Title: Dying in Here
Liliumscribe
Mal/Inara angst
Occasional reference to
events in the television series.
Disclaimer: These fascinating
characters belong to Joss Whedon and I am grateful for the
opportunity to place them in a different light.
He stared numbly at her seemingly lifeless body as fear gnawed through his insides. Her luxuriant, black locks hung over his lap as he glanced down at her porcelain features, watching their usual hues gradually draining away. He feared the worst. It was meant for me. It should be me lying here bleedin'. Not her… not now… His bloodstained hands desperately trying to close the gaping wound on her chest were wearied by the exertions and a strange feeling of loss. Within the space of a brief few minutes, his world was in a spin… this woman that he had for the longest time tried to resist was drifting away… Little by little… and those lips, that drove him to despair time and time again, were losing their warmth and colour.
A quiet moan and a whisper that seemed to come from
nowhere interrupted his train of thought…
"Mal…" her eyes
flickered.
"Inara… Gorram it… why d'ya go and do a thing
like that for…" his voice quivered.
"I couldn't let them…
hurt… I'm glad… that you're alright.."
Alright? I
will never be alright… if you die on me… now…
"Captain, we need to take her to the infirmary now… if we are to have any chance of saving her. She's losing a lot of blood." Simon's voice broke through with characteristic professionalism that belied a sense of quiet urgency.
Mal cursed the interruption but
conceded reluctantly that the young doctor was right. With a heavy
heart and an unnaturally laboured gait, he picked her up and made his
way to the infirmary, the thought of losing her, never far from his
mind. I've never been one for complications so why did I let
myself care about her? It was only supposed to be a business
arrangement? Wei she me jian dan de shi bian cheng na me fu za?
More curses to a God he had long-forgotten and self-recriminations
about putting her in harm's way.
He knew he was fortunate to
have Simon as his medic and knew that if there was anyone who could
save Inara, it was Simon. In all the months that he'd been with
them, he worked tirelessly to patch up the crew with skill and
intelligence. His devotion to his sister was a rare thing and in that
time Mal had gone from grudging respect to a fierce protectiveness
towards this young man.
When they finally lowered her onto the
operating table, he couldn't make himself leave. He knew he had to…
he would just be in Simon's way. She's lying there and I can't
do a gorram thing to save her. But it was as if his feet were
rooted to the ground. For the second time in his life, Malcolm
Reynolds felt utterly helpless. Simon, however, did not ask him to
leave. He seemed to know that Mal needed to be there. Mal stood and
watched as Simon prepped his patient, laid out his instruments and
readied himself for the procedure. It was one that he had observed on
several occasions but never before wracked with so much personal
anxiety. Mal forced himself to watch as Simon confidently delved into
the wound and extracted the bullet with his usual deftness. Only then
did Mal realize that his hands were shaking and one of them still
clutching onto Inara's. For not the first time, Mal was secretly
grateful for the doctor's discretion and sensitivity.
"Now
what, Doc?" Mal finally took the plunge and prepared himself for
the worst as the young doctor came to the end of his stitching.
"Now… we wait… hope and pray… Can't do much more until
her condition stabilizes."
Pray? Now that was something Mal had
left behind a long time ago… at the Battle of Serenity. Prayer was
of no use to him then and didn't seem to be much use now. Yet
looking at her, watching her chest struggle to rise and fall with
each passing moment something that had been buried was stirring
inside. For a man who had seen so many dying in his time, he couldn't
comprehend why this one was slowly tearing him up inside. An
unfamiliar feeling of desperation and fear engulfed him.
Dear
God… it's been a while since you and I have had a heart to heart.
I'm not sayin' I'm jumpin' back into the fold but just in
case you ain't too busy and listenin', there's a fine woman
here whose lyin' here at death's door 'cause of me. It's no
justice done if you let her die. The words came fast and
furious... it was the best he could muster under the circumstances...
and for lack of practice.
"Doc, would it be okay if I just
sit myself here for a bit?"
Simon nodded and walked away to
another part of the infirmary with his instruments, leaving Mal to
his own thoughts. What had he said to her once? Everybody dies
alone. Those words came back to haunt him now. Didn't matter
what he said then, he didn't want her to die. This beautiful,
elegant creature who with sheer words would put him in a spin and his
mind in a fog, was lying there in front of him in eerie silence. They
had battled from the beginning and theirs was a battle of words. He
called her a whore, she called him a hun dan… and on
it went. He enjoyed their little battles, it encapsulated everything
he loved about their relationship, and he secretly enjoyed the fact
that she had no fear of defying him. Remembering the fire in her eyes
when she told him where to get off brought an all too brief smile to
his weary face. But right now, looking down at her still, broken
body, he asks himself what he wouldn't do to take back all the
times he had called her a whore… He reached his out his
right hand still stained with her blood to caress her silky, black
curls. Then for a second, he recoiled, telling himself he had no
right but eventually gave in to his overwhelming need to touch her.
If only to somehow let her know that she was not alone and that she
didn't have to die alone.
Why did something simple become so complicated?
