ER/Stand Crossover
It was getting cold. Doug rubbed his hands together and blew
on them to keep warm. There was a brisk edge to the wind and he
knew what that meant. It wasn't just the night or the wind or
even the higher altitude... Winter was coming. It was going to
get colder and start snowing and he was never going to get to Las
Vegas before the snow tied everything down.
It didn't help that he had to take Lucy back. He looked at
her sleeping form, lying next to him curled in her sleeping bag.
There was no way he could, in good conscience, leave her there.
He sure wasn't about to let her tag along with him. I have to
head back, he though irritably, at least until I run into the
rescue party. That there was a rescue party was simply a given.
As soon as he had spotted Lucy, he had realized that there was a
search party out there. Not only was Kerry a manipulative bitch,
she was devious too. Send anyone else chasing after him, and no
one would give a damn. Sending Lucy though... He almost smiled.
He carefully wrapped his own sleeping bag around her, noting
as he did that she had huge dark circles rimming her eyes. He
hadn't seen anyone look that tired since he and Carol had gone to
Mark's apartment with their arms loaded with next to useless
medical supplies.
Mark hadn't just been tired, he had been out of his mind
with worry for Rachel. Doug had taken one look at the little girl
lying on her bed, shivering and coughing , and he had known she
wasn't going to make it. Deep down, he had a feeling that Mark
had known too, but that hadn't stopped the man from spending the
next three days doing everything he could to save her. It hadn't
helped, not at all. Doug had barely been able to think about
Mark, and Rachel, and especially Carol since the summer started.
Not for very long, and not without reaching for a bottle. Now
though, with the better part of a fifth of scotch warming him, he
realized that the memories weren't going to go away.
It had been oppressively hot in Mark's apartment. The power
had gone off within hours of their arrival, and Mark had been too
worried to take care of anything other than Rachel. He had died
within hours of the little girl. By the time it happened, Doug
had expected it, but he had been in a near frenzy over Carol.
Carol had been sick, as sick as Mark if not worse, but she had
lingered on for several more days. She had been coherent and
awake until the end, not like Mark who had lapsed into a peaceful
coma. Oddly though, as he looked out over the vast line of
wrecked and stalled, feeling drunk and depressed beyond belief,
it wasn't Carol that haunted his thoughts.
It was Mark. There were times, times not so long ago, that
Doug had considered Mark to be the only stable force in his life.
Oh certainly there were people who were pretty consistent about
their behavior. Even now, Kerry could be counted on to be the
female version of an officious prick. Peter Benton had always
consistently been a smug bastard. Mark though, was always there
to tell him what to do. Or even better, what not to do. He felt
rudderless now, as though he had been cast off into the sea and
was now nothing more than a piece of driftwood.
How would Mark have handled this mess, he wondered. Better
than me, that was for certain. The fact that Mark probably
wouldn't have wanted to live without his daughter, or in a post
plague world, rose up in Doug's thoughts, but he forced the
notion away. Mark would have stopped tolerating the drinking back
in Chicago. Mark wouldn't have let the situation with Kerry
escalate to the point of a suicide attempt. Mark certainly
wouldn't have tolerated Kerry inducing Lucy to chase after him.
Then again, he thought, Mark wouldn't exactly have approved
of my taking off to begin with. Mark would have stopped him. Mark
would have talked to him in that grim, serious way that Mark had.
Likely it would have been full of soft spoken advise about what
Carol would have wanted. If it had come from Mark, he was
starting to think he might have listened. If Mark had said, "
Don't go," he wouldn't have gone. But it had Kerry, and he had
been angry. Angry enough, despite everything that happened
afterward, to not give her the satisfaction. It had been easier
to leave, even though he had regretted it the second he walked
off the porch.
He didn't want to be there, on a ruined highway, surrounded
by the corpses of what was now a dead civilization. He wanted to
head back. Part of him was so touched by Lucy and her earnest,
dogged attempts to turn him around all evening, he had wanted to
just grab her and start walking back. He was too embarrassed to
act on it.
All day, as he went farther and farther west, he had felt
increasingly bad about his decision. The wrecked cars had slowed
him down, but he hadn't stopped until he'd found the tricked out
roadster. The dead man inside was disturbing, from his sequined
leather jacket to what remained of his Elvis like pompadour. Of
course, the really disturbing thing was the dead wolf in the
man's arms. There were paw prints all around the car. It was as
if a pack of wolves had waited for the man to get thirsty and
desperate. It was creepy and the more he had thought about it,
the worse he felt. The wolves had *waited* for the man. While he
wasn't an avid watcher of Animal Planet, he knew that was unusual
behavior. It was unnatural behavior and he shuddered to think
about what the man had done to warrant such a punishment. That it
was a punishment, he had no doubt. The fact that there was beer
cans and liquor bottles was something he took as a very bad sign.
But isn't this what you wanted, a voice in his head chimed,
a voice that was suspiciously Mark-like in tone, didn't you
expect this? You planned on dying. Did you think it was going to
be neat and clean? After everything?
I don't know what to do, he thought as he slowly got up,
leaving behind the bottle he had been nursing all through out the
night. He found himself standing on the grassy median, looking up
at the sparkling stars, wondering what it was that he was
supposed to do. He didn't know what to do anymore, and he was
tired of hiding from it. He drank to hide from the plague, he
drank to hide from everyone's problems, he drank to hide from the
guilt he felt over surviving when Mark and Carol died. He drank
to hide from the fact that Carol was gone and he would never hold
her again. He drank to hide from his life, and he wasn't sure he
could stop drinking. If he went back, to Carter's house, he had
to stop drinking. He knew that would be required, and he wasn't
sure he could do it. It he went west, he would eventually be
killed. That was something he was sure of also. Certainly they
needed a doctor on that side, but his dreams told him that his
drinking would not be tolerated. Plus, there was the fact that he
simply had to take Lucy back, at least to the nearest rescue
party. He knew why Kerry had sent her, and it was, he had to
admit, a masterful plan. Not only did it force the others out to
search for him, it forced him to turn back with the face saving
excuse that he couldn't leave Lucy standing by the roadside
alone. He sighed heavily. Face saving excuse or not, going back
meant admitting he had a problem.
" Doug?" He spun around at the sound of Lucy's voice. She
was sitting up, rubbing her eyes, generally looking like someone
that had just awakened from a fairly bad dream. How she could
have a good dream in their present surroundings, he didn't know.
His own sleep had been fitful at best. She blinked, and then eyed
him carefully. " Doug, what are you doing up? Its two in the
morning."
" I couldn't sleep," he admitted. " So I decided to have a
drink."
She got up, and shook off the various sleeping bags and
blankets. "Is that why you drink?"
" Lucy, its two in the morning. I'm really not up for a
temperance lecture." He meant to say it forcefully, to shy her
off the subject but instead he sounded like he was pleading.
She seemed to sense his uneasiness. She walked over to him
and stopped when she was right beside him. " That's not what I
meant," she said softly. " I'm not saying don't drink. I'm asking
why you drink. Are you drinking, right now, because you miss
Carol? Or because you can't sleep?"
In the bright moonlight, he could see her brow furrow with
concern. Despite the despair he felt, and the fact that her
question was intriguing, he was almost moved to laughter at her
expression. She looked so worried and concerned, and at the same
time, she looked like nothing more than a troubled teenager. He
wondered suddenly, if she had been carded a lot going into bars.
It was hard to see her as an adult even though he knew she was at
least twenty four. She was just so young looking. Even after
everything that happened, she still had that youthful enthusiasm
and hope. It made him feel ashamed, ashamed because he realized
in an instant that he was not drinking because he missed Carol.
He drank to numb his feelings, yes, but he mostly drank so he
didn't have to think at all. He was hiding from life, and not the
fact that Carol was dead. And he didn't want to talk about it at
two in the morning in such a creepy place. " Lucy, I'm not in the
mood to talk."
She straightened herself up, as if trying to make herself
look bigger. " Fine. Maybe you're in the mood to listen. I know
you've already gotten the lecture on how this isn't what Carol
would have wanted. I'm not going to do it again. I don't care
what Carol would have wanted. She's dead. She doesn't get a vote
anymore. *I* want you to turn around. I don't care if you don't
go back to Carter's place, or if you don't go to Boulder. You
don't belong out west. You are too good of a person to do that.
They'll know you aren't really one of them. Do you really want to
die, Doug? There's quicker ways than this."
He spun around to face her, his temper suddenly flaring into
life. " How would you know anything about it? You don't know me,
Lucy. You don't know the things I've done in my life. Did it ever
occur to you that I deserve it? That I'm not a very nice person
when it come right down to it?"
She crossed her arms. " I didn't say you were a nice person
Doug. You can be one self righteous bastard when you think you're
right, and you've got a nasty mean streak that you hide with
humor but you aren't evil. I know you took care of Carol and
Mark, even though you knew they were going to die. I know why you
went looking for Kerry that day, and it wasn't that you wanted to
make more fun of her. You were worried about her. And I know why
you walked into that camp looking for me. It wasn't just because
you were suicidal. You cared about what happened to me, to the
point that you risked your life. You are a good person. I don't
know why you can't see it."
It stopped his protest cold. He didn't know what to say,
because he had never really thought about it. Finally he said, at
almost a whisper, " I don't feel like a good person." In an odd
way, it felt good to admit it, like a weight coming off his
shoulders.
Lucy smiled, though he thought he saw tears welling up in
her eyes. She tentatively placed her arm around his waist. "
Doug, you *are* a good person, and this is not a place for either
of us. Let's leave. Right now. You can ride double behind me."
It wasn't a fix to everything that felt broken inside of
him, he knew that. It didn't really change any of the problems he
had. Yet, the relief he felt in his heart was so enormous, he
almost wanted to cry. Instead, he found himself nodding along. "
Ok... but only because I know there's a search party out there."
She laughed. " Yeah, as if I didn't know that was part of
the master plan to send me. Come on, let's just leave everything
here and go."

Part 39
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