1069 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
1069 lines
45 KiB
Plaintext
Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!apple!olivea!uunet!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!cc.curtin.edu.au!tnorthtj
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From: tnorthtj@cc.curtin.edu.au (Tim North)
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: MASH/Trek story: Again No More Angels.
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Summary: MASH/Star Trek crossover story
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Message-ID: <1991Jul29.114238.9030@cc.curtin.edu.au>
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Date: 29 Jul 91 03:42:38 GMT
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Reply-To: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au
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Followup-To: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au
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Organization: Curtin University of Technology, Perth. W.Aust.
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Lines: 1055
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This story is a cross-over between MASH and Star Trek. It occurs after
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the death of Spock in STII:TWOK and in the later years of the MASH
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series.
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Comments and flattery eargerly solicited. :-)
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Tim North
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(North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au)
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----------------------------------------------------------------------
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The small wooded area in which the two strangers materialised
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seemed almost peaceful. In fact, had their thoughts not been
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otherwise engaged, the two men now standing there might even have
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felt happy to again tread upon real earth, and not the cool, but
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somehow barren steel of a ship's hull; glad to be able to reach down
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and feel the damp, wholesome soil running between their fingers.
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But as things would have it, they did not have time for such
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reflections and even if they had, they would not have had the
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inclination. For some meters away from them, obscured by brushwood
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and other vegetation, lay a standard, United States army issue jeep.
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A normal jeep by all accounts, and one that had lain there for only a
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few hours since its previous owner had so carefully abandoned it. It
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was a well kept jeep too, except that an acute observer might just
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still see where its serial numbers had been painstakingly removed and
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rewritten.
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But its cover served it no good as the two strangers walked
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towards it almost as if they expected it to be somewhere nearby and
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began clearing away its camouflage. This done, and having climbed
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aboard, they started the engine and within minutes of having invaded
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the tranquillity of the scene were out of sight down the winding,
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gravelly road nearby. The small wooded area again seemed almost
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peaceful.
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* * *
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James Kirk started as the vehicle went over another in a series
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of almost innumerable pot holes in this poor excuse for a road. He
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had been driving for some time now and realised sheepishly that he
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had not been paying attention. He pulled himself up straight in the
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seat and made as if to renew his concentration.
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He looked over at the good doctor snoring next to him, it was a
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wonder to him how McCoy could sleep in a situation like this. Though
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if he could sleep over the sound of his own snoring, he could sleep
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through anything, Kirk supposed.
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He turned his attention back to the road and concentrated on his
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newly acquired skill of driving. 'It's a pity I haven't learned to do
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this earlier,' he thought to himself. He remembered the last time he
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had driven one of these things, Bela's place, he smiled as he
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remembered Spock's face, he had nearly killed them both!
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Spock. Why were his thoughts always turning to Spock? He'd taken
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this new mission to try and get away from those memories and yet they
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kept haunting him, always and ever present, no matter what he did and
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no matter where he went.
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He remembered how surprised he had been when 'Fleet' had asked
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him to participate in another of their series of 'historical
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reconnaissance' missions, seemingly out of the blue, and he more than
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a little suspected McCoy of complicity in this somewhere. They argued
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of course that he was uniquely qualified for the task etc., etc., and
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he couldn't entirely deny that in some sense he was. He still viewed
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with some foreboding though anything that might resemble his previous
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abortive dealing with these reconnaissance missions.
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The last one had thrown him back to about the same time as this
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one. When was it exactly, 1960? No, it was more like 1970. What a
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surprise that had yielded! Then of course there was his other
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experience with this sort of thing, that, like this one, had involved
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that mysterious machine--or perhaps being, no one had yet decided
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which--the Guardian.
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Of that incident he seldom thought, or tried not to anyway, but
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he did now in the loneliness of this unending road, and his thoughts
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were drawn to the similarities between what he had lost then and what
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he had only now lost. With them came the inevitable recriminations of
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knowing that if he had acted differently, if he had been more
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observant, if ONLY, then things could have been different. If only...
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He was saved the pain of further self examination by the
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literally jolting realisation that they were finally approaching
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their destination. He reached over to shake the incumbent doctor, but
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the road in its final desperate bid for dominance had at last managed
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to tear him from his slumber and McCoy was groggily stirring himself
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in the manner of those unceremoniously awakened.
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'I didn't sleep a wink with your damn driving,' he mumbled, but
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on getting no reply changed to a more productive tack, 'We there yet,
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Jim?' But the question went unanswered and as he looked up he
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realised why. They were indeed 'there' and at that moment Leonard
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McCoy wished he could be almost anywhere else.
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* * *
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'Oh, my God,' McCoy said tonelessly. Kirk's dry throat couldn't
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even manage a reply, and the two merely sat there in the jeep,
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surrounded by an ant's nest of activity. Everywhere, people rushed to
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and fro from buses that carried in the wounded. The ground outside
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was littered with bodies--doctors and nurses frantically carrying out
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triage--and in the background helicopters could be heard landing
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bringing with them more suffering souls.
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It was almost too much to assimilate all at once. Kirk's face
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drew itself into a tight, hard mask. McCoy swallowed and licked his
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lips, wondering how on earth any record tapes could have prepared
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them for this. One of the doctors nearby looked up from the once
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handsome boy he had been treating, the face now burnt and blistering,
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and gestured to the nurse attending him to have the boy taken inside
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immediately. 'Prep' him, I'll work on this one first.' This said, he
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hurried over to the awaiting jeep.
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'Colonel Potter the C.O.,' he snapped, his voice weary with the
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fatigue of hours. 'We've been expecting you state-side people. You
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sure picked a dandy of a time to get here.' He was about to continue,
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but was stopped short by Hoolihan's shouts. 'Colonel, this man's
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haemorrhaging!' Potter turned back to the new arrivals. 'You folks
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'll have to find your own way to the V.I.P. tents I'm afraid, I just
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can't spare anyone right now.'
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He turned once more to leave but was interrupted again, this
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time by one of the new arrivals. He glanced back, clearly annoyed.
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'Colonel, I'm Leonard McCoy, I'm a doctor. I'd like to help...'
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Potter's composure changed rapidly, 'Welllll, that's a whole new
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can of worms, doctor. We'd be mighty obliged.' He gestured towards
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the mass of bodies. 'Find somewhere to start, it's going to be a long
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night...'
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Some 14 hours later, McCoy was ready to agree with him and had
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barely enough time to down a cup of hot coffee in the mess tent
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before collapsing into a deep and, mercifully, dreamless sleep back
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in his tent.
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* * *
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Eight a.m. the next morning, the mess tent saw McCoy stumble in,
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a sympathetic Kirk watching his shaky progress. Kirk was sitting at a
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table by himself. Around him, tables were obviously engaged in deep--
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and not too pleasant--gossip, but Kirk seemed unmoved by it. He sat
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casually sipping a mug of coffee, having passed on the 'breakfast',
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much to the amusement of the people around him, and waved to McCoy
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when he came in. 'I didn't expect you so early,' he said, when McCoy
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had sat down.
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'I think it's something called 'jet lag',' the other answered,
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nursing a fuzzy head. 'At least that's what Hunnicut told me.'
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'You seem to be fitting in all right. I think someone even said
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good morning to you when you came in. What's the secret of your
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success, Bones? I could use a little of it to thaw my reception
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around here.'
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'It's called 14 hours in surgery, Jim,' McCoy replied dryly.
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Kirk was saved an embarrassed reply by the three officers who sat
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down next to them at that moment.
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'Mr Kirk, Dr. McCoy,' the first said, shaking hands. 'I'm
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Colonel Potter, commanding the MASH unit. I think we met earlier
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yesterday, but I'd kinda like to do the formal how-do's. This is
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Captain Pierce, our chief surgeon...'
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''Hawkeye' to my friends,' the doctor said warmly, shaking
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McCoy's hand. Didn't I see you in my nightmare yesterday?' McCoy
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managed a weak smile while Hawkeye shook Kirk's hand perfunctorily.
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'...and this is Major Winchester.', continued the C.O.
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''Major Winchester' to my friends,' Charles explained.
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'Well, now that we all know each other,' Potter continued,
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'let's get down to business. Frankly gentlemen, we're not quite sure
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why you're here. All the army's told us is you're 'surveying' the
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MASH unit to report back to some Congressman or someone.' He paused,
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obviously waiting for an explanation. Well, this is it Kirk decided,
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time to bite the bullet...
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'Colonel, our mission is a rather broadly based one actually,'
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he started. 'We're here to look at the functioning of the MASH in
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a... historical context you could say.' Several sets of eyebrows
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jumped at this, McCoy's included. Pierce spoke up.
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'A 'historical context'? What's historical about this place
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except the food?, which I notice you've wisely chosen to ignore.'
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Kirk glanced down at the mug he was holding.
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'I'm not too sure I shouldn't ignore this coffee either,' he
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grimaced. Addressing himself back to the group he continued. 'What
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we'd like to do here Colonel is simply observe your day to day
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workings, nothing critical, you're not being monitored I assure you,'
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he paused, wondering how to continue. 'You see, the people we're
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reporting to feel they can't get the real story of what the Korean
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war is like from just reading reports about it, so they took the
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novel step of sending Dr McCoy and myself smack into the middle of it
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to obtain the information for them.'
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He caught McCoy's curious expression and sent him back a small
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shrug. Well, he could hardly explain the loss of a lot of military
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records of the late twentieth century in Khan's Eugenics wars of the
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nineties. It was these losses that had prompted Starfleet's
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controversial 'historical reconnaissance' missions.
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'Well Mr Kirk, can't say that I understand why they'd want to,
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or that I even approve of sending civilians into a combat area...'
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'The rest of us are born to it of course,' Pierce interrupted,
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'We just love it here.'
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Potter glared at him and continued, '...but since you're here
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and since the army obviously approves, my people will give you
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whatever help you require,' he said; meaningfully staring at Pierce
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and Winchester. 'WON'T THEY!'
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'Oh definitely, definitely,' they chorused, rising to leave.
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'Can't wait to read about it in the history books,' Charles
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muttered.
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* * *
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Post-op was nothing new to McCoy, but he dreaded it all the
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same. Ruefully he thought that he'd seen enough wounded bodies in the
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last few days to last him the rest of his career, and he was
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certainly not looking forward to observing more. Hoolihan, from
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across the room noticed the expression on the new doctor's face and
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moved to take charge.
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'Dr McCoy, I'm Major Margaret Hoolihan, head nurse. I'll just
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run through the patients' files with you and let you familiarise
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yourself with our post-op before you get started on your rounds.'
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McCoy shot her a grateful look and accepted the chart she
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offered. 'You seem to run a very efficient nursing staff, Major,' he
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commented, more as a conversation starter than anything else. As it
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turned out he couldn't have said anything better.
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'Why thank you doctor,' she beamed. McCoy nodded and addressed
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himself to the charts as she gestured to their first patient. 'This
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is Mr Kim, Doctor, a North Korean farmer. We found him amongst the
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wounded up on the front.' She paused before continuing, 'A lot of the
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poorer villagers take to searching through the bodies of the fallen
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soldiers looking for valuables or something that can be exchanged for
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food for their families.'
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'Barbaric,' McCoy mumbled. 'Why is it the civilians who always
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seem to come out worst in this damned fighting?'
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'Oh, I agree Doctor, but there's very little we can do about it
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until the peace treaty's signed, and at the rate that's going...' she
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shook her head. Together they worked their way through the post-op
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session with relative ease until Charles came to relieve McCoy, who
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then found some excuse to make himself scarce in a hurry.
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'I think you're intimidating that poor man, Charles!' Hoolihan
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said. Charles snorted and said nothing. Margaret smiled and glanced
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out after McCoy. She saw him meet up with that man Kirk, through the
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window. He was a cool one that. She'd taken an almost instant dislike
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to him. Unusual for her she thought, she was normally so easy to get
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along with. Oh, he'd been active enough, helping out with the wounded
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of course, but there was something disquieting about the man, he was
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hiding something, or perhaps he just wasn't assertive enough, she
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mused. '
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'Major? Oh Major?' called Winchester, sotto voce, 'I hate to
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disturb your reverie...'
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'Hmmm?' Margaret turned around.
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'... but there are PATIENTS in here waiting for our attention?'
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Margaret sighed. Perhaps she could do without the assertiveness...
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* * *
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Kirk strode through the swing doors into Potter's Office. 'You
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wanted to see me, Colonel?' he asked.
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'Just thought I'd check on your progress Mr Kirk; get the dirt
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first hand as it were. Can't bare reading through pages and pages of
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official reports just to be told I'm doing fine.' He grinned and
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moved towards the old wooden cabinet in the corner of his office,
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'You know what the army's like.'
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'I assure you Colonel, our observations are proceeding just as
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we'd like them to.' Kirk replied honestly.
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'Good, good. I hope you're getting the required cooperation from
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my people?'
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Kirk shifted in his seat, 'Yes we've had a good response to our
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questions from everyone.' He paused. 'I'm afraid though I don't seem
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to have made too favourable an impression with the Major.'
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Potter looked up. 'Who, Margaret?' Kirk nodded his affirmation.
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'Well, I wouldn't be too worried, she's probably just got herself in
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a knot over something. Give her a few days, I dare say it'll blow
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over.' Potter mused, if the truth be known he shared his head nurse's
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reservations about this whole affair. He still couldn't see any point
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in all this. Come to think of it he'd never quite heard of this type
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of observation before. Maybe he should check with I-Corps.
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Mind you, he thought, this Kirk fellow seemed a nice enough type
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of chap, and although he hadn't had a chance to actually see McCoy at
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work, judging by the reports that had filtered back from the surgery
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and his own observations in post-op he was a damn fine doctor. Top
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notch, in fact. Strange, he mused, why would a doctor be doing this
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sort of work?
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'Meanwhile,' he continued, 'and this is the real reason I asked
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you over, can I offer you something to drink--a small scotch
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perhaps?'
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'Why thank you, Colonel. Actually I've always been rather
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partial to brandy, myself.'
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Hmmm, a brandy man hey?' Potter smiled amused at the memories
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than invoked. 'Why I remember back in doubleyuh, doubleyuh one, we
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had a chap in our outfit, 'Killer Carlson', was his name--what a
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character!' Potter paused as he poured their respective drinks. 'He
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was a brandy man too, you know. I remember one night he'd had just a
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tad too much to drink, and he thought he'd tell one and all just how
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fine a drink brandy really was. So he staggered into the nearest tent
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and began to sing an ode to the relative merits of brandy over any
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other drink.' Potter chucked to himself, 'Would've been hilarious if
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it hadn't been his C.O.'s tent!'
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Kirk smiled, and was just about to enquire as to the hapless
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young officer's fate when the doors to the office burst open and
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Corporal Max Klinger strode in, his dark features clearly worried
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about the information he bore. 'Sorry to interrupt you sirs like
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this,' he began, 'but we've just received word from the front that
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they're taking in more heavy casualties and urgently need medical
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supplies AND a couple of doctors if we've got 'em...'
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'Damn!' Potter slammed his palm down on the table. 'Just when
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we'll be receiving kids by the bucket load. They know I can't spare
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my people at a time like this.'
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Kirk mused, this was a perfect opportunity to observe an actual
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combat situation. Until now their time had been spent in the relative
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safety of the MASH and, although their mission didn't specifically
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call for them to be at the front, he knew it would add significantly
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to the body of knowledge collected. He spoke up. 'If you can spare us
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a driver, Colonel, Dr McCoy and I can go along. It'd be a fine chance
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for us to see just how things really are at the front,' he offered
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honestly.
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Potter hesitated for a moment, these men were still unknown
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quantities, but hell, he thought, he had no better alternative.
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'That's mighty nice of you boys,' he replied. 'I'll fit you out with
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a jeep and send along Major Hoolihan, she's been up there before.' He
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turned to his company clerk, 'Klinger get on to it.'
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'Consider it done, your Colonelness,' came the reply from
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Klinger already halfway out the door.
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* * *
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The two travellers thought they were past being shocked by the
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brutality and senseless loss of life they had seen. But somehow the
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filthy tin shack that was all there was to see of the battalion aid
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station here at the front, managed to shock them even further.
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Soldiers lay dead or dying in the dirt around the hut,
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unattended and oblivious to the explosions all around them.
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McCoy, his face pale, stood at the entrance to the hut looking
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in, before entering, incredulous at the sight of bodies lying opened
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on tables, dirt everywhere and medics frantically working amidst the
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screams; trying to patch them up just enough that they might survive
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the chopper journey to the MASH.
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Hoolihan, hardened to the atrocities inflicted in the name of
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God and country was already surveying the wounded. 'Kirk, don't just
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stand there gawking,' she snapped, 'start helping these people!'
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At the sound of Hoolihan's dulcet tones Jim Kirk shook himself
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from his dazed posture and, accepting the horrific situation as best
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he could, went to work repairing what damage he was able, and hoping
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all else could be restored by either McCoy or those back at the MASH.
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They worked on in the midst of the shellfire for what seemed like
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hours, both of them having lost count of the bodies dozens of faces
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previously.
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'Kirk give me a hand with this man,' Hoolihan's voice called
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urgently, as she struggled to control the incoherent thrashings of
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the wounded soldier at her side. Together they managed to
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anaesthetise their struggling charge and Margaret began preparing the
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boy for surgery. As the boy subsided and gave in, finally, to her
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ministrations she chanced to look up at Kirk and noticed, to her
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surprise and concern, that he was bleeding from a shrapnel wound to
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his shoulder. ''Here let me look at that.' She probed around cleaning
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the wound. 'Why didn't you tell me about this?'
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Jim Kirk shrugged as he dropped down beside their dust covered
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and battered jeep. 'There was no time,' he replied. 'Anyway, there's
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nothing lodged in the wound,' he said and treated her to one of his
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most disarming smiles.
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|
|
|
Margaret sighed heavily and dropped down next to him, both of
|
|
them exhausted. They sat propped up against the wheel of the jeep and
|
|
allowed themselves their first break in what seemed like days.
|
|
Margaret was the first to break the awkward silence that ensued.
|
|
'Look, I'm sorry I snapped at you before, this hasn't been easy for
|
|
you has it? I mean giving triage at the front isn't quite
|
|
'observation''.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'It's been no easier for you,' came the reply. 'But it would be
|
|
easier if we didn't have to call each other 'Major' and 'Mr Kirk' all
|
|
the time wouldn't it?' he said, alluding to the tension that had
|
|
existed between them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hoolihan smiled. 'Yes, it would wouldn't it,' she agreed, as she
|
|
rose to her feet, not really answering the question. 'Well, there's
|
|
no rest for the weary here,' she said, 'lets start with this fellow'
|
|
and gestured towards the bandaged body of a nearby soldier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk began to rise from his position, favouring his injured
|
|
shoulder, when there came a tremendous explosion from a close shell.
|
|
To their horror they both saw a young Korean boy, previously
|
|
unnoticed, had been struck down by the shrapnel from the explosion as
|
|
he searched for valuables on the fallen bodies as so many of his
|
|
people were forced to do--his shrill cries of pain and fear reaching
|
|
them even over the ensuing retaliatory fire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk jumped to his feet, wincing as a bolt of pain tore through
|
|
his shoulder. 'Stay here, I can get him!' he shouted, an edge of
|
|
authority appearing in his voice that had not been there before, as
|
|
he darted off into the combat area.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Oblivious to Margaret's screams to do no such thing, which
|
|
rapidly changed to violent abuse as she realised that this damn fool
|
|
might get himself killed, he weaved and ducked his way towards the
|
|
prostrate boy. Twice he was thrown savagely to the ground by the
|
|
proximity of the explosions around him, and twice he struggled to his
|
|
feet, again setting off towards the screams of the wounded child.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He made the last twenty meter dash toward the boy and dropped
|
|
down beside the boy's battered body. Stopping only briefly to examine
|
|
the child's condition, he scooped him up, oblivious to the pain in
|
|
his shoulder, and began weaving his way back through the perilous
|
|
fire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Margaret suspended her verbal barrage just long enough to grab a
|
|
stretcher for the boy and started to make her way out to a rendezvous
|
|
with Kirk, determined to chew him out thoroughly for such a suicidal
|
|
action. Joined by McCoy who had come out to investigate the verbal
|
|
abuse flowing through the combat area they dashed out towards Kirk's
|
|
encumbered form.
|
|
|
|
|
|
They prepared to grab the boy as he was rushed inelegantly
|
|
through the last few meters of fire, but their expectation was
|
|
tragically unfulfilled. Seconds before James Kirk made it to the
|
|
relative safety of their encampment a titanic explosion intervened,
|
|
spewing football size pieces of jagged metal spinning outward, end
|
|
over end in a deadly arc at terrible speeds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
James Kirk could never have known what happened when, only
|
|
meters from safety, he was cut down in a bloody heap, spraying them
|
|
all with his blood, as his body smashed to the ground inert.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
The scene in the O.R. at the 4077 was one of frantic, but
|
|
ordered, confusion. 'It looks like we'll all be working around the
|
|
clock again,' Potter grumbled to himself for the second time in a few
|
|
days. 'Hell, I'm too old for this,' he proclaimed. 'I should be at
|
|
home with Mildred wondering what colour daisies to plant!'
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Speaking of plants,' came Pierce's voice from the table behind
|
|
him. 'What was that green stuff they served up in the mess at lunch?
|
|
It sure wasn't salad...' he insisted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Maybe it was the Colonel's daisies?' piped in Hunnicut. 'Nah,
|
|
can't have been,' he corrected himself, 'daisies smell nice.' The two
|
|
continued bantering back and forth on all kinds of topics bringing
|
|
forward comments and laughter from the rest of the team--and snide
|
|
remarks from Charles. Together they made it through another long
|
|
night.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
Leonard McCoy cursed for the thousandth time, damning the
|
|
conditions he had to work in and damning mans' abhorrent disrespect
|
|
for life.
|
|
|
|
|
|
James Kirk's body lay inches in front of him, an enormous
|
|
incision exposing the internal organs to his delicate touch. He swore
|
|
again as a nearby shell shook dust and sand from the roof of their
|
|
makeshift hut and threw his body over that of his friend in a vain
|
|
attempt to minimise the amount of sand and dirt invading the opened
|
|
wound.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He looked around for the clamp he needed, damning himself for
|
|
not remembering what the hell it was called and snapped at Hoolihan
|
|
when the one he asked for wasn't what he needed. 'Blasted cat-gut
|
|
surgery!' he muttered. 'How are people expected to work in conditions
|
|
like this?' He stared loathingly at the collection of lethal-looking
|
|
and none-too-clean surgical instruments in the dirty tray next to
|
|
him. 'These knives should be in a torture chamber, not an O.R. Damn
|
|
it, I'm a doctor, not a butcher--how can I save him with these?' He
|
|
lapsed back into self deprecating muttering as he, once again, began
|
|
work on the open wound.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hoolihan however had no such feelings about his competence. She
|
|
watched almost dumbfounded as this seemingly ordinary Southern doctor
|
|
exhibited surgical techniques of such extraordinary sophistication
|
|
and elegance that she didn't even think to question him on the source
|
|
of such wisdom. Even had she thought to do so, she would have had
|
|
precious little time as they worked frantically to control the
|
|
massive bleeding and repair what damages they could. Once more her
|
|
attention was drawn to the ever accumulating pile of shrapnel that
|
|
had been drawn out of Kirk's tortured body as McCoy withdrew yet
|
|
another sliver of the deadly metal and added it to the collection of
|
|
would-be assailants.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In any other circumstances she would have dismissed the
|
|
patient's chance of survival as minute, but here she began to allow
|
|
herself to hope that maybe, just maybe, this enigmatic man may yet
|
|
survive. Onwards into the night and then untiringly into the
|
|
following morning they worked, heedless of the demands of their own,
|
|
already strained, bodies for rest. At last, countless hours later,
|
|
they stood back and relaxed their vigil, collapsing almost where they
|
|
stood, into a dreamless sleep, unconcerned with, and ignorant of, the
|
|
incessant shellfire around them.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some days later, to the amazement of all, Jim Kirk was
|
|
convalescing in the post-op ward back at the MASH--albeit painfully
|
|
and slowly. His progress was helped considerably though by the not
|
|
infrequent visits of Margaret Hoolihan; visits that were met with
|
|
well-intentioned jibes of favouritism from fellow patients. Their
|
|
developing friendship, he knew, was not going unnoticed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He propped himself up in bed, adjusted the reading glasses that
|
|
Potter had lent him and returned his attention to the book he had
|
|
been reading before Margaret's visit, resolutely ignoring the
|
|
insistent and painful tugging in his chest. Somehow, he dropped off
|
|
to sleep.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Next to him, a fellow patient, Kim, awoke startled and
|
|
dissoriented. His eyes darted side to side in panic not recognising
|
|
his surroundings. But as sleep all too quickly left him he remembered
|
|
where he was, the Americans' hospital, and he slumped back in his
|
|
bed. He longed to see his family, longed to know if they were even
|
|
alive. After the bombs had destroyed his farm, killing his youngest
|
|
boy, he had fled with what was left of his family to the relative
|
|
safety of the nearby hills. But somehow, they had become separated,
|
|
weeks ago now, and he had not seen or even heard from them since.
|
|
|
|
|
|
With no farm to provide even the meagre subsistence living that
|
|
they had eked out all their lives, he was reduced to stealing from
|
|
the bodies of the fallen soldiers and selling what little he found to
|
|
the black marketeers in order to buy food. But now even that had come
|
|
to an end and he had only dim memories of the pain as the bullets had
|
|
torn through him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kim turned his attention to the soldier in the next bed, hearing
|
|
again the muttered curse that had awakened him. He sat up, curious,
|
|
and saw Kirk deep in the clutches of a nightmare. He was about to
|
|
ignore the man and go back to sleep when the thrashing figure let out
|
|
a long string of words which brought his attention sharply back to
|
|
the feverish figure.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He caught the words 'Admiralty', 'mission' and 'Enterprise', and
|
|
something that might have been a name, although it sounded more
|
|
Korean than American. He glanced around the darkened ward but no one
|
|
else had awoken and the nurse on duty had slipped out for a cup of
|
|
coffee. His eyes started to shine with an idea. Perhaps this man
|
|
wasn't just a soldier, perhaps he was an officer. An officer whose
|
|
secrets he could trade for in exchange for assistance in finding his
|
|
family.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Furtively, Kim slipped out from under the sheets and leaned
|
|
closer to the American officer, listening to the man's mumbled
|
|
ravings. Any information he obtained would have to be worth something
|
|
to someone, surely.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Moments later Nurse Kelly chose to slip back into the ward, cup
|
|
of coffee in hand and he frantically scrambled back under the covers
|
|
and feigned sleep while Kelly hummed over to check on Kirk. Kirk's
|
|
dreaming seemed to subside and, satisfied that all was well, Kelly
|
|
returned to her coffee. Gleefully she slipped out the choc-chipped
|
|
cookie she'd scored earlier that day and admired it reverently before
|
|
devouring it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kim waited another hour and a half before Kelly chose to leave
|
|
the post-op again, but in that time he had planned well. As soon as
|
|
she was gone he slipped out of the bed, quickly shoving the pillows
|
|
under the sheets to simulate a body and crept out of the ward, intent
|
|
on finding his wife and remaining children.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy sighed, exasperated. 'Klinger, where are those 'Expected
|
|
Enemy Activity' files?' he said, sticking his head out through the
|
|
door from Potter's office. 'They're missing, they're not in the 'E'
|
|
folder'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Klinger strolled leisurely over to the frustrated McCoy 'Never
|
|
fear, Doc.,' he announced, as he rifled through the old filing
|
|
cabinet. 'Ah! Here they are, under 'V',' he smiled, handing the
|
|
documents to a bewildered McCoy. Seeing the man's confusion he
|
|
continued, 'They're under 'V' for Very-important,' he explained. 'We
|
|
wouldn't want to loose 'em, you know!'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy shook his head, amused. 'OK, thanks Klinger,' he said.
|
|
'I'll read these in my tent and return them later.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Sure thing Doc.,' Klinger replied, 'Beats me though why you'd
|
|
want to read 'em in the first place.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Oh, just checking out a hunch, Klinger. Something that sounded
|
|
familiar,' he said.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
The scene in Rosy's bar was one that could be found the world
|
|
over. War or no war, east or west, after long hours of stress the
|
|
human body demanded relaxation. And if pumping it full of alcohol,
|
|
amidst laughter, singing, and dancing wasn't quite what its designer
|
|
would have recommended, it was still close enough that it relieved
|
|
the tension of the inhabiting souls.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jim Kirk and Margaret Hoolihan sat together at a table in the
|
|
midst of the revelry, relaxing, the first time either of them had had
|
|
a chance to do so in recent weeks. Margaret looked over the now
|
|
impressive collection of bottles and glasses that had somehow
|
|
accumulated on their table, and at the thin, but mostly recovered,
|
|
figure of the man who had occupied so much of her time.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Jim, I'm so glad you're well again,' she said, a smile
|
|
lightening her features. 'Let's go on a picnic tomorrow,' she
|
|
announced. 'We're not expecting casualties, so we can take a basket
|
|
with us and have a lunch in the field behind the camp.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk laughed, something he hadn't been doing a lot of lately.
|
|
'Margaret, that sounds wonderful,' he said. 'There's a condition
|
|
though--we go further away than that, somewhere where there's no one
|
|
to disturb us--just the two of us.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
She laughed with him, 'You're on. It's a deal!' They would have
|
|
continued to plan their happy retreat except for the arrival of a
|
|
disturbed and worried McCoy. 'Jim, can I speak to you?,' he looked
|
|
over at Margaret and then back to Kirk, '...outside.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk frowned, as did Hoolihan, 'Bones...' he started but was
|
|
interrupted.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Jim, it's important.' Kirk looked up at his chief surgeon, and
|
|
friend, and saw worry in his eyes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
He turned to Hoolihan, 'Excuse us for a moment,' he said as he
|
|
rose. Outside with McCoy he started once more to seek an explanation,
|
|
'Bones...' he began but was again cut off.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Listen, Jim,' urged McCoy, 'Don't ask me for reasons just yet,
|
|
because I still haven't got things sorted out in my own mind,' he
|
|
paused, searching for words before continuing, 'but I don't think
|
|
it's wise for you to see Hoolihan for that picnic tomorrow.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk's jaw dropped, 'Wise! What do you mean it's not wise?
|
|
Bones, I'm a big boy now, what I do with my own time...'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Again McCoy interrupted. 'Jim, it's not that. You know I
|
|
wouldn't interfere if I didn't have a reason, but I just don't think
|
|
you want to start cultivating a relationship here and now.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk looked him straight in the face, 'Damnit, Bones, if you've
|
|
got a reason I want to know about it!' He could see McCoy hesitating
|
|
to talk so he continued, his voice softer. 'Bones, if you're worried
|
|
about me having to leave Margaret in a few weeks...,' he paused,
|
|
searching for words, 'well, I've been through that before, I can
|
|
manage, okay?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy continued, slowly. 'Jim, that's only part of it. I know
|
|
you can handle yourself, but there's more to it than that.' He
|
|
stopped, unsure how to continue, 'Jim...'
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Bones, what is it?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy resigned himself to what he had to say. 'Jim, I think we
|
|
may have to leave rather sooner than we'd planned.' Kirk started, he
|
|
was about to ask if the Guardian had recalled them, but that wouldn't
|
|
account for McCoy's distress. He looked up at McCoy, not speaking,
|
|
waiting instead for the doctor to continue.
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy lowered his gaze, his voice dropping of its own accord.
|
|
'Jim, I don't think the 4077 is going to survive the war much
|
|
longer.' He ploughed on, wishing he hadn't seen the look on Kirk's
|
|
face. 'History doesn't have any record of this camp, or any of its
|
|
people, much beyond the end of this week...'
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Korean sun was still low in the sky as the dusty jeep pulled
|
|
to a stop in the small wooded area. Kirk looked around him,
|
|
recognising it as the area where McCoy and he had first appropriated
|
|
the jeep, carefully secreted here by the Federation intelligence
|
|
operative who had prepared false identities and papers before the
|
|
start of their mission, a time now seeming so long ago. Things had
|
|
been different then. He'd come here partly to escape the pain of a
|
|
previous loss, and now it seemed like he was going to lose someone
|
|
else all over again.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Jim, what is it?' Margaret said as she took his hands, leading
|
|
him away to sit in a small grassy area. 'Jim, you haven't said a word
|
|
in ages. What's wrong?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
He looked away before answering, chewing idly on a blade of
|
|
grass, seemingly ignoring the question. After a while he looked up,
|
|
'You know, out here away from all the fighting and the people it's
|
|
almost peaceful; you could close your eyes and imagine you were
|
|
home.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hoolihan looked deep into the eyes of the handsome, compelling
|
|
man next to her, wondering how she could ever have been so wrong
|
|
about him. She could see the pain in his eyes and she wanted
|
|
desperately to help. Sitting by his side during the long nights in
|
|
post-op listening to him talking as he slept, she'd begun to piece
|
|
together something about him, enough to know that he'd lost someone
|
|
close to him. She decided it was time to broach the subject. 'Jim,
|
|
who was Spock?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk paled. A look of disbelief crossing his face, to be
|
|
replaced by an expression of profound sadness. 'How do you know about
|
|
that?' he said eventually, his voice so quiet that she had to strain
|
|
to hear him. He frowned, 'McCoy didn't...,' he began.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'No Jim, Leonard didn't say a word, you did.' At Kirk's
|
|
uncomprehending look she continued. 'Your were talking in your sleep
|
|
in post-op; you talked about him a lot you know.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk looked away for a moment before continuing. 'What else did
|
|
I say?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
'A lot of things, I didn't understand most of it, but you always
|
|
talked about the Enterprise. Is that where you're from?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk looked up sharply, dreading for a moment that he might have
|
|
said far too much. But Margaret was just sitting quietly watching
|
|
him, not realising that they spoke of two different Enterprises. He
|
|
relaxed somewhat and continued. 'Yes it is. Bones, Spock and I served
|
|
on her together for a long time.' He paused, not wanting to continue,
|
|
but yet somehow wanting Margaret to know. 'After Spock's death McCoy
|
|
and I were sent here on this mission.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
She nodded. That answered a lot of questions she had wanted to
|
|
ask. It explained her initial mistrust of him--he HAD been hiding
|
|
something--his real identity, and it explained his sadness. As a
|
|
nurse Hoolihan had seen enough cases of people wounded by the loss of
|
|
people close to them, and instead of making her cold to it, it seemed
|
|
to make each one hurt all the more. She found her thoughts turning to
|
|
her own losses and she remembered Henry Blake fondly. A few moments
|
|
passed with both of them lost in their own thoughts.
|
|
|
|
|
|
She looked over at Jim and somehow knew that there was something
|
|
else troubling him, something that was hurting him terribly. 'Jim,
|
|
what is it, what else is worrying you? Jim, let me help...'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Margaret Hoolihan couldn't have known the terrible memories
|
|
those three words evoked; the inevitable comparisons with Edith and
|
|
the regret, the longing for things that could have been. She couldn't
|
|
have known that it was those three words that finally made Jim Kirk
|
|
realise just how many people he had already lost in his life and just
|
|
how badly he didn't want to lose anyone else.
|
|
|
|
|
|
* * *
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dinner that evening saw James Kirk eating alone in his tent,
|
|
lost in how own thoughts and conflicting desires. He didn't hear
|
|
Leonard McCoy knock softly and, on finding no reply, walk in and
|
|
stand quietly behind him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
'Jim?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk looked up, registering McCoy for the first time. 'Bones, I
|
|
didn't hear you come in. How long have you been standing there?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy rested a hand on Kirk's shoulder. 'Long enough, Jim; long
|
|
enough to know what you're thinking. That's why I'm here.' He reached
|
|
for a chair and sat himself down only a few inches from Kirk, his
|
|
voice a whisper. 'Jim, it's true. I've confirmed what's going to
|
|
happen, what HAS to happen.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
He watched Kirk accept the news, outwardly without reaction, but
|
|
the doctor in him worried over what he wasn't seeing. McCoy knew it
|
|
was time to act, now, while Jim accepted the inevitability of the
|
|
situation. 'Jim, there's nothing you can do to save them.' Kirk
|
|
started to protest but he ignored him and continued on. 'Even if
|
|
there was Jim, you couldn't, you know it HAS to happen this way. We
|
|
can't change history Jim--it's them or us.' He swallowed, hating
|
|
himself for what he was about to say, 'Just like it was last time...'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk fell silent, staring at the floor for long moments. Just as
|
|
McCoy thought he should say something, he spoke up. 'How does it
|
|
happen?' he demanded. 'This is a hospital, these people are SAVING
|
|
lives not taking them. Why kill them?' McCoy paled slightly and
|
|
stood, turning away, hoping his reaction would remain unseen, but
|
|
they knew each other too well for Kirk to miss it. 'Bones, WHY?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy sighted heavily. He had hoped against hope that Jim
|
|
wouldn't ask, but hadn't really expected him not to. He took the
|
|
chair and sat down again and began to explain. 'Jim, while you were
|
|
sick, do you ever remember talking to yourself, thinking that someone
|
|
was there, me perhaps,' he looked up into the hazel eyes, 'or Spock?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kirk looked down, 'No, but Margaret said I'd been talking in my
|
|
sleep.' His gaze returned to McCoy, 'She knows about Spock.'
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The doctor caught himself before he asked what else she had
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found out. After all, it didn't really matter either way any more. He
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choose his next words carefully, 'It seems, Jim, that she isn't the
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only one that knows...' The blood drained away from the admiral's
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face as McCoy continued, 'The patient in the next bed was a North
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Korean, Jim. If he overheard you talking about your command and this
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mission, who knows what he might have thought'
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Kirk looked across at him, knowing what came next and dreading
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the hearing of it. 'He stole out of camp, Jim. It all fits. This, us,
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tomorrow unprovoked attack by the North Koreans.' Kirk's heart fell
|
|
even further. Tomorrow. There was so little time left to do anything,
|
|
to say something. But say what? What was there he could say, or do?
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'They must have listened to him, Jim. Listened and believed
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there was a United States Admiral of some sort, here on some
|
|
mission.' McCoy swore silently. How come he always got to break the
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|
bad news to people?
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|
'Bones they wouldn't destroy the entire camp for one man!' Kirk
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|
groped desperately, knowing damn well that they would. 'They know the
|
|
Americans would retaliate, and hard, it's against all the rules of
|
|
war to destroy a hospital.'
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|
|
|
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|
'I don't know, Jim. Maybe it just happens to tie in with some
|
|
other intelligence they had and the whole things a mistake. One big
|
|
mistake.'
|
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|
|
|
|
Kirk's voice dropped to a whisper, his face ashen, as he
|
|
realised what he had done, and what would happen because of it. 'My
|
|
God, Bones, a mistake. All these people... and it's just a mistake.'
|
|
His head fell into his hands, 'What have I done, Bones? What have I
|
|
done?'
|
|
|
|
|
|
McCoy grabbed him by the shoulders and looked at him
|
|
determinedly. 'Jim, you haven't done ANYTHING, this whole blasted
|
|
war's a mistake. It's not your fault!' he insisted. But Jim Kirk
|
|
wasn't listening. They talked for a while longer, McCoy trying vainly
|
|
to convince him that there was nothing he could have done, or could
|
|
do now.
|
|
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|
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|
Leonard McCoy left feeling useless and bitter. In some sense Jim
|
|
was right, their presence had precipitated these events, so if they
|
|
hadn't been there then it couldn't have happened this way. He
|
|
consoled himself that history demanded they were here, it was
|
|
inevitable he told himself, but he didn't feel any better for it.
|
|
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|
* * *
|
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|
|
|
Six a.m. the next morning brought with it a new day for the 4077
|
|
MASH, and all over the camp it's people were starting to plan their
|
|
activities. Some grumbled about the amount of work they had allotted
|
|
to them, some about the war in general, and all of them grumbled
|
|
about the food they were expected to eat.
|
|
|
|
|
|
James Kirk, though, sat alone in his darkened tent, his head in
|
|
his hands, his thoughts torn between two sets of actions. Those his
|
|
mind insisted he must do, and had done before, and those that his
|
|
heart told him were right. He had lost too much already to risk
|
|
losing it again, it argued. And, if he chose to accept what his mind
|
|
told him he must do, how could he live with the knowledge that it was
|
|
him who was responsible for the deaths of all these people. For her
|
|
death.
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|
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|
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|
Long into the day he fought the age old battle of duty versus
|
|
desire. And then, suddenly, with the confidence of a man who has
|
|
finally made the unmakeable decision, he arose, his jaw
|
|
characteristically firm, and strode out of the door towards Potter's
|
|
office, his decision in hand.
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* * *
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--
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-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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--------- | Dept Computer Engineering, Curtin University of Technology
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/ o ---- | Perth. Western Australia. Phone: +61 9 351 7908
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/ / / / / | Internet: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au
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| Bitnet: North_TJ%cc.curtin.edu.au@cunyvm.bitnet
|
|
_--_|\ | UUCP: uunet!munnari.oz!cc.curtin.edu.au!North_TJ
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/ \ |-------------------------------------------------------------
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-->\_.--._/ |I don't want to achieve immortality through my work...
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v |I want to achieve it through not dying! -- Woody Allen.
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