PLEASE NOTE: This is a post-ep for Jump the Shark that offers a resolution that differs from the implications of the conclusion for the episode. If you have not seen or do not care to see this episode or do not wish to read fanfic that deals with this episode, please delete this note. Disclaimer: The characters contained in this story are the creative property of 1013 Productions and FOX Broadcasting and are being used without their permission. Spoilers: Jump the Shark (US XF 9X15), The Lone Gunmen (S1) Rating: PG-13 Keywords: Lone Gunmen Classif: S, post-ep Summary: Extraordinary men meet in ordinary time. 21st Sunday in Ordinary Time by Martha marthalgm@yahoo.com It was too damn confusing. Running from a certain death should not have gone this smoothly - not with everything else that had gone wrong for them until a few hours ago. Meeting a deadline for their newspaper had more obstacles, Byers wistfully thought. The paper. Their life's work until this last year, when little equipment and even lesser funds made them abandon their mission and almost everything had to be sold just to pay the rent. At least they were alive, which was more than he could say for John Gilnitz or whatever his real name turned out to be. Yves had known that there was a chance - a small chance - that the virus could mutate into a benign state as the casing disintegrated, killing its carrier but becoming harmless when airborne. She had waited for that validation without passing that on to the Gunmen but had steeled herself for the worst. For getting them out of that room and covering their escape, Yves was promised payment of the vaulted databanks of all of their research to keep safe. She would probably also take some of their personal items as mementos. If they asked nicely, Byers thought, they might be able to get them back someday. She also promised to provide for Jimmy, for her father and his organization would not stop in their plans to further develop the toxic virus. When they learned of the failure - and particularly of her involvement in that failure - the lives of Jimmy and the Gunmen would be in danger. They had had a Doomsday Plan in effect for years. One phone call, at any time of the day or night, to a Baltimore number would set it in motion. New identifications and enough money to get them out of town would be available within an hour of the call. All they had to do was get there. Panicked, terrified, short on time and long on journey, they had each made their way to a corner coffeehouse in Baltimore by 5:30 the next morning. Until today, they never imagined that they would ever have a need to take such a drastic action. It seemed as good a time as any - they had nothing to go back to and waiting for some henchmen to catch them unaware was not how they wanted to continue through life. In a booth near the back, next to the emergency exit, they argued about last-minute changes to their arrangements. The harsh yellow light of sunrise streamed in through the glass wall that gave them an unobstructed view of the intersection outside. "Two years," Langly was mumbling, the soda straw still in his mouth. Frohike overruled him. "That's way too soon for what we just went through. I don't think Yves' father will give up that easily. You shouldn't be that anxious to see my pretty face again." "How about ten, then?" Byers looked over to Langly, who shook his head and glanced back over his shoulder to check the traffic pattern outside. Byers turned to Frohike for confirmation, but he only found a stare from the pair of tired eyes across the table. It seemed as if the elder Gunman was unwilling to acknowledge the chance that he might not be alive ten years from now. They agreed to five years. Splitting up had not been an easy decision to reach, but people would be looking for the three of them together. Separately, they would draw little attention. Survival was the key issue. When the time came to finally leave the coffeehouse, they found themselves standing on the pavement of that intersection corner several feet apart from the other, with the morning pedestrians making their way in-between and around them. No one wanted to be the first to turn away, and good-byes at this point would not be heard over the traffic. Frohike waved Langly on to a transit bus that had pulled up while they stood there frozen. Langly fumbled in his jeans' pockets for change while ascending the steps, looking back over his shoulders at the other two. He made his way down the aisle, ducking his head to keep the guys in sight through the windows as he made his way to an empty seat on that side of the bus. He had just enough time to sit down and place his palm against the window as a good-bye gesture before the bus took off, sputtering exhaust smoke down the street. To Byers, it was a harsh flashback to how they must have looked to Jimmy just a few hours before. It so unnerved him that he forgot to return the wave. Frohike waited until the bus disappeared into the morning traffic before turning back to his remaining colleague. Bringing his right hand up to his forehead to give Byers a salute, he quickly pivoted and rounded the corner, heading down another street. Byers, now left alone, jogged up to the corner to see if he could make out Frohike's form amongst the crowd but, after a moment's time, he still could not find him. Taking a deep breath and fighting back a few tears, he made a 180-degree turn and stepped toward the curb, waited for the light to turn green, and began the final walk away from his old life. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ Somewhere in Ohio He stared at his image reflected in the gas station bathroom mirror and wondered what he might have looked like had he not purposefully changed his appearance after That Day. Turning slowly to see one profile and then the other, his eyes never left the reflection as he tried to remember the longer hair and the dark-framed glasses of his youth. He snickered at the thought. `His youth.' That many years had not passed and he had been far from young even then. But it had seemed almost a lifetime, he sighed, since that time before. He searched the background of the reflection and tried to picture the other faces, the ones who were always beside him in the past. How much had their appearances changed, he wondered, and would he recognize them again? Would they be able to identify him with the short-cropped brown hair and aviator- framed glasses? With the t-shirts traded for the now- comfortable flannel? Curiosity got the better of him, and he reached into his shirt pocket and drew out the glasses. He had bought a cheap pair of sunglasses, two towns ago, simply for the color and the frame. He had punched out the dark plastic film that served as the lens and put them on, hoping to see some semblance of his old self in the mirror. It felt strange for him to have these yearnings. He had been on his own now for nearly five years. Five years of driving across the country. Five years of sacking out in the sleeping bag in the back seat of the car. Five years of never staying put in any town, small or large, for more than the few weeks he needed to scavenge for supplies and the temp work that paid him a few dollars for food and gasoline, until he ran out and had to stop again. He first came to realize that he had unlearned the language he had spoken for so many years. Not the English but his way of talking - the cadence of finishing one person's thought and stopping just in time to allow another to begin the pattern. To be so familiar and in-tune as to finish another's thoughts. He did not have many opportunities to just gab with someone - he was more afraid of having his voice recognized. Early on in his traveling, he wished that he could get his hands on one of those voice-synthesizing retainers that they had used on several jobs. An urgent knocking on the locked bathroom door interrupted his thoughts. He hastily switched to his real glasses and then let the next occupant in. He walked over to the car that he had left in the shade near a picnic area and picked up the road map left on the passenger seat. Spreading out the map on a nearby table and tracing the Ohio backroads with his finger, he calculated the remaining time it would take to reach his destination. He figured that there was a good chance that he could get there ahead of schedule. There were two things that they had all agreed upon That Day. One was that they were to never, *ever*, try to find or contact another until the appointed time and place. If someone was watching one of them, there was no need to give the others away. The second was to stay away from the computers. If any of them had taken a computer with them, the temptation to log on and visit one of their old haunts would have been too great. Those sites, those domains, would be closely monitored as well as the addresses of their old contacts. They each had their own style, their own signature, when online, and they could not be sure if those nuances had been embodied in some surveillance software and were lying in wait for them. It was best to avoid all contact. It had not been easy for him. He had practically grown up with his hands on a keyboard. After those first few days on the road, his fingers began to twitch from the forced hiatus of his normal routine. Whatever he did end up doing, he knew that he would have to work with his hands to get through the withdrawal. Luckily, thanks to Frohike and the needs of their aging van, he had learned a bit about car engines. He had had some training with tractor engines growing up, and the combined experience helped greatly during that first year on his own. He had kept mainly on the backroads and near farming communities, places where transient labor was a common occurrence. He could blend in and talk the talk and any suspicions were quickly set aside after a good day's work. He skirted around Nebraska in his traveling. Never one to yearn to return to the place where he grew up when living back East, it brought a chill to him to think that people could be spying on his family and the old homestead. The farther away he stayed from them, the safer that they would be. He gathered up the map and got back into the car. He was on his way home again - back to Byers and Frohike - the home he had dreamt of for the past five years. His only real home. ~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~ near Salinas, Kansas The date across the newspaper legend caught his eye. He squinted and brought the copy of the week-old Denver Post nearer to his face, cursing his old pair of glasses. There was something about the date that set off alarm bells in his head. July, he read. Is it July already, he asked out loud. He rested the paper on his lap and looked around to see if anyone else had heard him. From his seated vantage point on the breezeway just outside of the rented motel room, he saw no one standing around. The noise of the cab engines from the truckstop next door had probably muffled over his outburst, and he was grateful. He did not want to give people notice, in hindsight, that he might be planning something. He again looked at the date on the paper and settled back in the wooden chair to relive the memories triggered open a moment ago. He had hit the road back then in a peacoat and a seabag from an old Naval supply store, hitchhiking with a trucker who thought that he was an old ship buddy and had taken pity on him. They parted ways at a truckstop near Smithfield, North Carolina, where he had lucked into his first job working in its kitchen. Nursing a cup of coffee, he had overheard the counter waitress complain about begin shorthanded in the prep area, and he had volunteered his services in exchange for a meal until the next shift showed up. When the replacement also failed to show, he found himself being offered the job, and he accepted. He was now at his thirtieth truckstop job, give or take a few, cooking for the breakfast-to-lunch crowd just outside of Salina, Kansas. He liked the truckstop clientele. They helped him keep up his ear for the accents that stretched the continent, and the stories that they would tell the waitresses of the towns they came from and where they were heading next served as good intelligence for planning his next move. As for the waitresses themselves . . . He resisted the first few attempts as he sorted out the pros from the amateurs, from those looking for more than just a few hours of companionship. For acceptance meant entanglement, which made it harder to move on to the next town, the next state. And move on he would. He had purposefully avoided traveling near certain areas of the country. Miami, for instance, was forbidden. Prohibido. Although he felt quite certain that a new life and a warm bed could be found with a certain senorita from his past, he was even more certain that Miami would be one of the first places where people would start asking questions about him. On a similar note, Pontiac was also off-limits. He had not been home in many years. There would be few still alive who knew him back then, but there had been an agreement that they would stay away from their respective hometowns for everyone's safety. The best thing he found about working at the truck stops were the newspapers. Newspapers from all over the country, carried in by the truckers, found their way to the Formica countertops of the dining areas. He gathered up as many as he could when bussing the dishes and took them back to his room to read at his leisure. He could keep up with the national and regional news and those quirky local stories he found fascinating. He could also look for any leads as to the whereabouts of his former acquaintances, just to be sure that they had not gotten into any trouble. He focused again on the date of the newspaper and began calculating the amount of time needed to make the rendezvous from his current location. He figured that he still had a few days before he had to begin traveling. He got up, set the paper down on the chair, and entered his room to begin making a plan. ~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~@~ Sarasota, Florida He had returned to his room after the latest late-night panic button call to Mrs Butler's room. Mrs Butler, ninety-eight years old and weighing in at about ninety-eight pounds as well, had a habit of waking up in the dark and believing that she was in her coffin, buried alive. So she would press her panic button to see if anyone was going to come and dig her out. Every time that it happened, he would rush to her room and gently remind her of where she was and that she was not buried alive and that, even if she had been, there would be no panic button with which to summon help. He would tuck her back in bed, wish her sweet dreams, and wait by the door for a few moments to listen for any sounds of further distress before making his way back down the hall. There would be no more panic calls to Mrs Butler's room. This time, she managed to succumb to her fears and expired before the medical team arrived. He resumed his packing. This had been the fourth death at the facility so far this month, not altogether unusual for a nursing home, but it was beginning to make him uneasy. Too many deaths - for whatever the reasons - would invite questions as to the care, which would lead to a closer scrutiny of the nursing staff and the aides. He had already been through two close calls over the years and could see in the eyes of the awakened residents that the night's events would be repeated to the visiting relatives and friends over the next few days. The relatives would be concerned and insist upon answers from the home's management, and he would again be placed in the position of having to lie. Besides, he had caught himself absent- mindedly scratching the right-side of his jaw just underneath the chinline. It was a nervous habit he had developed in the years since he shaved off his beard, and it had served him well as his warning radar. Tomorrow or the next day, when he sensed the opportunity, he would disable an alarm and slip out one of the side doors. He liked living in Florida. It was warm and the weather was fairly consistent. There was also a high concentration of nursing homes with a yearly staff turnover rate of nearly three hundred percent on average. He had a Pennsylvania driver's license in the name of John Miller and a clean Social Security number to match, so he was never at a great disadvantage when applying for jobs. Most facilities were so desperate for help that beyond checking for a criminal background, they did not much care that you had only one reference and no formal training. How much training did it take to strip the beds of incontinent residents, walk with others down the halls, and oversee their meals? The more minimum-wage aides they had to supervise the patients, the more the nursing staff could concentrate on those who needed their expertise and not be bothered with babysitting duties. He also liked being with the elderly. Although they would ask questions about his growing up and his family, he never felt as if they were trying to pry out the past that he was trying to keep secret. Whatever they thought of a man in his forties with no wife, no children, and no pictures from home, he did not discourage. When they would tease that he must be running from the law, he would simply reply that they had found him out and wouldn't it be exciting for the other residents when the police arrived for the big capture. Of course, by now, he had been able to deliver those lines without breaking into a sweat and without the nervous laughter. He would pat their hands and move on to the next table or the next room but kept his ears open to any whisperings that might be going on behind his back. Just in case. There was the time that he had been in Corpus Christi, Texas, when Hurricane Eugene came ashore, and he had to evacuate nursing home patients to a high school gymnasium staffed with FEMA volunteers. Apparently it was standard procedure for these volunteers to gather next of kin and other personal information from the evacuees in case disaster befell them while in FEMA's care. He had put off filling out the forms for so long that it made one volunteer question out loud just what did he have to hide. When the hurricane finally passed and they were allowed back into their facility, he gathered his belongings and left town, certain that the volunteer had checked his meager information and found him out. He would not again be caught unprepared for those kinds of questions. Not like they were five years ago, he thought. He had always hoped that if they ever *did* have to run, it would be on their own terms, at a time of their choosing. Leaving everything they held dear - their work, their friends, without being able to say good-bye or even saying when they might return, to let everyone believe that they were dead - had not been an easy choice, but there were others besides themselves who would be harmed if they had not immediately run away. And now it was time to return. He had saved enough money over the past couple of years, knowing that neither Langly nor Frohike were likely to have done so. They would need an immediate cash source if they were unable to reach their contact. They would need money to buy new equipment, to start over again. And to make sure that they had a reserve should they have to bolt once more. ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ In public or out-of-the-way? DC or Baltimore or someplace else? When they had initially mapped out their escape and return, the steps of the Lincoln Memorial seemed a safe enough bet to finally meet up again. Over the years, they changed the location around DC; their requirements being that it had to be easily accessible (and escapable) by public transportation and with enough of a crowd to disappear back into if needed. The events of September, 2001, made them steer away from large public monuments that might be cordoned off at the last minute during national emergencies. That last morning that they had been together before heading south, west, and north, they had argued about the new spot. Frohike observed that baseball season would still be in full swing and suggested Camden Yards. Byers countered that they could not foresee a possible players' strike that would cancel games and the possibility that the Orioles might not be in Baltimore when the time came. Frohike scoffed at the idea of the Orioles *ever* leaving Baltimore, and Langly sniffed and reminded him of what happened to the Colts. Frohike did not further contest the point. "We're supposed to be dead, you know," Byers whispered, always aware that he could be overheard. "Coming back to Baltimore or even to DC is probably not a good idea." Langly played with the straw in his soda. "Should we even be trying to get back together?" The silence and the stern looks the other two shot towards Langly after he spoke answered his question, and he understood. *Not* getting back together, or at least not *planning* to get back together, would only hamper the incentive to keep on going after today. They each had to believe, needed to believe, that they would meet again. "We'll have to make a new start somewhere else, but I think, at least for the purposes of hooking back up, we should head for familiar ground." Frohike was making his point by tapping his finger on the table. "How about Union Station? We can get on a train and go anywhere after that." And so Langly found himself standing underneath the clock in the landmark's lobby, five years later on the planned date, nervously pacing about for over ninety minutes on a hot Sunday afternoon. He was almost afraid to take a bathroom break for fear that he would miss the other two and that they would leave early, believing that he had been unable to make it back. He considered buying a magazine and parking himself off to the side but his impatience won out, and he took another stroll over to the Information Desk and made himself look busy by reading the current arrival and departure schedules. Langly had lost track of the time staring up at the board, not even really reading the updates, when the rumbling footsteps of the recent arrivals on the staircases behind him made him turn around. He did not know why he kept on looking after the last of the crowd had passed. He would hear some hurried footfalls on the steps and think that it might be one of them, but it never was. Just one more passenger, Langly coaxed from the lobby, just one more to disembark the trains and please, this time, let it be one of his friends. Silence greeted his plea, mocking his hope. This is what I deserve, he thought, after all those years of cynicism. Why would anything go his way for him now? He was about to turn around, to return to the pacing around the lobby, when he heard another set of echoes from the staircases. Slow and heavy, weary steps, he thought, like someone who was tired or someone who was older. He froze at that thought and waited for the echoing to stop. When it did, an older - but recognizable - figure stood at the top of the steps, looking around and past him. Langly took a few steps forward, slowly at first, not wanting to frighten the new arrival and to give him time to be identified as someone familiar. He saw a smile cross the other man's face, and they both continued to venture forward. Frohike reached around Langly for a hug and buried the side of his face into Langly's chest. He had been unsure as to how he would greet the others - especially Langly, someone who had so aggravated him at times - but the loss of the familiar companionship with the other two that he had felt over the years was greater than any need for outward appearances. He held tight and did not try to hide his tears. Langly was not surprised by the gesture and was strangely comforted by the acceptance. Frohike had never seemed so happy to see him before, and Langly was not certain as to who was the more emotional at that moment. He returned the hug and, closing his eyes, rested his cheek on the top of Frohike's head. They were still hugging when Frohike heard rumbling sounds from Langly's stomach. "You're hungry. That figures." They parted, and Frohike looked around for the closest food court. "Come on, we both need something." When Langly did not make any move towards the exits, he added, "Don't worry. We said six o'clock, and I'm not even thinking of leaving without him until they throw us out of here." Pooling their money, they headed for the nearest place and got burgers, fries, and cokes. They sat down at a corner table that afforded them a wide view of the passing passenger traffic, in the off-chance that their missing companion might happen by. Neither spoke much at first, just offering general information as to their health and what they both did that morning, as if waiting to tell their full stories of the past few years until they were all reunited. Langly had just finished the last of the french fries when something - someone - caught his eye. The posture, the gait, seemed familiar, but the person had not yet turned around. Langly froze. Frohike noticed the change. "What's wrong?" "Is that him?" Langly's voice squeaked, gesturing to his right. At that moment, the person in question turned around, just as if he had heard their voices. A calming look of contentment passed over Byers' face as he made his way over to the table, not daring to break into a smile until he had gotten close enough to be certain that these were his friends. They all quickly hugged, and then Byers tugged them down into their seats so as not to draw further attention to their group. The three sat looking at each other, none knowing who should speak first. Byers broke the silence. "I got back in the area a few days ago. I've been making myself useful. I went by the old place." Frohike appeared shocked at this admission. "We said that we weren't going back there." "And we won't be." Byers' soft reply accompanied by the shaking of his head acknowledged that the warehouse, their home for so many years, no longer existed. "I was in Baltimore on Friday and picked up some supplies," gesturing to the bag he had been carrying. "The world went on without us - there's a whole new game out there now." "Does anyone know about us?" Langly asked softly and hesitated before continuing. "About us being back?" "If you mean alive, no. Everyone who thought we were gone still believes that." Tears returned to Frohike's eyes. "What about . . ." Byers put his hand on Frohike's shoulder to comfort him. "Word has been sent through the channels. We'll know soon." The three rose from the table on cue, gathered their possessions, and began walking back to the main lobby to make plans for their future. Byers looked up at the board over the Information Desk for the next set of departures. "Well, gentlemen, what will it be? Richmond, Philadelphia, or Trenton?" Langly groaned. "Not New Jersey. Please. Not New Jersey." Frohike thought it over for a moment before voicing his opinion. "I vote for Philly. I could go for some classic cheesesteaks." "But they make theirs with cheddar cheese." "So get it without." "It wouldn't be a *cheese*steak then, now would it?" Langly continued to argue with Frohike as they made their way to the ticket counter. "I mean, who came up with the idea of putting cheddar cheese on beef?" "You can get provolone, if you ask nice," Frohike teased. "Yeah, yeah." Some things never change, Byers thought. They had just reunited after being apart for five years, of knowing that nearly everyone who had known them before thought that they were dead and not knowing if they would ever see each other again until just now, and what are they doing? They're arguing about food. "Philadelphia it is, then," he said as he joined the line to buy their tickets. end