From: Coast2C@aol.com Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 21:23:51 -0400 Message-ID: <960430212113_387217461@emout12.mail.aol.com> Subject: Convergence: Part 14 of 25 Convergence by Dana Anderson Part 14 of 25 (Author's Notes and Disclaimer found in Part 1) * * * * Al left the Imaging Chamber and checked with Ziggy to find out where Jenna was. When Ziggy informed him that Colonel Tyler had left the complex dressed in athletic gear Al sighed. There were worse ways for people to purge anger and frustration. His third wife, or was it his fourth?, used to throw things at him; usually heavy, breakable and expensive things. Al briefly considered going after Jenna, then decided that he would allow her the space to breathe that he would probably relish in the same circumstances. There would be plenty of time later to express his appreciation for her rescuing him and Sam from their predicament. Al spent the rest of the day on paperwork and popping back and forth to the past. Every time he visited Sam it was easier to talk to him. Both of them relaxed completely and forgot to mentally review every statement, editing any personal or potentially provocative material, before speaking aloud. The sense of relief Al felt translated into a cheerful whistle when Sam leaped and Al left the Imaging Chamber for the last time that day. Al checked his watch; it was six p.m. "Ziggy, where is Colonel Tyler?" Al asked. "Colonel Tyler is in her laboratory" Ziggy replied. Al nodded. Jenna had taken her run earlier. He hoped that if she had a plan for an evening workout, it would require a partner. Al got on the elevator and stopped at the level where Jenna's lab and their offices were located. He sauntered down the hall, still whistling. When he drew closer to the lab, however, his whistling and his step faltered. The music that was emanating from the walls was not, as usual, the pounding exuberance of rock and roll. It was opera; a dark brooding dissonance with singing that sounded like a lament from hell. Al advanced to a point where he could just see into the lab through the first glass partition. Jenna was seated in a low, wheeled desk chair and leaning so far back Al thought she might tip over at any moment. She was staring at a whiteboard that was covered with mathematical and scientific notation. Every few seconds she threw a handball at the board. It would hit the smooth surface, occasionally smearing a character, and bounce back. Jenna was catching the rebounds without really paying attention, as though she were participating in some instinctive behavior rather than an elective activity. Her eyes had a vacant look. Al swallowed with difficulty. *What the _hell_ is going on in there,* he wondered, *and how long has she been sitting there like that?* Just as he worked up the determination to enter the lab and confront her, Jenna failed to catch the most recent rebound of the handball and it hit her smack in the middle of her forehead, leaving a smear of blue and green dry erase marker ink on her skin. She blinked and leaned forward in her chair, shaking her head. Jenna looked up at the ceiling, her mouth moved and the awful cacophony of the music ceased. She rose from her chair and limped painfully over to the corner of the room. Jenna stooped over slowly, keeping her right leg in an awkward and unnaturally rigid position for the activity she was attempting, and retrieved the handball from the floor. As she straightened up and turned she brought her left hand up over her head and released the ball in the fluid motion and practiced ease of a perfect hook shot. Al watched the arc of the ball's flight as it nearly reached the ceiling, then fell with a solid plunking noise into the wastebasket in the far corner of the room. "Nothing but net!" came the exclamation, just barely audible to him through the partition. *Okay,* Al thought, *so she does throw stuff. But at least she isn't throwing stuff at me.* As he continued on to the door, he saw Jenna approach the whiteboard. She stopped two feet away from it, crossed her arms in front of her and began another perusal of the writing. Al knocked on the door. "Come in or go away," Jenna shouted without turning around "it's all the same to me." "I hope you don't really mean that" Al said as he entered. "Oh, sorry Al" Jenna replied, turning around. "I thought you were the janitor. You don't usually knock." "You usually have rock and roll blaring so loud it wouldn't do me any good to knock" Al reminded her as he walked over to where she was standing. He looked the whiteboard over, recognizing the meaning of some of the equations and puzzling over others. "Something I can help with?" he asked. Jenna shook her head and then turned to him. "Something no one can help with" she answered. "It's a dead end." She grasped the small of her back in her hands and began to stretch the muscles that had cramped up from remaining in one position in the chair for too long. She miscalculated the strength available in her right leg and her knee buckled. Al caught her before she fell and supported her while she got her feet under herself again. "What's wrong with your leg?" Al questioned her. "And don't tell me you overdid your run today, that's just the tip of the iceberg." Jenna looked at the floor for awhile. "I'd rather not talk about it" she said finally, in a quiet voice. "Like I preferred not to discuss what was bothering me this morning?" Al challenged. Jenna's glance snapped up to his face to assess his mood. She was relieved to see mild amusement there. "Touché" she acknowledged. "So, you and Dr. Beckett kissed and made up?" "Please," Al grimaced "not right before dinner. I'll lose my appetite." Then his expression became serious. "And don't change the subject. I asked you about your leg." Jenna regarded him for a minute or two and saw that he had no intention of letting her get away with another evasion. "All right" she said "I'll tell you. But if you're concerned about your appetite, we'd better have dinner first." Al began to object to what he thought was a delaying tactic, then he saw the warning in her eyes. Neither of us will feel like eating afterwards, her look said. Al nodded and swallowed. "Okay, after dinner then" he decided. * * * * They both skimped on what was normally their lightest meal of the day. While they sat over soup and crackers in the cafeteria, Al filled Jenna in on the success of her mission to get him and Sam to talk to each other. "I thought you yelled at Sam merely for the shock effect," Al said "but you were really mad, weren't you?" "I guess you could say I was a little on the irritable side" Jenna agreed. "What set you off?" Al asked. "It's pretty obvious your friendship means a lot to both of you and I hated the idea that I was the cause of your argument" Jenna sighed. "I don't ever want to come between you and Sam, Al" she confided. What she was thinking, but couldn't bring herself to say, was that she never wanted to put him in a position where he would feel he had to choose between them. "Our argument might have involved you," Al reasoned "but it wasn't _because_ of you. And the only time you came between us was to appeal to our better judgment, which was quite a stretch. Whatever gave you the idea that Sam and I were reasonable and intelligent?" he asked with amusement. "I guess I should know better than to listen to speculative gossip" Jenna replied, with equal mirth. She was very glad that her interference had produced the result she had hoped for. "I think I'd like a smoke with my after dinner coffee, how about you?" Al asked. Jenna hesitated, realizing this meant a change of subject as well as location. Finally she nodded and they rose from the table. They went to Al's quarters, made a pot of coffee and went out onto the balcony with mugs full of the stimulating liquid and supplies of their favorite vices. They both lit up and relaxed into their chairs, exhaling the first satisfying streams of smoke in unison. The light from the living room was bright enough for them to see each other clearly and Al settled his gaze on her face. Jenna was obviously struggling for a beginning to her tale. *She doesn't look a day over twelve years old with that helpless, unguarded expression on her face,* he thought. *I wonder how old she feels?* Jenna shifted restlessly in her chair. Al knew that she was in pain. She had limped badly on the way here, even though it was obvious to Al that she was trying desperately to hide the extent of her suffering. Al had offered her some aspirin, but she had merely shaken her head. "I'm allergic to just about every pain medication in existence" she had said, with genuine regret "except hard liquor and I'm not in the mood for a drink." He couldn't quite understand the rationale of that remark, but accepted her decision. Jenna took a sip of coffee from her mug and placed it back on the small table that stood between them. She met Al's regard with a questioning glance. "Are you sure you want to hear about this?" she offered. "No, I don't want to hear about it" Al replied "but I want to know. I want to understand." "I can tell you what's wrong with my leg and how it happened and then you'll know. I can't promise you'll understand. I can't say that I do, even after all these years" Jenna warned him. She saw that he was firm in his intention to hear what she had to say, so she sighed and began. "There are three healed breaks in my right leg" she said. "My ankle was broken when I was four, I had a greenstick fracture just below the knee when I was five and a torsion fracture in my knee when I was seven." Jenna paused for another sip of coffee. "How many of them were set professionally?" Al inquired. Jenna kept her eyes locked with his as she took a drag from her cigarette. She squinted one eye against the smoke which curled up into her face, but he could still see the curiosity in the other eye. *She's wondering why I suspect that some of her injuries might not have been treated properly,* Al thought. He didn't offer any explanation for the source of his question and Jenna ultimately decided it was pointless to wait for one. "The ankle and the knee were treated by doctors. My mother splinted the greenstick fracture and locked me in my room for six weeks to hide the fact that I was hurt" she responded. "Your mother was responsible for all those injuries, wasn't she?" Al asked. "Yes" Jenna said and then, anticipating his next question, continued. "She broke my ankle by hitting me with a piece of firewood. The greenstick fracture happened one of the times she pushed me off the back porch. The torsion fracture in my knee, well" Jenna exhaled a stream of smoke along with a sigh, "sometimes I had a little warning. She would get this look on her face or in her eyes when I was in for it and if I had a chance I would run. That time she caught me, but lost her balance. She was twisting my leg in her grip and my knee was smashed against the edge of the coffee table by her body when she fell." Al felt the churning of his meager evening meal in his stomach. *Good thing I paid attention to her warning,* he thought. *I'd hate to have a full meal bouncing around in there right now.* Al had seen and experienced some of the most vile torture imaginable as an MIA in Vietnam, but somehow this was worse. She had been an innocent little girl, brutalized by the mother who was supposed to be the most nurturing person in her life. *It's the element of betrayal that's really disgusting,* he thought, *and the sense of wrongness; that this just wasn't the way things were supposed to be.* "Which break causes you the most trouble?" Al asked. He was wondering if there was anything that could be done, at this late date, perhaps surgery, that might alleviate some of her problems. "Or is it a combination of all of them?" Jenna studied his face in silence for a while, as though gauging his ability to accept her answer. "The breaks, in themselves, I can tolerate fairly well. They only start talking to me in damp weather or if I run too often or too far, a combination of the impact and the exercise I guess. It's my right hip that causes the most trouble." "Your hip?" Al echoed. Jenna nodded slightly, still watching his face. "It's been dislocated nine times. And before you ask, it's only been treated professionally twice." "Your mother dislocated your hip nine times?" Al was incensed. "No, only seven. The other two times happened later. Once a limb has been dislocated it doesn't take the same effort to force the bone out of its' socket as it does with a healthy joint" Jenna explained. "The two times it was treated professionally, those were the later times?" he inquired. Jenna nodded. "Your mother," Al went on "she couldn't hide the fact that you had a dislocated hip. What did she...I mean how..." he couldn't seem to finish his question. Jenna had a bleak expression and her face was very pale. She lit another cigarette and gave Al a long opportunity to withdraw his partial question. When it became clear that he had no more intention of ending the conversation here than he had of completing his question, she went on slowly and painfully. "She would carry me up to the attic where there were some very convenient rafters. She tied my hands together behind my back and then tied a rope to my right ankle. She would toss the rope over a rafter, hoist me up off the ground, tie the rope off and leave me there until the weight of my hanging body pulled the socket over the top of my thigh bone" Jenna answered. Al ruthlessly suppressed the urge to vomit. He picked up his coffee and took a few small sips, desperately hoping that he could urge his throat to work in the proper direction. When he felt the pressure of his gorge begin to subside he leaned back and fumbled for another cigar. "How long, I mean, did she leave you there for a long time?" "Time is relative" was the only answer Jenna gave him. Al knew what she meant. A minute in pain could be an eternity, release from pain could be fleeting. Then something else occurred to him. At first he thought he wouldn't be able to ask the question, but he couldn't stop now. He had to know everything. "You didn't say she gagged you. She must have. You would have screamed, you wouldn't have been able to help yourself. Someone would have heard you, even from the attic." Jenna shook her head slowly and carefully. "She only gagged me the first two times. After that I had learned the value of silence." A horrible memory surfaced in Al's mind. It was his own mental voice, ordering himself to be silent. "Be quiet, don't make a sound" he whispered. "You'll only make things worse" they said in unison, staring into each other's shocked expressions. Their eyes locked as the phrases repeated themselves over and over in their minds. Suddenly they both vaulted out of their chairs and leaned over the wall of the balcony and heaved their dinners over the edge. When Al recovered, he saw that Jenna was clutching grimly to the wall with her hands; her legs too weak to support her in her condition. He leaped to her side and helped her into the bathroom. Al reached into the cabinet and produced two toothbrushes and some toothpaste. They shared the sink, Jenna leaning over from her seat on the toilet and Al standing to one side. When they had removed the worst of the taste from their mouths and both of them had a chance to rinse, Al tossed the toothbrushes into the trash and helped Jenna back out onto the balcony. He lit a cigarette for her and retrieved fresh coffee before he reseated himself in his chair. "So," Jenna said "you've been there, too. Kind of makes you feel like a participant in the torture, doesn't it?" Al reignited his neglected cigar. "I don't think anyone who hasn't experienced it would believe how guilty it makes you feel, to tell yourself not to scream about what's happening" he agreed. "We were right, though" Jenna said. "Making a noise always made it worse. Silence was our only defense." Al nodded as he remembered grown men who had never learned this. Most of them died because they couldn't stop themselves from crying out. How could a child of four or five learn, and put into practice, such extreme self denial and control? He looked at Jenna and thought about how extraordinary she must be, to have developed that level of mental discipline as a mere baby. Jenna returned his gaze. "Sometimes being a survivor really sucks" she said. "Most of the time I think it beats the alternative" Al replied. "Yeah," Jenna agreed "most of the time it does." They smoked in silence for a while until the chill of the desert night drove them inside. Al helped Jenna undress and get into bed. He put his sexual appetite on hold and gave her a long and gentle massage. By the time he had patiently kneaded the tension from every bunched muscle in her body, Jenna had drifted off to sleep. Al was surprised at the release and satisfaction he felt at his accomplishment. *Maybe Sam's right,* Al thought, as he lay down next to Jenna and shifted into a comfortable position. *Maybe sex isn't always the ultimate experience you can have with a woman.* He just hoped there wasn't anything more intense for him to experience with Jenna than simultaneous vomiting, though. * * * * End Part 14 of 25