Hey guys. After a mixed response to my last fic, I've decided to, well,
take a chance with posting this one. Please, please read the warnings before
going in to reading it.
This piece is called "Leaving on a Jetplane". It's a songfic to the wonderful
song of the same name by John Denver. It is also a slash story. For anyone
who is unfamiliar with the term, slash stories involve a relationship with
a same sex pairing. In this case, a male/male relationship. I don't know
how people feel about homosexual relationships, so I feel it is only fair
to warn you. You do not have to read this. I welcome constructive critisism,
but please do not flame me with something such as: "This sucks, you're sick
and gays should die". I will not welcome that. We're all mature enough to
decide what to read and not what to read. You all have the delete key. -sigh-.
Now that's over and done with. Here's hoping for a positive response
Title: Leaving on a Jetplane
Author: Becky Thomson (Diana McKenzie)
Genre: Romance/Songfic
Rating: PG
Huge thanks to Mary for her usual insightfulness as my beta, and this time,
to Measer for her beta comments and encouragement.
Oh yeah. I don't own EE, I don't own the song.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Leaving on a Jet Plane
by Becky Thomson
****************************************
All my bags are packed, I'm ready to go,
I'm standing here outside your door,
I hate to wake you up to say good-bye
****************************************
He reached inside his jacket pocket and pulled out a
silver key. Fitting it into the lock of the door, he entered the bar. McGinty's
was quiet at 5:30 in the morning. You wouldn't think it would be anything
but quiet, but with a guy like Gary owning the place, you never could be
certain.
Chuck walked over to the bar, and sat down on one of
the bar stools. He was going to miss this place. He had given a lot of his
time in running McGinty's, but it was more the experiences that he'd had in
the place that he was going to miss. And the people.
He got up off the stool, and fixed himself a drink,
which he downed in one gulp. 5:30 probably wasn't the best time to do this,
but he knew that there was a goodbye he had to make with no-one else around.
Chuck set the glass on the bar and made his way up the stairs to Gary's loft.
He took a deep breath, and drawing up his courage, knocked on the door. Chuck
heard some moaning and complaining from Gary. He wouldn't be surprised if
Gary thought that he was the Cat. Through the frosted glass, Chuck could
see Gary approaching, and could start to make sense of what he was saying
to the feline he apparently thought was behind the door.
".not civil. Still asleep at half five."
Gary opened the door, and was obviously confused when he saw that it was
in fact Chuck whom had woken him at this early hour.
"Chuck?"
Chuck smiled, sheepishly. "Morning Gar."
Rubbing his eyes with the back of his hand, Gary yawned. "Chuck, what are
you doing here?"
"Ain't a guy allowed to drop by on his best friend?"
"Sure he is Chuck, sure he is. But you generally don't do it when people
are sleeping! I thought you were the Cat."
"I'm sorry Gar, I really am."
Gary waved his hand, and yawned again. "No, no, it's OK. I'm sure you've
got a reason. Come in."
The two of them went inside, and Chuck sat down on the
couch as he watched Gary trudge over to his coffee machine.
"Coffee?" he offered to his friend.
"Sure. Why not."
Chuck was quite aware that both of them were carefully
avoiding the topic of his imminent departure. There was really no point
in pretending that it wasn't happening; it was going to happen.
"You know I'm leaving today, Gar."
Gary nodded, not facing Chuck. "I know."
"I erm, I wanted to say goodbye."
The percolator clicked, signalling that the coffee was ready. Gary poured
out two cups, and passed one to Chuck, sitting down next to him.
"Couldn't you have waited to the sun was up, at least? I thought you were
coming by later to say goodbye to Marissa as well. Unless you already have?"
Chuck clasped his hands around the cup, and laughed softly. "No, no I haven'
t said goodbye to Marissa already. And I'm still coming to come around later.
I erm, I just wanted to come and talk to you alone."
Gary looked at him out of the corner of his eye. "Any particular reason?"
For a moment then, Chuck wondered how much Gary actually
knew. Aside from the paper, of course. Chuck had never been that sure at
how good Gary was at reading people's emotions. He was no Marissa, there
was no arguing about that, but maybe Gary did have some sort of intuition
of his own.
"Chuck, come on, what is it?"
Chuck realised that he had been staring blankly into his coffee. "Come
on Chuck, you know you can talk to me about anything."
"I, I, well, I wanted to talk to you about what happened on the tugboat."
A silence fell over the two of them. Both men were apparently remembering
the events on the boat all too well.
"W-what about it, Chuck?"
Chuck felt a lump rise in his throat, unsure about how
to proceed with the conversation.
"W-Well, you know when I told you.."
He stopped. He just couldn't continue. If he did, one, if not both of them,
was going to be hurt. And he didn't want that. Not for himself, and especially
not for Gary. After that time on the tugboat, he had started to evaluate
his life, and all the relationships in it. Being tied there in that boat,
watching Gary struggle, and knowing that there was only a certain amount
of time before both of them, and Crumb, would be overpowered by that freezing
water, had made Chuck realise the sort of things that Gary had to deal with
every single day. The knowledge that he risked his life in so many ways.
Chuck tried to put himself in Gary's position. Neither of them were getting
any younger, and Chuck knew that Gary feared one day he was going to wake
up, and realise that because of the paper, his life had passed him by, and
he was alone.
****************************************
There's so many times I've let you down
So many times I've played around
I tell you now they don't mean a thing.
****************************************
Sometimes he worried about waking up alone one day as
well. He joked around so much, but Chuck was a social creature, and he didn't
want to spend his life alone. Like Gary, he wanted someone who understood
him, and Chuck realised that because of the kind of person that he was,
there weren't going to be that many people who would.
He looked over at Gary, who seemed to be waiting for
him to continue. How could he tell him? How could he say what he had to say
to him? It was a Catch Twenty-Two situation. He could tell him, and he could
hate him for it, or he could love him for it. Or he could not tell him,
and hate himself for not saying anything. And even if he did tell Gary,
would he believe him? The Chuck who had always been flirt-happy, and would
take any opportunity he got
to chase some pretty young thing?
The look on Gary's face, which had previously shown
he was waiting for Chuck to continue, now seemed to have changed to a look
of concern. Gary looked worried about his friend.
"Chuck, what's wrong? What do you need to tell me about what you said on
the boat?"
Chuck placed his untouched drink onto the table, and shook his head miserably.
"I can't tell you, Gar. I'm sorry I even started this whole conversation."
Gary followed Chuck's lead, and put his cup on the table.
He did something out of character. He turned sideways, and took hold of
Chuck's hands.
"Chuck. Don't keep secrets from me. Whatever it is, you can tell me."
Chuck felt the lump in his throat return. He knew Gary
wouldn't let him go until he had told him the truth. He could, of course,
make something up, but he couldn't bring himself to lie to his best friend.
Not now. Not when he was about to leave, maybe forever.
But was he being selfish, wanting to tell him? He knew
that Gary didn't want a lot out of life, and out of relationships. He just
wanted the simple things. He wanted the stability and commitment; real love.
And he knew that he wanted children as well. Chuck sighed internally. It
was so strange, but he himself couldn't honestly say that he didn't want
all those things. He replayed Gary's last sentence in his mind. Whatever
it is, you can tell me. He had to tell him, even if he was being selfish.
Even if Gary would hate him. He didn't want that to happen, but that was
the risk he was taking.
"Chuck?"
He shook himself out of his daze, and though he felt like his stomach was
turning over, he took a deep breath.
"OK. Gary, when we were on the boat, you remember what I told you?"
Gary looked at him, as though partly understanding, but there was a look
in his eyes that Chuck couldn't discern.
"When I told you that I loved you?"
Gary nodded. "Well, I know that at the time I was just saying it platonically,
and because of the situation that we were in.but, ever since then, I've
been thinking. A lot. About everything. About my life, about the money that
Mrs Danforth gave me, about all my friendships, and I've realised.I-I've
realised that I meant it."
There was a heavily pregnant pause. Chuck watched Gary's
face for signs of revulsion or something else that he perhaps wasn't expecting.
But he just looked stunned, and confused.
"Y-y-you meant it?"
Slowly Chuck nodded, staring then at his hands, which Gary's still covered.
He took this as a good sign. His friend hadn't pulled away from him as soon
as he had said it.
"Yes. I meant it. I really care for you Gar. More than you could probably
know. More than I realised."
"Whoa.I, erm, I."
"You hate me, don't you? I don't blame you."
Chuck slipped his hands out of Gary's, and walked over to the window. He
clutched on to the top of the frame with his right hand, and rested his
forehead in the crook of his arm.
"It was a stupid thing for me to say, I'm sorry Gary. I know it's not your
style. And even if it was.well, it's me isn't it?"
He stared out into the city, where the sky was now lightening. From behind
him, he heard footsteps coming towards him. Gary placed a hand on his friend
's shoulder, and Chuck turned around to face him. Gary was smiling at him.
It wasn't a smile that shone with happiness, but there was something there.
"It wasn't a stupid thing to say Chuck. No-one should ever say that their
own feelings are stupid."
Chuck laughed sadly. "That sounds like something Marissa would say, not
you."
"I guess you're right. But it's true." Gary shook Chuck's shoulder. "And
you are a good guy Chuck. You're caring, and kind, and sometimes thoughtful
and witty."
They both smiled in a more relaxed fashion.
"Chuck, trust me, any guy would be lucky to have you. But, I never thought..you
know?"
Chuck sank down to sit on the floor, Gary following suit a few seconds
afterwards.
"No, neither did I. But, things change."
Gary studied his friend's face. He looked into Chuck's eyes. They were
so sad, and so sincere. A few days ago, Gary would quite simply have brushed
this off, putting it down as some sort of twisted joke. But looking at his
friend, he knew he was telling him the truth.
"Yes.things do change. So do people."
"I guess so."
"You've changed Chuck. I don't know whether it was the boat that did it,
but something has changed you."
"A bad thing?"
Gary shook his head. "No. Because I know that, despite what's changed,
you're still Chuck."
Then, something changed. The two of them, they kept
looking at each other, with a new sense of understanding. The two of them
were so different, but they were like opposite magnetic poles. There was
something drawing them together. Emotionally, spiritually, and physically.
Gary reached out and gently touched Chuck's cheek. A simple touch, yet it
let out so many different emotions in both of them. The magnetic field between
the two of them drew them closer together, until they were but a few millimetres
away from each other. Both looked the other in the eye, and their lips came
together. Passion, yet tenderness passed between the two of them, and when
they broke away, they found that they had their arms around each other.
"Y-you're still Chuck."
Chuck stroked Gary's hair gently. "Yes. Are you sorry that it happened?"
He looked thoughtful, then told him softly: "No. I'm not."
"Really?"
"No.I thought I might be.but I'm not. I don't know, it, it feels right
somehow."
********************************************
Now the time has come to leave you,
One more time let me kiss you,
Then close your eyes and I'll be on my way.
********************************************
The happiness that was so clear on Chuck's face then
faded. "You have no idea what that means to me. But, I had to tell you this,
because of the fact that I'm leaving.and I couldn't go without telling you."
"You still have to go?"
Chuck took Gary's hand, and the two of them intertwined their fingers.
"Yes. I do.I've made a commitment. And Mrs Danforth told me to do something
worthwhile with the money. And I've thought, and I've thought, but I can't
think of anything here in Chicago that I could do with it, that I could
do well."
Gary sighed deeply. "Why do I feel like it's my wedding anniversary all
over again?"
Chuck squeezed Gary's hand tightly. "Hey, hey hey! This isn't the end Gar,
if anything, it's the beginning. If you want it to be, I mean."
"I do. I never thought I would hear myself saying this to you, but I want
this to happen. But L.A's not exactly the next El ride away, is it?" "No,
no you're right, it isn't. But somehow, I think this is going to work.
I don't think distance, or the furball is going to stop us. I want to be
with you Gary, I'm not going to let circumstances stop that."
Gary's lips curled upwards. "I want to be with you too."
************************************
Oh kiss me and smile for me.
Tell me that you'll wait for me,
Hold me like you'll never let me go.
'Cause I'm leavin' on a jet plane,
Don't know when I'll be back again,
Oh, babe, I hate to go.
************************************
He lay down, and placed his head in Chuck's lap, and
laughed gently. Chuck grinned, and leaned over to kiss him. As he did so,
Gary pulled on his sleeve, and brought him down to the ground. Chuck shook
his head, and laughed back at him. They wrapped their arms around each other,
and held onto each other with such force, knowing full well that with each
second that passed, each kiss they shared was going to be their last for some
time. Because soon, Chuck would have to go. Though Gary had travelled in
time before, he knew that he still had no means of stopping time, or even
slowing it down. He'd never wished that he could more than he did during those
moments. Not even when he was short of time to perform a rescue, not even
when Marcia left him, or Emma. But this was different. This was Chuck. This
was his best friend. And Gary knew that even though Chuck was leaving, he
wasn't leaving him, and he was coming back. That he was sure of with every
fibre of his being.
***********************************
'Cause I'm leavin' on a jet plane,
Don't know when I'll be back again,
Oh, babe, I hate to go.
***********************************
The next few hours were a blur for Gary. He couldn't
remember Marissa arriving at McGinty's. He couldn't even remember Chuck arriving
to say goodbye. The next thing that he really remembered was standing there
in front of McGinty's, hugging Chuck.
"I'll miss you, buddy." Chuck told him. It was a heartfelt sentence, but
Gary knew that it meant more than someone might think. He nodded in agreement
as they drew away.
"OK.I'm leaving now."
Gary looked at his friend, and he was fairly sure that he felt about as
torn apart as he did. The next thing he saw was Chuck's car driving off down
the road, and as he took Marissa into McGinty's for a cup of coffee, he knew
that things weren't ever going to be the same. But as he'd said to Chuck,
it wasn't a bad thing. Not a bad thing at all.
Email the author: phoebe_or_becks@hotmail.com
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