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A Fireside Tale By Doc |
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Synopsis: Halloween evening, 1944, Doc has a little fun. Acknowledgements:
I’d like to thank EagleLady for writing her Halloween story and
inspiring me to write one of my own.
Also Mel, who diligently read it for me and then jumped up and
down smiling. Lee for all
things military who made some very nifty suggestions.
And Jestersang who made some very insightful comments and also
pointed out three grammatical/spelling errors that NONE of the rest of
us found, one of which was hysterically funny.
And as always DC, who reads everything I write.
Well, not my grocery list. Night
was slowly settling over the makeshift camp, shadows stretching away
from the bright lights of the mess tent and filtering through the trees
like water slipping over a dam. Men
ambled along in small knots of two or three, relaxed and playful,
shoving each other and laughing, the tips of cigarettes glowing like
fireflies. Somewhere the
tinny buzz of music from a radio suddenly grew louder and then was
hushed amid a burst of laughter. A
jeep motored up, disgorged a passenger and then drove away quite
sedately. And why not? They
were miles from the front. As the
medic wandered back to his squad, stomach sated for once and a hot mug
of coffee clutched in one hand, he marveled at how much difference
twenty-four hours could make. Yesterday
he’d been up to his neck in wounded. Quite literally, as he’d stood in a trench and dragged body
after body to safety. Bad
intelligence, Lieutenant Hanley had said.
Sheer stupidity was what Doc thought.
However you want to look at it, too many men had died for
nothing, bleeding out under the medic’s shaking hands.
Those few he’d managed to save had been rapidly evacuated to
the rear, final outcomes unknown. The
rest had been stuffed in body bags and loaded on trucks. The same trucks that Doc and his squad mates had ridden for
their trip to the camp. Blinking,
Doc tried to pull his thoughts away from those dark forms under their
feet. The men he couldn’t
save. “Hey
Doc! Trick or Treat!” A hand
caught him right between the shoulder blades and he stumbled forward,
coffee sloshing out of the mug and burning his fingers. “Ouch!
Kirby, this coffee’s hot!”
Switching the mug from one hand to the other, the medic flicked
the remaining liquid from his fingers and then wiped them on his pants.
Turning to face his rambunctious buddy, Doc risked another sip,
hoping to transfer at least some of the brew inside his body before
Kirby managed to spill the rest. “You
musta got a shower, huh?” Doc noted Kirby’s damp skin and the fact that the man was
still only half-dressed. Kirby
nodded as he pulled on a clean uniform shirt, buttoning it and tucking
it sloppily into his pants. With one quick movement, he removed the mug from Doc’s
hands and brought it to his lips, tossing it back in two huge swallows. “Thanks,
Doc! Boy, those showers are
somethin’, ain’t they? Hot
water, soap…I didn’t think I was ever gonna be clean again.” Doc
stared at him, thinking of all those body bags.
No amount of soap is ever gonna make me feel clean again.
He glanced away from Kirby, totally at a loss for words in the
face of the irrepressible squad clown.
Finally he raised one hand, then dropped it, turning his back on
Kirby to return to the mess tent.
I just want a cup a coffee.
That’s all. Kirby
stared at him, mouth open. He started to speak then shut up again. When Doc disappeared into the glaring light of the tent, he
sighed and headed for the squad’s bivouac, grumbling to himself all
the way. ***
***
*** Thirty
minutes later, the medic arrived at first squad’s designated area.
He’d gotten his cup of coffee and also another slice of pie,
compliments of the sympathetic Mess Sergeant who’d taken one look at
the shadows under Doc’s haunted eyes and served him without a
wisecrack. He’d also had
an interesting little conversation with a local. A small
bonfire burned merrily and the men had arranged several large logs
around it at a safe distance, suitable for sitting.
Caje knelt by the fire, adding small pieces of dry tree bark here
and there, finally sitting back on his heels and admiring his handiwork. “Looks
good, Caje. Now we just
need some weenies to roast.” Good-natured Littlejohn settled himself on the ground, back
against a log and long legs stretching toward the fire. Caje
smiled, dark gaze still fixated on the dancing flames.
The shadows filled in the hollows on his face, giving him a
particularly saturnine expression. Then he sighed and shoved himself to his feet, hands braced
on his knees. Brushing dirt
and tinder off his pants, the Cajun seated himself on a log and reached
into his jacket, pulling out some recent letters from home. Across
from him, on the opposite side of the fire, Billy Nelson was sharpening
his trench knife, circling the blade on a whetstone.
The rasping sound of steel on stone was unusually loud in the
peaceful evening. Looking
up, he grinned at his squad mates and nodded his head toward the fire. “It’s
nice to have a fire like this, hey Littlejohn?
Not worryin’ about Germans spottin’ it an’ all?” Doc
stood there a moment, debating with himself whether it was better to
just climb into his blanket and fall into oblivious sleep or join the
men around the fire. He
desperately needed the sleep. But
he was afraid of the dreams. The
moon broke through the clouds briefly, chasing back the shadows and
filling the forest with unearthly light. Conversations fell silent as each man slowly lifted his gaze
to the sky. A full moon
hung heavily over the trees, so huge that no stars twinkled beside it,
eclipsed by its reflected light. Seconds
later, the clouds returned, covering and then obscuring the moon
entirely. Nelson stared upward with wide eyes, his mouth hanging slightly open. He absently continued to sharpen his knife, nearly stabbing himself in the process. “Woweee, did you see that?” The
kid’s innocuous comment broke the spell, Caje laughing softly to
himself as he bent over his letter.
Littlejohn picked up a pinecone and chucked it at his young
friend. “No,
what, Billy?” They
were all laughing as Kirby joined them, throwing one leg over a log and
sitting astride. He lit up
a cigarette and held the smoke in his lungs for a long moment, eyes
closed in obvious bliss. Finally,
he blew it out in a series of lop-sided smoke rings. “Man,
this is the life. Warm
fire, hot food, hot showers, hot coffee…” His voice trailed off as he looked around the circle of
familiar faces. Caje,
Littlejohn, Billy… and Doc. He
immediately stood, turning to the medic with arms spread wide. “I’m
sorry, Doc, ‘bout your coffee.”
He shrugged and glanced back at the others who were pretending
not to be listening but very clearly were. Doc
looked away for a moment, considering things and then back at Kirby.
“It’s okay, Kirby. I
got another one.” He knew
the BAR man didn’t apologize often and recognized that for Kirby to
think he needed to meant that Doc himself was showing more of what he
was thinking than he intended. He
nodded his head slightly and cleared his throat.
“Really, Kirby.” Kirby
grinned, happy that he was off the hook for yet another audacious act.
He sat back down and extended his legs toward the fire with a
contented sigh. Doc
shoved his hands in his pockets, shivering slightly as the wind picked
up a little. The day had
been warm but as darkness fell, so did the temperature.
He turned his back on the fire for the moment and wandered slowly
across the clearing. He’d seen a glint of something in the grass during the
moon’s appearance and figured he’d check it out. Railroad
tracks. Long since used and
rusty, the rails still ran in perfectly straight lines through the trees
and off into the gloom. The medic smiled, remembering a time when he had little else
to do but play on the train tracks all day.
He’d loved trains as a boy, always wondering where they were
going and how big was the engine and how many cars could it pull.
Many times he’d sat on the bluffs with his best friend, arguing
over how many cars they’d counted and what colors they were and what
state they were from. Doc
remembered well the day he’d finally spotted the only one he didn’t
have, number forty-eight on his list. Taking
his hands out of his pockets, Doc hopped up on the nearest rail,
balancing on the balls of his feet. He took a few quick steps, throwing his arms out for balance.
Despite his depressed mood, he found himself grinning and leaped
agilely to the other rail. Another
few steps and he was running, heart pounding as if a big engine were
right behind him and gaining. Eventually,
of course, time caught up with him and Doc’s here and now footwear, GI
boots, couldn’t match the deftness of a farmboy’s bare feet.
He slipped, catching himself just before he fell onto an exposed
rusty spike, poking its way up through a rotted tie. “Bravo,
Doc! Bravo!”
Caje’s amused voice drifted across the clearing. Billy
and Littlejohn were applauding and Kirby had two fingers in his mouth,
whistling for all he was worth. Doc
smiled, ducking his head, and then bowed, straightening up almost
immediately, his cheeks flushing red with embarrassment.
Stepping over Littlejohn’s long legs, he joined the squad
around the fire, and settled himself on the opposite end of Billy’s
log. “We
was just sayin’ it’s Halloween.”
Kirby looked around at the darkness beyond the trees and pulled
his jacket closer. “AND a
full moon.” Billy
threw the whetstone into his ruck and reached for the trench knife’s
scabbard. He grinned at
Kirby and flashed a mischievous look to his buddy, Littlejohn. “What’s
the matter, Kirby, you afraid of the dark?”
He laughed as Kirby scowled at him.
“Afraid a bogeyman might get you in the night?” Kirby
finished his cigarette, never taking his gaze from the kid.
“No, Nelson. I’m
afraid that big moose over there may hafta answer a call ‘a nature
an’ step on me. Sheesh.” Placing
his hands behind his neck to cushion his log pillow, Littlejohn
pointedly ignored the BAR man as he casually stretched, huge boots
almost touching the bonfire. “It
IS Halloween, Billy. What
should we do? Trick or
treat at the mess tent?” Billy
grinned. “Nah, it’s all
tricks there.” His grin
faded as the moon appeared again, hanging directly over their heads, and
then just as quickly vanished. “That’s
spooky.” Kirby’s hands
crept up to his neck, thumbs flipping his collar up around his ears.
He stared at the treetops, waiting, for several minutes.
When the moon didn’t make another appearance, he shook his head
and hunkered back down inside his jacket. Doc
watched him, blue eyes narrowed thoughtfully.
He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees, and turned
his attention to the flames. “Ya
know, those ole railroad tracks remind me of back home.
Used to play on ‘em as a boy.”
Doc held his hands out to the fire, enjoying the warmth spreading
through his palms. “They
ran right behind our house an’ then outta town.
Pretty easy way for a fella an’ his buddies to escape, ya know?
We used to meet on the rails an’ follow ‘em, crossin’
railroad trestles over rivers.” Doc
paused, looking out of the corner of his eye at Kirby.
The man was listening closely. The
medic smiled to himself, well aware of his audience. “One
day, we went way further than ever before.
Saw the switchback of the river we fished on at home.
Out there it was white-water, rough an’ dangerous.
We took our time crossin’ that bridge, I’ll tell ya.” Littlejohn
smiled, the corners of his mouth quirking upward.
“Didja ever fall in?” Doc
shrugged, reaching up to scratch behind his ear.
“Well sure, but not on THAT trip.
Ya know, we never did go out there again.”
He paused and tossed a small branch on the fire.
“Not after THAT day.” The
fire crackled and spat, suddenly shooting sparks in the air as its
central core of logs collapsed. Caje
jumped to his feet, poking it here and there with a long stick.
It only took him a minute to get it under control and he then
piled a few more larger limbs around the edges to help concentrate the
burn. Billy
stared at Doc. “Well?
What happened?” Doc
shook his head. “Oh,
it’s nothin’.” Billy
looked over at Littlejohn, knowing the puzzled look on the big man’s
face mirrored his own. Littlejohn
pulled his legs back, crossing them Indian-style, and leaned on one
elbow. “Come on, Doc,
tell us.” Kirby’s
eyes were huge in his pale face. He
glanced from Littlejohn to Billy and then on to Doc.
The medic’s head hung down and he massaged his temples slowly,
as if trying to hold off a bad headache.
Kirby sat up straighter. “Doc,
ya gotta tell us.” Doc’s
fingers stopped moving and he slowly raised his head.
“Well, don’t say I didn’t warn ya.” “It
was Halloween an’ we were supposed to be goin’ to the school.
All the bigger kids who were too big to trick or treat.
S’posed to be a party or somethin’, I cain’t rightly
remember. Anyway, Eugene, he said ‘let’s go walk on the railroad
tracks.’ So we did, four
of us.” Doc
paused to button up his jacket and there was total silence around the
fire. The squad was hooked.
Doc snuck a peek at Kirby and was pleased to see he was sitting
bolt upright on his log, arms wrapped tightly around his chest.
He took a deep breath and went on. “We
got way out there, so far from home.
An’ it got dark. We may have done some hikin’ before, but never after dark.
Don’t want Mama to worry, ya know?
But it got dark. An’ Eugene started cryin’, he’d never get over that
river in the dark, he was gonna fall in an’ drown an’ his mama would
kill him! We laughed an’
said if he drowned he wouldn’t have to worry about his mama killin’
him. Well, that didn’t help, ‘course.
So we set out for home. We
got over the bridge, over that river.
We musta been pretty close, less than a mile, I guess, when we
heard the train whistle. Now
we were in a ravine right then, with nowhere to go!
Eugene started cryin’ again.
We all stood against the dirt walls, knowin’ we could still get
clipped by a car goin’ by, but we had to try.” He
cleared his throat, lacing his fingers together over and over again.
This time he didn’t risk a glance at Kirby but he could feel
the man’s warm attention. Billy
couldn’t stand it. “Holy
cow, Doc! What happened?” Doc
looked at the kid and shook his head.
“I don’t rightly know. The
moon, an’ it was full that night, too, the moon went behind the clouds
an’ it got black as a cave. That
train kept comin’, blowin’ its whistle an’ shakin’ the tracks
with its speed. We were
goners an’ we knew it. Right
as it got on top of us, we all closed our eyes an’ prayed, hopin’
our mamas could sort out whose arms an’ legs were whose.” He
stood suddenly, swinging his arm through the air over the fire, causing
the flames to flicker and follow his hand.
“WHOOOOOSH! It
went by us. I opened my
eyes, thankful to be alive. I
looked up the track an’ couldn’t see the train, it musta been goin’
so fast it was already outta sight.
An’ then I saw somethin’ else.” He stepped over Littlejohn’s legs again and sat down next to Kirby.
Kirby
snorted. “Sucker!
You wouldn’t have caught me out there!
No sirree!” He
looked up into the expressionless faces of his squad mates.
“What? Are you
kiddin’? Out there in the dark? Nah.”
He shut up and went back to hugging his jacket tightly around
himself. Doc
smiled. “Well, somebody
had to go an’ I got elected. I
always was popular.” He
paused to let the joke sink in. Nobody
laughed, Doc included. He
was remembering Artie, big for his age, but somewhat lacking in the
brains department. Artie
had threatened to pound him if he didn’t go.
Artie, whose intelligence had never quite caught up to his size,
had died on Omaha Beach, saving the lives of three other men in the
process. Doc sighed,
pushing those memories away. “So,
I started walkin’ toward the guy, figurin’ he musta been a rail
worker, lookin’ for somethin’ that fell offa the train.
As I got closer I could see he was wearin’ coveralls an’
those rubber boots they wear. I
started feelin’ better an’ looked back at my buddies, wavin’ an’
such. But when I turned
aroun’…” Doc’s
breath caught in his throat and his voice scratched to a halt.
He coughed lightly a few times into his fist, trying very hard
not to laugh. He could see
Kirby leaning so far forward listening that his nose hairs were in
danger of singeing. Billy’s
eyes were as round as canteen cups.
Even Caje was rapt, his dark gaze fixed on the medic. Standing
abruptly, Doc stepped over the log and out into the darkness.
He circled around behind Kirby and then Littlejohn, finally
stopping behind Nelson, directly opposite to the BAR man.
He knew Kirby couldn’t really make out his face and allowed
himself a small grin before continuing. “I…I
turned around an’ the man was lookin’ at me, lookin’ at me an’
wailin’ an’ wavin’ that lantern.
An’ the noise, it was the most awful thing I’d ever heard, he
was moanin’ an’ cryin’. He
said…” Doc stopped
again, lowering his head to his hands. Kirby
leapt to his feet. “What
the hell did he say? Come
on!!!!” Doc
wiped his eyes with his sleeve, apparently overcome with the memory.
Finally, he looked up, blue eyes red-rimmed and brimming with
tears. Of laughter.
He swallowed it down quickly. “He
said, ‘where’s ma head?’ ‘Where’s ma head?’
an’ he had no head! Just
a neck..ah…a neck an’ blood pourin’ down his coveralls from
his…ah…neckhole. I
nearly peed my pants! I
turned an’ ran as fast as I could back down those tracks, passed my
buddies an’ was home in bed before they hit the outskirts of town.
My mama never did figure out why I was home so early on
Halloween.” Kirby
stared at the medic. “He
had no HEAD?” Doc put
one foot up on the log, leaning an elbow on his knee.
“That’s right, Kirby. An’
you know what? The next day we found out there wasn’t no train that night.
We never did know what passed us, whistles shriekin’.
But we did find out somethin’ else.”
He paused, inspecting his fingernails. Kirby
took another step toward the fire.
“Jesus, Doc, WHAT?” “Well,
seems that a few years before that a lineman had been killed by a train
right ‘bout where we was. Seems
he was decapitated.” Doc
bit off a hangnail and spat it into the bushes. “They never did find his head.” Silence. “Seems
he likes to go lookin’ for it on Halloween nights when the moon is
full. Ain’t too many of
those, ya know.” Doc
looked up, his heart hammering in his chest.
He hoped like hell he’d timed this right. And the
moon appeared, its huge countenance blazing through the clouds like an
avenging demon, sinister and rough featured.
As they all stared in horror, it seemed to grow larger still
before the clouds once again closed the curtain. Kirby
stumbled backwards over the log. “That’s
crazy, Doc, YOU’RE crazy!” Doc
closed his eyes, forcing himself not to look at his watch, and pleaded
with whatever gods happened to be listening, please, please make this
work. The
ghostly keening of a train whistle split the silent night, drawing ever
closer with every second. Doc
ran to the tracks, bending down to grip the nearest rail with panicked
fervor. “It’s
comin’! I can feel it in
the rail!” He stared down
the track, shock flooding his face.
At the last second, as surely the train would burst out of the
trees, the medic threw himself sideways and rolled into the ditch, arms
covering his head. The
sound of the train passed them and faded away into the night. Kirby
backed still further away, his eyes huge in his head, mouth open and jaw
working. He flinched when
Littlejohn came up behind him and grabbed his arm, pointing off into the
woods. “What,
Littlejohn, what?” Kirby’s
voice was a panicked squeak. Doc
rose to his feet, a flashlight in his hand.
With a flourish, he switched it on and pointed it into the
darkness. “THERE!” In the
beam of the flashlight lay a head, covered in tousled blonde hair. “AAAAAAAAAGHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!” Kirby screamed, tore his arm from Littlejohn’s grasp and
ran, arms pistoning like a steam train.
He bounced off a tree or two in his headlong flight and vanished
in the direction of the motor pool. The
head slowly turned, its eyelids fluttering as the brightness of the
flashlight illuminated them. They
opened and- “What
the…? Who’s shining a
light over here?” Saunders’
outraged voice filled the night along with the laughter of the squad
minus Kirby. Doc
clicked off the light and made his way over to the sergeant.
Saunders sat up, his brows drawing together in puzzlement at the
leaves and twigs covering his blanket.
The medic bent down, reaching out to gently pat his shoulder. “It’s
okay, Sarge, just a bad dream, just a bad dream.
Ya know, you should really pick another spot for your bed, I
think this tree is dropping its leaves on you.”
He brushed the debris from the blanket and then stepped back,
biting his lip hard. “Night,
Sarge.” Saunders
shook his head, ran his fingers through his hair, and turned over,
burrowing back under the blanket. Doc
walked resolutely toward the fire, blue eyes dancing.
Caje and Nelson waited for him, holding back their own laughter.
As he stepped over the log, they all fell apart in hysterical
mirth, grabbing onto each other to keep from falling in the fire. ***
***
*** A half
hour later, the trio caught up with Littlejohn and an outraged Kirby in
the mess tent. “So,
you set me up?” “Yep,
is it so hard to believe?” Littlejohn smirked at the BAR man, enjoying every moment of
Kirby’s comeuppance. Kirby
shrugged, not wanting to believe that he’d been had.
Especially by Doc, whom he’d thought he could trust. Billy
poured himself another cup of coffee, glad it had been brewed in
something other than his helmet. “It’s
true, Kirby, we gotcha.” He
held out his mug to Littlejohn, nudging him with one elbow. Littlejohn
raised an eyebrow and then reached for his flask, pouring a quick splash
of something into the coffee. Doc,
who had been silent up to this point, cleared his throat.
The others looked at him expectantly. “It’s
all your fault, Kirby.” Kirby’s
eyes widened innocently. “What? What’d
I do?” Littlejohn
rolled his eyes and whispered in Billy’s direction.
“What DIDN’T he do?” Doc
smiled. “Well, you drank
my coffee.” “And?” “Well,
I had to come back for another cup.
An’ Billy an’ Caje an’ Littlejohn were settin’ here
talkin’ to this French guy.” He
blew gently across the surface of his latest cup of coffee, nodding to
Littlejohn as he held out the flask, much to the big man’s surprise. “AND?” Doc
eyed Kirby as he sipped, hoping this cup wouldn’t end up on the floor. “He
told us about the train tracks. An’
the OTHER set of train tracks. An’
when the train was comin’ through.
So it didn’t…ah…scare us.” “Scared?
I wasn’t scared, just…just annoyed.
Annoyed that my buddies, my friends, my…what’s that French
word, Caje?” He snapped
his fingers in the Cajun’s face. Caje
batted Kirby’s hand away. “Amis.” “Yeah,
annoyed that my amis would stoop so low.
You happy now?” Kirby’s face was beet red. Doc
looked around at his co-conspirators, all nodding their heads and
grinning at him. He faced
Kirby, a lopsided grin on his own face.
“Yeah, I think I am, Kirby, thanks.” The
medic stood, suddenly weary beyond words.
He thought he might finally be able to sleep, finally slip past
those dreams and into oblivion for a few blessed hours.
With a nod to his squad mates, he turned to the tent flaps. “Hey,
wait a second. When did you
have time to make up that cockamamie story about the train then?” Doc
paused, not turning around. “Oh,
the story’s true, Kirby. Night all.” The
tent flap fell neatly closed behind him. Note:
There actually WAS a full moon on Halloween, 1944.
There have only been three since then and the next isn’t until
2020! Also:
Doc’s story is based on the ghostlight of Gurdon, Arkansas.
I’ll give you a website so you can read for yourselves! http://littlerock.about.com/cs/urbanlegends/a/aagurdonlight.htm
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