Sometime in Autumn 2010
Portland, Maine
The man on the bed was being slowly moved through, an IV hooked up alongside an oxygen tank, as the medics moved him through, not in a rush but fairly quickly. It was a cloudy morning, in the quiet and small hospital, in the care unit. It seemed clean, with individual rooms, though they were tiny and cramped.
"Sgt Harris is being transferred into here, Doctor. His condition has been mailed through. The patient has been stabilized, he's got something in his grey matter but it isn't responding to our signals." One of the men said, as they pushed him into the windowed room, a view over the Atlantic ocean in the small but compact room.
"A case like this with severe head trauma, it could be weeks, months or years till we see something come from him. From now on, since we deem him non-critical, he is in your care, Doctor." The medic added, looking across to the Doctor.
"I understand. We'll do our best." He simply replied, as Scott looked, unable to do anything. He was a ghost in the machine. He blinked, his eyes receptive but unable to do anything. His body was killed off. He had lost his responses, he was essentially a ghost in the machine.
Four Years Later
5th December, 2014
The hospital hadn't changed much. Scott had blinked and ended up here. He didn't understand it. From the window, the trees lost their leaves, then gained them, then snow, then spring, light, a bright sun, then back to leaves falling again and rain. That cycle went again, He had been cared for, he didn't remember what happened. He had been cleaned, fed, made sure that he had a good standard of living. And right now, he was a vegtable. He couldn't comprehsibly think, and he could only remember blurs of the lady that cared for him. Alexis. She was like an angel, coming in and looking after him, no matter what. She looked tired some days, others she wore a smile on her face and while Scott's memory was shattered, his thought process dead, he could somehow just remember her. Alexis. That blonde nurse. And yet the memory of what he had gone through was gone. He didn't know who he was, let alone what he had done to get this. He was out for the count, but he saw. Like he was just passed away, but viewing the world through his body's lenses.
Until that was, the 5th of December, at about 0600 hours. He had undergone treatment again and again, to try and restore his mental capacity. He could hear and see doctors, talking about how long he'd been here. About how much better he would be if he was quietly taken off the life support, off what kept him alive. He had no wounds. His mind was just in pieces, just all over the place. A sudden movement filled him. Like something entered him. He gulped. Every movement hurt, nothing was familiar. He tried to blink, hold his eyes shut, consciously. She wasn't here, not at the moment. What was he? What the fuck was he doing here? He didn't know, not one bit of any of it.
"Basra....Basra....." He muttered, just unknowingly. Was he really in control? What was this? Basra? Where was that? His body began to have a sensation, like everything was coming into view, like his brain had began turning. Moving muscles didn't make sense, his body couldn't send signals. He was still immobilized, and something was at least there, as his brain began to understand where he was, and what he was in.
Summer 2010
Basra, Iraq
The Humvee pulled into the compound, the four men aboard confident and well dressed. This was 1st SFOD-D, Delta Force to be exact. Scott checked his HK416, cocking the rifle as the Squad Lead, Captain Marcus Powell, looked over. To his left in the back, was Corporal Hunter Woods, and in the front passenger seat, was Second Lieutenant Paul McKinley, though his surname had nothing to do with the US President of past who had been assassinated. Lastly, Private Ian Waller sat on the M240, mounted within the vehicle. His best friend, Hunter, held a Mk46 MOD 0, and Cpt Powell had a M4 SOPMOD to hand, with McKinley having a Mk14 MOD 1 DMR, Pvt Waller having a SCAR-L with an EGLM module attached.
"We're here. Our guy too." He simply said, as he opened up the door, Hunter chuckling.
"Another informant we want to talk to, after all these years. Classic." Hunter added, as they entered the derelict house, leaving the Humvee with the M240 turret behind, locked of course. The derelict hotel's back entrance was easy to get in, as they headed up a back flight of stairs, wepaons ready. Scott's HK416 had a Aimpoint CompM4 and a vertical Surefire M900 flashlight/foregrip, with a flash suppressor, not a silencer on the gun. He wore a regular Multicam set of BDUs, with an Ops Core helmet on his head, and a pair of Oakley Ballistic Goggles, souped up by the Mechanix gloves that he wore. They moved in, walking up, and then moving slowly, searching each corner, as they headed into the next room. Rasheed was here, sitting on a table, a guard with him who held an AKS-74U in his hands. Powell looked over, nodding, speaking in Arabic.
"Mr Rasheed, I am Captain Marcus Powell, US Army Special Forces. We came here because you said you had something you know of the activity against the oil refineries south of the city. Looking at the terms of your meeting, and what you want, we agree to these terms you have set. What you want we are currently in the process of doing, as we believe you are able to assist us on this matter at hand." He said, as the bearded man, some sort of former Cleric of sorts, sat up. He was a shady character- all that Scott knew was, that he willing to share important information, and that was that.
"I do agree, Captain. Take a seat. Keep your men watching, I am paranoid they could have followed you, you understand. I am worried they will kill us all, if they catch you here with me." He replied in Arabic, as Scott nodded, clear on what he said, moving through the derelict room to the window, where Hunter followed, looking out.
"My men have it covered. So we want to know what you know, if that is understandable, Mr Rasheed." The Captain said, as Rasheed sat up, coughing a little before he spoke, forming the words.
"Very well."
Portland, Maine
The man on the bed was being slowly moved through, an IV hooked up alongside an oxygen tank, as the medics moved him through, not in a rush but fairly quickly. It was a cloudy morning, in the quiet and small hospital, in the care unit. It seemed clean, with individual rooms, though they were tiny and cramped.
"Sgt Harris is being transferred into here, Doctor. His condition has been mailed through. The patient has been stabilized, he's got something in his grey matter but it isn't responding to our signals." One of the men said, as they pushed him into the windowed room, a view over the Atlantic ocean in the small but compact room.
"A case like this with severe head trauma, it could be weeks, months or years till we see something come from him. From now on, since we deem him non-critical, he is in your care, Doctor." The medic added, looking across to the Doctor.
"I understand. We'll do our best." He simply replied, as Scott looked, unable to do anything. He was a ghost in the machine. He blinked, his eyes receptive but unable to do anything. His body was killed off. He had lost his responses, he was essentially a ghost in the machine.
Four Years Later
5th December, 2014
The hospital hadn't changed much. Scott had blinked and ended up here. He didn't understand it. From the window, the trees lost their leaves, then gained them, then snow, then spring, light, a bright sun, then back to leaves falling again and rain. That cycle went again, He had been cared for, he didn't remember what happened. He had been cleaned, fed, made sure that he had a good standard of living. And right now, he was a vegtable. He couldn't comprehsibly think, and he could only remember blurs of the lady that cared for him. Alexis. She was like an angel, coming in and looking after him, no matter what. She looked tired some days, others she wore a smile on her face and while Scott's memory was shattered, his thought process dead, he could somehow just remember her. Alexis. That blonde nurse. And yet the memory of what he had gone through was gone. He didn't know who he was, let alone what he had done to get this. He was out for the count, but he saw. Like he was just passed away, but viewing the world through his body's lenses.
Until that was, the 5th of December, at about 0600 hours. He had undergone treatment again and again, to try and restore his mental capacity. He could hear and see doctors, talking about how long he'd been here. About how much better he would be if he was quietly taken off the life support, off what kept him alive. He had no wounds. His mind was just in pieces, just all over the place. A sudden movement filled him. Like something entered him. He gulped. Every movement hurt, nothing was familiar. He tried to blink, hold his eyes shut, consciously. She wasn't here, not at the moment. What was he? What the fuck was he doing here? He didn't know, not one bit of any of it.
"Basra....Basra....." He muttered, just unknowingly. Was he really in control? What was this? Basra? Where was that? His body began to have a sensation, like everything was coming into view, like his brain had began turning. Moving muscles didn't make sense, his body couldn't send signals. He was still immobilized, and something was at least there, as his brain began to understand where he was, and what he was in.
Summer 2010
Basra, Iraq
The Humvee pulled into the compound, the four men aboard confident and well dressed. This was 1st SFOD-D, Delta Force to be exact. Scott checked his HK416, cocking the rifle as the Squad Lead, Captain Marcus Powell, looked over. To his left in the back, was Corporal Hunter Woods, and in the front passenger seat, was Second Lieutenant Paul McKinley, though his surname had nothing to do with the US President of past who had been assassinated. Lastly, Private Ian Waller sat on the M240, mounted within the vehicle. His best friend, Hunter, held a Mk46 MOD 0, and Cpt Powell had a M4 SOPMOD to hand, with McKinley having a Mk14 MOD 1 DMR, Pvt Waller having a SCAR-L with an EGLM module attached.
"We're here. Our guy too." He simply said, as he opened up the door, Hunter chuckling.
"Another informant we want to talk to, after all these years. Classic." Hunter added, as they entered the derelict house, leaving the Humvee with the M240 turret behind, locked of course. The derelict hotel's back entrance was easy to get in, as they headed up a back flight of stairs, wepaons ready. Scott's HK416 had a Aimpoint CompM4 and a vertical Surefire M900 flashlight/foregrip, with a flash suppressor, not a silencer on the gun. He wore a regular Multicam set of BDUs, with an Ops Core helmet on his head, and a pair of Oakley Ballistic Goggles, souped up by the Mechanix gloves that he wore. They moved in, walking up, and then moving slowly, searching each corner, as they headed into the next room. Rasheed was here, sitting on a table, a guard with him who held an AKS-74U in his hands. Powell looked over, nodding, speaking in Arabic.
"Mr Rasheed, I am Captain Marcus Powell, US Army Special Forces. We came here because you said you had something you know of the activity against the oil refineries south of the city. Looking at the terms of your meeting, and what you want, we agree to these terms you have set. What you want we are currently in the process of doing, as we believe you are able to assist us on this matter at hand." He said, as the bearded man, some sort of former Cleric of sorts, sat up. He was a shady character- all that Scott knew was, that he willing to share important information, and that was that.
"I do agree, Captain. Take a seat. Keep your men watching, I am paranoid they could have followed you, you understand. I am worried they will kill us all, if they catch you here with me." He replied in Arabic, as Scott nodded, clear on what he said, moving through the derelict room to the window, where Hunter followed, looking out.
"My men have it covered. So we want to know what you know, if that is understandable, Mr Rasheed." The Captain said, as Rasheed sat up, coughing a little before he spoke, forming the words.
"Very well."