Doris ([info]dreams_of_him) wrote in [info]geekfiction,

Remembering All the Steps

Pairing: Grissom/Sara
Rating: T (teen)
Title: Remembering All the Steps
Author: [info]dreams_of_him
Summary: Grissom wasn’t a dancer. He knew how, of course. He just had to take the time to remember all the steps.
Disclaimer: Nope, not mine. No silver has crossed my palm, either.
A/N: Written for the Gibby’s challenge at YTDAW. Prompt: Make Grissom Dance. Many thanks to [info]csishewolf and [info]scifijoan for their beta services. Thanks, too, to [info]brandie for her thoughts and ideas.

Cross-posted on fanfiction.net



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Christmas 1963

He didn’t believe in Santa Claus anymore, which made Christmas only slightly less magic. Mama and Daddy pretended...they didn’t know he knew. Thank God they’d given up on taking him to visit that fake Santa at the department store. Some things about Christmas were great, though. The Sears Wishbook for one. So was the Edmund Scientific Catalog. Daddy sort of hinted ‘Santa’ might bring a microscope this year. He could hardly wait.

They’d just come home from midnight Mass. This was the first year he’d been allowed to go. The incense made him wrinkle his nose, but he’d felt so grown up and everything was so pretty. Afterward, he’d gotten to open one present – socks, unfortunately – but there was lots more stuff under the tree. Reluctantly he’d gone up to bed only to be lured back to the top of the stairs by The Christmas Waltz.

Daddy loved music so at first he thought maybe he’d just put on some records. But when he peeped through the banister what he saw made him creep down a few steps to get a better look.

It’s that time of year
When the world falls in love
Every song you hear
Seems to say...
Merry Christmas*

Mama and Daddy were dancing. He’d never seen that before. And it wasn’t that he hadn’t seen dancing before. He’d watched Lawrence Welk on TV, after all. No, it was the looks on their faces...the way they looked at each other and smiled...like they had a secret.

Much later, Jack and Anna Grissom found their boy asleep on the second step at the top of the stairs. They thought he’d been waiting for Santa.

>>>>> <<<<<

Easter 1968

//I don’t want to go to that dance, Mom,// he signed and sighed.

//There is more to life than bugs and baseball, Gil,// she signed, smiling. //A gentleman needs to know certain things. We’ve talked about manners. Learning to dance is another one of those things.//

He rolled his eyes and looked away. It was a risk...Mom would be mad because it was rude. Sure enough, he felt her fingers on his chin, turning his head to face her.

//Gil, you can’t just do what you’re good at.//

//But, Mom...//

Pulling him to a standing position, she dropped his hands and started clapping in 3/4 time. //This is the beat. Now, you know where your hands go...like I showed you. It’s important to watch me. A good dancer pays close attention to his partner.//

It was almost impossible to watch her face when he had an overpowering urge to look at his feet. After a few missteps, though, he got the hang of it and they waltzed around the living room in silence.

His mother made him go to the Spring Fling. Tongue tied and shy, he hadn’t asked anyone to dance, but Susan Sawyer asked him. It had been awkward at first, but he hadn’t stepped on her feet and he’d remembered to pay attention to her like Mom said. Seeing a girl smile with her eyes for the first time made baseball and bugs a little less interesting for a few hours.

>>>>> <<<<<

May 1982

He was missing California. Spring in Minnesota was hit or miss: cold one minute, warm the next…well, not really warm. This temporary assignment had taught him a lot about cold climate forensics and that he could not wait to get back home.

He would miss the people, though – the folks at Minneapolis PD were open and friendly. Manny Slaughter, head of the Lab and a man of good humor (he had to be in his profession with a name like Slaughter), had invited him for dinner a number of times. Minnesota native, Owen Gibbs, CSI III, had taken him to every bar and road house in the area, trying valiantly to hook him up for the duration. Katie Murphy, fingerprint specialist, watched Gibbs’s efforts with amusement and secretly shared Grissom’s bed.

It would be hardest to leave Constance Porter and her children, Ben Junior, 9, and Claire, 15. Ben Senior had sponsored his continuing education project in Minnesota. They’d met at a forensics seminar some years previous and hit it off. When they discovered Porter had known Jack Grissom in their college days, they’d become friends. Two weeks into the visit, Ben had had a stroke and died. In many ways, losing his friend had been like losing his father all over again.

He’d spent a lot of time with Constance and the kids helping out where he could, but mostly trying to say goodbye to Ben. The kids gravitated to him as if they knew they were all part of the same sad club. He thought he’d identify more closely with Benny since he’d been nine when his own dad died, but it was Claire who sought him out repeatedly, wondering how life could go on without her dad. He’d tried to assure her that it would.

One day in particular stood out in his memory.

“Where is she, Connie?” he asked.

“Up there,” said Constance, gesturing toward the staircase.

He called up the stairwell, “Hey, kid.”

“Oh, hi, Uncle Gil.” She wasn’t crying but her eyes were red. “Did Mom call you?”

“Would it bother you if she did?” he asked.

“I guess not.”

“She thought you might want to talk…” he said helpfully.

“Well, I don’t.”

“Okay…” he said, climbing to the landing and sitting next to her.

It was ten minutes before Claire spoke again. “Saturday is my birthday,” she said with a sigh.

“Your mom told me.”

“You know, Daddy did the most amazing things on our birthdays...clowns...pony rides...one year he drove us all the way to Wisconsin Dells and last year, he took me flying,” she said wistfully.

Grissom said, “Your dad was a great guy, Claire.”

“I miss him.”

“Me, too, honey...we all do.”

“He was supposed to dance with me on my 16th birthday. It was our tradition...ever since I was a little girl and I had to stand on his shoes because I didn’t know the steps... Every year after I blew out the candles on my cake, Daddy would put on a record and ask me to dance...you know...like a grown up. Then we’d dance around the living room – he’d tell me how proud he was of me...and about the day I was born...” she said, finally dissolving into tears again.

When Saturday rolled around, Claire made a wish on her birthday candles never expecting it to come true. He’d planned it carefully, talking at length with Constance to get the moment just right. When James Taylor’s Sweet Baby James started to play, he’d gotten up from the table, bowed to the birthday girl and said, “May I have this dance?”

He was rusty, but he remembered his lessons well...he looked into her eyes and told her the story of the day she was born and how proud Ben would be of her. The song lasted only a few minutes but he never forgot the gratitude and sorrow woven into that waltz. Dancing was not just for lovers.

>>>>> <<<<<

New Years Eve 1998

“I hate these things,” he thought to himself, “especially when attendance is mandatory.”

He hadn’t any plans to speak of, but dressing up in a monkey suit so the Sheriff could have a full court was definitely not on the list. Glancing at his watch, he figured he only had to stick another hour; then he could slip away and get back to the article he was writing for the Journal of Forensic Sciences.

Early on he’d parked himself at a table half hidden by a potted palm hoping he’d miss out on a situation that called for small talk. What an odd phrase: ‘small talk.’ It shouldn’t be, but it wasn’t ‘small’ to him – he hated talking about nothing.

One by one he’d seen his colleagues whirl by, laughing, a little drunk, having a great time. Charlotte, the new fingerprint tech, danced by with a wink and a wave. That had been a mistake...he’d violated his own rule by dating someone from the Lab...and now he didn’t know how to break it off without causing hard feelings. His mood darkened.

Staring at the bourbon in his glass, he swirled it idly. Another glance at his watch: 45 minutes to go.

“There you are, Gil. I’ve been looking for you!” Catherine said brightly as she sat down next to him.

He looked at her humorlessly. “You found me.”

“Oh, come on, Gil. Cheer up. It’s almost midnight.”

His only response was a grunt. Catherine broke into gales of laughter. “You’re the only man I know who’d rather recover a decomp than spend a few hours at a party.”

“You know I don’t do parties, Catherine...and I especially don’t do parties I have to attend in order to keep my job,” he said sourly.

She stood suddenly and grabbed his hand, “Dance with me? They’re playing a waltz...”

“Catherine...” he pleaded.

Reaching for his other hand she pulled him to his feet, “Oh, Gil, be a sport...”

He rolled his eyes and let her pull him toward the dance floor. Catherine was a force of nature; he’d learned long ago to let her have her head in certain things. As they started to dance he realized the band was quite good. He also realized it had been years since he’d danced with anyone...he had to concentrate hard at first before his body took over.

Catherine smiled up at him, “See? This isn’t so bad.”

He couldn’t repress his own smile, “You’re right. It’s not bad at all.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment,” she chuckled.

“I’m sorry, Cath...”

“Don’t be sorry, Gil. Enjoy!”

And he did. It was a rare thing...he never did this, nothing remotely like this...ever.

When the number was over he let go of Catherine reluctantly. “Thank you, Catherine. That was wonderful.”

She stretched up to kiss his cheek, “What are friends for? Happy New Year.”

>>>>> <<<<<

December 2006

This would be their first Christmas together. He turned the words over and over in his mind. Four absolutely wonderful words.

Neither of them had celebrated the Holidays in years. Oh, they’d exchanged a few presents and wished people well, but decorations? No. Sara did put a wreath on her door every year, but he hadn’t even done that much.

Once in awhile someone would sneak in his office with sparkly garland. One year he’d been forced to wear a Santa hat. Miss Piggy had been the focus of several decoration drive-bys, the most memorable being the year mistletoe was hung over her jar: he’d cleaned quite a few lip prints off the glass in January.

It was fitting that this year should be the first year they decided to actually celebrate Christmas; it had been a year of so many firsts. Their first date, their first kiss...the first time they made love. He smiled at the memory, for that had been the real beginning...the day they knew their paths were entwined for good.

And now it was Christmas. Part of him thought the urge to decorate the house was absurd. What was the point of putting up a tree for a couple of weeks only to take it right down again? But they both seemed to want it so they didn’t waste much time analyzing; they just did it.

His contribution had been finding the tree. “You can buy anything online,” he thought as he typed in his credit card information at FreshChristmasTree.com. They’d decided to go small this year…he’d bought a three foot Frasier fir they were going to put on a table in the living room. That made him smile – ‘small this year’ carried with it the belief that they’d make a decision like this every year for years to come.

Sara had put herself in charge of ornaments, buying a selection on eBay. She’d been so excited the day they arrived, spreading them out of the dining room table like some glittering treasure trove. He noticed she’d chosen vintage ones…trying, he thought, to give their tree a feeling of history where none actually existed. “Never mind,” he’d thought, “the history will come. We’re making it every day.”

He hadn’t been able to resist that call himself: he’d bought a vintage dime store Nativity set reminiscent of the one he remembered from childhood. When it was delivered in a somewhat rumpled box, he’d been relieved to find the figures unbroken. As he’d lifted out the wise men and sheep, shepherds and all the rest, he recalled how his mother had allowed him to unwrap and set up their manger scene so long ago, and of that Christmas he’d caught his parents dancing around the living room.

Sara was in the kitchen making spiced cider…it smelled delicious. He had some brandy that would give it some oomph, so he got the bottle out of the liquor cabinet pausing long enough to cue up a CD, and joined her next to the stove.

“That smells so good,” he said, smiling and holding up the brandy. “I have something that’ll make it even better.”

She switched off the burner and turned to face him, catching him around the middle and pulling him into a hug.

Frank Sinatra’s version of The Christmas Waltz drifted through the kitchen. “Dance with me?” he whispered.

“I don’t know how,” she said, brow furrowing.

“No problem. I’ll teach you,” he said with such confidence that she relented and let him go.

“Okay. Right hand here…in mine. Left hand on my shoulder. Ready? Look at me. It’s very important to look into your partner’s eyes when you dance…”

After a few missteps and a lot of laughing she caught on and relaxed in his arms, content to let him lead. They broke just long enough for him to cue the CD again.

It’s that time of year
When the world falls in love
Every song you hear
Seems to say
Merry Christmas
May your New Year dreams come true
And this song of mine
In three quarter time
Wishes you and yours
The same thing too*

They looked at each other like they shared some delightful secret. Bugs (and baseball) and the cares of the Lab temporarily forgotten, they whirled around the living room. He thought back to Claire Porter and her sorrow and Catherine, who wanted nothing more than to share a happy moment with a friend. He even thought of Susan Sawyer, that first girl who smiled at him with her eyes.

They made a little history that night, a fresh overlay on the faded memory of Jack and Anna waltzing on Christmas Eve…and he was so glad he remembered all the steps.

>>>>> FIN <<<<<

*The Christmas Waltz – Words by Sammy Cahn, music by Jule Styne

Read about Wisconsin Dells here and here.

Here is a version of The Christmas Waltz by The Carpenters...just for [info]csishewolf.
It is on Rhapsody. Requires that you download a plug-in. Unfortunately, they do not support the AOL browser.
Tags: *teen, -grissom/sara, dreams_of_him

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  • 43 comments

[info]ashiya

September 11 2006, 22:44:08 UTC 5 years ago

Oh how beautiful. ♥ Seeing Grissom throughout the years and not being a total social dork makes me grin. :D I love how the narrative is just wistful enough to be nostalgic without the sadness overwhelming it. Did that even make sense?

But I loved it! (That makes sense, right? ;))

[info]dreams_of_him

September 11 2006, 22:47:43 UTC 5 years ago

I love how the narrative is just wistful enough to be nostalgic without the sadness overwhelming it.

Thank you...I was hoping it wouldn't be totally corn ball (that's such a fine line). ;)

Glad you liked it. Thanks for letting me know.

[info]augrasshopper

September 11 2006, 23:55:05 UTC 5 years ago

Gosh. Your stories are like peeking into Grissom's soul. I love that.

[info]augrasshopper

September 11 2006, 23:56:18 UTC 5 years ago

Oh...and you are an amazing graphic artist. I have come to enjoy your title headers almost as much as the stories themselves. Thanks for sharing your talent.

[info]ckofshadows

September 12 2006, 00:17:02 UTC 5 years ago

This was so lovely... especially the last part, where Grissom is delighting in making new traditions and being able to count on a future with Sara. Makes me wish it were Christmastime again :)

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 00:21:48 UTC 5 years ago

making new traditions

Yeah, that's what they're doing...and making a little history, too.

This didn't start out as a Christmas fic, but it sort of ended up that way. I needed something to cheer me up today so I went ahead and posted it anyway.

Besides, it'll be Christmas before you know it. And i haven't done any shopping yet!

[info]marcasite

September 12 2006, 00:32:42 UTC 5 years ago

Lovely! You write Grissom with such honesty, wonderful. Makes me wish the holidays were here already!

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 00:36:58 UTC 5 years ago

You write Grissom with such honesty

You have no idea how much those words mean to me, especially coming from you. Thank you.

Pssst! Christmas is next week. OK so maybe not next week, but when it gets here it'll FEEL like next week

[info]scullyseviltwin

September 12 2006, 01:30:45 UTC 5 years ago

There really aren't words for the contentment I feel after reading that, it was fabulous.

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 01:34:44 UTC 5 years ago

Man! Thanks! You made my evening :)

Anonymous

September 12 2006, 01:58:19 UTC 5 years ago

Well done...

Yes, I agree...Each of your fics always end up making me feel as if I know Griss better & better...I love that...And yes, your graphic headers add that lil extra special something to the story...A frame of reference, so to speak...

Thanx so much for "filling in the holes" TPTB have neglected...Your stories & fics by several others have helped ease the bitterness I've often felt regarding lack of continuity...

Huggz,
IBS

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 03:55:25 UTC 5 years ago

Re: Well done...

Thanx so much for "filling in the holes" TPTB have neglected

You're welcome...I write, at least partially, to satisfy my own discomfort about dangling plot points or missing pieces... Come join me any time :)

I appreciate your taking the time to read and review.

[info]slip_of_the_pen

September 12 2006, 02:14:07 UTC 5 years ago

Ok, now that's just freaky.... right before I stumbled happily onto this new story I just happened to be listening to some old swing/big band music. And so there I am reading with Fred Astaire's "Cheek to Cheek" in the background. Now I know it's a touch earlier than this storyline calls for, but I couldn't help it - my brain just went ahead and super-imposed it over the song his parents danced to and it was so sweet!

Regardless of the tunes playing in my head, this was a lovely, lovely story. I often feel like a bit of a voyeur when I read your work - like I'm a fly on the wall spying on these bits of their private lives. You even make something as simple as the fact that he called his parents "Mama and Daddy" interesting. I guess that just goes to prove that the devil really is in the details!

[info]gsrblackrose86

September 12 2006, 02:36:35 UTC 5 years ago

ah i love how real your fics feel, if that makes sense...like it's really seeing into the Grissom that we never get the chance to see onscreen. this is no exception. great work. :)

[info]jessickuh

September 12 2006, 02:41:36 UTC 5 years ago

Gorgeous story. I like the way you presented it with flashbacks.

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 04:15:31 UTC 5 years ago

Thank you. Sometimes I think flashbacks get right to the heart of a story the way no other device can. A quick look into the part can shed enormous amounts of light on the present.

Thanks for taking the time to drop me a note.

[info]jessickuh

5 years ago

[info]cc_geek

September 12 2006, 02:52:38 UTC 5 years ago

Loved it! The structure, the details, the tone, everything. Awesome!

Also, this made me laugh hysterically:

Miss Piggy had been the focus of several decoration drive-bys, the most memorable being the year mistletoe was hung over her jar: he’d cleaned quite a few lip prints off the glass in January.

I'm sure some of those lip prints were Greg's. LOL

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 04:11:40 UTC 5 years ago

The structure, the details, the tone, everything

Thank you very much!

And those lip prints. Yeah, a lot of them were Greg's. I don't think I want to know how he managed to get caught under Miss Piggy's mistletoe...more than once ;)

[info]bruno_the_dog

September 12 2006, 09:37:59 UTC 5 years ago

You know, just yesterday I was wondering why didn't I read something new from you lately and then... this!
I can't tell you how much I enjoyed this story. I love reading about Grissom's innocent side and you did a wonderful job to describe it, once again.

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 10:32:12 UTC 5 years ago

You know, it's unusual for me to be so prolific (she says, looking over her shoulder, knocking on wood). If you look at the pub dates on my list of stories here at GF, you'll see that there's usually a lo more "air" between the things I post. Ever since Ghost I sort of hit my stride or something. I don't know what it is, but I'm not thinking abou it that hard. ;)

I did think about the last BKP challenge but "football jersey" just didn't speak to me...

I'm working on a long story abd fully expect to take awhile to finish it...and then some little something will get stuck in my head and this stuff pops out.

I'm glad you liked my series of vignettes...there's just something about this character that fascinates me...I want to know everything about him...all the tiny little details that make him who he is.

Thanks for taking the time to read my story and drop me a note!

[info]scifijoan

September 12 2006, 16:47:17 UTC 5 years ago

Yeah, glad to see this posted!! Love the touching moments you've selected, they seem very much in character.

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 17:05:42 UTC 5 years ago

Thanks! I am a total sucker for touching moments...and I feel as though I have to give grissom a few...to balance out whatever pain he's hiding :)

And thanks, too, for the beta...I was all on fire to get this posted with just the tiniest little snag of it not being betaed. You satisified my need fro instant gratification.

[info]doom_cherries

September 12 2006, 19:23:02 UTC 5 years ago

Wow, that was beautiful.

But honestly, the Wisconsin Dells are nothing special. ;) Ha, I say that 'cause live in the God forsaken state.

[info]dreams_of_him

September 12 2006, 20:17:22 UTC 5 years ago

But honestly, the Wisconsin Dells are nothing special. ;) Ha, I say that 'cause live in the God forsaken state.

Well (I'm confessing here), I originally had Ben Senior taking them to the Mall of America, which I was shocked to learn didn't open until 1992...a skosh after that part of the story takes place (teach me not to fact check before I write something!). A co-worker just came back from vacation, part of which included the Dells... it was fresh in my mind.

Now, I also have to confess that I am a huge sucker for tacky tourist destinations (of which the Dells is one). When I was a kid, we went to Alpena, Michigan every year to visit my grandmother. We stopped here at what was then called Domke's Zoo. Note the giant cement Jesus out front. The apatasaurus that you can climb inside of had a huge Sacred Heart of Jesus picture in it. Oh yes, this was my favorite place to stop. I still have postcards from the place! I stopped there not too long ago when I took my Mom to see some of Dad's relatives.

So, I had to have Ben Sr. take them somewhere and Michigan was too far away, hence, the Dells. All it really needed to be was somewhere exotic enough to engage the kids, so it is that ;) Not on the level of Dinosaur Gardens, but what is?

OK, enough of that...

Glad you liked the story. Thanks a lot for letting me know :)

[info]penprickle

January 23 2007, 14:41:57 UTC 5 years ago

*happy sigh* I love a good, sentimental, gooey fic, and all the more when you're the author, because you stick with character and you can SPELL. ;) This is wonderfully tender, all the little lovely moments, and I can so see them dancing together at the end.

'small this year’ carried with it the belief that they’d make a decision like this every year for years to come. Love the insight here!

[info]dreams_of_him

January 23 2007, 15:14:08 UTC 5 years ago

What a nice surprise.

It tickles me when an older fic gets a review...there's only this little window in which a story lives: getting a review long after is a real treat. Thank you.

Glad you enjoyed the story, sentiment and all :) Thanks for reading and taking the time to share your thoughts.
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