Benny Takes A Rider
Author: The Moo
Category: Drama
Rating: G
Warning: death story
Pairing: None
Summary: This is my attempt at a tear-jerker.
Author's Notes: It is supposed to happen 2 years after
"Remember Me" by Amethyst. (You write great stuff.) HS and COTW are
assumed to have never happened.
Benny
Takes A Rider
by The Moo
"Constable, are you limping?" Inspector
Thatcher called through the door of her office, as she noticed her deputy
coming down the corridor from the photocopier . Benton Fraser stopped, turned
automatically with military precision and faced his superior's doorway. He had
to choose his words carefully, so as not to actually lie. "Not limping,
precisely, sir, no."
"Then what are you doing."
"I'm favouring one leg, sir. My knee is bothering
me, just a little. A twinge. Sir."
"Have it looked at, Constable. By tomorrow."
"Understood."
Four hours later Fraser and Ray Kowalski were crouched
behind an abandoned car, waiting to spring after some malefactor lurking in a
nearby warehouse. Ray had his gun out and at ready. The Mountie, as usual, was
armed only with his wits and his stiff-brimmed Stetson. Still Ray felt safer having
him there.
"Ray, would you do me a favour? Would you look at
my knee?"
Ray started. Fraser was the best looking life form
he'd ever met of either sex, but he was still obsessed with his ex-wife,
Stella. While he had no doubt that his partner's knees would probably be as
good-looking as the rest of the Mountie, he really wasn't interested. "You
mean, now?"
"Yes, right now. I calculate there's another 287
seconds before our man comes out."
"Your knee?"
"Please."
"You want me to measure it?" Ray was thinking
of an anecdote Fraser had told him about the time he and the real Vecchio had
crash landed in the woods and a delirious Fraser had asked his partner to
measure his legs.
"No Ray, I don't think that's necessary. I'd feel
if it were swollen. Just look."
Ray still wasn't sure. "You're going to keep your
pants on, right?"
"Certainly. The left knee, Ray."
Feeling foolish, Ray glanced at his partner's leg then
looked away embarrassed. "Okay, I looked."
Fraser nodded his thanks, then sensed Ray needed an
explanation. "Inspector Thatcher noticed that I was having trouble with my
knee today. She ordered me to have it looked at. I have now obeyed her."
He craned his neck over the edge of the car to get a better view of the
warehouse door. "Any minute now, Ray. Get ready."
Ray didn't like this. "She meant a doctor,
Fraser-buddy."
"No doubt, but she didn't say it specifically, so
technically..." Fraser stood up, "Now, Ray, there he goes!"
A jean-clad and t-shirted figure had burst out of the
warehouse and across the parking lot. The detective and the Mountie sprinted
after him together. Then Ray, through the corner of his eye saw Fraser trip and
tumble to the ground. Without thinking, he halted, just long enough to see that
his partner was still in a sitting position and didn't look like he was in
immediate danger. Then he sped off again. Once the hoodlum was safely in the
custody of some uniforms, Ray trotted back to where Fraser was still sitting on
the ground, holding his left knee and wincing.
"Should have shown that to a doctor, Fraser. Not
a flat-foot with experimental hair." He snickered and reached an arm out
to help his partner to his feet. Fraser shook his head.
"I can't stand on it, Ray. You'll have to call an
ambulance, I'm afraid."
Ray froze. "What do think it is?"
"I just hope it's not what I think,"
answered his partner.
Fraser didn't have to wait long for an x-ray. Ray
guessed the hospital staff were all itching to get a look at what he, Ray, had
no interest in - the Mountie undressed. Ray paced the waiting room while they
wheeled Fraser back and forth from one examination room to another and one
doctor to another. Hours passed. Ray couldn't see what the fuss was all about -
so I guy puts his knee out. At last a nurse came and told Ray he could sit with
Fraser in the examination room.
"What's the story?" Ray demanded, pushing
the curtain aside. Fraser was in a hospital gown and sitting on the edge of an
examination table. "What's taking so long?" Ray didn't like the sight
of his rugged friend in this vulnerable position. The old Vecchio had seen him
hospitalized a number of times. Ray had read about these incidents in Vecchio's
file. But Stanley Ray Kowalsi had never seen his partner like this. It scared
him. Once Fraser had played possum to infiltrate a funeral parlour and played
dead just a little too well, freaking Ray out. Ray felt that same panic again
now. A shudder went through him.
"They want me to stay overnight." Fraser was
explaining. " and do some more tests tomorrow."
"Did they say why?"
"No, but I know why. There's only one thing that
could cause this." Fraser pursed his lips together, as if trying to decide
what to say next.
"What thing?"
"That's not important right now, Ray. What is
important is, would you take care of Diefenbaker for me?"
"Sure. I'll go pick him up at the Consulate and
keep him overnight."
"Thanks Ray." The Mountie seemed to be
thinking hard again. "If anything were to happen to me, would you continue
to take care of him for me? Possibly for a very long time?"
The shudder came back and stayed, turning into a cold
chill. "You know I will."
"You're a good friend, Ray. Go now. Dief will be
worried."
The bone cancer ran its usual, swift course. First
there were treatments, the hope. Then, little by little, the things that made
Fraser look like Fraser began to drop away: the dark hair, then the sturdy
muscles. Finally the lively glint in the blue eyes was replaced by a tiredness that
lasted all day and every day.
When it became clear that an end was in sight, Fraser,
usually so correct, so according to the rules, skipped over all of the textbook
stages of expected of the dying. He went right past anger, denial, bargaining
and depression, paying them no heed. He went straight to acceptance. Ray,
however, was another story.
Two years ago he'd watched cancer take his mother and
lived through the feelings of helplessness. Throughout his life he'd also seen
distant family and acquaintances go through the same. The experiences didn't
prepare him for the shock of seeing his strong partner dissolve so quickly
before his eyes. He only saw Fraser's spirits falter once, on a night when the
noise in the street outside his hospital room was particularly insistent.
"I spent a lot of time alone in the North,
Ray," Fraser confided. " It was normal there, to be alone. I wasn't
lonely. I wasn't frightened. But here, there's so much life crowded into such a
small place. So much life around me. I don't want to be alone. Just be here for
company, Ray. It shouldn't be much longer."
And Ray had choked out his promise to be there every
day.
"Vecchio. My office." Welsh's voice was
gruff but there was a kindness in it that Ray appreciated. He had been
expecting this. Welsh had been giving him nothing but Mickey Mouse cases for
two months now. He hadn't solved many.
"Sit down, Detective." Welsh came straight
to the point. "How long do they say he has left?"
Ray snorted. "They keep changing the story.
Months. Weeks."
"What's the latest version of the story,
Detective?"
Ray swallowed hard. "Weeks," he said sadly.
"Then take some sick time."
"I'd rather work, sir."
"Ray, in your present condition you're a danger
to yourself and your fellow officers." Welsh insisted. "Take off that
holster. Clear off your desk. Bring me your files."
The doctor sat Ray and Thatcher down in her office.
She had a name tag on, telling who she was but Ray didn't care. Just another
one of the army of doctors that did things to Fraser. Nuked him, cut him, moved
him from room to room, took him off one machine and onto another. Nothing they
did made any difference.
"I understand you're listed as next of kin for
Mr. Fraser," said the doctor with the irrelevant name to Thatcher.
"That's correct. I'm his commanding
officer."
"And they tell me you are here every day,"
she said to Ray.
"I'm his partner." Said Ray.
A few beats of time passed. "Oh." said the
doctor, carefully. "When you say 'partner', do you mean in the sense
of..."
"Police partner. I'm a detective. He's an RCMP
liaison officer." He looked at Thatcher. Maybe she wouldn't approve of his
promoting Fraser to her job just to impress some doctor. "Deputy liaison
officer," he corrected. "Was, before all this."
The doctor nodded. "You never do know these days.
So many different kinds of relationships out there. Now, what this is about.
There's something important I'd like to discuss with both of you. It's about
having him transferred to another ward."
"You don't usually ask us when you do that"
put in Ray, annoyed
"This is different." The doctor didn't seem
angry. She'd heard it all before and she understood. "I'd like to have him
transferred to the palliative care unit. I'm afraid its time."
Thatcher choked on the words "Palliative care?
That means we give up on him."
"That's one way you could look at it,"
admitted the doctor. "Another way of looking at is this: we've done all we
could to treat the disease. Now we focus our attention on making what time he
has left as pleasant as we can."
"What would happen to him there?" asked
Thatcher.
"There would be no more active treatments. He'd
get pain medication more often, since there'd be no more reason to be concerned
about his being alert. We have a kitchen so we could make him something to eat whenever
he feels up to it. You could cook there too if you want. Most important, any
visitors he wants, any time day or night. Even pets, as long as nobody else on
the floor is allergic."
"Sounds like Club Med" muttered Ray.
"What's the catch?"
The doctor sighed. "The catch is - his next of
kin signs an agreement that there will be no attempt at resuscitation when the
time comes. No heroic measures. We just, well, let him go in as much peace and
dignity as we can."
"That sucks." Ray left. Thatcher signed. It
was done.
Ray had to admit after a few days that the palliative
care unit had been a good idea after all. Fraser's room had a big window. Meg
had brought a couple of pictures from his room: a portrait of the Queen and a
northern landscape. Ray had begun to call the Ice Queen by her first name, now
that they spent so much time together in Fraser's room. Fraser himself never
deviated from the formality he used to talk to his superior officer. Ray
suspected he did it so that he would still feel like an RCMP officer. Francesca
and Meg made snacks and even supper when they visited Fraser after work. For
themselves and Ray. Fraser seldom ate or drank any more. The single IV on his
left arm kept him nourished but there was no other equipment attached to him.
Ray sat with Fraser so much now that he stopped noticing that how pale and thin
he was and stopped asking Fraser if he wanted to try sitting up. He knew Fraser
was too weak, so he just cranked up the bed when there was anything reason his
friend to change position.
On this summer evening Ray was sitting chatting with
him, Meg and Francesca as if Fraser were hosting them in his living room. Dief,
no longer an outcast, curled up at the bottom of the bed at the Mountie's feet.
With two women in the room, the conversation had turned to clothes. Ray wasn't
paying much attention, he was bored. Then Meg said something that startled him.
"Constable, I've had your red serge sent to the
cleaners."
"Red serge?" said Fraser, "Sir, I think
I made it clear that I wished to be buried in the brown uniform. With all
respect, sir, we did discuss this."
"Fraser, people will expect to see you in your
dress uniform."
"Nobody's going to see me. Why would anybody see
me? What are you talking about?"
"At the memorial service, of course. Everyone
will be coming to see you. You're a popular man, Constable."
"I never gave permission for a memorial service.
My will is quite clear, no service. I want to be sent to Dawson City for burial
immediately, and in the brown uniform."
"Constable, you're being unreasonable. How could
you even imagine us all not having a service for you. You'll have a regulation
service and you'll be properly dressed for it.
"I want the brown uniform, sir. The one you wouldn't
let me wear." Fraser seemed to be trying to raise his voice. The effort
made him cough. Then he went on, "Why wouldn't you ever let me wear the
brown? You never did tell me."
Meg smiled. "That first day when you came to my
office, Fraser, I saw at once you were a classic 'winter'. Dark hair, pale skin
with blue undertones. A 'winter' should never wear brown. I'm also a 'winter'.
You were right when you used to say red suits me. It does, and it suits you,
too. That's what I want you to wear." Then, in a whisper,
"Forever."
"Thank you kindly, sir, but shouldn't a dying
man's wishes be respected?"
"Not when the dying man is behaving like a
moron!"
"Meg! Are you nuts?" Ray couldn't stop
himself. "What the hell are you saying to him?
Francesca interrupted. "Okay, I think I have a
solution for this." She waved her arms to calm everyone down in that
classic Italian way she had. "I went to this Jewish wedding once. The
bride and groom left before the end of the party and just before they went she
changed into this suit, see? Lavender, with this really nice matching hat. They
called it a going-away outfit. So you see, here's what we can do..." she
turned to Fraser, who was watching wide-eyed from the bed. "You. Let Meg
do the memorial service. Everybody wants it and you won't know the difference,
right?"
Ray couldn't believe what he was hearing. He thought
women had hearts. The witches. What are they torturing him for? Francesca was
still talking.
You wear the red for the service, see, like Meg wants.
Now you" she turned to Meg, "after everybody goes home, you promise
to make sure somebody changes him into the brown uniform and he can go home in
that. So, what do you think?"
"Agreed" said the Inspector "When the
service is over, Fraser can wear whatever he wishes."
"I still don't want a service, but alright"
said Fraser, "It's a reasonable compromise."
"Good, that's settled," declared Francesca,
"I need a cup of tea. Anybody else want one?"
Fraser looked up at her. "I would, Francesca, and
if it's not too much trouble, would you please make me a piece of toast to go
with it?" Francesca smiled, beckoned to Meg and the women went off to the
kitchen together to make the Mountie the food he hadn't wanted in many days.
"Well, what do you know," thought Ray "He
actually feels better. Women, they know what to say to him. And look at me, I
can't say anything to help him" Tears came into his eyes and he hoped
Fraser didn't notice. "I'm nothing but a waste of skin."
Of course Fraser did notice. "Something wrong,
Ray? Outside of the obvious, I mean."
"Christ Fraser! We're talking about your funeral
here!"
"Oh that. Well, Ray, proper planning. Now the
Inuit always dress their dead in..."
"Fraser."
"Yes, Ray"
"Shut up."
There was a pause. Fraser voice went serious. "I
shall. Soon."
"God Fraser, I didn't mean it like that! Jesus,
I'm sorry, I always say the wrong thing! I promised I'd help you through this.
I'm a total F(&(*-up!" He fled the from the room.
Back in his car, Ray lashed out at himself.
"What's the matter with me? Fraser needs support, he needs his best friend
to help him. What good am I to him? I sit in his room like a zombie. I don't
talk. When I open my mouth the wrong this comes out every time. OK, sure I'm
there everyday. I swore I would be and I'm doing it. But that's not enough. I
gotta think of something." Then, a thought he'd never had before came.
"Vecchio would know the right things to say. He should be here, not
me." From that thought came an idea. Then a plan. He worked it out as he
drove home.
This would be hard to do. Ray was not good at talking
to his superiors. Every time he dealt with someone in authority he said the
wrong thing and, well, pissed them off. Welsh had said it often enough. Ray
knew that about himself. But not this time. "This time," Ray swore to
himself, "I'm not going to louse it up."
For the rest of the drive home Ray rehearsed the
speeches he would make, to Welsh, to the Feds, to anyone and everyone who would
help him do right by his partner.
It was the beginning of the early morning shift on the
palliative care floor of Chicago Hope. The night nurses brought the day nurses
up to date on the events of the last eight hours. They saved talking about Mr.
Fraser for last.
"He's still here," announced the chief night
nurse. "He was barely breathing all night, I don't understand how but we
still have him. I don't see him making it through the morning. Cheryl,"she
addressed one of the younger nurses, "call his friend. Tell him to come as
soon as possible. Oh, and somebody should sit with him until the friend
arrives.
"I'll do that myself," said Cheryl "I
have something for him."
Cheryl made the call to Ray. Then she went over to the
nursing station desk and took a brown paper bag from a drawer. She went to the
kitchen and cut up the contents of the bag into tiny pieces, put them on a
plate and went to Mr. Fraser's room. He was asleep. She had been told he used
to be gorgeous before he got sick. She studied the sleeping features. Yes, that
made sense. He must have been incredible. Gently she shook his shoulder to
awaken him.
Fraser grunted slightly and opened his eyes. It took
him a moment to register the face in front of him, then he said "Good
morning, Cheryl. How are you today." He's always so polite, thought
Cheryl.
"I'm fine, Mr. Fraser. I brought you something.
My brother went to Vermont on vacation and he brought this. It's not exactly
from Canada but it's the same stuff. See. Maple candy." She put the plate
near the patient's face, letting him smell the sweetness. "Do you think
you could swallow some? I've cut it up really small."
In answer, Fraser parted his lips. "He looks just
like a baby bird" Cheryl thought and carefully put a tiny piece of the
candy onto the man's tongue. There was pleasure for a moment, then his face
contracted in pain. "I'm sorry. I just thought you'd like a taste of
something from home."
"No, its fine. Really. Let me have some more,
please. It hurts a little, but it's worth it."
Ray found them this way as he rushed in. He snorted.
"Should have known I'd find you making out like a bandit. Good-looking
women feeding you stuff. Don't believe you're sick, man. Not for minute. Why
don't you get off your ass?"
Fraser laughed feebly and it was like a tonic for Ray.
Then the Mountie drifted off to sleep again. "You just wait around a few
more minutes, Fraser-buddy," he thought. "Just hang on a little
longer and old Ray will have something else to make you happy. I ain't much,
and I can't give you much, but at least I managed to get something - somebody -
you really want."
Ray settled into a chair beside his friend's bed where
he could watch Fraser breathe. "Just keep breathing a little longer,
Fraser, just a little more." Then he heard footsteps in the corridor. High
heels. Not the person he was waiting for. It was Francesca.
"Is he still here?" She asked, sitting down
on Fraser's other side and picking up his hand. Ray swallowed hard, trying to
get the lump in his throat down so he could speak. "Yeah, he's here."
Ray himself wasn't breathing very well, so heavy was the lump. Would there be
time? Would Fraser be able to hang on long enough? Then there was another sound
of footsteps. Heavy, men's shoes. They were running.
Ray looked up as a dark-haired man came through the
door. Francesca leaped to her feet and threw herself into the man's arms. Then
she jumped away, guiltily. The man took her close again. "It's okay,
Frannie. I'm me again. I've come home."
"So this is Vecchio." Ray thought. He knew
what Vecchio looked like of course, but seeing him in the flesh felt strange.
"Good going, Vecchio" he muttered to himself. "You made it. Now
talk to him. Say the right thing. Help him."
"Oh, Ray." The tiny woman clutched her
brother for a moment, then, arms around each other, they turned towards
Fraser's bed. Ray saw the pain in the Italian's eyes, the tears welling up.
"I wouldn't have known it was him. Oh, Frannie..."
"Come on, Vecchio, come on," Ray thought,
"you're here for a reason."
Vecchio sat down on Fraser's other side and picked up
the thin, weak hand that his sister had dropped. "Benny." He said
softly. "Benny, wake up for a minute." Fraser opened his eyes and
looked right into the eyes of his former partner. "Ray..." he began
and then stopped. Um...hello," he spoke again. "Who are you?"
Vecchio's eyes were tear-filled now, of course, but he still chuckled.
It's OK to talk to me, Benny. Assignment's over.
How've you been doing?"
"To tell you the truth, Ray, I've been better.
Have you met, um..." Fraser turned his head with great effort to where Ray
had been sitting, wordless. "That's Fraser," thought Ray,
"polite even on his f(*&*ing deathbed."
Vecchio looked at Ray for the first time.
"Pleased to meet you."
"Likewise."
"So, you're me." Said the dark-haired Ray.
"I'm not you," said the blonde Ray,
"That's why I brought you here."
The Italian nodded. "Understood."
There was nothing more they needed to say to each
other, now. Both knew they would talk a great deal - afterwards. Vecchio turned
back to the bed. "Its good to see you, Benny".
"I don't think so Ray."
"What?"
"I'm happy to see you, but I'm not happy to have
you see me like this. I know it must be hurting you. Francesca and Ray...
Ray's heart broke. Fraser was suffering more now. His
last minutes would be miserable and he, Ray, was responsible. Then Vecchio
spoke again.
"That's okay, Benny, I'm not seeing you like
this."
"You're not?"
"No way, man. You know how I'm seeing you?"
"How?"
"Remember that time on the train, you went after
Thatcher and scooped her up on the back of your horse."
"I remember."
"You looked good that day Benny, real good.
Whenever I thought about you, while I was away, that's what you looked like.
Rescuing damsels on a horse. Just like one of those knights. That's the way I'm
seeing you now, Benny."
"I'm glad, Ray."
"And, Benny..."
"Yes, Ray."
"I'm always going to see you that way, I
promise."
Francesca spoke. "I've never seen you on a horse,
Fraze. You must have looked pretty dashing."
"Oh, he did." Said Vecchio. "Say, I got
an idea. Why don't you get up on a horse now and show Frannie what you look
like."
Fraser inhaled with effort. It took a while for him to
exhale again. "Now?"
"Yeah, right now."
There was a pause while the Mountie thought this over.
"I suppose I could. Francesca, would you prefer any particular colour of
horse?"
"White, of course, Fraze. Like one of those
knight-guys."
"Well, that's not regulation but under the
circumstances...white horse...and which uniform?"
"You choose, Fraze. You look great in
anything."
"Thank you kindly, Francesca. The brown,
then."
"Climb up on the horse, Benny" Vecchio said
softly to his friend, bending low to his face. "Go for a ride. You go just
go for a nice ride, man."
Fraser closed his eyes. His tired face pulled into a
weak smile. He breathed in once, let the air out with a deep sigh and didn't
breathe again.
"Have a safe trip, Benny" choked Veccho
through his tears. "You say hi to your parents for me."
"It worked," thought Ray. "I didn't
screw up this time. I did the right thing for him after all." He forced
himself to look away from his partner's face and towards Vecchio. The Italian
was sobbing into Dief's neck. Then he looked at Francesca. She was crying too,
her head on Fraser's chest.
"Its over." Ray said it more to himself, but
Vecchio heard. "You made him happy. Thanks."
END