Title: Not Too Late
By: elfin
Pairing: Jack/Ianto
Rating: PG-13
Summary: CoE SPOILERS / FIX-IT. Inspired by John Barrowman’s comment that Jack had brought Ianto back to life before, but when he kissed him in CoE it was too late.

He wakes.  He opens his eyes.  Everything is orange.

Why is everything orange?

He’s fully clothed, and it seems strange that he should have fallen asleep with his tie perfectly knotted and his waistcoat straightened.

When did I fall asleep?

Where did he fall asleep?  Because whatever he’s lying on is hard.  Like a floor.

Why did I go to sleep on the floor?

He doesn’t remember lying down under an orange sheet on a hard floor.  He remembers blinding bright sunshine, cool air and a rush of adrenaline, aliens in a plastic box.

Dying.

Ianto lifts a trembling hand to touch the orange tarpaulin and screams.

~

Terrified.

Alice’s hands are no longer banging on the heavy metal door.  They’re pressed against it, fingers locked, body ridged as her mind refuses to go to the logical conclusion of Jack’s actions.  Stephen’s in there, and she knows that her Dad – her fucked-up alien Dad – means to use him, to harm him, because he’s the only child around and they’re out of time and it doesn’t matter to her that millions of children will be enslaved and tortured if he doesn’t.  Stephen’s her son and she’s frozen in place because she would die for him but there’s nothing she can do and she’s banged on that door until her hands bled.  She’s helpless, without hope.  All she can do is watch.

There’s a commotion in the corridor and she looks out of the corner of her eyes because her head refuses to turn.  She sees a man in a suit running towards her, breathing hard; eyes wide, face pale - almost white.  He stops at her side, stares in through the window and begins banging on the door.  She tells him it’s pointless, that they won’t let anyone in and everyone inside does ignore him until he shouts, as loud as she’s ever heard anyone shout, “JACK!”

To her amazement, her father stops and turns, mouth falling open, staring at the suited man through the small square of reinforced glass.  And in the next second he’s thrown aside two armed men and yanked open the doors and is pulling this stranger into his arms; Jack’s hugging him as if life itself depends on it.  Alice is through the open doors and across the concrete floor in a heartbeat, scooping Stephen up, lifting him out of the way despite the hesitant weapons being aimed at her.  An urgent voice tells them that they’re running out of time but as she watches it feels as if time is standing still, with her Dad taking the strange man’s face into his hands and staring into his eyes. 

She hears him say, “Ianto,” and vaguely recognises the name.

“I think you brought me back,” he says and she wonders what that means as Jack’s face breaks into a smile so bright that for a moment it seems to make everything seem just a little less terrible.  Then the man – Ianto – squeezes Jack’s arms and says, “Use me.  Their virus is inside me, I can feel them.  I can be the conduit.  Use me.”

She understands that this is why he needs Stephen, and now Ianto’s volunteering to be used in her son’s place and Alice could hug him too.  But Jack’s shaking his head, wearing an expression of horror.  “No!  I can’t.  It’ll kill you.”

Deep down she knows that but to hear it spoken with such pain when he had been so willing to sacrifice his own grandson turns the final remnants of her love for Jack to stone.

Ianto’s insisting, almost desperate, “You can bring me back.”  And now she’s starting to realise what it means.  “You’ve done it twice, you can do it again.”

There are tears in her father’s eyes when he asks, “And what if I can’t?  What if it doesn’t work this time?”

“Then I’ll have saved millions of kids.  I’ve already died today, Jack, at least this way would have some meaning.”

He’s still shaking his head.  “Don’t ask me to do this.  I can’t live the rest of my life knowing I was the one to kill you.”

“If you kill Stephen, you’ll hate yourself forever.  Please, Jack, we’re out of time, you have to use me.”  He leans in and to Alice’s amazement, kisses her father on the lips.

It’s obviously breaking him apart to agree but he gives a quick nod, strokes a hand over the man’s pale cheek and she watches him murmur, “I love you, Ianto.”

“Love you too, Jack.”  He moves away, into the circle where Stephen had been standing.  Someone’s yelling that it has to be now, but it sounds like a distant cry and she feels like she’s trapped in a bubble with her Dad and the man who is saving her son’s life. 

At the laptop, Jack sets the program with tears running over his face and his hands are shaking as they hover over the keyboard.  He looks up and there is a plea in his eyes but Ianto has his back to Jack and there is agony in his face as he hits the final Enter key.  In the circle, Ianto freezes, his mouth opens in a silent scream.  It seems strange that nothing else happens, not for long seconds that tick past like the final dying beats of a heart.  Then Ianto starts to tremble, blood pooling in his eyes and ears, dripping with macabre effect over his pale skin.  Bearing the brunt of the fatal transmission, the trauma rips through his body and all she can do is watch as agonising convulsions grip him and shake him.  Behind the laptop, Jack’s hunched over unable to watch, head dropped forward, shoulders hitching up and down; sobbing silently as he slowly kills this man he so obviously adores.  Outside there’s a series of sounds like metal tearing and from somewhere in the building there’s an explosion.  It seems to last for an eternity and all she can do is hug Stephen to her and silently give thanks for this brave stranger. 

Then it’s over.  The transmission dies.  Ianto collapses like a broken doll and Jack’s with him before his head hits the floor, cradling him, mouth to mouth, kissing him; a weird, intimate parody of the kiss of life.  She imagines she can see something, like smoky light pass between them but she can’t be sure because her own tears are marring her vision.  A man’s lying dead in front of her and she wonders what he meant to her father because she’s always thought he was strictly a ladies’ man because of her mother and now it seems she barely knows him.

~

Outside the sky is ablaze.  And the thirteen floor of Thames House is flooded with lethal gases.

~

“Ianto?  Ian... please.  Come back to me, please.”  Jack’s holding the dead man in his arms, rocking him just slightly, stroking his hand over the dark hair, over a stubbled cheek.  His face is wet, eyes red, and he’s crying like he might never stop.  “Please, Ianto....”

The armed men have backed away, embarrassed to watch such an emotional scene, and she tells Stephen to stay where he is as she cautiously approaches.  But her Dad’s beyond her reach now, beyond anyone, locked in his own grief, holding Ianto so tight there’s blood staining his hands, face and coat.  There’s no comfort she can offer.  Even if her love for her father hadn’t turned cold there’s nothing she can think to say to take from what he’s done.  She backs away, putting an arm around Stephen’s shoulder and turning him from his devastated grandfather, leading him to the door.  Still she can hear Jack begging the dead man in his arms to come back to life, his voice breaking, words turning to mindless sobs.  That could be Stephen lying dead and bleeding in her arms, she knows, and she reaches for the door, wanting nothing more than to leave this nightmare behind.

She’s almost out in the corridor when she hears it; a first agonising breath, life returning.  She turns, and sees to her astonishment that Ianto is gripping Jack’s shoulders, head lifted, still lying in Jack’s arms where he’s being petted and comforted, eased back to the land of the living by a man who knows all too well the pain of this return.  She stares as Jack drops a chaste kiss to his forehead and can’t quite hear the words that pass between them but Ianto’s arms wind around Jack’s neck and she’s left in no doubt that this is someone her father loves very, very much.  It thaws her slightly and she steps back inside but they just need each other right now, and alerting anyone else to what’s just happened would probably have extremely bad consequences for all involved.  Everyone’s suffered enough, she decides.  It’s time to go home.

~

They can’t get close enough.  They’ve made love, been inside one another, and now they’re lying face to face, legs entangled, on the queen-sized bed in the suite in the five star hotel the Home Secretary has set them up in for the night.   In the other room, Gwen and Rhys are presumably doing the same thing.  It’s been a hellish day for them all and while Jack knows they should all be exhausted beyond belief, remnants of adrenaline remain in their blood and while the half-empty bottle of red on the bedside cabinet and the desperate sex should knock them both out eventually, for now they were still wide awake. 

“One day, Jack, I won’t want to come back,” Ianto points out quietly, gently, and he knows Jack understands, even if his lover’s only answer is to kiss him again.  “When I’m old and grey....”

“Until then, stay with me.  Please.”

Ianto curves his hand around Jack’s neck, rubs his jaw with his thumb and nods.  “Of course I will.”

Jack takes his hand and links their fingers, stretching their arms down his leg and bringing their mouths together.  Part of him thinks maybe he’s being selfish with this, but losing Ianto twice in one day still weighs heavy on him and he doesn’t want to think about the cons right now, just that Ianto’s alive; very much alive in his arms.