TITLE: Not Dead
AUTHOR: Makiko (makikosab@hotmail.com)
SPOILERS: Through 321: "Into the Lion's Den, pt. 2." Doesn't take 322 into account.
Still, Americans and folks not on tape trains might want to steer clear. At least until
April.
ARCHIVE: Anywhere, but wait until they've aired. I will repost in April, just in case.
CATEGORY: some J/A
SUMMARY: Withheld
DISCLAIMER: RSO'B, DK, The Jim Henson Company, Hallmark, and SFC own.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: Punk helped, because we write together even if I've got
Aeryn and she's got Lex's shiny bald head. And this, this is for Pene.
SOUNDTRACK: Duende, "Sometimes You Gotta Let the House Fall."
makikoscape: http://www.grapefruithead.com/makiko/farscape.htm








Aeryn's taken to carrying around a bottle of water with a metal screw cap and a loop that
attaches to her belt. At least he thinks it's water. She reminds him of those kids in high
school who went on Outward Bound, half bent from the weight of oversized backpacks
and always a little shivery even in Nepalese sweaters, with that look that says they're just
a little better than you are because they've got water and a backpack and they'll be okay if
the world ends. He thinks, Aeryn will be okay if the world ends. He thinks, she's a little
bent and shivery too.

He feels older, but not as old as Aeryn looks. When she's not working -- and she's almost
always working -- she's in a corridor somewhere, crouched and quiet, whispering to
Moya. Melodrama, he recognizes the signs. "I am sorry," he heard her say once, and she
punched the "am" and sounded pretentious. And he felt embarrassed for her, like she was
looking for pity, but then at night he'd swear he could hear Moya calling and crying, and
he'd feel like an asshole again.

It's a mourning competition, and he's losing.

A day goes by, and another, and Spanky's spread out on the command floor mapping
battle plans, and Pip's convinced her calls are being traced by Nebari baddies, and
D'Argo's teaching Jool to fly his ship.

All Crichton has, as his own, to mourn for, is Scorpius. And all he has to keep him
company when he does it is Harvey, who laughs at him.

It is one of these days with Rygel on the floor and Chi on the phone, and Harvey singing
"It's My Party and I'll Cry if I Want To," and Crichton's in his quarters, cleaning Winona
and trying not to hum along. The door chime sounds bizarre. He says "come in," without
realizing it, or maybe he sings it. Aeryn comes in.

"John."

"Hey, Aeryn." He puts the gun down.

"What was your mother's name?"

It's more than she's said to him in too long, and he wants to say, "thank you for talking to
me," but he doesn't. "My mom?"

She's got that serious look, like the chick in the back row in science class, hunched over
her notebook, writing poetry, begging for acknowledgement, her profundity lost in a
misunderstanding world.

"Never mind," Aeryn says, and she turns to leave, and he wants to say "don't go," but he
doesn't. He wants to grab her. He doesn't.

"Why do you want to know?" he says, standing up, but she's gone again. He picks up
Winona, and Harvey is giggling.

He laughed at his mother's funeral, and he hasn't forgiven himself for it yet. It was
nervous, but it was laughing, and the look his father gave him wasn't anger, wasn't even
disappointment, just scared. The minister had said something and it reminded John of
something and he can't remember what, but he laughed, quick, clapped a hand over his
mouth and his father looked so scared, sitting there next to him with wide, weary eyes.
His father cried. John didn't cry.

He tries to think about Scorpius again. Rubber-stretched face and that wise cackle, that
slow, delicate tease of torture, the comic-book arch-nemesis. Intimate. He knows what it
was.

"Naturally," Harvey says. "He was your very own. You two were well matched. It's a
shame, really."

Harvey's called up the church, the day of John's mother's funeral. Harvey and John, side-
by-side, in the pews. Harvey is laughing. "Like this?" Harvey says. "Is this what it was
like?"

"No," Crichton says, and misses the real Scorpius. "You don't know me."

"Ah, my dear John, are we back there again? We're buddies. Pals. Comrades in arms, you
and me. I know everything. And I can tell you this much -- " Crichton doesn't want to
hear it, and the church echoes. "He would miss you too."

"Makes sense," Crichton says. "All those times he tried to kill me and drink my brains
like Gatorade."

"He would miss you if you left him," Harvey says, and they run for the bus stop, too late.
"Of course, he'd laugh too."

Crichton collapses on his bed, closes his eyes. "At least Aeryn's not pretending she's
mourning for Scorpius," he says.

"At least," Harvey agrees, nodding enthusiastically. "That would be ridiculous."

"It'd be insane," Crichton says.

"Stranger things have happened, of course," Harvey says, and goes back to his knitting.

It's later and Rygel's drawing up blueprints and Chiana's on the phone, speaking in code.
The DRDs are on vacation, because Crichton thought they deserved it and Pilot pretended
to agree.

Aeryn's working in the StarBurst chamber, and Crichton's spotting, doing the work of
four DRDs because it seems like a good idea. She's wearing the green shirt, the one he
likes, the one Crais said she picked up while they were on Talyn. The one Crais always
liked.

He remembers when Crais told him that, the twang of jealousy for no reason. He
remembers Crais. He misses Crais, but he can't miss Crais, because when they all got
back from the command carrier Aeryn sent a message to Crais' parents expressing her
grief. Hers. Not the crew's grief, hers. When she mutters to Moya, she says "I miss Talyn
too." Not "we miss." Never "we." There's no "we" anymore with Aeryn, and no "we" for
John now that Scorpius is gone.

He hands Aeryn a little air puffer and a sponge and he feels like a manicurist, but she's
down on her hands and knees staring into the glow of the StarBurst chamber and she
couldn't see him if she tried.

"Elizabeth," he says.

"Excuse me?" She doesn't look up.

"Was my mother's name," he says. "Libby. I know you sent a message to Crais' parents. I
know you've been sharing your grief with Moya, so I just wanted you to have the
complete set. You know, Aeryn's band of merry mourners." He wants to punch himself
for that, but it's not like her face changes any.

"Thank you," she says, and goes back to the thing with the sponge and the air and the
light. He sits next to her.

It's been two weeks and if this goes on any longer he's going to throw a tantrum. "Aeryn,"
he says. "We need to talk."

"Box spanner," she says. He hands it to her. "We do?"

"Listen," he says. "I miss Crais too. I feel bad about Talyn too. I hurt for Moya too."

"You didn't know them," she says through clenched teeth. He hears "they're not yours"
and in there "I'm not yours either."

"Yes, Aeryn, I did," he says, and he stares into the light. She's polished the panel to a
sickening iridescence, and she's working on the crystal bolts now, unscrewing each one,
cleaning it, putting it back. "I knew Crais. He was my friend. What he did for us --"

"What he did, he did because he has the morals of a Peacekeeper," Aeryn says. "He
sacrificed himself because he couldn't allow Scorpius to complete his research. He didn't
do it for us, Crichton. He didn't do it for you."

But she doesn't sound angry, she sounds...bored. Like she's said it before. Like she's
memorized a script and she's not a very good actress, and she doesn't really care one way
or the other. Almost sing-song. He wants to laugh, nervous, and Harvey says, "See? I told
you. Laughing."

Crichton bites his tongue, because he was about to say, "Crais killed my Scorpius!" and
he can't believe it himself. Harvey's found Star Trek pinball in his brain. Winner alarms
ring.

"What's wrong with you?" Crichton says instead. "I mean, aside from --"

"There's nothing wrong with me, Crichton," Aeryn says. She looks at him. "Really." That
bad actress again.

"Can I -- tell you something?"

She sighs. "Of course."

"I sorta miss Scorpius," he says, mostly to see what she'll do. "I mean, not the super-
villain stuff. But he was a big part of my life out here. A lot of what distracted me from
trying to get home, you know? Like all I had."

"Like my mother," she says, and looks back into the depths of the iridescent pit. "You
never knew her." Like he's forgotten that.

He stands up. "You need anything else?" he asks. She doesn't answer, and he doesn't let
himself hope it's because she wants him to stay. When she looks up, she has a wrench in
her mouth. She takes it out and wipes it on her sleeve.

"I'm sorry?"

"No," he shakes his head, and Harvey goes back to his knitting. "I'm sorry." He turns to
leave.

"John."

He wheels around. "What do I -- what do I have to do, Aeryn? I have to DIE to get you to
talk to me? Is that it? Because I'll tell you, you never paid this much attention to Crais or
Talyn when they were alive!"

"I'm talking to you now," she says. Quietly. He shakes his head.

"Sorry."

"No, John," she says. "I'm talking to you. I'm talking to you now."

He feels immediately guilty, and she doesn't look so much like those broody teenagers he
used to hate. She just looks like Aeryn, and sad, and just a little bit beautiful. Most of the
time he turns and sees her and his breath catches, because he can't believe how beautiful
she is, but this time it looks familiar, and that's better. He sees himself in her face. He
smiles.

"Sorry," he says again. He sits down, crouches really, and plays with the wrench on the
ground.

"He's not dead, you know," she says. "Scorpius."

He blows air between his lips. "They never are."

"No," she says. "Sometimes they are."

"Yeah," he says. "Sometimes they are." He remembers his mother and he doesn't laugh
this time. Harvey curls up on the end of the sofa and goes to sleep.

"I wish you could have known him," she says. "I mean, I know you know him, you ARE
him, but I wish --"

"Because he died for the cause, and I didn't," Crichton says.

"Because he died and I didn't," Aeryn says. "And Crais!" He feels like she's changing the
subject, and he lets her. "Crais died and I didn't. And here we are."

"We took out the command carrier. We got rid of Scorpius," Crichton says. "We're done."

"Maybe."

"And here we are."

She nods. "See."

He does, finally. "Aeryn --" But he doesn't know how to say it. "Did he ever say
anything? About -- what he wanted to do -- I mean -- about going back home?"

"Yes," she says, and for a minute it feels like all she'll say. "We talked about it."

Crichton looks at the floor, spins the wrench and watches it bleed into a circle. "Good,
okay," he says. "I was just curious."

"I wasn't sure," she says. "No. I was sure. I would have gone with him."

"Me too," Crichton says, and tries to laugh. The wrench stops.

"But I had the chance to see him again, and I said no --" She presses her palms to her
knees, hoists herself up like an old woman. "I said no, I was a Peacekeeper, and there's no
room for me to be beyond what I was bred to be."

He loves her like a heart attack, and he holds his breath, and he listens. "Oh."

"But there was room for Crais. And Scorpius -- " She looks at Crichton like she's
expecting to see Scorpius there, and for a minute he thinks she does. "Even Scorpius
grew beyond his programming. And here we are." She walks away a little, stands near the
door, looking thin and tall, like a shadow, like an alien.

"I will still go with him," she says, and it's closer than anything she's ever said before, to
him, anyway. And it's close enough.

He stands up, crosses to her, puts a hand on her shoulder. "I'm glad you're not dead," he
says, because it's all he can think of to say.

"Yes," she says. "But it's not up to you." And she leaves the room.