don't
think I like your jokes."
* * *
"Sydney, I wish you'd come to
see me earlier about this." The doctor looked up at the couple that sat
opposite her. "I'm not comfortable with my own diagnosis. I want to send
you to a specialist."
Michelle’s voice was tense with
anxiety. "Dr. Hutchinson, what do you think it is?"
The woman looked down at the results
of the blood tests in front of her and then up again, with a sigh. "As I
said, I'm not completely satisfied with my own diagnosis but it... looks like
cancer." She eyed her patient with a certain degree of severity. "As
a doctor yourself, Sydney, I would have expected you to see the warning signs
and come to me earlier than this."
She looked down, quickly writing a
letter, which she slid into an envelope, thereby missing the sharp glance that
Michelle shot at Sydney, to which he responded with a weak smile.
"This is my referral to Dr.
Crawford at St. Luke's. He's an expert in this field. His rooms are within the
hospital itself, so I'd like you to go there and let him run all of the
relevant tests there."
"St. Luke's?" Sydney,
attention caught by the name, looked up. "Do you mean St. Luke's Hospital
in Helena?"
"You know it?"
"I've been there once." He
paused. "Has Dr. Crawford been there long?"
"As I understand it, no."
Dr. Hutchinson handed the letter over and leaned back in her chair. "He's
only been in his position as head of the hospital for five and a half months.
But I've sent several other patients to him and I'm satisfied with him. I think
he'll be able to give you the best treatment. I'll see if I can make an
appointment for you now."
As she picked up the phone, Michelle
saw the tears glinting in Sydney's eyes and placed on hand on his, her voice
low.
"What is it?"
"That's the place where..."
"Jarod?"
He nodded speechlessly and looked
down at the envelope. His breath caught in his throat as he held it out to her.
She glanced from him down to the hand-written direction. Dr. Jarod Crawford.
Michelle gently squeezed his hand and watched as he fought to keep away the
tears.
"I've made an appointment for
later this evening." The doctor looked up. "It’s the only chance for
some time, and I'd like to get the results as quickly as possible, so that you
can begin treatment immediately. His secretary said she would arrange a hotel
room for you close by, so you can get there easily."
The man looked up, startled. "A
hotel?"
"Sydney, I want you to take it
easy and you won't do that if you have to sort it out for yourself. My
secretary will be able to give you the details when you leave and I’d suggest
you go home, pack a few things for a couple of days' stay and then catch a
train." She eyed him severely. "No driving, understand?"
He nodded and got to his feet,
holding out a hand. "Thank you, Dr. Hutchinson."
"Give my compliments to Dr.
Crawford when you see him."
"I will."
* * *
Sydney made his way slowly along the
street, stopping in front of the familiar building and looking at it for
several minutes, blinking the tears out of his eyes, before he slowly made his
way up the few stairs.
"Can I help you sir?"
He smiled faintly at the woman.
"Can you direct me to Dr. Crawford's rooms?"
"Which one, sir?"
Sydney looked startled. "Dr.
Jarod Crawford." The name, for some reason, came out easily.
"Certainly." She smiled.
"The elevators are just around the corner to the right and his consulting
suite in on the first floor. You'll see the sign as soon as you get out of the
lift."
"Thank you."
Sydney looked around as he waited for
the elevator to arrive, hating déjà vu he was experiencing. Dr. Austen's room
had also been on the first floor. Struggling to suppress a shudder, the man got
into the lift, and, as he had been instructed, saw the sign the moment that he
came out. Dr. Jarod Crawford, and, below it, a sign for a Dr. Nicole Crawford.
Slowly he walked in the direction that the first sign indicated.
* * *
He watched as a patient came out,
speaking with the receptionist before leaving the office and he was alone in
the waiting room. After a brief period, the woman lifted the receiver of the
phone.
"Dr. Crawford?"
Sydney was unable to hear the
response but could hear the next comment. "You have another patient to
see. He made a late appointment on a referral from Dr. Hutchinson. I'm still
filling out his card."
After a pause, she hung up the phone
and then turned to him. "You can go in."
He smiled faintly at her as he stood
and went over to the door, opening it and, without looking up, closed it behind
him, his mind so busy that the words spoken by the occupant were nothing more
than a low murmur. Slowly he turned, raising his eyes to look at the medical
practitioner, and then Sydney gasped.
* * *
He raised the fork to his mouth,
eating a small amount of meat and with his eyes fixed on the man seated
opposite, who protested indignantly.
"Sydney, it's hard to eat under
such close scrutiny!"
"Oh, come on, Jarod."
Nicole sipped her wine, smiling. "He hasn't seen you for so long that
surely he's allowed to look at you."
"I don't mind him looking at
me." Jarod put the fork down beside his plate and looked up. "But
it’s making me feel ever so slightly self-conscious when I'm being inspected at
such close quarters." He paused. "I don't think Sydney would be very
happy if I was doing it to him - and, as his doctor, I'm even allowed to!"
Laughing, Jarod continued to eat the
meal his wife had prepared, looking up occasionally. Finally Nicole broke the
silence.
"I just had a thought."
"Did it hurt?" her husband
enquired, laughing.
She playfully slapped Jarod's arm.
"Thanks ever so much!"
"You're ever so welcome."
Sydney looked over at her. "What
was your thought, Dr. Austen?"
Jarod sent a mock-glare over the
table at him. "Two points to remember, here, Sydney. First, and foremost,
she's married now."
"Dr. Crawford, then."
Sydney's lips twitched as he pronounced the name. "What's the
second?"
"She has got a first name."
"I couldn't..."
"I'd rather you did,
Sydney." Nicole reached out to place a hand over his. "We don't usually
invite patients around for dinner, so that puts you in a special league
immediately. And secondly, after everything I've heard about you, I don't think
I could bear it if we used titles and surnames all the time. So, please, call
me Nicole and I'll call you Sydney. After all," she laughed, "I
called you that the first time we ever spoke."
Jarod grinned. "And very
impolite it was, too."
"Well, you should have put his
last name into your phone and then it would have been easier."
"All you had to do was
ask."
"Uh, Jarod, dear, might I remind
you that you weren't supposed to be particularly conscious at the time. As far
as most people knew, you were as unconscious as it gets."
"Hmm, yes," Jarod mused.
"I had forgotten, actually. Funny how life gets in the way of little
things like that."
In an effort to hide the emotion he
felt at Jarod's words, Sydney spoke again. "So what was your thought,
Nicole?"
Hearing the tone of his voice, Jarod
looked up sharply but remained silent. His wife answered the question with a
smile. "I was thinking that one of you should probably call Michelle once
as we've finished dinner. I'm sure she's worried. After all," Nicole cast
a teasing glance at her husband and then at Sydney. "You've been to see a
specialist who’s the head of the hospital, which must make him..."
She stopped suddenly as Jarod placed
one hand over her mouth. "While I might think your idea's a good one, I'm
not going to let you finish that sentence, no matter how much you might want
to."
"You never like flattery."
Her voice was slightly muffled but still audible.
"Nor do you." His eyes
twinkled. "I have a vague recollection, one day when I was still a patient
at our hospital, of a certain Dr. Barnard being flattering at the same time as
he was trying to get me off his hands, and you..."
She wriggled out from his grasp and
placed her own hand over his mouth, laughing as she spoke. "You ought to
have been in no fit state even for vague recollections at that time."
Nicole narrowed her eyes. "Or had you pulled your I.V. out again and were
just pretending to be sedated?"
"Hey, I promised!" he
protested indignantly.
His wife looked over at Sydney.
"Does he keep his promises?"
"Well, he used to," the
older man admitted.
Jarod caught the tone in his voice and
the amusement died out of his eyes. He put his knife and fork together on the
plate and looked up.
"Should we call Michelle?"
* * *
"Do you have everything you
need, Sydney?"
He looked up to find Jarod leaning
against the doorframe with his arms folded and a smile on his face.
"I think so." Sydney
glanced around. "This part of the house is newer than downstairs, isn't
it?"
"Yes. While we were vacationing
after the wedding, the house was renovated so that it was better suited to a
family and not two single people." Jarod grinned. "They even managed
to get it done on time."
"You didn't build it yourself,
then?"
"Hey, I'm a doctor! Doctors
don't build!"
Sydney's lips twitched in amusement.
"And builders don't usually doctor."
"So when was I a builder?"
"Oh, at some point, I'm
sure." The look of humor vanished. "In fact, I'd suggest that was how
you and Thomas met."
"You're right." Jarod
stepped into the room, his own face serious and eyes sad. "It was."
"I thought so." Sydney
swallowed hard. "One day Parker started talking to me about comparisons
between the two of you." He looked up. "It was hard on her when she
thought you’d died, Jarod."
"Death is never easy, Sydney.
Even for the deceased." Jarod hesitated. "By doing what we did, it
meant that I was cut off from everyone that I may have wanted to contact - my
family, you, in fact all the people who were important to me. But it seemed
like the only possible solution at the time. Regardless of the way I was, they
would still have dragged me back and worked out a way to get me to do
simulations. I couldn't even walk at the time, let alone run, so the chances of
them catching me were high."
Sydney nodded. "I can understand
how you would have felt that way. I just wish, after you knew it was all over,
that you'd let us know you were still alive." His eyes narrowed
thoughtfully. "How did your family find out?"
"Just a sec. I'll show
you."
He heard Jarod's footsteps descending
the stairs and used the time to sit in the chair beside the bed with a weary
sigh.
"Tired?"
Sydney stared up at him in disbelief.
"How on earth did you hear that all the way down there?"
Jarod raised an eyebrow, grinning.
"I've just lived for months without sight. As you, of all people, should
know, it improves your hearing." He held out an album so that Sydney could
see a copy of the picture showing himself and the former head of the hospital.
"They found that and realized it had to mean I was still alive, so they
came by and gave me the fright of my life by sneaking up on me one day when I
was in the park." He chuckled, taking the book out of the older man's
hands. "And now, as your doctor, I'm ordering you to go to bed."
Sydney rolled his eyes. "You're
going to take this all the way, aren't you?"
"Oh, of course," Jarod grinned.
"With such a wonderful opportunity, I'd be silly not to, wouldn't you
say?"
* * *
"Why do you call him that?"
Ann eyed at Sydney. "What
'Mystery Man?’" She laughed. "When Jarod turned up at the hospital,
he had no identification and nobody he wanted us to contact. That was
interesting to start with but then I began to learn all sorts of things about
him, including the fact that the last name he gave us wasn't his real one.
After that, I learnt about the Centre."
He looked at her in astonishment as
she steered the car out of the hospital parking lot. "You knew about that?
How?"
"Nicole told me, in case
someone, like Lyle for instance, decided to come and ask me questions."
Sydney nodded. "So you know
about me, too."
"Not really. Nicole thought
you'd be the least likely person to come."
"I did think about it on a few
occasions,” he admitted. “But I didn't really want to know."
"I can imagine." Ann's
voice was soft. "I think that in the same situation, I wouldn't have
wanted to know either."
Blinking to erase the memory of the
autopsy pictures from his mind, he looked up at her. "But you weren't ever
his doctor?"
"Not really. My work is in
Emergency. I patch them up and then hand them on to someone else to deal
with." Ann rolled her eyes. "And in his case, I was glad to do
so."
Sydney raised an eyebrow. "Jarod
was a difficult patient?"
"Well, let's just say that's the
only time I ever heard that name and the word 'patient' in the same
sentence..."
* * *
Sydney looked up as Jarod was drying
his hands and found the younger man watching him. "I'm not your patient
anymore, Dr. Crawford," he laughed. "So I think you’ve just lost the
right that you claimed last night."
"Not at all." Jarod
grinned. "You're still under medical supervision - at least until you get
rid of the traces of those shadows under your eyes, anyway. And your
newly-found fainting tendencies."
"Michelle told you about that, I
take it."
"She and Dr. Hutchinson. But I
think it was rather careless of you not to tell me yourself." Jarod became
more serious. "I would have kept a closer eye on your blood
pressure."
"There's nothing wrong with
me," the psychiatrist insisted.
"And Michelle was very relieved
to hear me say so."
The older man raised an eyebrow.
"So you told her before you told me?"
"I’d had the results delivered
to me just before she rang so I told her while I wrote up my report. I didn’t
think you’d mind."
Sydney nodded slowly and then looked
up again. "What else did you say to her that you haven't told me
yet?"
Jarod raised his hands innocently.
"What makes you think that?"
"That very familiar expression
that I can see in your eyes right now makes me know that." Sydney caught
Nicole's eye. "It's the same as the one I was telling you about
earlier."
"I should never have left you
two alone together," the younger man muttered.
"Well, you did, so it's a little
late for regrets now."
"Thanks." Jarod looked at
his wife. "Your support is invaluable."
She laughed. "Hey, I can't
support both of you at once!"
He smiled at her and then turned to
stare out of the window for several moments.
"Jarod," the other man
stated flatly, his eyes twinkling with amusement.
"Well?"
"You still haven't told me what
it was."
Jarod raised an eyebrow as he looked
over. "And my dad called me tenacious!"
"Are you going to tell me what
it was or not?"
He rolled his eyes, looking up to see
the expression of amusement on his wife's face. "For that, Nicole, you can
say it. After all, it was your idea, not mine."
"Oh, you would have come up with
it eventually. After all, you're the genius."
"But you were the one who did
come up with it, so you can ask him."
"Are you sure you don't want
to?"
"Is anybody going to say it or
should I give up hoping here and now?"
Jarod laughed as he looked at Sydney.
"What happened to the tenacity?"
Nicole smiled. "It was an idea I
came up with last night." She glanced at Sydney, her face serious.
"As you know, we had a new bed delivered today and it struck me that we
seemed to have a new occupant delivered as well." Her lips twitched as she
saw the laughter in her husband's eyes. "So what I'd like to ask is
whether you and Michelle would like to consider this as much your home as
anywhere else that you've been living."