Steele Shaken
No matter what name he
carried over the years, Sunday mornings seemed to be perfect for
sleeping late. Of course, that was usually because he was out
late on Saturday night.
Which explained why he was
awake at the absurdly early hour of nine on
this bright Sunday morning. Laura had cancelled their plans on
Saturday night, giving the rare
excuse of a splitting headache. He'd offered to stay the evening
with her, but she'd waved him off,
insisting she was going to take some aspirin and go to bed for the
night. There was enough strain in her voice
that he'd believed her. Suddenly left without plans for the
evening, and more specifically, without Laura,
Remington found himself at a loss for what to do.
Eventually, he'd settled for watching Notorious and drinking a glass of
wine. At eleven, he'd gone to bed out of sheer
boredom.
Five minutes after waking
up, Remington dialed Laura’s number to see
how she was feeling today. No answer. He frowned
at the phone before hanging it up. After
a quick shower, he tried again. Still no answer. He dialed
the office and the car phone. No answer
at either place.
It took only fifteen
minutes to drive from his place to hers in the
Auburn. He rapped on the door to her loft with the back of his
knuckle. He knocked again before he
heard the slat being pulled back in the door.
Laura looked like death
warmed over. Pale, shaky, and still
wearing her pajamas, she held her hands up. “Don’t come near me.
I think I have the plague.”
Ignoring her, Remington
placed a hand against her face as he came
inside. “You’ve got a fever.”
She struggled with the
door until he reached across and closed it for
her. “I know. I feel terrible.” She hadn’t slept well the
night before. The headache hadn’t abated
until well after midnight, and the residual tension in her neck and
shoulders kept her from sleeping much for the
rest of the night.
“Have you eaten?” I’ll
lay a ten she says no.
“Not really. It
seems like a lot of effort.”
I win. “Laura, you really
must take care of yourself when you’re ill.” Had she ever been
sick? He couldn’t remember.
Injured, yes. But sick? Never.
“Go lie in bed or on the sofa; I don’t care which.”
“Mr. Steele, I promise
I’ll be fine,” she said wearily.
“Then you’ll have to
accept my clucking over you like a mother hen.”
He led her to the sofa, tucking a blanket around her before
pressing a soft kiss to her heated forehead.
When he brought a pillow from her bed, she put her head on
it, feeling dreadful but comforted by
Remington’s presence.
He poked around in her
larder. “Good Lord, woman, don’t you eat?”
As usual, all he found were a few pieces of fruit, some
cheese, and yogurt. Oh, and the bottle of
Dom he always kept stashed on the bottom shelf. In a
cabinet, he found a single can of chicken
broth which he warmed on the stove and served to her in a cup.
“Drink this. I’m
going to the market. If I’m going to stay
here with you, at least one of us should be able to eat.”
Once again, Laura
protested but was inwardly relieved when he shot her
his "don’t argue with me" look. She never won anyway she
rationalized inaccurately as she sipped her
broth.
“Where are your keys?
I don’t want to wake you when I come back.”
“On the counter, I think,”
she mumbled. Remington picked up her
keys and locked her inside. He decided to take her Rabbit
as well. It was much better for
carrying groceries than the Auburn.
While he shopped at the
market for fresh food and the makings of
chicken noodle soup, he had the idle thought to swing by his
own place and pack a change of clothes.
It wouldn’t be the first time he spent the night on her couch, and
probably not the last. It couldn’t hurt
to throw in a few of his favorite movies while he was there.
He stopped a woman with
three kids in the market, flashing a charming
smile. “May I ask you a question? What would
you recommend for a fever?”
Normally, the woman would
have been annoyed at the interruption, what
with her fussy infant and two young children bouncing in
the basket, but his smile made her sigh, and
his accent warmed her toes. “For an adult or kid?”
“Ah, adult. She’s
feeling a bit under the weather, and I want to
make her comfortable.” The woman pointed out three
different choices, indicating her favorite, and made
a mental note of recounting this conversation to her
husband. Maybe he would be more sympathetic
the next time she was sick.
Remington bought them all
along with a new thermometer. He wasn’t
sure if Laura had one at the loft. If she did, he could take
it to his place.
Laura was sleeping when he
returned. Quietly, he unloaded the
groceries and put them away before starting a pot of soup to
simmer during the day. He put a hand to
her forehead. She seemed warmer than before, but he wasn’t
sure. He had a hard time waking her
for lunch, but he persevered and managed to get a few
spoonfuls of soup into her. Her temperature
was 101 according to the thermometer.
By nightfall, Laura
alternated shivering and sweating. She woke
briefly to shower and change into fresh pajamas. Remington
insisted that she take acetaminophen along
with another sip of broth while she was up. She staggered to
bed with Remington supporting her the
whole way. He sat on the edge, stroking her hair until she fell
asleep.
Afterward, he sat at
Laura’s desk and dialed Mildred’s number.
“Hello?”
“Mildred, Steele here.”
“Oh, hello, Mr. Steele.
How are you this evening?”
“Ah, I’m, ah, calling
about Miss Holt. She’s quite ill, and I
doubt she’ll be in the office tomorrow.”
“Uh oh, that’s terrible.
What’s the matter with her?”
“She’s got a fever, a
rather good one, I should say.”
“Are you going to stay
with her, Boss?" Mildred wanted to know.
"If she’s got a fever, she probably shouldn’t be alone.”
“I am. I’ll stay
with her tonight.”
“Good idea, Chief.
I’ll talk to you in the morning.”
“Thank you, Mildred.”
He hung up the phone.
Remington checked on
Laura, noting her fever was down a bit after her
shower. He settled in with TV and the remote, rapidly
clicking through channels. He gave up and
popped one of his own videos into the VCR. He couldn’t
resist checking on her every twenty minutes or
so, but she seemed to be sleeping well at the moment. After
the first hour, he settled in to finish
watching Sunset Boulevard.
As the credits rolled, he
looked in on her again. Her temperature had climbed to 103, and
she shivered. He resettled the covers
around her and added a light blanket. She
woke briefly but drifted off almost immediately when he
stroked her hair once more. He fretted,
wondering if he should stay awake to watch over her during the
night.
Laura alternated between
dozing lightly and having odd, vivid dreams.
Vaguely aware of Remington settling down next to her
that night and lightly resting his hand on
her arm, she turned toward him and shifted so that their
fingers entwined while they slept.
She dreamed of walking
with him along the beach; only this time, instead of exchanging
letters, she found the courage to tell
him she loved him.
Shortly after 2 a.m.,
Remington woke, conscious of his need to check on Laura. He
pressed a hand to her forehead, but it
didn’t seem any different than before.
Relieved, he closed his eyes and slept.
Laura dreamed of London.
He'd left because he loved her; she followed because she loved
him.
At 3:45 in the morning,
Remington was abruptly awakened by Laura’s violent shaking. He
brushed his hand across her head and
found it terribly warm. He fumbled for
the lamp and the thermometer. Good God, her temperature had
spiked to 105. He rolled off the bed and
retrieved the acetaminophen from the kitchen.
“Laura, wake up. You
need to take your medicine. Laura,
Laura, darling, wake up for me.” He stroked her forehead and shook her
gently, noticing that her pajamas were
soaked with sweat. “Laura?” But she wouldn’t wake, even after
several minutes of prodding. Remington
was terrified. He had next to no experience with illness
and had no idea what to do with her. He
called her doctor but could only leave a message with his answering
service. For thirty long minutes,
Remington rocked Laura, trying to rouse her enough to drink water,
take medicine, anything. At four-thirty,
when the doctor hadn’t returned his call, he gave in and decided to
take her to the emergency room at the nearby
hospital.
As he lifted her into his
arms, all hell broke loose. The earth
rippled below his feet, throwing him off balance. The force
of the quake threw the two of them into the
railing separating Laura’s bedroom from the rest of the loft.
Pictures and small furniture crashed to the
ground, and Remington could feel small bits of concrete raining
down on him from the ceiling. He tried
to cover Laura as her bedroom windows shattered loudly.
He looked up in time to
see the bed dancing across the floor toward
them in an eerie pantomime, as if a puppeteer controlled the
strings. With strength born of fear,
Remington pulled Laura out of the way as the bed crashed into the
rail. He stumbled and sat down hard with
Laura in his lap. A deafening pop sounded as the transformer
outside the building blew, and the loft
settled further into darkness.
Remington could feel
Laura’s burning heat as she lay limp in his arms.
He kissed her forehead and hugged her, afraid to let
go. As he tried to get to his feet,
another ripple of the earth knocked him to his knees. Desperately,
he clutched Laura and tried to hold himself
steady. His heart pounded. Oh, he had experienced his fair share
of earth-shaking; after all, he lived in
L.A. This? He hadn’t been through anything like it.
Someone banged on the
door. “Miss Holt? Miss Holt?
Are you okay?” Remington scrambled to his feet, carrying Laura.
He started to set her on the bed, but his
hands brushed glass. He lifted her again, and he picked his way
through darkness to the sofa, wincing at whatever
he stepped on before putting her down. He heard more
banging on the door. “Miss Holt.
Miss Holt!” Remington pulled the door open. “Mr. Steele!”
Laura’s downstairs neighbor shined a flashlight in
his face.
“Ah, yes, Mr.
Bartholomew.” Steele held up a hand to block the
light.
“Sorry, are ... are ... is
Miss Holt okay?”
“She’s rather ill,
actually. I was about to take her to the
hospital. High fever.”
“You’ll never get there.
The roads are blocked with debris and
cars tossed all over the place. This is a bad one, Mr. Steele.
I was going to tell Miss Holt that if you
smell gas to be sure to turn it off. Who knows what pipelines were
broken in this thing.”
“Thanks, thanks for the
advice, mate.” He tried to break off the
conversation to return to Laura, but the other man stopped him.
“About Miss Holt, how bad
is her fever?”
“One hundred four, one
hundred five.”
“As long as we’ve got
water, try getting her to take a bath. The
cool water can bring a fever down.”
Remington raised his
eyebrows. “I’ll try that. Thanks
again, mate.” He shoved the door shut and dodged spilled furniture
and glass dotting the floor. He had to
move the bed a few inches to reach Laura’s side table. Another ten
she keeps a flashlight in the drawer. Ah, easy money.
He found his shoes and
headed for the bathroom, kicking aside debris and praying the water
would hold out long enough to cool
Laura down. He set the thermometer and
flashlight on the counter, pointing the latter upward to cast a
dim glow over the room. He got lucky with
the water. While the tub filled, he returned to Laura’s side.
His hands hovered for a moment over her
pajama buttons, not wanting to betray her privacy.
But her clothes were already soaked from
sweat.
Grateful for the darkness,
Remington stripped Laura out of her pajamas
and carried her into the bathroom. It took
some maneuvering to lower her into the tub.
Supporting her with one arm, he cupped his other hand to pour
water over her hair. That arm started to cramp
when Laura began struggling and crying out in confusion.
Cold water, drowning,
where was Remington? Why wasn’t he here? “S-s-s-so
colddd. Why? Why water? S-s-s-so
dark?”
“Shh, Laura. It’s
all right.”
“Mr. Steele?” her voice
quivered with fear.
“Laura, you’ve a very high
fever. You’re in water to help cool
you down. The lights are off because there’s been an earthquake
and we lost power.” His calm voice
must have gotten through to her because she suddenly relaxed
against him.
“I’m cold." Her voice
seemed stronger.
“Let me take your
temperature. If it’s come down a bit, I’ll let
you out.” In the darkness, he could barely make out her nod.
“Can you sit up for a minute?”
“I th-think so-so.”
“Come then.” He
raised her up, waiting a moment to see if she had
her balance. She crossed her arms on the side of the tub and
laid her head on them. He stroked her
damp hair while he waited for the thermometer reading and
wished he could make her feel better.
After a couple of minutes, he saw the mercury had dropped
somewhat. “It’s down to 103. If I let
you out, will you take more Tylenol?”
“Mm, y-yes.”
“Good. Now look at
me, Laura.” She slowly raised her head
to meet his gaze. Without shifting his eyes from hers, Remington
reached in and pulled the drain plug. He
helped Laura stand and wrapped one of the bath towels around her
before lifting her into his arms.
Since the bed was covered in concrete dust and glass, Remington sat
her in a hurriedly dusted-off chair to wait
while he quickly stripped off the covers and sheets.
He searched her dresser
for clean pajamas. On a normal day, this
could be quite a treat but tonight he looked for something
simple to pull over her head. He found a
shortish nightgown that appeared it would do. Laura, I swear I’m going
to get you sexier things to wear at night. Oh, the pj’s she wore
around him were pretty enough,
but there were a couple of outfits in that
drawer that should never, ever clothe the female form.
It took only a minute for
him to slide the nightdress over her head and
pull the towel away from underneath. In
another drawer, he found clean sheets and a couple
of blankets. With the bed remade, he retrieved the medicine and
water from the kitchen before resettling
Laura into the bed. Cooler and more comfortable, she fell
asleep in moments.
Remington sat down wearily
beside her, listening to the sounds of
sirens and frightened voices through the broken windows. He
looked at his watch. It was 5:35.
Had it only been an hour? The phone rang.
“Steele here.”
“Mr. Steele? This is
Dr. Mullins. I can’t believe I got
through. The phone lines have been jammed.”
“Have they?”
“You mentioned Miss Holt
has a fever, Mr. Steele. Tell me what’s
happening.” Remington gave him the short version.
“You’re doing the right thing. I’ll tell
you, the hospitals are packed with critical injuries and the walking wounded.
Two of them are damaged so badly that
they can’t take any patients. Even if you could get there, the
odds of Miss Holt picking up a secondary
infection right now are very high. Her best chance for a good
recovery is there with you. Do you have
water and gas?”
Steele rubbed his face,
thinking. He remembered the hot water.
“So far.”
“Boil the water before you
cook with it or drink it. It would be
a good idea to fill up every container you’ve got with boiled
water just in case either the gas or water goes
out. It will be a couple of days before the damages can be
assessed, much less repaired, so there’s no
telling what will happen.” The doctor continued, “Keep
Miss Holt hydrated and try to keep her
temperature below 104. I’ll check around today and see if I
can find a doctor who lives near you that can
bring you antibiotics. It sounds as if she may be fighting
some sort of bacterial infection. The
fever should burn it out, but a little extra insurance would help.
I’ll check back in with you later today to
see how she’s doing.”
“Thank you, doctor.
I ... thank you.” He hung up the phone.
Wearied and upset for
Laura, Remington picked his way through the loft
to the damaged kitchen. With his flashlight, he looked
around for anything that could hold liquid,
and for the next hour-and-a-half, he boiled water.
The dawn began streaking
the sky around six. By seven, Remington
could see the extent of the damage in Laura’s apartment.
If it was heavy, it had shifted several
feet. If it was light, it had been tossed to the floor. Concrete
flakes littered the whole lot, having been shaken
off the walls and ceiling. Everything on the kitchen counters had
landed on the floor along with most of the
contents of the cabinets. Remington lifted the lid to the
piano. Despite the layer of dust, it
appeared to be undamaged.
At least the tea canister
was still intact. He sipped a cup while
he began the process of mucking out the flat, starting with
Laura’s bedroom. She never moved as he
shifted the bed and dresser back into place. He swept and mopped the
floors and wiped off the table tops with rags
he found in her little utility closet. Most of her little
knickknacks were broken, shattered beyond repair
when they hit the floor. It made him sad to see Laura’s home
tossed about, especially since he knew how hard
she'd worked on it after losing her first house.
Finally, the bedroom was
as clean as he could make it. With Laura
still asleep, he dove into the shower to wash away the dust.
There was nothing he hated worse than
being dirty or hungry--too many bad memories of both.
He crawled into Laura’s
bed again, this time holding her close as they
slept.
Laura dreamed of
Remington. This time, he was in her bed, holding her. She
felt ... loved.
Throughout the day, small
tremors shook the building although none compared to the violent
upheaval of that morning.
Remington came fully awake during the trembling of
the first one and gave up sleeping after that. Between
coaxing Laura to drink water or broth,
Remington did his best to clean up the rest of her loft. He found a
battery-operated radio in a cabinet and
discovered the full extent of the earthquake’s destruction.
Freeways had crumbled, roads were impassible, and
whole neighborhoods had been destroyed by the shaking.
Remington tried calling both Mildred
and Frances, Laura’s older sister, but all he could get was an “all
circuits are busy” message from the operator.
She dreamed of Acapulco,
wondering why Remington wasn’t watching the fan dance. She was on
the bar again, dancing for
him. Why wasn’t he there?
Mr. Bartholomew from
downstairs knocked on the door at two in the afternoon.
“Hello, Mr. Bartholomew.”
“How’s Miss Holt?”
“Ah, still quite ill, but
she’s resting at the moment.”
“Good to hear. Um,
just wanted to tell you that the supervisor
checked out the building, and so far, they think it’s okay. We
won’t have power for a few days, but at least
we have running water and gas.”
“Excellent. Ah, tell
me, what are the chances of finding a doctor
around here?”
“I’ll see if I can find
one.”
“Thank you. I’d
appreciate that.”
“Anything else you need?”
“Perhaps something to
board up the broken windows? I like the
breeze, but I’d rather not entertain any unwanted guests this
evening.”
“Sure thing, Mr. Steele.”
Mr. Bartholomew paused. “You
know, it’s a good thing you were here for Miss Holt.”
“Yes, yes, it was.
Thanks, mate.”
“You too, Steele.”
A couple of hours later,
two of Laura’s neighbors boarded up her
windows while Mr. Bartholomew brought Remington a bag of
ice.
“It’s not much, but the
Red Cross was handing them out down the street,
and I grabbed you one. I gave them Laura’s address and
told them you were looking for a doctor.”
Remington dished up a good
serving of the soup he had warmed up again
on the stove and passed it on to Mr. Bartholomew.
“You’ve done for Laura; the least I can do is
give you something in return.”
“Thanks, Mr. Steele.
It’s no trouble at all. Just let me
know if you need anything else.”
She dreamed of the day she
found he was gone. It was too late. Without a single
declaration of love, he had already fractured
her heart.
Twice more, in that
afternoon and evening, Remington put Laura in the bathtub. The
last time, he gave up trying to protect her
privacy. In her lethargy, he didn't
think she was even aware of her nudity. He worried because, each
time, it took longer for her fever to come down,
and it only dropped to 103 both times. She was
hardly waking up enough to drink water.
She dreamed of her father.
She missed him. But Remington wasn’t her father. He
came home.
By the time night fell,
Remington had most of the place back in order. A good vacuuming
would help the process along, but that
would have to wait until the electricity was
restored. In the meantime, he placed clean sheets over the
couch and chairs. He didn’t want Laura
breathing in any more dust than necessary.
Because of the periodic
aftershocks of the earthquake, Remington was
afraid to light candles for fear of one falling over and
causing a fire. When it was fully dark, even
though it was an absurdly early hour by his normal standards, he
settled in next to Laura again, hoping the
night would be calmer.
Laura dreamed that
Remington was holding her, nuzzling her neck, caressing her.
It was not to be.
Laura’s fever hovered at 104 for most of the night. She
tossed and turned as fevered imaginings took over.
She mumbled incoherently and thrashed
occasionally, settling only when Remington stroked her hair
and talked nonsense to her.
She dreamed. Of what
was, of what is, and of what was to be. Remington was there in
all of them. But why?
By morning, Remington’s
eyes felt gritty with the lack of sleep, and he struggled to clear the
fog from his head. He looked over
and found Laura sleeping fitfully again.
He shook her gently, trying to wake her this time. “Laura?
Wake up, sweetheart. Come on.
Wake up.” He patted her on the face.
She opened her eyes,
startling him as she smiled sweetly and caressed
his throat. Despite their situation, her simple touch caused
the nerves under his skin to hum.
“How do you feel?”
“Hot. Very hot.”
He quirked a brow at her
innuendo. “Perhaps you’ll eat some
breakfast? Take a shower?”
“Sounds wonderful.”
Remington helped Laura to
the bathroom and then raided the freezer
where he'd stashed the eggs and milk with the ice.
He put together a frittata, hoping to entice
Laura into something a little more substantial than broth.
It wasn’t until Laura
paraded out of the bathroom wearing only a thin
t-shirt that Remington suspected a problem. Her hair
hung in wet ringlets on her shoulders, and she
practically sashayed into the kitchen where she brushed open
Remington’s dressing gown in order to run her
fingers across his bare chest. He caught her hands and noted
the fever-bright glaze in her eyes.
“Come, Laura, sit here and
have a bit of egg and juice.” He left
her at the table and retrieved one of his shirts. He shoved it
over his head and returned to the kitchen to
drape his dressing gown over Laura’s shoulders. Down, old boy. He felt slightly
lecherous at his reaction to his half-naked associate given her current condition.
Laura threw him a saucy
wink and dove into her breakfast. When
she'd cleaned her plate and emptied her glass, she tried to
ease off the stool. But three days of
illness took their toll, and Remington had to catch her as she stumbled.
“Come on, to your feet,”
he told her. Laura held on to his neck
and shifted forward when she had her balance, touching her lips
to his throat.
Remington shivered as he
tamped down the sudden ache of need.
“Laura, while I would adore returning the sentiments, I don’t
exactly think this is the time for it.”
He stepped away from her and drew her toward the bedroom.
She crawled onto the bed, lying on her belly,
and fell asleep instantly.
She dreamed of every kiss,
every caress she and Remington had exchanged. Her body started to
burn with need.
He stroked her hair for a
while, then leaned in to kiss her temple. She slept quietly.
Remington took advantage
of her quiescence, slipping into the shower
before cleaning up the kitchen. Afterward, when he touched
his hand to her forehead once more, he could
tell her temperature was rising again.
Mr. Bartholomew knocked on
the door and brought in a doctor to look at
Miss Holt. He handed another bag of ice to Remington.
“Mr. Steele, this is Dr. Brannigan.
She’s with the Red Cross, and she’s going door-to-door to check on
people.”
“Ah, excellent, right this
way, doctor.” Laura’s neighbor nodded
and trotted back to his apartment. Remington tossed the ice
into the freezer and followed the woman to
Laura’s side.
“How long has she been
ill?” The doctor was obviously weary but
maintained a very professional demeanor.
“Ah, she called me on
Saturday with a headache. I came on Sunday,
so three or four days, perhaps?” Remington recalled.
“I’ve been giving her acetaminophen when I
can get her to take it and cool baths throughout to help her
temperature come down. She ate a good
breakfast this morning, though, the first since Friday or Saturday.”
“That’s a good sign.
How high has the fever been? Any
hallucinations?”
“One hundred five, one
hundred six. She’s had odd dreams, I
think. I’m not entirely sure she was fully sentient this morning.”
The doctor nodded as if
she expected it. Laura barely awakened
for the examination. Remington had to roll her onto her back
while the woman listened to her breathing.
“Her lungs are clear, and
that’s the most important thing right now.
I’ll give her an antibiotic shot to give her system a boost.
If the fever doesn’t break by tomorrow, we
should consider getting her to a hospital. Let's keep our fingers
crossed because I don’t know which one can take
her right now. In the meantime, keep doing what you’ve
been doing, although you might try sponging her
down instead of giving her a bath to keep her cool.
It would be easier on both of you, if not
quite as effective.”
While she prepped the
shot, Dr. Brannigan peered over her glasses at
Remington, noting the dark circles under his eyes. “You
haven’t had much sleep, have you?”
“Ah, no, actually.”
He winced as the doctor poked the needle into
Laura’s hip. She jumped but settled down as he soothed her.
“Find a way to get
horizontal for a while. You don’t want to come
down with whatever she’s got. It’s probably bacterial, but
you don’t want to take any chances.”
“I’ll do that.”
“See to it. Here’s
my card. Call me if her fever doesn’t go
away by tomorrow evening.”
“Thank you, doctor.”
She clipped out the door,
leaving Remington staring morosely at Laura
after he saw the doctor out. He decided to take the
doctor’s advice and stretched out beside Laura
again.
Her memories wove with her
fantasies. Dressed entirely in black after lifting the triptych
panel, Laura made good on her promise.
Later it would be funny,
but by nightfall, Remington was short-tempered and exhausted.
First Mildred had called, then
Abigail. Then the building supervisor thoroughly
inspected Laura’s loft. After lunch, Dr. Mullins called again to
check on his patient. Then Mr.
Bartholomew knocked, bringing more ice, a jug of water and a few packages
of instant food provided by the Red Cross.
Between interruptions,
Remington woke Laura for her medication and to
sponge her down periodically. He tried to sleep, but the
temperature in the loft had gone up just
enough to be uncomfortable. When he opened more windows to let
the breeze waft through, he discovered he
couldn’t sleep with a window left ajar any more than he
could with a door unlocked. Silly.
Any decent thief could bypass either one, but then again, perhaps he was
more concerned with the amateurs.
Laura was fitful for most
of the day. She seemed to exist in a
strange half-world of wakefulness. Sometimes she would talk
about an old case; other times she mumbled
incoherently. At any rate, her temperature held steady at
102.
She dreamed about
airplanes. Remington unbuttoned her uniform jacket.
As the evening sun
disappeared from the sky, leaving the loft in darkness and
cooling rapidly from the ocean breezes, Remington
closed the windows and crawled into Laura’s
bed. He wasn’t thinking coherently when he
stripped down to his boxers and scooted in next to
her--just a vague hope that she would sleep soundly
tonight.
She did, more or less.
As the fever reached its breaking point,
Laura’s dazed mind tangled in memories and wishes, all revolving
around Remington and her. She could
smell and feel him, heightening the increasingly erotic nature
of her dreams. She lost herself in the
fantasy of touching him, feeling him grow long and hard in her
questing fingers. Silk was tugged away,
revealing that unique velvety hardness. She wanted to taste.
Savor. Feel it twitch with the heat from
her breath. And when it throbbed, she wanted
more.
Remington dreamed of
Laura--dreamed she used that delectable mouth of hers on him as
he had hundreds of time. He
groaned as the familiar desire for her rose
up and enflamed him. Images of her nude body flashed in his
mind. He was frantic to taste her, but
she had him at her mercy. He twisted as his control began to
fail. She shifted to straddle him and
take him inside. Incredible. It felt ... real.
Remington forced his mind
to wake with all the mental strength he’d developed over the
years.
Desperately,
he tried to regain enough sense to pull Laura away from
him, but as his hands clutched her slim hips, she opened her
eyes, staring straight at him.
“I love you.
Whatever your name, whatever role you play, I love
you.” She stroked his cheek. “I love you, Remington Steele.”
Her simple words did him
in, and he convulsed powerfully within her.
She gasped out her own climax and then sank down to lie
on his chest. In moments she was
sleeping again, leaving Remington dazed and wondering what to do next.
Hesitantly, he placed a
hand to the back of her head and kissed her
forehead. It was beaded with sweat but cool for the first
time. He sighed in relief. In the
end, he readjusted his boxers, tugged Laura’s t-shirt a tiny bit lower, and then
pulled the covers over both of them.
It might not have been the smartest thing to do, but it felt right
with Laura's head pillowed on his shoulder.
He closed his eyes, not waking again until morning.
Somebody stared.
Chocolate eyes hovered inches from his
face when he dragged his eyelids upward.
“I seemed to have missed a
few steps somewhere.” Laura seemed
amused, rather than distraught, to find him in her bed.
Remington scratched his
cheek. “Do you know what day it is?”
She crinkled her forehead,
considering the question. “Monday?”
“Try Wednesday, Laura.”
Shocked, she sat straight
up and stared at him. “What exactly did
I miss?”
“Can I get a cup of tea
first? It’s a rather long story.
Mmm, yes. Quite involved, I should think.”
“Of course.” But she
frowned as Remington slid from the bed,
wearing only a pair of silk boxers. He retrieved his dressing
gown from the foot of it, tied the sash and
headed for the kitchen.
Laura’s eyes swept the
room, noting the missing knickknacks from her
table and the boards over the windows. She threw
the covers back and was shocked to discover
she was clad only in a very skimpy t-shirt. Laura
headed for the bathroom, frowning at the useless
light switch.
In the kitchen, Remington
dropped a tea bag into a cup amid the
water-filled pots and pans scattered across the counters.
“The last thing I remember clearly was
sitting on the sofa and drinking broth.” She sat down at the kitchen
counter and sipped the tea he'd made for her.
“That was Sunday
afternoon.” He leaned on the counter, rotating
his own cup an exact quarter-turn every few seconds.
“You’ve been quite ill, Laura.” He
related the events of the past few days, paling a little when he recounted
the massive earthquake and how terribly
feverish she had been that night.
Laura looked around,
realizing that Remington must be responsible for
putting her home back together. “How’s your flat?
And the office?”
“I don’t know.
Mildred said she would try to get to the office
today, but so many freeways are closed that she might not be able
to get through.”
Laura nodded. “I
seem to recall a lot of hazy dreams. I’m
not really sure what’s real and what’s not.”
“If one of them involved a
bathtub, it was probably real. I’m
surprised your fingers aren’t permanently wrinkled.”
“You ... bathed me?” she
squeaked.
“I had to, Laura.
Your fever was dangerously high, and I couldn’t
take you to a hospital.” Remington started pacing. “I
don’t think I’ve ever been quite as frightened
as I was that night,” he admitted. “I was afraid to fall asleep in
case your fever spiked again.” He went
on to tell her about the last two days, of her fitful sleeping and
the comfort she seemed to find when he was
near. He told her about sleeping with her in his arms so that he
could tell when her fever was rising.
From the dark circles
still haunting Remington’s eyes, Laura guessed
that he hadn’t had much sleep since Saturday night. She
began recalling her dreams, trying to meld
them with the reality of the morning.
“Last night, did we ... ?”
she couldn’t get the words out.
He nodded, “Laura, you
must believe me when I tell you I had no
intentions of any kind. I woke up and ... and you were there.
I tried to stop but ...,” he choked on
the words.
“But I told you I loved
you. I remember that. Very
clearly.” She picked up a spoon and needlessly stirred her tea. “I
don’t remember everything, but I do remember
that.”
He walked around the
counter and leaned on the edge next to her.
He tipped his face to the ceiling. “Did you mean it, Laura?”
She waited until he
dropped his eyes to meet hers. “Yes.”
“Thank God.” Laura
opened her arms and Remington stepped into her
embrace. “I love you, Laura Holt.” He shivered
as the enormity of the past four days sank in
on him. He lifted her into his arms and carried her to the sofa
where they sat and absorbed each other’s words
for a long while. A sudden thought stuck in his head.
“Ah, Laura, I have a rather personal
question for you.”
“Personal? Is there
anything left after finding out you gave me a
bath, and I didn’t get to participate?” She raised a brow at him
in amusement.
“Well, next time, you can
scrub my back.” Remington stroked her
cheek. “Laura, I’ve always been very careful with ‘protection’
you might say, but last night I was ambushed
by a certain lovely woman. I have to ask: are you on the
pill?”
Laura’s mouth dropped
open. “No. I haven’t been since
Wilson.” She covered her mouth, rapidly calculating days.
Her stomach suddenly turned sour.
Remington’s own stomach
knotted up as he watched Laura grow pale.
“We’ll take it as it comes, love.”
Their relationship took an
abrupt turn that night. In the wake of
the earthquake, Remington and Laura spent every ensuing night
sharing a bed. It wasn’t the wildly
romantic affair both of them had imagined, but rather, a quiet
melding of hearts and bodies that brought them both
a great deal of peace and happiness.
They spent the remaining
three days of the week cleaning up Remington’s
condo and the office. What little work they actually
conducted in the office involved locating
people after the earthquake. They did this free of charge, and
Remington made sure Laura stayed behind the
desk, answering the sporadic phone calls while he and
Mildred wrested furniture and files back into
place.
The power returned in
Laura’s loft on Friday afternoon, enabling them
to finish their cleanup and wash all the laundry that had piled
up.
Mildred noticed that Mr.
Steele and Miss Holt were oddly easier to be
around. While their acerbic humor hadn’t lessened in the
slightest, the sparks weren’t flying at all.
Instead, a calm contentment seemed to envelop them both.
She wasn’t sure if it was their friendship
shining through in this difficult week or something else entirely.
The following week found
the trio getting back to business in the
office, and Laura getting frustrated at her own fatigue. Dr.
Mullins said it was normal after a prolonged
fever such as she'd had, but it annoyed her, nonetheless, to have
to dump a large portion of the incoming cases
into Mildred and Remington’s laps. While they
were out tracking down clues, she was stuck
answering phones and begging the computer to spit out the
information she needed. Remington
hovered over her, making sure she slept on his office sofa every
single day. She wasn’t sure which annoyed
her more: his insistence that she take a nap, or the fact she
needed one. By the time the week ended, she
was cranky and miserable.
On the second Monday after
the earthquake, Laura tried to resume her
normal duties, but found she still fought for every last
ounce of energy. Before the illness, she
was always wand-thin, but since then, there wasn't an ounce of extra
flesh on her body. Remington spent the
evenings coming up with appetizing soups and concoctions to
tempt her palate. Most of it didn’t sit
well.
Wednesday rolled around,
and Mildred suddenly had to find ways to
escape the volatile workplace, going on even the most spurious
of errands to get out of the office.
Laura was in a rare temper, snapping at the smallest imagined slight.
Even Remington tried to sneak in and
out of the office as if he was dodging bullets.
On Friday, they had a
fight of stupendous proportions. They were
still yelling at each other as Laura shoved open the door of
the office with Remington hot on her heels.
“Damn it, Laura. I’m
only asking you to take care of yourself!
To not go haring off and chasing cars down the bloody broken
freeways of L.A.!
“I’m fine!”
“Fine? You were
driving like a maniac after that man!”
“He’s a suspect, and I
didn’t want to lose him!” she yelled, keeping
her back to him.
Mildred covered her ears
and wondered how many other offices listened
in to the conversation.
Steele took a deep breath
and lowered his voice. “Laura, this is
not the same as it was a month ago; you can’t do this.”
Remington touched her arm.
Laura whirled around.
“I ...” She lost all color in her face,
then staggered once as the dizziness overtook her. Remington
caught her in his arms.
Mildred jumped to her feet
and ran to open Mr. Steele’s office door.
He placed Laura gently on the couch and sat down on the
coffee table, frowning as he watched her.
Mildred tried to lighten the mood with a joke. “Mr.
Steele, if it wasn’t for her illness, what with
all the short-tempers, nausea and fainting going on around here, one
would think Miss Holt was pregnant!”
Remington rubbed his face
and said very quietly, “Precisely, Mildred.”
She stood in stunned
silence. How had she missed this? “You
... you ... you’re ...?” she stuttered.
His anger flared.
“Yes, Mildred, I am the father. I got her
into this mess. She’s not ready for a family any more that I am.”
He yanked off his tie and threw it across
the room.
She sat down in the chair.
Her voice was calm and cool as she
spoke. “I didn’t mean to ask if you were responsible, Mr. Steele.
I just didn’t realize you two were
together.”
Steele nodded once and put
his chin in his hand.
“Do you love her, Boss?”
“To distraction, Mildred.”
“She loves you.”
“I know.”
“She’s bound to be
terrified. After all, there’s the agency to
think about and you and the baby, all at once. Give her time.”
“We don’t have time, Mildred,” Remington
snapped. “We can’t do
this little dance as we have for the past four years.”
“Then help her find the
answers. Help her find a way to manage
the agency so that she’s not giving up everything she worked so
hard for.”
“I don’t know if I can.
I don’t know if she’ll let me.”
Mildred crossed her arms.
“Do you want her?”
“Of course, I do!”
“Do you want the baby?”
Remington looked up at
her. “I ... yes, actually. I could
have hoped for better timing, but yes.”
“You do?” That came
from Laura as she opened her eyes. She
had come around a couple of sentences ago.
“Laura, I told you that
last night.” Remington took her hand.
“I guess I didn’t believe
you. I thought you were telling me what
I wanted to hear.”
Now he lost his temper,
jumped up and started pacing. “Laura,
when have I ever lied to you? Prevaricated, side-stepped
the truth, avoided certain questions like
the plague? Yes, I have. But lied to
you?”
“Ben Pearson, Daniel,
Cannes ... ,” Laura began counting off on her
fingers.
“About us, Laura.
I’ve never lied to you about us,” Remington
shot back.
Mildred interrupted, “Now
you two kids stop this right now. You
both can be petrified all you want, but don’t take it out on each
other. You two got into this together,
and I’m not just talking about the baby. Now find a way to make
this work. You owe it to each other.
Both of you are going to have to make some compromises whether
you like it or not.”
Remington and Laura both
had their mouths hanging open by the end of
her speech. “Yes, Mildred,” they chorused.
“Now if you’ll excuse me,
I have an office to run.” Mildred stood
up and yanked her skirt straight before marching out the door.
Mildred’s harsh words
spelled the beginning of a real détente
between Remington and Laura. They realized that they were on
the same team but playing by a whole new set
of rules. Laura began to accept the reality of her
pregnancy and made plans for the agency. She
bounced ideas off Remington and Mildred, and the three of
them decided a pair of interns would make a
big difference. A great deal of the legwork and stakeout work
could be shifted to them over the coming
months as Laura needed. Remington and Mildred
could handle some of the more sophisticated
legwork with Laura still analyzing and sifting through
details. Remington drew a hard rule, though,
that no matter how tempting the clue, Laura was not to put
herself in danger. She butted up against it
from time to time but, for the most part, accepted it as being
sensible.
Remington also surprised
Laura one night with a pair of wedding rings.
He’d always imagined proposing to Laura with some grand
gesture that would take her breath away.
Instead, they relaxed in front of the fire in his flat, talking
about the changes that were to come.
Laura was lying on her back as Remington traced patterns on her
belly, trying to fathom the tiny life growing
inside her. He placed two boxes on her slightly-rounded tummy.
“What’s this?”
“I’d envisioned that one
day I would fly you to Paris and ask
you to marry me on top of the Eiffel Tower or some such
nonsense like that. Somehow, this seems more
appropriate. I do love you, Laura.”
Laura eased open first one
box, then the other. She set the rings
between them and rolled over to her side, propping her head on
her hand. “They’re beautiful.
You don’t have to do this, you know.”
“I know. But I want
to. Will you marry me, Miss Holt?”
“Yes, Mr. Steele, I will.”
Four days later, Monroe
and Mildred witnessed Remington Steele and
Laura Holt exchange vows at the county courthouse.
They celebrated afterwards with an elaborate
dinner for the four of them at Remington’s favorite
restaurant.
Surprisingly, Laura
discovered she was happy. They still had to
work out living arrangements, but Laura felt confident they would
have something in place in the next two
months or so. Remington was up to his neck in baby books, having
bought out the local bookstore. He
seemed extraordinarily proud of escorting Laura about and
introducing her to everyone as his new bride. He
referred to himself as her "husband" every chance he got.
As for the agency, Laura
had narrowed down the applicants to four.
She and Remington would meet with them for one final
interview before hiring two of them. It
was going to take some interesting rearranging in the office
to make it all work, but Laura was looking
into additional office space from the suite next door.
And, in an ironic role-reversal of their first
two years, her new husband made certain that he kept Laura informed of
the details of each case he worked.
A week after exchanging vows, the couple planned to spill the happy
news to Laura’s family on Friday night. Laura had
wanted a quiet wedding and thought her mother
wouldn’t be nearly as disappointed about missing it if she
found out a baby was on the way at the same
time.
But sometimes things
aren’t meant to be.
Laura descended the steps
of the courthouse with Detective Jarvis that
Friday. They had finished their testimony, guaranteeing
that a murderer would spend life behind bars.
She was so proud of the fact she couldn’t button her jacket
this morning. At eleven weeks, her
tummy rounded beautifully. Jarvis was just complimenting her on
the pregnancy as they passed a group of
attorneys gossiping on the steps.
One of the women adjusted
her briefcase strap over her shoulder,
inadvertently shoving Laura off balance with her attaché.
Jarvis missed catching her arm, and she
tumbled down the flight of stairs, landing hard on the concrete.
“Mrs. Steele, Mrs. Steele,
oh God, Laura!” He yanked his radio
off his belt and had an ambulance on its way even before he reached
bottom. The woman with the briefcase
was on his heels, mortified by what she had done. Laura
tried to get to her feet, but the police
detective made her sit back down.
She whispered to him,
“Call my husband, please. Can you call Mr.
Steele?” She held her stomach and prayed while he radioed
the dispatcher.
Mildred and Remington made
it to the hospital only twenty minutes after
she arrived by ambulance. The older woman stayed in the
waiting room while Remington navigated the
emergency ward to get to his wife.
“Laura,” he called as he
walked into the room where the doctor was
examining her. He could see she had been crying, and her
face was pale. The doctor was moving a
paddle over her stomach, looking for a fetal heartbeat.
Laura reached out for his hand which she kissed
and held tightly. He stroked her hair while the doctor completed
his assessment.
“Mr. Steele, Mrs. Steele,
I have to tell you that this doesn’t look
good. I haven’t found a heartbeat yet, and there’s already been
quite a bit of bleeding. But since
you’re only at eleven weeks, it’s possible I’m just missing it.
Mrs. Steele, I want you to lie quietly, and
we’ll try again in an hour. I’m going to get a sonogram tech to come
help.”
Neither of them said a
word, horrified by what the doctor had said.
Remington pulled up a chair in the silence and held Laura’s
hand as they watched the clock together.
They didn’t have to wait
an hour. Forty-five minutes later, she
began cramping terribly. The nurse on duty examined her and
confirmed the miscarriage. The nurse was
gentle and kind despite the gravity of her news. “I’m very,
very sorry, Mr. and Mrs. Steele. At
this point there isn’t much we can do except to let nature take its
course. I’ll leave you two alone for a
while.”
Laura clutched at
Remington, and he moved over to sit with her on the
bed. He held her while she sobbed hysterically, and
his own tears rolled down his cheeks.
It was a while before he
could pry himself away from Laura long
enough to fill in Mildred. She knew about their big
family plans for that night and took it upon
herself to call Abigail and break the news, both of the Steeles'
wedding and the miscarriage.
Surprisingly, Laura’s mother drove straight to the hospital and stayed
for the rest of the evening. She hugged
Remington and dried Laura’s tears. In truth, she and Mildred
provided a tremendous help that let the
heartbroken couple get past their initial shock.
They went home late that
night. Beyond their painful loss, Laura
had only minor scrapes and bruises from the tumble, and
Remington thought she might rest more easily in
their bed. He certainly needed to hold her through the night.
The weekend was quiet with
neither of them knowing what to say.
Mildred brought a casserole to them for lunch and sat with
each of them for a while. They both needed
coddling and a reminder that none of this was their fault.
On Monday, Laura threw
herself into work, taking on the toughest of
their caseload to distract herself. Remington said nothing,
only made sure he partnered her wherever the
case called them. Laura was grateful for his solid
presence. He seemed to understand that she
needed time. For the first time in their relationship, they both
consciously made the effort not to push the
other away in anger.
But on Friday afternoon,
Laura and Remington each made poorly veiled
excuses to spend time apart. Remington headed for a
small, backroom boxing gym he frequented.
He took out his own sadness and still-raging anger on a
punching bag and a couple of willing contenders
interested in eating dust that day.
Laura spent her time
packing every bit of baby paraphernalia they had
already accumulated. From her loft she put away the tiny
baby outfits she hadn’t been able to resist
buying and the stuffed bear that Remington had picked out.
She threw out the prenatal vitamins and
placed two maternity tops into the box. The tears
started streaming from her eyes as she drove to
Remington’s flat. She cried while she put away all the baby,
parenting and pregnancy books Remington had bought
and the baby book she had started. There was
only one thing left to pack away.
Remington parked the
Auburn next to Laura’s Rabbit in the garage.
He hoped he didn’t look too awful. His hands hurt; he was
covered in sweat and bruises, and he'd had to
wipe away blood from his lip before he got into the car.
He felt better though. And then
promptly felt guilty over that fact, knowing Laura was still hurting.
But for the first time in a week, he felt as
if he could think past his own grief.
He found the door
unlocked, and he pushed it open. He noted the
box sitting on the sofa, then saw Laura leaning against the rail
on the terrace, holding something in her hand.
He peeked into the box, wincing when he saw the contents.
In this, he was grateful to Laura.
He wasn’t sure if he could have done it.
He crossed to her.
Placing his hands on her shoulders, he dropped
a kiss on her neck. She leaned against him, and he could see she
held the baby-name book. His mouth
curved up in a smile. Over the past few weeks, they’d had some
truly outstanding arguments, layered with biting
insults and graphic threats, over baby names ranging from
the ridiculous to the benign. Remington
was bent on names from the silver screen, and Laura wasn’t
having any of it at all. It had become a
game they played each night after dinner with periodic
flare-ups at the office that left Mildred
chuckling at some of the more creative exchanges.
“I don’t think I can put
it away,” Laura said softly. “I packed
everything else up. But I can’t seem to put this in the box, too.”
She stroked her finger over the cover.
“Then don’t. We lost
a child, Laura. We don’t have to
pretend it didn’t happen.”
“How do you feel?”
“Sad, of course, and
regretful. I hadn’t realized how much I
wanted a family with you.” He rested his chin on her shoulder and
wrapped his arms around her waist.
“I’m still angry.
Terribly angry. I know it’s not logical.
It was all an accident. It was an accident in the beginning, and that’s the
way it ended.” Laura’s hand tightened
on the rail.
“Do you really believe the
beginning was an accident?”
“You don’t?”
“Oh, the timing of it all,
perhaps. But not us coming together.
Certainly some good came out of it.” He lifted her hand and
stroked her wedding ring.
“I don’t have to put that
in the box, too?”
“Never.” He
tightened his hold on her.
She turned in his embrace.
“I love you, Remington Steele.”
“I love you, Laura Steele.”
* * * * *
The book stayed on the
bedroom shelf. From time to time, each of
them would page through it and reminisce about what might
have been.
It was nearly two years
later when Remington came home to find the book
on the table with a positive pregnancy test on top and
a note lying next to it:
No, we’re not naming it
Humphrey. Or Scarlett, for that matter.
20 February 2009
edited 16 October 2009