Title: Divided We Fall
Author: Melissa Jooty (e-mail me at cosmic_quest@yahoo.com)
Disclaimer: The characters of 'The West Wing' are
the property of Aaron Sorkin, NBC and Warner Brothers Television and no profit has been made by my
utilizing them in my story. All other characters are my creation and therefore
belong to me.
Rating: PG-13 for language and angst.
Spoilers: Mainly episodes from the second and
third season.
Summery: The President is not the only one with secrets.
Archiving: As long as you ask first, it should be okay.
Author's Notes: This is my first TWW fiction so
please feel free to let me know how well I did with it. Also, I haven't seen
much of season two and only half of season three so much of the spoilers will
be from what I read in episode reviews.
He
tried to ignore the familiar tightness of his chest, futilely massaging his
chest and ribs through his dress shirt. The pressure had been present since he
woke up but Sam had tried to pass it off as a tense and weary reaction to
coming into an office still reeling from, and struggling to deal with, the news
of President Bartlet's MS. However, Sam could no longer disregard the growing
strain in drawing air into his lungs nor could he pretend not to notice the
faint bubbling noise to his breathing.
Asthma had played a large role in Sam's life ever since he was diagnosed at the
age of five. In those first couple of years, the condition had asserted a tight
hold over his childhood to the point where he could barely go a fortnight
without wheezing. By the time he turned seven, his doctors were able to bring
his condition under control but by then the damage was done, his parents were
determined to wrap him up in cotton wool until the day he left for university.
It certainly didn't help that he was always the scrawny, small kid of his
class.
Even when he was away at college, his parents continued to harass him about his
medication and general health until Sam decided he'd had enough of the coddling
and announced it seemed he had out-grown the illness which had plagued his
life. True, it did make its presence known at times of stress or extreme
exhaustion but no-one else need know that. He wasn't a child, he didn't need
his parents anxiously flying to his side ever time he had so much as a cough.
And so, to this day, only his elder brother and sister knew the truth. Sam
hadn't even let slip to Josh during their younger days together for fear of
arousing his best friend's mother hen mode. He had spent much of his childhood
wrapped in cotton wool, he wasn't going to allow Josh to continue where they
left off. The whole reason he had spent months cajoling his parents into
letting him attend an out-of-state university was so he could be finally free
from the constant worrying and clucking. His two siblings had agreed to keep
quiet on the promise Sam would call them if he was sick, though these days he
didn't feel the need to worry them now that they were all adults with their own
lives to lead.
He had planned to tell his friends and fellow senior staff soon after joining
them in the campaign and then later when they were elected into the White House
only the opportunity to bring up the subject never really made itself known.
Admittedly, because Sam felt the problems incited when his asthma was
aggravated were minor enough for him to deal with himself.
Then, last Christmas, when he did suffer a rather severe attack, he decided it
was best to again go it alone and he managed to conceal it from everyone. It
wasn't that he was being stubborn and didn't take the asthma seriously as his
zealous doctor suggested, rather that Josh was the one most in need of support
with his PTSD. Sam didn't want to place further burdens on the shoulders of the
already vulnerable Josh as well as their friends whose main concerns should
have been, quite rightly, primarily on the Deputy Chief of Staff.
And now he discovered that President Bartlet, a man he looked up to and
admired, had kept the secret of his MS from the senior staff and the entire
country for all this time, Sam forced aside his feelings of betrayal to realize
maybe Bartlet was right in handling his condition in that manner. He didn't
need people clucking after him. It was bad enough that they were beginning to
exclude him over the simplest matters, Sam didn't want to further exacerbate
matters by having them treat him like an invalid child too.
Besides, it wasn't as if they lived in the Stone Age, asthma was no longer the
life threatening disease it used to be.
Only now, as he struggled to smother the slight whistling sound that was now
audible in his breathing, he found himself recalling the statistics for
asthma-related deaths and remembering they were not as low as he led himself to
believe. Maybe it *was* time for the inhaler.
Sam reached down to unlock the secured bottom drawer of his desk, where he kept
his emergency medication tucked away from prying eyes, only to find on top of
the piles of accumulated papers was the never-worn silver Medi-Alert bracelet
his sister had bought him a few years ago, a long time expired preventative
inhaler, an empty bottle of his theophylline pills and a dated prescription for
the now needed reliever inhaler. He had meant to fill the script out a year ago
but had understandably forgotten when a few days after receiving it, they had
almost lost Josh in the shooting.
He choked back his panic. His specialist was going to be so pissed. No, it
would be okay. All Sam had to do was nip out to the pharmacy for another
inhaler or just drop in at home to collect the spare in his bathroom cabinet
and hopefully an impending attack would be avoided leaving both his colleagues
and his Nazi doctor none-the-wiser. Everything would be fine.
Just as he planned his little escape in which he prayed no-one would notice,
Toby suddenly poked into Sam's office notching his head slightly as an
indication for his deputy to follow.
"Meeting in the Oval," he informed, already moving without waiting
for Sam to follow.
Any other day Sam would have been bitterly grateful they actually acknowledged
he was a member of the White House senior staff. Today, his complete
concentration was on actually making his way to the Oval Office without
collapsing into a fit of wheezing. Half-an-hour, all he had to do was keep up
his picture of health facade for another half-an-hour then he could retrieve
his medication.
He could do this.
He managed to pull away from his desk and traipse behind Toby towards the Oval
Office. The older man was joined by Josh and CJ, the trio talking amongst each
other not noticing that Sam was trailing them with difficultly. He heard a
couple of people passing him ask him in concern if he was alright but he was
too preoccupied with the building pressure in his chest to form a response. By
now, Sam could feel his heartbeat pulsating through his whole body, the beat
far too fast than what passed for norm. A deeper part of him recognized his
rapid heart rate as a symptom of an imminent asthma attack.
Either through sheer luck or his own special brand of bull-headed stubbornness,
he somehow made the short trip to the Oval Office although he arrived
significantly after everyone else and found the others standing around the
President waiting for him. Ordinarily, he would have muttered a sheepish
apology for holding them up but today he could barely suck in enough oxygen to
remain conscious let alone to talk. His lungs were beginning to close up and
there was little he could do about it.
Morbidly, he wondered if he was going to be the first casualty within the Oval
Office.
When Sam swept into the office, Josh had to admit he was a little annoyed the
younger man sluggish pace had delayed the meeting from starting until, that
was, he had a proper look at the Deputy Communications Director. Sam's
typically tanned handsome features appeared positively bleached of all colour,
except for his lips which had taken on a faint bluish tint. A light sheen of
cold sweat dampened his face and neck and he was clearly struggling to remain
upright, clutching the corner of the President's desk in a white-knuckled hold
yet swaying slightly despite the support.
It was that noise that instantly enticed the cold tendrils of fear to coil up
Josh's spine.
The alarming strangled wheeze accompanying his best friend's strained attempts
to breathe. His shoulders were hunched over and his free hand opened and shut
in a clenched fist. When Sam forced himself to look up, his eyes were wide in
uncharacteristic terror.
Josh found himself frozen to the spot, locked onto the distress reflected
within the ever-expressive cerulean-blue orbs of his closest friend. For an
instant, he was transported to his early childhood gazing into the mirrored
fear of his sister's dark eyes before he ran away, abandoning her to the
flames.
The moment was broken when Toby quickly stepped forward to his deputy,
obviously striving to contain the tumultuous emotions felt by all in the room.
"Sam? Sam, what's wrong?" he demanded.
"Panic attack?" he heard CJ utter quietly, the words barely audible
against Sam's wheezing.
Swallowing their own fear for their friend's sake, Josh and Toby moved as one
to steady the weakening Sam, easing him into a sitting position when his knees
gave out. They tried to lay him down but Sam, shoulders remaining distinctly
hunched, resisted with what little strength he had so instead they leaned him
against the desk. While Toby backed away slightly, Josh remained close to his
friend to the point of practically sitting on his lap. For his part, Sam had
transferred his stranglehold from the desk corner to clamp onto the wrist of
Deputy Chief of Staff. His grip was tight, Josh's bones protesting at the sharp
pain yet he said nothing and allowed his poor wrist to provide what little
comfort it could.
The President knelt down by the pallid speechwriter's side, shaking his head.
"This is too serious to be a panic attack, his breathing is too laboured
for that..." As he spoke, he had whipped off Sam's tie and was unbuttoning
the first few buttons of his shirt. "Leo, call an ambulance and get Abbey
in here now! Tell her Sam is having what looks like an asthma attack."
Bartlet had barely finished the sentence before Leo briskly left the office to
carry out the orders. By now CJ had joined the other three men on the
floor, her brow was furrowed in helpless anguish, but allowing Bartlet to
continue doing whatever he was doing since he was the only one out of them who
had some general idea of what to do.
A detached part of Josh guessed the President didn't spend three decades
married to a doctor without learning a thing or two. And a deeper part of him,
the part in denial that his friend was dying right there in front of him,
wanted to shout, 'of course it's not asthma'. Sam was the paradigm for health,
people like him didn't suffer from anything. But then people like Jed Bartlet
were not meant to have MS.
Toby pulled back his hand from the pulse point in Sam's neck, scowling deeply.
"Shit, his pulse is racing!"
"Sam, can you talk?" the President asked, with a calm that belayed
his concern.
"Come on, Sam, say something," Josh begged in a far less dignified
manner.
However, he honestly didn't care; decorum was the last thing on his mind at
this very moment in time. All he wanted was some sign from his fallen friend
that he was improving, verbal reassurance from Sam himself that everything was
going to be okay. His pleas went unheeded despite the obvious efforts of his
best friend, all Sam could manage was a choked gasp between his wheezing.
In fact, even to untrained Josh's ears, it was evident the awful high-pitched
whistling that accompanied each breath was beginning to quieten not due to
rallying against the condition but more to do with Sam's plain and simple
exhaustion. Suddenly, Josh began to inwardly pray for the wheezing to pick up
again, at least then he would know the younger man was still with them.
"Okay, it's okay, just relax," Bartlet soothed, as if talking to a
small child rather than one of the most senior men in the country. "Sam, I
need you to look at me. Do you have your inhaler with you?" When Sam
finally managed a jerky shake of his head, the President murmured a very
unpresidential curse. "It's alright, just hang on, Sam, Abbey will be here
soon."
They watched in collective shock as suddenly Sam's wheezing turned into futile
little gasps for air. Then there was complete silence. His lips were now
undisputedly tainted blue, oxygen deprivation taking hold, and his eyes widened
in terror before rolling back as his eye lids slid closed. Josh was on the
brink of an encore performance of his own when the grasp Sam had on his wrist
loosened, his hand falling away, and the speechwriter slumped against the
President, his chest still.
Trembling, Josh reached for Sam's limp form and began shaking him.
"Wake up, Sam, come ON!"
"No, Joshua," CJ warned, "you'll hurt him."
Toby and CJ quickly hauled him off and Bartlet gathered Sam into his arms then
gently laid him flat on the floor probably in response to begin CPR. Sure
enough, the President tilted Sam's head back then proceeded to breathe air into
his lungs. CJ firmly keeping hold of Josh, Toby swiftly moved to where Josh had
sat by Sam's side as he prepared to do the chest compressions if needed.
"He's still got a pulse," Toby said, his hand once again resting on
Sam's carotid pulse. "It's weak and still too fast."
Before the situation could further deteriorate, Abigail Bartlet swept into the Oval
Office carrying her black leather medical bag and Leo in tow. Everyone was
rendered silent, Leo blanching at what he saw, as the First Lady took a second
to assess the scene where the Communications Director was now maintaining the
role of Sam's failed lungs and her husband was slightly breathless from his own
stint of assisting with the artificial respiration.
"How long has he been down?" she asked, taking Toby's place when he
shifted back to where CJ and Josh were. Whatever shock she felt herself was
quickly smothered back by the professionalism that came forth automatically.
"About a minute," Toby answered. "He just...his breathing just
stopped..." He said the last words in a dazed disbelief.
"Ambulance been called?"
"Yeah," Leo responded this time, "should be here in a few
minutes. What about Sam? Is he going to be okay?"
The First Lady didn't reply, too intent on her patient. Josh nearly choked in
empathy when she carefully inserted a flexible trach tube into Sam's mouth and
down his throat. She then attached a plastic balloon-like device to the end of
the tube hanging from Sam's mouth and squeezed it in a regular motion.
Anxiously mesmerised, Josh noticed Sam's chest was beginning to rise and fall
to the same rhythmic movements as Abbey's breathing apparatus and his skin
regained a little colour, losing the death-like hue.
He relaxed ever so slightly; the weight on his own chest easing with the
knowledge that at least Sam was breathing, albeit not under his own steam.
Finally, Abbey spoke, her tone commanding. "Okay, he's getting oxygen
again but I need to examine him." She glanced around at her attentive
audience. "CJ, come over here."
CJ released her hold on Josh and mutely shifted so she was sitting opposite the
First Lady with Sam lying between them. While the press secretary was petrified
and seemingly on the brink of tears, she was minutely calmer than the rest of
her colleagues.
"Now, CJ, I'm going to let you take over the ambu bag. Just continue to
squeeze it at a steady pace, count it out if it helps." Abbey's voice
conveyed calm and confidence but Josh could see it was more for CJ's benefit
and she was truthfully hesitant to hand over the responsibility to a layperson.
The physician transferred the apparatus into CJ's uncertain hands and the
red-haired woman did as instructed under Abbey's watchful eye. "Is this
okay?" The press secretary, who had defended the White House on many an
occasion from the vultures of the worldwide media and within the White House
was a force to be reckoned with, had never sounded so nervous.
"You're doing fine, just keep doing that."
Intoxicated with overwhelming emotions, vacillating between relief Sam was
being treated and crushing agitation that until the younger man was up and
talking he could still so easily slip away from them, Josh mirrored the other
men as they turned their gazes from CJ to Abbey. The doctor had completely
ripped open Sam's shirt and was listening to his chest through a stethoscope.
Frowning deeply, she tore the unconscious deputy's shirt sleeve past his elbow.
Patting for a vein, the First Lady prepared a syringe then proceeded to inject
the clear substance into her patient's arm.
No-one questioned why she still had the medical instruments and drugs given the
First Lady had forfeited her medical license. Abbey herself might have been
bound by such legal constraints but she was still a physician first and
foremost and they all knew she would rather deal with any consequences than see
Sam die because of her inaction. And right then and there, Josh couldn't have
cared less if she had found her medical degree in a cereal box; she was taking
charge with some semblance of confidence and that was all that mattered to him.
It was at that moment, Charlie led two EMTs along with their equipment and
stretcher into the Oval Office. It was easy to see how hard it was for Abigail
to grudgingly back off and allow them to tend to Sam but ever the professional,
she did give them a run-down of his assumed condition and his vitals. Most of
it went over Josh's head; all he was concerned about was his best friend who
had now been transferred onto the stretcher and hooked up to an IV and portable
ventilator, much to CJ's relief.
The entire senior staff, including the President and his entourage of agents,
followed the stretcher all the way outside to the waiting ambulance. The EMTs
had given permission for Doctor Bartlet to accompany them in the ambulance and
while part of Josh wanted to argue that as Sam's best friend *he* should
be the one granted the privilege, he knew this way was better for his
friend. Abbey could at least do something for Sam as opposed to staring
dumbly at him in shock. It was still hard letting Sam out of his sight as they
loaded him into the ambulance and the doors slamming shut after them.
The vehicle pulled away, its lights flashing and sirens blaring, and for once
Josh did not flinch with his memories of Rosslyn. His mind was too intent on
the present to linger on his past. It couldn't have been more than ten minutes
for everything to fall apart in that office but to Josh, it seemed eternity.
CJ's hand on his arm jolted him out of his reverie. She squeezed gently,
managing to force a faint smile. "We're going to follow on." Josh
glanced to Toby, who was practically jumping from foot-to-foot anxious to make
a move. "You coming?"
As if she really needed an answer.
*************************************
The little congregation
almost jumped on the brunette doctor who entered the private waiting room over
an hour after Sam had been brought in. By this time Josh, Toby and CJ, who had
followed immediately after the ambulance, had been joined by President Bartlet
himself, not to mention the multitude of Secret Service agents posted outside
the door. Leo had reluctantly remained behind to field any problems but Bartlet
had been adamant to come. After all, it was not every day a member of the White
House senior staff collapsed at the feet of the President in the Oval Office
not to mention it was not every day the President performed mouth-to-mouth on
one of his staff. They were all determined to ensure Sam was going to recover
as well as discern exactly what the hell had happened.
Doctor Bartlet followed a few paces behind the hospital doctor, looking stoic
yet oddly almost saddened, and she moved to her husband's side apparently
leaving much of the talking to her counterpart. If the young woman was in any
way intimidated by her audience and their importance, she didn't show it.
She cleared her throat then focused a serious gaze to the impatient group.
"I'm Doctor Jessica Waylin, the chief pulmonary specialist."
Josh couldn't remain quiet any longer. "How is Sam? Is he going to be
okay?"
He just couldn't push the memory of Sam, blue and rasping desperately for oxygen,
collapsing. Of how his lungs eventually failed him to the point where the First
Lady was forced to shove a tube down his throat and was physically breathing
for him in an effort to keep him with them. Josh was suddenly beginning to
comprehend what it must have been like for Sam the previous year when it was he
who had come so close to dying. Never again did he want to be so helpless as he
watched his friend's life ebb away before his very eyes.
"Why don't we all sit down?" Waylin said, flashing a comforting smile
to them.
Josh took the smile as a good sign, surely a doctor wouldn't be upbeat if she
was about to break the news of her patient's d...No, he couldn't even say the
'd' word lest he tempt fate. He might have been a little sceptical of Toby's
odd superstitions before but this was one time he would be willing to do
anything if it meant Sam was given a better chance.
When everyone was seated, Waylin carefully regarded the six piercing gazes
resolutely eyeing her back. "Okay, I don't know if you know by now but Sam
suffers from asthma and what you all witnessed earlier was an acute asthma
attack. Now, he has stabilized and began to make an effort to breathe for
himself and his lungs have started to open up but we'll be keeping him on a ventilator
until at least tomorrow morning when hopefully he'll be more awake and aware.
Then maybe by tomorrow afternoon or evening, we can think about transferring
out of ICU to a step-down room."
There was a universal sigh of relief throughout the room and everyone visibly
released the tension clawing at them from the moment Sam had collapsed. Of
course, it didn't last.
"He wasn't breathing," Toby stated. His voice turned hesitant.
"Is there any chance of...brain damage?"
Josh paled and CJ bit her lip at this. How could Sam survive then not be *him*?
Could they handle seeing the bright, spirited young man they knew and loved a
shadow of his former self? Damn Toby for thinking to mention this new threat.
"I can't be one hundred percent certain until Sam regains consciousness
but his reflexes are good and thanks to immediate treatment, he didn't go
without oxygen for long so I'm cautiously going to say I think he'll be
fine."
There it was again. The way in which she used Sam's first name rather than referring
to him as the customary 'Mr Seaborn' and the tone of vague worry that belayed
simple medical concern for a patient allowed Josh to suspiciously deduce Waylin
knew Sam...Like she had met him before today. And why did he have the distinct
feeling that meeting was in no way similar or simple as the call girl incident?
Evidently, the President had picked up on this too. "Doctor, have you met
Sam before?"
Waylin seemed visibly conflicted, as if trying to decide whether to protect her
patient's confidentiality and the realization she was speaking to the Leader of
the Free World. It was Abigail Bartlet took the decision out of her hands.
"It seems Sam has been a guest here a number of times," the First
Lady replied curtly, her lips pressed thin in displeasure, "occasions he
has neglected to mention to anyone."
The younger doctor sighed, "Sam has been a regular patient of mine for
five years, since he relocated to DC. Usually, I only see him on an out-patient
basis to monitor and advise him on his asthma but..." She paused a moment,
still uncertain of how much to reveal. Then, showing caution to the wind, she
continued, "There have been a couple of occasions when he has had to be
admitted due to debilitating asthma attacks."
"It's that bad?" Josh's voice was low, afraid to ask for fear of
being pervaded by images of Sam suffering alone.
"It's moderate, from his records and what he told me, I know it did affect
him quite chronically as a child. As he grew up, the intensity and frequency of
the attacks have eased off slightly but when they do come, his condition can
turn quite grave." She seemed exasperated now. "It certainly doesn't
help that Sam isn't always known to take the best care of himself. Today
needn't have been so bad if he'd at least had his reliever inhaler with
him."
"When?" Toby finally spoke. His tone was cold but to those who knew
him, it was just his way of attempting to cope with the situation in a mixture
of consolation that his deputy would recover coupled with suppressed anger at
the duplicity which brought him to this state in the first place.
"Excuse me?"
"When did he have these attacks?"
Waylin shifted uncomfortably, and the Deputy Chief of Staff had the feeling she
regretted mentioning the previous asthma attacks and having someone as
difficult as Sam as a patient. Nevertheless, whatever pity he might have felt
for her was muted by his own interest in this particular question.
"The last rather bad one was on Boxing Day last year." She frowned at
Josh's gasp but carried on. "It wasn't as bad as this one, he came in on
his own with severe wheezing but a night with a nebulizer settled it."
"And you didn't think to call anyone?" Bartlet asked, incredulously.
*You didn't think to call me,* Josh forlornly thought.
It hurt to think of his closest friend lying in the hospital. He might have had
his own problems over the festive season when his PTSD came to a head but that
didn't mean he wanted Sam suffering on his own without his friends' support.
And, in turn, he wondered if he had precipitated the asthma attack. Had the
bottled up stress of watching Josh self-implode affect Sam's asthma? Did he
feel that he had to protect Josh from his illness resulting in him coping with
an attack on his own rather than call his friend for help? He did take his
responsibilities to his friends to a whole new level.
"Sam was adamant that no-one know, we pressed the issue but we do have a
duty to respect our patients' wishes, especially when that patient is a
lawyer."
Abbey raised an eyebrow. "He threatened you?"
"No, not exactly but he does know all the medicalese. He knows what we can
and can't do, and he does make sure we know it too."
"We were hardly going to splash this across the 'Enquirer'," CJ
pointed out. "Couldn't you have made him see sense? He almost died today
and we didn't even know what was wrong."
"Now you see what I have to deal with. I've tried to tell Sam for the past
five years he's been my patient that it's in his best interests to tell his
co-workers about his asthma so they could be prepared if he had an attack. But
Sam is stubborn and insists he knows best," the physician snorted, "I
can see why he makes a good politician."
"Okay, but I have his medical power of attorney," Josh said, hotly.
"I thought you guys kinda have an obligation to inform me when my best
friend is lying unconscious in some ICU."
"And if he had lost consciousness, believe me we would have." Waylin
inhaled deeply, lowering her voice to convey she was on their side when it came
to this matter. "Only Sam made damned sure he remained conscious, oh he
struggled but he won the fight although I think it had less to do with his own
recovery and more to do with ensuring we kept our promise not to call anyone.
He can be quite determined when he wants. If he put half as much energy into
managing the asthma, he probably wouldn't be here today. Instead, his
appointments have tapered off, he doesn't seem to carry his reliever inhaler, I
doubt if he checks his peak flow once a week let alone once a day...The way he
was going, this attack was inevitable and if Sam keeps this up, he risks
permanent damage to his lungs."
A hush enveloped the room at the realization that Sam had kept this a secret to
the point where he was skirting the edge of harming himself. It was Josh who
broke the silence with the question burning in everyone's minds.
"Can we see Sam now?"
"Yes, I can take you up. You can look in on him but that's all for
now." When Josh and Toby simultaneously opened their mouths to complain,
the doctor quickly headed them off. "Sam's unconscious and I'd like to
keep it that way. It seems that's the only way he'll rest and if he comes to,
he'll waste energy between planning his escape and putting on a show for you. I
know you don't ask him to, and obviously you need to talk to him about this,
however just now Sam needs to rest more than he needs a good bawling out.
There'll be plenty of time for that later."
Mollified for now, the group followed her to the lift and up to the fourth
floor. Unlike the hustle and bustle of the ER, the atmosphere in the intensive
care floor was quiet and orderly. Immediately, Josh felt uneasy with the
familiarity of the oppressive environment, too many memories of his own lengthy
stint on the ward pervading his mind, yet he pushed himself on forcing himself
to ignore haunting tranquillity. He would have walked over hot coals if it
meant he could see Sam. CJ patted his arm in sympathy, guessing his thoughts.
Waylin came to a stop and inclined her head to the glass window looking into
large cubicle where Sam lay oblivious to all the anguish he had caused. Despite
being still rather pale, there was a large improvement from the awful pallor of
before. It was disconcerting to see the usually boisterous young man so quiet
with tubes and wires encompassing his body with the worse being the plastic
tube snaking from his mouth leading to the ventilator.
Nevertheless, seeing him now was a stark contrast to his previous pale and
pinched features. If one could force oneself to ignore all the medical
equipment then Sam seemed quite peaceful and vulnerable now, far younger than
his thirty-two years.
"Oh God..." murmured Josh.
"Doctor, why are his hands tied down?" Toby asked warily.
It was only upon closer inspection the others did in fact noticed Sam's wrists
were restrained to the safety rail of the bed with soft cotton strips. He might
have been unconscious but his co-workers were justifiably horrified to see him
secured to the bed like a prisoner.
"Sam doesn't take well to the tubes and monitors," Doctor Waylin
explained with patience and understanding. "Some patients, when they're
making the climb to full consciousness, they try to pull them out. The
restraints are there for Sam's safety."
Toby just scowled. "Dammit!" He looked ready to do 'a Josh' and shove
his hand through the window.
"He's going to be fine," CJ said, anticipating his darkening mood,
"he'd better be, he had too much explaining to do."
"He will be fine," Abbey assured. "But things are going to change,
whether I have to come over every day and force the inhaler down his
throat."
Josh just grunted in acknowledgement, too focused on the silent form alone
lying in the room and the fact the doctors had an insight on how Sam reacted to
the medical tubing. He glanced sideways when he saw the President usher Sam's
doctor to the side and while he turned his attention back to his friend, he
couldn't help but overhear the two talking despite their hushed tones.
"Abbey...? There may be repercussions," Bartlet said, in askance no
doubt worried about the possible consequences for his wife and her earlier
display of unauthorised medical intervention, especially if Waylin did not
support what she did. There were too many petty bureaucrats in this world that might
not be so willing to let this slide even if a man was saved thanks to her
actions.
"I know, Mr President," Waylin said softly, "I also know that if
it wasn't for her, Sam would have been dead by the time the ambulance arrived.
If a bunch of dinosaurs on the medical committee can't see that then I'll make
sure every physician and press agent from here to the moon does." She
smirked faintly, regarding Abbey. "In this hospital, it really doesn't
matter if she's the First Lady but she *is* a doctor who did right by a
patient, and we doctors do protect our own. Trust me, if anyone is stupid
enough to make an issue of this, Doctor Bartlet will have plenty of
back-up."
If the situation was not so dismal, Josh would have spared a smile. He already
liked this doctor who obviously cared deeply for the patients under her care
and he could almost forgive her for not calling him when Sam had been
previously brought into hospital. To her credit, Waylin appeared the type to
have fought him tooth-and-nail when it came to the speechwriter's utterly
absurd decision to go it all alone; it just so happened that she did not count
on Sam's own unyielding obduracy.
The President further lowered his tone and Josh could barely hear the words,
"Do you think Sam might have become so careless with his illness because
of the way I handled my own condition?" It was clearly difficult for him
to voice that question.
"No, sir," was his flat response. "Sam has been careless for the
five years I've known him, your MS...I take it he only found out a few months
ago." Now the physician sounded a little uncertain. "I do think that
you need to perhaps emphasize that people don't collapse and die of MS if they
miss their medication for days at a time, the same can't be said for asthma.
Sam's not a child, he doesn't need coddling, he does need to able to tell
people if he's not feeling so well. But don't worry, Samuel and I will be
having words about this issue later."
"Yes," the President agreed, "I think Sam is due for a very long
talk." Suddenly he sounded wearier than Josh had ever heard him.
"'United we stand, divided we fall'- this has all gone on for long enough.
We don't need Republicans to bring us down, we're doing a good job of
destroying ourselves. It has to end now."
*************************************
After they had been evicted from the ICU by the combined forces of Doctors
Bartlet and Waylin, Josh somehow found himself retreating to Sam's office
instead of going back to his own. Slumping back in the chair behind the desk,
he regarded his surroundings with a new hindsight. He remembered how in the
first two years in term, he and Sam would often be in and out of each other's
offices both for professional and companionable reasons. Somewhere along the
line, particularly over the past six months, these visits began to taper off as
they drifted apart.
And it was only now, as he took the time to consider it, did Josh realize he
truly missed Sam. He missed his friend's innocent outlook, his passion at being
a part of the 'Real Thing', his exuberant smile...He missed his best friend yet
he hadn't noticed he had lost him.
He admitted he played a large role in increasingly isolating himself from Sam;
he'd lied to his friend, repeatedly helped to keep him out of the loop on major
decisions, and hidden his own problems from him. Looking back with hindsight,
he could only wonder how hurt and alone Sam must have felt and how Josh would
have felt if he had died today. They could have been preparing for a funeral
today, Sam could so easily have been lying in the morgue rather than the ICU,
and he would have died not knowing how much Josh valued their friendship even
if he hadn't shown it recently.
Instead, he had been given a second chance to amend things. They had all been
given a chance...himself, Toby, Leo. Today had showed them life was to fragile
to become complacent with those around you. Like the President, each had
wondered if recent events had led to Sam's duplicity over his asthma status,
that maybe he felt they didn't trust him so he shouldn't entrust them with the
truth either. First there was Josh turning away from everyone eventually
leading to his outburst in the Oval, Toby and his infamous drop-in and most
significant of all, Sam being the last to learn of Bartlet's MS. So many
secrets and lies festering away, no wonder Sam kept his own counsel.
Sometimes he hated this job for what it did to good people.
Nevertheless, Sam was by no means an innocent in all this. He had ten years to
tell Josh that he was an asthmatic, the first seven of which they did not have
the added stress of managing the country on their shoulders. It was cutting to
know your best friend could not tell you he was sick and had been sick since he
was a small child.
Josh would have readily ran interference if Sam didn't want to let anyone else
in. Why the hell couldn't he have just said something to the man who had known
him since college? Did he think Josh would think any less of him or something
equally ludicrous? Instead, Sam had ploughed on regardless of the consequences,
regardless of what losing him would do to his friends. Josh could remember a
number of times the other man had the flu, which often seemed to move to his
chest, and when he accepted aspirins as a remedy to an annoying headache if no
Tylenol was available. Sam had literally opened himself up to an attack like he
had some kind of death-wish.
Asthma need not have been so serious had the young deputy did what he was told
by his doctor. As it was, he had turned a manageable condition into a very real
threat to his life by missing medication, skipping hospital appointments and
generally being careless. He had nearly died at Christmas time but still
managed to drag himself back to work a few days later with no-one keeping an
eye on him, no doubt in his mind he had already decided to keep the asthma
attack a secret because of Josh's problems.
How did it come to this- Josh smashing windows with his hands and Sam lying
sick in hospital yet both staying quiet until their problems were just an
explosions waiting to happen?
Yet, it wasn't only from the senior staff did Sam hide his asthma from. When
Josh phoned Sam's sister, he found that while she knew of his condition her
younger brother had never informed her of his recent asthma attacks despite
promising he would. In fact, she had been quite pissed when she wrangled all
the details from a more than willing Josh, who did so both out of concern to
ease her worries and because that Stephanie Seaborn-Croft was a paediatrician
every bit as formidable as the First Lady when it came to health matters.
Stephanie had been all set to fly from her California home to DC so she could
'deal' with her brother and his little web of deceit. And as much as Josh's
protective instincts had been invoked by Sam's illness, part of him would
rather have enjoyed seeing Sam being reamed out for his stupidity. However, he
managed to dissuade the elder Seaborn when he realized this was something Sam's
surrogate family, the Senior Staff, had to sort out with him. For the President
was right in one regard...
How could they be responsible for running the country when they spent much of
their energy keeping secrets from one another?
Josh sighed, jingling the Medi-Alert bracelet he had found in Sam's little
hideaway drawer along with that unfilled prescription. He hadn't really been
snooping, Sam must have been in a hurry when he left for the meeting that
morning and left the drawer unlocked and half open. With all that had occurred
earlier, Josh couldn't help but be curious as to what the speechwriter was
being keeping there, especially when he caught a glimpse of an inhaler.
The medication was not all he found. Under the piles of newspaper clippings and
speech notes, there was a framed photograph of four beautiful, raven-haired
children smiling for the camera. The youngest of the children, an adorable
little boy of no more than five, had the bluest eyes and there was no denying
Josh was looking at a little Sam. He guessed the young girl was Sam's elder
sister Stephanie while the two older boys, one aged around twelve and the other
slightly younger, had to be his brother Nick and perhaps a cousin. It was a
nice photograph, Josh just couldn't figure what it was doing in the drawer when
Sam usually displayed his photos on the shelf.
However, the puzzle was secondary to the two offers of professorship to Princeton and Yale. This was not worrying in itself; what Josh
was concerned about was the fact the former had a half-completed letter
attached to it dating back to the week after the BSE palaver.
It shocked him to realize Sam must have been so disillusioned he had juggled
with the issue of quitting.
It made also him consider not just what else had the speechwriter kept from
him, rather *why* Sam was so possessively secretive and how he managed
to conceal this side of his personality from the very people who were meant to
be his closest friends. They had always assumed he was this open, guileless guy
and now he had shown he was quite adept at closing himself if he chose to.
Things had to change in the West Wing; Sam had to learn to trust them again. He
had to trust *him* again. Maybe Josh was not always sympathetic or
supportive but he never wanted Sam to feel he was a burden.
"What's that?"
He jerked in the chair to find Toby studying him from the doorway and it took
him a moment to realise he was referring to the bracelet. "Oh, it's one of
those medical bracelets. Y'know, tells you what medical problems or allergies
the person has."
The older man moved further into the office, scanning the contents on Sam's
bottom drawer, which were now strewn across his normally tidy desk courtesy of
Josh. He shook his head slightly as he lightly touched the empty pill bottle
and prescription. "I've never seen Sam wearing it."
"No, that's because I don't think it's seen the outside of this
drawer." Toby just grunted, evidently not surprised. "He should have
told us, Toby, he should have said something." Josh continued to twirl the
bracelet around, his movements harsher now. "I gave him some aspirin the
other day, asthmatics shouldn't take those...I could have murdered him and he
would have let me."
"That would have been suicide, Josh, not murder."
Josh scowled in disgust. "This isn't funny, it's not a joke."
"No, no, it's not." Toby sighed heavily, dropping into the chair
opposite. He rubbed his face before leaning forward. "Sam knew what he was
doing, he deliberately spent the past five years hiding this from us. He did
this to himself...and we did it to him by not making ourselves more accessible
to him."
Blinking in astonishment as the guilt carried in Toby's voice, Josh floundered
for words. Sometimes, they forgot no matter how harsh the Communications
Director was with everyone, he did care for his deputy.
"I'm meant to be his best friend, some friend I am that he can hide this
from me for *ten* damned years. I watched Sam take pills, seen simple
colds knock him for six and still I thought he was like some kind of poster boy
for health. Shows how much I know about him."
"You know, he said the exact same thing at Christmas."
"Wha..." He wasn't sure he wanted to speak about that incident yet he
had to hear Sam did not blame himself for Josh's PTSD. He hadn't really talked
it over with Sam, partly because he wanted to protect him but mostly because he
wanted to forget it ever happened. Now look where denial had taken them? Well,
not any more. "What did you tell him?" Even as he spoke, he found he
couldn't look Toby in the eye.
"I told me when someone wants to hide something, they will."
They pondered over the logic of the advice for a moment; no doubt Toby had
never considered Sam himself was doing a little hiding of his own.
Josh gazed up. "What are we gonna do?"
Their eyes met, a steely glint in Toby's dark eyes. "I don't intend to
lose him, not to our own mistakes and certainly not to something like asthma.
He's going to change, and we're going to change with him. We're going to
change."
"We're going to change," echoed Josh, his voice gaining more
confidence.
Both men knew they were not going to do any work that day, how could they when
Sam was lying in hospital? Together, they locked up the deputy's office and
quietly left for the hospital. Toby never noticed Josh quietly taking the
bracelet, tucking it safely in his coat pocket.
*************************************
Jed had allowed Sam time, given him a full two days to regain his equilibrium.
He purposely chose not to visit his deputy speechwriter too soon, not wanting
the younger man to waste his energy in an attempt to feign health. On the other
hand, Bartlet didn't want to allow him too much time in which his defences
would be back up and it would be like speaking to a brick wall, albeit a
deceptively innocent, agreeable brick wall.
Since been transferred from the ICU to a private room the previous day, the
stubborn young staffer was already griping to be released from the hospital.
The President's discreet reports courtesy of Josh, Toby, CJ and Leo informed
him that he was also beginning to downplay his asthma in the hopes they would
leave it be. Of course, his hopes were in vain although this insight did help
Jed to see the moment had arrived. It was now time they all had a little chat.
Not seeking to actively intimidate Sam, it was decided only Toby and Josh would
accompany him on this visit. Leo and CJ had been assured they could punish his
youngest staff member to their hearts' content when he returned to work and his
wife seemed very satisfied with herself so Bartlet could only guess she had her
own plans for him. The poor boy was in for a hard time when he was allowed back
to the White House.
For his part, the President felt he needed to be here today to ensure his own
decisions were not unduly influencing the way Sam was operating. Doctor Waylin
was right, Sam was not some impressionable child but they often forgot he was
young and not as experienced in the political arena as the others. What he
didn't know for himself, he would pick up from those around him and it seemed
he had learned his lessons a little too well...
According to Josh, Sam had been mortified not just by his collapse but by the
subsequent mouth-to-mouth the President had performed. Jed did not want him to
be embarrassed, he wanted him to trust those around him. Sometimes, they would
be the only ones he could turn to. Sam would one day be in his position and it
was his duty to ensure his young protégé would not make the same mistakes as
he. By teaching him now, Bartlet could save Sam, his future staff and family
any possible grief this generation had recently been through.
It was more than that. In his own college days, Bartlet had watched a good
friend, also an asthmatic, die suddenly at the tragically young age of
twenty-five of his condition. The asthma attack had been largely due to neglecting
to take medication because, like Sam, he was a firm believer in the philosophy
'ignore it and it will disappear'. All his friend received for burying his head
in the sand was a grave and a grieving family.
He wasn't going to allow Sam to suffer the same senseless fate.
He hadn't taken this job so he could bury the people who so loyally served him.
It was difficult enough losing Mrs Landingham but at least it could be said
she'd lived a good life and she was now with her beloved sons. Sam, on the other
had, still had so many achievements and dreams awaiting him in the future. Jed
wasn't sure if his staff could recover from losing their resident kid brother,
the baby of the Senior Staff.
As the trio approached Sam's room, they could hear him talking to woman and it
took them a moment to realize he was speaking to her over the speaker phone.
Josh was about to knock politely on the ajar door but his movements stilled as
they all heard what Sam was discussing with his friend.
"It was not a big deal, Stephy," Sam said, with a light whine to his
voice.
"Not a big deal?!" the woman, evidently named Stephy, retorted over
the line. Bartlet had heard Josh mention he had called Sam's sister after the
incident and recalled her name was Stephanie. Was this who Sam was talking to
now? It would explain why she was in the position to give him the scolding she
was currently berating him with. And from her disgust and anger, it sounded as
if this young woman was very much on the same wavelength as his wife. "Do
you have any clue how lucky you are? If the First Lady was not a doctor, if she
wasn't there, they would have been bringing you home in a mahogany box or
worse, you could have been left with brain damage. Although at the moment I
beginning to wonder if that isn't the case."
Bartlet glanced at Josh and Toby and he could see, like him, they were not in
the least guilty at eavesdropping into this private conversation. It would be
interesting to hear what the kid had to say when he thought he was unobserved
and to compare it with whatever excuses he would come out with when he was with
them.
"I can't believe Josh called you."
"And I can't believe you never told me about the other attacks. Do you
know what it's like to know while I was enjoying Christmas, my baby brother was
dying on the other side of the continent?"
"That is an exaggeration, I wasn't exactly dying."
His sister ignored him. "I imagine the shock of finding out about your
little festive adventure mirrors how your friends felt when they learnt you had
asthma by watching you collapse in front of them. Y'know, out of them all I
don't get how Josh in the very least never knew about any of this. I can
understand you not wanting to take a page out in 'The Post' but he has known
you for years and you didn't think to tell him about the asthma."
Josh leaned closer to the door, eager for Sam's response. He shrank back in
disappointment when there was only a mumbled 'I dunno'. Bartlet couldn't help
but smile inwardly at how belligerent and sullen Sam sounded at his sister's
interrogation. He sounded like a typical little brother and it was rare to hear
the normally articulate, solemn speechwriter sounding so much the petulant
adolescent.
"I *was* going to tell them, there never was a good opportunity."
"I would have thought you being in hospital last December would have been
an excellent opportunity!" Abruptly, Stephanie Seaborn's tone softened
midway in her lecture. "Oh Sammy, I know it's easy to fall back on what we
were taught as kids but this isn't what Mom and Dad meant to happen."
Bartlet wondered what she meant by this since he didn't think any sane parent
would encourage their child to ignore a serious illness such as asthma. The
thought was instantly abandoned in anguish at the young woman's next words.
"Nicky is blaming this all on the whole MS mess with the President and
being surrounded by sleazy lying politicians twenty-four/seven."
"You told Nick? You know what he's like..." There was a heavy sigh.
"This has nothing to do with the President, I...I just wanted to get on
with things."
It was an echo of Jed's own excuse when Leo asked why he didn't tell him, his
best friend, about his MS. Unfortunately, neither of them could really 'get on
with things' for ironic as it was, by ignoring their respective conditions they
were moreso inviting flare ups to disrupt their lives.
Hearing enough, Bartlet pushed past Josh, who practically had his ear to the
door, and knocked curtly to warn Sam of their presence before entering the
private room. Sam blinked in surprise, no doubt not expecting a visit from the
President, but recovered quickly, sitting straighter in the bed and attempting
to appear his usual self. It was quite a feat considering he was in a hospital
bed dressed in blue pyjamas and still attached to an IV and heart monitor.
Sam smirked mischievously at the phone on the bedside table. "Stephy, I
have to go. The President has just arrived."
There was silence on the other end before his sister snorted in amusement.
"Yeah, right, if you wanted to get rid of me then you need to work on
those excuses. I'll let you off for now but we'll be talking more later. And
remember, don't get any ideas about signing yourself out AMA or I'll be kicking
some A-S-S and don't think the three thousands miles between us will stop me,
baby brother."
Oh yeah, Abigail would love this girl.
"Oh, I don't ever doubt your abilities, Steph," Sam sighed, flushing
slightly. The President had the feeling his embarrassment had less to do with
his sister bullying him in front of his friends and more to do with his little
escape plan being foiled.
"Okay, love ya, kid."
When the phone line clicked off, Sam sobered and turned his full attention to
his visitors. "Mr President, Josh, Toby, it's good to see you. Uh, please
have a seat."
Under Sam's apprehensive gaze, Bartlet and Toby sat down in the hard,
uncomfortable chairs near the bed while Josh chose to hover and play with
something he had in his jacket pocket.
"How are you feeling, Sam?" Jed asked, deciding to jump in before an
awkward silence could develop.
"I'm fine, Sir. I, uh, I would like to thank you for what you did the
other day with the CPR..."
"That's quite alright," the President assured, "you had us all
worried, you know?"
"I'm sorry," the young man murmured, unable to meet his visitors'
eyes, especially the accusing glares of Josh and Toby.
"Was that your sister on the phone?" Toby spoke up.
"Yes, Stephanie thinks she needs to check up on me." Sam scowled at
Josh. "You called my sister?"
"Yeah, so?" Josh replied, daring him to say more.
He wisely shrugged, realising it was not a good idea to force the issue.
"Nothing, just wondering." When Josh jiggled whatever he was playing
with in his pocket, Sam seemed to think it was a chance to change the subject.
"What have you got?" His face fell when the Deputy Chief of Staff
pulled out a silver bracelet and held it up. "Oh..."
"Is that all you're gonna say?"
"What is it?" Bartlet asked, aware it was more than just a piece of
jewellery.
Toby raised an eyebrow at his deputy "Sam? You wanna take that?"
There was no reply other than squirming from the bed. "This, Mr President,
is a bit like an adviser. If the wearer gets sick- like let's just take, for
example, collapses in The Oval Office- this advises surrounding on-lookers,
like worried sick friends, on what to do. Only, for it to be successful it
actually has to be worn!" His voice grew louder with each word until he
was practically shouting at the end of his little tirade.
"It's a Medi-Alert bracelet, Mr President," Sam said in a barely
audibly, his voice a contrast his superior's.
"Aah, I see...I don't believe I've ever seen you wear it, Sam. Don't you
think it's important for people to know what's wrong when you have an asthma
attack?"
"It's only asthma," was the reluctant reply, "It really isn't a
big deal, Sir."
"'Only' asthma?!" Josh exclaimed in the same incredulous tones of
Sam's sister. "You could have died of 'only' asthma and that makes it a
very big deal."
"You made it a 'big deal', Sam," Toby jumped in, "when you kept
it a secret and nearly died because of that. If you had at least taken care of
it, it wouldn't have been so bad. You don't even carry your damn medication.
Three days ago, it wouldn't have been 'only' asthma that would have killed you,
it would have been carelessness and unnecessary secrecy."
From the sidelines, Bartlet watched Toby and Josh rant on and on. This was not
the way to do this; the kid was already shutting himself off from their anger
only the other two were too involved in their own indignation to see.
"I'm sorry."
There was sudden silence at Jed's whispered yet equally heartfelt apology. Toby
and Josh were literally lost for words, their moans forgotten. The President
gazed at Sam, who was studiously avoiding looking at him.
"I'm sorry that I lied to you about my MS, that I made you feel like I
didn't trust you. And I'm sorry that I made you feel that it was acceptable to
lie to your friends, your family."
Meeting his commander-in-chief's eyes, Sam shook his head. "No, Mr
President, this isn't your fault...I just wanted to deal with this myself. It
dominated my life and my parents enough as a kid."
"Is that why you never said anything last December?" Josh asked.
For a long moment, it looked like Sam was not going to answer then he sighed.
"Things got so bad...I just didn't want to make things worse for
you, I didn't want to ruin any progress you made."
Josh opened his mouth to retort something, Bartlet guessed it would go somewhere
along the lines of 'how would I have felt if you'd died?', but Toby spoke up
first. "What about your family? Hell, what about of us? Didn't you think *we*
would have wanted to know?"
"Stephy and Nick are as bad as our parents sometimes. As for you guys,
Josh needed you more than I did." He must have noticed their collectively
saddened expressions and tried to appease them. "I'm a big boy, I've been
seeing to myself for some time now."
Disheartened as he was to hear this, that was not to say Bartlet did not
understand where Sam was coming from. He reacted much the same when he was
diagnosed with MS, pushing Abbey and his girls away. It took time to come to
terms with his illness and, in turn, let his family in. It was a monumental
mistake not to allow his senior staff- people he thought of as his second
family- the same consideration but in the very least he did have the support of
his wife and daughters. The same could not be said of Sam, who still seemed to
be in some sort of perpetual denial and continued to push away everyone from
his parents to his sister to his closest friends.
Of course, one did not reach presidency without developing an inner sense of
people and Jed could feel this situation delved far deeper than Sam simply not
wanting to be treated like a child. There was another reason, infinitely more
significant and probably rooted long before he met them, which led the young
man to believe this was the correct way to deal with his asthma. The President
was a man who knew when to pick his battles and first his deputy had to learn
to come to them with his problems.
Maybe it was time to fight fire with fire.
"I can understand, I used to think much like you do. Look where it got me;
the administration is tarred, everyone was dragged to court, Abbey can't even
do the job she loves...all because I had MS and lied about it."
Sam fidgeted, uncomfortably, as if he was trying to block it all out.
"Sir, no offence but asthma is hardly on the same scale as MS."
It was true, Jed would give him that. Someone mentions MS and everyone is in a
panic with images of wheelchairs and hospices conjured up in the mind whereas
asthma was so common nowadays, it was easier to forget- and deny- it was a
serious problem. It's only until you watch a loved one in the throes of an
attack struggling in the simple act of breathing that you remember it can still
so quickly swoop in for the kill.
"You're right, Sam, the difference is that when I have an attack of MS, it
may be hell but I do recover fully. Yes, I may gradually deteriorate in time
but that is the outcome of my illness. I don't like it, I would do anything to
prevent it, but I can't so I've come to accept it in a way. That's why it makes
me angry to hear you're putting yourself through trauma you needn't suffer,
you're risking permanent damage to your lungs for nothing."
"You've all been speaking to Doctor Waylin," Sam said, in what was
more of a statement than a question.
"Damn right we have," Josh shot back. "Because we've heard
precious little from you."
"Josh-"
Josh cut him off. "No, don't. Is that what you want? To be connected to
tubes and oxygen for the rest of your life, to be in some vegetative state
'cause that's what's going to happen if you don't start taking better care of
yourself. If you don't let us help you." He sighed. "Next time we
might not be having this conversation, we'll just be visiting you while you
languish in a coma caused by oxygen deprivation. Then what? What will we do,
what will your family do?"
Sam jolted slightly as if startled, and he glanced away with a frown.
"I...I'm sorry." At that moment, he sounded for all the world like a
little boy who had killed his puppy. Bartlet didn't think he'd ever heard him
sound so vulnerable. "I guess I didn't think. I'm sorry."
Why did Jed feel like Sam was apologising more for his friends' feelings than
disregarding his own health? Still, he wasn't one to look a gift horse in the
mouth, they were finally making some leeway and he wasn't going to let this
opportunity slip away.
"It's okay, Sam, but what I need to know it why? Why did you ignore the
asthma? Why did you not keep up with your medication? Your doctor said this
needn't have gotten so bad and I'm sure you don't need me rattling off the
statistics of asthma-related deaths for the past decade because I can do that
if it would help you see sense."
There was a faint smile. "No, you don't need to do that, Sir." His
voice sobered. "There just wasn't always time, I have more important
things to do."
"More important than your health?" Toby quizzed. At his deputy's
shrug, the older man sighed. "God, Sam, I know we don't always make
it clear but nothing is more important than your life. Nothing. We'll find time
for your medication, we'll *make* time if we have to. You're not going
to damage yourself because of us."
"I'm not damaging myself, Toby."
Josh spoke for all of them when he said, "Try saying that when you're not
stuck in hospital looking like the Walking Dead. It'll come off more
convincing." He studied his best friend solemnly. "Why did you never
tell us about the asthma? Why didn't you tell *me*? We've known each
other for years...And don't say 'it was no big deal' because that excuse isn't
going to cut it."
"I don't know." Sam spoke softly, regarding each of them carefully.
"You really don't know what it was like when I was a kid, it didn't help I
was the youngest, that my..." He sounded as if he was going to confess
something before his voice trailed off. "I've spent twenty years getting
away from my parents' overbearing attitude, their watching my every move afraid
something would trigger another attack. I didn't want to go through that again,
not now."
At last, there it was- the truth. Bartlet knew there was more to this, more
than just a case of parents hovering over their sickly child. It was on the tip
of Sam's tongue to let it all out, it was like he was carrying a burden he
wanted to share yet something held him back. The President wanted to push
further only he didn't want Sam to close himself off and he was afraid he would
if he forced his deputy to say more than he was ready to.
However, obviously, Sam hadn't quite learnt secrets don't stay secret for long
when you work at the White House and he just hoped whatever his deputy felt he
still had to conceal was not on the same emotional charged level as the asthma.
"We're not your parents," Bartlet said, after allowing Sam's words to
sink in, "but we *are*, in many ways, a family. I know we don't
always act like it...but it would hurt each of us very much if something was to
happen to another. I want you to remember that and remember that when we're
worried, you'll just have to bear with us especially after this incident. We'll
try not to nag you but we do expect you to come to us when something is bothering
you, whether it's your health or something work-related. Don't go it alone
again, Sam, you shouldn't have to."
A lull hushed over the small hospital room before Sam nodded solemnly.
"I'll try to remember that, sir," he smiled, his features brightening.
And they said he couldn't make a speech, Bartlet thought as his own eyes
twinkling in response to the young man's more cheerful mood.
Josh and Toby had backed down from their offensive, reassured that the
President's sermon had sunken in to Sam's obstinacy and he would take heed of
the words. For all the great deeds they had accomplished for the country, for
all they were uniquely capable of doing, Jed couldn't help notice in mild
amusement that 'the kids' all still needed a little guidance from time to time
and that's what he and Leo were there for.
However, the President could see in Josh's dark eyes he was not entirely
convinced, obviously able to tell Sam was not being one hundred percent honest
with them.
Josh studied his best friend carefully for a long few seconds then seemed to
let the matter go. "Hey, I got a present for you." he grinned in
boyish mischief.
Sam's eyes narrowed suspiciously. "Oh yeah?" When Josh held up the
Medi-Alert bracelet, he groaned. "I'm not wearing that thing, I don't know
why Stephy got the damned thing in the first place."
"Could it be because she knew you're as capable of taking care of yourself
as a first grader?" Toby couldn't resist replying.
"You know," the President intoned, finding it difficult to suppress a
fiendish smile, "I would hate to be in your shoes if my wife finds out
you're not wearing your bracelet. She can be very passionate about such
matters." Sometimes, all his people needed was a little persuasion to see
things his way.
"But, Mr President, the First Lady doesn't know about it..."
"We *do* work in the White House, Sam, nothing is kept a secret for
long."
Sam might have found it a little disconcerting to witness three of the most
powerful men in the country smirking like smug schoolboys if he wasn't so
resigned to their implied threat. The kid wasn't stupid , he no doubt knew
Abbey planned to take him to ground for his carelessness and he no intention of
further inciting her wrath. With a
much put-upon sigh, he held out his arm and Josh clicked the silver bracelet
onto his wrist where it belonged.
*************************************
"Have you taken your medication?"
There was a heavy sigh. "Yes, *Mom*."
Toby just snorted, not in the least apologetic for his question, before
retreating back to his own office. Sam knew he had a right to be a little
irritated between Toby and Josh's regular interrogations and the First Lady's
almost daily visits to his office to actually watch him check his peak-flow
(she had even brought him a colourful chart adorned with Pokemon characters for
him to record his results) and take his medication. He didn't think she was
really allowed to do that after forfeiting her medical license but he wasn't
going to be that one to tell her and he certainly wasn't going to be the one to
tell Josh and Toby to back off. He valued his life too much for that.
Nonetheless, he had to admit things were starting to change in the West Wing;
the tense atmosphere of the previous year was draining back into the almost
pleasant comradé of before. Sure, there were still bad days but now at
least the other senior staff seemed to remember he had a part to play with them
and were including him in the majority of matters again. He no longer felt his
job contract was covered by the term 'block of cheese'.
That being said, if he had it to do over Sam would never have allowed for them
to find out about his asthma. He knew his near-death had frightened the others,
reminding them of his role in their lives and forcing them to change their
ways, but still they didn't understand why his asthma was so severe between
those two years in his childhood and why it's continued presence was a haunting
bane in his life that affected far more than his health. He knew if his friends
were to ever know the truth the aftermath would, to them, probably be equal to
the harrowing news of the President's MS.
Sam unlocked his bottom drawer and rummaged around until he found what he was
looking for. Tentatively touching glass of the framed photograph of the four
happy, blissfully innocent children gazing back at him, he wondered what Josh
had thought when he had found the picture during his little snoop-fest a few
weeks ago. He was eternally grateful his friend would never know what the photo
meant to Sam for it would hurt Josh far more than anyone else.
"Hey, there's a meeting in the Oval." Slamming the drawer shut in
fright, Sam jerked up to find Josh standing by his doorway watching him. The
older man regarded him knowingly. "Sam, are you okay?"
Sam smiled. "Yeah, I'm fine. Let's go."
No, it was better this way. Some things were just too horrifying to share.
THE END
Okay, I hope you enjoyed what was my first attempt at TWW fan fiction. In case you haven't noticed, I tend to veer towards Sam-torture fiction or ESF and while I know Sam is leaving the show soon because we're still only finishing up the third season, I'm just going to pretend he is forever a permanent member of the cast (ignorance *is* bliss)! Also, as for the ambiguous ending, I am considering writing a sequel about why Sam would be so secretive over asthma and what role the photo has in it. Anyway, please feel free to send me any feedback about this or any of my other stories, I would be very grateful if you did.
