VIRTUAL SEASONS EPISODES |
|
Chapter Three
Friday,
April 19, 1985
Sam
rapped sharply on the door to Al’s quarters.
“Al?” he called out. There
was no response. Sam bounced
impatiently on his toes and tucked the sheaf of papers beneath his arm.
He knocked again, louder. “Al?
Captain Calavicci?” A
faint groan sounded through the door. “Oh,
no,” Sam whispered. He only hoped
the captain would be sober enough to comprehend the new theories he’d come up
with since their last conversation. He
knocked again and tried the knob, surprised to feel no resistance.
“Say,
Al,” he began excitedly as he flung the unlocked door open and strode inside.
The papers fell unheeded to the floor, the door swinging closed,
unnoticed as Sam beheld the sight awaiting him.
Al
Calavicci was sprawled in a chair at his desk.
His head lolled alarmingly to one side as he stared at his wrists--his
wrists, which were dripping blood down the arms of his chair.
A blood-stained knife at the captain’s feet caught the light.
It
took Sam a moment to recover from the shock.
Then he flew into action. “Al!”
The other man did not react. Sam
placed a hand on either side of Al’s face and turned it toward him.
Al’s skin was clammy and covered with a faint sheen of sweat.
The brown eyes drifted back down to stare at the red flow making its way
through his fingers. Sam quickly slid his fingers down Al’s neck to check a
pulse. It was thready and erratic.
Sam
eased Al out of the chair onto the floor. The
dazed captain flopped over Sam’s shoulder like a rag doll, offering no
resistance. As Sam laid Al on his
back, he noted the extreme shallowness in breathing. He frantically unbuttoned Al’s shirt. “Hang on, Al.”
Al’s
eyes fluttered closed as Sam surveyed the wounds. The captain was losing a lot of blood and Sam had to act
quickly. He knew he ought to call
for assistance, but he couldn’t risk Al’s career.
The man obviously felt he didn’t have anything to live for.
How could Sam strip him of the one thing he had left?
The
slash to the right wrist was deeper, so Sam decided to staunch this flow first.
He raised Al’s arm vertically, pressing the brachial artery.
A bandage. He glanced to his left and right for anything he could use.
Al’s bed was right behind him. He
snagged a pillow from where it had been haphazardly tossed at the foot of the
bed. Holding Al’s arm in the air
with one hand, Sam flipped the pillow out of the case and hurriedly ripped and
folded the pillowcase, using his teeth and his free hand.
He wrapped the ragged fabric tightly around Al’s wrist, pulling it taut
with each rotation.
Al
drifted back into awareness as Sam began applying pressure to his left arm.
He stared deeply into the younger man’s eyes, shame furrowed in his
brows. Sam didn’t know what to
say. With what he hoped was an
understanding look, he bandaged Al’s left wrist.
Sam
knew he needed to get Al to the infirmary for stitches.
But he needed to do it in such a way as to avoid notice.
He jumped up and crossed to Al’s closet, grabbed a black shirt, and
returned to kneel by the semi-conscious naval officer’s side.
Sam
slipped a hand beneath Al’s neck to support his head as he raised the limp
body to a half-sitting position. He
anchored his leg and leaned Al against his thigh.
“Al?
We’re going to go for a little walk in a minute, Al,” said Sam as he
pushed the blood-stained shirt off of Al’s body.
He quickly slipped the black shirt on the unresisting form, accidentally
bumping Al’s wrist as he maneuvered the cuffs to cover the makeshift bandages.
The captain’s eyes opened with a sharp moan of pain.
Sam took advantage of the momentary coherence.
“Al?
Listen, buddy, I’ve got to take you to the infirmary.
But I need you to help me right now.
Where are your keys?” Al
stared thickly at him. “Keys, Al.
Where are your keys?”
Al
swallowed. “Dresser,” he
mumbled.
Sam
draped Al’s arm around his neck as he slipped an arm under the man’s armpit.
“Okay, Al. I need you to
stand with me, pal. Ready?
1-2-3.”
He
dragged Al to his feet. The Navy
man stumbled, falling heavily on Sam.
“That’s
okay, Al. I’ve gotcha.
Just hang on.” Sam glanced at the ashen face as they slowly moved toward the
dresser. “Stay with me, Al.
Come on, buddy,” he said; Al’s head dipped toward Sam’s shoulder.
“No,
no--stay here, Al,” Sam raised his voice.
He lightly slapped a wan cheek. Al
slowly opened his eyes and stared dully at Sam.
“That’s better. Just a short walk. You
can do it, Al.” Sam kept a steady
chatter going, prodding Al step by step to the door. He locked the door behind them so no one would walk in on the
remnants of the suicide attempt before Sam could clean up the blood.
Because
of the late hour, everyone was either asleep or out at a bar.
Sam gratefully hurried Al down the halls to the infirmary.
The guard at the door stared questioningly and disapprovingly at Sam’s
burden. Sam giggled and attempted to slur his voice.
“Went out, gonna need a hangover remedy.”
He flashed his I.D. The
guard rolled his eyes and thumbed them inside.
Once
the door closed, Sam swung Al into his arms to save time as he made his way to
the farthest exam room. Al was so
dazed he didn’t offer any protest.
Sam
staggered slightly as he carried Al to the bed. He set the captain down and quickly rolled up his cuffs.
The makeshift bandages were marred by dark red stains.
The door. Sam locked
the door to the exam room. It
wouldn’t do to have anyone walk in, unlikely as it was.
As he returned to Al’s side, Sam’s photographic memory recalled the
empty vodka bottles on the desk. Vodka,
of course. Hardly any smell. But
Sam couldn’t give him an anesthetic with so much alcohol in his system.
“I’m
sorry to do this, Al.” Sam held a
basin in one hand and a small dosage cup of ipecac syrup in the other.
Al
just stared at the ceiling with drooping lids as Sam set the basin in his lap.
He was rather a dead weight as Sam raised him to a sitting position and
slid behind him. Sam balanced Al’s head on his shoulder and carefully
brought the ipecac to his lips.
“Come
on, Al, drink it,” Sam urged, tilting the small cup. The dry lips parted slightly and he carefully poured the
syrup into Al’s mouth.
Al
retched. Sam grabbed the basin and
held it below the captain’s chin before the vomiting began in earnest,
supporting his forehead with his free hand.
When
the regurgitating surge came to an end, Al sagged back.
Sam eased him down to the bed and laid the basin aside, wishing that he
had some assistance. He needed to start an IV and was losing precious time,
especially considering Al had just lost more fluid from Sam’s attempt to purge
his system.
He
pushed the right sleeve up past Al’s elbow and cleaned the site with a swatch
of alcohol. As the liquid
evaporated, Sam retrieved an IV line from the supply closet. Realizing the examining room wasn’t stocked with the
lactated Ringer’s solution he needed, he reluctantly left to get two bags of
it as well as a vial of painkillers from the storage area. He returned to find Al paler than before.
As
quickly as he could, Sam rigged the IV to one of the bags and carefully slipped
the needle into Al’s arm. He
taped the needle down and hung the bag on a pole near the bed so that the fluids
would enter Al’s body as quickly as possible.
Now
that Al was getting the fluid he so desperately needed, it was time for Sam to
begin sealing the wounds. He tried
to get Al’s attention as he neared the bed with the suture kit.
“Al.
You need stitches, Al,” Sam said.
He
unwound the bandage on the right arm as gently as he could, but it still caused
a great deal of pain. The captain
visibly winced. He cried out softly
when Sam cleaned the wound.
“I’m
sorry,” Sam said. He lifted a
syringe and injected local anesthetic in the captain’s wrist. Sam kept talking and using Al’s name as often as possible.
With the combination of blood loss, shock, and alcohol abuse, there was a
very real danger he could slip into a coma.
Sam
examined the self-inflicted wound. While
it was deep and had damaged tissue, the tendons and arteries hadn’t been
severed. ‘Small
favors,’ Sam thought. The
tendons were slightly cut, but Al had managed to miss the arteries completely.
He grunted and moaned as Sam began stitching. When he sealed the skin, Sam looked up to find Al watching
him sew. A tear made its way down
the captain’s cheek.
“Al?
Does it hurt?”
It
took a moment for the words to register. Al
shook his head. He swallowed hard
in an attempt to loosen the lump in his throat as the young doctor began working
on the left wrist. A second tear
followed the first, and then a third. Al
closed his eyes in humiliation.
Sam
expertly tied off the final stitch. He
covered his work with gauze pads and taped them in place.
With any luck the scarring would be negligible.
Sam
gazed on Al’s face again. Tears
were streaming down the man’s cheeks, despite Al’s valiant attempts to keep
them back. Sam wondered when anyone
had last shown compassion to him. Judging
from Al’s surprised expression when Sam had intervened at the vending machine,
he was willing to guess it had been a very long time indeed.
“Al,
it’s all right,” he began, not really knowing what to say.
Al slowly opened his eyes. Sam
felt the penetrating stare through his whole being.
As Al continued to stare at him, Sam took a damp cloth and gently wiped
his mouth and chin. “I remember
you saying you hated to puke,” he spoke in a light tone, trying to ease the
embarrassment for the captain as he cleaned away the tears and traces of
vomiting. “Sorry I had to do that.”
Al’s
lips moved around silent syllables as he tried to speak.
“Why?” His normally
gravelly voice sounded rougher than usual.
“Why’d you . . . help me?”
“I
couldn’t let you die, Al.”
“That’s
. . . not what I mean.” Al paused
for a breath. Speaking was very
difficult and he was tempted to just go to sleep.
The sound of his name being repeatedly called pulled him back to a dull
awareness.
“Al.
Look, I know you want to rest--and you need to.
But not right now, Al. We
can’t stay here.” Sam balled up
the bloody bandages and sheets and hurried to the back to stash them in his
locker. He’d dispose of them tomorrow.
Meanwhile, he grabbed his white lab coat and a hanger.
Al was unconscious when he returned.
There
was no way Al could retrace the entire route on foot, especially with the IV and
pole. Sam doubted that he could
even be pulled back to awareness. Besides,
they needed to remain fairly incognito on their return to the room, even though
Al obviously required a wheelchair to get back.
Laying the coat and hanger on a nearby counter, Sam headed into the
equipment room to retrieve a wheelchair. Returning
to the examination room, Sam parked the wheelchair near the bed and turned his
attention to the unconscious man.
He
pulled Al up to a sitting position, supported the limp body, and tapped his
cheeks. “Al! Wake up, buddy. You
can sleep when we get back to your room. Come
on now.” Al groaned as Sam stood
with him. “Come on.
Just to the chair. We need to make it past the guard.”
“Guard?
Guard!” Al tensed in his
sleep. The words seemed to have
registered at the edge of his consciousness.
“Too weak . . . to try to escape.
Beth!”
“Escape?
Beth? Al, what are you
talking about?”
But
Al had passed out again, leaving Sam with unanswered questions.
Confused, Sam eased the form into the chair.
He contemplated the IV pole, unhooked the bag and hung it from the hanger
along with the extra one, then hung the coat up and covered the IV line by
draping the coat over Al’s right arm. Sam
pushed the chair out of the infirmary, steeling himself for the encounter with
the guard.
The
guard looked questioningly at the pair that emerged. “Is he all right?” he asked, looking with concern at the
pale face slumped against a shoulder, the arm dangling weakly.
Remembering
to slur his voice, Sam answered, “Oh, yeah, he just . . . hee-hee-hee . . . he
just passed out.”
“You
were in there quite a while,” the guard said.
Sam
jiggled the hanger. “Forgot my
coat. See you in the morning.”
He nodded at the guard and bustled Al through the corridors, praying for
empty hallways. They arrived at Al’s quarters without incident.
He
unlocked the door and wheeled Al into the room. Sam locked the door behind him, Al’s privacy foremost on
his mind. Before he began cleaning
the blood, Sam wanted to be sure Al was as comfortable as possible.
He wanted to keep him warm to counter the shock, too.
Sam hung the coat hanger on a handle of the wheelchair and searched the
dresser, finding a pair of flannel pajamas.
He carefully removed the tubing from Al’s arm and hung the rigged IV
“pole” from a cup hook above and to the left of the bed, probably intended
for hanging plants. Slipping
his arms under Al’s and locking his hands behind the other man’s back, Sam
hefted him up and got him onto the bed. Al
didn’t stir as Sam stripped him to his boxers and slowly dressed the dead
weight in the pajamas. He pushed a
sleeve up and reattached the IV tubing to the needle, checking the flow of the
solution to make sure it was fast enough. Arranging
the unconscious man’s body as comfortably as he could, Sam pulled the blankets
under Al’s chin and tucked them snugly around him, keeping the right arm from
becoming entangled. Al looked more
like a little boy on Christmas Eve than a bitter man who had just attempted
suicide, he thought. Then Sam
turned around and came face to face with just how troubled Al Calavicci was.
The
arms of the wooden chair were covered with blood. The knife continued to lay where Al had dropped it after
slashing his wrists. Sam grabbed
the knife and brought it into the bathroom.
“Why,
Al, why?” Sam asked aloud as he rinsed the blood from the stainless steel
blade. The reflective surface
bounced the unanswered question back at him.
Sam thought back to the question Al had asked of him in the infirmary.
“Why’d you help me?” Sam
reached for a towel and dampened it.
As
he wiped blood off of the chair arms, Sam recalled the tears streaming down
Al’s face before he’d posed the question.
He glanced back at the sleeping form.
‘Is that what your tears were
for, Al? Is it that hard to believe
someone cares?’ Sam bent to wipe the blood from the chair leg and found a
legal envelope that had been tossed under the desk.
He loosened the string and pulled out a stack of legal papers, all signed
and notarized. He looked closer and
realized that they were divorce proceedings dated over the last ten years.
The most recent was three months ago--and the papers all included the
name Albert M. Calavicci. Obviously,
it was indeed hard for Al to believe he was worthy of being loved.
Sam noticed that all of Al’s ex-wives had taken the initiative to sue
for divorce--they’d all left him.
Sam
silently replaced the papers and tied the string. He picked the envelope up and put it on the desk, feeling
like a snoop.
Sam
returned his attention to cleaning the blood.
Fortunately, it hadn’t landed on the nearby rug, just the bare tile
floor. He scrubbed efficiently and
returned to the bathroom to soak the bloody towel in the sink.
Sam
came back into the room to straighten Al’s desk. He tossed the vodka bottles in the trash and moved the glass
to the side when he noticed something gleaming out the corner of his eye.
Sam turned to the right and found Al’s dogtags in a crumpled pile.
He picked them up by the chain and watched them spin in the light.
The sight reminded him of his older brother, Tom.
When Tom had been killed, they’d sent his body home with personal
effects. The dogtags had been among
them, and Sam had stared at his brother’s name for hours, alone in his room.
He closed his hand around Al’s dogtags and returned them to the desk.
Sam
rested his head in his hands and let his mind race through the memories of his
brother: basketball games, farm
chores, pheasant hunting expeditions. Soon
he was thinking of his father, too. Before
long, he felt hot tears splashing down his cheeks.
When
he heard the whimper, Sam’s first thought was that it had come from his own
throat. But it began escalating in
volume and panic until it became a cry of anguish. Sam wiped away his tears and flew to Al’s bedside.
Al
was curled into a tight ball. His
body jerked as though he were trying to avoid a blow. “Albert Calavicci, lieutenant, United States Navy,” he
mumbled. His body jerked again.
Al wrapped his hands around his head.
“I don’t know any attack plan,” he wailed.
He ducked his head and began to cry a woman’s name over and over again
until it became a shout. “Beth!”
Al
woke himself up. He shrank back
from Sam, who stood next to the bed with an unsure hand hesitantly extended.
Sam
dropped his hand and patiently waited for Al’s breathing to return to normal.
Al turned away, shivering beneath the covers.
Sam didn’t know what to do. Seven
degrees, and not a single one in psychology.
He risked sitting on the edge of the bed.
Al ignored him.
“Al,
I know you’re in a lot of pain.”
“You
don’t know squat!” came the vicious reply.
“Want
to talk about it?” offered Sam.
Al
pulled the sheets tighter around his shoulder and continued to stare at the
wall. He began to laugh without
emotion. “Boy, you sure are
dumb!” he said, the vehemence coming through despite the weakness of his
voice. He grimaced as he pulled
himself up to lean against the headboard. Sam
moved as if to place a pillow behind Al, but the captain’s fierce glare froze
him in place. “Do I want to talk
about it? Would I have done this
if I felt like talking?” He
thrust a bandaged wrist below Sam’s nose.
The movement of the IV line caught his attention and Al stared at the
tubing. “Man, I need a cigar.”
Al let his head fall against the headboard, ignoring Sam’s alarmed jolt
at the thud of his skull against the wood.
“I’m
not so sure that’s . . .” The
flashing stare silenced Sam. He
obediently passed a cigar and lighter to Al, who lit the cigar and returned the
lighter with shaking hands.
“Damn,”
he whispered around the cigar. He
dropped his hands into his lap and stared at them, twisting his wrists to
examine the bandages. Al shook his
head and spoke bitterly, the words slightly slurred, “Geez, Calavicci, you
can’t even kill yourself right.” He
removed the cigar from his mouth and dropped his head against the headboard
again.
“You
came pretty close to succeeding. If
I hadn’t come in when I did . . .”
“And
who the hell asked you to come in?!” Al flared. He tore the bandage from his right wrist and flung his arm
out with the shiny black stitches in full view.
“This was my choice! Can
you understand that?” Tears began
to spill down his cheeks, and he blindly stabbed the cigar in a nearby ashtray.
The energy expended by the outburst exhausted him and he slumped back.
Sam
took Al’s hand in both of his and reapplied the bandage to the wrist.
“No, Al. I can’t
understand it, and I can’t accept it. Why would you try to end your life?”
Al
yanked his hand away and wiped his eyes. “It
wouldn’t make sense to you,” he said with a tone of finality.
Sam
was not to be deterred. “But
I’d like to try.”
Al
looked away, as if escape resided in the minute cracks in the wall.
“Why are you doing this?”
“What?”
Sam was caught off guard.
Al
stared deeply into Sam’s eyes. The
defensive, irate man was gone. The
searching gaze unnerved Sam, but he returned it. “Why are you doing this?” Al repeated. He lifted his wrists, staring pointedly at them.
“I asked you before. Why’d
you help me?” He gestured at the
desk area. “You’re covering it
all up for me. Why?”
“To
protect your career,” Sam awkwardly answered the last question first.
“Pah!
You think a suicide cares about a career?”
“I
think you still care too much period to be a suicide,” Sam ventured.
Al
didn’t respond. He averted his
eyes and plucked at a loose thread on the comforter.
He wound it tightly around his index finger and unwound it again,
feigning fascination with the ridges it made in his skin.
“Why would you think that?” he finally asked without raising his
head.
“Just
a feeling. Besides, you didn’t
fight me when I tried to help you.” Sam
touched Al’s shoulder, half-expecting the captain to pull away and shut him
out. Instead, Al closed his eyes in
resignation and shook his head.
“No,
I didn’t,” he admitted, his physical weakness evident in his voice.
He looked up at Sam. “I
guess . . . I guess I want to live more than I thought.”
“Then
why did you try to kill yourself?”
“Because
I’m a failure.” The words fell
shortly and bitterly from Al’s tongue.
Sam
hesitated before continuing. Al was
very vulnerable right now, and Sam didn’t want to drive him away, not when the
captain had opened a tiny crack. Maybe
it was from exhaustion, but Sam would take what he could.
“A failure?”
Al
laughed bitterly. “I guess you
hadn’t heard. Al Calavicci, the
project drunk. A washed-up star
jockey with five failed marriages. And
now a botched suicide attempt. A
real winner, huh?” He ran a hand
through his hair. “Oh, the
Committee’ll love this. I can
kiss this project goodbye.”
“What
does the Committee have to do with anything?
No one has to know, Al.”
“Boy,
you really don’t pay much attention to the Project grapevine, do you?
I thought everyone knew.” Al
started to get up, but a wave of dizziness forced him back down.
He waved at the desk. “Bring
me that paper from the corner.”
Sam
complied and handed the memo to Al. The
captain shook his head. “You read
it.” Al reached for his cigar so
he wouldn’t have to look at Sam. “I
know what it says.”
Sam
absorbed the note which formally informed Captain Albert M. Calavicci of a
Committee hearing to determine his future status with Project Starbright.
It cited Al’s alcoholism and volatile behavior as evidence of his
“questionable actions.” He just stared at Al.
Al
puffed on his cigar for several seconds. Removing
it from his mouth to jab it in the general direction of the paper, he said,
“If that doesn’t define me as a failure, I don’t know what does.”
“You
are not a failure, Al.
You . . . you just have a problem.”
Al
laughed. It sounded like the kind
of laugh that covers an urge to break into tears.
“A problem.” He shook
his head. “I can’t make it
through a day without a drink. If I
don’t have one I start to remember . . . things.”
“Were
you remembering ‘things’ when you slashed your wrists?”
Al
drew heavily on the cigar and closed his eyes.
“Vividly.”
“You
were a POW, weren’t you?”
Al’s
eyes flew open. “How did you know
that? I never talk about it.”
“Before
you woke up you were talking in your sleep.
It, uh, it sounded like an interrogation session.”
“That’s
a mild term for it.” Al rubbed
his forehead. “A very mild
term.”
“How
long were you held?”
“Too
long.”
“And
Beth?” At Al’s annoyed and
incredulous stare Sam quickly amended, “You called for her at the infirmary
and then right before you woke up.”
Al
shrugged with a callousness that didn’t match the pain in his eyes.
“I came home a single man.” He
ground the cigar out in the ashtray, pressing so hard the tobacco ruptured.
Sam
was speechless. He actually found
himself amazed that the man had never attempted suicide before.
“Al, I . . .”
“No.
Don’t say it. I don’t want your pity.”
Al sighed uncomfortably. “I
just . . . I just want . . .”
Sam
leaned forward. “A friend?”
Al
looked down and nodded.
Sam
smiled. “I thought we were.”
Al
returned the smile until the emotional roller coaster he’d been on proved too
much for the physically drained Captain to control any longer.
As the first tear began to run down his cheek, he slid under the covers
and turned on his side to face the wall.
“Goodnight,
Al.” Sam got up from the edge of
Al’s bed. He bent to gather the
papers that had fallen from his grasp hours before and stacked them on the desk.
Glancing around the room, Sam spied a battered leather easy chair that
looked as if it dated back to the Forties.
He settled in it and tossed a Navy blanket over himself.
He watched Al until the quivering shoulders settled into the steady
rhythm of sleep. Then Sam entered
the land of dreams himself. ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
Saturday,
April 20, 1985
“Ohhh,”
Al groaned as consciousness smacked him in the face. He felt as if someone had dumped a pile of bricks on his
head. Rather, he amended, like
someone had strapped him to the wrecking ball that demolished the wall of
bricks. He opened his eyes.
The
bright light breaking through the cracks in the blinds stung his red eyes and
stabbed through the center of his head like a master swordsman.
Al looked up at the ceiling. The
globe covering the light bulbs served as the pivot upon which the entire room
spun madly. He closed his eyes with a moan, but the spinning continued
inside his head.
‘God,
what a hangover.
I certainly hope the party was worth it.’
Once again, Al’s hangover had taken the place of whatever memories he
might have accrued of the previous night.
He blindly patted the bed around him, unwilling to open his eyes again.
He let out a sigh of relief that he was alone.
With this hangover he was in no shape, not to mention in no mindset, to
deal with a one-night stand.
‘How
much did I drink last night?’
he wondered. He
hadn’t had a hangover this bad since he had graduated from Annapolis.
‘Liar,’ his mind shot back.
’What about when you found out Beth was gone?’
‘Shut
up! Just
shut up!’ he mentally
screamed. Lying
in the bed was no way to battle his roaming thoughts.
He’d have to overcome the hangover and get up.
Al
split his eyes open as slowly and as marginally as he could.
Ignoring the protests of his head and his stomach, he pushed himself up
against the headboard. He bit his lip, drawing blood, at the sharp stinging he felt
in his wrists from the pressure.
Al
shoved the sleeves of his pajama top up to his elbow and examined his arms.
At the sight of the white bandages taped to his wrists, the memories of
the previous evening came flooding back. He
stared at the IV line taped to his arm and followed it up to a spot above his
head, where two empty IV bags hung from a coat hanger.
Al tugged the needle from his arm, cringing at the sensation.
He flushed with anger and shame. Now
that kid would probably spread the story all over the project.
His fury and embarrassment were so strong that he nearly ignored his own
part in the matter, including how he’d opened up, practically bared his soul.
He remembered sharing things with Sam Beckett he’d wanted to keep
secret, and he flushed deeper.
With
a muffled curse, Al swung his legs out of bed and started toward his desk.
And promptly fell to the floor with a thud.
He stayed where he fell, gagging back a surge of nausea that threatened
to overwhelm him. He slowly lifted
his head from the crush of the rug and pushed himself to his knees.
Not trusting his legs to carry him again, Al crawled to his desk and
reached up to grab the bottle of vodka he’d left there.
It was gone.
‘No.
I don’t want to think about everything.
Where’s that bottle?’
That kid must have thrown it out, Al realized with a curse.
He spun as quickly as his pounding head would allow and thrust his hand
within the wastebasket.
One by one, he lifted the empty bottles from the crumpled papers.
“Damn!”
he muttered, throwing the wastebasket aside.
It crashed loudly against the desk.
Oblivious to the muffled snort as Sam started awake, Al dragged himself
to his dresser and began searching for the bottle of bourbon he’d hidden
there.
Sam’s
head popped up in search of the source of the noise. He glanced at the bed and jumped up when he saw it was empty.
A red sock flew past his nose and Sam turned to find Al on his knees in
front of his dresser, flinging socks and underwear over his shoulders.
The stiff shoulders suddenly relaxed and Al tenderly reached into the
drawer with both hands, caressing his treasure as he lifted it. It was half a bottle of Jack Daniels.
“Al,
no,” Sam groaned. He dropped to
his knees beside the captain and grabbed his arm.
It was a mistake.
Al
immediately yanked his arm away with a curse.
The dark eyes which had filled with emotion the night before were burning
with hatred. Clutching the bottle
to his chest, Al backed into the corner.
“What
are you doing here?” he snarled. “Spying
on me for the Committee? Well, I
hope you’ve got a good story for them. They’ll just eat this up.”
“Do
you want to help them build their case against you?” Sam stretched his hand out.
“You don’t need that, Al.”
Al
hugged the bottle closer. “You
don’t know what I need! Get away
from me! Get out of here!”
He weakly waved his hand, the gesture lacking the fierceness of his
words.
Sam
edged closer, moving slowly, but Al still backed up against the wall as closely
as he could, shrinking into himself.
“Get
away!” The rough voice rose by
octaves, hysteria working its way in.
“Al,
this is no answer. No more than
last night was. Please.”
At
the mention of the previous night, Al dropped his head in shame.
Until Sam actually spoke the words, he could still pretend it was a
dream, despite the bandages on his wrists.
Now even that fantasy was ripped away.
And so was his bottle. With
a curse he snapped his head up to see Sam shove the bottle deep within the
drawer it had come from.
Al
narrowed his eyes and spoke in a menacing whisper, “Damn you.”
Sam
cringed. He drew upon his medical
expertise to deal with the angry man quivering in the corner.
“Come
on, let me help you back into bed. You’ve
got to be feeling awful, and with the blood you lost, you really shouldn’t be
moving around.” He took hold of
Al’s arm again.
Al
stiffened beneath his hands, his muscles tensing into hard rocks.
A stubborn glare seared Sam’s face.
“I’m
fine where I am,” the captain spoke through gritted teeth.
He dropped his gaze from Sam’s face to the hand gripping his arm.
“Just leave.”
Sam
didn’t budge. “I’m not
leaving, so you might as well get used to the idea.”
Al
sat motionless for a few moments before he began clawing at Sam’s hand.
“I said leave
me alone!” he bellowed.
Sam
hissed through his teeth at the sight of the tiny lines oozing blood on the back
of his hand, but he refused to let go. He
held on as Al began swinging fists at him. He held on while Al kicked his feet. He held on while Al cursed him.
Al’s
vituperations were interrupted by a foreboding gurgle from deep in his throat.
“Oh, God,” he moaned, his face suddenly drained of color.
He concentrated his efforts on yanking his arm loose and fled for the
bathroom.
Sam
blew lightly across the scratches on his hand while the sounds of Al’s
sickness filled the room. Low moans
intermittently broke the retching noises. Sam
hesitantly got to his feet and moved to the bathroom doorway.
Al
slumped against the bathroom wall, his sweaty forehead resting against the
soiled porcelain. His face was
ghostly pale, his eyes unnaturally ringed with red and streaming water.
He panted and ran his hands across his chest, as if he didn’t know what
else to do with them. He didn’t
notice Sam.
“Oh,
God,” he moaned over and over again. The
mantra became panicked as the gurgling rose in his throat again.
“No, no.” The voice was
filled with dread. Al barely lifted
himself over the bowl before he was sick once more.
He
jumped when he felt hands on his back. Weakly,
he waved a hand behind him in a leave-me gesture.
But when he finished throwing up, Al realized he needed the support.
If the hands hadn’t been there to help ease him down, he would have
smashed his head against the metal base of the shower enclosure.
Al
cocked his head. “You don’t
give up, do you?” he asked the earnest face before him.
“No,
I don’t,” Sam replied. He rose
and flushed the toilet as he moved to the sink.
Al
groaned as the sound of the rushing water beat against his throbbing head like
waves against a cliff. He watched
Sam wring out a blood-stained towel from the sink and lay it next to a shining
knife. ‘The knife.’ Al limply
raised his arms and looked at his bandaged wrists.
Sam
was running a washcloth under the tap now.
Al looked at the bloodied towel on the counter.
His thoughts ran disjointedly. ‘Blood.
My blood. From the knife.
Oh, God, I slashed my wrists.’
He realized exactly what he had done for the first time.
Al was breathing hard now. He
clumsily pulled the bandage from one of his wrists and stared in disbelief at
the line of the wound, sealed by the stitches.
“I
did that,” he mumbled. He stared
down at his own wrist, oblivious to the fact that Sam had dropped to his knees
beside him. “I did that.”
His heart began racing. If
it hadn’t been for Sam, he would be dead.
Al
looked up at the knife, never hearing Sam’s request for permission to apply
the washcloth to his face. He
barely felt the cool wetness moving across his forehead and the back of his
neck. He only became aware of Sam
when the sensation of the cloth on his mouth interfered with his words.
“I’m
a mess.”
“It’s
all right, Al, I’m cleaning it up.”
Al
shook his head, fighting a lump in his throat.
“No, not this,” he weakly gestured toward the toilet.
“I’m a mess,” he repeated, nodding toward the knife.
This time his voice did break.
“Al,
why don’t we get you back in bed so you can rest,” Sam suggested, retreating
to medicine as a safe interaction. He
was relieved at Al’s imperceptible nod, though he would have put the captain
to bed without acquiescence. It was
easier this way, Sam acknowledged.
They
rose together, Al leaning heavily on Sam. As
he draped Al’s arm around his neck, Sam felt the absence of the bandage.
“Will
you let me change your bandages?” Sam asked.
Drained,
Al grunted an affirmative. He was
more dragged than walked back to the bed. He
sank into the pillows Sam stacked behind him to keep him upright.
“Don’t
move,” Sam cautioned. “I’ve
got to go to my quarters to get the gauze.
I’ll be right back.”
Al
nodded with a wry smile. “Don’t
worry, I’m in no hurry to eat carpet again.”
Sam
chuckled, gratified by the hope in Al’s humor, and slipped out the door.
Al’s
mind wandered as he waited. He
confronted the demons in his head, the demons who had been building in power
over the last fifteen years. The
demons who had tried to take control last night.
‘Well,
you won’t anymore, do you hear?
Not again.’
Al looked down at his
wrists. ‘You
almost won last night, but not again.’
He
was not surprised when the demons refused to silently slink off in defeat.
’Try
to get through the Committee hearing by yourself.
You can’t win, Al Calavicci, no matter how hard you try.’
Al
had almost forgotten about the Committee hearing. There was so much to keep track of. He felt a wave of depression wash over him again.
The demons laughed triumphantly, taunting him to take a drink to silence
them.
He
was on the verge of trying to sit up under his own power when Sam came back in
with a small first aid kit in his hands. Al
settled back with intense relief.
Sam
looked puzzled by Al’s relieved sighs, but he didn’t ask any questions.
He sat on the bed and opened the kit in his lap.
Regretfully, he lifted a packet and ripped it open to reveal a swatch
soaked in betadine.
“I’ve
got to clean them, Al. It’s gonna
sting like anything.”
Al
nodded and offered the exposed wrist to Sam first. As gently and as quickly as he could, Sam swabbed the area
around the wound. Al ground his
teeth and tried his best not to jerk his hand.
Sam allowed the medicine to evaporate while he removed the bandage and
cleaned the other wrist. Al sucked
his breath in and bit down on his lip, breaking through in the same spot he’d
bitten earlier.
Sam
next applied a light coating of an antibiotic ointment.
Gently, but firmly, he pressed gauze pads over the wounds and taped them
in place. Done, he gathered up the
old bandage and the wastepaper from the gauze and betadine swatch and threw them
away. Neither man had spoken a word
in all that time.
He
went into the bathroom and Al heard water running in the tap and cabinets being
opened and closed. Sam emerged with
a tall glass of water in one hand. He
sat on the bed again and handed Al the water.
“You
need to drink some fluids,” Sam explained.
After Al had taken a few sips, he offered the glass to Sam, but the young
doctor insisted he drain it first. Al
grumbled at the mother hen tendency, but complied all the same.
“Oh,
man, how am I going to explain this away?” he groaned, raising his bandaged
wrists.
Sam
didn’t know what to say. An
attempted suicide was the last thing Al needed on his record. “You don’t,” he said lamely.
“I
don’t,” Al snorted. “I
don’t explain it. You’re right.
They probably know anyway. Better
to just pack up and go.”
“Maybe
you’re right.” A sudden idea
had struck Sam.
Al
laughed bitterly. “That hopeless,
huh?”
Sam
realized what he’d just said. “No!”
he quickly amended. “Not like
that. What I mean is, take some
time off, a vacation.”
“A
vacation? Sam, the Committee will
never authorize a vacation, especially at the last-minute.” He shook his head. “They’d
probably insist on a medical exam and then I’m back to square one.
Besides, they want to be sure I don’t skip out before the hearing.
Though, come to think of it, if I left it would solve their problem for
them.”
“The
hearing is in a week and a half. The
stitches will be gone by then.”
“Yeah,
but hiding the bandages for almost two weeks.
I don’t know if you’ve noticed, but the duty uniform is
short-sleeved.”
“I
have noticed you don’t concern yourself with being in uniform all the time,”
Sam countered.
“Yeah,
well, if I want to get past this hearing I better start.”
Sam
frowned. “There was not a word in
there about the way you dress, Al. Your
behavior and your alcoholism, that’s what was in there.
They’re not asking you to change who you are.”
“No,
they just want me to change most of who I am!”
“Can
you sit there and tell me you’re honestly happy surviving from drink to drink,
throwing your life up in the mornings? Can
you tell me that you feel good when you destroy something?
That you get a lasting satisfaction from propositioning every female on
the property?”
“Shut
up!” Al shouted. He immediately
laid his head back and moaned from the pain his own shout had intensified.
“I
think the answer is no,” Sam quietly finished.
“And I think you know it, too.”
Al
turned his head and stared at the wall. “I
don’t know what to do anymore,” he said in a small voice.
“That’s
a start, isn’t it?”
“Some
start. Rock bottom.”
“I
can’t think of a better place. But
you don’t have to start alone.”
Al
started laughing. “And just who
do you think is going to help me?”
Sam
wasn’t smiling. “I will.”
Al
sobered. “You?
Why would you want to waste your time on a washed-up has-been like me?”
“Because
it’s not a waste of time. Because
I believe Al Calavicci has a lot to offer, and I want to help him find it out
for himself.”
Al’s
mouth twisted, trying to decide if it wanted to frown or smile.
He rubbed the back of his neck and regarded Sam, searching for
confirmation of the sincerity of his words in the young face.
He found it and didn’t know how to react to it.
He just stared.
Sam
rubbed his temples as his mind raced. “The
thing is to get you away from the project until we can get you back on your
feet.”
Al
released a grateful breath that the intense moment was past.
“I told you already, there’s no way they’ll grant a vacation
request.”
“A
vacation request, no. But a
business trip, yes.” Sam’s face
brightened.
Al
scanned the physicist’s face, trying to decipher the secret.
“Don’t
you see, Al? I’ll conjure up a
reason why I need to leave town for a week or so.
We’ll head up to MIT. I’ve
got some friends up there who will let us use their apartment.
Or, better yet, there’s this cabin where Professor LoNigro and I would
retreat to be sure we wouldn’t be disturbed while we were working on our
theories. That’s it!”
“I
hate to burst your bubble, but how do you plan on getting me on this so-called
business trip? I’m not exactly
high on the good list. Hell,” he
laughed, “I’m not even on the good list!”
“Leave
that to me. I’ll say you demand
on coming as part of your administrative duties, to be sure I’m not violating
procedure.”
Al
tossed his head back and laughed. Sam
didn’t see what was so funny, and said so.
“Right,
like they’ll believe that! They
think I’m a drunken slob who can’t tell which way is up.” He lowered his eyes. “And
they’re right.”
Sam
touched Al’s ankle through the sheets to get his attention.
“We’re going to change that, Al.”
Al
nodded toward the disaster spread across the room from his desperate raid.
“It won’t be pretty.”
“I
know that. I can handle it if you
can.”
Al
sighed. He covered his face with
his hands and took several deep breaths. Dropping
his hands, he looked Sam in the eye. “Commence Operation Bootstraps.”
To Be Continued |