VIRTUAL SEASONS EPISODES |
|
PROLOGUE The
anesthetizing effect of leaping settled down on him making him feel
inebriated. He waited for the
sensation to pass as he relied on his senses to tell him of the place
he’d leapt into. His senses
slowly began to come back to him. He
could tell from his body position that he was sitting down, his body
leaning slightly forward. He
could feel a soft pressure between his hands as if he were holding onto
something. In addition to the
area that surrounded him, he could smell the disinfectant spray that had
recently been sprayed into the room.
He could also hear a constant rhythmic beep coming from the
opposite side of the room. At
last, his vision cleared. What
he saw alarmed him. Lying
on a hospital bed was a beautiful brunette somewhere in her thirties, he
assumed, who looked emaciated and vulnerable.
She was very pale except for dark bruises under her eyes.
Sam stood quickly and scanned the equipment reading all the data
from the monitors that surrounded the head of the bed. The
steady beep that Sam heard came from a cardiograph monitor that sat on a
table on the other side of the bed. Its
steady rhythmic beep alleviated Sam’s distress over the patient having
heart trouble. His
eyes continued on their visual assessment.
An IV tree was dripping clear liquid into her system via an IV in
her arm. Respirator equipment to the right of the bed, pumped up and
down as it sent air into her lungs, via a trachea tube that was down her
throat. Even as he scanned
her body seeing the large bruises, the bandages and wrappings around her
chest cavity, he could tell that she had been in a fatal accident and the
only thing that crossed his mind was, ‘I’m
too late.’ After
his inspection of the patient, Sam sat back down in the chair he had been
in and gazed upon the patient’s face.
As he looked at her, he was taken aback when he recognized her.
He studied her features for a few long moments as flashbacks slowly
came to him. “Brigadoon,
Brigadoon,” a brown haired little girl said abstractedly as she leaned
back on a couch, her head resting on the palm of her hand as she stared
off into space. “NO!
I REMEMBER! I
remember! I saw her do it!”
the same little girl now shrieking in a courtroom as she ran down to her
mother, another familiar face, then a moment later, running over to him,
hugging him tightly telling him, “I’ll
never forget you.” Then an older version of the same beautiful child who was standing beside him, trying to reach him as she cried, “Sam Beckett, you have a daughter who is just as stubborn and bright as you. Her name is…” “Sammy
Jo,” he finished. Questions
filled his mind. What had
happened to her? What could
he do? How? Why? Where
in the hell was Al to answer his questions.
He sat there, her hand in his, caressing his daughter’s hand,
wanting ever so much to take her pain away.
“God, please, what do you want me to do?” PART
ONE May
21, 1996 Augustana
Hospital Chicago,
Illinois 7:35
PM Sam
laid his arm on the bed and then rested his head against his arm trying to
control his emotions. He
wanted to cry out. He wanted
to take revenge on whoever had hurt his daughter.
He wanted…. He
wanted answers and the only person who could give them to him wasn’t
about to show up when he wanted him to.
He slowly shook his head wondering when the holographic image was
going to show up when he felt a hand on his shoulder.
He was so caught up in his own emotions to even look up, but the
raspy voice that went with the hand snapped his head around to its source. “I’m
so sorry. I came as soon as I
heard.” Beside him,
touching him was Ex-Rear Admiral Albert Calavicci. Not
comprehending the sense of his friend’s touch, questions ran through
Sam’s mind pertaining to his where-abouts, his name and the reason why
he’d come to wherever he was. He
was about to ask these questions to the man who stood beside him; however,
he did an abrupt turn as he heard the chunk-zoom of the Imaging Chamber
door open across the bed from him. He
quickly overcame his abruptness of turning and took his daughter’s hand
back in his and looked up at her face once more.
It pained him to see her this way. Al,
the holographic image, came out from the Imaging Chamber door, with a
tight grin. “Sam, you
won’t believe the guy in the Waiting…” he stopped as he looked
around the room. His eyes grew wide in disbelief and sorrow as he remembered
what happened to Sammie Jo, and at seeing himself standing behind Sam.
“Oh boy,” he said softly as he ran his hand over his mouth only
to drop it to his side. Sam
tore his attention away from Sammie Jo for a moment to look at Al. Albert Calavicci, a short, slender man with an olive
complexion, dark hair and dark puppy-dog eyes stood on either side of Sam.
Al, the observer, was dressed in an ornate yellow shirt, a black
suit, a star talisman string tie and a matching yellow handkerchief in the
coat lapel. The other Al,
dressed in a somber pair of black pants and a purple shirt, looked as if
he hadn’t had a good night’s sleep in a couple of days.
He had black circles under his eyes, which were now filling with
tears. “Why
did this happen, Al?” Sam questioned softly to both of them, but neither
replied. Each was caught up
in their own emotions, choking off any kind of response that either could
give. The
door behind them opened and a nurse came into the room.
She was dressed in a multicolored swirled top with matching
bottoms. A band pulled her
shoulder-length black hair back and she carried a small tray that held
only one syringe. She gave a
small warm smile to the men in the room as her eyes wanted over the figure
of the woman on the bed. All
three turned to her as she came into the room. She blinked as she set down
the tray then proceeded to inject the medicine from the syringe into
Sammie Jo’s IV, then tossed the syringe in the disposal bin marked for
it. She placed her hand on
Sammie Jo’s shoulder and patted her shoulder almost gently.
She then turned to look at Sam.
“You know, you could go home and get some rest.
I’ll stay with Samantha if you’d like.” “No,
I couldn’t. I just got
here,” Sam was surprised that he had let it slip.
“I don’t want to leave her.”
He wanted to be at her side when she woke, to let her know that he
was here, in some sense of the word and to take care of her, that…
that… that he would save her. “You
could. I can tell by the
circles under your eyes sir, you’re tired.”
She
turned back to Sammie Jo and touched her hair, smoothing it out on the
pillow on which it laid. “Samantha
is a sweet child. She
shouldn’t be here in this bed. Her
soul is kind and good, like her father’s,” The portly woman turned and
looked at Sam knowingly. Al,
the somber one, looked at the woman skeptically.
“And just how do you know Sammie Jo?” He cared very deeply for
her and he didn’t want her to be used by some strange woman. “Oh,
Samantha and I know each other. She
always came to Dr. Pinkerton’s office when her family moved to Chicago. I always gave her medication.” Al’s
eyebrows rose. “Who
are…?” he probed. “Marilyn
Anne Tenen,” she said plainly. “I’m
sorry, Marilyn. I just
can’t. I know your intentions are good, but I can’t leave her,”
Sam said softly. Marilyn
nodded in agreement. “I
know.” Her face saddened as
she glanced back at Sammie Jo. “It’s
hard to leave your daughter.” She
slowly smiled as she moved toward the tangible Albert Calavicci. Al
watched the woman before him warily.
He didn’t know what to expect from her and he didn’t want to be
caught unaware. That was one
thing that the Navy had taught him, always being aware of those around
you. He straightened up as
she approached. “I’m
sorry, sir, but visiting hours are over.” “But…” “Yes
sir. I know, but Mr. Mililani
is her father and has permission from Dr. Pinkerton to remain in the room.
All visitors though, do need to leave.” Al
looked at Sam for reassurance. Sam
nodded. He was glad he
didn’t have to leave. He
did need to be alone, to think, to get answers from his observer.
He watched as Marilyn grabbed her tray; place it under her arm,
then walked behind Al out of the room. Once
the door closed, Sam turned to his holographic pal.
“What in the hell is going on here, Al?
Why? What has happened
to Sammie Jo? When am I?
Who am I?” he rattled. Al
raised his hand at Sam’s barrage of questions.
“One at a time, Sam. One
at a time.” He took out the
handlink and tinkered with the edges of it not wanting to call up
Ziggy’s image immediately. He
knew that Sam wanted answers, so he kept it with what he knew.
What he remembered. “You’ve
leapt into Phillip Samuel Mililani, who is Sammie Jo’s step….” The
door opened causing Al to stop as he glanced to see whom it was who
entered. He looked back down at the handlink, but quickly looked back
at the person again. “Phillip?”
a feminine voice asked softly. “How
is she? Any change?” Sam
looked at Al irritatedly. He
wanted answers and all of these interruptions weren’t helping.
He turned at the voice only for his mouth to open in awe.
He let go of Sammie Jo’s hand and stood seeing a woman before
him… a woman that he hadn’t seen in a long time… and the same woman
that he had loved dearly some time ago. “Abigail?” He
looked at her for a long moment. She
was still beautiful even though time had aged her.
She was dressed in a light blue dress that showed off her figure
and the way that her dark hair was pulled up behind her in a twist only
showed off her elegance more. Sam
went to her and pulled her into his embrace. “Phillip?”
she asked as she returned his embrace hesitantly.
“You’re scaring me. What
happened? Did the doctor come
back since I left?” “Ahh…
no… I don’t think so,” Sam said truthfully not knowing for sure.
He leaned back away from her, his hands still on her waist so that
he could look into her lovely eyes. “You
don’t think so?” she asked a little upset.
“What do you mean?” “I…
I…” he stammered. “I
had to use the restroom,” he lied.
“He might have come in while I was gone.” “Oh.”
She looked at him warily one thin eyebrow curving up slightly. Sam
looked at her apologetically, his heart warming at the sight of her.
He knew without a doubt that he loved the woman before him and just
as before, he found himself wanting to hold her more. Abigail
glanced at her daughter then back at Sam seeing the warming look in his
eyes. She grinned back at
him. “Sam?”
Al asked as he saw the look pass between the two.
“Maybe we should go somewhere else to talk.” Abigail
leaned forward putting her hands behind his neck.
She lightly brushed her lips against his.
Sam took the invitation of her lips on his and he brought her
closer, deepening the kiss. Al
cleared his throat, trying to get his friends attention back at the
subject at hand: why he was here. “Sam?”
he crooned. Abigail
broke off the kiss and looked at him for a long moment.
There was something in the look that he gave that reminded her of
Will Kinman, Sammy Jo’s father. She
blinked back at him and looked at Sammie Jo just beyond him. “Phillip, this isn’t the time or the place.” Sam
blushed embarrassed of his actions. He
swallowed and ducked his head as he put his hands in his pockets.
He coughed lightly and turned toward his daughter lying in the bed. Abigail
brushed past him to move to her. She
placed a motherly kiss on her daughter’s forehead.
“I’m here, Sammie. Mom’s
here.” Abigail wanted to be
strong for her daughter, but even as she touched Sammie’s’ hair, her
left hand came up to her mouth, playing with her lips as tears threatened
to fall. Sam
went to her placing a hand on her shoulder trying to comfort her.
“I’m going to go for a walk,” he told her softly knowing that
he had to get answers from Al. Abigail
only nodded a reply. Al
followed Sam outside the hospital room and tried to pick up from where he
left off. “Okay, Sam.
You’ve leapt into Chicago, May 21, 1996. You are Phillip Samuel Mililani, who is Sammie Jo’s
stepfather. He’s a retired
police officer, and from his track record, he was a damn good one too.” Sam
looked at Al with a sideways glance as he listened.
“And?” “And
other than that, Ziggy has no idea why you’re here.” Sam
sighed irritatedly and stopped to look at Al squarely.
He briefly looked down the hallway toward Sammie Jo’s room from
hence he came. “Could it be
that my daughter needs me? What
happened Al?” Al
rubbed the back of his neck thoughtfully.
He pocketed the handlink and sighed.
“I let her go home to Chicago to visit her mom and step-dad.
She was driving in the rain – a downpour from what EMS and police
officers said. A drunk driver
hit her. She hit the steering
wheel with enough force to break five ribs, two of which punctured her
left lung and collapsed her right. EMS
said she was barely breathing when they found her unconscious. They…” “When?”
Sam asked concerned. “A
day ago,” Al said softly. “Dad!”
Sam turned at the calling to see a young man coming up toward him. “Dad, where is Sammie Jo?”
The dark haired young man hugged Sam only to pull away quickly from
him. “Down
there… ah….” “Room
115,” Al supplied. “115.”
As the young man sprinted down the hallway in the direction Sam had
just come, Sam pointed to him and looked at Al.
“I have a son?” Al
thought at that moment to go ahead and tell Sam that he had a brown
headed, bright-eyed brilliant son who seemed to be mimicking his
father’s independence and optimism.
However, Al remembered the rules of the project and he backed away
as he bopped up on his toes and sighed.
“Phillip has three of his own kids.
Daniel, the one that just breezed through here is the oldest.
Next in line is Alex and third, is Candace.
They are triplets and if I remember correctly, they will be
arriving soon.” “Triplets?”
Sam breathed. He ran his hand
over his mouth and was about to speak again, when Marilyn appeared at his
side. Marilyn
smiled at him. “You felt
like coming out after all.” She
saw the wavering impish look that she was given and she glanced down at
the floor for a moment. “It’s
going to be okay, Mr. Mililani.” “Will
it?” Sam asked thought thinking of Sammie Jo on the bed helpless and in
the hands of the doctors in the hospital. “Yes,”
she nodded understanding how he felt and patted his arm gently. “I
appreciate your concern, Marilyn.” “My
prayers are with you.” She
then turned and walked down the hallway toward the nurse’s station. Al
dug out the handlink from his pocket.
“All right, Sam,” he said as he shot a glance at the woman
walking away from him. “I’ll
go back and get some information for you.
I’ll be back ASAP.” Al
then pulled up the Imaging Chamber Door and vanished as he stepped through
the light. Sam
nodded then rubbed his hands over his face.
He needed to talk to someone and the only someone that he could
talk with was in the hospital’s waiting room. PART
TWO November 23, 2005Stallions
Gate, New Mexico 5:35
PM As
Al stepped back into the Control Room, the room took on a helter-skelter
spin for a brief moment then settled down leaving him with an instant
headache. He shook his head
slightly as if to clear the pain from it.
He slowly put his hand to the wall as he felt the dizziness slowly
disappear. He took a few
hesitant steps then paused as he blinked and took two slow deep breaths to
rid himself of the nausea he now felt bubbling up.
He swallowed and wondered what was wrong with him. “Al?”
a very concerned voice asked softly.
“Are you okay, Admiral?” Al
looked up into the concerned face of Tina Martinez-O’Farrell.
Tina’s head was cocked to the side, her full lips pursed in
worry. He smiled at her. “Yeah, I’m fine. Just
a dizzy spell.” He pushed
himself away from the wall and went to the Control Room with Tina
fidgeting at his side. He
approached the Control Grid and carefully placed the handlink into its
assigned spot. “Ziggy?
Any chance that we can find out what is going on back in May 21,
1996?” “At
the moment,” Ziggy purred at him, “I’m accessing newspapers and
archives in the Chicago Area. I’ll
come up with some information for you when this feat is accomplished.” “Great,”
Al supplied then he turned his attention to the people who had gathered
around the Control Grid. Dominic,
who for the most part was beginning to get used to his job; Tina was
grinning as she chomped on her gum enthusiastically; and the third person
was somebody he didn’t recognize. He
frowned as he studied her. The
woman stood about five foot seven, had a beautiful full lips, green eyes
and long brown hair. He
couldn’t remember right off hand her name; however, he turned back to
Tina with a quizzical expression. Almost
with a definite nod to the woman, Al asked, “Where’s Sammie Jo?” “Sammie
Jo?” Tina asked just as quizzically back to him with a furrow in her
brow. “Yeah.
I want to talk to Sammie Jo about the retrieval program she’s
been working on. She said she
thought she had it almost completed.” “Al,
are you okay?” Tina asked as she blinked at him and stopped chewing her
gum so adamantly. “You know
that Marilyn has been working on the retrieval program.
She’s been working very hard on it and…” Tina glanced at the
woman who was now frowning with worry. “If
you’ve had someone else working on it, Admiral, we could compare notes
and possibly be able to bring Dr. Beckett home,” the brunette said with
concern. Al’s
head whipped back around to the other woman and her name magically
appeared – Marilyn Hines. He
had hired her – he realized and quickly began to feel his memory
refilling with how Marilyn and Gooshie had worked so hard on Ziggy to make
the earlier retrieval program work. ‘No,’
Al’s mind argued with him. ‘That
was Sammie Jo! Not Marilyn
Hines. Wasn’t it?’ Not
understanding what was going on, Al looked up at the circular orb above
him and asked, “Where is Dr. Samantha Josephine Fuller?” The
room fell instantly quiet for a moment before Ziggy’s voice floated down
around him, “Admiral Calavicci, Dr. Samantha Josephine Fuller died on
May 23, 1996.” Almost
as instantly as Ziggy had uttered the words, Al’s mind seemed to explode
with memories that he had not had before.
Memories of a funeral for the lovely woman who was Sam Beckett’s
– his best friend’s – daughter.
Instant pain and anguish filled his heart and he immediately turned
to Dominic with his finger pointed directly at him.
“I don’t care how much energy it drains, keep that lock on Sam.
I want to get back to him in any possible emergency.
You hear that Ziggy? Monitor
him with that… that… whatever meter-thingy-ma-bob you have and just
let me know. Okay?” “Yes,
Admiral,” both Dominic and Ziggy replied simultaneously. Al
turned, gave an apologetic look to Marilyn then quickly strode out of the
room, his mind set on one specific place – his office.
He knew he could find answers there. ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ May
21, 1996 Augustana
Hospital Chicago,
Illinois 8:00
PM Sam
walked into the hospital waiting room to see Admiral Albert Calavicci
sitting down with his elbows on his knees and his head supported in his
hands. Giving a somewhat
heartsick smile, Sam walked over to him, sat beside him then cleared his
throat hoping to get Al’s attention so they could talk. Al
sighed worriedly and glanced to see who had sat down beside him and saw
Mr. Mililani, Sammie Jo’s stepfather.
He wanted to get up and walk away quickly but his manners where two
stubborn to let him. “Mr.
Mililani, I…” Al started. “Please,
call me Sam,” Sam responded almost to casually. Al
lopsidedly grinned at him as he thought of Sam Beckett for a brief moment. “Sam?” Al looked at him a bit skeptically. “Yes,
I like to go by my middle name, Samuel… Sam,” Sam covered up his own
flub. Al
nodded understanding. “Sam,
I’m sorry that I let her come. I
mean, don’t get me wrong, I…” Sam’s
emotions quickly got the better of him and he quickly put his hand on his
best friend’s shoulder. “It’s
not your fault, Al. You were
not the drunk driver.” Al
nodded slowly. “True, but I
was the nozzle that approved her to go on the drive in the first place.” “Yes,
you did. You were the one
that approved her to come up here to visit us and we are so appreciative
of that, Admiral. Being able
to spend time with our daughter is very important to both Abigail and
myself.” Sam knew the words
were the ones to say because he honestly felt them.
“We really appreciate what you’ve done to help our daughter
out.” Al
searched Phillip’s face for a long moment as his brain forged through
all the information he knew on Samantha Josephine Fuller and her mother
Abigail. Knowing that he couldn’t say anything about the project, he
said, “All I did was ask her if she wanted a job.” “You’re
right,” Sam answered. “It
was a job that you felt assured that she could do and deserved, or you
wouldn’t have offered it to her so freely.”
Sam stepped aside as he felt Phillip’s presence take hold of the
conversation. “Sammie Jo is even so wrapped up in her work that we see so
little of her now, and don’t you worry, Admiral Calavicci, Sammie Jo
hasn’t told us anything about whatever is going on in New Mexico.
That girl can blab when she wants but she’s so clammed up, we
could probably open her mouth and get a pearl one of these days.”
Sam grinned as soon as the words came out then turned to see Al
smirking then make a somewhat of a gurgling sound before he began to
laugh. Both
men laughed for a moment and let loose a moment of tension from what had
brought them together. Sam
had never felt more at ease and he so wanted to tell his best friend whom
he was. Yet, instead, to keep
up the charade, he asked, “So, maybe you can tell me, Admiral…” “Call
me Al,” Al blurted out quickly. “Al…
tell me what do you do that is so dreadfully important in New Mexico,”
Sam finished just curious to find out what Al would say to those who
didn’t know about the Time Traveling experiment. “Well,
it’s a government funded operation that’s top secret, Sam.
Beyond that, it’s all I can tell you.
I’m sure that Sammie Jo told you all that she could.” Sam
nodded as Phillip re-emerged from somewhere in the recesses of his mind.
“Well, Al, I can tell that you are taking good care of our Sammie
Jo. She looked very healthy
– uh – relatively speaking, of course,” Sam said softly. “You
have one hell of a daughter,” Al said just as softly. “I
know,” Sam answered. “I
know.” PART THREE November
23, 2005 Stallions
Gate, New Mexico Project
Quantum Leap Al
rubbed his temples as he walked down the corridor toward his office.
He couldn’t understand what had happened to cause the timeline
change. What had Sam changed
so violently to have Samantha Josephine Fuller, his own daughter, wiped
out of history? He
sighed and rubbed at his face with his hands.
He was getting too old to have this problem and he wasn’t sure
how he was going to correct history this time.
He’d question Ziggy on it and hopefully she’d have an answer
for him. He
turned the last corner to go to his office when a small body ran smack
into him. Stumbling toward
the wall, Al’s eyes popped open to see Stephen Beckett, his hands full
of electronics. “Stephen…
what the…” “Oh,
Uncle Al, I’m sorry. I
wasn’t watching where I was going.
I’m sorry, but… you know,” Stephen said his eyes brightening
with excitement, “I maybe able to come up with a new concept for the
handlink. I mean, you can see
just the top half of Ziggy. I
could make it to where she’s a fully integrated holographic person to
interact with. Cool, huh?” Al
half-listened to the young Beckett before him and frowned as he looked at
the electronics in his arms. He
slightly shook his head but knew that giving Stephen any negative words
would destroy his spirit. “Sure,
kid. If you can do that, you
go ahead. But you know the
rules, right?” Stephen’s
face even brightened more. “Sure
do! So, I can go ahead and
try?” Al
smiled at the young man standing before him, his eyes so full of
excitement and wonder. No
matter what happened, he didn’t want Stephen to think that he didn’t
care about whatever the kid was working on.
Reaching out to shuffle his hair, he said, “Go for it.” “Thanks,
Uncle Al.” Al
stood back as the young man grinned up at him and hurried down the
hallway. Sighing, he shook his head wishing that he had the boy’s
energy before he opened the door to his office and shut it behind him. “Ziggy?” “Yes,”
the hybrid computer purred down to him. “Who
is Marilyn Hines and what happened to Sammie Jo?” “I
already told you, Admiral. She
died May 23, 1996.” “No….
No, no no… no,” Al shook his head adamantly.
“She was here up until Sam leaped into Phillip Mililani and you
know that you hunk of bolts! Don’t
you?” “I
remember her,” the hybrid computer answered back softly.
“I don’t know what Dr. Beckett has changed but his presence
already made the outcome as they are now, Admiral.” “I
don’t like this outcome, Ziggy. What
do we need to do to change it back?” “I
do not know, Admiral Calavicci,” the hybrid computer answered back
softly. “As soon as I can tell what Dr. Beckett has changed, I can
only…” “Only
what?” Al demanded of the parallel hybrid computer. “Speculate.” Al’s
jaw opened and he glanced up at the ceiling as his eyes slightly widening
at her answer. “Ziggy,”
he said when he was able to formulate words once again.
“For Sammie Jo and Sam’s sake, do the best speculation you can. If anyone can do it, you can.” ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ May
21, 1996 Augustana
Hospital
Chicago,
Illinois 8:45
PM Sam
and Al had talked for another thirty minutes before the rest of
Phillip’s family showed up demanding to know where their sister was.
After a brief introduction, Sam excused himself from his best
friend and returned to room 115. Daniel,
Candace and Alex stood on one side of the bed looking down at their older
stepsister with tears brimming their eyes while Abigail sat on the
opposite side reaching out to hold Sammie Jo’s hand affectionately. Sam
went to stand behind Abigail and gently massaged her shoulders.
“Have the doctors come in yet?” Abigail
nodded. “Dr. Hilliard said
that she could wake up at any time,” Abigail said wearily with an intake
of a gasp. “That’s
good,” Sam replied softly giving her shoulders a gentle squeeze. “…
within the next year,” Alex finished his mother’s sentence and
immediately got the back of his head clipped by his brother, Daniel. “What?”
Sam asked a bit surprised as Alex let out a squawk from being smacked so
smartly. “Quit
it,” Alex ducked his head. “You
started it,” Daniel retorted back. “Will
you two stop it?” Candace questioned with a shove at both of them. “Sammie’s hurt and you two are…” “Stop
it,” Abigail said softly, her eyes on her first born.
Slowly though, her eyes made it over to her other children who were
still rattling off at each other, beginning to shove and push at each
other. “I
did not. I was telling dad
what the doctor said.” “I
know what you were doing. You’re wrong…” “She’ll
wake up. She’s gotta wake
up…” Candace said as she brought her right hand up to her mouth and
fidgeted with her lip like her mother. “I
said, stop it,” Abigail raised her voice appropriately but the boys had
already turned to each other and were nose to nose. Sam
couldn’t believe what he was seeing, but he quickly snapped to and
crossed around the hospital bed, split the boys apart and held them at
arms length. “You will stop this nonsense right now,” he demanded of
them. “Do you hear me?”
The boys dropped their eyes and nodded before he dropped his hands
and took a step toward the bed. “Now,
what did the doctor say?” “They
don’t know when… or if she might wake up, Dad,” Candace said softly. “What?!”
Sam exclaimed a bit too loudly. He
then moved away from the bed, and began to pace a four step pace at the
foot of Sammie Jo’s hospital bed. “Phillip…” “This
doesn’t make any sense. How
can a couple of broken ribs, a punctured lung and various contusions make
them say…?” Sam stopped muttering to himself, turned to look at his
daughter looking so frail and weak in the bed then glanced at the family
around Sammie Jo’s form. “She’ll wake up, but right now, I know some children and
a very worried mother who will be going back home to…” Refusals
immediately began to erupt in the room.
Sam looked at each one of them in turn before he took in a deep
breath and gave his pronouncement. He
held up his hands for them to quiet down and once they did, he said,
“Listen, Abigail, you know how you need your sleep, and you three know
how your mom gets when I’m not at home.
Now…” “I’m
not leaving, Phillip,” Abigail proclaimed adamantly. “Oh
yes you are, and do you know why you are going?” he asked as he
approached her. Abigail
raised an eyebrow at him wondering what reason he was going to give.
Her eyes immediately began to water as he said, “Because Sammie
Jo is my daughter and she needs her daddy right now.” “Oh
Phillip,” Abigail said softly as her bottom lip began to quiver.
Those words meant more to her than she knew since he wasn’t her
biological father. She slowly
stood up from the chair and moved to him to hug him tightly to her.
“I love you,” she told him softly before placing a kiss under
his earlobe. “I
love you, too,” Sam said softly and reveled in the kiss that he had just
received. He looked over at
the three standing beside the bed and slowly pushed Abigail away from him
as much as he hated to do it. “I
know that you… all of you don’t want to leave Sammie Jo’s side, but
it’s not going to help with all of us exhausted. Go home, get some sleep
and I’ll keep watch tonight. Tomorrow,
we’ll switch out.” Abigail
nodded her head and held out a hand to her children.
As they started toward the door, Sam watched as the Daniel gave
Alex another smack against the head for his words earlier.
He gave them a fatherly look of disdain, which made Daniel
immediately apologize then watched as they left the room.
Sam
then turned back to Sammie Jo lying so helplessly on the bed and he licked
his lips and did what any other doctor would do.
He checked all the machines, all the monitors, as well as the
IV’s. Once satisfied that
they were all fine, he settled back into the chair that Abigail had
vacated. “Wake up, Sammie,” he whispered softly as he propped
himself up on his elbow on the side of the chair.
“It’s all I want… just… wake up.” PART FOUR November
23, 2005 Stallion’s
Gate, New Mexico Project
Quantum Leap 7:35
PM “What
do you mean you have no idea?” Al snapped sharply up at the ceiling of
his office. He had waited two
and a half hours to get some iota of information from Ziggy and she still
had nothing substantial to go on. “There’s
got to be something! Something!
Tell me what the newspapers/archives said about Sammie Jo.” Ziggy
remained quiet for a moment before she began to give the information she
had gathered from the Chicago area. “In
the Chicago Sun-Times dated May 24, 1996, it reads:
Fuller, Samantha Josephine died May 23, 1996 at age 29. Her mother, Abigail Fuller-Mililani, is her only surviving
family member. Samantha gave
generously and selflessly of her time and resources to support her fellow
man and will be missed by all who benefited from her love and care. Funeral services will be held at Parkside Chapels and
Cremation Services 5948 Archer Avenue in Chicago on Sunday, May 26, 1996
at 2:00 PM. Arrangements by
Jeff and John Sutton.” Ziggy
paused then added, “The other article that I have, Admiral is the
autopsy report. According to
it, Samantha Fuller died of a massive heart attack attributed from an air
embolism as a result of the injuries sustained in the automobile accident
on May 20, 1996.” Al
closed his eyes, his face blanched from Ziggy’s words.
He couldn’t believe what he had heard.
“I remember both timelines, Ziggy.
She was fine previously. This
just doesn’t make any sense. Dammit!”
Al’s fist slammed into his desk.
“I’m missing something. What
am I missing!?” Turning
his back on his desk, Al rubbed his face with his left hand then with one
thought in mind headed for the door.
As he headed down the corridor for the Waiting Room, Al prayed that
Phillip would have some idea to help him out.
He had to have something… right? In
the few minutes that it took for Al to get to the Waiting Room, he already
had several questions for Phillip that he wanted answers to.
As the door swished open, Al quickly scanned the room to see
Phillip Mililani in Sam Beckett’s aura sitting on a chair, his head
bowed as it rested in his left hand.
The way that his body seemed slumped in the chair made him look
submissive and despondent. Hearing
the door open, Phillip looked up and immediately straightened up in the
chair, his head coming up, his jaw tightening and he glared at the man who
entered. Swallowing, he
readied himself for whatever would come his way and licked at his lips as
he assumed that the one approaching him was the one in charge.
He glanced back at the door and his jaw twitched in despair as the
door shut. Clearing his
throat, Phillip ran his eyes over the man then said forcibly, “Let me
see her.” Al
frowned, his whole frame of mind wiped clear of what he had wanted to ask
by Phillip’s demand. “Who?” “My
daughter. She’s hurt and I
understand that you want answers,” Phillip said his jaw tightening as he
tilted his head defiantly. “Do
what you want to with me, just don’t hurt Samantha.” Al
blinked. He was more than a
little shocked at what Phillip was saying to him but he completely
understood where the man was coming from, especially being a retired
police officer. Al raised his hands in a pacifying manner.
“You’ve got this all wrong. Sammie
Jo is in Augustana Hospital. She
hasn’t been removed and we didn’t kidnap you or her, sir.” Phillip
fixed Al with a patronizing leer. “You’re
holding me against my will.” “Yes
sir,” Al responded, “and with good reason.”
Seeing the challenging glance, Al supplied, “You are in a top
secret project, Officer Mililani and…” “I
don’t have clearance?” Phillip queried back. “That’s
right,” Al said with a wave of his hand. “I
don’t believe you. Sounds
too much like a pile of bull if you ask me.
A top-secret project with top-secret clearance and you’re holding
me against my will. Sounds
like kidnapping to me.” Al’s
demeanor wilted. “Come with
me.” Al walked toward the bed that stood in the middle of the room
and glanced back over to see Phillip still seated.
“I just want you to take a look into the mirror.
That’s all.” Phillip
slowly stood up and made his way over toward the bed and watched the man
before him warily. “A
mirror?” “Yes,
sir.” Al pointed to the
mirror and stepped back ready for the shock that he was sure that Phillip
would go through. Phillip
leaned forward still looking at the man before him then peered down into
the mirror. He blinked
several times and touched his face watching the reflection as he did so.
“Okay,” he said plainly as his hand came up to touch the small
white patch of gray over Sam Beckett’s brow.
“What kind of project is this?
You explain that to me, and if … if I can remember, I’ll let
you know what you want to know.” Al
nodded. “Fair enough. Mr. Mililani, you are currently involved in a Time Travel
experiment.” That
information brought Phillip’s head up and his eyes peered back at Al
guardedly. “This experiment allows Sam, that’s who you see in the
mirror, to trade places with you in the past to help solve problems that
have occurred. Once that problem is fixed, you’ll go back.” “Does…
this guy, Sam, know what’s wrong?” “Yes
and no. That’s why I came
in here to ask you about your life and your family.” “And
you are?” “I’m
Al.” “Okay,
Al. Ask away, but I’m not
sure if I can remember anything. I
seem to have holes in my memory,” Phillip answered.
He glanced down at the mirror before him once more and with a shake
of his head turned back to Al. “That’s
natural around here,” Al answered with a half-sigh.
“Alright, let’s just start off with what you remember about
your step-daughter, Samantha.” For
the next thirty minutes, Phillip talked to Al, faltering in his memories
as he told of how he loved Samantha as his own daughter.
Al listened respectfully to Phillip as he spoke highly of his
stepdaughter but nothing in the conversation sent up any warning flags.
Al
excused himself from Phillip’s presence telling the retired police
officer he had some official business to take care of, and then exited the
room. As he walked down the corridor, he felt his stomach growl.
Looking at his watch to see it was a little after eight, Al entered
into the Control Room to see Dominic running a systems diagnostic.
“Anything out of the ordinary so far?” Al asked as he glanced
up at the Imaging Chamber door. “No
sir. Actually, Admiral, it
seems that Dr. Beckett is resting at the moment.
He could possibly be sleeping.
It is close to midnight, there.” Al
nodded. “Alright, but keep
that lock on Sam like I said. Oh,
and, call me if anything, and I do mean anything goes wrong.” “You
got it, Admiral.” “Thanks.” Turning
back toward the door once more, Al paused for a brief moment.
“Ziggy?” “Yes,
Admiral?” “I
want you to do something else for me.
Check into Phillip Mililani’s police records.”
Al thought about his request for a moment.
“Maybe I’m grasping here, but let’s look anyway.
Look for anything… well… anything that sticks out.” “Yes
Admiral.” Al
smiled. “Thanks doll. I’m going to go eat something with Beth then get some
shuteye. Report to me if you
find something.” PART FIVE May
22, 1996 Augustana
Hospital
Chicago,
Illinois 1:30
AM “Mr.
Mililani,” a voice called softly beside Sam.
“Mr. Mililani, you need to wake up, sir.” Sam’s
head was resting on his arms on Sammie Jo’s bed.
The moment that a hand was laid on his shoulder, Sam immediately
brought his head up and blinked. “Sammie
Jo?” The
nurse that stood beside him smiled apologetically.
“I’m sorry to wake you up, Mr. Mililani, but the station is on
the phone. They say that
it’s urgent.” Stifling
a yawn, Sam nodded and looked over at his daughter.
The cardiograph showed a strong, steady pulse, which seemed to put
his mind at ease about his daughter’s welfare while he slept.
He turned his head back to the blonde-haired nurse and asked,
“Who called?” “The
Police Department, sir.” Sam
nodded again as he tried to wake himself then turned back to his daughter.
“Okay, I’ll be right there.”
He heard the door open and then close behind him.
Slowly, he stood up and peered down into his daughter’s face.
She resembled her mother so much that it was uncanny. Leaning down carefully, he placed a tender kiss on her
forehead before straightening up. Sighing,
he turned away from her and exited the room. Moving
down to the nurse’s station, Sam stretched his arms out trying to rid
his body of the hard rest he had taken.
He gave a small smile to the woman who had returned behind the
nurse’s station and asked, “Do I need to call them back, or are they
on the line still?” “Let
me see, Mr. Mililani. I
didn’t take the call, but I’ll check the lines for you.” While
Sam waited, he turned his back on the nurse’s station to see the chubby
Hispanic woman striding down the hall toward him.
She was dressed in an old twenties white outfit which flowed around
her body. She wore a matching
white hat atop her short black hair and she waved a fan in front of her. In her other hand, she carried a small purse hardly large
enough to carry bare essentials. She
came up to him and looked up at him warmly. Sam
gave her a friendly smile then turned back around when he heard the nurse
pronounce that they were still on the line.
He carefully took the receiver from her and put it up to his ear,
“Mililani,” he said plainly. “Mililani,
you need to get down here ASAP. We
have a situation with those kidnappers and they want to talk with you. They won’t talk to anyone else but you or they’ll kill
that little girl.” Sam
closed his eyes and ducked his head slightly as he nodded.
“All right. I’ll
be there. Give me… uh…
twenty minutes.” The dial
tone in his ear told him that the small conversation that he had was
finished and he handed the phone back over to the nurse.
Taking a deep breath, he turned and ran smack dab into the portly
Hispanic woman behind him. “Oh,
I… I’m so sorry.” “Jou’re
leaving?” she asked him plainly as she overheard the simple conversation
he had on the phone. “A
situation has come up down at the station and they need my help,” Sam
answered back. He glanced
back down the hall that he had come from and thought about his daughter.
‘What about her? What
if she needed help and he wasn’t there to help her?
What then?’ “I
don think jou could go. What
about Samantha? What if she
could need jou?” Sam
tilted his head at the woman’s words as she spoke his thoughts aloud.
He studied her for a long moment.
She had called Sammie Jo by her true name. ‘Was she a friend of the families?’
Hoping that he wasn’t too forward he asked, “You… you could
stay with her, couldn’t you?” “Oh,
I wish I chould, but I’m here for…” she paused as she tilted her
head. Taking a deep breath, she put it plain and simple to him.
“Jou need to stay here for jour daughter, Sam.
I… I can’t stay. It’s
time for… Angelita to go.” “Oh,”
Sam said softly. Sam
was surprised when the Hispanic woman reached up and carefully planted
both of her hands on his face lovingly as she seemingly was able to feel
his concern. “Don’t
worry, Sam. Jou’ll do the
right thing.” Sam
looked at her thoughtfully, listening to her words.
“Will I?” Angelita
smiled warmly at him as she brought her hands down and winked at him. “Jou always do.” Angelita
then turned with a wink and started down the hallway sauntering away from
him. Sam
glanced down at the floor thinking about her words then looked back up at
the way that she had gone. Swallowing,
he went down the hall after her wanting to ask her how she knew he’d do
the right thing. As he turned
the corner, he noticed that he was the only one in the corridor.
Turning back down the hallway, he went toward the elevators at the
other end of the hall and said, “I always do the right thing.” ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ November
23, 2005 Stallion’s
Gate, New Mexico Project
Quantum Leap 11:00
PM Al
had a pleasant dinner with Beth and had actually laid down for a grand
total of two hours when his wrist link to Ziggy lit up and a loud chime
rang through his quarters startling not only him but Beth as well. “What
is it, Al?” Beth asked concerned as she turned over in bed to look at
the link on his wrist. “I
think that I’m getting my notification about what’s going on in this
leap.” Leaning over, Al kissed Beth lovingly then threw back the
covers and sat on the side of the bed.
Sliding his feet into his slippers, he padded over to the closet
and grabbed his white robe with black polka dots and headed toward the
door. “Don’t wait up
honey. Go back to sleep. I’ll be back in a bit.” Al
wiped at his eyes and yawned tiredly as he headed down the hallways of the
project. He was halfway to
Central Control when he said, “Ziggy, brief me on what’s going on.” “You
requested to know if any actions were happening surrounding Dr. Beckett. His blood pressure has increased and he’s moving to another
location.” “Is
the link still open?” “No,
Admiral.” “Dammit!
Get that thing up and going!” ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ May
22, 1996
Augustana
Hospital
Chicago,
Illinois 1:38
AM Sam
paced in front of the small area in front of the elevators for only a few
moments before the doors opened and he stepped forward hurriedly to get
into the small compartment so that he could get back to his daughter.
The moment that his body collided with the man who was coming out
of the elevator and scattered the tray that he had, Sam muttered a silent
curse. “Geez,
I’m … I’m sorry.” Sam
looked down at the instruments he had helped to scatter on the floor then
glanced back up at the man once more.
Seeing a male dressed in the same multicolored nursing uniform, Sam
automatically dropped to his knees and began to pick up the clutter. The
nurse came down to his knee as well and began to pick up several of the
instruments he had been carrying on the tray.
“I’m glad that none of these were contaminated needles.
If they had been, we’d have a problem on our hands.” Sam
glanced at the nametag on the nurse’s lapel and nodded at his words.
“You’re right, Mr. Fitzgerald.”
Sam gathered the last of the sealed needles and tightly smiled at
the brown-haired man before him and started toward the open elevator
doors. As
Sam pushed the button for the ground level of Augustana Hospital, he
glanced back at the nurse. There
was a grin on his face and it was only when he turned to walk away that
Sam faintly saw a scar on his cheek. ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ November
23, 2005 Stallion’s
Gate, New Mexico Project
Quantum Leap 11:08
PM In
the few minutes that it took him to get down to the Control Center and for
the Imaging Chamber to get a lock, he felt as if he was losing time.
It was in that same time that Ziggy briefed him on what she had
learned from Phillip’s personnel folder as well as any pertinent
information in the local newspapers and tabloids.
“Within the last forty-eight hours, Admiral, one Bryan Mohane was
released from prison on parole. Mr.
Mohane had promised revenge on Officer Mililani when he was sentenced
fifteen years ago for trafficking cocaine in 1981.” Al
nodded his head not liking the thought process that was beginning to make
his stomach churn at the thought. ‘Revenge,’
he thought bitterly. ‘On
Phillip, his family or both?’ Al
turned back to the few people in the Control Room and grabbed the link
from its spot and hurried into the Imaging Chamber. The
moment that the door opened, he found himself in Sammie Jo’s room on the
seventh floor. Seeing that
she was okay, he hurriedly re-located to find Sam pacing in the elevator.
“Sam? Where are you
going? Why did you leave
Sammie Jo?” Al asked curiously. “Al,
God, I’m glad you’re here. I
need you to talk with Phillip. The
police station called and they need Phillip for kidnapping negotiations.
I need you to get whatever information he remembers on the
negotiations. I mean, I know
that I shouldn’t leave… even Angelita told me that I….”
“Angelita?”
Al asked as his mind immediately flashed to the large Hispanic
woman who had claimed to be an angel. “Yeah,
Angelita. She told me….” “Sam,
you need to listen to me… I don’t think…” Al said thinking that
the whole situation was odd that they would call a retired police officer
in for duty. He knew that normally, once they retired, they were finished
with working for the force. Sam
shook his head at Al’s statement. “Look,
never mind about Angelita. Al…
I… I need that information. I
don’t know how to handle kidnapping negotiations,” Sam said as he
turned in his pacing to look up at the numbers to see that the elevator
was coming to a stop on the fifth floor. “Okay,
Sam. I’ll go check it out,” Al said as he opened the Imaging Chamber
door. “Just do me a favor,
okay? Get out of the elevator
and stop at the next floor.” Sam
looked at him frustrated as a several nurses entered into the elevator
with him. “Al… I told
them….” he hissed lowly at Al. “Then
you’ll be a few minutes late.” “Al…”
Sam murmured between his teeth. “I’ll
be right back.” With that
said, Al stepped back through the Imaging Chamber door back into 2005.
Quickening his pace into the Control Center he asked, “Ziggy, is
Phillip awake?” “Yes,
Admiral.” Al
ran toward the Waiting room with two thoughts on his mind and he hoped
that he was wrong. As soon as
the door opened for him, he stepped inside and asked, “Phillip, when you
were sitting with Sammie Jo at the hospital, did you get a call from the
chief of police asking you to negotiate for the release of a kidnapped
child?” Phillip
frowned. “Now, why would he
do that? The force knew
Sammie was hurt – sent flowers, I think.” “Answer
the question with a simple yes or no, Phillip.
Did you get a call at the hospital asking you to negotiate with the
release of a child or they’d kill her?” “No,”
Phillip answered after a moment of thought.
“Why would they? I’ve
been retired for five years, Al.” Al’s
eyes widened in response and he immediately turned and raced back toward
the Imaging Chamber. “I
swear, Ziggy, if you turned off the link to the Imaging Chamber, I’ll
take you a part myself!” “Admiral,
I did further digging into Samantha’s medical files and found that on
May 22, 1996 at 2:08 AM, a “Code Blue” alarm went off on her.” As
Al took the final step toward the Imaging Chamber, he asked, “What time
is it where Sam is?” “It
is exactly 2:00 AM.” PART SIX “Center
me on Sammie Jo!” Al demanded and the Imaging Chamber materialized into
the hospital room where Sammie Jo was neatly tucked in the bed and Al
noticed a male nurse in the room standing at her side looking down at her. “It
was all his fault,” the man said tenderly as he reached his hand up and
gently touched Sammie Jo’s cheek. “I
spend fifteen years of my life in jail because of your daddy and
someone’s gotta suffer.” “Get
your hand off of her, you bastard!” Al hissed hotly at him then knowing
that Sam was waiting for him, he quickly re-centered himself on Sam.
“There’s no time to explain, Sam.
Just get back to Sammie Jo. Now!”
Without waiting for a response, Al blinked back out to stay with
Sam’s daughter. ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ Hearing
the urgency in Al’s voice, Sam immediately pressed the elevator button
on the wall before him. When
the elevator doors didn’t immediately open, Sam’s palm slapped at the
sealed elevator doors. Looking
around quickly and finding the door for the stairs, Sam took the stairs
two at time back up toward the seventh floor where Sammie Jo’s room was
located. Pushing
the door open, Sam raced down the corridor toward her room.
As he passed the nurse’s station, he slapped at the counter and
yelled, “Call security… the police…” then kept going down the
hallway to Sammie Jo’s room. ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~ “Sammie
Jo, wake up and kick this nozzle!” Al yelled down at her as he continued
to listen to the lousy good for nothing continue with his sob story. “SAM!”
Al yelled as Bryan opened the needle and pulled back the plunger filling
the syringe with air, then look back down at the woman lying so peacefully
on the bed. Bryan
looked at Sammie Jo and hung his head for a brief second.
“I can’t do this…” “Oh
thank God!” Al said in relief. “…
without having one good-bye kiss.” Al
watched in horror as the brown haired, hazel-eyed man leaned down and
pressed his lips against Sammie Jo’s cheek.
He sighed, pressed his cheek against hers then murmured said,
“Vaya con Dios, love,” then straightened up. “NO!
SAM!” Al stepped
through Sammie Jo and her bed and tried to slap at the holographic image
of the man before him unsuccessfully as he began to insert the needle into
Sammie Jo’s IV. The
door to Sammie Jo’s room slammed open and Sam surveyed the room, his
eyes widening at the other man’s presence then remembered seeing his
face from earlier. In that
moment, Sam acted on reflex. Grabbing
the man, he twirled him away from Sammie Jo and shoved him toward the
wall. Sam rushed toward him,
adamant on saving his daughter from danger. The
pair grabbed mindlessly for any hold they could manage on the other. A
well-placed thrust from Sam shot past the other’s head, while Bryan’s
fist came up and connected with Sam’s lower jaw moving them back away
from each other for a half of a second.
Sam leaped forward and got his arms around his target.
The force of his attack staggered the pair and they landed roughly
on the floor just as doctors, nurses, and three security members came
running into the room. The
burly men that had security emblems on their shirts grabbed at the men
fighting and split the two of them apart. Sam eased back with the man who
held him while the other kicked and thrashed to get away from the two men
that held him. It was seeing
the doctors and nurses at Sammie Jo’s side that he raised his voice over
the grunts of the other man and said, “I saw him trying to insert
something into her IV.” ~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~
May
22, 1996
Augustana
Hospital
Chicago,
Illinois 4:30 AM After
the authorities had arrived and took the statements from all involved, Sam
stood at the end of Sammie Jo’s bed, looking down at his daughter and
gently rubbed his jaw where he had been punched.
He still didn’t understand why she hadn’t awakened yet and it
unnerved him to the nth degree that he had almost lost her.
He moved to her side and gently took her hand in his.
“Why did I leap into Phillip, Al?” Al
lightly shrugged his shoulders as he looked at his friend and reached into
his pocket to pull out the handlink.
It was silent in his hand before he punched in the question that
Sam had asked. Instead of waiting for the response, he pressed the button to
call up the holographic image of Ziggy.
The image was fuzzy at first then blinked into place. “In
response to your question, Dr. Beckett, I have looked into every possible
scenario, and all of them were all very low, far below anything for a
strong probability. This
scenario did not happen the first time. However in the original history,
Mr. Mililani’s daughter, Candace, was killed in an auto accident on June
2, 1998. Mr. Mililani would
have lost not only Samantha, but Candace as well within a two-year span.
As for Sammie Jo, she’s….” Sam’s
head turned to look at the image above the handlink then peered up at Al
who was beginning to smile. Turning
his head to his daughter hopefully, he saw her eyes flutter.
Squeezing her hand slightly, he stood up with tears that
immediately gathered in his eyes and peered down at his daughter. “Sammie Jo?” he called softly. Sammie
Jo’s eyes fluttered a little bit more then her head slightly turned
toward her father beside her before her eyes opened very slowly.
Her eyes blinked once, twice, then she gently squeezed his hand
back before half of a smile appeared around the respirator.
Leaning
slightly toward the wall, Sam immediately pressed the call button for the
doctor and then gazed back down at his daughter as tears slowly began to
fall. Another
squeeze came from Sammie Jo as she searched his face.
It was in that moment that she raised her right hand up to her
chest and curled her middle fingers toward her palm in a simple sign
language signal to her father that she loved him. Sam
smiled back down at his daughter, leaned down and kissed her tenderly on
her cheek. “I love you too,
Sammie Jo.” The
door behind him opened and he turned to see a doctor and two nurses
rushing in. Seeing their
patient awake, Sam was asked to move away from her.
Sam moved to the end of the bed to look down at her, and placed his
hands in his pockets. “I
think I know why you were here for her, Sam,” Al said with a nod.
“Phillip does love Sammie Jo like she was his own daughter, but I
think that maybe God, Time, Fate, Whatever thought that she needed her
daddy… her real daddy this time.” Sam
glanced back over at Al and smiled at him.
“Thank you, Al,” Sam said as he turned back to his daughter
once more then leaped.
EPILOGUE
As
the electrical blue light dissipated around me I found myself standing in
an empty classroom behind a teacher’s desk. I was wearing a neatly
ironed tweed suit and glasses. I supposed it was the typical professor
look, the kind of teacher no one took seriously. I was trying to take this
in and get a bearing on my newest leap when I saw Al
come through the Imaging Chamber door.
He had a rather disturbing humored look on his face and I wondered
what was up. “Hi,
Sam,” my friend greeted me, just as I was orienting myself to this new
situation. “Al,”
I responded, feeling my face and looking around me, searching. “Where am
I?” “Let’s
see.” He hit the handlink a few times for good measure. Sometimes I
think he already knows the answers to my questions but does that just to
annoy me. “It
is… February 19, 1980, Denver, CO.
Your name is Robert McKenzie. You are a fifth grade teacher and
your class should be in here in about five minutes.” I
sighed and felt halfway relieved. “A teacher, eh? I kind of figured.”
I motioned to the desk and my clothes. “Yeah,
but obviously not one with much fashion sense,” Al added, shaking his
head. Like he could talk. Today he had on a purple number with a
completely mismatched yellow and green polka dot tie. It amazed me how he
thought his ensemble could look like anything less than clown wear. “Well,
anyway, being a teacher can’t be too threatening. So what am I
teaching?” Out rightly this all seemed pretty tame, but the look on
Al’s face made me suspicious. He
smirked and paused for effect. Then…“You teach sexual education,” he
said with triumph. “Ohhhh boy!”
|