Author's Note: Hey everyone, I've taken a break from a little more ambitious project to write my first fan-fic. I enjoy the idea of a Lasky/Palmer dynamic, and I'll try to convey a good interpretation of the Halo universe through this story. I absolutely love the canon, but it also looks like there's enough wiggle room with these new characters for a guy to introduce some new elements. Rate, review, and do whatever else it is that us deviants here do :).
I claim nothing from the Halo universe for personal gain. All is owned and controlled my Microsoft and Bungie/343 Industries. I simply take up writing for the personal enjoyment.
"O Captain! My Captain!" is authored by Walt Whitman. Not sure what the disclaimers are there, but I claim nothing from it either.
"Madsen! Hand me the tequila, this one looks like it's worth a try."
"Madsen this, Madsen that. Always doing the heavy lifting. What are you going to do when I'm not around?" Madsen retorts with a grin as he passes Paul Demarco the bottle.
"Eh, probably just keep on trying to drink everyone under the table, maybe do some more community outreach. I think I'd do just fine on my own."
"Tssssh, that hurts."
"There's some ice over here. You want one of these?" DeMarco points to the line-up of glasses already filled with mixtures of varying colors.
Finding this a suitable time, I decide to join in the banter. "Are you going to sample all of the recipes listed on that tumbler, Spartan?"
DeMarco comes back swinging, never disappointing. "Only the ones that look good. Which, right now, look like…" He draws his finger around the tumbler, pulled close to his face in mock transfixion. "One, two, three, four… All of them!"
I can't help but chuckle and roll my eyes, before leaning into the barstool I'm braced against and giving him a slight squint. "I'd be careful then. Seems to me like all that booze would make your community outreach a little less than 'up-to-snuff'."
Madsen and Hoya both pick up on the hint and immediately start breaking down in laughter. "Oh man, she cut low on that one DeMarco! You may want to just stick to fixing drinks!" Hoya suggests to the fireteam leader, grabbing his shoulder and giving it a healthy shake to make sure he knew that it was all for the sake of good spirits.
"I'll give you that one, Commander. But I'll be back. Don't you worry about that." Says DeMarco in between shaking the tumbler, already experimenting with another one of his concoctions.
"Mmm-hmm."
Noticing Tedra sneak up behind DeMarco, I have to try to suppress my smile when I see what she's after. Watching the bottle of tequila intently, she whisks it away as soon as DeMarco sets it back down onto the counter. From the looks of it, Thorne's going to show her how to do proper tequila shots, salt and limes included. There was only one ingredient missing, and now that was remedied as well.
"Ooop, where's… Hey! Grant! Damnit…" Sighing, DeMarco takes the tumbler in hand again, blindly placing a finger on a recipe. "Whiskey it is, then!" Low spirits were in short supply tonight.
I can't keep from grinning widely now, that was damn near perfect. Looking over at the table where she and Thorne are stationed, I notice eight double-shot glasses along with as many slices of lime and a healthy dose of salt, yet only the two of them. Vernier wasn't drinking tonight, and from the way he kept looking and everyone with slight unease, I took it that he doesn't spend much time at all around intoxicated Spartans. Thorne, however, catches me looking over at them. "Practice shots, Commander! She's got to have more than one chance to get the hang of it."
I laugh and shake my head. "So you settled on four?"
"Seemed like a good number."
I bring my hand up to my forehead in mock disbelief.
"Say, Commander. Where's the Captain? This whole thing was his idea, and now he's raining on his own parade!" Madsen pipes up, after sitting back and taking in the banter for a few minutes.
He brings up a good point, and I try to think of any paperwork that would have kept him tied up for this long. It has to be a combination of the reports from Requiem and the shit he's no doubt gotten into over Dr. Halsey.I surmise to myself. Before I can convey that thought to Madsen however, Hoya jumps in with an idea of his own.
"Somebody give him a call. He's at least gotta see what he's missing." He suggests, pointing to the video terminal on the far bulkhead, across from the bar.
"If Lasky has to churn through mission reports, maybe we should just…" Gabriel starts up, but is quickly cut off by Madsen, already at the terminal and punching in the address to connect to Lasky's quarters.
"Oh no! No way, the Captain needs a sit-rep."
Standing back and apparently a little proud of his handiwork, Madsen allows the terminal to have a view of all of us who are crowded around the bar. The call beeps several times before Lasky answers it remotely. He's still in his slacks and his sidearm is still holstered at his side, but he has traded in his lightly armored coat for a black fitted t-shirt and is just finishing hanging it up.
"Lasky. Be there in a second."
"Captain!" The jumbled conglomerate of voices that greet him are friendly, but a little over the top in terms of volume. He turns around and paces over to his desk with a raised eyebrow and a grin. From what I can discern from his walk, he's relieved himself of his boots as well. Affording himself some creature comforts, but not all.
He sits down at his chair with an exhaled "ah". "What's everybody up to down there?"
"Starting the party without you, oh exultant filler-outer of mission reports!" Madsen attempts his best fanfare-esque voice, like a squire announcing the presence of a nobleman.
Lasky laughs and rubs his forehead, not quite sure what to think of his new monicker.
"Did you come up with that all on your own, Madsen?"
"Yes sir!"
"Oh my, I'm impressed. Keep that up and I'll have to make you my personal announcer."
Madsen returned the comment with a sloppy salute.
"Alright now, my turn to hog the vid-com." I push gently past Madsen, although I'm not worried in the slightest about knocking the marksman off-kilter. Spartan-IV, after all. Tom waits for me to edge closer, and gives me that warm closed-lipped smile. It's a subtle difference, but there's definitely an extra sense of depth to his expressions when we talk to one another now. A sign of something more than friendship.
I mirror him in his soft smile. "Well now, Tom. DeMarco's cracked open the whiskey, you can't hide from us for too much longer!"
"Damn. You're making this hard, Sarah." Tom glances over at what can only be his datapad. "Give me another fifteen minutes, I'll be there."
I give him that scrutinizing look that I'm all too good at.
He laughs. "I promise."
"I'll hold you to it!" I jab back at him. He gives me one more soft chuckle and a raise of his eyebrows before stretching and yawning.
"Lasky out."
Vernier looks as if he's had enough of our antics, and stands up from the table to leave the rec-room. "Calling it quits early, Doctor?" Thorne calls after him.
Vernier turns back for a moment, in the middle of a stretch. "It looks like I can't keep up with you guys. I'll just hit the sack."
"Have a good one, then."
Vernier just nods and exits the room. He has seemed a little more uptight when I've run into him over the last few days, even for an egghead. A little stranger still considering the downtime we've had. Nevertheless, the drinks and banter continue to flow throughout the room. I've drifted off into my own thoughts for a few minutes before I've realized it, spurred on by the short vid-com and doubtlessly assisted by the alcohol.
I think of what Tom and I have been through during the past few weeks. It's definitely safe to say that I was angrier than Hell at him for what happened between the two of us and Majestic over Dr. Halsey. Angry that he had stood up against me, and bested me. I always hated when that happened. But I was even more… confused that he had stood against arguably the most powerful person in the UNSC. Admiral Serin Osman would most certainly not let this go.
There was plenty of yelling from my side, but only a steady, raised voice from him. I suppose that argument could have been compared to a wildfire pitted against an earthquake. Sure, the wildfire comes out hot, swift and swinging for the fences, but every fire runs out of fuel at one point. The earthquake however, is a different matter entirely. There's no stopping it. Tom would wait until there was a lull in the argument, and come back on such solid ground that even I couldn't find it in myself to rebuke. He had taken every verbal bullet I fired at him, and then disassembled the gun. He took away the façade of Commander Palmer and left me standing there with only Sarah.
Nothing was black and white to him; it was always some mottled hue of gray that always complicated things. He had explained that even though he knew how fucked up this view of the universe made some situations, he always felt it was the right view. Always right, but not often easy. We had a calmer talk up in the loftiest area of Infinity's Spartan-IV armor bay a week later, overlooking the entire complex, where I had first addressed the IV's en masse prior to the second battle of Requiem. I had asked him how he could deal with that weight he had imposed upon himself.
"It's a drag a lot of the time. Sometimes it almost holds me to the point of inaction, and that's when things can get dangerous. But I still trust my gut, it's made me and now I see that there's not a chance in hell I'm letting it go."
"You ever think you'll get lost in between making the right choice and completing the objective?"
"A lot of the time, yeah. But I can say that I've always had a few anchors that make sure I stay grounded when I feel like I'm starting to drift."
"Anchors because of people? Not what you believe?"
"Mhmm. Cadmon was the first. Chyler was pretty quick to take his place when he… well…"
I edged a little closer and leaned on the railing, mimicking his posture. "Yeah."
"I've still got one more, though. I wonder if they know how important they really are." He was rubbing his thumb over the smooth purple shard that shares the same chain as the two sets of dog tags cradled protectively in his palm.
Not wanting to make assumptions, yet still fairly certain of where this was headed, I asked. "I'm not very good at cryptic, Tom. I can connect dots, but cryptic? Not for me."
He looked over at me with that warm grin of his, before gazing back out over the armor bay. This was the first time he had let that added bit of warmth come to the surface, and it made me curious. A little less Commander Palmer trying to find good, strong words to console a friend and a little more Sarah letting her heart do the thinking.
"She's… fast and determined like a fire. But then she's steadfast like a compass; always has her head and heart pointed loyally in a constant direction. And holy shit, can she can bear down like a tempest. 'Hell hath no fury', let me tell you! But she'll stick it out to the very end. I've seen that every time."
"She sounds like a hell of a pain."
"People can call her all kinds of things." He looked to me again with that same smile.
"I just call her Sarah."
And there I was, just Sarah. Whatever was left of the shell of Commander Palmer that day had been smashed to bits. I had to have known that it was coming, but I couldn't stop myself from blushing like a little girl. I didn't know I could spontaneously create butterflies in my stomach, but they were there in full force.
"Tom, I… damn."
"Didn't know I had that in me. Maybe I should write a book?" We both laughed like kids at the thought.
"Now Captain, let's not go that far."
I paused for just a second, then leaned over and gave him a kiss on his left cheek. Always right, but not often easy. It had just taken me a while to see some things that way. Then it was his turn to blush, a lighter red as opposed to my fire-engine-esque shade. "Ah hell."
Looking at each other now with equal thoughts running through our heads, we slowly allowed our lips to say physically what they never could have verbally. Patiently they explored one another, sometimes stepping back as if to admire their work before approaching for more. I was his anchor, as he was mine.
Breaking out of my own head and looking over at the clock, only twelve minutes had passed since Tom had promised he'd show. It had seemed like so much longer. Not that I had any objections, considering what I was lost in thought over. I now wanted nothing more than for him to come strolling through the door.
A soft but concussive "bang", barely noticeable through the bulkheads of Infinity, emanates from directly above the bar. Our heightened hearing however, causes us all to pause and look up, then around to each other.
"Sounded like…" Hoya begins, before the half-sized datapad in my rear pocket chirps loudly. My blood turns to ice and a hand clenches my heart in a death-grip as I answer. Everyone in the room watches my face in confused half-drunken shock as the color no doubt recedes from it.
"Sarah… I've got a little problem up here. I'm gonna need some help." Tom's breathing was labored and ragged.
Even counting the times encased in my armor, I don't think I have ever moved that quickly in my life. Sprinting out the rec-room door, Majestic is close on my six like hellhounds as we cram into the nearest elevator. As quickly as the elevators move with six augmented humans aboard, the journey up two decks was painfully slow to me and I wished for anything to speed it up.
Upon rounding the corner and finding Tom's sliding door wide open, the invisible hand gripping my heart only squeezes tighter. Dr. Vernier is lying in a pool of his own fluids, a .50 caliber wound entering square between his eyes and exiting the crown of his head. The round is embedded in the ceiling above, along with… other bits. The weapon meant to terminate Tom lies midway between the two men, a ten inch combat blade. The compound ground steel implement is now stained crimson clear to the hilt. And Tom… Jesus Christ, Tom.
He's managed to push himself back to his desk, propping himself against it and leaving an incredible amount of blood in his wake. Dr. Vernier had thrust the knife upwards, just under the ribcage and through Tom's liver and lung. I rush up to him, completely distraught. All of my training, all of my field experience has damn near gone out the window. I do the only thing that might be remotely worth a shit and apply pressure however I can. Trying not to crush his ribs from being unaware of my own strength, I'm failing helplessly to stop the bleeding.
I frantically whip around and attempt to resemble Commander Palmer once more. "Grant! Get me biofoam! Gauze, bandages, anything! Hoya, shut that door! DeMarco and Madsen, get that motherfucker's corpse out of my sight!"
Tom gives me the lightest punch in the shoulder I have ever felt him deliver. Still, It's such an endearing measure of strength that it makes my tears flow twofold. "Pressure, Sarah. You can push harder… it's alright. Vernier told me… to say that Osman sends her regards. Told me I wouldn't be fucking up… anymore orders now."
That traitorous, double-crossing bitch. ONI had better topple under her rule, I swear to High Heaven. You've killed a damn saint, you happy Osman?! I scream in my head. But my voice registers as only a whisper. "We'll get them back, Tom. You'll patch up and testify at a trial. Always were a fan of that."
"Won half the battle… already. Son of a bitch was… sloppy. Got bloodthirsty and wanted to drag it out." Tom makes a firing motion with his hands and smiles, teeth stained from the blood.
Grant came charging back within twenty seconds with all three things I've ordered. Tom lets out a muffled grunt, and then a sigh as the biofoam sets in, burning as it cleans away the wound. But something is still terribly wrong; his skin is losing all color at a quickening pace.
"Internal bleeding not stopping. Jesus, I don't know what we're going to do about the liver." Grant spews out nervously, shaken up as well. The four men of team Majestic stand in disbelief at the sight of Tom reduced to… this. There's no room for them around him, they would simply be a crowd. Tom senses what we all know and what I so desperately don't want to believe, and yanks his dog tags from his neck. He gently pushes them against my chest and I close my hands around his, all the while shaking my head frantically. They might as well be made of ice.
"No no no no no. Don't do this. You're Captain Thomas Lasky, you can't be struck down, you wouldn't be struck down. Never like this."
His voice is at a whisper now as well, but the ragged gaps in his speech have stopped. "I remember something along the lines of 'It's the quiet ones you want to watch out for'. 'O Captain! My Captain!' Seems pretty damn fitting, hmm?"
His attempts at humor only force more salt into the wound. "Fuck. We've been a team. We were supposed to do this together, to do this all together. You're Tom. You're my Tom. What the hell happens now?"
He takes his left hand off my chest and places it on my cheek. What looks like an incredibly painful gesture with his would on that side, but shock has to have set in by now. "Hey, hey now. I'll be around, that's what these are for. That's the cruel beauty of life isn't it? You just never know."
I can't hold back this lake of emotions any longer; the dam is splitting right down the middle. I bend low against him, careful to avoid triggering any more pain. The tiniest pinhole opens in that dam, and everything that is pent up, that has been pent up, funnels down and out into three words that I haven't strung together for anyone in a long time.
"I love you."
I always have. I was just too busy being Commander fucking Palmer to be Sarah. I never even gave her a shot. Not enough time, never enough time.
"Ah, don't do that to me now Sarah." Tom lets out a horrendous combination of a chuckle and a wet, blood soaked cough.
"But I love you too. Have for a while now."
The guilt comes in like a wave, smashing against my wall of resolve that's entirely too short. You never know what you have until it's gone. I kiss him on the forehead, and he flashes me our smile one last time, before placing his head against my chest.
"I still owe you guys those drinks, you know. Don't think I've forgotten."
"Never." I reply in a broken voice.
"Maybe another talk sometime… too…"
And with that, Tom releases his final breath. I move my fingers down over his eyes, closing them as if in some sick imitation of a peaceful rest, and cradle his upper torso in my arms. But my eyes are clenched tightly shut; I can't bear to look at him. Tedra stands up, tears welling in her own eyes, and she steps back to slam her fist into the bulkhead. Gabriel approaches us and crouches down, placing his hand on Tom's limp shoulder. I can smell the tequila still on his breath, but the only thing that odor makes me want to do now is vomit. He finishes the poem Tom had thought of. I let him continue out of silent respect.
O Captain! My Captain! our fearful trip is done;
The ship has weather'd every rack, the prize we sought is won;
The port is near, the bells I hear, the people all exulting,
While follow eyes the steady keel, the vessel grim and daring:
But O heart! heart! heart!
O the bleeding drops of red,
Where on the deck my Captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.
O Captain! my Captain! rise up and hear the bells;
Rise up—for you the flag is flung—for you the bugle trills;
For you bouquets and ribbon'd wreaths—for you the shores a-crowding;
For you they call, the swaying mass, their eager faces turning;
O captain! dear father!
This arm beneath your head;
It is some dream that on the deck,
You've fallen cold and dead.
My Captain does not answer, his lips are pale and still;
My father does not feel my arm, he has no pulse nor will;
The ship is anchor'd safe and sound, its voyage closed and done;
From fearful trip, the victor ship, comes in with object won;
Exult, O shores, and ring, O bells!
But I, with mournful tread,
Walk the deck my captain lies,
Fallen cold and dead.
Commander Sarah Palmer stirred for the last time in a hellish, restless sleep. She jolted awake, glancing around frantically. "Tom?" She darts out of her bunk, the sheets already a strewn out mess from her kicking and grabs the datapad from her desk. Bringing up crew vitals, as many commanding officers are allowed to access, she flew through the last names on the roster until reaching the section containing those that start in L.
Ready room. He's in the ready room and he's fine. Heart rate. Blood pressure. All fine. He's up really late, but he's all there, Sarah. It was a dream, just a really shitty dream.
But it had seemed so real, almost tangible. She remembered being able to smell the alcohol, to feel the lull of the ship during its lazy hours.
I remember the smell of his blood, too. The feeling of his ice-cold skin.
STOP IT. Get a lid on it, right now. You're going to be a mess if you don't.
Sarah drew in several deep breaths, the shakiness in her movements decreasing each time. She rolled her head around, loosened up her limbs one at a time, and rubbed her eyes. As she did, she also remembered that only most of her dream had been fantasy. Lasky and Palmer had indeed shared a conversation on the observation deck of the armor bay. But it had ended by her account when Tom had explained what he saw in her. There had been no flirting, and no kiss. Sarah had enjoyed the idea of what could be, but it had all been in her head, private and free form the scrutiny of others. Reality was an entirely different animal. She couldn't bear to stay by his side after that, the tidal wave of what she was feeling was insurmountable.
Imagine that, Commander Palmer doesn't have the guts to face her feelings. Maybe Sarah would, but you never gave that part of yourself a chance.
She thought that maybe the whole dream held a message for her. Palmer may have been a grunt at one point, but she certainly wasn't unintelligent. Could this be the consequence of the denial of her feelings? Or the acceptance of them? If either possibility was the truth, the thought of the outcome gutted her regardless. The two of them kept speaking, as their parting ways in the armor bay hadn't been unfriendly. Conversation was simply more… reserved now. She resolved to come to terms with how she felt, in due time. She would definitely need more of that.
Maybe a late night walk. It'll get your blood moving, and maybe your thoughts will follow.
She would definitely need time.
Note: This ain't over yet!
