Home > Graywulf > Spiritwalk (RNT) Part 1, Part 2
Disclaimers:
"The Sentinel" and all its characters belong to Pet Fly and Paramount.
"Quantum Leap" and all it’s characters belong to Bellasarius Productions
and Universal. Any other characters belong to my warped imagination and I’ll gladly
take the blame/credit for them.
Warnings:
OFC alert. This story does contain a recurring OFC from the Road Not Taken
series.
Acknowledgments: Many thanks
to my online friends for the support and generally putting up with me as I worked
through this story. Thanks to Marianne, Otter and Catbat for the sanity checks.
Thanks also to TAE for telling me to get back to work. And last but not least,
many thanks to Kathleen & Shallan & Toni Rae for agreeing to beta this
story!
Author’s Notes: Major references
to the episodes Switchman and Warriors. Minor references to the episodes Seige,
Night Train, Remembrance, Flight. This story is set in Fall 2000.
//
…// denotes thoughts.
The rain beat a steady
tattoo on the windshield as Jim slowed for the amber traffic light as it turned
to red. It had been another gray rainy day in Cascade, which mirrored his mood.
He would be glad to get home. Time to relax and try to put this whole mess behind
him, unless the Professor had other plans. He’d told Sandburg he was going to
be out for the afternoon. At least that had been his intention until the rain
started to fall.
He had just spent
the last two hours in Bayside Park, going over the scene of a now closed investigation.
Unfortunately, it had not closed to his satisfaction. It had started out with
a missing persons report, the nephew of a local political candidate, Russell Bradford.
As it was an election year, they had respected Bradford’s desire to keep it out
of the media’s eye. The case was handed to Captain Simon Banks, who in turn handed
it over to his best team, Ellison and Sandburg; developments escalated and it
turned to murder before they had ever been able to bring the Feds into the case.
The light changed and a car impatiently
honked behind him, alerting him to the fact. Jim continued his journey home, driving
more on instinct than conscious thought.
//We’d collared the suspect. The evidence
gave the DA an almost airtight case. The kidnapping victim had died before we...
*I* could find him. He had only been sixteen years old and should be out playing
football with friends instead of being buried by his family. Minutes had made
the difference, not hours or days. I *should* have been able to find him, but
*I* failed. And now a family grieves. More people I’ve failed. Sometimes, I wonder
why I’m even a cop. Maybe I should have considered doing something else with my
life, where being a few minutes late doesn’t cost someone his life.//
Lost in thought as he turned on to Prospect Street,
he almost missed a familiar car sitting across the street from the entrance of
their building. It appeared that the occupant was reading while waiting for someone
to arrive. Jim remembered then that Blair was expecting company this afternoon.
If she was waiting in her car, it meant his roommate was running late.
Jim parked his truck and went over to the car. He chuckled
after he rapped on the window, realizing he had startled Cat. She lowered the
window and returned his grin.
“Sandburg’s
running late, is he?”
“Yeah, I just
heard from him about five minutes ago. He said he’d be about 20 minutes late,
the line was long at the store and he couldn’t get out of there any sooner.” Cat,
offered Jim her umbrella, since he was standing in the rain getting soaked.
“Why don’t you come upstairs and wait for
him? I’m pretty sure the loft is more comfortable than your car,” Jim invited,
opening the umbrella.
“Give me a sec,”
she quickly agreed while gathering the books beside her. Jim opened the car door,
holding the umbrella to try to give them both some cover.
“The
lending library is still open?” he joked.
“Yes,”
she replied with a grin. “Blair said he’d finished the others.”
“What’s
the topic this time? Spirit guides and how to contact them? Aboriginal dreamtime?
Energy healing? Crystals?”
“No… not
this time,” she answered with a chuckle. “I’ve got a couple of books about spirit
walks for Blair.” Cat paused as Jim opened the door for her. “And he’s got a couple
of books I wanted to borrow.”
*
* * * *
Jim ushered Cat into
the loft, taking her coat and hanging it after he placed the dripping umbrella
on the boot mat below the coats.
"Make
yourself comfortable,” he suggested, taking off his own damp coat. Cat deposited
the books she was carrying on the coffee table and sat in the corner of the loveseat,
turning slightly so she could talk to Jim.
“Would
you like some coffee? I’ll get a fire going in just a moment to take the chill
off. I can get you something else if you’d prefer. Maybe some tea?” he offered
as he started rummaging through the refrigerator.
Jim
may have been making light conversation with her, but Cat noticed immediately
something was wrong. His smile was for her benefit only. She could see it in his
eyes and feel the undercurrent just by being around him.
“Coffee’s
fine. Um… Jim? Is everything okay?” Cat asked cautiously as she rested her elbow
on the back of the loveseat, cupping her chin in the palm of her hand.
“Yes. Why do you ask?” replied Jim warily, remembering
how intuitive she was.
“Just
a funny feeling I had. But if you say everything is okay…” she trailed off, turning
her gaze away from Jim to the rain dripping down the overhang above the balcony
doors. The feeling persisted. //Okay,
so he doesn’t want to talk about it with me. I’ll make sure Blair knows, but it
will definitely be out of Jim’s earshot.//
“It
is,” he assured. “What do you take in your coffee? We still have some cream or
would you prefer milk? Sugar?” he asked, busying himself in the kitchen getting
three mugs for their coffee.
“Cream
and sugar is good. You don’t need to fuss though…” she stated, only to stop when
she heard the thud of something falling in the kitchen and realized Jim was no
longer in view. From her vantage point in the living room, all she could see was
his hand, which peeked out past the edge of the kitchen island.
“Jim!”
she cried as she ran into the kitchen.
Cat
knelt beside him. He was unconscious. She quickly checked him for injuries remembering
the four “B’s” – breathing, bleeding, broken bones and burns. He was breathing
easily. He had a steady pulse. There was no sign of any physical injury, though
she was sure he’d have one heck of a bump and a bruise or two from the fall. There
was no sign of fever… yet there was something very wrong. There was an almost
hollow feeling when she touched him. Almost like he was there, but wasn’t.
Cat hurried to the phone and with shaking
fingers dialed the number of Blair’s cell phone.
“Blair
Sandburg,” came the answer after two short rings.
“Blair,
it’s Cat. How long are you going to be?” she asked with a note of panic in her
voice.
“I’m just going through checkout
now. Why? Is something wrong?” he countered hearing the panic.
“Big
time. Jim arrived home a few minutes ago and let me in, then he suddenly collapsed
midway through a conversation.”
“Can
you see anything wrong with him? Injuries? Anything?” Blair quizzed, while the
cashier rang the last of his purchases through.
“He’s
breathing. He’s got a steady pulse. I can’t see anything physically wrong with
him, but he’s unconscious. Do you want me to call 911 or wait for you to get here?”
“Hang on… I’ll be there in a few minutes.”
Blair handed the cashier the money for his purchase and, without waiting for his
change, grabbed the bags and ran for his car.
*
* * * *
The trip from the store had
been a blur. The groceries sat forgotten in the car. He took the stairs two at
a time as he hurried to the loft. Opening the door, Blair saw Cat kneeling beside
Jim, draping an afghan over his still form to keep him warm.
Joining
her on the floor, Blair started his own examination. “Has there been any change?”
he demanded. If he hadn’t known how this had happened, he would have sworn Jim
was sleeping.
“No. Has he done this
before? Is this a sentinel thing?” Cat asked shakily.
“Not
as long as I’ve known him,” he replied, checking Jim’s pulse.
“Blair…
do you get a funny feeling… when you’re touching Jim? Like now… taking his pulse?”
she asked hesitantly.
“No. What do
you mean?”
“I get this feeling of
a hollowness. I don’t know how else to describe it,” she offered apologetically.
“It’s almost like his essence is gone. The part of him that makes him who he is
apart from his physical self. His soul, I guess some might call it.”
Blair furrowed his brow at this comment not knowing what
to make of it. “Help me get him into the living room. There’s more room there.
We can make him more comfortable.” Cat nodded in silent agreement and helped Blair
move Jim into the living room.
*
* * * * *
They had just gotten Jim
settled when he heard Cat gasp. He watched as she fell backwards with a look of
shock on her face. She stared at a point above them, nodded wordlessly and then
looked at him.
“Are you okay? What
happened?” he asked with concern.
“Uh,
yeah. I’m okay. I think… I just saw Incacha,” she responded slowly trying to take
in what she had seen.
“What? How did
you know it was Incacha? Did he say anything?” Blair questioned.
“He…
He had long dark hair. He wasn’t wearing much and his face was painted red. He
said the Shaman of the Great City is the only one who can help Enqueri. Do you
know who this shaman is?”
“Yeah, I
do,” Blair responded absently. //How am I supposed to help Jim if I don’t know
what’s wrong?//
“So… how do we find
him? Look him up in the yellow pages under “S” for Shaman or “G” for Great City?”
she asked in bewilderment.
“No. We
don’t have to go looking for him,” Blair began hesitantly. Seeing Cat’s confusion,
he continued. “Incacha called me the Shaman of the Great City just before he died.
But I have no clue what to do. I don’t even know what’s wrong with him!”
“You’re the…?” her voice trailed off.
Blair nodded. “You said it appeared that
Jim’s ‘essence’ or ‘spirit’ had left his body. How could you tell?”
“When I tried to connect with him to do a healing, all
I could feel was the emptiness within him.
Jim isn’t here,” she said quietly, laying her hand on Jim’s chest. “The
only thing I can think to do is a soul retrieval, a spiritwalk, to bring him back,
but I’ve never tried it before under circumstances anything like this.”
“Okay,” Blair said, trying to take this information in.
“How do we get started?”
“I wish we’d
had our meeting before now. Those are the books I brought over for you to read,”
Cat answered wistfully.
“I’ve always
had an interest in this type of thing,” Blair admitted. “But I have to admit;
I’ve never taken Incacha’s calling me a shaman as anything more serious than someone
who’s helped Jim with his senses. I’ve come up with some medicines that have helped
him when regular medications threw his senses off the chart.”
Cat
reached for her purse, and pulled out a tape. “It’s a drumming tape I’ve used
in the past to help me with my journeys. I thought you might find it useful with
the books on spiritwalks.” She handed the tape to Blair. “Put this on continuous
play and get a candle, a lit candle represents the spirit and invites our spirit
guardians and helpers to help us find Jim,”
Cat prattled on nervously.
Blair set up the tape and the
sounds of the drums filled the room. He adjusted the sound to a comfortable level
and then brought a candle over to Cat.
“Next?”
“Next, we to do the same type of breathing
exercise as for mediation,” she explained as she lit the candle, placing it on
the floor above Jim’s head. “Then you state your intention to retrieve Jim’s soul.
We will then, hopefully enter a meditative state which will allow us to go to
the same place Jim has gone.”
Blair
settled into place opposite Cat with Jim lying on the floor between them. They
each closed their eyes and took a deep breath, releasing it slowly. Repeating
this pattern four more times, they let the sounds of the drumming fill them, their
hearts and minds in rhythm with its beat. As they began their journey, a boom
of thunder reverberated through the still loft as lightening lit up the sky. They
did not notice the thunder’s uncanny resemblance to laughter.
*
* * * *
It was dark. There was little
light, and what light there was only showed various shades of gray in the darkness.
He could sense movement around him, but wasn’t sure if it was in the loft or elsewhere?
He suddenly felt a pull as if someone had
him by the scruff of the neck and was yanking him upward. He became aware of his
body below and raised his gaze to see where he was being drawn.
He
could see nothing. He could sense his movement had slowed and finally came to
a stop, but the landscape, if you could call it that, told him nothing. It was
the same gray nothingness he’d found himself in before. There was no sense of
up, down or sideways here, though he *knew* he was standing on something; but
what, he couldn’t tell. He could actually see it shift and move, but it still
defied any semblance of normal.
A
vague shape pulled and twisted and finally, pulled away, separating from the gloom.
This new shape started moving toward him, taking shape, until he finally recognized
Cat.
“Where are we?” Blair asked,
bewildered by what he saw and felt.
“We’re
in a sort of way station,” she stated, slowing her approach. “An *in-between*
place. Close your eyes. Concentrate on Jim and state your intention.”
Blair closed his eyes and started to state his intention
when he heard Cat gasp. He stopped and turned toward her. She appeared to be talking
to someone, though he couldn’t see anyone there. She hung her head and slowly
joined him where he stood. She was definitely more subdued than when he first
saw her.
“Who were you talking to
Cat? What happened?“ he asked, in concern.
“Incacha
appeared again,” she spoke quietly. “I had been warned before not to interfere.
It is not my place to help Jim.”
“And…?”
he prodded.
“I told him I was here
to help you, not Jim. I’ve been allowed to stay, to help you, but I have to pay
a price.” Cat went quiet and stared at her feet.
“What
price?” Blair asked, alarmed, not realizing there could be strings attached to
this kind of thing.
“I can stay and
help, but you’re the only one who will be able to see or hear me. I won’t even
have the ability to move things.”
“You’ll
be like the hologram Al to my Sam Beckett on this leap then? I’ll be glad for
the company. I don’t think I want to try something like this by myself.”
“Uh, yeah, just don’t expect me to start
smoking a cigar and wearing tacky suits….”
“Deal,”
Blair said with a grin, relieved she was able to stay and help him.
*
* * * *
He stated his intent as she
had instructed before then repeated it several times. Around them, the gray nothingness
started to shift and part – taking on vague shapes. Soon, they found themselves
in an alley behind a parking garage.
“Blair,
do you have any idea where we are?”
“I’m
not sure. Let’s walk a bit further and see if we can get a better idea.”
Walking around the parking garage to a
street corner, Blair confirmed his suspicions about where they were. The vehicles
in the street, for the most part, had Washington state license plates. A Paolo’s
Cab whizzed by. Blair looked at the street signs. They were at the corner of 8th
and Waterman.
“Okay, I think its safe
to say we’re in Cascade. I’ll try to call Jim and see if he’s at the loft. If
he’s not there, we can try his cell number.”
Blair
pulled his cell phone from his backpack and started to dial the loft.
“I’m not getting a dial tone. Either the battery is dead
or I don’t have a cellular phone in this Cascade.”
Pulling
a few coins from his pocket, Blair checked to see if he had enough change to make
a couple of phone calls at a pay phone. He did. Thankfully, he remembered that
he still carried the $100 bill in his wallet. He’d have to check his finances
to see how much money he had. If he didn’t have enough, he started to wonder if
the credit card he had would work here. Who knew how long they actually had to
find Jim?
“Blair, something to remember
while we’re here, while this looks like our Cascade, it isn’t. Anything can happen.
Anything is possible.” To make her point, she changed her shape before his eyes,
becoming a cougar, then returning to her human form.
“Point
taken,” Blair said with wide eyes. “I guess that means I can make the cell phone
work if I want to?”
”Why not try it again to see?” she prompted.
Blair turned on the phone again and smiled
when he got a dial tone. He dialed the number to the loft and received a message
“The number you have reached is not in service...” He tried Jim’s cell phone this
time and received the same message.
“Neither
number works,” Blair announced. The disappointment was evident. “Let’s check the
phone booth down the street. Maybe we can find a listing for him there.” The two
walked to the phone booth and checked for a listing. Jim either did not exist
in this Cascade or he had an unlisted number. The fact they were here meant it
was more likely that he had an unlisted number.
“Next
stop, Cascade P.D. We’ll see if Jim is there.”
*
* * * *
Cat watched people entering
and leaving the Central Precinct as Blair stood talking to the desk sergeant.
She was tempted to explore the upper levels of the precinct to see who else she
could find, but chose to wait for Blair’s return. It wasn’t a long wait.
Blair left the precinct with Cat following
close behind him. “He doesn’t work there.”
“So
where does this leave us?” asked Cat.
“The
only thing I can think of right now is to search for him in the newspapers,” Blair
answered. “The library should have those on file, some in hard copy, some on microfiche,
and the rest on CD ROM.”
“So off to
the library?” she suggested.
“No,
not yet,” he countered. “I’m not sure about you, but I’m getting hungry. I’m going
to grab something to eat. Are you okay?”
“One
of the fun things about being non-corporeal in this place is I won’t get tired
or hungry. But because you have a physical form in this reality, it seems you
will,” she commented with a wry grin.
“Okay…
I guess if I’m going to get tired, then I’m going to have to find someplace to
spend the night. I know of a place not far from here where I can grab something
quick to eat and a place to sleep.” Blair paused, looking at his watch. “It’s
4:30 p.m. now, maybe I should think about getting a rental car as well, so that
we can move a little faster than walking. Who knows what we’re going to face while
trying to find Jim.”
Cat nodded with
a grin, but silently wondered what she was going to do with herself while Blair
slept. There definitely were drawbacks to this journey.
*
* * * *
They
entered the large library and stopped to get their bearings. “Do you want to try
the reference area first or get online and see if you can find out something through
newspaper searches?” Cat asked.
“Why
don’t I take the Reference area, while you can start searching online?” he suggested
and began walking in the direction of the Reference desk. Blair stopped when he
realized there had been no reply. Looking back, he saw her staring after him.
“Oh, right. Sorry. Let’s start at Reference, and then do an online search.”
“Have you figured out how to start this
search?” Cat asked. “We’ve already struck out at the PD, and both his cell number
and the line at the loft weren’t in service.”
“The
only thing I can think of is to try to locate him from key dates and events that
I know from his life: return from Peru; cases he’s worked; and anything else I
can remember.” Grabbing a seat, he sat down and started to rummage through the
pockets of his jacket for a pen and paper.
“Why
don’t we make a list of dates first?” Cat suggested, perching on the edge of the
table. “If more occur to us afterwards, we can add them. We may not even need
all of them.”
“Okay. We know he was
born, because he’s here; but apparently he’s never become a cop, so we can backtrack
to September or October 1989 for news of his return from Peru.”
“Next?”
“July 9, 1991 is when Jim and Carolyn were
married,” Blair added.
“That should
be in the papers then,” she agreed.
“Veronica
Serris was bombing Cascade for about a six month period in 1994, just before I
met Jim in September. His senses came online while he was working on that case.
She blamed Jim for the death of her father, who was one of the men who died in
Peru.”
“Why did she blame Jim?”
“He was the commanding officer of the mission.
He survived while the others didn’t. So as far as she was concerned, it was his
fault.”
Cat shook her head. “The next
date?”
“Ahem.” Blair heard from behind.
Turning, he noticed a librarian glaring at him.
“I’ll
keep my voice down. Sorry.”
“Sorry,
‘bout that. I keep forgetting people can’t see me.”
“That
makes two of us. But I’m sure they’re used to people talking to themselves. Let’s
search between 1989 and 1994. We’ll
dig deeper depending on what we find.”
“That
sounds like a plan. So, we start with the microfiche for 1989?”
“Right.”
*
* * * *
A short time later, Blair
made himself comfortable in front of a viewer for the microfiche spools he had
just placed on the table. Each represented the dates he had earlier identified.
Shifting his chair a bit to the right, he pulled another next to him and smiled
and whispered, “You may as well have a seat, this may take a while.”
Cat slipped into the chair beside Blair as he loaded
the first spool into the sprockets. The both watched carefully for any mention
of Jim’s return from Peru. There was nothing.
The
next spool proved that Jim was in Cascade. He and Carolyn Plummer did marry on
July 9, 1991. Blair noticed a few changes from the picture he had seen before.
Both of Jim’s parents were present, along with the Plummers. This was an interesting
development; and a possible way to get in touch with Jim, if Carolyn was still
around and had not moved to San Francisco.
Searching
the records from March of 1994 to the end of the year, there were no mentions
of Jim, the Switchman or even the taking of the Cascade PD by the Sunrise Patriots.
None of it ever happened. Where was Jim?
“Any
other ideas?” Cat inquired, sounding more than a little worried.
“Wait,
September of 1997, Incacha and several other Chopec came here hunting for two
Vice Presidents of Cyclops Oil,” Blair started. “If they came, then there should
be some mention in the papers at least of Torrens’ death and possibly other details
from that time.”
Blair returned the
spools they’d already reviewed and requested the spools for the last six months
of 1997.
As he scrolled through the
spools, he noticed that, Bud Torrens had died exactly the same way he had in September
of 1997 in their reality. Two days later, the disappearance of Gerald Spaulding,
another Vice President of Cyclops Oil, was noted along with the death of Mitch
Yeagar, Vice President in charge of Security, also from Cyclops Oil. The good
news as far as Blair was concerned, was that there was no report of Janet Myers’
death.
Blair slowed over the next
few weeks, looking to see if any other details could be found about what happened
at Cyclops. He knew if Incacha had been successful, Spaulding would have been
tried and found guilty by the Chopec for killing the land, the water and several
of their tribesmen. The penalty, according to Jim, was death.
Finally,
they found a follow-up article to the disappearance, but not what either of them
was expecting. There, in the October 6, 1997 issue of the Cascade Tribune, in
the Business Section, was a picture of Jim. Above was the announcement of the
promotion of James J. Ellison to the position of Vice President in charge of Products
and Chemical Operations at Cyclops Oil.
//Jim?
At Cyclops? Maybe if Janet is still at Cyclops….//
“I
think I may have a way in to see Jim,” Blair said cautiously. “Let’s go online
first, to find out what we can about what he’s doing there. I can also see if
an old friend is still there.”
“An
old friend? At Cyclops?”
“Yes. She was murdered in our reality,
but according to the papers, she wasn’t here. Her name is Janet Myers. She was…
*is* the Vice President of Environmental Affairs. She was being used in the Hale
Corporation scam which lead to the deaths Torrens, Yeagar, and Spaulding, who
were also involved,” he explained. “Now if we can verify she’s still there, she
might be able to help us meet with Jim.”
*
* * * *
They sat across the street
from the Cyclops Oil building in a rental car Blair had obtained earlier in the
evening.
“Are you ready, Cat? You
know what you’re looking for?” Blair prompted.
“I’m
to look for any traces of either Janet Myers or Jim at Cyclops. If I find traces
of them, then I’m to look for information that will help us locate either of them,”
she repeated as she stepped out of the car.
“Good.
I’ll see you shortly. Good luck,” wished Blair.
Cat
crossed the street oblivious to the traffic, which passed through her. Blair shuddered
as he watching her and shook his head when she finally disappeared inside the
building.
Once inside the building,
Cat looked for clues as to where the executive offices would be located. Approaching
the security desk, she looked at the logs of those who had come to visit over
the course of the day, hoping for a little luck. There had been a number of visits
from out-of-town Cyclops people to the upper levels, floors 15 to 22. Her guess
was she would find the offices she sought there.
Walking
to the elevator banks, she realized that they had been locked down for the night.
Unless one of the security guard decided to use them, the elevators would take
her nowhere. She found the nearest stairwell tucked to the left of the elevator
bank. She suspected they too were locked as a precaution. “Not that it will be
a problem for me,” she said to herself as she passed through the door and started
the climb to the 22nd floor.
Working
her way down through the building from the 22nd floor, she found Jim’s
office on the 17th floor. “Nice view,” she commented as she looked
out over the moonlit harbor. His office was stark but immaculate. Not a clue was
to be had about his whereabouts, from what little there was on his desk. She took
a piece of paper and pen from her purse, taking note of his phone number, then
left for his assistant’s office.
Cat
had a little more success in Karla Wither’s office. Sitting in front of her phone
was her agenda for the day. She had been making arrangements for a breakfast early
the next morning at the same hotel Blair was staying in. Apparently, Jim was holding
a breakfast for several directors from out-of-town and then they would return
to Cyclops for their meeting.
A second
meeting later in the day with the R & D group was set for one of the conference
rooms. They were going to have a catered lunch. Apparently, they had an in-house
caterer for those types of functions, since the number for the caterer was an
extension rather than a full number.
She
hurriedly took down the information about both meetings to pass on to Blair.
Cat explored further, looking for Janet’s
office; finally finding it on the 15th floor. She took note of Janet’s
office phone number and noted that her married name was Janet Myers-Allen. At
least Blair would be relieved to know she was still here, and it would be interesting
to see what his reaction would be to the news she had gotten married.
Her assignment complete, Cat tucked her notes in her
purse. Deciding the quickest way down the stairs would be on four legs rather
than two, she changed into cougar form and hastened to give the information to
Blair.
*
* * * *
“Thank you,” Blair said, hanging up the phone.
“Well, that’s taken care of. I’ve got a wake up call scheduled for seven in the
morning. Hopefully, we can connect with Jim right away and get out of here.”
“Do you have any ideas on how to confront
him?” asked Cat.
“I think, for the breakfast meeting, maybe
just watching and waiting for an opportunity would be the best thing. We don’t
know what he will do when he sees me, if anything.”
“Okay, but what are you going to do for the
rest of the day?” she questioned. “All the other meetings are scheduled to be
in boardrooms at Cyclops. Even the lunch is going to be catered by an in-house
caterer.”
“I think we can play
the rest by ear; especially since we don’t know what’s going to happen. After
breakfast, I’ll call Janet to see if she can get me in to see Jim – even for a
few minutes. If that doesn’t work, then we’ll come up with another plan. You know…
I have to admit, I’m curious about what my other self is doing here. I mean, what
happened since I didn’t meet Jim. Maybe I could check on that while I’m thinking
of it.”
“Blair,” Cat said cautiously.
“Please, don’t get sidetracked. If you start going off on a tangent, we might
lose Jim. Or worse still, I might end up losing both of you. And in my current
state, there isn’t much I could do if that happened.”
“Okay,”
he agreed, noting the concern on her face. “I do have one favor to ask though…”
“What’s that? Don’t tell me… you want me
to hang out at Cyclops all day tomorrow and sit in on Jim’s meetings? Hmmmm… Just
think what a corporate spy would give for this kind of opportunity,” she continued
with a grin.
“No, that’s not what
I was thinking, although you may have to do a bit of that to help me keep tabs
on him.”
“Okay, so what did you want
me to do?” asked Cat, her curiosity piqued.
“Teach
me how to change like you do… into animal form. What’s the trick?”
Cat fell back on the bed laughing. “Blair, you know that
old joke about getting to Carnegie Hall?”
“Yeah.
Practice. You mean that’s all there is to it?” he asked skeptically.
“That’s the secret,” she confirmed. “You’ve already started
learning how to do it just by manipulating the ability to use your credit card
and cell phone here. You also seem to have an unlimited supply of cash too, I’ve
noticed,” she teased. “Its also the same way I was able to take notes.
Neither of us brought anything with us.
But, we’ve both materialized other tools, like your backpack and my purse.”
“You mean I can do the same thing, only
on a bigger scale?” he prompted.
“Start
small, like changing the color of your shirt,” Cat suggested. “Just focus on the
change you want to make. Just approach it like you do mediation, relax while doing
it. It works better than trying to force it.”
Blair
closed his eyes and his face blanked; slowly, the shirt changed from a light blue
to a dark green.
“Um, Blair. Why
don’t you take a look?” she suggested with glee.
Blair
looked down to see that the shirt had indeed changed color. For the next couple
of hours, he tried different articles of clothing changing both color and style.
Finally, he tried changing his clothing from coat to shoes. Once he was satisfied
he could do it, they settled down to a companionable silence to watch television
until Blair drifted off to sleep.
“Sleep
well, Blair,” she said, as she vacated the chair. It was going to be a long lonely
night. Feeling restless, she decided to go for a walk, promising herself to be
back before Blair received his wake up call.
*
* * * *
“So, what did you do all night?”
Blair asked. “When I woke up in the middle of the night, you were gone.”
“Well, since I didn’t need to sleep I went
for a walk,” Cat responded, watching Blair order his breakfast. “You’re great
company when you’re awake, Sleeping Beauty, but you don’t talk enough in your
sleep for me to stick around all night.”
“So
where did you go?” he prompted.
“He’s
here,” she announced with a nod. “You could set a clock by him,” she remarked,
noting the time was exactly 8:00 a.m. according to the watch Blair was wearing.
Jim strode into the room with an air of
a man used to getting exactly what he wanted and settled at a table on the opposite
side of the room from them. Dressed in a conservatively tailored gray suit, adding
to the imposing figure he cut. Somehow, seeing him this way, and adding the glare
Jim was capable of, Blair shuddered at the picture it painted. This might be more
difficult than he had expected.
“A
penny for your thoughts,” Cat offered.
“I’m
just wondering what it will take to get him to come back with us. He looks just
a little too comfortable here,” he mused. “I’m beginning to wonder if he remembers
any of his life before this.”
“If
he doesn’t, I’m wondering what it will take to shake him,” she murmured. “He looks
positively cold, which isn’t exactly surprising after seeing his office at Cyclops.
I wonder how his marriage to Carolyn fared in this life.”
Three
other men soon joined Jim. Blair watched as their host greeted them. He was smooth,
but Blair could tell by the way the men sat in their chairs that they were wary
of him.
Over the next half hour,
Blair’s gaze rarely strayed from Jim as he absently nibbled on his bagel and drank
his coffee. Jim had noticed his attentions and it was obvious he wasn’t pleased,
but he offered no sign of recognition.
“Cat,
watch the room and let me know when no one’s watching. I want to try something,”
Blair whispered, his eyes locked with Jim’s at that moment. From the look on Jim’s
face, storm clouds were gathering. This was Blair’s chance to try to throw Jim
off balance.
“All’s clear. What are
you…?” she started, but stopped as she looked back at him. Briefly, as a waitress
had stepped between Jim and Blair, Cat found herself sitting with Simon.
Cat watched Jim, who was watching their
table; his eyes narrowing when he saw the young man who had been watching him
had been replaced by another vaguely familiar face.
“Okay,
we have some recognition, and a little surprise, but he’s not giving away much.
Blair, don’t sit down at the poker table with this one…” Cat warned. “Welcome
back,” she said as a patron crossed between the two tables and Blair changed back.
A slow smile formed as she watched
Jim choke on his coffee. He realized his uninvited observer was back.
“You never warned me it was that difficult to hold another
form,” Blair admonished.
“Why do you
think I suggested you start small?” she replied. “It takes time and practice.
I’m surprised you were able to take on Simon’s form, let alone hold it as long
as you did. It was effective though.”
“At
least I’ve caught his attention. Now I know I can get through to him,” Blair said
thoughtfully.
“Just be careful how
you get his attention. Remember, I can change like you just did without attracting
attention. You can’t. If anyone else sees you, how are you going to explain it?”
she cautioned.
“Okay, no more quick
changes, at least not out in the open.” Blair paused briefly. “Cat, do me a favor?”
Blair asked, continuing without waiting for a reply. “Keep an eye on Jim and let
me know when he’s getting ready to leave. I need to get in touch with Janet at
the office. I want to see if she can get me in to see Jim today between meetings.”
Blair pulled out both his copy of Janet’s
phone number and his cell phone as he stood and ducked around the corner. Dialing,
he prayed silently that Janet would answer. Catching the eye of the waitress,
he had his coffee cup refilled, assuring her he’d be right back. He wanted to
be as far out of Jim’s earshot as possible, just in case.
*
* * * *
“May I speak to Janet Myers-Allen,
please?” Blair requested, stumbling over the hyphenated last name.
“Speaking,” she answered hesitantly. “May I ask who is
calling?” she demanded, knowing this call was being made from an unfamiliar outside
line as the call hadn’t been passed through her assistant or receptionist.
“Janet, I’m sorry. This is Blair Sandburg,”
he started to explain.
“Blair… Sandburg!
Oh my God! It’s been ages,” she replied in disbelief.
“Yeah,
you wouldn’t believe what’s happened since we last saw each other,” he said with
relief. “Look, I’m sorry to have called you on the wrong line. A friend passed
this number on to me. I was hoping to ask a favor from you.”
“Sure!
How about we get together this weekend for dinner to talk over old times? We can
discuss this favor you want then. Besides, I want you to meet my husband. I’ve
mentioned you to David a few times.”
“I
was kind of hoping I could beg that favor from you today. It would really mean
a lot. We could still get together on the weekend for dinner if you wanted,” he
countered, trying not to hold his breath as he waited for her answer.
“I wish I could Blair. I’m just about to leave for the
airport. I’m leaving town on business for the next couple of days,” she said apologetically.
“What kind of favor is it? Are you sure it can’t wait until the weekend?”
“Actually, I was hoping to get a few minutes
with one of the other VPs at Cyclops and hoped you could help me. His name is
James Ellison. Is there any possibility you can help arrange that?” Blair crossed
his fingers hoping she could help him.
“Just
a second, Blair,” she asked. He could hear her tapping her keyboard to check. “Blair, I’m
sorry. I won’t get a chance to talk to either J. J. or Karla until I get back
Thursday. He’s in meetings over the next two days. We’re both in the middle of
preparing reports for a big meeting which is coming up in a couple of week’s time.
I wish I could be of more help.”
“That’s
okay Janet,” Blair replied. “You don’t know how nice it is to hear your voice
again. I’ll talk to you when you get back,” he offered quietly, knowing he might
never talk to her again if he was successful in his task.
*
* * * *
The waitress noticed Blair’s
return to the table and presented him with the bill. Charging it to his room and
leaving a tip, he busied himself with his coffee until the waitress left.
“No luck with Janet,” Blair told Cat. “Apparently
she’s on her way out of town and won’t see Jim or ‘J.J.’ as she calls him until
Thursday. Jim’s in meetings for the next two days.”
“Options?”
Cat inquired.
“I’ve got an idea, but
we need to leave now. It looks like they’re getting ready to leave and I want
to see his reaction if we can beat him to Cyclops,” he said with a grin.
*
* * * *
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