On Distant Shores (31 page)

Read On Distant Shores Online

Authors: Sarah Sundin

Tags: #FIC042030, #FIC042040, #FIC027050, #Letter writing—Fiction, #Friendship—Fiction, #World War (1939–1945)—Fiction

BOOK: On Distant Shores
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He eased himself up to sitting and met Chadwick’s eye. “Thank you for telling me, sir.”

The physician’s eyes glazed, and he gave a brisk nod.

Hutch pushed himself to standing. His vision darkened, and he wobbled. “What’d you do, Captain Bergstrom? Carve your initials into my back?”

Bergie took his arm and guided him out of the tent. “My initials? I carved my entire given name.”

Hutch laughed and paused, lightheaded. Sweat tickled his upper lip. “I’m glad our friendship is no longer misplaced.”

“Me too, buddy. Me too.”

50

Marina Piccola, Capri, Italy
April 5, 1944

Georgie picked her way along the rocks on the shore in her new leather sandals, and a cool wind ruffled her pink sundress.

A dozen shades of blue and green shimmered in the water, and to her left, the Faraglioni, three large rocks, jutted out of the ocean.

A week’s R & R on the island of Capri served as her reward for the ditching incident. But what kind of reward was solitude? A party—that would have been a reward.

With a huge, multilayered decision to make, she missed her friends, not so they could decide for her, but so she could discuss her options with someone—aloud.

She passed three soldiers lounging on the rocks, and she angled her straw hat as a shield. Plenty of men begged for her company this week, but she didn’t want that kind of company. Even the handful of nurses she’d met wouldn’t do. She needed someone who knew her well.

Behind her, the Via Krupp wound down steep limestone cliffs in stacks of hairpin turns, braced by stone walls overflowing with bougainvillea. Whitewashed homes with red tile roofs dotted the green hillsides, unmarred by war. A carriage
had brought her down from her luxurious hotel in the town of Capri to the Marina Piccola, led by charming horses with plumes on their headdresses.

She’d seriously considered discussing her decision with the horses.

Georgie stood on a spit of land poking into the bay and tugged her cardigan tighter around her waist. “Lord, it’s you and me.”

If she could survive a ditching, she could make the decision the ditching sparked. The Army smelled publicity, and they wanted to send her on a one-month bond tour. A cute, plucky nurse who had saved ten lives at sea could sell tons of war bonds and bring attention to the flight nursing program. After that, they’d give her a nursing position at Walter Reed Medical Center in Washington DC with full weekend leaves to visit home.

A year ago, her decision would have been easy, but not now.

She pulled a notepad and pencil from the pocket of her dress and perched on a rock, far enough away from the water to keep her toes dry from chilly waves. This choice called for Hutch-like rationality.

She drew a T-shaped chart on the paper and labeled one column “Virginia” and the other “MTO” for Mediterranean Theater of Operations. Her decision had multiple layers, so she marked four rows—comfort, professional, people, and spiritual.

For comfort, Virginia won—no air raids, no strange diseases, soft beds, and good food. The MTO side was empty. That felt wrong, and she knew why. “I don’t care about comfort.” She wrote it down.

The professional aspect was a wash. Either way she’d use her talents and skills to care for the sick and wounded. Either way she’d aid the war effort.

People. She nibbled on her pencil. Her family wanted her. Freddie’s need for bed rest stretched the family thin as they cared for Freddie’s children and grocery while running their own homes and farms. Georgie would only be home for the weekends, but every bit would help.

And Ward. At regular intervals, his letters declared his undying love, his wish to marry her at the time of her choosing, and his willingness to fulfill her every wish. She could do worse than to marry a good man who adored her.

As for people, who would keep her in the MTO? She wrote down the names of her friends, but they didn’t truly need her. Once-shy Mellie had plenty of good friends. Kay hadn’t opened up, and if she ever did, it would be to Mellie, not Georgie. The other ladies had lots of friends. They would do fine without her.

What about Hutch? She slowly wrote his name, remembering his warm eyes, his passionate kisses, his gentle humor, his wise advice. Love alone wouldn’t bring him back into her life. With a deep sigh, she drew a line through his name. No, she wouldn’t let that lingering dream sway her decision.

“Spiritual.” She jabbed her pencil in the next box, tearing her thoughts from the man she shouldn’t still love.

Her smile rose. This was where the MTO won. “Challenges me,” she wrote. “I’ll continue to grow.” But in all honesty, she had to write in the Virginia column, “I proved myself.”

The ditching incident showed how much she had grown. She’d overcome her fears and been strong and capable in a life-threatening crisis. More importantly, the change felt permanent. Back in Virginia, she wouldn’t revert to the pampered baby role, no matter how hard her family tried to make her. And they’d try.

Georgie held the notepad at arm’s length, and the page fluttered in the wind. The Virginia column was longer and
more convincing. Maybe she was done in Italy, her lessons learned, her job finished, free to go home and seize her lifelong dreams.

If so, why did she feel a strong urge to pad the MTO column?

Georgie tapped her pencil against her chin. “Are you thinking what I’m thinking, Lord?”

Deep down inside, she wanted the MTO side to win. Because she wanted to stay. Because she needed to stay. Her work here was not done.

Naples, Italy
April 8, 1944

The strains of “Star Eyes” floated out onto the circular terrace of the Orange Club overlooking the Bay of Naples, and Georgie blinked rapidly. If she and Hutch were still together, that song would have been perfect for them.

Instead she tried to concentrate on Lt. Larry White’s dissertation on how many crates of rations his battalion had unloaded today. Never again would she let Kay Jobson set her up.

Kay insisted Georgie couldn’t be the seventh wheel. Mellie danced with Tom, Louise Cox laughed with Tom’s friend Rudy Scaglione, and Kay was fending off the advances of Lt. Hal Heathcock, who served with Larry White in Quartermasters.

The entire 64th Troop Carrier Group had left the MTO for India on April 2, taking half of Kay’s flyboy boyfriends. The Quartermasters fellows filled the gap.

“A 45 percent increase over last month. But we’re keeping up.” Larry folded his napkin with long tapered fingers.

“That’s wonderful.” Georgie nestled her chin in her hand
and tried to focus on his gray-blue eyes. A good-looking man, but not for her. Her gaze drifted over his shoulder to Vesuvius, dark and solid in the twilight across the bay, and still sending up plumes of smoke, but no longer menacing.

“That new penicillin. That gives us headaches.” Larry pressed his hand to his temple. “It has to be refrigerated. You can imagine the challenges.”

Georgie’s smile faltered. “I can imagine.” Why all the reminders of Hutch? She was trying to celebrate. Her flight of six nurses had all decided to stay with the 802nd.

“Star Eyes” ended, and Tom and Mellie breezed onto the terrace, flushed from dancing.

Tom held out Mellie’s chair for her, then sat beside her. “Have I ever told all of you why I love bridges?”

Mellie smiled but raised one eyebrow. “Okay . . . ?”

“You know why, Mellie.” He tucked her hand in his on top of the table. “But do your friends?”

An odd topic of conversation. Georgie gave Mellie a faint smile. “You said Tom wants to build bridges all over the world.”

“I do.” His blue eyes lit up. “Bridges connect people, and the best bridges are also works of art that inspire the soul.”

“True.” Georgie glanced around the table at the polite smiles.

Mellie patted his hand. “Are we to be blessed with a lecture on the differences between suspension and cantilever bridges?”

Tom laughed. “Not today. Unless you want one.”

“That’s all right.” Kay shrugged Hal’s arm off her shoulders. “Though I’m sure it’d be fascinating.”

It would definitely be more fascinating than Larry White’s inventory of supplies. Georgie smoothed her uniform skirt.

Tom gathered Mellie’s other hand into his grip. “I met
you through a thin paper bridge of letters. That bridge grew stronger when we met in person, and our love made it into a work of art that inspires my soul.”

Mellie’s eyelashes fluttered, and she lowered her chin. “You’re embarrassing me.”

“I’m not done yet.”

Georgie’s heart squeezed. Thomas MacGilliver Jr. wasn’t talking about bridges. She had a hunch she was about to observe one of the most important events in Mellie Blake’s life.

“One more thing I like about bridges.” Tom’s voice thickened. “Their permanence.”

Louise let out a soft gasp.

Tom got out of his chair and went down on one knee.

“Oh, Tom.” Mellie wouldn’t raise her chin, and tears glistened on her cheeks.

Georgie’s eyes filled with joy for her friend and bittersweet wistfulness for her own happy ending.

“Look at me, sweetheart.” Tom nudged up Mellie’s chin.

“I—I need a handkerchief.”

Kay laughed and handed her one. “Stop blubbering. This is the happiest moment of your life.”

“I kno-o-ow.” Mellie dabbed at her eyes, sniffled, and looked into Tom’s beaming face.

“The love between us is strong,” Tom said. “It’s been tested. It’s proven solid. Would you do me the honor of making our love officially permanent? Would you please be my wife?”

“Oh, Tom.” She leaned forward in her chair, threw her arms around his neck, and burrowed her face into his shoulder. “Yes. Oh, Tom, yes, yes, yes.”

“Thank you.” He closed his eyes, almost as if in pain, and held her tight.

Georgie’s heart squeezed again, this time out of guilt, out of compassion for him. When Mellie found out Tom’s identity,
Georgie had urged her to let him go so she wouldn’t be burdened with an infamous name for life. Tom probably thought no one would ever take on his name, and now sweet Mellie would wear it gladly and proudly. That was love.

“I have a ring.” Tom’s voice came out scratchy. “You want it?”

Mellie let out a shaky laugh and pulled back. “Do I want it?”

“Well, do you?”

Everyone around the table laughed. Tom took a little box from his trouser pocket and slipped a ring on Mellie’s finger.

Georgie stood with the others. She hugged the engaged couple, admired Mellie’s ring, and pressed her handkerchief into Mellie’s hand, since Kay’s hankie was no longer dry.

Hal and Larry stood to the side, talking to each other, and Kay stood alone by the edge of the terrace. Georgie joined her. “So, who’s next, do you think? You and Hal?”

“Oh, please.” Kay shuddered. “He won’t get one more date out of me. All hands.”

“Well, it won’t be me and Larry. The man’s as interesting as an Army manual.”

“Sorry. Thought you liked them quiet and dry.”

Because of Hutch. “Quiet isn’t always dull.”

Kay swept her hair off her shoulder. “I suppose not. Appearances can be deceiving.” A breathy tone hinted at sadness.

Georgie stared at the redhead. What was going on? Gingerly, she threaded her arm through Kay’s. “Do you miss the flyboys?”

“India,” Kay whispered, her gaze fixed over the moon-dappled ocean. “Can’t believe he’s gone.”

He? Only one? Who had broken through? “Grant?”

“Grant?” Kay made a face. “I broke up with him weeks ago. Getting too serious.”

“Then who—?”

“No one.” She gave Georgie a firm hard look. “No one at all.”

That was a whopper of a lie, but Kay Jobson certainly wouldn’t tell the truth tonight. Georgie raised a soft smile. “I won’t pry. But I’ll pray for him and for you.”

“There is no him.” Her chin high, she turned away, letting Georgie’s hand fall. Then she turned back. “But thanks for the prayers.”

Somewhere, down on the terrace floor, lay Georgie’s lower jaw. She closed her mouth. Well, well, well. What was happening with Miss Kay?

A full moon illuminated the beauty of Naples Bay and the deeper beauty of her friends on the terrace. Oh yes. She had definitely made the right decision to stay in Italy.

51

Nettuno
April 14, 1944

Hutch’s gaze circled the six other men from pharmacy and lab sitting on crates and camp stools. “You heard the order. We leave the day after tomorrow, and the 11th Evac will take our place.”

“Eighty-three days at Anzio is enough,” Dom said.

“But who’s counting?” Ralph grinned, his fair face yellow from Atabrine. The forces at Anzio had started the antimalarial med two weeks earlier.

Hutch glanced around the tent, finally dug in six feet deep and reinforced with boarding and sandbags by the engineers. “Our equipment stays here, and we’ll take theirs in Casanova back on the Cassino front.”

Dom nudged Ralph. “Casanova—great place for lovers.”

“Guess we’ll have to leave you here.”

Hutch laughed and held up his hands. “Okay, men. I called you together for a reason. As you know, Kaz’s organization is . . . different.”

“It’s stupid,” one of the lab techs muttered.

“I’d like to switch it back for the fellows in the 11th,” Hutch
said. “They’ll have a hard enough time adjusting to air raids and artillery. They need to be up and running immediately.”

Ralph leaned forward on his knees. “On the other hand, if we leave it as is, the men from the 11th will raise a stink. Kaz will get in trouble.”

Hutch gripped his hands together. “That’s the other reason I’d like to switch it back. Kaz acted in good faith that he was helping us. He shouldn’t get in trouble.”

“But—”

“But he deserves our respect as a man and as our supervising officer. I’d like to protect his reputation.” Hutch glanced behind him toward the door. “Now, he’s under the weather today, so he won’t know what we did.”

Ralph grumbled. “Too bad we’ll have to waste time in Casanova setting up Kaz’s way again.”

“I don’t think so.” Hutch patted his hands on his knees. “That’s the second part of my proposition. I want to run it past all of you. We’ll decide together.”

“What do you have in mind?” Sergeant Paskun, the lead lab tech, said.

“Simple. We’re taking over the 11th Evac’s tents and equipment and supplies. In a sense, we’re borrowing from them. We tell Kaz we don’t feel comfortable changing the organization of another hospital. It’s like visiting someone’s house and rearranging the furniture. We wouldn’t want to be rude, would we?”

Dom’s eyes lit up. “That might work.” Murmurs of agreement swept the circle.

A sense of accomplishment warmed Hutch’s chest. “If we’re united and make a big enough fuss, I think we’ll prevail. If not, I vote we go en masse to Colonel Currier and state our case. I’d rather not involve him, but—”

“I agree,” Paskun said.

“Me too.” Ralph thumped his fist into his open palm. “Let’s do it. Who’s with Hutch?”

All six hands shot up, and Hutch smiled. If this worked—and he’d prayed plenty about it—then they could practice as they’d been trained, in a safer and more efficient environment. And they could do so while treating Kaz with respect and kindness.

“Okay.” He clapped his hands. “Let’s put this place back to rights.”

Casanova, Italy
April 16, 1944

Hutch dropped his gear beside his new cot and stretched up to his full height. Felt good to stand straight for once. His back prickled, and he scratched the network of scabs that itched like crazy. Thank goodness Bergie wasn’t there to tell him to stop scratching.

He headed out to search for the pharmacy and laboratory tent. The 11th Evac had a slightly different layout from the 93rd.

Rolling green hills surrounded the hospital under a partly cloudy sky. No rumbling artillery, no roaring aircraft, no crashing waves. Would his ears ever adjust?

He’d adjust quickly to not wearing his helmet. His garrison cap felt flimsy, the warm air ruffled his hair, and his head floated light and unburdened.

So many burdens lifted. The name Casanova needed one extra letter—if it were Casa nuova, it’d mean “new house,” a new start.

As he walked, he read Dad’s letter again. The Pharmacy Corps had opened six more positions. To reapply, Hutch needed to fill out the short form Dad enclosed. Dad said with
Hutch’s high test score and excellent application, he’d get the commission. Within a month he’d be stateside.

In the Bible, when the herdsmen of Gerar fought with Isaac, the patriarch gave up his first well. They fought again, and Isaac surrendered his second well. But when the third well gushed forth and he prospered, the herdsmen realized God was on Isaac’s side and begged for a treaty with him. Isaac finally kept a well.

This second chance at the Corps could be Isaac’s last well, Hutch’s reward for seeing the light, learning his lessons, and surrendering.

Hutch unfolded the application form, read it through, and ripped it in half.

Dad wouldn’t be pleased, but this was for the best. Hutch needed to find contentment outside of recognition. He had peace, a renewed passion for his job, and satisfaction in it.

He’d joined the Army to provide excellent patient care, and that’s what he did at the 93rd. Doing an important job well was plenty for him.

Hutch ducked into the pharmacy tent and almost stumbled. Level earth. No drop into dugout conditions.

Lieutenant Kazokov stood in front of the counter, studying the shelves, hands on hips.

Hutch tensed. Time to implement his plan, with full respect.

Kaz turned. “Ah, Sergeant. There you are.”

“Good day, Lieutenant.” Hutch gave him a genuine smile. The man really did try hard, had the best motivation. “I’m glad to see you’re feeling better.”

“Thank you. One more bout of dysentery might do me in.” He frowned at the shelves and ran his hand along a line of bottles, neat and orderly.

“I’ve been thinking, sir—”

Kaz held up one hand. “No, I’ve been thinking. You fellows gave it a try. You went along with my modernization. But I’m a man of careful analysis, and I don’t see that the reorganization increased efficiency. That was the purpose in the first place.”

“I know you had the department’s best interest in mind, sir.”

Kaz turned his small, dark eyes to Hutch. He was more than a caricature. He was a good man who wanted to make a difference.

Hutch smiled at him. “Where would our country be without innovators, men willing to take a chance and make changes?”

The lieutenant set his hand on the counter by the scales. “Did you know when Thomas Edison invented the lightbulb, he tested three thousand filaments before finding one that worked?”

“Yes, sir.”

“If Edison can admit failure, so can I.” He thumped the counter and faced Hutch. “I trust you and Paskun to come up with the best organization for your departments.”

Hutch couldn’t contain his smile. “Thank you, sir. I appreciate the vote of confidence.”

“It’s earned.” He headed for lab. “I’ll go tell Paskun.”

What was better—the unexpected respect or the pharmacy setup, the blessed setup? Bulk items on the bottom shelves, topicals grouped with topicals, injectables with injectables, orals with orals.

First thing, an inventory. Hutch sifted through the paperwork and found a WDMD Form 16a to order Class 1 Medical Items. He pulled the first bottle off the shelf, acetone, about half full. Fine. Acetic acid, glacial, almost out. Better order some.

Bergie jogged into the tent, cheeks flushed. “Hiya, Hutchie. Stop scratching.”

“I’m not . . .” He was. He forced his hand back to the task.

“How’s pharmacy?”

“Great.” Acetylsalicylic acid, bulk powder, order one more pound. “Got a fresh, organized start and permission to keep it this way.”

“Good.” Bergie leaned his elbows on the makeshift counter. “Say, did you decide?”

“I told you last night I’d stay here. It’s final. Ripped up the application. I wrote to Dad last night, and I’ll mail it as soon as the PX is open.”

“Are you sure it’s the right decision?” Concern lowered his voice.

Hutch hefted the bottle of aspirin tablets. “Absolutely certain. This is where God wants me for many reasons.”

“You also said you were going to write a letter to Georgie. Did you?”

“Yep.” That was harder than the letter to Dad. He had to express his gratitude without sounding romantic, pathetic, or manipulative.

“Why don’t you just hand it to her?”

Hutch spun to face him. “What?”

Bergie wore a small, satisfied smile. “She’s in Receiving. She and Captain Maxwell didn’t know we switched places with the 11th and that we don’t have patients yet.”

His heart jumped around untethered in his chest and turned his head toward Receiving.

“She asked about you, real sweet and concerned, and I told her you were better than ever, happy and peaceful. You should have seen the smile on her face.”

Hutch wished he could have seen it too.

“I told her to come over and say hi, but she thinks you don’t want to see her.”

He didn’t want to see her. And yet he did, more than anything.

“What are you waiting for? Get over there. They won’t stay long since we don’t have patients.”

Hutch’s feet felt as if he’d poured the hospital’s entire supply of numbing procaine into his boots. But he had to go. It was part of his humbling.

He had the letter as an excuse. Even better, she’d see his face when he delivered it. She’d see his sincerity and understand he wasn’t trying to win her back.

With great effort he popped his knee forward and moved his foot. He patted his chest to make sure he had the letter in his field jacket, gave Bergie a croaky “thanks,” and headed out.

He strode down the path to Receiving, dodged men and equipment, and wet his mouth and lips.

What would he say? He hadn’t planned to see her, just to mail the letter. But the thought of saying good-bye in a more gentlemanly manner than at Pompeii—that quickened his pace.

Hutch burst into Receiving. Empty, except for four medics rearranging the cots. Where were they? Had they already left?

The other receiving tent. Hutch charged out and into the tent next door. A nurse and a medic rummaged through the medical chest.

His hands splayed out, groping for what he’d lost. “Excuse me, ma’am. Have you seen Captain Maxwell and Lieutenant Taylor from the air evac squadron?”

“Sure.” She pointed to the other entrance to the tent, the front entrance. “They left a minute ago.”

Oh no. He dashed through the tent.
Please, Lord, let them still be here.

He shoved aside the tent flap, got it tangled around his arm, and shook himself free. Straight across the main road, a jeep backed out. He’d recognize that curly head anywhere.

Hutch ran to the jeep. “Lieutenant Taylor!”

Georgie whipped around, mouth and eyes wide.

He stopped a few feet from the jeep and saluted Captain Maxwell. “Excuse me, Captain. Please pardon the interruption. I have something for the lieutenant.”

A frown puckered his forehead. “All right, Sergeant. Proceed.”

Hutch turned to Georgie, and his entire chest caved in on him. She looked stunned. Pale. Beautiful. With all his heart, all his soul, he still loved her.

Captain Maxwell cleared his throat. “Yes, Sergeant?”

Hutch’s gaze flicked to him, then back to Georgie. In that split second, she composed her face into hospitable, polite distance. He’d lost her forever, thrown away her love in exchange for wallowing in bitterness. The stupidest mistake of his life.

But he wanted her to know she’d made the right decision in breaking up with him. “I have a letter for you.”

“You do?” The delicious way she turned two syllables into four. How he’d missed it.

“Yeah.” He pulled out the letters, made sure he had the right one, and held it out to her.

She reached for it and hesitated, her fingers curling. When he poked the letter closer, she nodded and took it. If only he could have grasped her hand and pulled her up into his arms and held her forever.

But she would have slapped his face and rightly so.

Hutch stepped back but fixed his warmest gaze on her. “I wanted to thank you. For everything you’ve done.”

Her lips parted. Her eyes had never been bluer.

He pulled himself tall and gave her half a smile and a full salute. “Good-bye, Lieutenant, Captain.”

“Good—good-bye.” Georgie fumbled through the salute.

“Good day, Sergeant.” The captain shifted the jeep into first gear, and the vehicle churned down the road.

Georgie didn’t look back, but Hutch held the salute until she disappeared from his sight.

From his life.

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