They call it fronting because itâs like being on the frontlines of a war
#phm#ryland grace#rocky the eridian#project hail mary spoilers






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They call it fronting because itâs like being on the frontlines of a war
FRONTLINES - PART ONE. a harry styles x original character story. word count:Â 21,746 content warning:Â soldier PTSD, descriptions of injury, discussions of death, survivors guilt, war trauma, graphic details of WWII.
summary:Â a WWII hospital nurse and a wounded air force lieutenant form a bond in his recovery, stealing intimate moments that help them both heal.
author note - this is one of my favorite things I've ever written & I hope that you enjoy this as much as I've enjoyed writing it! this was going to be over 40k words, but I decided to give you two parts instead (that's more fun!)
disclaimer!! I have done a bit of research, but this is not a story based in reality or to be consistently based in research on 1940s England. so if there are some things that are not 100% correct, please know that it is just for fiction reasons.
so, with that, here is part one of Harry and Clare's story. enjoy.
____________________________
February, 1943.
England.
Harry came to his senses with a jolt that never quite made it to his limbs. It was a quick jolt â an electricity that urged him back into existence on Earth.
He was alive, that was certain.
His body was still, but inside, everything was movingâheart racing, thoughts spinning, lungs gulping air like heâd run ten miles. The ceiling above him was stark white, slightly stained in the corners, pulsing with the artificial flicker of overhead light. The air was thick with antiseptic and starch, too clean. It all felt too still. There was no wind, no sky, no engine hum. Thereâs pressure across his chest and an ache roaring in his shoulders, his side, his legsâeverywhere.
His fingers twitched. Or maybe they didnât. He couldnât be sure.
His ears rang faintly, as if the explosion had followed him here. For a moment, he thought he was still mid-fall, that the burning smell clinging to his skin meant the wreckage was still around him. But noâthere were sheets under him, not dirt. The heat came from bandages, not fire. And someone nearby was speaking.
ââŠwaking up,â a manâs voice spoke off into the distance. âThatâs something.â
âShouldnât be long now. Morphineâs wearing off,â said another unfamiliar voice, this one female. The sense of worry in her tone was there, but she held her own. She had seen this far too many times.
But then it was silence again. Or maybe it was just the roar in his own head.
He tried to speak, but his mouth was dry as paper. His tongue felt too thick, too numb. The only sound that escaped him was a rasp, almost like a growl. His limbs felt too heavy to lift. Every inch of his body achedâshoulders, legs, chest. His right side burned, not just skin-deep, but inside, like the muscles themselves were torn and blistered.
He opened his eyes as much as he could manage and blinked again, this time slower, and the world came into view in patches.
White walls. A window with blackout curtains barely cracked open. A curtain rail. A clipboard hanging from the foot of the bed.
He tried to sit up but the agony bloomed sharp and immediate across his ribs and down his side. His breath caught in his throat, and a low, involuntary noise rumbled from deep within him. A hand came to rest gently but firmly on his shoulder.
âEasy, Lieutenant,â It was the same womanâs voice this time; it was much closer this time. âDonât move. Youâre safe. Youâre back in England.â
England.
The word hit him like diving into a pool of cold water. How long had it been since the crash? He turned his head just enough where he wasnât in immense, shell-shocking pain.
In his short vision, she was a nurse. Early to mid-twenties, maybe, if he could guess. She had dark hair swept back in a twist, not a strand out of place. Her uniform was crisp, the navy collar straight, and her name tag flashed briefly before his eyes blurred again. She had a narrow face, pale from the overhead light, but steady.
She was in control of the situation as she moved around him now, knowing that he had woken up and may have to deal with questions and situations that were far too upsetting for most. She seemed to be the kind of person who could stare down chaos and not flinch.
âYouâve been sedated, quite heavily,â she told him briefly, checking on the bag of IV. âYou were brought in from the field hospital in Calais. Can you tell me your name?â
His mouth worked, his lips were parting, but the words didnât come easily as he blinked to try and make sense of what he needed to say. His throat burned like heâd swallowed smoke; he coughed then, everything hurt in a way that he hadnât felt before in his life.
âPlane,â he managed out through the coughing, completely ignoring her question. âWent down. Over France.â
âYes.â Her expression didnât shift. Not with sympathy, not with surprise. Only the slightest flicker of her eyes betrayed her listening. âYou were ejected midair; your plane went down. Ground team found you a few miles outside the wreckage.â
He let his eyes drift shut again. The memory was fractured with shards of color and sound. The red glow of the warning light. The wrenching scream of the fuselage breaking apart. Dean yelling. Bennett fumbling with the hatch. John screaming at them to eject.
âMy crew,â he croaked, opening his eyes to try and get answers. âWhere are they? Are they here?â
The nurseâs hands stilled as she tried to come up with a response that wouldnât send him into a spiral â it happened quite often, upsetting them too quickly after they had woken up. That was the trauma of the war â it was the terrible aspect of life that had disrupted their lives.
âThereâs no confirmation yet,â she told him in honesty, âYouâre the only one theyâve recovered so far. It-â She cleared her throat, âThere was a lot of planes down, and many men were sent many places. It will take a while to get confirmations.â
He closed his eyes again, not from sleep this time but from something heavier. Something he didnât want to face because that was how this war was.
Dean had a girl waiting for him in Bristol â he always carried her picture on him. Bennett used to whistle in the hangar like it annoyed everyone, even though they all secretly liked it. John could down beers and laugh with the best of them.
They couldnât just beâ
âTheyâll find them,â the nurse reminded him. But there was no promise in her voice, only practice. Harry turned his face away as much as he could physically manage.
Silence settled between them; he didnât want to be bothered, and she didnât seem that she was going to give him the answers he was looking for. She moved around the bed, adjusting something at the IV stand. He heard the clink of glass and metal, the rustle of paper.
The movements were efficient, distantâlike she was used to handling broken men in quiet rooms. The exhaustion that hit him was overwhelming, but he knew that when he closed his eyes he would just see the nightmare again and again.
âHow bad is it?â he asked after a moment. She didnât answer right away, just scribbled on the paper that was left by his bed.
âWell, you have burns along the right shoulder and ribs,â she told him; her eyes lifted to meet his. âSome deeper muscle damage in the thigh. More than likely a concussion from the fall. Fracture in your wrist. Youâll recover just fine, but you are quite beaten up.â
There wasnât another beat before his eyes tried to meet hers: âWill I fly again?â
A pause.
âThatâs not my call,â she said gently, but professionally. This time, he could tell that her empathy had been tested one too many times. âBut you survived.â
As if that was the miracle it sounded to be.
Harry gave a humorless half-smile; it was then that he could feel he had a cut on his lip, probably along his eyebrow, as well. It felt foreign on his face. âNot sure if thatâs lucky or not.â
The nurse didnât answer; she didnât say a single word.
Instead, she approached with a syringe, her touch brisk but not rough. âIâm giving you something for the pain. Youâre shaking a bit. The adrenaline only kicks in every once in a while, but I suspect that you will be feeling it quite shortly.â
âIâm notââ But he was. He hadnât noticed until her hand touched his forearm, steadying it on the small, bedded cot in the hospital ward. His skin felt too hot and too cold at once, fevered, electric. His breath came in shallow gulps.
She didnât flinch, just pushed the needle in slowly. It was another thing he just chose not to feel, because it felt better that way. âItâll ease off in a moment, just give it some time. Youâve had quite a long journey.â
âI donât even know your name,â he swallowed, a bit of a slur in his voice as he felt the haze of the morphine already curling at the edges of his vision as he tried to focus in on her.
The woman gave him a quick, unabashed smile as she focused in on him. âClare.â
He tried to hold onto that, Clare, but the drug moved fast, like warmth spreading through frozen limbs. The lights above him swam to create the blurriest lines in the worst way. His head lolled slightly to the side, and through half-lidded eyes, he saw her one last time.
She watched him fade, knowing that she had given him the relief that he was desperately asking for. Without another word, Clare let the air filter out of her lungs as she watched him fall into darkness. She was the only thing that didnât hurt. For that, she was thankful.
+++
It had only been three days since the crash, though time passed differently in hospital wards.
Harry no longer woke in a blur of pain and morphine. He was more alert now, unfortunately more aware of every ache, every shift in the light, every passing moment that he wasnât given any answers.
His burns were healing in increments he couldnât feel, and the torn muscles in his thigh were no longer on fire, just throbbing due to the heavy medications they had him on. Still, he couldn't sit up on his own. His chest tightened every time he breathed too deep, and a nurse had told him â a blonde one with far too much joy, that his ribs were âknitting nicely.â
Heâd snapped at her without meaning to. The guilt lingered, but not enough to make him apologize. He hadnât seen that nurse again. In all certainty, he couldnât stand the pity and the smile and the happiness that came with being alive.
The ward he was in only had twelve beds, though only seven were filled. It was one of the smaller military hospitals in the area. Most of the other men were in worse shape than he wasâone with bandages wrapped around his entire head, another with a leg amputated just below the knee. Some slept all day, others groaned through their nightmares, sometimes waking up the whole ward in fits of screams and cries that were more than upsetting.
A few were like ghosts even while awake, eyes hollow, refusing to speak on what they had seen out there. Harry hated that he wasnât the worst of them.
He hated the silence in the gaps between coughs and groans and footsteps. He hated the absence of his uniform and the new hospital clothes that they had put on his body while he was unconscious, removing his suit that was covered in blood and tears. Hated the sound of his own heartbeat, which was steady and undeserving, he knew. He hated thinking â
âTea?â
It was a voice that came from his left â seeing a nurse standing there in her white. The navy collar around her neck, the pinned back dark hair that had felt so familiar to him. He had been startled slightly by the voice, but tried not to show it.
It was the night nurse again - Clare, he remembered. She stood at his bedside with a metal tray, a chipped mug in one hand, a folded cloth in the other. Her hair was pinned back again, and the shadows under her eyes were more pronounced tonight. He wondered if she ever slept, or if she just floated between wards.
âOnly if thereâs whisky in it,â he muttered, voice raspier than intended. He realized that he hadnât spoken much, his throat feeling dryer than ever.
Clare didnât smile, but one corner of her mouth quirked at the small bit of humor, barely there. âNot quite regulation, Iâm afraid.â
She set the tray down on the bedside table and pulled a chair closer, settling into it with a sigh that sounded more out of habit than weariness. She didnât look at him right away, just adjusted the angle of the lamp, the slope of his blanket.
Harry practically hadn't sleep here â he didnât want to close his eyes. Most of the sleeping was due to medications. These nights were mostly spent sitting awake with his own thoughts, watching as the nurses would go from person to person, waiting for their medications or for something terrible to happen to bring in a bunch of soldiers.
All twelve of the beds hadnât been completely filled since Harry had gotten there, which was a good thing, he supposed. But that may have just meant that they were dying out in the fields instead.
He could feel her watching him in the way trained people didâwithout making it obvious. She was checking his color, his alertness. The way his fingers twitched when he thought he was being still.
âYour colorâs better,â he said, concluding his assumptions. âAre you sleeping?â
Harry shrugged in a nonchalance like he didnât know how to respond, though it hurt to do it. âEnough.â
âYouâre not feverish anymore,â she told him, nodding a few times.Â
âFantastic.â
That bitterness was back in his voiceâhe could hear it, taste it, but it still kept slipping out like a reflex.
Clare didnât flinch at his roughness. She simply picked up a small cloth and dipped it into the water basin that had sat next to his bed, wringing it out over the tray. She was quiet for a while, the kind of quiet that didnât demand conversation but made Harry guilty for snapping at her too.
Harry stared at the ceiling, trying not to think too much about it.
âHave they heard anything?â he asked, too quickly, too suddenly. âAbout Majors Rosenthal and Connolly? Or Tupolo?â
She paused; she knew from other nurses that he asked daily, almost multiple times a day, about his colleagues. About the men he had gone up in the plane with and hadnât come down with.
âThereâs been no word yet that I'm aware of.â
Her tone was gentle, but not soft. She didnât look away. She didnât coat it in false hope; he was happy that she didnât lie to his face. Thatâs what made it worse.
Harry nodded a few times as he stared at the ceiling, feeling the water from the rag press against the cut on his brow. He felt the press of something sharp behind his ribs, too, and not the kind that came from injury.
âThey were better than me,â he let out after a long moment. âMore experienced. Dean could land a plane blind, and Bennett⊠Bennettâs the kind of lad who always has a cigarette, even when no one else does. Heâs the one people follow,â He paused again, âAnd John was just a fucking kid.â
Clare didnât interrupt as he started to talk about the men who he may have shared last minutes with. From the other nurses, they hadnât heard much out of him, so his time to talk must have been at night rather than during the day.
âAnd me?â He let out a short, mirthless laugh. âI got ejected like bloody cargo. Popped out the side door and fell into a field while they went down in flames. And now, here I am.â
Clare was quick with her response, âYou didnât choose that.â
âNo,â he snapped, eyes moving to look up at her. âBut I survived it, didnât I?â
His voice rose, just a little, enough to make the man in the next bed stir. Harry winced and turned his face away. Clareâs expression didnât change, but she took the cloth from against his skin and rinse the muslin in the small basin. He exhaled through his nose, trying to push the anger back down.
âI keep thinking maybe if Iâd stayed⊠if Iâd tried harder to reach the cockpit, orâhell, if Iâd stayed on the radio one second longerââ
âWhat was your duty station?â Clareâs initial attempt to change the conversation worked for a moment as he cleared his throat to give her an answer.
âEngineer,â Harry nodded, staring at the ceiling for a moment. âThe â I mean, the last thing I can remember is we were shot from behind and the wing was damaged. We were falling out of the sky, but Bennett couldnât â uh, he just couldnât get the leverage to be able to land it, and â â
âYou did everything that you could.â She told him in honesty, thatâs what she had to say to these soldiers. There was nothing that could have been done â they were following their orders, they were young men in the world trying to make a difference and to fight for their freedoms.
âDid I?â He turned toward her, frustration lighting his eyes as he practically seethed at the question. âMaybe I wouldâve burned with them. And maybe that wouldâve made more sense.â
Clare met his gaze and held it; she didnât shy away from making contact with him because that helped neither of them.
âAnd maybe it wouldnât,â she told him, something in her eyes that made Harry close his mouth. âBut youâre here. And thatâs what we have to work with.â
Harry looked away first. When he did, Clare let go of the breath she held to stay strong.
The anger drained as quickly as it had come, leaving only the echo of it, hollow in his chest. The worst part wasnât that he didnât know where his crewmates were - it was that he couldnât help them. Couldnât move. Couldnât do anything but lie in this quiet room surrounded by dying men and pitying nurses and wonder why heâd been spared.
Harry sat and wondered if they were out there laying in a field, dying. If they had someone to hold their hand and recite their last prayers to the almighty God.
Clare stood and placed the cloth gently on his forehead. It was cool, damp, soothing in a way that he wanted to reject, but didnât.
âMost of the men who come through here,â she said, voice low to keep the other men from awaking around them, âThey wake up disoriented, in tremendous pain. Screaming,â she cleared her throat âThey donât remember where they are, sometimes who they are - some donât know their own names. Youâre lucid. Youâre angry. Thatâs not failing.â
Harryâs jaw was tight as he swallowed. âYou sound like youâve said that before.â
âI have.â Clare said, nodding. âItâs a reminder for the ones who lived. Thankfully, many have, but many are taking away the same nightmares.â
She took the mug from the tray and handed it to him. His hands were steadier than theyâd been a few days ago, though the left one trembled slightly from the burns. The tea was always a bit of a trick to make sure that they were steady and there hadnât been anymore shaking. He took the tea, even though it burned a bit.
âI donât know what to do with myself,â he admitted after a long silence, possibly a bit overwhelmed with the situation. A bit muffed with how everything had turned out. He hadnât had any information, or any way to get information. He didnât know if they knew he was alive or dead â he didnât know anything.
Clare pulled the chair a little closer, crossing her legs as she sat with him for a moment. âYou rest. You heal.â
With a quick response, he shook his head, âThatâs not enough.â
âFor now, it has to be.â
The quick and emotionless duties of her responses were eerie in some ways. Now that Harry could sit here and look at her, he recognized how absolutely stunning she was â dark features, pink lips. Her eyes were cerulean, which popped against her dark hair that was pinned back.
But there was something about her that seemed troubled, almost just as stubborn and hurt as he could have been. Instead of making her night worse, he decided to possibly dive into the company.
As he took a sip of the tea, he looked over at her. âIs it hard?â
âWhat?â She asked him, checking over his paperwork that was next to his bed.
âThis job. Seeing people like this.â
Clare didnât answer him at first, because there really wasnât a response to give. Hard was subjective; the job itself was easy because she knew how to handle tough situations, and she knew how to attend to the patients. But was it mentally draining, of course it was.
She glanced around the ward, her gaze briefly landing on the man two beds down who moaned softly in his sleep. That man had been shot in the head; he was barely hanging onto life as he knew it. He was only twenty-one.
âYes,â she said eventually, giving him an answer. âBut itâs harder when they donât make it. Or when they do, but they give up.â
Harry didnât reply, he didnât want to look at her with that response, either. It felt pointed, almost like he was being punished for feeling sad. He sipped the teaâit was bitter and weak, but it grounded him.
The heat of the ceramic, the feel of his own breath fogging the rim, reminded him that he was real. That he was here. Not in the wreckage. Not floating over fields in a parachute. Not burning.
No, he was lying in a warm, hospital ward with a beautiful woman next to him as he had antibiotic medication soothing his burns. He took a deep breath in through his nose and settled against the pillow.
Clare stood again. She checked his chart, made a note, then paused. âWould you like me to bring you a book next time Iâm on shift? To pass the time?"
He blinked at her, a bit unsure of where her question had come from.
âWhat sort of book?â He asked her, blinking a few more times to feel the tiredness in him.
âHm,â she hummed, âYou tell me.â
He thought for a moment, a bit of humor in his tone. âNothing heroic. No war stories, please.â
She nodded, appreciating the bit of humor that he gave her. It had been nothing but pointed jabs and pessimism from him, but she could handle it. âUnderstood.â
As she turned to go, Harry called out, quietly, âClare?â
She looked back at him, carrying the tray with her as she went. The man she was looking at was broken, he was physically and emotionally scarred, and she knew that there was built up anger and resentment. She didnât hold that against him in the slightest bit; she knew it was just an uphill battle.
So, she gave him a bit of grace. She looked at the broken man giving him the grace and prosperity that he deserved.
âIâm not always like this, you know..â
She gave him a small, tired smile. Taking in a deep breath, she held the metal tray to her chest. âNeither am I.â
Then, without another word, she was gone. Her steps quiet on the polished floor, her silhouette swallowed by the dim light near the ward doors.
Harry lay back slowly, wincing as his side tensed. He stared at the ceiling again, but the pressure in his chest was softer nowâless like a vise, more like a hand.
He thought of Bennettâs laugh. Of Dean swearing at the radio. Of the way the clouds looked from above, blinding and soft. Those were the most precious memories that he could hold. It was a euphoric feeling of being high above the cloud, through the clouds, being up that high gave you a sense of purpose.
But then there was the feeling of falling, then waking, and seeing her standing over him like a lighthouse in the smoke. What a way to awaken from the haunted visions.
He hadnât seen the plane crash to the ground. But heâd survived it. And maybe, somehow, that would have to be enough.
Maybe, somehow, the others would have, as well.
+++
The next evening, Harry had been finishing up some of his supper â some meat, potatoes, cabbage, and carrots cooked in a sort of gravy sauce. It wasnât the best meal heâs ever eaten, but it satisfied the pain in his stomach. He needed to continue to eat, or the medicine would make him sick to his stomach, he was told by the doctors.
But as he was finishing his meal, Clare returned with a book tucked under one arm. She had practically snuck it into the ward, keeping it away from the other soldiers and nurses, as if to make him feel special.
Harry noticed immediately. Not just the bookâbut her. The way she carried herself through the ward, less like a nurse and more like someone who belonged there. Someone who moved through pain without absorbing it. He didnât understand it, not fully, but he was beginning to recognize it.
âSomething told me you wouldnât be one for poetry,â she said by way of greeting. She held out the book, letting the lopsided grin of hers take over her face.
He took it, eyebrows lifting at the cover. The Thirty-Nine Steps.
âAdventure. Espionage. No heroism,â she added, âJust as requested.â
Harry smirked faintly as he took it from her fingers. âIâm very glad you remembered,â he said to her, âIâve been bored out of my mind.â
She pulled the chair closer again and sat, her posture a little more relaxed this time. It was getting easier to look at her without feeling like he might break.
âThank you,â he said after a beat.
At this point, Clare looked around at his paperwork next to his bed â checking all the other nurses had properly done his medicines, changed his bandages, bathed him, and done right by him. âFor the book?â
âFor not treating me like a broken watch.â Harry pushed his tray away; Clare took it from his lap and set it down on another table as she noticed how he may have been in a bit more pain that day.
Clare smiled softly, her attitude may have been giving him the right to smile and feel better. âI wouldnât know how to fix one of those, either.â
He gave a low laugh, but it turned quickly into a wince. His side still pulled tight if he moved too quickly. The way that his nose scrunched made her look worried, which was the most she had given to him empathetically. Clare breathed out, turning the conversation back to a different topic.
âI read that one when I was sixteen,â Clare continued, âMy brother snuck it to me. My mother thought it was much too improper.â
âBecause it had spies?â
âBecause it had adventure,â she said, grinning now. âMy mother was a schoolteacher. Believed anything fast and unrealistic was indecent.â
Harry opened the book with care but didnât read any of the words yet. He liked the feel of it in his hands. Something to hold onto; it made him realize that his hands may have hurt a bit more than he had recalled from doing nothing with them. Something with a beginning and an end. Something someone else had finished.
He didnât ask about her brother. Before he could speak again, the ward doors opened suddenly with pace and loud conversation that caught everyoneâs attention.
A pair of orderlies wheeled in a stretcher, occupied by a soldier. The man on it was unconscious, his skin pallid, lips chapped, and a deep bandage wrapped around his upper thigh. One arm was splinted and strapped to his chest; his leg was covered in blood through the bandages.
Harryâs heart clenched when he watched the man be placed practically across from him.
âJohn?â he whispered before he could stop himself.
Clare looked up when she noticed that Harryâs demeanor had changed. âDo you know him, then?â
Harry nodded, stunned and unsure if his medications were playing a trick on him. âThatâs- thatâs John. Captain Tupolo. H-He was with my unit. He was our bombardier on the plane.â
The orderlies settled John into the bed across from Harry and pulled the curtain halfway; he was unable to see any longer, but his heart beat expeditiously. A nurse followed with a clipboard. There was quiet movementâvitals, tags, whispered instructions.
âFound him in a hedgerow,â one orderly muttered to another. âAlive, somehow. Someone mustâve moved him over there and thought he was a goner.â
Clare stood and crossed the room briefly, speaking in low tones with the nurse at Johnâs side. Harry tried to listen, but his ears buzzed too much, blood rushing with a new kind of urgency.
When Clare returned, her expression was cautious, but she gave him a smile.
âHeâs stable, but in rough shape,â she told him gently, âDislocated shoulder. His leg is badly infected and cut very deeply. But heâs lucid. Heâs here.â
Harry exhaled a breath that he hadnât been sure he had been holding in until it felt good to release. âCan Iââ
âSoon. Let him wake fully.â Clare placed another quilt on the bottom of Harryâs cot, using her hands to make sure that he was comfortable.
She didn't sit again, and didnât speak further, letting him sit with the information as she moved her way out of his space. Harry didnât know what to do with the relief and the dread, crashing together like waves. Two men accounted for. Two still missing. He closed his eyes.
An hour passed. Then two. Another could have, but Harry had stopped keeping track. His sleep hadn't come.
Clareâs shift ended the next morning as usual, and another nurse took her place. But sheâd left a note tucked into the bookâs first page as soon as Harry had opened it when he was eating breakfast the following morning: If it gets too dull, tell me. I wonât take it personally. Iâll bring another one.
He read the first chapter, but his thoughts drifted. It felt silly to be reading about a world where this wasn't happening.
Across the room, John stirred on his own cot. A soft groan and a rustle of sheets made Harryâs eyes move towards the curtain that they had closed around him. Harry had learned that the worse cases got the longest curtain.
The nurse approached and murmured something before he realized that she was pulling the curtain away to let some daylight into the ward from the day, which allowed Harry see John for the first time.
âJohn,â Harry could see his friend, not far at all, right across from him. The man had been sat up, probably to keep the blood flow moving.
Johnâs voice came in a hoarse whisper as he really opened his eyes to see Harry sitting across from him; his eyes were swollen and he looked like he had a lot of trauma to the face, scrapes, brusing: âStyles?â
Harry snapped upright, then winced at the pain in such a movement.
âBloody hell, mate,â he breathed, giving a humorless laugh before shaking his head, âYou look like you lost a fight with a train.â
John gave a faint, broken laugh himself. âTakes one to know one.â
His eyes were sunken but sharp, and though pain was etched in every feature, he was unmistakably John. Harry wanted to ask a thousand things at once but didnât know where to start â he didnât know if he had any answers, or if he had anything further to discuss.
In some ways, he didnât want to have John relive through moments that were probably horrifyingly troublesome.
âYouâre here,â he said instead.
âNot for lack of trying otherwise.â
Harry stared, hands starting to shake as he had flashes of what had happened. âHow the hell did you make it?â
âGot thrown clear when the fuselage split. Landed in a bog.â He paused, breath catching. âStayed down. Played dead for a while because I couldn't move, could hear them around me. Some farmer found me and helped.â
âJesus.â Harry breathed out, shaking his head. If that had happened, he had so much more hope for the other two.
After another moment, John cleared his own throat. âFigured you were gone, mate.â
Harry swallowed hard, holding onto the quilt Clare had put at the foot of his bed, but his hands were taped with gauze and he could barely hold anything tightly. âI thought the same about you.â
A heavy silence settled between them, almost like they both knew what the other was about to say. Harry made it there first.
âWhat aboutââ Harry started to speak but couldnât say Deanâs name, Bennett's name was stuck in his throat, too. His throat closed; eyes welling up as he thought about the inevitable truth of possibly losing a friend.
Johnâs expression shifted but stayed rather bare.
âBennett made it out. Got burns on his hands, think he had major damage to his skull. They airlifted him to another hospital up north. Some place near Leeds, I think. I heard that when I was being transported here.â
Relief and grief collided again, but Harry felt his mouth go dry. Three survived. âAnd Dean?â
John didnât speak for a long time, but when he did, Harry heard the way that his voice broke at the first words.
âI saw it happen,â he said finally. âHe tried to get the radio working again. Refused to bail. Last thing I heard was him shouting coordinates at me, but I ââ He paused for a moment, âI was pulled out before the plane exploded.â
Harry stared at the ceiling, blinking hard because crying meant losing. It meant he was giving up the façade the soliders built so hard to be respected for.
âIâm sorry, mate.â John said quietly; he had known that Dean and Harry had made their way through the unit trainings together, flying many trips. They had gone up multiple times in the year that they had been together â so, it hurt to know that one moment took Dean away forever.
Harry nodded slowly with his jaw clenched, thinking of the girl that Dean held with him in his pocket in a photo memory. âHe was the best of us. Iâm sure Rebecca got word, thenâ
âIâm sure she did.â
Silence. Thick, heavy, full of memories neither could voice. They didnât talk again that night.
+++
The next day, Harry woke to find Clare back, sitting in the same chair with a steaming mug of tea and a handful of letters she was sorting through, looking for ones for him. When she didn't find any, she sat them down on the bedside table.
âYouâve got a roommate,â she said, nodding toward the next bed.
âSaw him,â Harry murmured out, a bit dazed. âDidnât sleep much after.â
Clare studied him for a moment. âMust've been some relief to see him.â
Harry nodded, not knowing if he had much to say about it. It just made him think about other things. âGlad he made it out.â
Her eyes softened. She handed him the tea, watching as his hands still shook when he held it. âThatâs something.â
He wanted to thank her againâhe wasnât sure why. Maybe for the way she didnât ask too much but gave just enough acknowledgement for it to mean something. Maybe for always knowing when to sit in silence, or to let him grieve.
Instead, he said, âDo you always volunteer for the night shifts?â
She lifted her eyes to him, clearing her throat. âI donât mind them." He could tell that there was something else there
âBut?â He questioned.
Clare tilted her head. âBut thereâs a kind of quiet here at night that feels⊠honest.â
Harry sipped his tea - stronger today, which was good. âIs that what you look for?â
âMost days," she told him, shrugging with a smirk, "I'm not one for bullshit."
He considered her for a moment. The curve of her shoulders. The quiet steadiness in her eyes. There was something strong in her that had nothing to do with uniforms or rules. Something she carried into the room each time she walked in.
âYouâve seen a lot, havenât you?â he asked her, feeling chattier the more she sat around him. Something about her made him want to know all of it.
Clare didnât answer immediately. âI started as a nurseâs aide at seventeen. The men used to joke that I still looked like someoneâs little sister.â
Harry's eyes traced her, really looking at her like he couldn't take his eyes off of her. âYou donât now.â
She raised an eyebrow, maybe feeling a bit of flush on her cheeks. âIs that a compliment or a comment on the war?â
âBoth.â
She smiled again, but just barely, and stood. âYouâll need rest. The doctor wants you to try standing with assistance by weekâs end.â
Harry groaned, feeling his eyes roll gently before he set his tea down. âAre they trying to kill me properly?â
Clare leaned in, adjusting his blanket. âNo, Lieutenant. Theyâre trying to send you home.â
Her touch lingered briefly on his arm before she pulled back.
Harry watched her move to the next bed, speaking softly to John. The two of them exchanged a few words, and he heard Clare laughâquiet, real. He hadnât realized until that moment how much he liked that sound.
He lay back, the book still on his lap.
Dean was gone. Bennett was alive. John was here.
And ClareâClare was becoming something he didnât know how to name. A tether, maybe. A warmth in a room full of wounds.
He didnât know what was next. But for the first time since falling from the sky, he wasnât completely afraid to find out.
+++
It was nearing half-past nine on a grey, sluggish evening when Clare found herself seated at the far end of the nursesâ station, a cup of tea cooling beside her half-finished patient chart. Rain tapped softly against the windowpanes, a rhythmic background to the scratch of pens, murmured updates, and the occasional weary yawn.
The night shift had bled into day like watercolor over damp paperâblurred, endless, quiet in that strange, exhausted way hospitals always were after dawn.
She tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear, the nape of her neck damp from the heat of the ward and tried to focus on finishing her notes for bed twoâan older gentleman with a broken hip and an exceptional fondness for singing hymns at four in the morning.
Across the desk, Nurse Margaret tilted her chair back and fanned herself with a clipboard. âLord, if I have to change one more dressing soaked through with iodine and self-pityâŠâ
Nurse Ruth, sorting some medical supplies beside her, chuckled. âYou mean the charming Mr. Abrams in ward six? He winked at me yesterday, said Iâve got the hands of a pianist and the face of a war bride.â
âYou going to write him back when he leaves?â Margaret teased, giving a knowing eye.
âOh, absolutely,â Ruth deadpanned back, âright after I put some bleach in my eyes.â
The small group of nurses laughed at that. Clare gave a quiet smile but didnât join in. Her fingers remained poised on her own chart she was to complete for the doctors reference, her expression composed as her eyes fell over the name: Lt. Styles, Harry.
âItâs strange,â Ruth continued, sliding onto a stool as she tucked her ankles together. âSome of them flirt like itâs the only thing keeping them breathing. Donât get me wrong, sometimes I think it helps. Reminds them theyâre still human. But it feels⊠I donât know.â
âLike a game, maybe?â Clare offered softly to the conversation.
Ruth looked at her, surprised at her joining in. âExactly. Like theyâre playing dress-up in their own tragedy. To step away from the tragedy.â
Clare nodded once, not unkindly, her eyes drifting back to the chart. She didnât say what she was thinking, that it didnât always feel like a game to the men.
Sometimes, it was desperation disguised as charm. A last-ditch attempt to feel young, or funny, or alive again because they would leave here to go back to their units or back home to something that didn't matter anymore. Sometimes it was innocent. Sometimes it wasnât. But always, it left a mark.
Margaret leaned forward, lowering her voice with a conspiratorial grin. âSpeaking of inappropriate affections, has anyone noticed how Lieutenant Styles doesnât respond to anyone except Clare?â
That earned a few lifted brows and a round of curious glances, maybe even a few gawks. Clare blinked slowly but didnât lift her head as she tried to ignore the conspiracy altogether.
âOh, come on,â Margaret continued, trying to push Clare, âI gave him his meds yesterday morning and he just nodded. Didnât even thank me or give me the time of day. But you come near his bed and he sits up straighter than a schoolboy reciting Latin.â
âHeâs quiet with everyone else,â Ruth said, more thoughtfully. âBut he listens when Clare speaks.â
Clare gave a mild shrug, eyes still on the paperwork. âPerhaps he simply finds comfort in routine.â
âComfort, sure. But the way he watches youâŠâ Margaret trailed off with a knowing smirk.
âLike a man writing poetry in his head,â Nurse Helen chimed in from the corner. âI saw it myself last week when you leaned in to check his shoulder dressing. His eyes didnât blink the entire time â it was like he was memorizing you!â
âI think I blushed for you,â Ruth added with a simple giggle; she must have been kicking her feet under the chair.
Clare rolled her eyes, but the flush rising to her cheeks betrayed her from keeping quiet or not saying too much. She closed her chart with deliberate care and sipped her now-cold tea. âYou lot spend far too much time crafting romances out of fever dreams, it seems.â
âWeâre overworked, underpaid, and in the middle of a war, Clare,â Margaret said breezily, shaking her hand at her. âLet us have our stories.â
âHeâs a patient.â Clare defended, trying to brush off the stares and the eyes knowing that they would but placed on them more heavily now.
âYes,â Ruth said, watching her carefully, tilting her head, âbut heâs also a man. And youâre not made of stone, especially with a face like that.â
Clare didnât answer right away â her facial expression gave it away, surely. Her gaze dropped to her hands, stilling on a faint smear of ink on her palm. She rubbed it absentmindedly against her skirt, then finally looked up.
âItâs not that I donât see it,â she said, with a calm tone. âThe way he watches. Iâd have to be blind not to. But donât mistake that for anything more than what it is.â
âAnd whatâs that?â Helen asked gently â the other girls leaning in to listen to her answer, surely wanting a bit more gossip than there was to give.
âRecognition,â Clare replied. âOf someone whoâs walked into the fire and come back. Someone who knows what it costs,â She stood from her spot, shaking her head as she did it. âHeâs a hero, and Iâm just making sure he feels recognized for what heâs done. Especially when many of them feel like failures.â
The room quieted for a moment at her words; maybe even a bit of guilt from everyone as Clare felt guilty for bringing the mood down, but the girls may have felt a bit guilty for making a joke out of their duties.
Ruth nodded slowly, tucking her hands into her apron. âThatâs fair.â
But, Margaret couldnât resist one more jab, albeit softer this time. âStill, if he asks you to run off with him to the coast, at least let us know so we can throw you a proper goodbye party to relinquish you from your duties.â
Clare smiled faintly at that, shaking her head. âIf he ever manages to walk across the ward without tripping over his IV line, I may consider it.â
That earned another round of laughter, and this time Clare let herself join in with it.
Still, when she returned to the ward twenty minutes later, chart tucked under her arm, her gaze wandered to the almost inevitable site where, near the bed corner window, the one screened slightly for privacy, was Harryâs bed.
And, as usual for this time of night, he was awake. Propped up on one elbow, book in hand. He wasnât reading, though. He was watching her.
Not in the way a soldier watched a nurse, waiting for meds or instructions or for some sort of reaction of feeling needed. Not even in the way a man watched a woman he found pretty. Noâit was quieter than that. It was much more present than that â like she was the only thing in the room he didnât want to miss.
Clare held his gaze for a second longer than she meant to, tilting her chin forward to suggest she had been going to him for a reason. Then she turned and walked toward him, heart tapping a little too hard in her chest, voice steady as ever.
âLieutenant Styles,â she said lightly with a sigh, quietly to allow the other men to sleep, âdonât tell me youâre pretending to read again.â
He smirked, the edge of it sharp and crooked, just for her. âNot pretending at all. Just distracted for a moment.â
âI wonder by what.â She asked him, quietly moving to fluff the pillow that sat behind his back, making sure that his posture was not taking a beating for the way that he sat.
Harryâs eyes reverted to the book in front of him, nodding a few times as he allowed the smirk to stay present on his face, âI think you know.â
She rolled her eyes againâbut this time, she smiled as she did. And he saw it.
+++
The ward was quiet, the kind of quiet that settled only in the deepest stretch of nightâwhen the men who could sleep, did, and the others tossed in silence, chasing ghosts behind their closed eyes.
Harry was somewhere in between those moments â he felt that sleep was to take him, but he struggled with falling.
Heâd dozed off around midnight, propped up slightly on the pillows Clare had fluffed for him, her voice still echoing faintly in his head. âTry to get some rest. Iâll be on until morning if you need anything.â
Sheâd smiled before drawing the curtain halfway shut around his bed, promising safety in that gentle, practiced way of hers. But sleep wasnât a peaceful place. Not anymore, at least.
He twitched once, then again, face tightening as his breath caught.
There he was back in the skyâcramped in the bomberâs gut, metal rattling all around him. There was smoke⊠fire. His oxygen mask tight against his face as the machine shook and rattled and adrenaline struck through his veins.
Someone was shouting over the intercomâStyles? Tupolo? He couldnât tell; his senses were heightened, but the adrenaline and pulse was louder. The plane bucked beneath them like a dying animal, the nose tipping unnaturally downward as he tried to hold onto the side to try and escape from where he sat, gravity pulling against him.
Thenâan explosion. Light, hot and blinding, consumed everything.
âEngine twoâs out! Weâve got fire! Weâve got fireâMayday! We need to eject!â
Harry was trying to move â every inch of him was trying to get to Dean who was stuck in the rear, thrown backwards by the explosion. His harness was caught; he couldnât remove it.
He was screaming.
The heat was everywhere; the sound was everywhere. The fuselage was tearing open above his head. Sparks rained down. Deanâs voice was screaming his nameâno, not screaming.
Gurgling. Like something inside him had broken. And it had; a piece of the plane had him pinned to the wall, blood circling around his abdomen as he fought The numbness felt like he couldn't move, but he needed to. He needed to get out, he needed to move.
âBail out, Styles! Bail out!â John's voice called over the sound of the plane falling from the sky. Falling deeper and moving faster.
His hands fumbled to get himself out of the door. His shoulder screamed in protest. The world tipped again, violently, and his body hit the fuselage wall hard.
Red. Everything was red. And then, nothing. Freefall. He was falling.
Cold air against his face.
A silent, endless drop.
Harry jerked awake with a ragged gasp, his hands clutching the blanket twisted over his chest, heart pounding like it was trying to break through his ribs. His shirt was drenched with sweat, his shoulder seizing up with pain from the way heâd thrashed. He blinked rapidly into the dark, half-lost in the nightmare still clinging to his skin like smoke.
He tried to sit up but couldnât. His body trembled violently, his breathing sharp and fast and wrong.
âHarryââ
The curtain rustled and Clare appeared in a second, hair pinned up but a few strands loose now, face open with concern. She was still in her uniform, though the collar was unbuttoned at the throat almost like she had been taking a break before hearing his struggling.
She didnât speak again at first, just came to his bedside and placed a hand gently on his arm.
âYouâre alright. It was just a dream. Youâre safe.â
Harry squeezed his eyes shut, voice quivering just at the thought of the sounds, the noises, the sounds, the feeling of it â seeing Deanâs face. âIâI saw it â I almost,â
âI know,â she murmured, holding his hand, softly coaxing him to come to a manageable place. âItâs okay.â
âItâs not okay.â His voice cracked, quiet and raw, his throat felt right as he tried to whisper but the feeling of tears releasing from the sides of his eyes only made him want to speak less. âDean didnât make it. I saw - I left him in there. I left him, Clare.â
Clare pulled a chair up to the side of his bed and reached for his hand, wrapping her fingers firmly around his. Her touch felt like the burning.
âYou didnât leave him,â she told him flatly, âYou were ordered to bail. You survived. That doesnât make it wrong. That makes you human.â
His hand shook in hers, jaw clenched hard like he was trying to force the rest of it down. His hands hurt, he could practically feel the burn on them from hitting the side of the plane on the way down.
âI hear him sometimes. Even when Iâm awake. Itâs likeâlike heâs stuck in the moment I lost him.â
Clare exhaled softly and moved to the supply drawer by his bed, retrieving a small vial and a paper cup with practiced ease. Like she had done this hundreds of times. âThis will help calm your nerves. Just enough to let your body rest, okay?â
âI donât want to forget,â he said as she prepared the dose, watching her with a calmer notion. The feeling of her there was calming, it was helpful to not be alone when he felt so incredibly alone.
âYou wonât,â her words were gentle with him, âBut you wonât relive it over and over like this either.â
She handed him the cup, the small medications. His fingers were still trembling, so she steadied his hand as he drank.
When he was done, she eased him back against the pillow, brushing the damp curls from his forehead. Her touch was tender, but not fragileâlike someone who had learned to be steady because the world wasnât.
âI used to wait for the telegram,â she said after a while, voice barely above a whisper. âEvery day for two years. My brother went straight to Germany. I thought if I stayed busy, if I worked hard enough, it wouldnât come.â
Harryâs gaze shifted to her face, eyes focusing on the way that she held stoic and cold. Like showing emotion revolving around herself would hurt him more.
âThey found his body six months ago,â she said, swallowing hard, nodding â a dry laugh left her as she turned away from him for a moment. âSometimes I still wake up thinking heâs on leave and just forgot to write. I just get so wrapped up in staying busy that I feel guilty that I forget every once in a while.â
He didnât speak, just watched her in the pale moonlight spilling through the window, her profile etched in soft blue and silver from the outside.
âYou and I,â she shook her head, âwe didnât start this war. But we live in the middle of it, and we carry what it leaves behind.â
She looked back down at him, eyes deep and steady and full of a wisdom he hadnât been ready to hear. âThatâs not weakness, Harry. Thatâs survival.â
His throat tightened at her words, blinking at her with a mindful watch. âHow do you do it? Keep your hands from shaking?â
âI donât,â she admitted to him gently, showing him the shake in her right hand. âI just have to keep using them, anyways.â
The medication had started to work, dulling the edges of his panic. Harry had started to feel his body ease, though the grief hadnât leftâit just wasnât screaming quite so loud anymore. There wasnât a voice anymore, but just a noble reason.
Clare stood and tucked the blanket back around him, tucking it into his legs to keep him warm in the cold ward. âTry to sleep now. Iâll stay until you do.â
âYou donât have to.â He told her, watching as she took another seat next to him. Her eyes looked at the book that sat on his bedside table, dog-eared on the places that he stopped.
âI want to.â
He didnât argue with that. His eyes drifted closed, and for the first time in days, when he exhaled, it didnât feel like he was breathing through fire.
Clare sat beside him, her hand resting lightly on the edge of his bed, not holding on, but certainly not letting go either.
+++
There was rain by the midafternoon, pattering gently against the long windows that lined the ward. Outside, the grounds were turning a muddy brown, leaves wet and heavy from the wind. Inside, the heat in the woodstove ticked, and the scent of antiseptic still clung to every linen.
Harry sat upright in bed, legs over the edge, his hands gripping the frame for balance.
Every inch of movement still hurtâjust less than it had a week ago. It had been almost two weeks now that Harry was here. His muscles ached, his burns were starting to heal as best as they could in the short timeâ the ones that were down to the bone were struggling, but there was progress. His hips were starting to get sore the more he sat around, waiting for the muscles to heal
The burns along his ribs itched under the bandages. But the doctors had informed him that he could start to walk now. Stand without help, even if he had to hold the wall. Heâd taken six steps that morning, and felt like he could have collapsed. It felt like a bloody marathon.
âI heard you made it to the door and back,â Clare said, appearing beside him with a folded blanket. He hadnât realized that she was back so soon â the day must have started to really fade from him.
âYou forgot to mention how bloody far the door is.â
She grinned at his nonsense. âYou can take it up with the nurse who designed the floor plan.â
âI will. Just as soon as I can walk without feeling like a newborn deer.â
He looked at her, and wondered how he hadnât seen it before. There was something different about Clare today. Her shoulders were drawn in slightly, her smile a little thinner.
âEverything alright?â he asked. He could see that there was a look in her face that may have been more somber than before.
She nodded. âJust tired, I guess.â
Harry watched her for a beat longer, then glanced at the book on his side table. Heâd nearly finished it nowâstolen chapters late at night, flipping the pages when his thoughts turned too heavy.
âYouâre off tonight, yeah?â he asked; Harry was quite chatty in normal conversation, maybe it didnât seem that way when he was in here. He didnât really know what to say, but he felt a bit more normal today as he was able to get up and walk around.
Clare paused what she had been doing before nodding back at him with a pressed smile. âI am, for a few days.â
âGoing home?â He asked her quietly, watching as she readied his medicines.
A soft exhale. âUm, yes, Iâm â going to see my father, I guess,â she bit on her lip softly, âThe first time Iâm seeing him since George died,â she paused for a moment, âJust the two of us. Mum died of influenza years ago now, so I just imagine it will be difficult.â
He nodded, thinking to himself. Then: âClare?â
She looked back over at him without another word, as his words had drawn her in.
âYou said once your brother gave you that book. The first time you read it. You didnât have to give it to me, you know.â
Her smile faded. Harry didnât speak. He didnât have to.
âWe were very close. Closer than most siblings, I guess. We used to sneak up to the roof of our childhood flat and watch the people pass below, pretending we could read their thoughts. He used to say the only thing worse than being ordinary was being forgettable.â
She folded the blanket with slow, deliberate hands.
âI think about him when the ward goes quiet,â she blinks at him before she writes something on his chart, âReminds me quite a bit of you, actually. He was very cheeky.â
Harry let her talk, watching as she grabbed the stethoscope to listen to his lungs, moving closer to him before her eyes were naturally in front of his, âI see his face in every boy who flinches in his sleep. And every time someone dies, I wonder if he had someone like me with him when -â
Harry swallowed, his voice tight, nodding. âHe did.â
She looked at him, startled at his confirmation â the positivity in his voice. It was new, so she blinked at him for a moment almost not catching his new comfort.
âI wasnât there,â Harry said, âbut I know he did. Someone held his hand. Someone stayed with him.â
The silence between them stretched, but it wasnât empty. It was thick, humming with what neither of them had said aloud yet. He went to stand slowly, muscles protesting as he pushed himself off of the cot and pushed his shoulders back.
âStill hurts like hell,â he muttered, stretching out his back.
Clare stepped toward him on instinct, almost like she was going to catch him if he fell, âCarefulââ
But the problem with that was that Harry was quite taller than Clare, not by too much, but she would definitely not be able to lift him if he fell.
He waved her off with a tired smile, shaking his head as his hair fell into his eyes. âIâm alright, love. I just needed to stand while you talked about him. Felt like⊠like I should.â
She nodded, eyes shining before she studied him for a moment.
âSince youâre up, do you want to sit outside for a bit?â she asked. âThe gardenâs just through the hall.â
Harry blinked, a bit confused by her question. âYouâre allowed to take patients for walks outside?â
âNo,â she said, he could tell there was a bit of nonchalance in her voice, maybe a bit of weariness, âBut youâre not a patient. Youâre a soldier with a limp and poor judgment, and I feel it's the least we can do.â
He smiled back at her. âAnd youâre clearly a very bad nurse for not following protocol.â
âIâm the worst,â she said, already moving to grab an extra blanket to place around his shoulders in lieu of a jacket.
They made their way slowly through the corridor, Harry bracing himself on the walls when needed, Clare walking beside him like she wasnât watching every breath he took. When they reached the door to the small, enclosed garden, she opened it gently and helped him step out.
The air was crisp, earthy with rain. The garden wasnât largeâjust a few benches, some ivy climbing the walls, a rusted fountain with no water. But it was quiet. And private. Clare moved them over towards where they sat on a bench tucked near the back, out of sight from the windows.
Clare pulled her coat tighter. Harry tilted his face toward the sky; there wasnât a cloud above them.
âI forgot what clean air smelled like.â
Clare watched him, making sure he was okay to maneuver before she helped him down on the bench. They sat on the wood for a moment, elbow to elbow, while she heard Harry take a few deep breaths. It was enough for him, she thought.
âI thought about writing my parents,â he said after a while. âBut I donât know what Iâd say. They sent me off a whole son and I came back a cracked one.â
âYou came back,â she said gently; her frustration didnât lie with him, but with the situation. She knew he didnât mean anything by it, and she allowed his own frustration to take over when he was obviously thinking of what happened in the sky. âThatâs what matters.â
âFor what? Johnâs still stuck in that bed. Deanâs gone. I was supposed to get us back â I was supposed to fix the plane.â
âYou think you failed them,â Clare said matter-of-factly.
âI know I did.â
She shook her head. âYou canât keep measuring your worth by who did and didn't survive around you.â
âAnd how the hell should I measure it, then?â He was quick with his quip, turning his head to look at her and catching a glimmer in her eye.
âBy who you still are.â
He looked at her, jaw tight. He noticed that there may have been a tear in her eye, so he backed down a bit quieter. âI canât be who I was before.â
âGood,â Clare said, nodding, scoffing a bit. âHe was probably full of himself.â
Harry gave a surprised laugh, sudden and short at the way she delivered that with such wit.
âI mean it,â she said, serious. Harryâs smile wiped away. âThe man sitting here now? Heâs still carrying everyone elseâs weight. Still angry enough to walk, stubborn enough to argue. Still kind enough to ask about my brother. That sounds like someone Iâd trust.â
He looked down at his hands. The backs of them were still healing, one wrapped loosely where the burns hadnât closed yet. Her eyes looked down at them as he did.
Harry drew in a breath as he kept his voice to a whisper, âDo you ever think about what happens after?â
She didnât ask what he meant â she didnât have to.
âAll the time,â she said. âAnd it scares the hell out of me.â
Harry nodded. âI think about being normal again. About laughing and meaning it. About sleeping through the night. But it feels like something only other people get to have.â
They sat in silence, the quiet between them thicker than the fog curling in the cool night air. The sky above was smudged with stars, barely visible behind drifting clouds, and the damp scent of earth and smoke hung in the air. The bench beneath them was cold, but Clare hadnât moved. Neither had he.
Harry shifted slightly, only then realizing just how close they were. Her shoulder nearly brushed his. Her breath, soft and steady, fogged in the space between them.
âDo you believe in second chances?â he asked, voice low for just her to hear.
Clare didnât look away. Her eyes, always steady, were darker in the twilightâwatchful and unreadable, yet somehow gentle.
âI donât know if I believe in chances at all,â she said finally, shaking her head. âBut I believe in choosing. When something feels right, you choose it. Even if itâs only once.â
His breath caught, barely audible. Their fingers touched. Not by accident - she had reached for him, deliberate but featherlight, the back of her hand brushing his like a secret passage that only they both could see.
âI donât know where I go from here,â Harry said quietly, eyes fixed on the ground. âI feel like Iâm still falling in the sky.â
âYou donât have to know yet,â Clare said to him, honesty laced like honey around her words. âYouâre allowed to just⊠be here.â
âIt doesnât feel like enough.â
Her voice softened, almost a whisper. âHarry.â
It was then that he looked at her. Really looked â it was a look that she had never seen before on someone. Her hair had loosened from its pins in the breeze, strands clinging to her cheek.
There was a smudge of ash near her collarbone from lighting the woodstove, and her coat wasnât buttoned properly. For once, she didnât fix it. She didnât retreat behind the neat uniform, the calm nurseâs mask. Out here, she was only Clare.
It was the only person that she wanted Harry to see. Not the broken nurse who was looking for sympathy, or the girl who was losing everyone in her life at rapid rates.
âWhat?â he asked, barely above a breath. She could see his breath in the cold fog of the air.
She reached up, her fingers brushing his cheek. Not the raw, healing sideâshe didnât flinch or pity. She chose the other, smooth and still familiar, as if to remind him that he hadnât been erased. Her touch was warm against his cold skin; he noticed the shake in her fingers as she lifted her.
âIf you asked me to stay,â she murmured, âI would.â
His throat worked around the lump that rose there. He stared at her, trying not to fall apart from something as simple and devastating as that.
And then he leaned in. Tentative. Careful. Like she was something fragile and holy and he was still learning how to hold anything without breaking it. Their foreheads touched â it was a bare touch, a touch she could have passed off as intimate. A breath passed between them, then another. His hand found her knee, grounding himself.
He didnât kiss her.
But he could feel itâthat pulse beneath the quiet longing that both of them held between them. The terrifying, beautiful possibility of being seen and chosen anyway.
Clareâs eyes drifted closed, only for a second, just a beat. Then she pulled back, slowly, as if severing something delicate.
âWe should go in,â she said, voice hushed but with need. She needed to move away, or she would do something she could regret, âYour doctor would have my head if I let you catch cold.â
Harry swallowed, nodding. His chest ached, but not from pain this time. They stood, shoulder to shoulder, and for the first time in weeks, he rose without stumbling.
And Clare didnât step away from him for a second, holding around his waist to help with movements. His legs and his body just hurt. It was hard to maneuver, but it was good for him to move like this.
They returned to the ward in silence, the corridor dimly lit by amber lamps â most of the soldiers were asleep, they made sure of it. Harry walked more steadily now, the rhythm of his steps echoing off the walls. Clare didnât offer to hold his arm once they got insideâshe didnât have to. Something between them had already shifted, quiet but undeniable.
When they reached his small spaceâa small, curtained-off space tucked just past the main wardâhe paused at the threshold.
âYou can come in,â he said, turning his head to look at her then.
Clare hesitated only a second before following him. The room was quiet, softly lit by the lamp at his bedside. Compared to the ward, it felt warmer. More human. Harry had started to collect a few books from a few of the doctors and nurses, they were stacked neatly on the side table. An extra blanket folded at the foot of the bed, one that Clare had brought the other day. A small radio Harry never touched.
He sat on the edge of the bed, and Clare remained standing as she held her hands in front of her.
âStay a moment?â he asked.
She nodded, drawing the curtain fully closed behind her.
The corridor had been quiet, the bustle of the hospital dimming quite drastically. Clare had just helped Harry back into bed, his body still stiff with the slow, frustrating ache of healing. She fluffed his pillow with practiced ease, smoothing the blanket over his lap as the ward had started to feel cold since the winter months were upon them.
âFuck,â Harry cursed under his breath, shaking his head as he winced at the feeling of his leg stretching out. âGod â fuck.â
âYouâre wincing,â she countered, rolling her eyes at his face, âand youâre too proud to â â
He opened his mouth to retort, but then it happenedâ the noise was sharp and clear, the rising whine of a siren split the silence, its cry climbing like a scream into the darkening sky.
Harry froze; Clareâs head turned quickly towards the windows with a breath let out. His fingers clenched the edge of the blanket. âBloody hellâŠâ
Clare snapped towards the window that sat near Harryâs bed, where the thin lavender light of evening had turned grey and dark even though there wasnât a cloud in the sky. That should have been their first warning.
Air raids never happened in cloudy conditions.
âThatâs the second time this week,â she said, breath catching as she tried to remain calm. âThey must be heading toward the docks again.â
âAlways the bloody docks,â Harry muttered, but his voice had thinned. He wasnât there anymoreânot really; his brain had started to feel odd, like parts of him were there and other parts werenât. He was back above the Channel, the smell of smoke in his nose, the thunder of anti-aircraft guns all around, Dean slumped beside him.
The siren wailed louder, and he pressed his palm against his forehead to stop the noise â he needed all of it to stop.
Clare turned quickly, flicking off the bedside lamp to plunge the room into shadows. âHarryâ Harry, please, look at me.â
His eyes were glassy, unfocused. Her heart dropped at the way that he looked at her. She stepped closer, taking his hands, grounding him to stare at her for a moment while she spoke to him.
âWeâre safe here. The ward is reinforced, and if we must move downstairs, weâll do it quickly. I promise. We â you, youâre safe.â
Then came a sound he hadnât realized he feared until it filled the roomâthe long, low thrum of engines. Dozens of them. Close. The windowpanes began to tremble in their frames.
Harry flinched, his hands beginning to shake as he felt a scream so internal and loud and completely overpowering overwhelming his thoughts. âI canâtâ Clareââ
Ruth appeared in the doorway, face pale as Clare turned around to notice that many people had started to gather. âWe need you, now. Casualties incoming. Triage staff first â we must move quickly.â
Clareâs grip on his hand tightened. He shook his head, almost like a child. âPlease donât leave me hereââ
âI have to go,â she said, heart twisting at the mere promise that she had stated to him just before this â she would stay if he asked her to. But she had to go. âBut Iâll be back. As soon as I can. Lie flat and stay away from the windows, alright? I will be back.â
His lips parted to protest, but sheâd already gone, sprinting into the dim corridor, her silhouette swallowed by the chaos. The door clicked shut behind her as she walked out of the ward, and silence swept in, heavy and totalâexcept for the rumble of the engines above.
The lights flickered. Harry stared at the ceiling, each second stretching like wire pulled taut. Then, from across the room, a low voice began to speak out into the darkness. Harry laid as flat as he could, pulling the blanket over him to try and silence the monsters that lay beyond him.
âOur Father, who art in heavenâŠâ
Harry turned his head. It was John, in the next bed, voice shaking but steady in its rhythm. âHallowed be Thy nameâŠâ
The floor beneath them gave a subtle tremor, distant, but real.
They were bombing.
Harry squeezed his eyes shut to try and push away the thoughts that were racking in his brain. He could feel it in his chest againâthe fire, the fall, the absence of Deanâs voice.
âThy kingdom comeâŠâ
He didnât pray often, but now, he mouthed the words too. Not for himself. For Clare. For Dean. For Bennett. For the kid in his squad whose name he never learned, only the way he cried for his mother when they dragged him from the wreckage with barely an arm attached to him.
Another boom soundedâcloser.
âDeliver us from evilâŠâ
Harry pressed the heels of his hands to his eyes and took a shuddering breath. He felt like he was made of glass, every breath threatening to splinter him from the inside. Then he thought of Clare. Of her voice. Her hand on his and the feeling that it left; the burning sensation from her touch rather than from the sheer pain of trauma. Her eyes when she promised sheâd be back.
The fear didnât leave him. But it no longer had full control.
A few hours had passed; he hadnât been sure of it. Harry laid awake under the covers, eyes heavy as hell, but refusing to shut completely. The bombing and the sirens had shut off; it had ended. They had made it through another night.
Clare returned hours later, past midnight, her apron streaked with soot and blood, her face pale but calm as she approached his bedside. She noticed that he was still underneath, possibly not seeing her approach.
Without a touch that may spook him, she spoke into the universe: âI told you Iâd come back.â
And he, without hesitation, pulled the covers away from his eyes to see Clare standing there, and whispered, âYouâre the only thing I believe in anymore.â
With tears in her eyes, her evening had been filled with different spectrums of emotions. Her eyes told a terror; Harry could see it from the way that she stood. Someoneâs blood on her hands, her own hands still shaking.
Harry bit his lip as he looked at her but knew that words werenât enough for her right now.
âGo get some rest,â he told her softly, knowing that it was the one thing sheâd say to him. âYou need to rest.â
Clare let a single tear run down her face, a sniffle followed as she gave him a tight smile, âI will.â
And with that, she turned to leave his small spaceâ one day older, and another day further.
+++
It had been a few nights since Harry had laid eyes on Clare.
Most of the men had drifted into uneasy naps, the hush broken only by the hum of distant footsteps, the occasional clatter of a tray, and the low murmur of birdsong outside the tall windowpanes.
Clare had lingered after her rounds. Not out of duty, though she told herself that was part of it.
Harry had been awake all morning, his wounds no longer fresh enough to draw constant pain but still healing, still temperamental. Heâd walked a full circuit of the ward that morning, joking gruffly with one of the orderlies, pushing through the ache in his thigh like it owed him something. He looked less like a patient and more like a man waiting for orders that wouldnât come.
Now, with the curtains half-drawn and sunlight painting lazy patterns across the floor, Clare pulled a chair to the side of his bed. No chart in hand. No task pending. Just⊠company.
She didnât speak at first. She didnât need to.
Harry sat up slowly, back against the raised bed frame, and looked at her with that same unreadable expression he often wore when he was too tired to be guarded but too proud to ask for kindness.
The air raid had passed, though the ward still trembled with the tension it left behind. There were more men than before, and Harry had noticed that there was a lot more movement around the ward.
Outside, the clouds had begun to thin, but the scent of smoke clung stubbornly to the windowpanes, like something that didnât want to be forgotten. Inside, the ward was dim again, lit only by a few low bulbs strung across the beams and the occasional flicker of light through the curtains.
Harry sat up in his cot, blanket gathered loosely around his waist, legs bent as he leaned forward over the small wooden crate theyâd turned into a makeshift table. Cards lay scattered between them, worn at the edges from too many rounds. Clare sat across from him on a low stool, knees drawn together, her uniform sleeves pushed to her elbows.
Her fingers moved over the cards with quiet precision, shuffling them into a clean stack. Heâd already lost two hands in a row.
âYouâre ruthless,â Harry muttered, eyeing the cards she had just dealt him.
Clare gave him a half-smile, barely more than a twitch at the corner of her mouth. âHave to be."
But something was off. She wasnât gloating like usual. Her movements were slower, less sharp. And though her posture remained straight, her eyes werenât quite focused.
Harry narrowed his gaze. âEverything alright?â
She kept her eyes on her cards, lips parted as if to respondâbut didnât.
The silence grew, coiled between them like a thin thread stretched too tight.
Clare laid her cards down. Not folded. Just⊠placed, side by side with delicate care. Her hands remained on the table for a long moment before she spoke.
âThere was a man,â she said, her voice low, steady. âThe night of the raid. In one of the overflow tents.â
Harry didnât speak, only let her continue.
âShrapnel in the abdomen,â she added, swallowing deeply. âDeep. There wasnât anything we could do.â
Her gaze drifted down to her lap, where her fingers had clasped together. White-knuckled as she recalled.
âHe kept calling for his wife,â she said, her voice even, measured. As if sheâd rehearsed it to try to keep herself composed. âDidnât know where he was. Just⊠cried out for her. Like if he said her name enough times, maybe sheâd appear.â
Harry swallowed as the images came too easily to him. Too vividly. He knew what that looked like.
âI told him she was on her way,â Clare said, quieter now, staring at her hands. âThat sheâd gotten his letter. That she was coming to take him home.â
She looked up, then, just a flick of her gaze toward the window, as if she could see that other tent from that morning. That man.
âHe smiled,â she said. âRight at the end. He said she made ginger cake on Sundays and always wore a yellow scarf in the spring.â Her mouth twitched, something between a laugh and a breath. âHe smelled like blood â Iâm not one to get lightheaded, but I felt ill.â
Harryâs chest tightened at her observation, the way she spoke and he let her speak. He didn't interrupt, he looked at her with pity but the kind that made him feel worse for bitching the way he did.
âI donât cry with patients,â Clare went on, shaking her head. âNot once. Not even when they scream. Not even when theyâre alone.â
She paused, but it was then, a single tear traced the curve of her cheek. She didnât wipe it away. Her face remained composed, still.
âBut heâŠâ she murmured, her voice wobbly. âHe was the same age as my brother.â
Harry reached across the crate slowly, deliberately. His fingers found hers and held them there, gently. No pressure, no urgencyâjust warmth in the palm of his hand. Contact.
âIâm sorry,â he said, voice rough.
Clare didnât look at him immediately. She was breathing through her nose, quiet and slow, as if trying to pull all the emotion back in before it escaped.
âI didnât want to upset you,â she said, pushing the tear away, âIâ I just needed to talk about it.â
âYou didnât â the war is affecting us all, I ââ
She shook her head, almost feeling silly for bringing it up to him, âI just⊠I didnât want to forget it happened.â
âYou wonât,â Harry told her. âNeither will I.â
Another tear fell, catching on her chin before she pulled in a deep breath, as though that small moment of release had to be enough.
She turned her hand beneath his, palm up now, fingers curling lightly around his. Her eyes met hisâtired, honest, but dry again.
Then she let out a shaky exhale and, with a soft sniff, picked up her cards.
âYouâre still losing, by the way,â she said, her voice steadier, teasing just enough to make it believable.
Harry grinned faintly, the lopsided grin that she had come to know fondly. âDonât rub it in.â
âIâd never.â She looked up from under her lashes.
âYou bloody would.â
She raised an eyebrow at him. âOnly if I thought you could take it.â
And for a little while longer, they played their quiet game, their fingers occasionally brushing across the table when they would go to pick up a card or set one down, the warmth between them chasing away just enough of the cold that lingered in the corners of the night.
âI didnât plan on making it back,â he said, voice low. âFor a while, I didnât even want to.â
Clare blinked, then looked at him fully. His face was thinner now, sharper in profile, the hollows beneath his cheekbones dark from restless nights. But his eyes were clearer. Still tired, still storm-sweptâbut clear.
The color green was undeniable; something she had come to miss when she wasn't on shift. She loved the way the green danced over her when she walked, like his eyes were magnets.
âYouâre not alone in that,â she replied softly.
He nodded once, setting down a pair of hearts. âI think about them all the time. The ones who didnât come back.â
His hand, wrapped lightly in gauze over the knuckles, drifted to the side, where a book sheâd lent him sat closed on the nightstand. He tapped it once.
âI write their names down sometimes. When itâs quiet. Not because Iâm afraid Iâll forgetâbut because I already feel like the world has.â
Clare leaned in slightly. âYou donât owe them your silence, Harry.â
He gave a short, dry laugh. âNo. But I owe them something.â
He looked away, toward the window, where darkness has started to overcome them, pressed against the glass.
âIâve got a sister back home. Older than me. Sharp as anything. Sheâs got two little onesâAlfie and Beth. My niece is five. She sent me a letter written in pink crayon. Told me she thinks soldiers are superheroes. I didnât have the heart to tell her weâre not.â
Clareâs chest tightened, not just at the way he opened to her but the way that he seemed to love to talk about his loved ones â something in him lighting up just at the thought of them.
âMy mumâs been trying to keep herself busy. Sewing circles, church things. My dadâs a quiet man, but heâs proud â I can tell. When he thinks no oneâs looking, heâll keep my letters folded in his shirt pocket like theyâre medals. Pull âem out and tell his mates all about my travels.â
There was a long pause.
Clareâs voice was barely above a whisper. âTheyâll be so glad to have you home.â
Harry didnât respond right away. His jaw flexed, eyes still fixed on some distant point outside.
âIâm not married,â he said finally. âNo sweetheart. No children. And I still made it home. But the others⊠so many of them had people waiting. Wives. Toddlers. Boys who were just learning to speak themselves, really.â
Clare felt it thenâhis guilt settling over the room like dust.
âI know itâs not fair,â he continued. âI know itâs war. Goddamn random and cruel. But sometimes I sit up at night and thinkâwhy me? What did I do to deserve walking away when they didnât even get to send a goodbye?â
Clare reached for his hand before she could second-guess it â she missed it between her fingers again, and even though she knew better, she was playing a game she wasn't sure she could win. She didnât take it fully, just touched her fingers to the edge of his wrist, warm and steady.
âHarry,â she said, firm now. âYou didnât take their place. You didnât steal their breath. You survived. And surviving doesnât make you guilty. It makes you human.â
He looked at her. Really looked.
The hurt was there, but so was the gratitude. And something elseâsoft, unspoken. Like maybe, for the first time in weeks, he didnât feel quite so hollow.
He breathed in slowly. Let it out, breathing and taking in a breath. She hesitated.
âWhen my brother was still alive, we'd made plans. Where weâd travel, the books weâd read. The people weâd meet. Then he was gone, and the world felt smaller.â
He said nothing, but his hand turned slightly beneath hers, palm upward. This time, she took it.
âI donât know if I believe in fate or destiny,â she said, quieter now, continuing. âBut I do believe in timing. And in second chances. Maybe thatâs what you have now.â
His thumb brushed over her fingers.
âWhat if I donât know what to do with it?â
Clare gave a small, half-smile.
âThen maybe you take it one day at a time. Maybe you meet someone for a drink. Maybe you walk your niece to school and help your sister with her garden. Maybe you learn to live without apologizing for it, maybe you stay in London or see a new city," She swallowed, "Maybe you find yourself a sweetheart."
Harry leaned back slightly, as if the weight in his chest had eased just by her giving him choice and permission to move forward. The noise of the ward had returned, faintlyâa distant conversation, a nurse laughing two rooms over.
But for a moment, everything else was still.
Clare reached for the book on his nightstand and opened it. Inside the front cover was her noteâshort, handwritten, her script looping in soft curves.
He looked down at the words, then back at her.
âWasn't boring, by the way.â He told her, setting his cards down. âWas quite good.â
âReady for another one, then?â Clare asked, setting the book back down.
Harry nodded with confirmation, giving her a faint smile. âAlways ready.â
+++
It was late. The kind of late where the world went still, and the only sound in the ward was the rhythmic ticking of the clock above the supply cabinets and the soft, wheezy breath of a soldier two beds down.
Harry sat propped up in his cot, a dim reading lamp clipped to the shelf beside him. The book Clare had brought him weeks ago lay open on his lap, though his eyes hadnât touched the words in some time. His thoughts kept driftingâto the war, to home, and mostly, to her.
Clare stepped into the ward quietly, her shoes silent on the polished floor. She wasnât on shift. Not technically. But her hair was down and there was no clipboard in her hands, just a plain mug of tea and a knowing look.
Harry watched her approach like someone watching a secret arrive.
âYou always drink a cup this late?â he asked, voice low so it wouldnât carry.
âOnly when I know someoneâs still awake pretending to read, and I can sit with them for a bit.â
She offered the mug, and he took it with a small smile. âWhat gave me away?â
âYou were on the same page when I checked an hour ago.â
He smirked, taking a sip of the tea. âObservant.â
âIâm a nurse. Comes with the territory. It's why you're getting better so quickly.â
Clare sat on the edge of the nearby supply bench, facing him. She didnât look tired. Just quiet, thoughtful.
âI heard the brass came in today,â she said gently. âPaperworkâs through?â
Harry nodded, trying his best to put on a good face. âYeah. Iâm out in two days. Failed my physical test."
There was a long pause, then, like she was waiting for him to remember how good it would feel to leave, but knew how disappointed he had been in himself. Clare glanced down, twisting the ring on her finger that wasnât for anyone. âYouâll be glad to get home, Iâm sure.â
âSure,â he said, a little too quickly, almost like he was lying to himself. Then, slower: âYeah. I mean⊠itâs home, right?â
But the words hung there like something unfinished.
She looked up at him, keeping her eyes still. âYouâve got people waiting on you to return in one piece.â
âHavenât seen them in⊠God, over two years now.â He gave a soft laugh. âThey probably wonât even recognize me. Which might be for the best. No need to scare them off with all this.â
Clare frowned, her gaze flicking over the healing burns along his neck, the tension in his shoulders that came with healing.
âTheyâll be proud,â she told him, honestly in her voice. He could see that she was trying to keep her hands busy, but didnât know how to make it not obvious. âYou came home, that's all that matters to them.â
Harry looked at her then, and something in his face shifted. That sharp, dry wit gave way to something bare and unsettled.
âSome of them didnât,â he said, reminding her. âMen with wives. Children. And Iâm the one packing my things.â
âDonât do that,â Clare said softly â he could tell that he may have made a mistake in talking about men who had died, who werenât there, âDonât carry the guilt of being alive. Youâve carried enough,â she shook her head. âYou donât have to be brave in here.â
He was quiet for a long time, not knowing if he needed to respond, not knowing what he should say.
Then: âFeels heavier at night.â
She stood slowly, walked the few steps to his bedside, and sat beside him on the edge of the mattress. They didnât touch. Not yet. But their arms were close enough that the warmth between them was unmistakable.
Harryâs voice was rough when he spoke. âItâs easier when youâre near.â
That silence againâthick and blooming with a charge neither of them could explain.
âYou shouldnât say things like that,â Clare said, but it was barely a whisper.
âWhy not?â
âBecause Iâll want to believe them.â
His hand shifted slightly on the blanket, like he was fighting the urge to reach for hers. But she leaned in firstâjust enough that their shoulders brushed, their breaths mingled. Her perfume was faint but familiar by now, notes of soft lavender. Clean linen.
She turned her head and looked at him, mouth parted as if she might say something. But she didnât. Her eyes stared at his parted lips as if remembering what it would feel like to reach out and touch them. She couldnât recall the last time she was touched like that.
Harry leaned just slightly closer, to the point where their noses almost touched. Her hand rested on the edge of the blanket, fingers curled loosely, and for a moment he thoughtâhopedâshe might reach for him too.
But she pulled back a heartbeat before anything could happen.
âI should go,â she said quietly, standing without another word as she smoothed down her apron.
âClareââ he started, voice thick. His hand reached out to grab at her, but he wasnât quick enough. A sharp pain in his shoulder radiated before he winced quietly.
She looked back at him, something complicated shining in her eyes. It was a goodbye that she wasnât prepared for, but somehow, knowing it was coming hurt more.
âIâll see you tomorrow,â she said.
And then she was gone, the soft sound of her footsteps fading down the corridor.
Harry stared at the door for a long time, heart pounding like he was still falling from the sky. It was weird how it did that â weird how feeling that way could make him feel like living and dying and loving were all synonymous.
But was glad that his heart could feel, even if his brain struggled.
+++
Five weeks.
Thatâs how long it had been since Harry was dragged unconscious into the military hospitalâburned, broken, half-lucid, and gripping the fading image of a smoking French sky.
Now he could walk without assistance, eat without pain, and sit in the quiet without flinching every time the wind hit the windows wrong. Physically, heâd mended well enough. But the wound that mattered mostâthe empty space left by Dean, the weight of a crew scattered like ashâwas nowhere near healing.
Tomorrow morning, he would be discharged. He would be sent back to Manchester.
The orders sat like a stone in his stomach.
The matron had delivered the final orders that afternoon. He was being sent back home to Manchesterâno reassignment, no further duty. His left shoulder was too damaged to meet active service standards, the muscle strain and scar tissue compromising his full range of motion. His service to the Royal Air Force was officially complete.
Honorable discharge, they'd called it. But it didn't feel like honor. It felt like being sent home from a war he hadnât finished fighting.
He sat at the edge of his bed in his small private space, elbows on knees, listening to the clatter of dishes down the hall, the distant crack of a radio playing swing music somewhere. The curtain was half drawn, the soft light of early evening stretching golden fingers across the tiled floor.
A half-packed satchel sat by his nightstandâjust a few changes of clothes, the worn book Clare had lent him, and a letter John had helped him send to Bennettâs hospital.
He turned the book over in his hands now, thumb brushing the corner of the faded cover. A Farewell to Arms. Ironic, really. He'd finished it two days ago and hadnât stopped thinking about the ending since.
There was a gentle knock on the frame outside the curtain. His heart reacted before his voice did because he knew that someone had come to say their goodbyes.
âYeah?â
Clare stepped inside, her cap slightly askew, cheeks warm with color. She was out of uniform nowâjust her soft cardigan and skirt, the sleeves pushed up to her elbows.
âI thought you might still be here,â she said.
âI havenât been sleeping much.â Harry told her, putting down a few of his items that he had been holding to pack away.
She nodded like she understood, then smiled faintly. Her breath was deep as she tilted her chin up, almost like she was trying to keep it together. âI heard itâs your last night.â
âThatâs what theyâre telling me.â
She reached into her bag and handed him a parcel wrapped in brown paper and twine. âI brought you something.â
Harry stood then, taking it in his hands. He opened it slowly, careful not to tear it. Inside was a copy of A Farewell to Arms, a different edition than the hospitalâsâhardcover, older, with a clothbound spine. He looked up at her.
âCouldnât keep you reading the wardâs tattered one,â she said, shrugging. âFigured youâd need something to throw across the room when you get angry at the ending again.â
He huffed a laugh, shaking his head. âStill not over it.â
âI know.â
He opened the cover, looking over the edition that she had given him and caught sight of her handwriting on the inside flap. Neat, but a little slanted, like sheâd written it quickly.
Harryâ Until you find your next story. âClare
His throat caught around something he couldnât quite name, eyebrows narrowing at it before he bit the inside of his cheek.
âThanks,â he said, quieter than he meant.
âI was hoping you might write to me.â She moved to lean against the nearby dresser, arms crossed, but not defensively. More like she didnât know what else to do with her hands. âIâd like to know how Manchester treats you once you arrive home.â
He glanced up, studying her. There was something deliberately casual in her tone, but her eyes were shining slightly. She was trying not to cry. That alone undid him.
âI donât know what Iâm supposed to do next,â he admitted to her before he let his shoulders settle.
Clare nodded, shrugging with a small smile. âYouâre not supposed to know.â
âThey gave me this medal,â he said, showing her the item that was tucked into his satchel now. âTold me Iâd shown bravery. I think they needed a reason to sign me off and not feel guilty.â
âYou were brave.â Clare told him â a reminder she would give him forever, if he let her.
âI was lucky. Thatâs all.â Harry ran a hand through his hair then, sighing.
âSometimes,â Clare said, stepping forward as she adjusted the collar of his shirt that he had been given; something different than the hospital wear, âsurviving is harder than dying.â
That struck something in him, deep and cold. The kind of truth you only recognize after war has carved a hollow into you, but the way that her near him felt electrifying. Clare gave him a look before going to tuck her skirt beneath her knees, sitting on the edge of his bed. He followed.
He closed the book and set it on his lap, then looked up at her. âI want to take you for a drink sometime.â
That made her smile, slow and uncertain and lovely â not wanting to make it obvious that it was one of the things that she had wished for.
âYouâd come to London?â she asked.
âIâll make the trip,â he said. âPromise Iâll wear a clean shirt and everything.â
âWell,â she teased, ânow Iâm tempted to see what that looks like.â
He reached for her hand. She didnât hesitate to give it to him.
Her fingers curled gently between his, and for a while, neither of them said anything. The hospital faded around themâthe clatter and coughs, the smell of antiseptic, the ghost sounds of war.
âI donât want this to be it,â he said finally, ghost of a whisper on his breath as he held her hand on his lap.
âIt doesnât have to be.â Her eyes were filled with tears; knowing that the five weeks together were the ones that kept her the sanest.
âBut it might be.â
She didnât argue. Clare was never the sort to make promises she couldnât keep.
âThis past monthâŠâ she began, then stopped. âItâs been different with you here, you know.â
âBetter or worse?â The lopsided grin was back; eyes searching hers when they turned to face one another.
âBoth,â she said, smiling gently. âBut mostly better.â
He wanted to kiss her â he had never wanted to kiss her more than he had right now. But the room felt too still, too full of goodbye.
So instead, he whispered, âWill you write me back?â
Clare let out a dry laugh, shaking her head as she tried to keep her tears behind her eyelids, unsure of how she was doing it up until then, âOf course.â
Then, as if something cracked open inside him, he added, âYouâre the only reason I didnât lose my mind here.â
Clare exhaled, and the breath trembled. âI think youâre the reason Iâve lost mine.â
It was then that she found the utter need for the push and pull to draw her into him. She searched his lips, parted slightly before she allowed her hand to fall on the back of his neck, drawing her lips to his. She kissed him thenâslowly, properly, like the space between them had finally closed.
When she pulled away, her hands lingered at his jaw, and her voice was low. âDonât let this war define you. You get to choose who you are after this.â
Harry nodded, his eyes locked on hers.
âAnd when youâre ready,â she added, her eyes still laying on his lips as their foreheads pushed together, âcome find me.â
With finality, she heard some steps around his room â she moved to her feet to move apart as she smoothed down her skirt. She stepped back, her silhouette framed by the curtainâs edge as she turned around for one last look.
âGoodnight, Harry.â
âGoodnight, Clare.â
She slipped out into the corridor, the curtain fluttering softly behind her. Harry stayed there long after she was gone, the book resting in his hands. He opened it again, rereading her note.
Until you find your next story.
He didnât know where to start yet. But maybeâjust maybeâit began with a letter.
+++
The train to Manchester had felt like it had taken one hundred years.
When Harry stepped off the train, satchel in hand, the air had smelled of coal smoke and cold steel, the same scent he'd known since boyhood. But everything else felt sharper, more fragileâlike he was walking through a memory that hadnât quite settled back into place. This didnât feel like home anymore, it felt stranger than that.
His mum had cried as soon as she saw him. Not loud or dramatic, just a quiet kind of weeping, her hands wrapped around his face like she couldnât believe it was real. His dad stood behind her, stiff-backed, his eyes red, though he never said why. When he finally clapped Harry on the shoulder, it was with the strength of a man whoâd held back every emotion for four weeks too long.
His sister, Nora, had nearly tackled him, Alfie and Beth tumbling behind her like puppies, shouting âUncle Harry!â and pulling at his coat like they thought he might vanish if they let go.
Heâd sat at the kitchen table that night, the old kettle hissing in the background, and listened to them talk over one another. Every story, every small detail, felt like a lifeline anchoring him back to the living.
But underneath it all was the ache.
Because when Nora kissed her children goodnight, he thought about Dean, who would never see his own grow up. When his father poured him a glass of whisky, hand trembling just slightly, he thought of Bennett and wondered if heâd been able to write home yet. And when Beth handed him a drawing of the two of them standing under a rainbow, he had to turn away for a moment so she wouldnât see the tears in his eyes.
He was home, he was where he grew up and his family was. But part of him still felt like he hadnât landed. Not completely. Not until he made his way to London.
Not until Clare.
+++
Three Months Later.
May, 1943. London.
The train rocked gently beneath Clareâs feet, a lull in the evening rhythm that almost matched the flutter in her chest. She sat by the window, a coat in her lap for the chilly evenings, a letter in her gloved hands. She had read it more times than she could count, but tonightâon her way to see himâit felt different.
It felt real.
Clare had been able to take the train back to her flat in London for the weekend, getting a break from the hospital. She didnât tell the other nurses about this particular meet up â she'd be teased endlessly, but she knew that they had an inkling when she started messing with lipstick in her bag.
London was a few hours away, and somewhere in the maze of its streets, Harry was waiting for her.
She found a compartment with a few older women and a quiet soldier who nodded once in her direction and returned to his paper. The train lurched forward, wheels shrieking against the tracks, and Clare leaned her forehead against the cool windowpane. Fields slipped by, blurred in the bit of drizzle, but her mind was miles ahead, already at the corner of a pub, searching the crowd.
The journey stretched long and winding, as though time itself resisted her reunion with him. The envelope was soft now, its edges creased, and corners worn from being tucked into coat pockets and beside her pillow. His handwriting filled the page in a neat, deliberate scrawl, like he had taken his time, like he wasnât used to writing anything that wasnât a flight log or a report.
He was writing something a bit more important to him than those.
- Postmarked - May 5th, 1943 â Manchester Lt. Styles, Harry E.
My dearest Clare,
Iâve been trying to start this letter for days, but nothing felt quite right. Every piece of paper that I started got crumpled and thrown away because I needed this to be perfect. I wrote quite a lot to my friends and family during training, but those didnât mean as much as this does.
Manchester is colder than I remember. My mum wonât stop feeding me, but my sister and father are very happy to have me home. I can tell that theyâre proud of me. Dad has been keeping me busy with putting me to work on fixing things that arenât broken, but I know he cares and wants me to be better. The people in town stare at me like I came back missing a limb instead of just not going back at all. But you were right. I do get to decide who I am after this.
Iâve decided Iâm the sort of man who keeps his promises.
So, Iâm writing because Iâll be in London for a few days come next week, Thursday through Sunday. Iâll be at The Red Lion on Argyle Street Thursday evening, around seven.
If you donât come, I will assume that what we had shared in those difficult weeks was meant to shape me for who I am and was just a small part of the story Iâm supposed to be writing for myself. I will make ends with that, and I wish you all the best. You gave me hope, and I will forever be grateful for every conversation we shared. I will move on, and so will you, but I will always think of this chapter.
If you do come, I will know that everything I felt then was real, and that you felt it too. I will recognize that who I am now is stronger than who I thought I was then. I would love to see you again, Clare. Iâll be the one trying not to look like I ironed my shirt just for you.
I hope youâre well, Clare. Truly. I hope your hands are warm and youâve found ways to sleep through the nights. I hope your laughter still comes easily after everything youâve seen. You deserve to smile, and the world needs to see it now more than ever.
Yours, always,
H
Clare folded the letter slowly, sliding it back into her bag as the train hissed to a halt. Her breathing was uneven, as she thought of his hands scribbling against the paper, wanting to feel something so badly.
By the time the train hissed into Kingâs Cross, her limbs were stiff and her mouth dry from nerves. She navigated the narrow corridor and stepped off into the crowded station, swallowed by the shuffle of coats and caps, voices and suitcases thudding along the stone. There was something about London, even in the midst of a terrible war, it hummed with movement, life refusing to be quieted.
The streets outside were still wet from afternoon rain, puddles reflecting the glow of gas lamps and storefronts. She walked with purpose, her heels clicking quietly against cobblestones, heart hammering beneath her navy-blue dressâthe one her friend had helped her choose, the one she hadnât worn since before the war began.
The color matched her eyes, her hair pinned neatly away from her face.
When she reached the pub, warm light spilled from the windows, the sound of music and soft laughter carrying into the street. She hesitated at the door for just a second, smoothing the fabric of her coat, and then stepped inside. The pub was warm and crowded, the floor a scuffed checkerboard of dancing feet and shuffled boots. Men in uniform leaned over pints. Women in soft cardigans and bright lipstick sat in small groups or danced between tables.
Clare scanned the room, her heart suddenly thrumming too loudly to hear the music.
He was already there. At a table near the back, turned slightly toward the door, Harry looked up the moment she walked in.
His uniform was clean, pressed to perfection. His RAF jacket fit perfectly against his broad shoulders as he sat, hands around a pint almost like he was more anxious than her â there was no doubt, he was. His hair was combed back, though it curled a little stubbornly at the nape of his neck.
But then his eyes saw her; he didnât move at first, almost like he had thought it was a dream. He stood when he saw her, slower than a man without pain but steady on his feet, and smiledâa little unsure, a little shy, but unmistakably him with the dimple creeping into his cheek.
He moved toward her, weaving between people without a word, the pint glass abandoned. Clare met him halfway, her pulse loud in her ears, breath catching just before she said his name.
âClare,â he said, greeting her softly, saying her name like a prayer. It was the one thing that felt rooted in God.
âHarry.â
For a moment, neither moved. Neither of them could imagine a world where they saw each other outside of the bubble they had created behind the curtains of his hospital bed.
But, here was their moment â here was the moment that Clare had referenced in survival. Every moment that had led to this was a moment that Harry couldnât have accounted for.
Then she crossed the room, and he pulled her into a careful embraceâhis good arm around her waist, the other resting gently at her back. They stood like that longer than was proper, longer than anyone else in the pub noticed, hearts pressed close as if they were still in the silence of that hospital ward.
âI,â He stopped for a moment; the scent of her perfume was overwhelming in a way that he couldnât have imagined, âI didnât know youâd comeâ
Clare held onto his jacket, pressed in the embrace as she took in the smell of tobacco, the smell of soap and warmth of smoke that wafted from the material like he had smoked a full pack before she arrived in anticipation, holding onto him like she didnât know how to let go.
But for a moment, it was quiet between them. Still. The kind of still that doesnât feel empty, but full with things unsaid, things still blooming.
She only looked at him, really looked, and saw the faint shadow of the man heâd been in the hospital: pale, exhausted, trying to stitch himself back into something whole. That memory curled beside the man now standing before her, eyes soft, shoulders no longer burdened quite the same. He had color in his cheeks. He had a glint in his eye that hadnât been there in the ward, when the light had felt too far away.
And she hadnât realized, until this moment landing between his arms, how much sheâd needed this. How much sheâd needed him.
Not just the man she missed, but the very act of missing someone. Of longing. Of hoping. Of standing in a room of strangers and seeing one face that made everything feel⊠rooted again. Like something could begin, even now. Even after everything.
Across from her, Harry couldnât stop looking at her â like if he blinked, the vision might vanish. His fingers curled tighter around her, grounding himself in the reality of her warmth. In the scent of her hair and the way her eyes crinkled when she smiled up at him like that.
He had been prepared for her not to come. When he had written that letter with equal parts courage and resignation, he realized that there was disappointment in life â he knew that more than anyone. But now, standing here with her hand in his and her breath still on his lips, he felt something collapse inside of him. A tension held too long. A question finally answered.
She came. She was here. She still wanted him â not the airman he used to be, but the man he was now. Scars and all.
They didnât need to speak again just yet. There would be time for that. For stories. For apologies. For everything they hadnât said in the soft ache of two months apart. But for now, they just stood â folded into one another like a secret, quiet and whole â while the rest of the world went on, none the wiser.
And Clare thought, as she let her head rest against his shoulder and he pressed a steady kiss to her temple,
So this is what it feels like⊠to be known, and still wanted. To arrive somewhere, and be seen.
She closed her eyes. She hadnât known how much sheâd needed to be held by someone who had missed her just as much. And she took a deep breath in that feeling, to know that there was something to look forward to.
Them.
Spokesperson calls journalists who refused to agree to new rules âself-righteous media who chose to self-deportâ
Eric Berger at The Guardian:
After the recent departure of Pentagon reporters due to their refusal to agree to a new set of restrictive policies, the defense department has announced a ânext generation of the Pentagon press corpsâ featuring 60 journalists from far-right outlets, many of which have promoted conspiracy theories. Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell posted the news on X but did not provide any names. The Washington Post, however, obtained a draft of the announcement, which stated that the new reporters, who agreed to the departmentâs new policies, were from outlets such as Lindell TV, started by Trump ally Mike Lindell; the Gateway Pundit; the Post Millennial; Human Events; and the National Pulse. The list also includes Turning Point USAâs media brand Frontlines, influencer Tim Poolâs Timcast and a Substack-based newsletter called Washington Reporter, the Post reported. The Pentagon did not immediately respond to the Guardianâs request for the list of journalists. Parnell described the group as a âbroad spectrum of new media outlets and independent journalistsâ. âNew media outlets and independent journalists have created the formula to circumvent the lies of the mainstream media and get real news directly to the American people,â Parnell wrote. âTheir reach and impact collectively are far more effective and balanced than the self-righteous media who chose to self-deport from the Pentagon.â
The new press corps includes rightwing outlets that have promoted conspiracy theories. For example, the Gateway Pundit spread false information about the 2020 election and then settled a defamation lawsuit with two Georgia election workers it falsely accused of wrongdoing and admitted that there was no fraud in the election. Similarly, Lindell denied the results of the election and was ordered to pay $2.3m to an employee of a voting machine company who sued him for defamation.
Pool, a conservative podcast host, was among the influencers who allegedly were associated with a US content creation company that was provided with nearly $10m from Russian state media employees to publish videos with messages in favor of Moscowâs interests and agenda. Pool said they were âdeceived and are victimsâ. The journalists who turned in their press credentials earlier this month did so after the US defense secretary, Pete Hegseth, introduced a policy that required that they agree not to obtain unauthorized material and restricted access to certain areas unless accompanied by an official. Outlets including the Washington Post, the New York Times and the Atlantic, as well as reporters from rightwing outlets such as Fox News and Newsmax, all refused to sign on to the new rules.
The Pentagon named new members of the press corps, and they all come from various far-right propaganda outlets such as The Gateway Pundit, The Post Millennial, Turning Point USAâs Frontlines, Real Americaâs Voice, and Lindell TV.
See Also:
Daily Kos: Pentagonâs new press corps is the stuff of nightmares
Military.com: After Others Departed, Pentagon Announces 'New' Press Corps Filled with Conservative News Outlets
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