Why, Indeed? (2/2)

      Kay Kelly (wilusa@earthlink.net)
      Mon, 17 Nov 2003 15:31:00 -0500

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      --------
      Stunned as he was by Joe's revelations, Methos hadn't
      missed the hint in the Watcher's "no time to keep
      secrets" line. He'd been mulling over his own secrets
      most of the morning, and still hadn't decided what to
      do about them.
      
      Joe broached the subject before he'd finished his first
      beer of the day. "Time for the question I meant to ask
      you. Are you going to tell them you're Mac's father--
      and he's Richie's?"
      
      Methos said honestly, "I don't know."
      
      Joe's jaw dropped. "What's the problem? I know you
      want to claim Mac as your son. You couldn't do it with
      Richie dead--whether or not he really was--because if
      Mac learns Immortals can have kids, he'll be able to
      put the dates together on his own and realize Richie is
      his. I agreed with you that with Richie dead by his
      hand, that probably would have killed him. But not
      now! They'll both be delighted."
      
      "I haven't decided, okay? I'm still thinking about it."
      
      Joe gave an exasperated grunt.
      
      "You've promised to keep it to yourself," Methos
      reminded him. "My decision, whichever way it goes."
      
      Joe grunted again.
      
      Methos adjourned to the deck, cold though it was, and
      brooded there for the next hour.
      
      
      
      
      //Joe's right. There's nothing that should hold me back
      now. We put the Horsemen business behind us years
      ago. I'm sure MacLeod will be as happy with me as a
      father as with Richie as a son.
      
      But male Immortals can only impregnate mortal
      women, and the women always die in childbirth. Will
      either of them be pleased to know their birth killed
      their mothers?
      
      How will the knowledge that it can happen affect their
      sex lives? Pregnancies are rare. MacLeod lived with
      Tessa Noel for over a decade--undoubtedly not using
      birth control, since she knew what he was--and she
      never conceived. But if they know it can happen, and
      will kill the woman, will they be too inhibited to enjoy
      sex at all?
      
      Or will they simply use birth control, as they'd have
      to do with most women in any case, and be grateful for
      the warning?
      
      I keep coming back to the fact that their birth killed
      their mothers. Maybe, with pregnancies as rare as
      they are, I could skip telling them that part?
      
      I told Joe that MacLeod is my son while MacLeod was
      agonizing over having killed Richie. Before Joe knew
      how Richie fits into the picture, he urged me to tell
      MacLeod the truth because he was alienated and
      depressed. It would have meant the world to him to
      know that he really is a MacLeod, courtesy of his
      mother...that he was loved and wanted by both
      parents...that he has a living father who STILL loves
      him.
      
      My son needed me then. But I couldn't tell him
      anything because it would have led him to the truth
      about Richie's paternity, and that would have
      shattered him completely.
      
      He needed me THEN. He doesn't need me in that way
      NOW. He'd been comfortable with his identity as
      Duncan MacLeod of the Clan MacLeod for centuries,
      and he's comfortable again; Richie's being alive was all
      it took to straighten him out.
      
      Richie is young enough, and a new enough Immortal,
      that he and MacLeod could have a real father-son
      relationship. But MacLeod and me? I doubt it. I've had
      more experience, but not much of it is relevant in the
      21st century. We're equally mature men.//
      
      As the sun sank visibly lower in the sky, he urged
      himself to reach a decision.
      
      //They could be back any minute.
      
      Is Joe right about this being "no time to keep secrets"?
      
      If I don't level with them, he'll keep nagging me...//
      
      Suddenly, he sensed the two approaching Immortals.
      Sensed them, of course, before he saw them on the dock.
      
      He felt a rush of affection for both of them.
      
      And all at once, he knew what really mattered.
      
      //Duncan MacLeod and I have laid our lives on the line
      for each other, more times than I care to count.
      Hopefully, we'll still be doing it at the turn of the next
      millennium.
      
      But he's been risking his life for me out of friendship. Is
      there even a chance he'd take more risks for me, foolish
      risks, if he knew I'm his father?
      
      Be honest. Have I taken risks for him--at least before
      I knew him well--that I wouldn't have taken if he
      weren't my son?//
      
      He had his answer.
      
      
      
      
      While MacLeod and Richie were taking turns in the
      shower and changing their clothes--in Richie's case,
      changing from one ill-fitting outfit of MacLeod's to
      another--Joe arched his eyebrows and said, "Well?"
      
      Methos replied tersely, "Follow my lead. Don't
      volunteer anything."
      
      He waited until they'd scraped together and eaten an
      early dinner. When they were relaxing over their
      beverages of choice, he set his beer aside and said, "I
      know it's been hard for all of us to absorb everything
      that's happened today. Maybe I should let this go for
      now...but I can't."
      
      He looked from one to another of his companions. All
      three were clearly interested, but only two appeared
      puzzled.
      
      That would change.
      
      "MacLeod," he said quietly, "did you notice that from
      the day we met, I took a special interest in you? Did
      you ever wonder about it?"
      
      MacLeod looked flustered. "To tell the truth..." He
      reflected briefly, then admitted, "My life has been so
      hectic lately, so much going on, that it never struck
      me. But when I think back, I can see it."
      
      Methos smiled. "All right. The fact is that I've been
      keeping a secret. *Guarding* this secret, which is
      critically important, for centuries."
      
      MacLeod and Richie leaned forward, listening intently.
      
      "It became even more crucial within the last few
      years. I knew I had to share my knowledge with
      someone. And there was a reason why you, MacLeod,
      were the obvious choice.
      
      "But while I was weighing what and how to tell you,
      bad things happened. You went through the Dark
      Quickening. I fell in love with Alexa and had to cope
      with her illness and death.
      
      "I wasn't sure of your stability after the Dark
      Quickening. At different times, you were on the outs
      with Joe and with Richie.
      
      "Then you learned about my past with the Horsemen.
      For a while after that, I didn't think you'd want to hear
      anything I had to say."
      
      He sneaked a look at Joe.
      
      //Here's where I surprise you, my friend.//
      
      "In fact," he went on, "there came a time when I felt
      I had to share the secret with someone else. Not the
      ideal person--it was just a stopgap measure.
      
      "Remember, Joe? A few years back, when I gave you a
      sealed letter to pass on to Cassandra?"
      
      The Immortals looked stunned, and Joe almost choked.
      
      The letter was real--everything Methos was saying
      was true. But Joe undoubtedly hadn't guessed what it
      dealt with. After a few moments he managed to say,
      "Yeah, I remember. I had no idea what was in it, of
      course. But I'm sure she received and read it."
      
      Methos nodded. "Right. Despite the bad blood between
      us, she got in touch with me and we discussed it.
      
      "Like I said, it was you I really wanted to tell, MacLeod.
      But when I was getting close to doing it again--"
      
      MacLeod grimaced. "You had reason to doubt my
      stability again."
      
      "Yes. First I didn't believe in the demon, thought you
      were mentally ill. By the time I learned the demon was
      real, you weren't ill exactly, but you were depressed,
      with good reason."
      
      Richie cleared his throat. "I guess I was the reason.
      Listen, Methos--if you're  going to tell Mac this big
      secret now, do you want me to get out of earshot? It's
      okay, my feelings won't be hurt."
      
      //Grandson, my already high opinion of you just shot
      up even higher.//
      
      "Thanks, Richie, but that won't be necessary. I've
      decided to tell all three of you. Joe already knows part
      of the secret, but not all.
      
      "I was in Paris during the French Revolution--"
      
      The suddenness of that leap startled all of them.
      Especially Joe; it wasn't a part of the story he knew. He
      blurted out, "*The* French Revolution? In the 18th
      century?"
      
      "That's the one. I was in Paris...and I helped Darius
      escape.
      
      "Darius had a child with him, a 2-year-old boy named
      Marcellus. If that doesn't sound like an 18th-century
      French name, it's because he was an Immortal 2-year-
      old boy."
      
      MacLeod and Richie winced. Even if they'd never
      encountered anyone made Immortal at such a
      horrifically young age, they'd thought about the
      possibility.
      
      "Darius had assumed responsibility for him...but there
      was more to it." Methos looked back and forth between
      the two Immortals. "He told me Marcellus was *his
      biological son,* fathered before he became a priest."
      
      They both gasped.
      
      Methos stole a glance at Joe.
      
      //No lying here, Joe. Just a little misdirection. The
      encounter during the French Revolution was real, and
      that WAS when Darius first admitted his paternity.
      
      Can I help it if they assume it was only then that I
      learned Immortals can father children?//
      
      He turned back to the Immortals. "Darius told me he
      learned from personal experience and later research
      that male Immortals are fertile, very infrequently,
      and only with mortal women. The children can be
      either sex, but they're always pre-Immortal.
      
      "Very few Immortals understand this. Most who do
      know they have children get as far away from them
      as they can--to prevent enemies' doing to their
      children what an enemy of Darius did to his."
      
      Tears were welling in MacLeod's eyes.
      
      //Good, he doesn't question it. He knows Darius
      wouldn't lie. And whatever he may think of me, he
      can't imagine my having a reason to misquote Darius
      on a point like this.//
      
      MacLeod reached out to clutch Methos's arm. "Darius
      is dead. What's become of the child? Is he still alive?"
      
      "Yes," Methos said gently. "That's what I've been
      leading up to. After I saved them during the
      Revolution, Darius asked me to promise that I'd take
      responsibility for Marcellus if anything happened to
      him.
      
      "I've been his guardian since Darius died in '93. I
      provide a good home for him, with a wonderful young
      woman, a former Watcher named Jillian O'Hara, as
      his nursemaid. I visit him often, and"--yes, it was true--
      "I love him."
      
      He could see that Joe was more dazed than the
      Immortals. Joe had known about Darius's son. But he
      hadn't known whether he was still alive. And he
      hadn't been aware Methos had discussed the subject
      with Darius, or ever met him again, after the priest
      helped him to see the truth about Margaret MacLeod's
      pregnancy in 1592.
      
      Methos continued, "At the time Darius died, MacLeod,
      it's believed he admired you more than he ever had
      any other Immortal. I'm guessing he still thought I'd
      be the best guardian for Marcellus because I've proven
      I'm very good at *surviving.*" He made a face. "But I
      think you can understand why I hoped to recruit you
      as a backup."
      
      "Yes," MacLeod said softly. "I can also see why
      Cassandra was the best alternative, with her love of
      children. You and she may have been enemies, but
      you know her very well."
      
      "Methos?" There were tears in Richie's eyes, too. "Do
      you think I could...see Marcellus, someday? If I'm very
      careful not to lead enemies to him?"
      
      After unexpectedly having to blink to clear his own
      vision, Methos said, "He'd love it."
      
      
      
      
      It was nearing midnight when Methos and Joe left
      the barge. As soon as they were alone on the dock Joe
      began grousing, "Why didn't you tell them?"
      
      "I did," Methos retorted. "Care to bet on how long it will
      take MacLeod to figure out they're father and son?"
      
      "You know what I mean. He could have handled the
      truth."
      
      Methos smiled, recalling another long-ago exchange
      with Joe.
      
      Once again he said wryly, "Why would I tell the
      TRUTH?"
      
      
      
      
      (The End)
      
      --------

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