RESURRECTION by Alison Email: xalison@excite.com Category: Response to challenge Disclaimer: Not mine, etc Archive: Wherever you like! Summary: This is in response to the AprilTopica challenge: JTS, one year on. Arlington Cemetery Sunday, April 20, 2003 AGENT REYES: Arlington Cemetery is quiet and still, this early in the morning. I've never been here this early; the sun has only just risen and the mist is still lying in pale drifts across the peaceful green field, making the rows of identical white stones seem as insubstantial as mist themselves. I stand at the top of the hill, looking down the view I have come to know well in the last year. The cemetery is deserted now, but later it will be crowded; today is Easter Sunday, and many people will come today, this day of all days, to spend a little time at the grave of friends or sons, brothers, fathers, husbands; time to remember, to grieve, and perhaps to draw comfort from their faith, and hope. The graves I have been helping to tend the last few months lie a little way away along the path, and I begin to walk in that direction, in search of the man I have come to meet. I see him from a long way away, his back turned to me, a dark shape gradually resolving itself through the mist. His head is bowed, and I don't need to see his face to know that he is crying. His shoulders are shaking, his hand going frequently to his face to wipe away tears. I stand behind him, reluctant to interrupt. Reluctant too to alarm him; he's been in hiding for the last year, and only agreed to meet me here after much persuasion. It took us a long while to track him down; me and Yves and Kimmy; then to win his trust to the point where he would agree to meet me. Maybe he feels that he has nothing more to lose. If so, I have a surprise for him. Eventually he straightens his shoulders and looks up, a heavy sigh escaping him, and looks around for the first time, his head turning as his gaze drifts over the view and the many, many graves. I judge the time is right, and clear my throat in a quiet cough. He spins round, startled, and I see his face for the first time. Bertram Byers. There's not much resemblance to his son; similar height, but this man is heavily built and muscular. His eyes are brown, not blue, deepset, and betray nothing but suspicion. I guess John must take after his mother. I smile and extend my hand to him. "Mr ... Fitzgerald? I'm Monica Reyes. Thank you for coming to meet me." He nods briefly, a muscle in his cheek twitching. He's not as composed as he thinks he is. He looks me up and down, still suspicious. "Agent Reyes." His voice is nothing like John's, either; deeper in register and harsh. But perhaps he's entitled to be, after what he's been through in the last year. I move up beside him and we stand together, looking down at the grave and the simple marker bearing his son's name. I stoop and place my spray of white roses at the foot of the marker. I've brought flowers every month or so; all of us, Yves, Kimmy, Jimmy, John Doggett and I, and Scully before she disappeared, make sure all three graves are well tended. Appearances must be kept up, after all. As I straighten up I hear a muffled sob, and he wipes his hands over his eyes again. He turns his back and steps a couple of paces away, standing there with his back to me. I hear a broken whisper "Sorry ..." So I wait, and in a few minutes he's regained his composure and turns back to me, but his eyes are drawn downwards again to the stone. He tries to speak again. "Sorry ... today is the first time ... this is the first time I've been here since ..." He breaks off again, swallowing hard. I nod with partly feigned sympathy. Now is not the right time to betray my knowledge of him and the troubled relationship between father and son. Nor to betray my opinion of a man who could drive his son away and refuse to see him for ten years, then greet him with a blow to the face when they met again. But then, I remind myself, I'm not here today for Bertram Byers' sake, but for his son's. I stand quietly aside, and in a while he speaks again, not looking at me but letting his gaze wander over the peaceful field dotted with graves. "You were here, weren't you? You came to the funeral." "Yes, I was here." He turns to face me. "I didn't even do that for him. Didn't even come to my own son's funeral." "I understand why it wasn't possible. And I think John understood .... would have understood it too." He laughs humourlessly. "You have no idea .... No, I'm sorry. That was uncalled for. But how well did you know John?" "I wouldn't say we were close friends, but I got to know all three of them fairly well the last year. They helped me and my partner a lot." He looks at me in silence. His eyes are reddened. "You still probably knew him better in that time than I did in the whole of the last ten years. Did he tell you about him and me?" "No, he never talked about you. But Frohike told me what happened last time they saw you." He breathes deeply. "Did he tell you I refused to see John for ten years ... that the first time I saw him after that, I hit him in the face? That even after that, when it was proved to me he'd been right all along, I still didn't have the guts to stand up alongside him for the truth? That I let him down again, ran away to save my own skin? "I don't think he believed that for a minute." He shakes his head. "You don't know .... you can't know. After the way I treated him, the things I said ... not just last year, but for years, even before we fought. I don't think I ever told him how proud I was of him. My son, my bright, successful, handsome son ... he was going to do so much. I had such hopes for him. And then he threw it all away. I couldn't forgive him. It never crossed my mind that he was right. All I could think of was that he'd let me down, thrown everything away, all his opportunities, a promising career, the start I'd given him ...." He trails off. "I couldn't forgive him." I move closer and put a hand on his arm. "Mr Byers, I do know that John didn't blame you for a minute. I know it hurt him that you didn't believe him, and he did feel he'd let you down. But he never stopped being proud of being your son." He shakes his head again. "I wish I could believe that." That sounds like a good cue for my next move. I tug gently on his arm. "Will you walk with me?" He shoots me a puzzled look - I still haven't given him a clue as to why I asked him to come here - but moves slowly after me, casting one last regretful look back at the stone. He mutters something under his breath. It sounds like "I never told him I loved him." I squeeze his arm, and we walk for a few minutes in silence. He's not a stupid man, and soon he will start to wonder why I asked to meet him here. We walk together down the path towards the parking lot where John Doggett is waiting for me. The mist is clearing, and it's going to be a warm day. The parking lot is still almost deserted, except for John Doggett's car and another battered saloon a few yards away. Doggett gets out of the car as he sees us approach, lifting a hand in greeting. I introduce them, and they shake hands. Doggett winks at me when he thinks Mr Byers isn't watching. None of us pay any attention to the other car, a dingy old Chevy. The preliminaries over, Mr Byers looks from one of us to the other. "Agents .. I must confess I don't know why you've asked to see me today. Except that it's a year since ... since John died. Is there something I can do for you?" Doggett takes over. "Not exactly, Mr Byers ... it's more the other way about. It's more what we can do for you." He shrugs. "What can you do? My son is dead and nothing is going to change that. Unless ..." He looks from one of us to the other as a thought strikes him. "You can tell me about him. Tell me everything you remember. Everything he said, everything he did ... I missed ten years of his life. I want to know everything you can tell me." Doggett catches my eye. "There's no need." He frowns, confused and angered. "What?" I look beyond him to the tall figure getting out of the back of the Chevy. "Ask him yourself." Bertram Byers looks over his shoulder to see what I'm looking at; I can't see his face but I see the reaction shake his whole body as he recognises the man walking towards him. It must be like looking back twenty years; John Byers looks like he must have as a young man fresh out of college, clean shaven and baby faced with untidy collar length hair, in jeans and a teeshirt and sweater. And he's smiling at his father in a way I've never seen him smile before. "Dad." Mr Byers cries out in disbelief and joy, and reaches out his arms for his son. John grabs him in a tight hug and they embrace wordlessly, hard, faces buried in each other's shoulders. Silently at first; then I hear harsh sobs, and see John Byers stroke his hands comfortingly over his father's shoulders. His father is calling his name again and again, brokenly, all the pent up feeling of so many years released as he holds his son for the first time after so long. John looks at me over his father's shoulder; there are tears on his face too. He smiles at me and mouths a silent "Thank you" before hugging his father tight again. I tear my eyes away, not wanting to intrude on such a private moment, and find Doggett looking at me with a grin on his face. This has touched him too, and he's not ashamed to let me see. For all his tough-guy exterior, he's one of the kindest men I know. He's also one of the most practical, and his eyes are roaming over the parking lot and beyond. We were pretty sure we weren't followed, and that no-one else knew we were meeting here, but you can never be too paranoid - as the guys have always told us. He signals to Byers, who straightens up, nodding. "Dad .... we have to get out of here." Bertram Byers blinks, confused. Shock and deep emotion have made him slow. "What ... where ..." His son smiles at him affectionately. "You're coming with me, of course. We have a safe house, and now that I've found you again, I'm not going to let you go." "We ...?" "Me and Langly and Frohike, of course. Come on." "Oh, yes ..... my God, John, I've got so many questions. What happened? How did you escape? Where have you been .. " He breaks off, staring at his son in wonder. "God, John, I can't believe it ... you're alive!" John Byers looks at his father with love and concern shining out of his eyes. It's like a complete role reversal of father and son; he slips his arm round his father's shoulders and leads him gently towards the car. "Come on Dad, we can talk later. I've got a lot to tell you." I hope his father has a few things to tell him, too. Bertram Byers is still confused, and I can't blame him. He follows his son obediently back to the car and gets into the passenger seat beside him, still unable to take his eyes off John. He's temporarily dumbstruck, all his questions forgotten as he begins to realise that, today of all days, his only son has been given back to him from the dead. END