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"The best laid schemes of mice and men
gang aft a-gley" Robert Burns, 1759-1796
Best laid plans of mice, men and Immortals, it seemed. Methos glared at
the computer screen, invoking ancient dieties of
communication who were obviously ignoring the modern world. The Watchers were
riddled with spies from attic to basement, it would appear, and he was not the
only Immortal to hide in their ranks. Or to hack into their
database.
Someone was hunting MacLeod.
Didn't matter that the Highlander had left the Game months before, off
to his holy island to hide, lick his wounds, meditate, stare
at rocks, whatever a five hundred year old man did with nothing but himself and
his katana for company. Methos didn't see it, himself. He was ten times the
other man's age, and the only times he'd hidden on holy ground were when he was
too tired to run or had too many pissed off husbands on his trail.
After five millenia, he was seldom too tired
to run. He'd honed survival to a very fine art.
It was time to use that art on behalf of another, looked like. He wasn't
used to this altruistic shit, but then, he'd taken up a number of unusual
habits since hooking up with MacLeod. He just hoped he wasn't going to regret
this one, too. He'd already had to step back into the game, and as painful as Quickenings had become, that was a very large regret. At
the back of his mind, he wondered when the cup was going to run over, and how
he would handle the spillage. There were very few truly ancient Immortals still
alive, most having been lost to hunters or madness long before. He'd only made
it himself by becoming a shadow, staying out of the whole mess as much as
possible, packing it in and walking away when life came too close.
MacLeod had taken his emotional steamer trunks and tossed them in the
river.
He couldn't walk away from this. MacLeod was his friend, and Methos had killed
most of his other friends by now. Or they'd been killed because of him, often
in front of him. One way or another, he was very nearly alone. He found he
didn't want to lose the last good thing that might ever happen to him. Even if
it hadn't actually happened, the potential was there, as long as MacLeod lived.
No fun fucking a headless corpse.
Shaking the mental image that created from his mind, Methos bent back to
the computer monitor. A warmth behind him and the
familiar shuffling gait told him that Joe had joined him. He nodded, not taking
his eyes from the data running along the screen.
"Looking for a bolt hole again, Adam?" Joe asked quietly. There was humor leavened with disapproval in the
warm whiskey voice.
Methos shrugged one shoulder, pushed another button, and cursed under
his breath in Etruscan. "Not me," he tossed over his shoulder. Then
he pointed at the caption under the picture currently displayed. "Him. And not to hide in,
either."
Joe leaned forward to peer at the image. "Shit," he breathed.
Methos couldn't help but agree. "MacLeod?" Even
more quietly, a bare whisper in Methos' ear.
"Yeah." Ancient eyes met sad sherry eyes, and understanding passed between
them. MacLeod would be protected whether he wanted it or not.
"How do you think he'll do it? Even Krage
wouldn't attack him on holy ground."
Methos stared at the cold, finely sculptured face staring arrogantly
back at him from the screen. "Vikings haven't had a problem with killing
on holy ground since they hit
"Might be tough. She's in
"Oh, bloody hell," he hissed, as the truth hit him. "He's
a neanderthal, Joe. But he's a damned observant one.
He won't bother with goats, he'll go straight to the
source. Who's his Watcher?"
Joe reached past him for the keyboard, leaning against Methos for
balance as his fingers flew over the keys. Within moments, a matching data file
blinked onto the screen. "Gary Buardess. Experienced, over fifteen years in the field, very stable."
More buttons, more data, a quick, indrawn breath signalling
anything but the norm. "Damnit. He hasn't
reported in for over a week."
He was reaching for his cell phone when all hell broke loose.
Methos felt the buzz at the same moment the side door was kicked in. The
strength of the other's Quickening made him dizzy for a fatal moment, and he
reached out to Joe an instant too late to stop the other man from moving into
the main room. The Watcher could move fast when he wanted to, even with his
sticks and his prosthetic legs. Shaking the residual effect of the buzz off,
Methos followed very cautiously, staying to the shadows. The other Watchers
didn't know he was an Immortal, and he'd just as soon keep it that way.
As he peered around the doorway into the living room of the house, long
since converted to a computer center for tracking information, he winced. It
looked like his cover wasn't going to last very long at all. Joe had, with his
usual bravery and total disregard for personal safety, gone to the defense of
the younger Watchers in the room. Krage saw the greying hair, the air of authority, the obvious
protectiveness, and zeroed in on him with gusto.
Just what Methos didn't need. Gusto, this early
in the morning, from a two thousand year old Teutonic sociopath trying to find
his best friend by threatening his only other
friend. There were days when it simply didn't pay to get out of bed. Letting
his masking slip, a handy little trick he'd kept secret from just about
everyone, he allowed a hint of his buzz to escape, alerting Krage
to the presence of another Immortal in the area. Krage's
nose tipped to the wind like a hunting dog, and Methos sighed again. This one
was much too far gone to appeal to his sense of secrecy. He was rabid. The only
thing that could be done with him would be to put him down. Unfortunately,
Methos didn't have his gun with him, or he'd simply shoot the bastard, take him
somewhere remote, lop off his head and be done with it. Also unfortunately, the
rest of the Watchers were nowhere near the two guns kept at the office, and Joe's
was in his desk … on the other side of the rabid mastiff currently threatening
him.
Methos had a really bad feeling about this one.
Settling his hand around the hilt of his sword, he squared his
shoulders, said goodbye to Adam Pierson, and focused completely on becoming
Death.
He didn't hear the gasps, garbled questions, or oaths flung at him from
the assembled Watchers. All he saw was Krage's face,
the world narrowed down to icy grey eyes and a feral snarl. He instinctively
marked Joe's position, preparatory to drawing the fight away from the
vulnerable mortal. Then the Dane drew his battle axe with one hand and his
heavy sword with the other, and the battle was joined.
Hefting his broadsword with a sure, two handed grip, he made short work
of the battle axe. He felt the chunk of metal knocked from the edge of his
sword by the curve of the axe blade, but with a twist of his shoulders he tore
it from Krage's hand and flipped it out of the battle
area. He heard a scream, vaguely, as someone dove out of the way and the
wickedly edged axe destroyed some equipment, but he was too busy to worry about
bystanders at the moment. Losing his axe just pissed Krage
off.
Twisting, turning, putting the strength of his back and legs into a
committed offense the likes of which he hadn't made for years, Methos hacked at
the berserker. Howls of rage broke from the other Immortal's mouth as he stood,
rock solid, and did his best to chop Methos into pieces. In contrast, Methos
was eerily quiet, ignoring everything and everyone around
him, an odd light gleaming in his eyes as he followed his enemy's every move.
Followed, countered, and broke through, time and time again.
Krage was strong, and
insane, and determined, and good. He'd been weaned on blood fueds,
a follower of Ymir in the time before Odin, devoted
to Ran in the time of expansion, ancient before he left the ice of the North to
pillage with his brothers. But Methos was even more ancient, and more cunning,
and had been Death a millenium before Krage was born. And Methos was not yet ready to die.
Blood flowed freely from both straining bodies, a deep slice to Methos'
chest, another along his thigh, weaving blue fire through the bright red fluid,
healing almost immediately. The murmurs in the background rose and fell, as it
hit the Watchers that their researcher was not only Immortal, but old enough to
have the strongest Quickening they'd ever seen. Methos ignored the whispers, as
he ignored the pain, and adjusted his attack to balance his injuries. Krage healed less spectacularly quickly, but still fast
enough to show his own age. If there had been room in the single minded pursuit
of survival that had overtaken Methos' brain, the earlier unease would have
intensified, but there was attention for nothing other than the will to kill.
Fiercely, intently, he closed on the faltering Krage.
Deep cuts to the abdomen, at least three broken ribs from a slamming kick,
copious blood loss from a scalp wound, and a crushing blow from a hilt that
broke the fingers of his left hand were the beginning of the end. Finally
ducking under a wild arcing swing, Methos rammed his broadsword through the
berserker's ribcage, ripping his heart into pieces. Lifting one heavy foot to
his enemy's gut, he wrenched the sword back from its deep seat in the other's
chest. Gathering the last of his strength after the grueling fight, Methos
swung his weapon two handed, cleanly separating Krage's
head from his shoulders. The swing nearly overbalanced him, and he dug the tip
of his sword into the carpet underfoot, balancing on its sturdy weight, panting
harshly.
The first jagged bolt of Krage's Quickening
hit him directly between the shoulderblades, sending
his head arching back as his knees buckled under the force of the blow. His
eyes flew open, meeting Joe's in an instant of pure, unadulterated anguish
before his being was consumed with fire. Then his pupils dilated, lost focus, and his attention collapsed completely inward, drawn
by the electricity searing his nerve endings. Every muscle in his body
strained, then relaxed, then strained again, as the powerful surge of life
force moved through him. Faces swirled through his mind, and he heard voices in
the wind buffeting him, overpowering the electronic screams as machinery
throughout the building shorted out and exploded. Watchers dove under tables to
escape stray flashes of energy, as metal desks were ripped apart and electric
cables melted to slag.
He noticed none of it. Krage laughed, in him,
through him, around him, and the laughter was subsumed in the screams, behind
him, within him. Two thousand years of pain, of pillaging, of murder, of
cooking meals on the corpses of the enemy, of living to die in battle, joined
and melded with five thousand years of a different sort of pain, first felt,
then committed, of dying and killing, of running and fighting, of loving,
losing, and killing again. The faces screamed up at him from the grass as he
tore into their bodies, laughed down at him from the sky as he was torn in
turn. Barriers broke and wept blood; memories so deeply submerged they had
disappeared now paraded before him, laughing and screaming, refusing to be
forgotten again.
The Quickening went on forever, an eternity of
pain endured and inflicted, victims and lovers interchangeable in their agony.
The broadsword became his anchor, and he held on tightly as his body jerked and
twitched with the force of the energy he drew from his enemy. As the currents
finally eased and the pain began to subside, he drew a ragged breath down a
throat gone hoarse from screaming, and curled shaking fingers around the hilt
of his sword. Throwing out a hand to ward off Joe's approach, he knelt next to Krage's decapitated body. Slowly, deliberately, he wiped
his blade on one of the few remaining clean patches of clothing, then forced himself to his feet.
Bodies were coming toward him, hands outstretched. With the greater part
of his mind still caught up in the horror of the Quickening, he perceived them
as threats, and lifted his sword defensively. They stilled, all but one, and he
dimly recognized the caring under the rough voice. It wasn't enough to reach
him, couldn't break through the maelstrom of faces whirling around him. Keeping
the sword as steady as he could with both hands, he backed away from the
bodies, away from the voice. Had to hide, had to heal, had to … had to … he had to find someone. There was something he had
to do.
Someone he had to kill.
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Joe stepped forward carefully, one hand outstretched, the other
balancing himself on his cane. It had been a hell of a fight, one of the worst
he'd ever witnessed, if not the
worst. Both Immortals had been reduced to hacking away at one another like
animals, the sheer need to live finally determining the winner. He'd learned a
few things about Methos during that fight. Maybe, if he was lucky, he could
forget them one day.
When it was over, and the damned lights stopped blowing up, and the
windstorm finally calmed down, he'd gotten out from behind the big desk he'd
hidden behind, and tried to reach his friend. But he didn't recognize the man
he knew in those wild black eyes. He saw ages upon ages of suffering in those
eyes … but he didn't see Methos.
He saw Death.
As strong hands brought the sword up and waved it threateningly at them,
he motioned the other Watchers to back off. But still he inched forward. He had
to reach him, somehow. They'd been through one dark Quickening
already, and it had nearly destroyed a good man. If this was another one …
Before he could complete the thought, much as he didn't want to, the swordpoint stopped wavering, pointing steadily at him. The
patrician features were drawn into a grimace of unconcealed hatred, a
strong-planed mask of targetted destruction. As
Methos, or whatever Methos had absorbed with the Quickening, backed out the
door, one word fell from the snarling mouth.
"MacLeod."
Joe felt the world tilt.
Standing there, staring after his friend, it took a moment for the chaos
around him to sink in. Snatches of half-hysterical conversation hit him, and he
shuddered.
"-Immortal! And pretty fucking old from the look of it!"
"So much for our Methos researcher! He was probably hiding the old guy all along, they look after
each-"
"-oh my god, oh my god, oh my god-"
"-blood. The hea… "
"My computer is toast. There's blood on the … is that his
HEAD?"
"-and did you see when the storm hit, he --"
So much confusion. Anger. Betrayal. Distress. Someone was crying, probably more than one. He had
a job to do. He was the senior Watcher, it was his job to try to clean up this
mess, reassure his people, take care of them. He
stared at the wreckage of the room, the traumatized witnesses, the corpse, the
blood, the broken, burnt bits of wood and metal strewn over the room, and
quietly walked into the back room.
Closing out the Files, he switched over to email. Quickly, not thinking
at all, acting on instinct, he sent one message, addressed to ClanMan@earthlink.net
and cc'ed to LadyA@aol.com and blairs@u.ranier.edu,
the young man who was MacLeod's liaison to the outside world. Priority urgent, just a few lines. Subject,
"ALERT" and content, "Oldest friend took possible dark Q.
Hunting MacLeod. Prepare to defend. Signed, Whiskey."
He just hoped to God it got there in time.
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Halfway across the country, a studious anthropologist looked up in
surprise as his computer beeped at him. He didn't really get all that many
priority emails -- after all, most of his study subjects were members of
ancient tribes who still communicated with drumming. And his partner hated
email, much prefering the cell phone. Seeing the
subject line, he immediately opened the message.
"Oh, man, that sucks."
Grabbing his backpack, leaving a short, explanatory message on his partner's
voicemail at the division, he headed out for his car. At least it wasn't
raining, so the canoe ride would be a pleasure. Too bad it wasn't a pleasure
trip.
Five hours later, he was hoarse from pleading with a brick wall. It had
not been a productive conversation.
"He's dangerous,
MacLeod. You know that, man, you've done this yourself. You couldn't control
it, what makes you think the Old Man can?"
"I know Methos, Blair. He won't hurt me. Not if I refuse to
fight."
"Refuse to fight? Have you lost it completely? I don't know about you,
MacLeod, but if somebody was coming for my neck with a sharp instrument I'd get
outta town if I didn't want to fight. What are you
going to do? Sit here, by the campfire, and offer up your throat when he gets
here?" Totally exasperated, the young man threw his hands up and walked
away, then bounced a u-turn and came back to try one more time. "You know what happens when a Quickening
goes bad, MacLeod, and you know better than anyone else what kind of life he
has led. Do you want to be part of the load, man? You think it's going to be
any easier for him to live knowing he killed you than it is for you to live
with Sean's death?" Seeing the wince that memory caused, he pressed his
advantage. "If you won't defend yourself for your own sake, man, do it for
his. Please?"
Deep brown eyes bearing ages of sadness stared down at him. "I will
not fight Methos."
Blair gritted his teeth. "I'm not tellin'
you to take his head. He's your friend, you don't want to kill him, I am so down with that. But you cannot simply allow him to waltz in here and whack off your head. It
won't do either of you any good.
Are you hearing me?" He was right up into MacLeod's face at this point. He
had to get through. He'd known MacLeod for a very long time,
and through him had grown to know and care about Methos. He didn't want to lose
either of them. Finally, the tense face close to his relaxed,
then leaned forward and pecked him lightly on the nose. He scowled up at
MacLeod.
"I hear you, youngster. I will defend myself. But I'm not going to
kill him. I canna do that."
Hearing the stubborn determination in the deep voice, he knew that was the only
concession he was going to get. Admitting defeat, he shrugged acceptance.
"I hear that. That's cool. Just watch your back. And
your neck." Reaching up to hug the older man, he trudged back to
the canoe. He'd done all he could do. The rest was up to MacLeod.
And Methos.
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He didn't know what reality was any more, so he wasn't sure when he was
slipping out of it and when he was slipping into it. The night had been long,
and cold, as winter nights on the streets of
Time slipped with reality, and as he moved westward, his mind moved back
through the centuries. The rage was still there, and the faces from all the Quickenings he had taken rose up in him when he was least
prepared to deal with them. Kronos, a well of hatred
so deep, so pure and strong, it nearly overwhelmed him again, barely held at
bay by the will of MacLeod, undermined by his own misery and need, supported by
the bewildered death of his other brother in blood. MacLeod was now
inextricably entwined with them in Methos' memories, in the muscle memory of
the hurts suffered at their hands and inflicted with their joyous
participation. His hands clawed into battle readiness, his head bowed, and his
back tensed.
Had to stop the pain. Had to kill the cause.
No one approached him on the long bus ride from
No pain, in hiding. No light, either, but he was used to the dark. Then
MacLeod had drawn him back in. Back to the warmth. Back to the pain.
Further back, the humming of the wheels along the pavement lulling him
into millenia before, a melody unlike any he had ever
heard. He had broken every rule he'd made in his first two thousand years of
life in order to listen to that seducer's song, had allowed the singer in, had
taught him what he could, never enough, not nearly enough. He'd taken a
student, a creature of light and harmony, warming Methos to his bones. A
master, of song and history, faith and beauty, a man who had not listened, and
had fallen victim to those who would never understand him. Torn
to pieces by the followers of a jealous God, destroyed while Methos was gone
and unable to protect him. The world had lost its music when Orpheus was
lost, but Methos had lost much more. He had fallen into a pit of death, and
found brothers there to relish it with him. The darkness had swallowed him
whole.
As it was swallowing him now. It gnawed at him, needing to be released, unleashed on the one
responsible for making him feel again.
The final walls inside crumbled, and the oldest pain bubbled to the
surface. He'd thought the man a God, his first master, his final master as a
mortal. He'd been a bard, a teller of tales, a soldier when he had to be, for
who was not? It was a world of war, and war made history, and he was an
historian. Until he was a slave. The master had been
drawn to him, in a way cruelty seemed to always be drawn to him. He'd died,
although he hadn't known it the first time, too overwhelmed with the pain in
his throat and in his chest and between his legs and at his wrists. He'd not
realized it the second time, or the third, either. He'd been unforgivably
stupid when he was young. When he finally had understood that he died and was
reborn, he'd thought it was divine punishment, to live in order to die in the
pleasure of his master, and that his master was the God driven to take the
pleasure and give life as reward for it. An eternity of pain.
Life into death into life into death into life again, at the whim of a cruel
God who literally loved him to death. Until something had snapped, inside, and
he'd fallen on his God like a beast, beating his head in, ripping and tearing
with his bare hands until he had torn his God to pieces. Lightning had struck
him then, for daring to destroy a God, and he had screamed from the pain and
the ecstasy of it.
The faces had shown him, then, what he was, and it was not a man. A sort of God, perhaps, but damned for all of that, by the fact of
his Godhood. Destined to kill. Destined to die,
and live, to kill.
It had begun in pain. Continued in pain. He had
shielded himself the best he could, fought back the memories until he thought
they had disappeared, killed and killed again, drowning his pain in the blood
of others. It wasn't enough. He'd shut it down, closed it out, walled it up,
until someone broke the walls and dragged him back into the fire, naked,
unarmed, defenseless.
He had to strike out. Had to stop the screams. Had to kill the one responsible for him feeling the pain.
Too many years of death. Too much darkness with too little light to balance
it. All the words of millenia
pressing on his mind, the blood behind the words, the death behind the blood,
the blessed numbness behind the death. He had been so many things, told
so many lies, been so many different people, and he was tired. Time to stop lying. Time to be who he
really was.
Something small and still shifted as he rowed closer to the green shore
of the island. It protested, faintly, something holy, something safe. It was
crushed by the weight of the years on his soul. There was no holy hiding place
from a God born of blood.
The chiming of voices, of laughter and music, sounded all around him,
filling his head with echoes, and he looked up at the man waiting for him on
the shore. He knew that face. It was one of the faces screaming death at him.
He dropped the paddle into the water and climbed over the side of the canoe,
wading to shore, pulling his sword from its sheath as he came. It was time to
silence the voices.
Time to end the pain.
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Duncan MacLeod looked at his approaching friend and knew he was looking
death in the face. He didn't recognize the uncanny stillness to the set
features, or the pure ice in the eyes, now the color of old coins in the
sunlight. He'd heeded his young friend's warning, and read the email Joe had
sent, so his katana was at hand. But he was determined not to bring death to
this holy place, most especially not the death of a friend.
He'd had enough of death.
He wasn't given a choice.
The broadsword was sweeping toward his stomach before he could so much
as open his mouth to greet Methos. Instinctively he jumped back, bringing his
own katana up to fend off the blow. His position higher on the slope gave him
an advantage, but he only used it to keep the deadly sword coming at him from
cutting into him. Methos pressed the attack with a single minded intent to kill
that
If Methos was truly determined to kill him, it would take everything he
had ever learned as a warrior just to stay alive. Barely escaping yet another
whistling sweep of the long blade, he rolled under the blade and backed toward
the cabin. As he parried blow after blow, he did his best to talk his friend
out of his killing fury.
"This isn't you, Methos. Please," he ducked, hissed as the
edge of the blade opened up a thin slice along his chest, and slithered out of
the way of a back-handed swing. "It's the Quickening, it's
making you do things that you don't want to do."
A smile greeted the words, but it looked more like rigor mortis on a
skull than humor. "Don't tell me who I am, child. I am Death." A swat
with the sword sent
With every ounce of strength he had,
He wasn't going to satisfy those demands.
Falling back immediately into a defensive posture, he husbanded his
strength, giving everything he had in skill, training and tactics to ensure
that he was protected and that Methos was not harmed. The change in strategy
worked beautifully. Frustration mounted behind the ice in those golden green
eyes, and the rigid mask began to break. Unfortunately, his strength was
beginning to wane, and Methos didn't show any signs of weakening. Finally,
pinned to the ground, his neck much too close to the sharp edge of death for
comfort, Duncan gave in to desperation and did the only thing he could think of
to shock his friend back into sanity.
He kissed him.
Hard.
The only way Methos was going to cut off
Everything came to a crashing halt. The fight came to standstill, the
only movement, the harsh panting from
The broadsword slipped sideways. Neither man noticed. Methos' fingers
clenched automatically, searching for the hilt, then
stilled, all his attention focused on the man attached to his mouth.
The katana fell to the earth as
Violent hands that had been trying to kill him moments before now moved
equally strongly against him, tearing at his clothes, pulling at his hair to
move his head further back. Long legs tangled with his, knees jabbing into the
ground between his thighs, roughly thrusting his legs apart. The mouth he had been tasting turned on him, forcing his jaws apart, tongue
probing without care or gentleness, claiming him. A different sort of fear
caught at
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The screams were louder now, the warm skin and hard muscle under his
hands bringing back so many memories. His victims, taken on
the bloody fields, smoke filling the sky from the ruins of their villages.
His own surrender, ripped from him when the fight was lost, taken over and
over. Many masters, many losses, many surrenders, each one a
bitter taste and another brick in the wall. The cloth was in his way,
and his fingers clenched in it, tearing it, digging into the flesh beneath.
Sweet taste, sweat and blood and musk, his entire body blanketed with the heat
of victory. So close, and he was hard, aching with it. Hating
it. Needing it.
Then the muscles softened, the limbs went pliant under his hands. The
mouth below his invited, accepted, relished his tongue, his biting kisses. His
legs trembled, his torso lowered, his arms locked to keep himself upright, but
his prisoner was moving with him, not against him, and it confused him.
Victory was supposed to hurt.
Pleasure had no part until after the pain. Where was the pain?
The voices cut through his head again, but this time the chiming laughter was
louder, the light was brighter. He saw the faces, and he recognized some of
them. Others, he knew, they were part of him, but they were not of him, and he
turned away from them.
Hands came up around his shoulders, not pushing him away, but pulling
him nearer. He felt dizzy, he couldn't breathe. The world tipped to one side,
and his arms gave. He was falling, rolling, stopping, held fast. The face that
had been against the grass, his victim, was now outlined with sky, and he held
those bright warm eyes with his, waiting, expecting the pain to start any time,
for his prisoner was now his master, and wasn't that what masters did? Then the
face lowered, blotting out the sky, and he closed his eyes, accepting the pain,
for in the end, no matter how hard he fought, the pain would win.
The gentle lips caressing his cheek, nibbling along his jawline, brushing his lashes had no place in his memories.
He didn't know this touch, from this man. It didn't fit, didn't meld with any
of the memories, stood out alone, distanced from the
well of chaos in his mind. The mouth lifted, returned, teased at his own until his lips relaxed and he accepted the kiss.
He didn't know this taste.
Tentatively, he opened his eyes. Deep velvet brown against a backdrop of
thick black, set in graceful lines and curves. He
didn't know this look.
Strong, broad hands swept him endlessly, along his ribs, up his back,
down to his ass, up into his hair. Gentle, inexorable,
unstoppable. Learning him. Teaching
him.
He knew this man.
With that knowledge came sanity, and with sanity, icy shock. He
shouldn't be here. MacLeod didn't want this. If he had, he'd've
said … done something, before he left. He wouldn't have left.
Would he?
Thoughts caught up in the internal debate, body responding to tender demands
without will or restraint, Methos let go of the last of the pain, and gave himself over to the hands, mouth and body that were
cherishing him. His clothing was removed much more slowly than he'd stripped
MacLeod, and the urgency of attack shifted into the urgency of passion. By the
time he felt MacLeod's hands urge his thighs apart and MacLeod's mouth cover
him, lips and tongue working at the delicious ache, the debate was abandoned,
and any thought of resistance with it. His world collapsed in on itself again,
taken up completely with the mouth suckling at him, the softness of the hair
brushing at his inner thighs, the strong hands cupping, separating, penetrating
between his buttocks. The ground under his shoulders as he arched, the sea salt
scent on the air, his fingers tugging at MacLeod's head, the explosion of fire
centered at the base of his spine that blew his thoughts into fragments as he
came.
Dimly, he was aware of MacLeod moving up his body, spreading his legs
further, lifting his knees. A hot, agile mouth sharing the bitter tang of his
essence with him, the strong arms braced at each side of his waist, the slow,
deep grind of MacLeod's pelvis cradling his hips. The relaxed
muscle yeilding to pressure and need, stretching,
filling, a welcome weight grounding him through the haze. Then the
urgent movements against him, his own arms circling the broad shoulders, his
face buried in the sweat damp skin at the joining of MacLeod's shoulder and
neck. The friction of hair against his chest, the twinge of muscles
over-extended at his hips, the clamp of his knees against MacLeod's own waist,
ankles crossed at the small of his back, pulling him further in, urging him on
as his energy returned.
The cloudiness lifted, thought and sensation
crashing back into reality as MacLeod arched against him, throwing his head
back and moaning, low, deep in his chest. Methos felt the movement within him,
felt the surge of energy, the swift crackle of Quickening mingling, as his own
pleasure crested again. Then his legs were falling loosely to the sides, his
hands tangling in the thick hair at the nape of MacLeod's neck, as they melted
into one another. He inhaled deeply, imprinting the moment on his mind, knowing
now he would know this touch, this taste, this scent. This
man.
When MacLeod raised his head again, staring down at him, Methos met the
searching look with wide eyes. Whatever MacLeod saw there seemed to satisfy
him, for he hugged Methos tightly, then gently disengaged himself. Methos
watched as MacLeod rose, gathered his katana, and turned back to him. Oddly
enough, he wasn't afraid, even though he'd done his best to kill the other
Immortal earlier, and he was now completely defenseless. He knew Duncan MacLeod.
He'd never been safer.
MacLeod took a deep breath, then extended his
free hand for Methos to take. He stared at the hand for a second, then up at
the open, honest face beyond it. Clasping it firmly, he let MacLeod haul him to
his feet. Without speaking, he gathered his own scattered clothing and his
sword, silently preceding MacLeod up through the clearing and into the small
cabin.
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They didn't talk about the fight for the first week. Or
the second. Gradually, Methos opened up about Krage,
and the confrontation at Watchers' headquarters in
By the end of the first month, it was actually true.
The island was a haven, a healing place, for Methos as much as for
MacLeod. Over time, and good Scotch, and quiet nights in front of the fire,
Methos shared a little of what had been hiding behind his walls. He used the
quiet time to rebuild them, stronger this time, and with less pressure behind
them. The pressure eased with each story he told.
He didn't tell all of them.
There weren't enough nights, and the walls were still too high for such
honesty. Besides, the burdens were, in the end, his own. The only thing he
really had to call his own.
But the pain eased, with the nights, and the security that came with
holding and being held. Several months passed before the walls were strong
again, and the burdens that he could share had been shared. MacLeod gained
strength as Methos did, and wounds healed on both sides of the fire. Late one
night, as they held one another in the warmth of the small cabin, Methos turned
to MacLeod and propped himself over him, staring down into his face, memorizing
the features all over again in case this last conversation didn't turn out the
way he hoped.
"I've done this before, you know."
MacLeod grinned up at him, a hint of a smirk to the grin. "I'd hope
so, after five thousand years. You dinna act much
like a virgin, ya know."
Methos refused to be sidetracked. "Not the lovemaking. We both know
how to do that--"
"Thank god!"
"-but the hiding." Methos ignored the interruption and tapped one long forefinger against
MacLeod's chin. "I'm very good at it. But I hate it. And whose fault is
that?"
MacLeod stared up at him mutely, obviously having no clue where the
conversation was going.
"You, you twit," Methos sighed with exasperation. "I was
perfectly … content hiding in my shell, until Duncan MacLeod of the Clan
MacLeod came along and pulled me out into the sunlight. And I remembered that I
actually like the sunlight. Now
that it's gone, I miss it." He waited, patiently staring down at his
lover, for the light bulb to turn on. Eventually, of course, MacLeod got it,
and his face closed up. "You can't hide forever, MacLeod." It was a
gentle reminder, and an invitation.
MacLeod closed his eyes, refusing both, and Methos remained precisely
where he was. It was the truth, and MacLeod knew it was, and he would have to
face it sooner or later. From the stubborn look on the Scot's face, it looked
like it was going to be later. He nodded. He'd expected that, actually. MacLeod
was too pig-headed for his own good. But Methos was willing to wait. He'd done
that before, too. And never for anyone he was as
willing to wait for as this one.
"Whenever you're ready, MacLeod." Relaxing back against the broad warm chest, Methos closed his eyes and
waited to fall asleep. He could feel MacLeod staring down at him, but didn't
let it bother him. In his own good time, MacLeod would come to the same
conclusion, and when he did, they'd stop hiding and rejoin the world. Until
then, he'd just lay back and enjoy it.
finis
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Overheard in a church in the south of
"It's nae right."
"You think too
much, Highlander."
"But it canna be … Methos … what are you …
Holy Mary, Mother of God …"
"You'd be
surprised."
"Yeah. Am. Oh. Guid God."
"Not in this
era."