|
Title:
Stockwell's Men
By:
Junkfoodmonkey
Rated:
PG13
Summary:
Face and Hannibal talk through some issues and think about their future. This
is a short follow up to Tightrope Walk to thrash out some of the issues.
Warning:
Most of this will make no sense to anyone who hasn't read my series of
stories that started with Settlement (or even back with Insurance). Please
check them out first. Or if you don't I hope this story will intrigue you
enough to want to.
Disclaimer:
The A-Team doesn't belong to me. I'm not making any money from this.
Acknowledgement:
Thanks to Rita for some help with polishing this up ready for posting. |
Stockwell's Men
The headstone had a
simple inscription. "Hunt Stockwell, 1932 – 1989".
Hannibal wondered
if the birth year was accurate. You could never be sure of anything with that
man. Putting a lie on his tombstone would be so… Stockwell.
He knew the year of
death was accurate. More than two years now, and the memories were still as
clear as if it happened last week.
"Hello,
Colonel." For a second, still lost in reverie, he heard it as Stockwell's
voice and started violently. He whipped around to see Face standing behind him.
Hannibal hadn't heard him approach. Either Face was still able to move as
silently as he'd learnt to do in the jungle, or Hannibal's hearing was going.
It wouldn’t be surprising if it were; he'd been subjected to more than his
share of loud bangs in his time. And of course he was getting… older.
"Face."
Hannibal hadn't expected to meet any of the other team members here, but he wasn't
surprised now to see Face. Face stepped up to stand beside him. They stood for
a moment in silence looking down at the grave. Finally Hannibal broke the
silence, starting to feel uncomfortable.
"Can't believe
it's over two years."
Face didn't answer
for a long time. Eventually he just said, "Yeah, two years," before
going quiet again. Hannibal suffered the silence for another few moments then
he turned and walked away leaving Face alone. There was a bench nearby beside a
path and Hannibal sat down.
It was symptomatic,
he thought. It was all too typical of the way things had been between them
lately. Since Colombia. Oh, they had made up their differences with all the
right words. But it was superficial. There was still a barrier between them.
Hannibal longed to talk to Face, really talk, and help him deal with it. But
Face just pushed him away, insisting he was fine.
And he seemed fine.
Seemed. Face was always good as seeming. He watched Face standing by the grave,
his hair blowing in the breeze. Then, feeling even this was too much of an
intrusion; Hannibal closed his eyes and just enjoyed the warmth of the sun on
his face. In a few minutes he heard the crunch of footsteps on the gravel path.
Face came over and sat on the bench beside him. He looked a little less
introspective now, smiled at Hannibal.
"Come here
often?" Face asked.
Hannibal smiled at
the question.
"First
time," he said. "Since the funeral." He glanced over at the rise
in the ground where they had stood and watched the funeral service from a
distance. The only witnesses to Stockwell's death. The only living witnesses.
Face nodded slowly.
"I come here fairly often," he said quietly, not looking at Hannibal.
"Once a month maybe."
"Why?"
Hannibal asked.
Face turned to look
at him. "I… guilt, I guess. I'm good at the guilt. Catholic thing, you
know."
"Do you bring
flowers?"
Face smiled a
little. Knew Hannibal was teasing to keep him from getting too morbid.
"I'm not quite
that guilty." He paused for a moment, and then went on. "And I
wondered if he had anyone, you know, to visit the grave. I saw a woman here one
time, but she left before I could speak to her." He shrugged. "I
figured someone should visit, that's all." He sounded slightly defensive.
"That's nice,
Face," Hannibal said, not wanting Face to think he disapproved of the
gesture.
"Few weeks ago
I saw Farrell here," Face said.
Hannibal felt the
tension rise a little at the mention of Farrell, at the memories that invoked.
"How's he
doing?"
"Fine, he
says. Though not so fine, I think. Didn’t look like he was sleeping much."
He went silent, bit his lip. The same memories that had painted dark smudges
under Farrell's eyes haunted Face's nights too.
"He's working
for his father now, right?" Hannibal asked after a moment. Face nodded.
"Vice-President
in charge of corporate mergers and acquisitions." He shook his head.
"I shudder to think of his methods. If we went back to the old job we'd
probably run up against him inside a month."
"Yeah,
probably." Hannibal said, slowly. But he was no longer thinking about
Farrell. "If we went back to the old job." Interesting that
Face should say that. He chewed it over for a while.
"I hope he'll
be okay," Face said. "What he saw…" His voice trailed off.
"You saw it
too, Face." Hannibal reminded him softly.
"Yeah, well,
I've seen that sort of thing before," Face said, seeming to dismiss
Hannibal's concerns.
"It doesn't
get any easier."
"No, I guess
not," Face admitted. He gazed unseeingly across the manicured grass. In the
distance a hearse and a convoy of limousines moved slowly though the cemetery.
"Face..."
Hannibal said, wanting, needing to say something about this. It had been eating
at him for a long time now. "I should have prepared you better for it,
talked to you about that, about losing men under your command."
"Prepared
me?" Face stared at him, apparently amazed. "I don't understand,
Hannibal. How the hell do you think you could have prepared me for that?"
"Well, I've been
through it, in the war, in two wars. I know what it feels like."
"And could you
have told me? Can you honestly say that you could have described it to me? And
even if you could have, do you think that would have made it easier for me to
hold Gonzales while he called for his mother? Made it easier to see…" his
voice cracked, then he brought it under control. "To see Collins get his
brains blown out?" Face shook his head. "I knew there was a chance it
could happen, that I could lose men on that mission, and I was terrified of
that. But there is nothing you could have said that would have made it easier
for me."
Hannibal was
staring at him. Months of guilt about this and now Face was saying he didn't
even blame him?
"You were so
angry." Hannibal said. "At me."
Face shook his
head. "No, not at you. Well maybe, yes, partly at you, for getting us into
that in the first place and, well, you screwed up royal on the rescue
mission." Hannibal winced at that but didn’t argue. "But I was angry
at myself, mostly, for letting them down, letting everyone down. Felt like,
still feel like, a failure."
"No, Face, you
didn't fail. You had bad luck, even the best commanders can have bad
luck." Face didn't argue the point. Hannibal didn't try to claim bad luck
for his own failure. He had indeed screwed up royal as Face said.
They sat quietly
again for a while. The breeze felt quite cold now and Hannibal eventually said,
"You want to walk for a while?"
"Sure."
Face said. They set off slowly along the gravel path, leaving behind
Stockwell's grave.
"So why did
you come here, Hannibal?" Face asked him. "You don't have any reason
to feel guilty over Stockwell's death. Hell, you killed the guy who killed
him."
"I guess the
way I feel about him has changed a little." Hannibal admitted. Face looked
at him. "You know that saying, 'don't judge a man till you've walked a
mile in his shoes?'"
"Of course. I
always thought, 'forget the judging, you're a mile away and you have his
shoes!'" He grinned. Hannibal stayed serious, sensing Face was trying to
head off any deep discussion, uncomfortable with revealing any more than he
already had.
"Well, I
walked a mile in Stockwell's shoes and it made me change my mind about a few
things."
"Those shoes
didn’t suit you, Colonel." The comment was still a little flippant, but
Face said it more quietly, more serious now.
"I know that
now." He put his hands in his pockets, shrugging his jacket up on his
shoulders. They walked on slowly for a few minutes.
"So what are the
things you changed your mind about?" Face asked.
"Well, mostly
the idea that he started out as an irredeemable bastard." Hannibal said.
"Oh, I still think he pretty much ended up that way. But I think I can see
now how a man can get there, without having to start out that way."
"But you
didn't, Hannibal. You had all the same temptations and you didn't fall."
"I was lucky.
I had good friends, good advice. Maybe he never had that. Maybe he was on his
own." Hannibal shook his head. He knew now how easy it was to take the
wrong path. And when you did how hard it was to turn back.
"And you're a
better man than he was." Face said.
Hannibal laughed,
an ironic edge to the sound. "Yeah, that's why I took the job in the first
place, to prove that."
"Prove it to
who?" Face asked, puzzled. "You know you don’t need to prove anything
to us."
"To him."
Hannibal jerked a thumb back the way they had come. "I wanted to prove it
to him. That not only could I do his job as well as him, but that I could
stay…" he cast around for the right word, "…ethical while doing
it."
"Hannibal,
Stockwell was dead when you took the job." Face sounded amused.
"Which means you were basically in a pissing contest with a dead
man." He grinned. "Ever considered the tiny possibility that your
competitive streak is a little out of control?"
Hannibal gave a
slightly chagrined smile. "There's a tiny possibility, yeah."
Face looked back
over his shoulder. Stockwell's headstone was lost among hundreds of others now.
"He casts a
long shadow." Face said. He turned back to Hannibal. "When you think
of it, so much that we've done since has been because of our involvement with
him."
"Yeah. I
guess. Even once he was dead. Like you say, being competitive with a dead man
led me to taking that job. Not that I admitted it to myself at the time. I
really believed what I was telling myself, about doing good."
"I never
doubted that, Hannibal." Face said.
"But I let
them flatter me into taking it, Face. I let them appeal to my vanity. They knew
exactly how to work me, letting me think they believed I would be better than
him at the job. That first contact they made, they told me how impressed they
were with how I handled the coup attempt in Qumar. And I just sat there and
swallowed that whole, like it was all down to me. I forgot there were other
people who shared the credit for how things turned out." He smiled a
little and added, "You for one, Lawrence." Face grimaced at the
'Lawrence', but then smiled too at the memories.
"It hasn't all
been bad." Face argued. "We've done some good, made new friends,
because of the things we did as… well as Stockwell's men." He frowned a
little at the characterisation, but Hannibal knew it was something they had all
accepted they would never escape now. Their names and Stockwell's would be
linked forever.
They reached the
gates of the cemetery. Hannibal glanced across the road at a café.
"You want to
get a coffee?" He asked.
They got their
coffees and took a window table, overlooking the cemetery gates.
"You know
Murdock's writing a book?" Face said as they sat down. Hannibal nodded.
"Yeah, he told
me. What's it about?"
"He won't tell
me. At least not the whole thing. Sometimes he tells me bits of it. I think it
must be sci-fi or fantasy or something, it seems to have a lot of spaceships
and dragons and dinosaurs in it." He shook his head and grinned. "Of
course this is Murdock we're talking about, so it could be a gritty
autobiographical account of his time in Vietnam." Hannibal grinned too
"Sounds like
Murdock." They sipped their
coffee, sat in silence for a few moments. A more comfortable silence than
before. The barrier was starting to crumble. Eventually Hannibal spoke.
"I was just
thinking about something you mentioned earlier. About 'the old job'." He hesitated,
and then, attempting to sound casual, said. "You ever miss it?"
"Sure,"
Face said. "Well not the getting beaten up, shot at and generally menaced
parts, but, you know, the rest…"
"The
Jazz?"
"Yeah,"
Face smiled. "The Jazz."
"Would you go
back to it?" Hannibal asked. Face looked at him quizzically.
"Are you
trying to recruit me, Hannibal?" He sounded amused.
"Just
wondering." Hannibal said with a shrug that belied the serious look on his
face. He sipped his coffee with forced nonchalance.
"Would
you?" Face asked.
Hannibal had to
restrain himself from answering 'in a hot second.'
"If I had you
guys with me."
Face stared at him.
"Really? You'd really go back to it now? At your… uhm, is this some kind
of 'die with your boots on' thing?"
"Probably."
Hannibal said. "I know, you're right. I'm too old for it now." He
raised a hand to silence Face's protest. "I'd be a liability out there, I
can't move as fast as I used to. My eyes aren't what they were, or my
hearing."
"Hannibal,
you're a commander, that stuff doesn't matter. Look at… look at Nelson, he only
had one eye and one arm and he won the Battle of Trafalgar."
"He also died
at the battle of Trafalgar." Hannibal pointed out.
"Okay, bad
example." Face admitted.
"No, Face.
Good example." Hannibal said. "I'm just being selfish really."
Again Face tried to protest and again Hannibal raised a hand to stop him.
"You all have normal lives and you're doing well, I can't ask you to
sacrifice that again, just because I'm… restless sometimes."
"I get
restless too, Hannibal." Face said. "I may have given up the
dangerous sports, but that doesn't mean to say I'm not missing the
action." They looked at each other for a few minutes, and then Face
laughed. "Hell, look at us, trying to talk ourselves into it."
Hannibal grinned at
him. "Maybe we should get together with BA and Murdock, see what they
think?"
"Okay,"
Face said. Then after a moment he added. "Chasing thugs through the park,
huh?" with a sly smile.
"What else are
we qualified for?" Hannibal winked at him. His coffee was finished; he
turned and called over the waitress, ordered another round. He turned back to
Face, who had become serious again.
"Do you really
think we could go back to it, Hannibal? Back to the way things were
before…" he nodded his head in the direction of the cemetery.
"I don't
know," Hannibal admitted. "Things have changed a lot, but I'll bet
there's still plenty of people out there who could use our help. And this
time…" he grinned suddenly, thinking of it for the first time, "We
could even advertise!" Face laughed at the prospect.
"Think we
could spring for a quarter page in the Times? It could go something like…ah…
'If you have a problem, if no-one else can help…'" They were both laughing
when the waitress brought over their coffees. She smiled at them.
"Nice to see
happy customers," she said.
"Well with
service this good…" Face said, giving her a smile and a wink. She blushed
as she walked away. Face shot his cuffs and straightened his tie, grinning at
Hannibal.
"The old
Faceman's still got it." He said, smugly. "I didn't even have to tell
her I was an agent." Hannibal smiled, shook his head. They went quiet
again, both deep in thought about the same thing. 'The old job'. After a few
minutes Face said softly, "Full circle."
"What?"
Hannibal looked up at him.
"Nothing."
Face said. He looked at Hannibal. "If you’re serious, really serious, then
let's arrange some time, maybe a weekend, with BA and Murdock to talk about
it."
"Yeah, I'm
serious."
"Okay I'll set
something up. Maybe we can go up to Crystal Lake?" Face suggested.
"That'd be
nice. You know I'm away for a couple of weeks though, so make it after
that."
"Oh yeah, your
Yellowstone trip with Faris."
"Yeah, he
finally got some leave. Come with us if you like."
"Hah! Sleeping
on the ground with the bugs and snakes listening to you two talk about military
history all night. Gee, I think I'll pass, thanks."
Hannibal shrugged.
"Your loss."
"Why can't you
take him somewhere fun?" Face said. "Like Vegas. He'd love
Vegas." When Hannibal gave him a doubtful look he added. "It's in the
desert," as justification.
Hannibal laughed.
"I don’t think he's a Vegas kind of guy, Face. And I don’t think his
religion allows gambling."
"Hey, scratch
the surface and every guy is a Vegas kind of guy." Face said. "And
I've seen plenty of Arabs in Las Vegas." He added. His face suddenly lit
up with an expression Hannibal hadn't seen for some time. "Actually, I've
got this great con I've always wanted to run in Vegas, only thing is it needs
someone who can be convincing as an Arab sheik…"
"Aww,
Face," Hannibal said, interrupting him. "Not your Sheik Yamuni scam,
I thought you gave up on that years ago."
"It would
work!" Face protested. "It just needs the right Arab. I wonder if I
can find my old notes about it," he wondered to himself.
"Couldn't I do
it?" Hannibal asked.
"Er, well,
you're not an Arab, Hannibal."
"No, but I'm
an actor. A bit of make up, the costume. And I've got the accent down," he
claimed, laid on the accent and said "I am sure I could totally fool the
infidels." Face looked around nervously in case there were any Arabs
nearby. Thankfully not, since Hannibal's accent was bad enough to provoke a
small riot.
"I'll, uh,
call you." Face said.
"Remind me how
the con goes." Hannibal said. He saw Face's eyes light up with that
expression again. Sheer pleasure in the 'old job', the one he was born to do.
He started going over the details.
Over by the counter
the waitress heard the two men laughing again. It was rare to hear that in
here. Their location opposite the cemetery meant they had many customers who
just sat and stared off into space, or looked sad, or even cried. It was good
to have a couple of happy customers. It was very good to hear that laughter.
end
Check out the next
in this series: A Choice of Nightmares
Home
Send Me Feedback
© Elizabeth Charles
2005