Title: A Quiet Sleep and a Sweet
Dream
Author: Janlaw
Disclaimer: All the usual
legalese.
Lee’s ficathon wish: At the end of 'The Martin
Baker Fan Club', Harm leaves Roscoe's room to go check on Harriet.
When he goes back to tell Roscoe goodnight, he finds him. How does
Harm react to this? Does he feel guilty? Does Mac help him? How?
(I’ve) always wondered about Harm's reaction to Roscoe's
death.
IMPORTANT Author’s Note:
PLEASE READ BEFORE READING THE STORY.
I did not
write this story to provoke a discussion of assisted suicide, which
is illegal in most places, or “right to die” issues, life
after death, organ donation, nursing home care, or any other
hot-button controversial topic. This story is also not about life as
a paraplegic, quadriplegic, or living with any other physical or
mental challenge. Two of my closest family members live with
significant “challenges.” The story is merely an attempt
to explore Roscoe’s decision and its impact on Harm’s and
Mac’s lives. In doing so, I hope I have fulfilled Lee’s
“wish.”
I am not a physician, other medical care
provider or clergy. Author’s liberties have been taken.
A
few deviations from strict “canon” as we knew it in early
Season 4 -- In this story, Harm has a television and DVD player; he
even gets cable TV! Also, he was aware of Mac’s relationship
with Chloe. The story begins a few minutes after the frame that ended
"The Martin Baker Fan Club.”
*********************
20
October 1998 (Season 4)
Banneker Hospital
Washington,
D.C.
Her smaller two hands gripped in his larger
one, Harm and Mac stood tight against the wall, partly hidden by the
door. They watched intently what appeared to them to be controlled
chaos as the Code Blue Response Team attempted to resuscitate Roscoe
Martin.
Minutes later they listened in disbelief as the Team
Leader indicated to the Nurse Recorder, “the time of death is
…”
“No.” Harm’s voice was so
faint Mac could barely hear him. “Why would he do
it?”
The Code Team Leader and the Security Officer
turned to them, grimacing. “You’re not supposed to be
here – we told you to leave the room and let us work,”
Dr. Larry Phillips sighed. “Now, why do you say he did
anything? He was a paraplegic, then wounded, apparently a
quadriplegic now, his airway was compromised …”
Harm
tried to focus on the physician. “We came back from checking on
our friend and I thought he was sleeping, it was so quiet, then I
realized the machine wasn’t making any noise …then I saw
his head was turned, the flag was in his mouth…” He
closed his eyes for a moment. “He used it to shut off the
power…”
Dr. Phillips picked up the flag from the
end of the bed and held it out. “This?” At Harm’s
nod, he puzzled, “Where was it? How did it get in his mouth? No
one would have helped him….”
Mac pointed to a
black feather on the floor. “From Chodorowsky’s hat,”
she whispered. “They must have followed the ambulance and
somehow found him.” Harm nodded, “They would have done
anything he told them to…the flag was always on his
wheelchair.” Looking around, Harm pointed out the empty flag
holder on the wheelchair in the other corner of the room. “I’m
sure he told them to go so they wouldn’t be involved.”
“I
have to make a report. What are you saying?” Dr. Phillips
listened intently as Harm and Mac provided a synopsis of the recent
events. Turning the pages of Roscoe’s medical chart, he finally
nodded. “I suppose it’s possible …he apparently
was able to move his head… I’ll talk to his attending
physician.”
Dr. Kevin McKnight spoke from the doorway.
“That would be me. He insisted I tell him the truth, not sugar
coat it or hold out false hope…he had the right to know what
had happened to him and what the prognosis was.” The young
doctor’s voice cracked. “If I’d had any thought he
would do this, any, I would’ve assigned an aide to not
leave him alone for a minute.” Dr. McKnight forced himself to
look Harm in the eye, “I’m sorry for your loss. Are you
family?”
“I was his lawyer…I was supposed
to help him but now … now I feel like I failed him. He still
had his mind….” Harm was agonized by what he saw as an
unnecessary death, and worse, Roscoe was someone he was supposed to
have been helping.
“Trapped in a non-working body…and
it wasn’t a completely functioning mind …you know that
Harm. He was psychotic…but ‘with it’ enough that
he knew he didn’t want to live like that …” Mac
tried to comfort Harm, to make some sense out of Roscoe’s
apparent suicide.
“We have several grief support
groups. Our chaplain’s office can give you the dates and times
they meet. It might help you ….” Dr. McKnight
offered.
“Are you Mr. Martin’s family or someone
who can make a decision?” Two women entered, nodding at both
the physicians and Harm and Mac. “May we talk to you?”
The older woman’s voice was gentle. “I know it’s
hard but we only have a small window of time for you to make a
decision. ‘Time is of the essence’ as the lawyers say. If
you’ll agree, a blind person might be able to see.”
“We
are lawyers.” Harm saw no humor in the equation. “Isn’t
it enough that he’s dead when he shouldn’t be? Now you
want his organs too?”
“I’m Alanna Engel, the
hospital’s donor coordinator.” The older woman calmly
introduced herself. “This is Chaplain Kelly Greene.” Mac
couldn’t stop a small chuckle at the name – the younger
woman had bright red hair and “looked” Irish.
“Rabbi
Kelly Greene, Commander, Chaplain’s Corps, Naval Reserve,”
she amended. “They’re family names. I’m one of a
group of volunteer rotating chaplains here,” she explained,
glad to be able to momentarily lighten the heightened emotional
tension in the room.
Harm brightened slightly, noticing the
woman’s Naval Academy ring. “Lieutenant Commander Harmon
Rabb, Navy JAG Corps and Major Sarah MacKenzie, ‘Mac,’
Marine Corps, also at JAG. He – Roscoe -- had no family. I’m
his lawyer.”
Shaking their hands, Rabbi Greene nodded
to Alanna to continue.
“I’m glad he has someone to
care. We can’t take his organs, they’re already degraded
because he’s not on life support. We might be able to use his
corneas and someone who’s blind could see. Would he want that?
Will you consent?” Alanna brought the decision that Harm needed
to make back to the table.
“I don’t know….I
know he has no family, no one. I know he cared about his friends and
I know he wanted them to be free…” Harm understood,
intellectually, the need for organ donations. “Mac? What do you
think?”
“Do it Harm. Let something good come from
Roscoe’s death.” Mac didn’t hesitate. “My
organ donor card is in my wallet, has been for years.”
“…he
has slipped the surly bonds of earth …put out his hand, and
touched the face of God.” Harm paraphrased the aviators’
favorite poem, John Gillespie Magee’s famous “High
Flight.” “How can he do it if he can’t see?”
“He
already has.” Rabbi Greene understood what Harm was asking and
responded without hesitation. “His soul has already gone to
Heaven “on wings of eagles” if you remember the Psalm and
like aviation metaphors. He’s already with God ... and he’s
found his friends and family who were waiting for him. Your friend
doesn’t need his eyes anymore but someone else does. Please say
‘yes.’”
“Okay, do it.” Harm
nodded to Alanna. “What do I need to sign?”
“I’ll
alert the team and bring the consent form. Thank you.”
“L’chaim.”
Kelly Greene sketched a salute. “You’ll see. It’s a
mitzvah.”
Several hours later
Harm’s
loft
North of Union Station
Washington, D.C.
“I
still can’t understand why he did it.” Harm was still
upset. He and Mac had talked for a long time with Chaplain Greene
before leaving the hospital and returning to his apartment. “It
wasn’t like he was Karen Ann Quinlan or Terry Shiavo. I
wouldn’t want to be a vegetable …what’s the
medical term – ‘persistent vegetative state’…
If I was like that I’d want you to make them ‘pull the
plug.’ But he still had his mind, he could still think and
talk, he could still do ‘something.’”
“What
would his life have been Harm?” Mac didn’t want to sound
harsh but she knew that Harm would be haunted by Roscoe’s death
if he didn’t come to terms with it. She deliberately described
a ‘worst case scenario.’ “He didn’t have
Christopher Reeve’s money or family support. He wasn’t a
lawyer who could see clients and have a profession. He wasn’t a
famous mathematician or writer or an artist who’d draw with a
pencil in his mouth. He would have lived out his life in a VA nursing
home bed. Maybe if the staff was nice they’d strap him into a
wheelchair some days and taken him outside or to a window. Maybe he’d
wake up early before the staffer came in. He couldn’t scratch
his nose. If he sneezed it’d just drip. He couldn’t go to
the bathroom. He couldn’t brush his teeth. He couldn’t
feed himself. He couldn’t ….”
“I get
the picture Mac! I get it.” Harm knew what she was saying, but
accepting it was a different story.
“Do you? I wouldn’t
want to live alone like that, maybe for 10 or 20 or 30 years. We hold
each others’ durable medical power of attorney. You need to
understand what I want, beyond what’s in my Living Will. And I
need to know what you’d want.” Mac’s tone was
fierce. This was a subject she felt really strongly about. “I
did a paper on “right to die” and the right of a
competent adult to make his or her own decisions in law school. I
know what I want… and what I don’t want. I have
to make sure you do.” Mac made an effort to calm herself,
breathing deeply and speaking more slowly. “I’m not
asking you to help me commit suicide Harm. I know that’s
against the law. But I need you to understand how I feel if you ever
have to make the decisions for me. No heroics. No life support. A DNR
order. And you have to tell me what you’d want. You must have
thought about it – if not before your ramp strike, then after.”
Mac sighed. She was tired too. “It’s different for you –
your family has money, you’d never be alone. Even if you were a
quadriplegic, you could practice law from a wheelchair, you’d
have nurses and aides and whatever you’d need to help you with
everything.”
“I did think about it,” Harm
whispered “I just never had to see it before. Can we talk about
it more tomorrow? I can’t do it tonight. Except …you’re
wrong Mac, you know. You’d never be alone either.”
The
two friends stared at each other, cognizant of the suddenly changed,
suddenly charged atmosphere in the room. It was almost like a
climactic change – the “air” was “supercharged.”
Mac was too tired to try to figure out what Harm meant. What
was he implying? That he’d always be there for her? They’d
come back from Russia a few weeks ago, closer than ever, but did he
feel about her the way she did about him? She knew he cared, but was
it more than the bond of a strong friendship?
“Can you
just stay with me tonight? I mean ….” Now it was
awkward, the tension in the room had subtly shifted.
“If
you want me to.” Mac would do anything to comfort her best
friend, who was obviously hurting. “Tomorrow we can make some
funeral arrangements. We’ll call back to the hospital, to the
Chaplain and Alanna. I know they can’t tell us who got the
corneas but maybe they can tell us if it was successful.” Her
hand rubbed Harm’s forearm gently, up and down. “Do you
have a tee shirt I can borrow?”
0230
Moonlight
filtered through the blinds as Harm shifted yet again, trying not to
roll against Mac the way he wanted to. He watched her sleep,
wondering if she’d understood what he’d been trying to
say. Did she have any idea how he felt about her? He knew she
considered him her ‘best friend’ but he felt so much more
than friendship for her. Finally giving up, he grabbed sweats and
went into the living area. For the next hour, he surfed the web,
reading about right to die, right to self-determination, accounts of
cases, newspaper articles, even skimming a few law review articles.
Finally he decided, he had no right to substitute his judgment for
Roscoe’s, especially since he couldn’t get Mac’s
description of what Roscoe’s life probably would have been like
out of his mind. If it were him …what quality of life would he
be willing to settle for? He didn’t like not being able to fly
because of his eyesight, except during daylight in ‘Sarah.’
How would he manage if he were paralyzed? He could’ve so easily
been much more badly injured in his ramp strike. Then he’d
walked away from a second ejection. How many more chances would he
get before he’d end up like Roscoe?
“What are you
doing Harm? Couldn’t you sleep?”
“I’m
sorry – did I wake you?” Startled, Harm swung around from
the monitor. In his tee shirt, with bare feet and her hair tousled,
Mac looked very young and very beautiful.
“Uh uh …I
never sleep for very long at a time.” Peering over his
shoulder, Mac grimaced. “Please let it go Harm. Roscoe made a
split second, blink-of-an-eyelash decision when the guys came in.
Don’t obsess over it.”
“I do in a way Mac,
I really do. See his point of view I mean. Now I want to think about
myself, like you said.” Harm blinked his eyes. What if that was
the only way he could communicate? “Do you want some coffee or
tea? Maybe watch a movie? Or do you want to try to go back to sleep?”
Harm felt bad – he knew Mac rarely slept well and figured the
light had woken her.
“Let’s have tea and find a
movie,” Mac decided. “When it gets light we can go for a
run and then I’ll buy you breakfast.” Back to sleep? Who
was he kidding? He had to know what his cute six looked like in those
sweats. Didn’t he? “What movies do you have?”
“I’ll
make the tea, you decide. If you can’t find anything you like
we can get a pay-per-view.” While Harm busied himself making
tea and putting some crackers on a plate, Mac flipped through his
small collection of DVDs. “Nothing sad. We’ve had enough
sad.” She paused at “The Big Easy” with Dennis
Quaid and Ellen Barkin. “Is “The Big Easy” set in
New Orleans? I’ve always wanted to go there, to the French
Quarter and to the plantations on the River Road.”
“Uh
…yeah,” Harm liked the movie but somehow, he didn’t
think Mac knew it was one of the sexiest films he’d ever seen.
Bringing the tea and a tray with the crackers to the coffee table, he
saw Mac rubbing her arms as she started the movie. “You’re
cold …c’mere.”
With a small sigh, Mac
settled against him, thinking that at seven inches taller he was just
perfect for her – she fit right under his arm.
Trying
to concentrate on the movie, Mac was increasingly aware of Harm and
how still he held himself against her. She’d had no idea how
steamy the romantic thriller was. Squirming slightly, she smirked to
herself at her ribald thoughts and wondered if Harm was affected too.
“Stay still Marine or I won’t be responsible…”
Harm wondered if she had any idea what the movie and her proximity
were doing to him. Watching her smiling sleepily at him, he had a
feeling she knew …knew very well.
“So don’t
be.” Mac’s voice was a trifle breathless.
“Are
you sure Mac? You won’t slap me if I do what I want?”
“Only
if you don’t!” Mac wiggled closer, eagerly lifting her
face. His beautiful expressive eyes locked onto hers as their lips
met. Dennis and Ellen were forgotten as nearly two years of dancing
around each other were swept up in the magical feel of lips on
mouths, hands on skin, and breathless murmurs of pleasure.
Finally
drawing back slightly, Mac sprawled on Harm’s lap. They were
both awed by the unleashing of feelings they had long tried to deny.
“I love you Mac …I love you and I want you …but
not tonight, when we’re both so tired and I’m still
thinking about Roscoe dying like he did. I want better than this for
our first time. Do you know what I mean?” Caressing her cheek
with his lips, Harm prayed he hadn’t misinterpreted.
“It’s
technically morning but I know what you mean so we can wait ’til
tonight…or ’til you’re ready.” Mac giggled
softly. “It’s okay” she whispered, “we’ll
wait as long as you want, as long as you kiss me again.” Not
waiting for an answer, she touched her fingers to her lips and then
to his. “I love you too Harm. I’ve loved you forever.”
Dusk, six days later
A cliff overlooking the
Pacific Ocean
La Jolla, CA
Luminarias flickered,
lighting the path from the Burnetts’ pool and deck to this
point of land overlooking the ocean. “Ready?” Trish
Burnett beamed at her son and the woman who would soon be her
daughter.
It had taken less than a week to change the course
of their lives. They’d asked the Admiral for a week’s
leave and made a series of decisions. First, cremation, and that
they’d scatter Roscoe’s ashes into the wind. “Do
you have any idea where he was from Harm? Whether he’d prefer
the Atlantic or the Pacific?”
“No, but we’re
his family now and we’re from the west. The Pacific it is.”
They’d called Chaplain Greene to ask her if she knew a chaplain
in the San Diego area and were pleased to learn that she lived in
Chula Vista, and was only in Washington for a few days of Reserve
duty. Arriving in California, they’d spent a day with Trish and
Frank, explaining what had happened. Delighted with the woman she’d
always felt had captured her son’s elusive heart, Trish had
volunteered to get everything they wanted together while Harm and Mac
spent a few days on Catalina Island.
Taking the hydrofoil
from Dana Point to Avalon, 26 miles off the coast, they left the
bustle of Southern California behind. It was still warm but most of
the tourists were gone and they enjoyed exploring the small town and
its attractions. Most of the island is owned by the Santa Catalina
Island Conservancy, dedicated to preserving, protecting and
beautifying the island and its resources. Harm and Mac enjoyed the
excursions that were still available this late in the season,
including the semi-submersible “submarine” ride, hiking
the short distance to the Wrigley Memorial and Botanical Garden and
going by jeep into the mountainous interior to the “Airport in
the Sky.” They rented equipment and spent a day kayaking to Two
Harbors at the northern isthmus, an even smaller village and
campground.
Most importantly, they’d planned their
future, talking for hours about what would be important for them and
the family they both wanted. Roscoe Martin’s tragic life and
abrupt death was the catalyst that let them open up fully to each
other.
The decisions, with just a little compromising,
actually came easily. They would each complete their military
careers, but retire as soon as Mac had her 20 years, two years after
Harm. They would hope for a boy and a girl and Chloe would always be
part of their family. Knowing their time as partners at JAG was over,
they agreed that they would ask the Admiral’s help with their
detailers for orders to duty stations in the same area. They decided
they’d like an overseas tour, then a few more years in D.C.,
then they’d try to get San Diego duty stations for their last
few years before retirement.
“Could you be happy here
Mac? Or in a place like this? We could have a small town practice
together, I could teach flying part time at the airport, we could
have a good life.” They had walked along the seawall to the
Avalon Theater and sat on a bench holding hands, waiting for the sun
to set.
Mac lifted her face to the last rays of the day’s
warmth. After just a few days, the faster pace of the city and the
stresses of their work at JAG seemed far away. “I was a small
town girl ’til I got to D.C. I know I want to finish my Marine
career and I want to do the best job of it I can, but there’ll
be life after the Navy and Marine Corps to look forward to. The next
eight-nine years, I think working with you will be what I’ll
miss the most.”
“Are you sure Harm? You could be
JAG someday the way you’re going. Don’t you want to be an
admiral?”
Harm shook his head decisively. “No, I
wouldn’t like the politics, the paperwork, the meetings and the
bureaucracy. I like investigating and litigating. I want a good
career too, but I want to work with you and I know that’ll have
to wait.”
Mac nodded. “We don’t have to
decide anything definite today. This is a beautiful island and the
town’s really nice. Let’s come back as soon as we can,
see about buying a house we can rent out ’til we retire. If we
change our minds, we can use it for vacations or sell it. California
real estate’s always a good investment.” She leaned over
to kiss his cheek, still a little shy about ‘PDAs.’ “The
next decision, Sailor, is yours … what’s for
dinner?”
Returning to La Jolla, they’d spent a
morning with the Legal Assistance Department Head at NLSO Southwest,
revising their Wills, Living Wills, and Durable Powers of Attorney.
Harm felt better. He’d come to terms with Roscoe’s death,
and felt certain that if necessary, he’d find the inner
strength and courage to cope with whatever travails life might throw
at him.
*****
“Ready.” A.J.,
Bud, Harriet and Chloe waited with Chaplain Greene and Judge Arthur
Geller, a friend and neighbor of Trish and Frank’s. A harpist
and flutist alternated classical selections and Irish tunes. “I’ve
been ready forever.” Harm held out his hand to Mac, who wore a
simple strapless sheath, the white silk shot with gold threads
swirling around her legs. No uniforms or fancy dresses. Harm and Mac
had asked their friends to wear white or something close to it, and
Trish had arranged for the musicians and ordered a cake decorated
with tiny roses.
They’d decided on a brief memorial for
Roscoe, followed by the simplest of wedding ceremonies, completing
the circlet of death and life, affirming their belief that their life
together would be good. It had helped that Alanna had reported that
the cornea transplant operation on a firefighter blinded in a gas
explosion appeared successful.
The harpist played the Navy
Hymn and Harm read Magee’s “High Flight” hoping
that it had come true for Roscoe, that he really had “slipped
the surly bonds of earth,” that his soul and spirit were
finally free. Mac followed with the first and last lines of John
Masefield’s “Sea-Fever:”
I must go down
to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky,
And all I ask
is a tall ship and a star to steer her by.
And all I ask is a
merry yarn from a laughing fellow-rover
And quiet sleep and a
sweet dream when the long trick’s over.
At Chaplain
Greene’s nod, Harm tilted the small box of grey particles into
the wind, and as the ash blew skyward, she recited the Kaddish, the
Jewish prayer for the dead.
Yis ga’ dal, v’
yis’ kadash, sh’may ra’bbo….
It
was done.
The small group – Harm and Mac’s ‘family
of the heart’ – joined hands in a semicircle around them.
Judge Geller moved to join Kelly and face them. “Ready?”
“Dearly
beloved….”
They exchanged Irish Claddagh rings,
and the circle was complete.
The end.