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Clear Blue Skies
by Kaytee
Disclaimer: I own them.
Really, I do. I own Josh and Katie and Michelle and Kerr and Meredith.
I don't own James cause I gave him the hell away. Oh! I also
own Columbia-TriStar, The WB, and I've got Paul Stupin in my back pocket.
Blah dee dah, I barely own myself.
Author's Note: Totally
spoilerific! This is the missing scene from Two Gentlemen of Capeside,
a.k.a. The Storm. What happened between the time Pacey and Joey drove
away in her truck and the time Pacey goes to Dawson at the end? Dawson
has shown significant signs of humanity, and I just don't know how to process
that. For all you Dawson lovers, don't worry, I don't bash him in
this. Thank you to my beta baby bijal, who's been getting lots of
snippets of fics that will probably never see the light of day but she
doesn't complain. :P
Rating: PG-13 (the
word "penis" is used, oh my)
Category: P/J
Feedback: For the love
of God. Please! kaytee@dstream.net
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She's watching me as I drive
her truck through the storm-ravaged town. I realize my grip on the
steering wheel is tight enough to leave me white-knuckled, and by the look
on her face as I glance at her I know that she's correctly guessed that
I've been replaying what happened over and over in my mind. Wondering
if I could have done something different. Pissed off because I had
to leave our boat out there. Wishing to God he hadn't been the one
to rescue Jen and me.
Loosening my grip, I reach
over and take one of her cold, clammy hands in mine and our fingers entwine.
Her eyes are still wide and they're still scared and I rest our linked
hands against my leg as I return my attention to the slick road.
"I'm okay," I say, an effort to reassure her.
Joey doesn't bother answering,
opting instead to let me know she's aware I'm lying by giving my hand a
light squeeze. I sigh and brush my thumb over the back of her hand.
I notice how the town has
been turned upside down by the storm. Store windows are blown in,
tree limbs are broken. As we drive down the residential streets nearing
the other end of town, I dodge the trash barrels lying still in the street
after having been tossed by the wind.
When we pull up to the Potter's
Bed & Breakfast, the back porch light flips on and the door opens.
Bessie pushes open the screen door and walks out to the steps, pulling
her cardigan tight around her.
"Where the hell have you
two been? I tried to call the Yacht Club but nobody answered and
I knew that you said that Pacey and Jen were going to go sailing this afternoon,"
she calls out while we get out of her old Ford pickup.
Joey trudges up the stairs
toward her and I follow her closely. In a tired voice, she tells
the story as she reaches her sister. "They did go sailing, and they
were out there when the storm came up. Dawson and I stole a boat
from the club and went out after them. And we had to leave True Love
out there."
Bessie reaches out and grabs
Joey close to her, hugging her tightly despite the fact that she's soaked
to the skin. "Oh my God, oh my God! Joey! You could have
drowned out there! What in the world were you thinking?"
Joey pulls slightly away
from her and looks back at me. Bessie looks at me too and I stand
there, pinned by two pairs of Potter eyes. "I was thinking I could
lose him."
Her voice is soft and plain
and I wonder if I'm the only one who hears the frightened note. It
breaks my heart.
Bessie has a hundred questions
in her eyes but she bites them back visibly as she notices Joey shiver
delicately. Her hair, caught back in its simple ponytail, is dripping
and as I break our gaze I remember that I'm likewise soaked.
"You two need to shower and
get changed into some dry clothes," Bessie says finally, and to lighten
the moment I purposely choose to take the comment in the lewdest way possible
and wiggle my eyebrows suggestively.
"Separately!" she adds, reaching
up and smacking me lightly on the top of my head.
Joey cracks a smile at the
exchange and offers to shower in the smaller bathroom, the new addition
that was put in over the summer. I open my mouth to protest, knowing
that the water takes longer to heat up in the newer bathroom. She
stops me with a look and I nod lightly, watching her walk down the hall
and start up the stairs. Her shoes squeak with each step and I want
to tease her about it but I don't.
Feeling foolish standing
in the kitchen and dripping onto the linoleum, I offer Bessie a sheepish
smile and move past her, heading for the main bathroom. I'm not entirely
surprised when she catches my arm and I look down into her concerned brown
eyes.
I try to head off what I
know is coming. "Bessie, I'm sorry she went after me, I'm sorry she
was in danger. I feel horrible - "
She interrupts me by putting
her arms around my neck, forcing me to lean over her. I put my arms
around her gingerly, not knowing if this is merely a diversion while Bodie
comes up behind me with a cleaver for endangering Joey.
"I know you do, kid.
You think I don't know that? I know you love her," she says, squeezing
me before pulling back to look up at me.
I guess my confusion is written
plainly on my face because she sighs, exasperated. "You're completely
stupid for being out there in the storm, but . . . you're part of this
family, Pacey. I'm glad you're alright; I was worried about you."
Once again I'm overwhelmed
by how these people have welcomed me and made me one of their own.
By loving Joey, I've wormed my way into a functional family and it feels
good. Damn good. I don't care if their name is linked with the biggest
scandals to hit Capeside. I come from people who have spotless reputations
and picture perfect smiles that degrade one another and spread animosity
like poison as soon as the camera stops flashing. However unconventional
a family they are, the Potters and Bodie love each other. And they
love me, too.
My expression must have betrayed
me, because Bessie hugs me again before shoving me away from her, laughing.
"Go take your shower, twerp."
When I get to the bathroom,
I turn on the hot water tap and strip out of my wet clothes, leaving them
in a pile on the tiled floor. Steam is starting to billow from the
shower and I step into it, the sharp needles of the hot spray stinging
my cold flesh until I get used to the feel of it. I stand there for
long moments, going over Bessie's words in my mind and trying not to think
of how scared Joey looked, how tightly she'd held onto me on the docks.
Of how I put Jen in danger. Of Dawson's face when he shouted that
he wasn't going to leave without me. I don't want to think
of True Love.
When the door opens and shuts
quickly, Joey's embarrassed voice unnecessarily says, "It's me."
"Well hello, you," I say
back, lathering my hair, what little is left after being buzzed.
Thank God that there is at least one man's presence in the house to insist
on shampoo that doesn't smell like an exotic fruit salad.
"I came in to get your clothes
to run through the washer. I also brought you some of Bodie's sweats
for you to wear," she says, and through the flowered shower curtain I can
faintly make her out as she closes the lid on the toilet and sits on it.
"Thanks. You were awfully
quick in the shower," I say, surprised that she's remained so long in my
naked presence. I'm not about to complain, however. Not me,
no sir.
"I never take long showers.
I prefer to soak in the tub," she tells me. "With a good book and
headphones to block out screaming children and strange people in my house."
The mental image that springs
to mind is one that I have to push to the recesses of my brain if I'm to
continue having a coherent conversation with her. While I'm naked.
I cough and continue scrubbing as I say, "I can understand that.
You're never alone here. In my house, with three sisters and a girlie
brother, I was lucky to get five consecutive minutes to myself in the bathroom
to bathe."
"Well, that certainly explains
the way you used to smell," she teases.
"You're such a sweetheart,
have I ever told you that, Potter? I mean, really," I laugh, heartened
that she's feeling better. Good enough to make fun of me, at any
rate. "A guy could get quite the ego with such abundant praise."
"It's a wonder your eyes
aren't brown, Pacey," she snaps back without a hint of heat to her tone.
"Yeah, yeah."
She sits there for a little
while longer and I don't mention it. She wants to be near me and
I want her close just as much.
Finally, she gets up and
goes to the door. "Are you hungry?"
I look around the edge of
the shower curtain and she blushes immediately, her cheeks pinkening, though
to her credit she doesn't look away. "Yeah," I say, winking.
She rolls her eyes dramatically.
"I'm going to make some soup and sandwiches. Take your time."
When I get through with my
shower, I towel off and dress in Bodie's old sweats. They're a little
big on me but nice and warm. She also left me socks and I walk out
to the kitchen with them in hand, intending to sit at the table and put
them on but when I get to the archway of the kitchen, I stop because I'm
caught up in the sight of her.
Her hair is drying in waves
and she's dressed in boxers and a t-shirt and she's just so beautiful,
standing there at the stove with her sister. Joey stirs something
in a pot that smells delicious while two sandwiches sizzle in the pan and
I realize that Bessie's talking just in time to hear her say, " . . . completely
natural reaction. Your man was in life-threatening danger, so what
do you do? Feed him."
"He's hungry, Bessie," she
says, shrugging one shoulder the way she does when she desperately wants
to change to change the subject.
"So what? He's a teenaged
boy, he's always hungry," Bessie says with a dismissive wave of her hand.
"And this is the first time I've seen you voluntarily cook without complaint."
"Doesn't mean I still can't,"
Joey mutters. "Besides, your little theory there pushes back the
women's movement about, oh, thirty years."
Bessie smiles and bumps her
hip. "Tell me something. Do you care?"
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