The Spirit And
The Setting Free
By
Amanda Sichter
E-mail: wolf@ozdocs.net.au
The Never Enough Time To Say I Love You . .
. Challenge
Well, this challenge called to me (I have a
strange & morbid fascination for killing off my characters, ok!) and for
some strange reason these two characters turned up when I thought of it.
Hope you all enjoy.
Continuity: Future
Disclaimer: They all belong to Marvel. The
story belongs to me. I don't make any money out of this so no-one should bother
suing me.
'How you doin', Cyke?' Logan settled down in the chair
next to the medilab's bed. It was a comfortable chair, made for sitting in for
long periods. The whole medilab had been transformed now, into something that
almost approached a bedroom – books lining the walls, bright prints where they
could catch the eye of the patient, the bed with a cheery coverlet. The only
thing they couldn't change was the smell. No matter how hard Jean tried to
bring in the scents of the outside world, the hospital smell still pervaded.
'Pretty – crappy – Logan,' wheezed out Scott, in
response to the question. He made a grotesque sound, something that had once
been laughter. It was changed now, into a harsh, gurgling, wheezing sound. The
disease had starting eating into his voice in the last few weeks and holding a
conversation had become an exercise in patience. Not that any of the X-Men
showed anything less than the patience of a saint when they were in Scott's
presence. However long it took him to get the words out, they would wait.
''Ro take good care of you?' asked Logan.
Scott's head rolled slightly from side to side, his
equivalent of a shrug now he couldn't move his shoulders. 'Best – she – could,'
he whispered. 'Least she – doesn't – cry.' He grimaced slightly.
Logan nodded. They'd had to take Rogue off the roster
lately, mainly since Scott's voice had started to go. She had been brave at
first, chattering cheerfully to Scott as his legs and his hands and his body
had started to fail on him. But when he couldn't answer her any more, when his
laugh had started to turn into that obscene gurgle, she had failed to hold back
the tears. Each time she had assured the others that next time it would be
different, she would keep control, but each time she had succumbed to her
emotions. In the end, it had been easier to take her off the roster.
'Where's Jeannie?' Logan asked. Even though Jean had
her rostered times, more often than not she was in the room, holding Scott's
hand, bolstering his faltering body with her own strength, doing whatever she
had to to make him comfortable.
'Sent – her – to bed,' Scott said. 'She – was – so –
tired.'
Logan nodded carefully. Jean was driving herself to
exhaustion, everyone knew that, but they couldn't stop her. She was going to
lose Scott, she knew it, and she would spend every possible second of her time
with him. Only Scott himself could ever persuade her to get some rest. The
others had tried and failed.
'You – take – care – of – her,' whispered Scott. 'When
– I'm – dead. Promise me!' His voice – quavering, uncertain – was yet fierce.
'Of course, Cyke,' said Logan. 'You don't have to
ask.'
'You – love – her,' said Scott. 'I – trust – you. Make
– her – happy.'
'Cyke. Scott. I never . . .' Logan floundered for
words. 'You're the only man for Jean, Scotty. She worships you, Cyke. I could
never replace you. I wouldn't try.'
That grotesque sound again – that ruptured laugh. 'Don't
– want – you – to – replace. Just – care – for her. She'll – need – someone –
keep her – alive. Make – her – laugh. Do that – for me.'
'I promise,' said Logan. He put everything, every
ounce of love and sincerity and passion, into his voice. Scott heard it and
nodded slightly, content.
'I'm – dying,' he said, softly.
'Not yet, you're not,' whispered Logan, fiercely. 'There's
still time. Hank's working night and day to find a cure. There's still hope,
Scotty. It ain't over 'til the last breath wheezes out of you, Cyke, and that
won't be for a while yet.'
'Hank – want – two Nobel – prizes?' asked Scott. 'He's
found – his – cure, Logan. He – stopped – Legacy. Not – his fault – I – get –
motor – neurone – disease. Hank – can't – save – me – now.'
'He can. He *can*.' Tears glinted in Logan's eyes,
beneath his frowning brows.
'Too – far – gone,' said Scott. 'Can't – work – my –
body – any more. Can't – talk – much – longer. I – hate – this, Logan. I –
can't – eat – unless – someone – feeds me. I – shit – myself. I – can't – fight
– can't read can't control – myself. Everything – falling – apart. I'm not – a
man, any – more. I'm a baby – a 34-year – old – fucking – baby. Help – me –
Logan.'
For an instant Logan didn't understand what he meant,
but then cold fear shivered down his spine. 'Help you, Cyke?' he asked. 'Help
you die? Scott, I can't do that. I couldn't. There's still a chance. There's
still
Jeannie.' Anguish laced his words.
'Do – it – for – Jeannie,' said Scott. Strain etched
across his face until Logan noticed that his hand moved slightly. Logan knew
what he wanted, and reached down and clutched Scott's hands. Feebly, the
fingers encircled his, so gently he could barely feel them. It was all the
strength left in a hand that had once held the fate of all of mutantkind in it
and been strong enough to handle it, to accept the responsibility and carry the
weight of the world. Now, there was nothing left.
'Don't want – Jean – keep – seeing – me – like this,'
wheezed Scott. 'Not – fair – on her. On – the – others.' He took a deep breath.
'On – me. I – want – to – die, Logan. Be – free – of – this joke – of - a body.
Trust
you – to – help – me.'
'Oh, Scott, Scott,' said Logan. 'How could I do it? I
don't know if I could do it? What could I do – slit your throat? The others –
they'd never understand. Jeannie'd never forgive me.'
'Gotta – be – you,' said Scott, his eyes wearily
closing. 'Beast – can't – do it. He's – a – doctor – he'd never – forgive –
himself. Jean – won't – let me – go. The others . . . – you're – my – friend –
Logan. I – trust – you to – do – it.' He smiled, a slight twitch of facial
muscles that still obeyed him, if only just. 'You're – the – practical – one,'
he finished.
Logan took a deep breath, feeling suddenly selfish. 'I
can't, Scotty,' he said. 'Jean would know. It would kill her to know I'd done
it.'
Scott twisted his head from side to side in negation. 'She's
– asleep,' he said. 'If – you – do it – she – will – not – want – to – know. She
– won't – try to – get it – out of – your – head. And – I'll – be – gone.'
'But I don't know how to do it so she wouldn't know,'
muttered Logan, his voice hoarse with anguish. 'I think she'll notice the
claw-marks.'
The laugh again. 'Logan – Logan,' chuckled Scott,
feebly. 'Always – the – same. Always – the – violent – solution. Don't – need –
claws. Just – turn – up – the – rate – on my – drip. Drugs – in there – can
kill me. Take me – away – from – this – pain.'
'But Hank?' said Logan. 'He'll know. He'll tell.'
'No – he – won't,' disagreed Scott. 'He was – the –
one – who – told me – about – the – drip – in case – I – wanted. But – I won't
– put – it – on – his conscience. You – can – do it – Logan. You – are – the
practical – one. You – can – survive – the – knowledge. Hank – will – not
tell.'
'You've covered every angle, haven't you?' said Logan,
and his voice was suddenly wry.
'I've – been – lying here – for – eight – months. Get
– to – think – a lot.' Scott opened his eyes and they were filled with
pleading. 'Do – it – for – me,' he begged, and his voice was suddenly wretched
with emotion.
Logan could have withstood the requests, but he could
not withstand the look in Scott's eyes. There was pain there, pain beyond
imagining, and hopelessness and fear and misery, loss and sorrow and a
desperate need for respite.
'For you, Scotty,' he said, and reached out and gently
turned the drip up to maximum.
'Thank – you,' said Scott, and his eyes filled with
relief. 'I – knew – I – could – trust – you.'
'I'm glad you trust me. I'm glad I could do this,'
said Logan and gently stroked the hair out of Scott's eyes, away from the visor
that had defined Scott's whole life. When they buried him, Logan would make
sure it wasn't in the visor.
'I – know – you – loved – Jeannie,' said Scott. 'That
– didn't – get in – the way. You – were – my – friend, Logan – and – my –
team-mate.'
'You were my friend, too, Scott,' whispered Logan. 'I
hated you, in the beginning, because I loved Jean so much. But you taught me
how special you were. I never thought anyone would ever be worthy of the
Phoenix, but you were, Scott, and you proved it to me, over and over again. The
world needs people like you, Scott. It's not fair that this happened. We
shouldn't have to lose the ones we love.'
Scott smiled, weakly. 'Love – you – too, Logan. Love –
all – the X-Men. Tell them – I – love – them.'
'I will,' Logan promised.
'Tell – Jean – I – love – her.' The words were
becoming more slurred as the drug began to shut down the last of Scott's
systems.
'She knows, Scott.' Logan noted the sudden flit of
anguish across Scott's face and added, 'But I'll tell her.'
'Tell – her – I'll – be – waiting,' said Scott, and
died.
'I'll tell her,' whispered Logan and lay his head down
on the white sheet and cried until there were no more tears left to cry.
Finally he lifted his head and released the hand he
was still holding. He lay it gently upon Scott's chest, once so strong, now
thin and wasted. Logan reached up and took off the visor and flung it viciously
across the room, so it clattered against the wall and spun away. He lay his
hand softly on Scott's brown eyes, staring sightlessly at the ceiling, and
closed them.
He walked back to the door, opened it and turned. The
body, under the white sheet, hands crossed on the chest, eyes closed, looked so
peaceful there. At peace with everything at last, thought Logan. No
more battles, no more fights, no more need to save the world. No more screaming
against the fate that put you in a body that stopped working just when you
needed it most. No more effort, Scotty. You can put away these former things
and wait for us. We will come to you. All of us. One day. When our fight is
done. Rest in peace, Scott Summers.
Logan closed the door and went to tell the others that
Scott's long, last fight was done.
The
End