Commitment
by elfin
Quiet against the background
of howling wind and beating rain, Devon stepped into the dry warmth of
Kitt's garage and closed the door behind him.
"Bonnie?"
She turned, finger to her lips. "Ssh."
He dropped his voice to a whisper. "How are they?"
"Michael
refused to leave Kitt, so…." He followed her gaze and smiled fondly at
what he saw. The battered sofa had been pulled up from the rest area
and Michael was asleep on it, lying on his side, one blanket rolled up
under his head as a pillow, another covering him, tucked in by Bonnie
no doubt.
Kitt's was parked close by, scanner dark, prow
touching the edge of the sofa at a slight angle. Michael's left arm was
stretched out over the black body, bent at the elbow, fingers spread on
one closed headlight.
It was a stark contrast to the scene that
had met them earlier in the day in the previously peaceful little
Nevada town of Commitment. They'd been unable to get too close in the
sedan; a five-deep crowd had formed around the barely restrained chaos
blocking the road, so he and Bonnie had been forced to get out of the
car and to investigate on foot.
Over the shoulders and
between the heads of the men and women who'd congregated, they caught
sight of a man in a brown leather jacket standing against Kitt's
driver's side door. He had one hand on the back of the neck of a young
girl whose head he was holding through the car's open window, throat
pressed against the sill.
Michael was a foot or so behind him,
saying something they couldn't quite hear, the other man's head turned
to him, an argument ensuing. They didn't even realise he had a gun
until the shot rang out. Next to Devon, Bonnie screamed, and he
belatedly realised that neither Michael, nor the poor girl being held
hostage had been fired at. But Kitt. A direct, point-blank-range shot
into the dash.
Michael's cry rang out over the collective yell of the crowd.
Devon
felt an ice-cold chill wiped out almost immediately by the flush of
adrenaline as he watched, helpless, while Michael struck out, cracking
the gunman's head against Kitt's roof, surprising and unbalancing him
enough to allow the girl to break free. Michael won the thankfully
short fight, dropping their attacker to the ground, getting hold of the
gun.
Devon and Bonnie pushed their way through the crowd, and
at the moment that they made it to the front, Michael aimed the gun
directly into the now frightened man's face, shouting, screaming; he
was going to kill him, revenge for his partner's life, and his voice
broke on Kitt's name, anger for now in place of grief.
Reaching
out instinctively, Devon had denial on his lips when he thought he
heard Bonnie actually trying to reassure him. He turned to her, stared
at her; "what?!"
"Kitt's fine!"
Trying to get that
through to Michael though… he was still yelling at the man on the
ground, one heavy foot in the middle of the man's chest, choking off
the pleas for his life as Michael tightened his finger on the trigger.
Something
stopped him; stopped him from murdering the man he'd believed had just
murdered his partner. And for a moment Devon hadn't a clue what it was.
Then he saw it - Michael's glance at the Comlink on his wrist - and
taking a few steps forward he heard the incessant beeping, heard
Michael's broken voice say, "Kitt?"
"I'm here, Michael. He didn't hurt me."
"How…?"
And
then Bonnie was there, crouching down at Michael's side, not touching
him but telling him, "His CPU isn't located behind the voice panel, and
it's protected by the same MBS coating as the car… there's some damage
but it's to the the engine, not to Kitt. I promise you, Michael, he's
fine."
Everything seemed to freeze. Michael, shaking hard, his
attention caught between Bonnie and the Comlink, glancing over his
shoulder at his partner. "Kitt?"
"Michael," the voice came from the Comlink. "It's
me. Please… I know that man deserves everything coming to him but don't
kill him. Please don't kill him. I'm fine, Michael, I promise you."
"Kitt… he shot you."
"My dashboard, Michael, not me. I'm safe, I'm fine."
"I don't…. Kitt…?"
"The
last thing you said to me, Michael, as we entered this terrible place,
was 'isn't about time Devon gave us some time off?' and I reminded you
that he'd given us some time off, and you'd spent it helping a young
woman with large breasts who turned out to be a serial car thief who'd
only been interested in me."
Devon watched Michael lower the
gun, wrap his right hand over the Comlink on his left wrist, and
finally raise his foot from the attacker's chest. He took control then,
lifting the gun from Michael's loose grip before leaving him in
Bonnie's care, smoothing everything over with the town's chief of
police, ensuring the gunman was arrested and charged. Bonnie arranged
for Kitt to be taken back to the Foundation - only thirty miles from
Commitment - and when the low-loader arrived, Michael went with them,
refusing to leave him, despite Kitt's continuing reassurance that he
was perfectly all right.
Michael muttered something in his sleep, moved his fingertips over Kitt's closed headlight, and settled again quickly.
Devon watched with growing concern. "What happened today, Bonnie?"
She
shrugged, shook her head. "I don't know. Maybe he does need a break."
But he wasn't convinced. It was something more, something deeper.
Something that would explain the sight in front of him, Michael with
Kitt, a sight that was as touching as it was making him uneasy. "He had
a shock. We have no idea what happened before that girl's life was
threatened, before Kitt was shot." Michael hadn't told them, hadn't
said very much to anyone, just stayed close to Kitt. "But we could take
a wild guess. Something persuaded Kitt to lower his window. If Michael
was forced to choose between that girl and his partner…. I don't know,
Devon, how far can anyone be pushed before they break?"
It was a
question he didn't have an answer to. How much had they asked of
Michael over the years? He'd never really considered the idea that he
would crack one day, break down and kill someone.
"It's just one
possibility," Bonnie broke his train of thought. "He might have just
had one too many pot-shots taken at them. He did think that man had
hurt - killed - Kitt. How was he supposed to react?" Again, Devon had
no answer. "Let them rest. If Michael won't talk to us, maybe Kitt
will, now that he can."
With a soul-deep sigh, he nodded and
allowed Bonnie to lead him out of the garage, dimming the lights on the
way, closing and locking the door behind them, leaving the partners
alone to come to terms with whatever they needed to.