TITLE: A Couple of Lucky Bastards
AUTHOR:
Lady Ra
E-MAIL
ADDRESS: LadyRa11@yahoo.com
RATING:
R
PAIRING:
Tony/Gibbs, Jack/Daniel
SUMMARY:
Jack and Gibbs meet up while on Christmas vacation and go sailing.
EPISODE
SPOILERS: None.
NOTE: Happy holidays!!!
DISCLAIMER:
NCIS and Stargate are owned and operated by people far richer than I. Honor and Praise to the creators. I love playing with these guys.
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THANKS:
Thanks to my awesome betas. My stories
are always so much better for their hard work.
For this story that includes: Joolz,
Annie, Martha, Susan, and JillsJourney.
A Couple of Lucky Bastards
Jack stared
out at the Pacific Ocean and tried to remember the last time he’d spent
Christmas someplace warm, and the Middle East didn’t count. He made a promise to himself that he’d do it
more often, especially here in Southern California. Who needed snow, black ice, and freezing
temperatures?
He
strolled down the pier, looking at all the boats in the marina, wondering if
there were any for rent for the afternoon, and what the chances were he could
get Daniel out on one. It was still a
battle to get Daniel to his cabin, and Jack had stopped asking him to actually
put a hook on the end of his fishing line years ago.
Not
that Jack didn’t still feel like he’d won the lottery. It might have taken them a few years, and a
lot of heartache, but they’d finally gotten their heads out of their asses, and
just the memory of kissing Daniel for the first time made him as randy as a
teenager.
This
had been a good idea, the two of them going off somewhere together. Other than Jack’s cabin, this was the first
time it had been just the two of them, able to do whatever they wanted. Of course what Daniel wanted to do right now
was browse in a vintage used-book store, so Jack had left him to it, smiling at
the look of sheer delight on Daniel’s face as he’d drooled over all the dusty
leather bindings.
Jack
liked to think he was the most important thing in Daniel’s life, but the truth
of it was that what Daniel liked best was Jack in bed, surrounded by
books. Jack had already spent many a
night waking up when the book under his ass finally couldn’t be ignored any
longer.
Snickering,
Jack kept walking, coming to a complete stop when he saw a beautifully
constructed boat. It looked to be about a thirty-footer, the craftsmanship on it deserving a second
and then a third look. A gray-haired man
was on the deck, fussing around in a storage compartment, his back to Jack. “This boat yours?” Jack asked.
“Yup,”
the man said. He turned around, and when
he saw Jack, one side of his mouth curved into a smile. “Well, hello there, Jack O’Neill, with two
Ls.”
Jack stared up at him. “Jethro, that you?” Leroy
Jethro Gibbs was a man Jack would never forget.
His extraordinary sniper skills had gotten Jack out of a tough situation,
not once, but twice. “How the hell are
you?” He and Jethro had gone out
drinking a few times after that, but it had been years since he’d last seen him.
Jethro
waved at him, “Come on board. She’ll stand the extra weight.”
Not
needing a second invitation, Jack stepped onto her deck, taking another
appreciative look around. “She’s a
beauty.”
“I
built her myself,” Jethro said proudly. “Every last inch of her.”
Jack ran
his hands along the polished wood. “Does
she sail as good as she looks?”
“Got
time to go out?” Jethro asked in answer.
“You
bet,” Jack said. Daniel wasn’t likely to
notice if several days went by; he’d probably be lost in that bookstore until
the proprietor kicked him out for the night.
In any case, they had made plans to meet back at the hotel at 7:00 for
dinner, so even if Daniel managed to unearth himself, he wouldn’t worry too
much if Jack was out of cell phone reach.
Jack
had done some sailing in his time, so with minimal direction he happily played
the part of first mate, and within a few minutes they were slowly motoring out
of the marina.
Once
they were out to sea, the shoreline still visible but far enough away to feel
distant, Jack noticed the Christmas lights around the grabrail. “Nice touch,” Jack said, pointing at the
lights.
Jethro
rolled his eyes. “Not my idea.”
“’Tis the season,” Jack said. It was three days before Christmas, the first
Christmas he and Daniel were spending together as lovers. They’d asked for vacation time, deciding
they’d earned it. The Ori were kaput, Jack was sick of his job and thinking about
retiring, and Daniel, for all the fact that he was a lot younger, was considering
the same thing. Jack was using this
vacation as a trial run, to see what his life could be like without the weight
of the world on his shoulders, having a companion to spend his time with.
“Bah,
humbug,” Jethro said, but there was a grin hovering around his mouth.
Jack
recognized that grin. It was the same
grin on Jack’s face as he left Daniel to his books. He chuffed out some silent laughter, saying,
“Oh, the things we do for love.”
Jethro
barked out a laugh. “Amen.”
Jack
let the warmth of a southern California winter day warm his bones, so glad he
wasn’t in Colorado under two feet of snow. The day was perfect, sunny and breezy.
“Ready
to get the sail up?”
Jethro asked.
“Aye,
aye, skipper,” Jack said, getting to his feet, pleased at how easily his
sea-legs were coming to him.
They raised
the mainsail, leaving the jib sheet down.
After a brief conversation, they decided that neither of them was in the
mood for speed and rapid handling; the single sail would suffice. “God, this is great,” Jack said. As they raced over the water, no sound but
the wind buffeting the sails and the occasional sea bird, Jack thought that retiring
to someplace like this, where he could get a boat and put out to sea whenever
the mood hit, would be a dream come true.
“You retired?” he asked Jethro.
“No,
just on vacation.”
Jack flicked
a hand at the Christmas lights. “Not
alone, though.”
“Nope,
not alone. You? Are you retired?”
“Nope. Thinking about it, though. I’m tired.”
“What’s
your rank?”
“General,”
Jack said. “And the paper cuts are
killing me.”
Jethro
snickered.
“You?”
“I
work at NCIS. Special Agent Leroy Jethro
Gibbs at your service. Been there for a long time, now.”
“Never
thought you’d leave the service,” Jack said.
“Thought you were a lifer.”
Jethro
shrugged, and Jack saw a world of hurt in the gesture. He normally would have kept his mouth shut,
but hanging around with Daniel was having a bad effect on him. “Who’d you lose?”
Jethro’s
lips tightened, but then he said, “Wife and daughter.”
“Jesus,”
Jack said. “I’m sorry.”
“It was a long time ago.”
“Stuff
like that never goes away.”
Jethro
sent him a piercing look. “What
happened?”
“Lost
my son.”
The
look he got from Jethro was one of commiseration, not pity, and Jack took
comfort in it.
“Never
goes away,” Jethro said. “But it does
get easier.”
Jack
agreed with that. Daniel made it a hell
of a lot easier. From the moment Jack
had met him, Daniel had breathed new life into him. “Especially with someone
who puts Christmas lights all over your boat?”
Jethro
grinned, the smile actually reaching his eyes, and Jack was glad that Jethro
had found his own version of Daniel.
“Never
expected it,” Jethro confessed. “Got
married three more times after Shannon died, and it never worked. But this? Never saw it coming.”
“I
hear ya,” Jack said.
If anyone had told him after he’d lost Sara that he’d be crazy in love
with a man, he’d probably have decked them.
Not that he was homophobic, but it was so far out of Jack’s imagination
of what his life was supposed to be, it wasn’t even worthy of consideration. “Tell me about her?”
“Coming
around,” Jethro said first, and Jack ducked as the boom came swinging around,
nimbly moving to the other side of the boat, reaching to take the rudder as
Jethro secured the boom. “Green eyes,” Jethro
said after he was sitting again.
“Blue,”
Jack said.
“Brown
hair,” Jethro said.
“Me,
too. Well, not me, obviously. Looks like we both lost that lottery.”
Jethro
smiled. “Tall.”
“Mine,
too.”
“Young,”
Jethro said with a roll of his eyes.
“How
young?”
Jack asked.
“Fifteen.”
Jack’s
eyebrows rose. “Fifteen?”
Jethro
let loose with a strong laugh. “Oh, I
wish you could see your face. Fifteen
years younger than me. Not fifteen-years-old.”
“Glad
to hear it.” Jack did some math in his
head. “Mine’s thirteen years younger.”
“You
dog,” Jethro said.
“Takes
one to know one,” Jack said, making a pretend toast.
“That
deserves a beer,” Jethro said, disappearing into the galley for a moment and
returning with a couple of iced bottles.
“There you go.”
Jack
took it gladly, twisting the top off, taking a nice long swallow. “Perfect.”
“Where
is this tall, young, blue-eyed beauty of yours?” Jethro asked.
“Bookstore,”
Jack admitted. “Loves
them almost as much as me.
Where’s yours?”
“Shopping. Buying souvenirs for the
rest of the team.” Jethro
shuddered, as if the thought of shopping gave him nightmares.
Jack
could relate. “Rest of
the team? You work together?”
Jethro
nodded, but didn’t volunteer any more information.
“You
her boss?”
Jethro’s
face squinched up, but he admitted, “Been offered a
team several times, but they’d rather work with me.”
“You
don’t need to defend yourself,” Jack assured him. “I work with mine, too, and I’ve been the
boss for a long time.”
Jack
was glad he’d said it when Jethro’s shoulders relaxed. “Couple of reprobates,” Jethro said.
Jack
chuckled and took another long drink from his beer. “Happy?”
He wanted his old friend happy.
The man had saved his life years ago, and suffered the same kind of loss
Jack had. Jack wanted for him what he’d
found with Daniel.
“Yeah,
I am. I never expected to be, but
somehow I got lucky.”
“Good,”
Jack said, and then ducked again, when Jethro announced another turn.
They
spent a long while out on the ocean, tacking back and forth, no destination in
mind, just a couple of old soldiers relaxing, talking a little, but mostly not. Jack felt himself finally relaxing even
though he and Daniel had been on vacation for two days already. It was hard to leave the bullshit
behind.
When
Jack finally looked at his watch, three hours had gone by. “I should probably get back.”
Jethro
glanced at his watch, too, and nodded.
“I’ll be getting yelled at for sure.”
“Just
plug in the Christmas lights,” Jack suggested.
It wasn’t dusk yet, but they’d still be seen.
Jethro
grinned and did as Jack suggested, and Jack smiled as the lights blinked on, a
long string of multi-colored lights that started out shining in unison, but
then started blinking.
“Merry
Christmas, Jethro,” Jack said, and he reached forward to clink his beer against
the other’s.
“Merry
Christmas, Jack,” Jethro said in return.
As
they neared the shore, they worked together to take down the sail, folding it
carefully, and tying it up tight. Jethro
turned the motor back on, and they made their way into the marina. Jack noticed two men on the dock, one of them
looking very familiar. The other noticed
the boat coming in, and Jack found himself smirking, thinking back over their
conversation.
“You
know, Jethro,” he said. “There was an
interesting lack of female pronouns in that conversation we had.”
Jethro
looked apprehensive at first, but then he followed the point of Jack’s chin,
and saw the two men on the pier and started to grin. “Quite a lack of female anything, in fact,”
he said.
“Maybe
we could have dinner together,” Jack said.
“I’d like you to meet someone.”
“That
sounds good,” Jethro said.
They
got close enough for Jack to see the other man’s face clearly. “You did all right for yourself,” Jack
said. Jethro’s guy was gorgeous. He and Daniel looked good together.
“You
too,” Jethro said with an admiring glance.
Jack
sighed as he looked at Daniel. It wasn’t
fair. He just got better looking every
year. Of course, he said that about
Jack, too, but Jack knew that was love talking.
When
they moved alongside the pier, Jethro threw the rope to his friend who easily
tied it off, then stood there waiting for Jethro to drop the anchor. “Have a nice sail?” he asked when Jethro’s
feet hit the pier.
“Yes,”
Jethro said, giving him a quick kiss.
“Jack, this is Tony, Tony DiNozzo. Tony, Jack O’Neill.”
“Jack,”
Tony said with a friendly smile. “I take
it this is yours, then?” he said, gesturing to Daniel. “We’ve been getting to know one another.”
“Yes,” Jack said, pulling Daniel to his side and wrapping an arm around his
waist. He was feeling bold, and ready to
retire. Not that he was really worried
about it. It wasn’t like anyone was
going to drum him out of the service with a dishonorable discharge. Sometimes being a hero who saved the Earth a
hundred times over had its benefits.
“Jethro, this is Daniel Jackson.
Daniel, Leroy Jethro Gibbs. He
goes by Jethro.”
Jethro
shook Daniel’s hand. “Nice
to meet you.”
“How’d
you know I was here?” Jack said.
“Where else would you be?” Daniel said.
Jack was astonished Daniel had actually left the bookstore before dark. He felt flattered; maybe Daniel did love him
more than books. “How’s dinner sound?”
he said. “The four of
us?”
“Sounds
great,” Daniel said. “There’s a little
Italian place right down the street. It
smelled fantastic as I was walking by.”
In
easy agreement, the four of them walked down the pier and onto the street that
paralleled the sea. Tony and Jethro
spoke quietly, while Jack got Daniel caught up on how he knew Jethro.
When
they reached the restaurant, Daniel and Tony entered ahead of them, and Jack
saw Jethro watching Tony’s ass the same way he was watching Daniel’s. Catching Jethro’s eyes, he said, “We are a
couple of lucky bastards, you know that?”
“Believe
me, I do,” Jethro said in all sincerity.
Jethro entered the restaurant, and Jack had one foot over the threshold
when he turned around and easily found Jethro’s boat, Christmas lights still
blinking merrily. A wild joy filled
Jack’s heart, and he stared a moment longer before following Jethro through the
doorway.
The
End
Merry
Christmas!!
If you
enjoyed the story, please let me know: ladyra11@yahoo.com
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