DISCLAIMERS: These wonderful characters aren't
mine, unfortunately. And more unfortunate still, I am not rich because of them.
SPOILERS: None
NOTES: Read "Edges of the Day"
first. The Queen of Angst (me) takes a little break with this one.
Nothing of Any Importance
By Colorado1
Lord John Roxton, shirtless and sweating,
hammered relentlessly on the windmill long after his coworkers had taken refuge
under some nearby shade. The sun had hit its high point in the cloudless sky,
but he didn't stop. From the shade of a sheltering palm grove, Professor George
Challenger, Ned Malone, and Marguerite Krux watched him.
"He must make sure that board is on its
axis," Challenger muttered.
"He's trying to show us all up,"
Malone said, wiping his brow.
"He's trying to have a heat stroke!"
Marguerite said loud enough to get Roxton's attention. He looked her direction,
smiled a crooked smile, and kept on hammering. Veronica approached the group
with freshly filled canteens.
"Roxton! I've brought fresh water!"
she called. He waved but remained on the ladder.
"Thank you," Malone said as she
handed him a drink. She noticed with a smile that the damp sandy-blonde hair at
his temples was curling and that his tan complexion was a shade darker.
Challenger and Malone quickly drank the cool water, then stood.
"Back to it, Malone," Challenger
said, adjusting his hat. "Let's get this job wrapped up!"
Veronica sat down next to Marguerite. The
dark-haired woman was repairing a tear on one of the windmill panels.
"Why won't Roxton come get some
water?" Veronica asked.
Marguerite smiled sadly. "Because I'm
here."
Ever since Roxton rescued Marguerite from
slavers a month earlier, the once-happy couple had been shrouded in melancholy.
On the day they returned to the tree house, Roxton had blurted out a hasty,
heartfelt marriage proposal. Marguerite, still shaken from her ordeal, had
turned him down kindly but firmly. He said he understood, but their
relationship changed. They didn't bicker like they used to, nor did they share
meaningful glances and kind words. Instead, they shared only a silent space of
sadness. But more often than not, they avoided each other.
Marguerite shaded her eyes with her hand and
watched Roxton swing the hammer. The way the muscles rippled across his back
quickened her pulse. What might have been, she thought unhappily.
"I may as well go back to the tree house
so he'll come over here," she announced, standing. "We can't have the
great hunter passing out from dehydration."
"Marguerite, this is silly. You love him,
right?"
"Yes."
"And he loves you?"
"Yes."
"Then..." Veronica's slate-blue eyes
widened in aggravation.
"Sometimes love's not enough,"
Marguerite said. "I hurt him when I turned down his proposal. If there
weren't already enough in my past... Now I have... It's too much." She
took her rifle and walked quickly to the tree house, her long ponytail swinging
from side to side.
Veronica watched protectively as Marguerite
went the short distance to the tree house and ascended in the elevator. Even
though she knew it was irrational, Veronica still felt partially responsible
for her friend's kidnapping four months ago. If she had only been more
vigilant, Marguerite never would have left the tree house alone. The three
months she was missing were ones of desperate worry for Veronica. It was as if
her parents had disappeared all over again.
Marguerite never told her what had happened
during those months, but Veronica knew enough of the Plateau to imagine, and
her heart went out to the heiress. Marguerite was right--it was too much to
deal with, certainly too much to face alone.
"Where is Marguerite off to?" Roxton
asked as he walked up and reached for a canteen.
"Back home," Veronica made no secret
of her disapproval.
"What's wrong with you?" he asked
crossly.
"I'll tell you, Roxton! You're behaving
like a child! You both are!" Veronica scolded.
"Veronica, you don't understand."
"Yes. I do. You love her. But your pride
is hurt, so you're pushing her away."
"She made it perfectly clear..."
"That she couldn't marry you. I know. But
you need to give her some time."
"That's exactly what I'm doing."
"By avoiding her? Roxton, she needs you
to help her through this!"
"And I'm here, Veronica. Whenever she
wants," he said. "She knows how I feel about her. But I won't
beg."
He tossed the canteen down and angrily walked
back to the windmill. Malone, who had observed their encounter, came over to
Veronica.
"Are you OK?" he asked gently.
"Those two are so stubborn! They love
each other. Why are they letting anything keep them apart?" she exclaimed.
Ned looked down at his boots. "Sometimes
you can love someone with your whole heart and still something happens..."
"Nothing of any importance,"
Veronica said firmly and turned to go to the tree house.
Ned wistfully watched her lithe figure easily
traverse the distance to the tree house.
"Nothing of any importance," he
echoed.
The dinner Summerlee had made was nothing out
of the ordinary—dried raptor meat, homemade bread, and boiled greens. But the
silence at the table was unusual. Marguerite ate quickly and excused herself
with a cup of tea to the balcony. Roxton, still stung from Veronica's
chastisement, wouldn't look her direction or Marguerite's. He sat in an ill
humor until everyone was done, then began to clear the table.
The two older men went to Challenger's lab
while Veronica and Ned sat in the living area. Veronica looked from Roxton, who
tossed the dishes about carelessly, to Marguerite, who stared into the coming
darkness.
"Ned, we have to get those two back
together," she told him matter-of-factly.
"'We' do?" he raised his eyebrows.
"Since when am I involved?"
"Since right now," she smiled.
"I have an idea..."
"Marguerite? Can you bring in some
water?" Veronica called.
Never one to arise early, Marguerite walked
into the living area with half-closed eyes. "Wasn't it Roxton's
turn?" she asked irritably.
"He isn't here, and Challenger needs it
or the experiment will be ruined..."
"Well, heaven forbid science wait for me
to have a peaceful morning!" she said grabbing her hat, rifle, and a
bucket. As soon as she had left on the elevator, Malone motioned to Veronica,
who ran to the top of the stairs.
"Roxton? Are you down there?" she
called.
He climbed the stairs two at a time. "Now
where else would I be? You said Challenger was waiting for me in the lab, but
he isn't there!"
"Sorry. He just went down in the
elevator," she reported. Mumbling curses under his breath, Roxton entered
the elevator that had just returned from ground level.
As soon as he left, Veronica raced over to Ned.
The two rigged the elevator controls so the elevator couldn't return to the
tree house. "A little togetherness will make them talk," she said.
"Veronica, this prank could end
differently than you expect," he cautioned.
She smiled mischievously. "Let's tell
Challenger and Summerlee it's OK for them to come out of hiding."
Marguerite gripped the bucket handle in one
hand, her rifle in the other. She didn't like coming outside alone anymore.
Every unexpected noise set her nerves on edge. Still, this was a lovely
morning. The sky was washed clean, and the air was filled with the heady scent
of a hundred wild flowers.
The sudden breaking of branches directly ahead
froze Marguerite in her tracks. With trembling hands, she dropped the bucket
and swung her rifle into readiness.
"Who's there?" she demanded with
more fear in her voice than she realized.
"Marguerite?" Roxton stepped into
view. Without thinking, he walked up and enveloped her in his arms. "Oh
love, I didn't mean to frighten you. What are you doing out here alone?"
She stepped back into the mud puddle her
spilled water had made. "Getting water, which you were supposed to do, I
might add."
Roxton's face was a study in confusion.
"I did bring in the water. First thing this morning."
"But Veronica sent me to get it!"
"And she sent me down here to find
Challenger."
Marguerite wiped her soiled boots on some
nearby grass. "I smell a rat. A lovely blonde rat."
"A well-intentioned rat," he added
with a brief smile.
"And the road to hell is paved
with?" she asked, returning his smile. They stood staring at one another,
unable to look away. Finally, Roxton cleared his throat.
"Well, we may as well go back," he
said. Marguerite's roses-and-cream complexion, warmed by the early morning
exertion, held a becoming blush that accentuated her large gray eyes. However,
Roxton saw nothing of the lovely light that once lit up her face. It had gone
out four months ago, and he felt helpless to bring it back.
"Yes," she agreed, still not looking
away. Roxton's jaw was firmly set, his thin but passionate lips pressed
together, his dark-brown eyes pleading with her for...something. This was the
face she loved, the man she loved. He would be at her side in a heartbeat if
she only asked.
"John..." she began.
"Yes?" he answered quickly.
"She meant well. She just doesn't
understand," Marguerite said softly.
"Oh," he said, turning to the side.
"She doesn't understand," she
repeated a little louder, "that things aren't the same between us."
"Yes," Roxton said, ill at ease.
"They aren't." He stepped aside and gestured for Marguerite to walk
ahead of him. They went to the foot of the tree, but to Roxton's exasperation,
the elevator wouldn't go up.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
"Damnation! Another well-intentioned
ploy, I believe," he slammed his palm against the bark.
Marguerite smiled slyly. "Would you be up
to teaching our little matchmaker a lesson?"
Roxton raised an eyebrow. "What do you
have in mind?"
"Veronica! Malone! Come quickly! Roxton
is hurt!"
Veronica leaned over the railing. Far below
Marguerite stood waving her arms.
"Nice try, Marguerite. But you're staying
down there!"
"No, no, he really is hurt!"
Malone joined Veronica at the railing.
"Maybe we should go see, Veronica."
"Ned, this is just a trick," she
said confidently and walked away.
"Malone, do you want Roxton to be raptor
food? Please help me!" Marguerite called. "Malone, I swear this is
the truth! He needs help!"
Ned hesitated then quickly went to the
elevator controls. In a matter of minutes, the elevator was working, and he was
on the jungle floor. Seeing the red stains on Marguerite's blouse, he set off
on a dead run to where she was pointing.
Roxton sat at the base of the windmill
pressing a handkerchief against his forehead, which was covered in redness.
"What happened?" Malone asked
anxiously.
"A support board fell," Roxton
winced. Malone supported him under one shoulder, Marguerite the other. Together
they helped him back to the tree house.
"How can I help?" Veronica looked
ashen as the others helped Roxton to his room.
"You've done quite enough,"
Marguerite said sharply. Ned retrieved the first-aid kit from the kitchen and
handed it to her. She shut the bedroom door behind her.
Marguerite bandaged Roxton's "cut";
Roxton quietly watched her every move.
"There now," she said with
exaggerated sympathy. "How does that feel?"
"Better," he replied with a grin.
"How long are we going to keep up this ruse?"
"Oh, I don't know. Until she—and her
accomplice—have learned a lesson," she said, looking down at her white
blouse. "I hope these berry stains will come out. It really looks like
blood, doesn't it?"
"Real enough to fool those two," he
whispered, and they shared a quiet laugh. "This is nice," he added a
moment later.
Marguerite looked at him longingly. "I've
missed you."
"I've missed you, too," he said.
"I only wish..."
"Yes?"
"I only wish that I could wind the clock
backward to four months ago. Or at least to one month ago. That day I brought
you home..."
"Was the one of the happiest of my
life," she finished for him.
"The happiest day of your life includes a
bungled marriage proposal?" He raised himself up on one elbow only to be
pushed back onto the pillow.
"Bungled? No. Never. Not from you,"
Marguerite brushed a stray lock of hair off his forehead. "Just
ill-timed."
"I can't change how I feel about you. I
want you to be my wife."
"I'm not asking you to change. I'm asking
for some time," Marguerite said barely above a whisper. "I...need
your help, John."
"Tell me what to do, and I'll do
it."
"I can't tell you, because I don't
know!" she cried, quickly standing. He reached for her hand and pulled her
down on the bed next to him. They lay facing one another for a long time. He
reached out and pulled a stray blade of grass from her hair.
"Your hair is a fright," he teased,
reaching again.
She slapped his hand away. "It is
not."
"You haven't seen it recently then."
"Well, you won't win any beauty
contests," she retorted. "Not with a big bandage on your
forehead." She kissed her fingertips and gently placed them on the white
gauze.
Roxton caressed her face with the back of his
fingers. "One way or another, I guess we're stuck with each other."
She looked at him tenderly. "It always
seems to end up this way."
Veronica stood on the balcony, hot tears
stinging her eyes. Angrily, she wiped them away. Of all the stupid, juvenile
things to do--trapping two people in the jungle, then not responding to their
cries of help! She struck the railing in anger.
Malone left her alone for a while, then walked
purposefully over to her. "Veronica, that was a silly trick," he
began.
"Don't you think I know that, Ned?"
she said in distress. "Roxton could've been seriously injured, and I just
let them stay down there. Thank God you had the good sense to take Marguerite
seriously!"
"You meant well, Veronica. And who knows?
You may have done some good. They've been in there a long time, and I don't
hear any screaming."
Veronica shook her head. "No, Ned. It was
wrong of me to interfere."
"Maybe so. But you opened up my
eyes," he said.
"What do you mean?" she asked,
facing him.
"You said that nothing of any importance
should stand between two people in love. I thought of a dozen different
arguments to that...but then I realized you were right. All that matters is
that the two people love each other." He paused and took a deep breath.
"So. Here it goes. Veronica, I love you."
Veronica swallowed hard. "You love
me?"
"Yes."
"But...what about Gladys?"
He shook his head. "I did love her. Or
thought I did. But she really didn't love me. She didn't even know me that
well. I was just a rising star at her father's paper. No, I don't love Gladys.
I love you."
Veronica's cheeks were burning, and her throat
was dry. Ned shifted his weight uncomfortably.
"This is where you say that you love me,
too," he tried to laugh.
"I do love you," she shyly
whispered.
He pulled her to him and felt her lean body
weaken in his grasp. "I told you this prank could end differently than you
expected," he whispered hoarsely.
Nearby a wild jungle bird screeched.
"What was that?" Veronica murmured
quietly, looking into Ned's clear-blue eyes.
"Nothing of any importance," he said
and lowered his lips to hers.