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Wind + Water - Tree in the Road
A MacGyver Fan-Fiction
by @emachinescat
@febuwhump day 12 / alt. 5 - hostage situation
Summary: AU of 2x21. The bank robbers make their escape with Mac, but this time there isn’t a tree in the road to slow them down. The rest of the team arrive at the marina just in time to see the robbers procuring a boat - and they have every intention of taking their hostage with them.
Characters: Mac, Jack, Riley, Bozer, Matty, the robbers from 2x21 (apparently their names are Booth, Pike, Dean and Ash)
Words: 4,129
Note: The Spanish is a mixture of my own adventure learning the language (I’m getting there) and a more advanced translator than Google. Hopefully there aren’t any mistakes, if so - I apologize to any Spanish speakers.
Keep reading here, or on AO3!
If you enjoy, please consider liking, commenting, or re-blogging, and you can follow me for more content like this! :)
“So, for the record, this wasn’t part of the deal,” Angus MacGyver informed his captors testily as he carefully steered the stolen Chevrolet down the narrow, debris strewn backroad toward San Juan Marina and Boat Rentals. Even though his eyes were on the road, he kept the gun pointed at him in his peripheral vision. He felt the eyes of the four bank robbers on him, so he continued, very aware that no appeal to logic or conscience that he made at this point would have any effect, largely because these men had depleted stores of both. Plus, they were desperate. “I said I’d get you out with the money if you left all the hostages behind,” he continued, then added pointedly, “All including me.”
One of the three robbers in the backseat, Pike, leaned forward to give their hostage a hearty slap on the back, which sent waves of agony shooting through his battered body. Mac’s sides, stomach, and back felt every kick and weighted punch, and his mouth tasted like blood. “Guess you shoulda been more specific,” he taunted, and Mac glanced back long enough to see the amusement on the man’s face.
“Honestly,” said the leader – his followers had called him Booth – “After giving us a glimpse of what you’re capable of, you really think we’d just let you go?” His tone made it clear that it wouldn’t have mattered if Mac had drawn out and made them sign an extensive contract expressly stating that he was to be left behind with the other hostages, nothing about his predicament would have changed. He’d gotten them out of a seemingly impossible situation, he’d made himself a valuable asset, and if there was one thing Mac understood about desperate people, it was that once they had something they saw as an advantage, they would never let it go.
The realization left a distinctly sour feeling in Mac’s stomach. He’d been seen and used as a tool before – in the army, he was a bomb defuser; for Phoenix, he was a kind of real-life troubleshooter. But even in the army, he’d still been a person whose life mattered. And now, he knew he was valued for so much more than just his skill set by his friends.
Here, though, with these four men who looked at him with a kind of contemptuous greed in their eyes, he was nothing but a tool, something to be used to their advantage, over and over, until his usefulness had run out, and then he would be discarded like a broken drill bit. To Booth, Pike, and the others, Mac was less than human, and it made him feel dirty and used and caused his chest to tighten anxiously despite his cool demeanor. He knew he had to find a way to get away, and soon. Otherwise, one of two equally unfortunate things was going to happen to him: Either he would be used to bargain their way off the island and then, as soon as they were safely away, he’d be shot and tossed overboard, or they would decide to keep and use him, and his life would become a living hell. Neither option was a possibility that Mac was willing to entertain, so he would keep his eyes out for the first chance of escape.
Noting once again the scattering of wreckage in and lining the road, Mac found himself hoping for a large piece of debris – perhaps a fallen tree or power line – would end up in their path. If they ended up having to get out of the car for any reason, that might give him the chance to plan an escape. Until then, with the five of them in such close quarters, with all but Mac armed, it was too risky to try anything. He’d wait for his opportunity, and then make his move.
***
Mac’s opportunity for escape never came, and as he reluctantly directed the vehicle into the marina, the knot it his stomach had imploded into a cavernous pit. Real tendrils of fear radiated through him, and a furious sense of injustice made his knuckles white and his fingers cramp from the grip he maintained on the steering wheel. Normally when he was out in the field and in a risky situation, he’d end up finding what he needed to make an escape or at the very least to put a significant hitch in the bad guy’s plan. It was something he’d come to take for granted, he realized, this bit of luck, that he always had something to work with. This time, he hadn’t been asking for much – just a piece of debris, a block in the road, on an island ravaged by a natural disaster! Something should have stood in their way. The statistical probability of the road being blocked at some point in the twenty-minute drive – especially considering the situation in Puerto Rico – was incredibly high. He’d counted on that blockage.
And while there had been a couple of branches scattered in their path, none were large enough to hold them up for long at all, and at no point had Mac been allowed out of the car. In the back of his mind, he remembered what Matty had said to him when she had first taken over. She didn’t want to be there when Mac’s luck ran out. He’d been quick to assure her that it wasn’t luck, that he was good at what he did, but now he had his doubts. If he wasn’t given anything to work with at all, how was he supposed to do what he was so good at?
Still, Angus MacGyver had never been one to give up, and he continued to keep his eyes peeled for anything at all he might be able to use to his advantage. Even if he couldn’t escape here and now, he would find a way to survive and get back to his friends. He always did.
“Stop here.”
Mac did as he was told, putting the car in park and waiting for further instructions. The gun was still trained on him, and he knew that none of his other captors would hesitate to put a bullet in him from behind if he made one move they didn’t like. “Dean, grab the kid,” Booth snapped, and the youngest of the robbers, the one who had been gearing up to kill all of the hostages and who couldn’t be any older than Mac himself, got out of the car, went around to Mac’s door, pulled the hostage out of the seat and shoved him forward. Mac forced himself not to fight back, because Dean’s gun was now pressed into the small of his back, and his voice was deadly as he ordered, “Move.”
The marina was fairly deserted, which would have been odd any other time, but it was midday and most people were either already out on the water or further inland, helping with cleanup and rebuilding. The only person in sight was the young woman working boat rentals. She had an open, kind face with eyes that had seen their fair share of suffering – it was a look Mac had seen in Carlos’s more vulnerable moments, and in the eyes of everyone he’d met while on the island.
“Hola,” she greeted, a bit flustered at the new arrivals. “¿Te puedo ayudar?” Mac thought that she probably didn’t see a lot of business nowadays. Tourists were the ones who rented boats more often than not – the locals usually had their own – and tourism had plummeted since the hurricane. Mac noticed that the bank robbers had hidden their weapons, other than the one at Mac’s back, and to the girl it must have looked like Mac and Dean were just walking close together, side by side. Maybe she thought they were a couple. Mac made sure his face was neutral, not wanting to give anything away and put this poor girl in danger. If only the marina had been deserted, with no one else in the crosshairs!
“Do I look like I speak Spanish?” Booth snapped impatiently.
The girl blinked, eyes wide, taken aback by the rudeness. “I – I’m sorry,” she stammered in heavily accented English. Mac’s heart went out to her even as he felt his revulsion for his captors grow. It literally would have expended the same amount of energy to treat the girl with an ounce of respect. These men were assholes just because they could be.
“We need a boat,” Booth ordered briskly. “Now.”
“Bien – ah, okay.” She looked scared that her accidental slip was going to get her yelled at again. “Our skippers are not on site at the moment, and most of our boats are being repaired. We do have one –”
“We’ll take it,” Booth growled, and the girl flinched back at the harshness of his tone. Tears forming in her eyes, she glanced around briefly at the other men in the party, her eyes landing on Mac last. He offered her a sympathetic half-smile, knowing that the girl – Mia, her name tag said – was probably having her worst day on the job yet. At least she didn’t know the true colors of the difficult customers she was dealing with.
As if worried Mac was trying to tip Mia off, Dean tightened his grip on Mac’s arm and rammed the barrel of the gun painfully into his back. Mac didn’t react other than to break eye contact with their hostess, who abruptly got back to her task. “Do you have a boating license that I can see?” Her dark eyes plainly showed she was afraid of the answer – afraid of what would happen if they did not have the proper documentation and she had to tell them no.
“I don’t have a damn license,” Booth answered, impatience rising with his voice.
“Lo siento – I’m sorry, you can’t rent a boat without a skipper if you don’t have a license.” At the fury on her tormentors’ faces, her eyes darted desperately to Mac, as if she had sensed he wasn’t like the others and would step out and ask his friends to give it a rest. Not wanting to risk her life, Mac felt guilt rise in him as he pointedly avoided her gaze. Her voice thick with emotion, she regrouped and offered, “But I can call and have someone here within the hour to take you out.”
Booth lost his temper completely. Slamming his fist down on the counter, he leaned over the cowering girl and hissed in a deadly tone that brooked no argument, “You will get us a boat now.” Mia stood frozen in shock, and Booth glanced back over his shoulder at his three men and their hostage. Collectively, they came to a silent agreement – obviously, the subtle approach wasn’t working, and they were running out of time. With deft movement, so seamless it could have been rehearsed, Dean let go of Mac’s arm and shoved him into Booth, who twisted his greedy, filthy hand in Mac’s hair for the second time that day. Mac grunted in pain as his head was yanked back and stilled his instinctive struggling as the sun-warmed barrel of Booth’s gun found the left carotid artery in Mac’s neck. “If you don’t,” Booth added grimly, “I’m going to kill him right before your eyes.”
Mia’s eyes darted to Mac’s once more and he saw the barely controlled terror just beneath the surface. She hesitated, and the gun jabbed deeper into Mac’s neck as the safety clicked off, and Mac fought the urge to squeeze his eyes shut as his heart jumped into overdrive. “You’ll be scrubbing his blood off this dock for the next year,” Booth promised, “and you’ll never get it off your pretty little hands.”
Mac thought for a terrifying moment that Mia was going to pass out or break down, as she swayed slightly on the spot, but then she steeled herself, an inner strength that Mac was proud to see flowing into her. She straightened her spine, offered a small, scared smile that was probably meant to be reassuring at Mac, and nodded curtly. “Okay,” she said in a thin voice, and it barely shook, though her hand did as she reached for a set of keys hanging on the wall behind her. “Just… don’t hurt him, please.”
As she slowly moved away from the wooden counter and motioned for the men to follow her along the dock to their new vessel, Booth yanked Mac’s head back fiercely and whispered, “I knew you would come in handy in some way,” and then shoved Mac forward, finally releasing his hair – Mac’s scalp ached and his neck had already developed a painful stiffness from being twisted back in such an uncomfortable position. The gun moved to the back of Mac’s head. The safety remained off.
Everything moved far too quickly after that. It seemed that no time had passed until Mac was being forced onto the deck of a small craft barely big enough for the five of them. Mac graciously offered to stay behind, and received a crack to the back of the head with the pistol butt in response. At some point, one of the robbers – Ash, Mac thought his name was – had stepped in and tied Mac’s hands behind his back with sturdy nautical rope. Mac hadn’t had a single opportunity to attempt escape throughout the whole process, as not only was Booth’s gun still at the base of his neck, but Pike’s own weapon was on the helpless Mia who stood on the dock, tears streaming down her face as she watched the men prepare to leave with their hostage. Mac knew that if he even thought about doing something stupid, she would be killed without a second thought.
And then many things happened at once – a battered orange car swerved into the parking lot, the sound of screaming sirens not far behind. Mac couldn’t help but grin when he saw who jumped out: his team, Riley, Bozer, and Jack – who had death in his eyes. Mac had seen that look many times before. Someone had threatened his partner. Mac didn’t envy Booth and his goons once Jack Wyatt Dalton got his hands on them.
Jack already had his own gun drawn as he raced onto the dock. His boots thunked hollowly against the boards as he sprinted for the boat, keen sights already on the bastard who had his paws on his kid.
But Booth had all the power here, with Mac in his clutches, and he knew it. And with the innocent civilian being held at gunpoint, he’d doubly covered his ass. Mac’s hope at seeing his team faltered when he realized that Jack’s being here really didn’t change a thing. It would just make this so much worse, because Jack would be forced to watch as Mac was taken, and when he could finally chase after them, it would probably be too late. As if to solidify this knowledge, Mac felt Booth’s hand twine in his hair, again – what was it with this guy and Mac’s hair, anyway? – and the gun was back beneath his jaw, Mac could feel the artery rapidly pulsing against the unyielding metal.
“You make one more step, and Boy Wonder here dies,” Booth shouted right in Mac’s ear. Mac locked eyes with Jack, who stuttered obediently to a stop, Riley and Bozer following suit. Even now, Mac knew that his partner was desperately searching for any opening, any shot he could take to save his friend.
“I’d put that gun down, if I were you,” Ash called out.
Jack glared at him, unrelenting. “Who invited Papa Smurf to the party?” he joked, but Mac clearly saw the anxiety in every line on his face.
A shot rang out. Mia screamed. A smoking hole had appeared inches from her feet: The bullet had buried itself into the planks. “He said,” Booth repeated, “put down your gun.” He punctuated his words with a brutal yank of Mac’s hair. “Next time, I put a bullet in your friend. No more warnings.”
Loathing poured off of Jack in waves, but he did as he was told and lowered the weapon, though he didn’t put it down. The sirens drew nearer, and Mac knew his captors were going to have to make their move before the police arrived, or things would get even messier. “Ash, start the damn boat,” Booth ordered.
The man did as he was told, inserting the key, and the engine spluttered, coughed, and fell silent. He tried again. Nothing.
“What the hell, man?” Dean barked, an edge of panic creeping into his voice.
“I’m trying!” Ash shot back, making another attempt to start the motor.
For a split second, Mac felt Booth twist behind him, trying to get a look at what was going on, and in that moment, Pike was distracted as well. Just one look away from their hostages was all that Mac and Jack needed – maybe the universe was looking out for them, after all. While Booth was distracted, both his grip on Mac and on the gun momentarily slackened, and Mac inched over and made himself as small as possible to give Jack a better shot at the man behind him. The gun was far too close to his face for Mac to lash out himself; now was a time to stand aside and let Jack do what he did best.
In the span of five seconds, Jack brought his gun back up and shot both Pike and Booth in quick succession. He hit Pike first in the gun hand, and the man toppled over the side of the boat, howling in agony. Booth’s bullet too had been perfectly timed and aimed – it hit him in the side of the head as he turned back around to deal with his hostage. He dropped, the gun clattering from his hand, dead before he hit the ground. It had been a tight shot, and quite the gamble considering the gun that had still been at Mac’s throat, but Jack had timed it perfectly, and Mac never doubted him once.
***
The next half hour was a blur of police sirens – “‘Bout time you got here,” Jack griped testily – painful but welcome hugs from his friends, and a collective promise of painkillers, a four-way lecture, a hasty debrief, and much-needed rest, in that exact order, on their flight to their next op.
Jack had been livid, insisting that Mac needed more than on-the-go treatment, but Matty was firm – this op couldn’t wait. Her fierce eyes did soften when she got a good look at the state that her agent was in, though, and assured him that he was getting a thorough check by medical the second they got home. Until then, she ordered, with no room for argument, he was to rest and recuperate, and so help her God, if he purposefully threw himself into this kind of mess again.... She didn’t actually finish her threat, which made it all the scarier, and Mac had promised to be good on the next mission. (Nobody really believed him, though.)
Secretly, though, he was glad that he would get a chance to rest on the flight, because every single bruise, cut, ache, and pain called out, vying for his attention. A cursory check by Jack and a frazzled EMT revealed that though no ribs were broken, he had severe bruising along his back, sides, and torso. Booth had chipped a tooth when he’d kicked Mac in the mouth, and Mac did not look forward to spending some quality time with the dentist when he got home. And there was a nasty, bloody welt on the back of his head from where he’d been pistol-whipped.
Added to that, his entire body, from his scalp to the tips of his toes ached with a bone-deep weariness that came from the physical abuse and stress of his time as a hostage. As Jack had reminded him on more than one occasion when Mac had tried to brush similar experiences off, just because it wasn’t his first rodeo, it didn’t make it any less traumatic for his mind or his body – he was still human, after all. Now, Mac found himself reluctantly agreeing – emotionally, mentally, and physically, he felt in that moment every single thing that had been done to him from the second he’d snuck into that bank.
As usual, though, Mac filed away everything he was feeling to deal with – or even more appealingly, to not deal with – later.
While Matty finalized the details of their flight, Mac tied up a few loose ends of his own. First, he called Carlos and spoke to him for a few moments, reassuring his friend that he was really okay and getting the same reassurances in return. Mac wanted to see Carlos and his family one more time before they took off, but Carlos was just now being released from the hospital, and the Phoenix team was on a very tight schedule. He did promise to come back and visit soon, and was able to reveal the exciting news that Matty was sending another team in their place, to continue to help with rebuilding.
Next, Mac made his way over to Mia, who was sitting on the edge of an ambulance, her sandaled feet dangling off the side and a bottle of water cradled in her hands. “Hola,” Mac greeted, and she offered him a small smile. Mac realized that she was even younger than he’d thought – she couldn’t be more than eighteen or nineteen years old. “I’m, uh, really sorry about everything,” he stammered, feeling that his words were thoroughly inadequate.
“You have nothing to apologize for!” she exclaimed, dark eyebrows furrowing over kind hazel eyes.
Mac didn’t agree – as always, that incessant feeling that he could have done more reared its ugly head – but he changed the subject anyway, because Riley and Bozer were approaching, and he knew his time was running short. “Quiero darte las gracias.” It was important to him that he thanked her in her own language, after the way Booth had treated it. She deserved better.
She tilted her head, dark brown ponytail swinging with the motion, but a soft smile touched her lips at his fluent but accented Spanish. “¿Para qué?”
Unable to call the exact words to mind in Spanish, courtesy, he knew, of the light concussion he almost certainly had, he switched back to English apologetically, but Mia didn’t seem to mind at all. “That was a risky play,” he admitted, “giving them the keys to a boat that didn’t work. But it was brilliant – and it bought my friend enough time to take control of the situation. Great job thinking ahead. You saved my life.”
A brilliant blush colored her cheeks at Mac’s praise.
***
Twenty minutes and a couple of painkillers later, Mac found himself curled up in his seat on the Phoenix jet waiting for the inevitable lecture to start. He know it had been a stupid and dangerous risk, sneaking into the bank and making himself a hostage. But he knew that his actions had saved lives, and he would make the same choice if anything like it happened again.
Jack dropped down into the seat beside him. “You look like hell, brother,” he observed. Jack Dalton didn’t sugar coat anything.
“Yeah, well,” Mac admitted, too tired to put up his normal unaffected front. “Feel like it too.”
The lines around Jack’s eyes deepened. “The kids are already settling in for the flight,” he said. “Get some sleep?”
“I thought you guys had a lecture all primed and ready,” Mac muttered, already feeling his eyelids dragging themselves down. He was exhausted, from everything he’d been through, the pain, and the drugs.
“Aaah,” Jack waved his hand dismissively. “What’s the point of lecturin’ you if you’re too strung out to actually hear what we’re trying to drill into that big brain of yours?”
Mac quirked a half-smile. “Or you could just skip the lecture all together. You know that you would’ve done the exact same thing in my shoes.”
Jack shrugged. “Maybe, but tryin’ to get you to look after yourself has become a kind of bonding thing for the rest of us. And it’s fun seeing you squirm.”
Mac groaned. “You know I never listen.”
A long-suffering sigh. “And that’s why my hair’s going gray, hoss.”
Letting his eyes fall shut, Mac couldn’t help but squeeze in one last, murmured jab. “No, it’s definitely an age thing.”
Mac didn’t hear Jack’s indigent retort, or the quiet cackling of Riley and Bozer from the seats behind.
He was already asleep.
#febuwhump#febuwhumpday12#febuwhumpalt5#macgyver#jack dalton#no tw#macgyver 2016#episode au#s2e21#wind + water#whump fic#whump#mac whump#bank robbery#hostage#hostage situation#manhandling#riley davis#wilt bozer#matty webber#puerto rico#spanish#team as family#macgyver spoilers#emcatwrites
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