Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!mips!apple!olivea!uunet!munnari.oz.au!uniwa!cc.curtin.edu.au!tnorthtj From: tnorthtj@cc.curtin.edu.au (Tim North) Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative Subject: MASH/Trek story: Again No More Angels. Summary: MASH/Star Trek crossover story Message-ID: <1991Jul29.114238.9030@cc.curtin.edu.au> Date: 29 Jul 91 03:42:38 GMT Reply-To: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au Followup-To: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au Organization: Curtin University of Technology, Perth. W.Aust. Lines: 1055 This story is a cross-over between MASH and Star Trek. It occurs after the death of Spock in STII:TWOK and in the later years of the MASH series. Comments and flattery eargerly solicited. :-) Tim North (North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The small wooded area in which the two strangers materialised seemed almost peaceful. In fact, had their thoughts not been otherwise engaged, the two men now standing there might even have felt happy to again tread upon real earth, and not the cool, but somehow barren steel of a ship's hull; glad to be able to reach down and feel the damp, wholesome soil running between their fingers. But as things would have it, they did not have time for such reflections and even if they had, they would not have had the inclination. For some meters away from them, obscured by brushwood and other vegetation, lay a standard, United States army issue jeep. A normal jeep by all accounts, and one that had lain there for only a few hours since its previous owner had so carefully abandoned it. It was a well kept jeep too, except that an acute observer might just still see where its serial numbers had been painstakingly removed and rewritten. But its cover served it no good as the two strangers walked towards it almost as if they expected it to be somewhere nearby and began clearing away its camouflage. This done, and having climbed aboard, they started the engine and within minutes of having invaded the tranquillity of the scene were out of sight down the winding, gravelly road nearby. The small wooded area again seemed almost peaceful. * * * James Kirk started as the vehicle went over another in a series of almost innumerable pot holes in this poor excuse for a road. He had been driving for some time now and realised sheepishly that he had not been paying attention. He pulled himself up straight in the seat and made as if to renew his concentration. He looked over at the good doctor snoring next to him, it was a wonder to him how McCoy could sleep in a situation like this. Though if he could sleep over the sound of his own snoring, he could sleep through anything, Kirk supposed. He turned his attention back to the road and concentrated on his newly acquired skill of driving. 'It's a pity I haven't learned to do this earlier,' he thought to himself. He remembered the last time he had driven one of these things, Bela's place, he smiled as he remembered Spock's face, he had nearly killed them both! Spock. Why were his thoughts always turning to Spock? He'd taken this new mission to try and get away from those memories and yet they kept haunting him, always and ever present, no matter what he did and no matter where he went. He remembered how surprised he had been when 'Fleet' had asked him to participate in another of their series of 'historical reconnaissance' missions, seemingly out of the blue, and he more than a little suspected McCoy of complicity in this somewhere. They argued of course that he was uniquely qualified for the task etc., etc., and he couldn't entirely deny that in some sense he was. He still viewed with some foreboding though anything that might resemble his previous abortive dealing with these reconnaissance missions. The last one had thrown him back to about the same time as this one. When was it exactly, 1960? No, it was more like 1970. What a surprise that had yielded! Then of course there was his other experience with this sort of thing, that, like this one, had involved that mysterious machine--or perhaps being, no one had yet decided which--the Guardian. Of that incident he seldom thought, or tried not to anyway, but he did now in the loneliness of this unending road, and his thoughts were drawn to the similarities between what he had lost then and what he had only now lost. With them came the inevitable recriminations of knowing that if he had acted differently, if he had been more observant, if ONLY, then things could have been different. If only... He was saved the pain of further self examination by the literally jolting realisation that they were finally approaching their destination. He reached over to shake the incumbent doctor, but the road in its final desperate bid for dominance had at last managed to tear him from his slumber and McCoy was groggily stirring himself in the manner of those unceremoniously awakened. 'I didn't sleep a wink with your damn driving,' he mumbled, but on getting no reply changed to a more productive tack, 'We there yet, Jim?' But the question went unanswered and as he looked up he realised why. They were indeed 'there' and at that moment Leonard McCoy wished he could be almost anywhere else. * * * 'Oh, my God,' McCoy said tonelessly. Kirk's dry throat couldn't even manage a reply, and the two merely sat there in the jeep, surrounded by an ant's nest of activity. Everywhere, people rushed to and fro from buses that carried in the wounded. The ground outside was littered with bodies--doctors and nurses frantically carrying out triage--and in the background helicopters could be heard landing bringing with them more suffering souls. It was almost too much to assimilate all at once. Kirk's face drew itself into a tight, hard mask. McCoy swallowed and licked his lips, wondering how on earth any record tapes could have prepared them for this. One of the doctors nearby looked up from the once handsome boy he had been treating, the face now burnt and blistering, and gestured to the nurse attending him to have the boy taken inside immediately. 'Prep' him, I'll work on this one first.' This said, he hurried over to the awaiting jeep. 'Colonel Potter the C.O.,' he snapped, his voice weary with the fatigue of hours. 'We've been expecting you state-side people. You sure picked a dandy of a time to get here.' He was about to continue, but was stopped short by Hoolihan's shouts. 'Colonel, this man's haemorrhaging!' Potter turned back to the new arrivals. 'You folks 'll have to find your own way to the V.I.P. tents I'm afraid, I just can't spare anyone right now.' He turned once more to leave but was interrupted again, this time by one of the new arrivals. He glanced back, clearly annoyed. 'Colonel, I'm Leonard McCoy, I'm a doctor. I'd like to help...' Potter's composure changed rapidly, 'Welllll, that's a whole new can of worms, doctor. We'd be mighty obliged.' He gestured towards the mass of bodies. 'Find somewhere to start, it's going to be a long night...' Some 14 hours later, McCoy was ready to agree with him and had barely enough time to down a cup of hot coffee in the mess tent before collapsing into a deep and, mercifully, dreamless sleep back in his tent. * * * Eight a.m. the next morning, the mess tent saw McCoy stumble in, a sympathetic Kirk watching his shaky progress. Kirk was sitting at a table by himself. Around him, tables were obviously engaged in deep-- and not too pleasant--gossip, but Kirk seemed unmoved by it. He sat casually sipping a mug of coffee, having passed on the 'breakfast', much to the amusement of the people around him, and waved to McCoy when he came in. 'I didn't expect you so early,' he said, when McCoy had sat down. 'I think it's something called 'jet lag',' the other answered, nursing a fuzzy head. 'At least that's what Hunnicut told me.' 'You seem to be fitting in all right. I think someone even said good morning to you when you came in. What's the secret of your success, Bones? I could use a little of it to thaw my reception around here.' 'It's called 14 hours in surgery, Jim,' McCoy replied dryly. Kirk was saved an embarrassed reply by the three officers who sat down next to them at that moment. 'Mr Kirk, Dr. McCoy,' the first said, shaking hands. 'I'm Colonel Potter, commanding the MASH unit. I think we met earlier yesterday, but I'd kinda like to do the formal how-do's. This is Captain Pierce, our chief surgeon...' ''Hawkeye' to my friends,' the doctor said warmly, shaking McCoy's hand. Didn't I see you in my nightmare yesterday?' McCoy managed a weak smile while Hawkeye shook Kirk's hand perfunctorily. '...and this is Major Winchester.', continued the C.O. ''Major Winchester' to my friends,' Charles explained. 'Well, now that we all know each other,' Potter continued, 'let's get down to business. Frankly gentlemen, we're not quite sure why you're here. All the army's told us is you're 'surveying' the MASH unit to report back to some Congressman or someone.' He paused, obviously waiting for an explanation. Well, this is it Kirk decided, time to bite the bullet... 'Colonel, our mission is a rather broadly based one actually,' he started. 'We're here to look at the functioning of the MASH in a... historical context you could say.' Several sets of eyebrows jumped at this, McCoy's included. Pierce spoke up. 'A 'historical context'? What's historical about this place except the food?, which I notice you've wisely chosen to ignore.' Kirk glanced down at the mug he was holding. 'I'm not too sure I shouldn't ignore this coffee either,' he grimaced. Addressing himself back to the group he continued. 'What we'd like to do here Colonel is simply observe your day to day workings, nothing critical, you're not being monitored I assure you,' he paused, wondering how to continue. 'You see, the people we're reporting to feel they can't get the real story of what the Korean war is like from just reading reports about it, so they took the novel step of sending Dr McCoy and myself smack into the middle of it to obtain the information for them.' He caught McCoy's curious expression and sent him back a small shrug. Well, he could hardly explain the loss of a lot of military records of the late twentieth century in Khan's Eugenics wars of the nineties. It was these losses that had prompted Starfleet's controversial 'historical reconnaissance' missions. 'Well Mr Kirk, can't say that I understand why they'd want to, or that I even approve of sending civilians into a combat area...' 'The rest of us are born to it of course,' Pierce interrupted, 'We just love it here.' Potter glared at him and continued, '...but since you're here and since the army obviously approves, my people will give you whatever help you require,' he said; meaningfully staring at Pierce and Winchester. 'WON'T THEY!' 'Oh definitely, definitely,' they chorused, rising to leave. 'Can't wait to read about it in the history books,' Charles muttered. * * * Post-op was nothing new to McCoy, but he dreaded it all the same. Ruefully he thought that he'd seen enough wounded bodies in the last few days to last him the rest of his career, and he was certainly not looking forward to observing more. Hoolihan, from across the room noticed the expression on the new doctor's face and moved to take charge. 'Dr McCoy, I'm Major Margaret Hoolihan, head nurse. I'll just run through the patients' files with you and let you familiarise yourself with our post-op before you get started on your rounds.' McCoy shot her a grateful look and accepted the chart she offered. 'You seem to run a very efficient nursing staff, Major,' he commented, more as a conversation starter than anything else. As it turned out he couldn't have said anything better. 'Why thank you doctor,' she beamed. McCoy nodded and addressed himself to the charts as she gestured to their first patient. 'This is Mr Kim, Doctor, a North Korean farmer. We found him amongst the wounded up on the front.' She paused before continuing, 'A lot of the poorer villagers take to searching through the bodies of the fallen soldiers looking for valuables or something that can be exchanged for food for their families.' 'Barbaric,' McCoy mumbled. 'Why is it the civilians who always seem to come out worst in this damned fighting?' 'Oh, I agree Doctor, but there's very little we can do about it until the peace treaty's signed, and at the rate that's going...' she shook her head. Together they worked their way through the post-op session with relative ease until Charles came to relieve McCoy, who then found some excuse to make himself scarce in a hurry. 'I think you're intimidating that poor man, Charles!' Hoolihan said. Charles snorted and said nothing. Margaret smiled and glanced out after McCoy. She saw him meet up with that man Kirk, through the window. He was a cool one that. She'd taken an almost instant dislike to him. Unusual for her she thought, she was normally so easy to get along with. Oh, he'd been active enough, helping out with the wounded of course, but there was something disquieting about the man, he was hiding something, or perhaps he just wasn't assertive enough, she mused. ' 'Major? Oh Major?' called Winchester, sotto voce, 'I hate to disturb your reverie...' 'Hmmm?' Margaret turned around. '... but there are PATIENTS in here waiting for our attention?' Margaret sighed. Perhaps she could do without the assertiveness... * * * Kirk strode through the swing doors into Potter's Office. 'You wanted to see me, Colonel?' he asked. 'Just thought I'd check on your progress Mr Kirk; get the dirt first hand as it were. Can't bare reading through pages and pages of official reports just to be told I'm doing fine.' He grinned and moved towards the old wooden cabinet in the corner of his office, 'You know what the army's like.' 'I assure you Colonel, our observations are proceeding just as we'd like them to.' Kirk replied honestly. 'Good, good. I hope you're getting the required cooperation from my people?' Kirk shifted in his seat, 'Yes we've had a good response to our questions from everyone.' He paused. 'I'm afraid though I don't seem to have made too favourable an impression with the Major.' Potter looked up. 'Who, Margaret?' Kirk nodded his affirmation. 'Well, I wouldn't be too worried, she's probably just got herself in a knot over something. Give her a few days, I dare say it'll blow over.' Potter mused, if the truth be known he shared his head nurse's reservations about this whole affair. He still couldn't see any point in all this. Come to think of it he'd never quite heard of this type of observation before. Maybe he should check with I-Corps. Mind you, he thought, this Kirk fellow seemed a nice enough type of chap, and although he hadn't had a chance to actually see McCoy at work, judging by the reports that had filtered back from the surgery and his own observations in post-op he was a damn fine doctor. Top notch, in fact. Strange, he mused, why would a doctor be doing this sort of work? 'Meanwhile,' he continued, 'and this is the real reason I asked you over, can I offer you something to drink--a small scotch perhaps?' 'Why thank you, Colonel. Actually I've always been rather partial to brandy, myself.' Hmmm, a brandy man hey?' Potter smiled amused at the memories than invoked. 'Why I remember back in doubleyuh, doubleyuh one, we had a chap in our outfit, 'Killer Carlson', was his name--what a character!' Potter paused as he poured their respective drinks. 'He was a brandy man too, you know. I remember one night he'd had just a tad too much to drink, and he thought he'd tell one and all just how fine a drink brandy really was. So he staggered into the nearest tent and began to sing an ode to the relative merits of brandy over any other drink.' Potter chucked to himself, 'Would've been hilarious if it hadn't been his C.O.'s tent!' Kirk smiled, and was just about to enquire as to the hapless young officer's fate when the doors to the office burst open and Corporal Max Klinger strode in, his dark features clearly worried about the information he bore. 'Sorry to interrupt you sirs like this,' he began, 'but we've just received word from the front that they're taking in more heavy casualties and urgently need medical supplies AND a couple of doctors if we've got 'em...' 'Damn!' Potter slammed his palm down on the table. 'Just when we'll be receiving kids by the bucket load. They know I can't spare my people at a time like this.' Kirk mused, this was a perfect opportunity to observe an actual combat situation. Until now their time had been spent in the relative safety of the MASH and, although their mission didn't specifically call for them to be at the front, he knew it would add significantly to the body of knowledge collected. He spoke up. 'If you can spare us a driver, Colonel, Dr McCoy and I can go along. It'd be a fine chance for us to see just how things really are at the front,' he offered honestly. Potter hesitated for a moment, these men were still unknown quantities, but hell, he thought, he had no better alternative. 'That's mighty nice of you boys,' he replied. 'I'll fit you out with a jeep and send along Major Hoolihan, she's been up there before.' He turned to his company clerk, 'Klinger get on to it.' 'Consider it done, your Colonelness,' came the reply from Klinger already halfway out the door. * * * The two travellers thought they were past being shocked by the brutality and senseless loss of life they had seen. But somehow the filthy tin shack that was all there was to see of the battalion aid station here at the front, managed to shock them even further. Soldiers lay dead or dying in the dirt around the hut, unattended and oblivious to the explosions all around them. McCoy, his face pale, stood at the entrance to the hut looking in, before entering, incredulous at the sight of bodies lying opened on tables, dirt everywhere and medics frantically working amidst the screams; trying to patch them up just enough that they might survive the chopper journey to the MASH. Hoolihan, hardened to the atrocities inflicted in the name of God and country was already surveying the wounded. 'Kirk, don't just stand there gawking,' she snapped, 'start helping these people!' At the sound of Hoolihan's dulcet tones Jim Kirk shook himself from his dazed posture and, accepting the horrific situation as best he could, went to work repairing what damage he was able, and hoping all else could be restored by either McCoy or those back at the MASH. They worked on in the midst of the shellfire for what seemed like hours, both of them having lost count of the bodies dozens of faces previously. 'Kirk give me a hand with this man,' Hoolihan's voice called urgently, as she struggled to control the incoherent thrashings of the wounded soldier at her side. Together they managed to anaesthetise their struggling charge and Margaret began preparing the boy for surgery. As the boy subsided and gave in, finally, to her ministrations she chanced to look up at Kirk and noticed, to her surprise and concern, that he was bleeding from a shrapnel wound to his shoulder. ''Here let me look at that.' She probed around cleaning the wound. 'Why didn't you tell me about this?' Jim Kirk shrugged as he dropped down beside their dust covered and battered jeep. 'There was no time,' he replied. 'Anyway, there's nothing lodged in the wound,' he said and treated her to one of his most disarming smiles. 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.' The doctor caught himself before he asked what else she had found out. After all, it didn't really matter either way any more. He choose his next words carefully, 'It seems, Jim, that she isn't the only one that knows...' The blood drained away from the admiral's face as McCoy continued, 'The patient in the next bed was a North Korean, Jim. If he overheard you talking about your command and this mission, who knows what he might have thought' Kirk looked across at him, knowing what came next and dreading the hearing of it. 'He stole out of camp, Jim. It all fits. This, us, 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? 'They must have listened to him, Jim. Listened and believed there was a United States Admiral of some sort, here on some mission.' McCoy swore silently. How come he always got to break the bad news to people? 'Bones they wouldn't destroy the entire camp for one man!' Kirk 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.' '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.' 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. 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. * * * 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. 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. * * * -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------- | Dept Computer Engineering, Curtin University of Technology / o ---- | Perth. Western Australia. Phone: +61 9 351 7908 / / / / / | Internet: North_TJ@cc.curtin.edu.au | Bitnet: North_TJ%cc.curtin.edu.au@cunyvm.bitnet _--_|\ | UUCP: uunet!munnari.oz!cc.curtin.edu.au!North_TJ / \ |------------------------------------------------------------- -->\_.--._/ |I don't want to achieve immortality through my work... v |I want to achieve it through not dying! -- Woody Allen. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------