TITLE: From Where I Am 1/?
AUTHOR: Loblolly Girl
RATING: PG, maybe -13
AUTHOR NOTES: Hmmm... do I get special props for being FiRsT on the Wellard Fic bandwagon? Eh? Eh? Come on...! oh well... I suppose I had to write a fic around this scene because there's something about a poor little helpless beaten-up pale pathetic looking midshipman that makes me just want to jump in there and hug him to death.... hmmm, and people thought I wasn't the sappy type! 8^) The title is taken from an Enya song of the same name from 'the Memory OF Trees'. Enya songs usually give good fanfic fodder... hmmm.
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"Bring him to the sickbay." Wellard barely made those words out before giving in entirely to the blackness, however briefly. As the words sunk in and he realized where they were going, however, he began to try to struggle. Mr. Kennedy was supporting him and trying to get him to walk under his own power.
"NO.." Wellard let out a moan. "NO.. not the sickbay... not the sickbay.. " Kennedy stopped, holding him up and looking at him worriedly.
"Wellard? Mr. Wellard?" Kennedy was asking.
"Not the sickbay!" Wellard cried. He was scared of the sickbay... Dr. Clive's lair. Bad things happened in the sickbay-evil things. From ahead, Dr, Clive looked back at them.
"Come along then!" he snapped.
"Sir, Mr. Wellard has expressed a desire to return to his own bunk." Kennedy offered. Clive looked taken aback.
"Nonsense. He has been punished. Common sense says that n his condition he must come to the sickbay and be treated."
"But sir.." Kennedy started.
"No BUTS Mr. Kennedy! He will come to the sickbay!"
With an apologetic glance toward the pale Wellard, Mr. Kennedy helped him the rest of the way, on the verge of reliving his own days on the Justinian, and vowing that as long as he could help, poor Wellard would not know the same horrors he had.
As soon as the two had made it into the sickbay, Wellard leaned into the first corner, as close to the door as he could be, and held onto the side of the wardrobe for support, his knees threatening to buckle underneath him at any moment. Kennedy remained beside him, one hand on his elbow, trying to make sure the young midshipman was alright. Jesus, but Wellard reminded Kennedy of himself, scared and shivering and frightened almost witless out of his senses, never knowing from which side the next attack will come.
"MISTER Kennedy, you are dismissed." Clive's voice was loud, even though his back was turned to the two officers.
"Sir, with... Kennedy began.
"YOU ARE DISMISSED, MISTER KENNEDY!" Clive bellowed. With a shrug, Kennedy put a hand on Wellard's shoulder and then left, a worried look on his face.
Mere minutes later, Horatio Hornblower appeared. Dr. Clive had turned, and was drinking something out of a small unlabeled bottle. Wellard stayed where he was, feeling faint, and wishing again that he could just silently disappear. Clive turned as he heard someone enter.
"Mr. Hornblower." Clive addressed the newcomer. "Nasty business, there, nasty business." He gestured towards Wellard with the bottle before putting it down. Hornblower stood next to Wellard, putting a steadying hand on the midshipman's shaking shoulder.
"But then again," Clive continued. "boys have been beaten since history began, and it would certainly be a bad thing for the world if boys should cease to be beaten." He spat the last word towards the two officers. Wellard flinched and pulled back, closing his eyes.
"That may well be your medical opinion, Dr. Clive." Hornblower sounded as if he were just on this side of rage, "but I can see no useful purpose, sir, by thrashing a young boy within an inch of his life." He was seething beneath the surface.
"Come, come, Mr. Hornblower. " Clive tried to placate him. "A little tincture of laudanum for the pain, and al will soon be forgotten."
Hornblower stepped forward to speak to Clive face to face, his words clipped.. "Forgotten, maybe, Dr. Clive, but forgiven?"
"Careful, Mr. Hornblower." Clive warned. "I've had the good fortune to serve the captain for over 15 years and he has inspired nothing but loyalty in the men under his command."
"And that too is your medical opinion, is it not, Mr. Clive?"
The two stared at each other for a long moment. Wellard felt his legs start to buckle, and he grasped the wardrobe even tighter, inadvertently shaking it in his struggle to stay upright. A small clear bottle fell from the shelf and shattered against the floor, snapping Hornblower and the doctor out of their stare.
"Get that.. that filth out of my sickbay, Mr. Hornblower. I have half a mind to report your mutinous tongue to Captain Sawyer."
Horatio put his arm around Wellard's shaking shoulders and slowly helped the midshipman out of the sickbay, silently seething with rage towards now the captain and the doctor, for the cruelty he had shown another member of the crew. And another member of the crew in circumstances like that. If Pellew had seen... *Pellew... Pellew's not here to rescue you this time Horatio. You or Wellard there. It's up to you this time to save your hide. Besides, Pellew would have nipped this all in the bud, and you wouldn't have to worry about helping a delirious midshipman back to his bunk.*
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Wellard was more incoherent than delirious. He knew exactly where he was, and exactly where he was going, and just wished himself anywhere else. He wished he could die. He wished he could just curl up into a quiet little ball and fall silently overboard. nobody would miss him, he was sure of it. That was one less midshipman to be taught and one less mouth to fed, not to mention one less person for Matthews and Styles to worry about. He barely noticed as Horatio helped him into the midshipmen's berth, deserted, because it was in the midst of the time allotted for lessons. His raw skin screamed in agony as he climbed into his hammock, the last one in the darkest corner. Carefully he curled up, trying to be oblivious to the pain. Horatio put a hand on his shoulder.
"Wellard.. Mr. Wellard?"
The midshipman didn't reply, staring at the wall facing him. During storms he was battered against that wall, and woke up bruised, much to the amusement of some of the other midshipmen.
"I feel I owe you an apology Mr. Wellard, for being the reason you have be subjected to an unjust punishment. I..."
"'Scuse me, sir," Style's voice cut in. "But seein' as Mr. Hobbs is lookin' for you I thought you should know that the beginin' of yer watch started alre'dy."
"Thank you, Styles."
Styles saluted and left. Hornblower leaned in closer to Wellard. "Things do seem bad, Mr. Wellard, and I assure you, they stand every chance of getting worse. But Mr. Kennedy and I would be honored if you would allow us to hold the tile of your friend." One last pat on the back and Hornblower was gone, leaving Wellard to the sound of the ship around him.
He shifted slightly. It felt as if someone had taken a red hot cannonball and forced him to sit on it.
Hornblower and Kennedy. What did they know of pain? Of torture? Of a captain so far gone in his own delusions that he beat a midshipman almost daily for doing nothing more than not standing to attention fast enough? Did they know how he had screamed at the beginning, oh those many months ago, months before they came to the floating hell of the H.M.S. Renown? How he had wished for death to be free of the pain an embarrassment?
As far back as he could remember, Wellard had been an embarrassment. He was the bastard son of a nobleman and a servant woman, and from the beginning his father had hated him. Hated him for simply begin what he was, a living reminder of the mistake that had been made oh those many years ago. He had been malnourished and uneducated at home, passed off as one of the servant children, learning abuse as a way of life. Then his father had met anther woman, a noblewoman fit to marry, and young Wellard had gotten too much in the way. BY sending the young boy to the navy, his father had to pay his expenses, a small price when he was kept out of the way, forgotten on a ship tossed in the middle of the ocean somewhere.
Wellard had always known this story, pieces together from the servants whispers. HE figured that really his father was hoping as well for his ship to be engaged in battle and destroyed, and Wellard killed, so the reminder was well and truly gone.
A tear rolled silently down his cheek. He was well-practiced at crying noiselessly, as he had done numerous nights both at home and here, aboard the ship after begin roughed up in almost unimaginable barbaric ways, by not only the common men, but by the captain. The captain! And he knew no way out. Desertion, which hung the price of death over his head... death, which was the only he saw fit, painless, the only way out.
Tears rolled down his face. It was like there was a hole inside him, a jagged hole, like the ones left by the ships' cannons. Something was missing deep inside him, something that he knew should be there, and it hurt. It hurt so badly sometimes, that it overshadowed the welts and bruises he received from the blurs of faceless abusers.
The only time the hole was healed, the pain went a way was in his dreams, where she waited, a figment of his mind. She was the one who forced his chin up in pride before kissing him. She was the one who would hold him in her arms like a baby as he cried and then rock him to sleep. She was the one, the only one who cared. And he hoped, he hoped beyond hope that tonight she would be there, and she would brush away the tears that were rolling down his face as Wellard fell asleep, tomorrow looming black and forbidding on the horizon of his mind.
AUTHOR: Loblolly Girl
RATING: PG, maybe -13
AUTHOR NOTES: Hmmm... do I get special props for being FiRsT on the Wellard Fic bandwagon? Eh? Eh? Come on...! oh well... I suppose I had to write a fic around this scene because there's something about a poor little helpless beaten-up pale pathetic looking midshipman that makes me just want to jump in there and hug him to death.... hmmm, and people thought I wasn't the sappy type! 8^) The title is taken from an Enya song of the same name from 'the Memory OF Trees'. Enya songs usually give good fanfic fodder... hmmm.
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"Bring him to the sickbay." Wellard barely made those words out before giving in entirely to the blackness, however briefly. As the words sunk in and he realized where they were going, however, he began to try to struggle. Mr. Kennedy was supporting him and trying to get him to walk under his own power.
"NO.." Wellard let out a moan. "NO.. not the sickbay... not the sickbay.. " Kennedy stopped, holding him up and looking at him worriedly.
"Wellard? Mr. Wellard?" Kennedy was asking.
"Not the sickbay!" Wellard cried. He was scared of the sickbay... Dr. Clive's lair. Bad things happened in the sickbay-evil things. From ahead, Dr, Clive looked back at them.
"Come along then!" he snapped.
"Sir, Mr. Wellard has expressed a desire to return to his own bunk." Kennedy offered. Clive looked taken aback.
"Nonsense. He has been punished. Common sense says that n his condition he must come to the sickbay and be treated."
"But sir.." Kennedy started.
"No BUTS Mr. Kennedy! He will come to the sickbay!"
With an apologetic glance toward the pale Wellard, Mr. Kennedy helped him the rest of the way, on the verge of reliving his own days on the Justinian, and vowing that as long as he could help, poor Wellard would not know the same horrors he had.
As soon as the two had made it into the sickbay, Wellard leaned into the first corner, as close to the door as he could be, and held onto the side of the wardrobe for support, his knees threatening to buckle underneath him at any moment. Kennedy remained beside him, one hand on his elbow, trying to make sure the young midshipman was alright. Jesus, but Wellard reminded Kennedy of himself, scared and shivering and frightened almost witless out of his senses, never knowing from which side the next attack will come.
"MISTER Kennedy, you are dismissed." Clive's voice was loud, even though his back was turned to the two officers.
"Sir, with... Kennedy began.
"YOU ARE DISMISSED, MISTER KENNEDY!" Clive bellowed. With a shrug, Kennedy put a hand on Wellard's shoulder and then left, a worried look on his face.
Mere minutes later, Horatio Hornblower appeared. Dr. Clive had turned, and was drinking something out of a small unlabeled bottle. Wellard stayed where he was, feeling faint, and wishing again that he could just silently disappear. Clive turned as he heard someone enter.
"Mr. Hornblower." Clive addressed the newcomer. "Nasty business, there, nasty business." He gestured towards Wellard with the bottle before putting it down. Hornblower stood next to Wellard, putting a steadying hand on the midshipman's shaking shoulder.
"But then again," Clive continued. "boys have been beaten since history began, and it would certainly be a bad thing for the world if boys should cease to be beaten." He spat the last word towards the two officers. Wellard flinched and pulled back, closing his eyes.
"That may well be your medical opinion, Dr. Clive." Hornblower sounded as if he were just on this side of rage, "but I can see no useful purpose, sir, by thrashing a young boy within an inch of his life." He was seething beneath the surface.
"Come, come, Mr. Hornblower. " Clive tried to placate him. "A little tincture of laudanum for the pain, and al will soon be forgotten."
Hornblower stepped forward to speak to Clive face to face, his words clipped.. "Forgotten, maybe, Dr. Clive, but forgiven?"
"Careful, Mr. Hornblower." Clive warned. "I've had the good fortune to serve the captain for over 15 years and he has inspired nothing but loyalty in the men under his command."
"And that too is your medical opinion, is it not, Mr. Clive?"
The two stared at each other for a long moment. Wellard felt his legs start to buckle, and he grasped the wardrobe even tighter, inadvertently shaking it in his struggle to stay upright. A small clear bottle fell from the shelf and shattered against the floor, snapping Hornblower and the doctor out of their stare.
"Get that.. that filth out of my sickbay, Mr. Hornblower. I have half a mind to report your mutinous tongue to Captain Sawyer."
Horatio put his arm around Wellard's shaking shoulders and slowly helped the midshipman out of the sickbay, silently seething with rage towards now the captain and the doctor, for the cruelty he had shown another member of the crew. And another member of the crew in circumstances like that. If Pellew had seen... *Pellew... Pellew's not here to rescue you this time Horatio. You or Wellard there. It's up to you this time to save your hide. Besides, Pellew would have nipped this all in the bud, and you wouldn't have to worry about helping a delirious midshipman back to his bunk.*
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Wellard was more incoherent than delirious. He knew exactly where he was, and exactly where he was going, and just wished himself anywhere else. He wished he could die. He wished he could just curl up into a quiet little ball and fall silently overboard. nobody would miss him, he was sure of it. That was one less midshipman to be taught and one less mouth to fed, not to mention one less person for Matthews and Styles to worry about. He barely noticed as Horatio helped him into the midshipmen's berth, deserted, because it was in the midst of the time allotted for lessons. His raw skin screamed in agony as he climbed into his hammock, the last one in the darkest corner. Carefully he curled up, trying to be oblivious to the pain. Horatio put a hand on his shoulder.
"Wellard.. Mr. Wellard?"
The midshipman didn't reply, staring at the wall facing him. During storms he was battered against that wall, and woke up bruised, much to the amusement of some of the other midshipmen.
"I feel I owe you an apology Mr. Wellard, for being the reason you have be subjected to an unjust punishment. I..."
"'Scuse me, sir," Style's voice cut in. "But seein' as Mr. Hobbs is lookin' for you I thought you should know that the beginin' of yer watch started alre'dy."
"Thank you, Styles."
Styles saluted and left. Hornblower leaned in closer to Wellard. "Things do seem bad, Mr. Wellard, and I assure you, they stand every chance of getting worse. But Mr. Kennedy and I would be honored if you would allow us to hold the tile of your friend." One last pat on the back and Hornblower was gone, leaving Wellard to the sound of the ship around him.
He shifted slightly. It felt as if someone had taken a red hot cannonball and forced him to sit on it.
Hornblower and Kennedy. What did they know of pain? Of torture? Of a captain so far gone in his own delusions that he beat a midshipman almost daily for doing nothing more than not standing to attention fast enough? Did they know how he had screamed at the beginning, oh those many months ago, months before they came to the floating hell of the H.M.S. Renown? How he had wished for death to be free of the pain an embarrassment?
As far back as he could remember, Wellard had been an embarrassment. He was the bastard son of a nobleman and a servant woman, and from the beginning his father had hated him. Hated him for simply begin what he was, a living reminder of the mistake that had been made oh those many years ago. He had been malnourished and uneducated at home, passed off as one of the servant children, learning abuse as a way of life. Then his father had met anther woman, a noblewoman fit to marry, and young Wellard had gotten too much in the way. BY sending the young boy to the navy, his father had to pay his expenses, a small price when he was kept out of the way, forgotten on a ship tossed in the middle of the ocean somewhere.
Wellard had always known this story, pieces together from the servants whispers. HE figured that really his father was hoping as well for his ship to be engaged in battle and destroyed, and Wellard killed, so the reminder was well and truly gone.
A tear rolled silently down his cheek. He was well-practiced at crying noiselessly, as he had done numerous nights both at home and here, aboard the ship after begin roughed up in almost unimaginable barbaric ways, by not only the common men, but by the captain. The captain! And he knew no way out. Desertion, which hung the price of death over his head... death, which was the only he saw fit, painless, the only way out.
Tears rolled down his face. It was like there was a hole inside him, a jagged hole, like the ones left by the ships' cannons. Something was missing deep inside him, something that he knew should be there, and it hurt. It hurt so badly sometimes, that it overshadowed the welts and bruises he received from the blurs of faceless abusers.
The only time the hole was healed, the pain went a way was in his dreams, where she waited, a figment of his mind. She was the one who forced his chin up in pride before kissing him. She was the one who would hold him in her arms like a baby as he cried and then rock him to sleep. She was the one, the only one who cared. And he hoped, he hoped beyond hope that tonight she would be there, and she would brush away the tears that were rolling down his face as Wellard fell asleep, tomorrow looming black and forbidding on the horizon of his mind.
