Author: Vikki
Disclaimer: The SMK characters and the Agency belong to Warner
Brothers, Shoot the Moon Productions, and a bunch of other folks more fortunate
than I am. I am merely borrowing them for fun without profit.
This story is mine, however, so please don't reproduce without my permission.
(Emily Ann and Merel have blanket permission to archive anything I
post.)
Note: This was written as an addendum to my story, "Crying Uncle."
However, you don't need to read that story to understand this one.
All you need to know is: (1) the time frame is early 1988; (2) Lee
and Amanda's marriage is common knowledge; (3) Lee, Amanda
and the boys are living in Rockville; and (4) there has been a small addition
to the family.
Summary: Can Lee bond with the newest member of the family?
Additional note: This is just a little bit of fluff. Several
friends have read it and told me it was entertaining. It wasn't officially
beta'd, though, so any mistakes you find are mine alone. A special
thanks goes to Adrea, who gave me the idea!!
Feeback: Yes, please. All comments are sincerely appreciated.
************************************
Lee Stetson turned his wrist with practiced ease and smiled as the tumblers
fell into place with a faint click. Rotating the brass knob, he pushed
the door open and stepped inside, then paused for a moment while his eyes
adjusted from the bright winter sunshine to the dimness of the tiled entryway.
Carefully closing the door, he glanced down just in time to realize that
his damp shoes would leave clearly visible tracks, and he slipped them
off and nudged them with one toe to the edge of the woven entry rug.
As he took stock of his surroundings, he was momentarily disconcerted by
the uncharacteristic silence - it was a rare day when he came
home to a quiet and deserted house.
Padding down the hallway in his argyle socks, he reached the kitchen
and flicked on the light switch, flooding the cheerful room with a warm
glow. Amanda was right, as usual, he mused as he surveyed the bright
walls and coordinated window and floor coverings; this was definitely
the way to do a kitchen. The kitchens of his many bachelor apartments
had been rooms of utility, on good days. This was a room of comfort
and contentment.
Lee's stomach gave a low growl, and he turned toward the refrigerator.
He opened the door and scanned the contents, searching for something substantial
enough to make up for the lunch he had missed, but not so filling as to
ruin his appetite for the Beef Wellington Amanda had promised him for dinner.
Unfortunately, with two teenage boys in residence, there wasn't much more
food available here than in the refrigerators of his bachelor days.
His gaze finally came to rest on a cellophane wrapped cheeseball, left
over from a gift basket he and Amanda had received for Christmas.
"That'll do," he mumbled to himself. "If it's moldy, I can cut off
the bad parts."
Lee moved the cheeseball to the counter and quickly gathered a box of
crackers, a plate, a knife and a glass - which he filled with
cold milk. He carried his snack to the family room and settled on
the sofa, arranging his culinary treasures on the coffee table. His
hand hovered for a moment over the television's remote control before he
shook his head and returned his attention to the cheese. "A quiet
afternoon in this house is too rare to spoil," he commented to the still
room.
Lee had unwrapped the cheeseball and was reaching for the crackers when
a slight movement caught his attention, and he turned to see a tiny black
and white kitten creep around the corner of the sofa toward his feet.
"Great," he muttered, casting a disparaging look at the diminutive animal.
"This morning, Jamie spent two hours trying to coax you out of that damn
utility closet," he addressed the intruder with a gruff snort, "and you
decide to come out now."
"Meowwww," the kitten responded, arching his back as he rubbed himself
gently against Lee's stockinged feet.
"You've got the wrong guy, buddy," Lee informed the feline sternly,
waving one hand in the general direction of the kitchen. "You'll
have to wait for someone else to come home; I'm not a pet person."
The kitten's only reaction was a soft purr. After a final, lingering
stroke against Lee's toes, he crouched down and made an uncoordinated leap
onto the sofa, almost losing his balance and falling backward to the carpeted
floor. Shaking himself with comical dignity, he gingerly navigated
the lumpy cushions toward his unwilling host.
"You don't look much like a Wizard," Lee observed sardonically
as he watched the cat's unsteady progress. "I don't think Paul would
be amused."
Wizard ignored the insult as he ensconced himself comfortably at Lee's
side. Then he stared longingly at the food on the coffee table for
several moments before laying one tiny paw on the large man's leg and looking
soulfully into his hazel eyes.
Lee met the kitten's look with a stony glare. "Don't even think
about it. This is mine," he stated firmly. "Besides,"
he added in a somewhat milder tone, one corner of his mouth twitching faintly,
"Amanda said milk is bad for your digestion. Milk's a dairy product;
cheese is a dairy product. This probably wouldn't be good for you."
The kitten, undeterred by the rebuff, rubbed the side of his face against Lee's outer thigh and purred again, louder this time.
"It's not gonna work," Lee grumbled, pointedly moving his gaze
to stare straight ahead, away from the kitten's pleading eyes.. "I
didn't even want you in the house; if I had my way, you'd be in the
barn practicing for a career chasing mice." As he spoke, Lee cut
a wedge of cheese, placed it on a cracker, and moved it upward. Pausing
with the tidbit mere centimeters from his lips, he cast a brief sidelong
glance at the creature at his side before popping the treat decisively
into his mouth.
After he chewed and swallowed, Lee stole another quick look at the kitten.
"If we were gonna get a house pet, we should've at least gotten one with
a pedigree. I don't know why Amanda wanted such an ordinary looking
little thing," he said dryly as he returned his attention to his food.
Wizard watched intently as Lee consumed several more cheese covered
crackers, drained his glass, and then leaned back against the sofa cushions
with his arms crossed and his eyes partially closed. Finally, the
kitten climbed cautiously onto Lee's lap, moved slowly to his knees, and
attempted the short jump to the coffee table. Lee had barely uttered
the words "good riddance," when Wizard made a wobbly landing on the edge
of the plate, sending it as well as the glass, the knife and the kitten
tumbling to the floor. A frightened mewl blended with the sound of
breaking glass and clanging metal - causing Lee to jerk upright,
alarm apparent in his features.
"Hey, are you okay?" Lee asked in concern, scooping the tiny cat up
and checking it for lacerations. "You've gotta be more careful,"
he scolded in relief when he found no bleeding. "You're too small
for a stunt like that."
Lee tucked the kitten under one arm while he picked up the broken glass
and placed it, along with the remains of his snack, back on the coffee
table. Then he set the kitten on his lap and awkwardly rubbed the
top of its head. Wizard reclined limply across Lee's legs and whimpered,
causing Lee to quirk one eyebrow questioningly. "You're hungry, huh?
Well, I guess a little taste wouldn't hurt you," he relented, reaching
forward to slice a small wedge of cheese. He held the offering in
front of Wizard, who immediately abandoned his injured pose and sat up
to consume the treat. Lee chuckled softly as he resumed stroking
the kitten's silky fur. "Just don't think I'm going to make a habit
out of this," he warned.
After finishing his cheese, Wizard daintily wiped his mouth and whiskers
with one forepaw, then curled up in Lee's lap with a contented purr.
"I guess you are kinda cute," Lee conceded as he leaned back and closed
his eyes once again, without ceasing the stroking movements. "But
if anyone asks, I never said that. It's gonna have to be our little
secret."
The end
