ɢɪᴅɢᴇᴛ (
gidge) wrote in
bottleneck2015-06-21 03:51 am
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And on this point, he might have expected more of a fight.
Simon shakes his head, sets down the data and crosses his arms across his chest as he leans back against one of the medbay's counters. Casual, a signal that the argument (such as it was) is over.
"Would you have seen anyone if I hadn't come on board?"
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Anyway, he shrugs.
"No."
Keeping it real.
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(One he might actually make satisfying progress on, but he doesn't let that thought linger.)
"Well, now you're stuck with me," said with a sigh, because that's about what Simon expected. How he manages to end up on ships with self-destructive men at the helm is beyond him, but it speaks to his general luck in life.
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The thing is, if it isn't broken, he doesn't want to fix it. He keeps an eye on his own health, quietly. He has regular scans on the autodoc for tumors, keeps his implant full up with power and medicine. Makes sure their stock of meds never dips dangerously low. This is a solution that may not be perfect, but it works. It makes it easy for him to keep on top of his treatments, keeps him active and present and able to deal with every challenge that comes their way.
The thing is, he's the captain of this ship. He doesn't want to make them worry: Naomi, Alex, Amos. He's here to take care of them, of the Roci, and he can still do that. They need to be able to rely on him.
The thing is, they were the last ship off Eros. He and Miller took enough radiation to kill them several times over; but a hundred thousand people didn't make it off Eros. Even Miller didn't, in the end, not really. If he could change anything about that day, it wouldn't be the radiation. It'd be all the people he didn't save. And that's a regret the whole crew will carry for the rest of their lives.
The thing is, Holden's living on borrowed time. He survived that day because he was lucky; because Miller was there to help him make it to the docks, because Naomi made sure the ship waited for them. That's all there is to it. So he'll take whatever extra time he gets with gratitude, and try to put it to good use.
What he says, looking upwards at Simon as the autodoc beeps quietly, is, "You know, when people say someone around here can't help trying to save people, they're usually talking about me. I'm starting to think that's just because they hadn't met you yet."
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Quiet, amused but held back. A little bitter. Maybe a lot bitter.
Most days it isn't hard to wonder about what-ifs, the past. He'd wanted to be a doctor for as long as he could remember, wanted to be the one that fixes people. That takes something impossible and heals it, restarts a heart or replaces a lung. There's power in it, a kind of high knowing he has the knowledge and the skill at his disposal to save a life. Others in his class were after that first and foremost, and the credits it would earn them, but from Simon's perspective it was a duty, too. Money wasn't a real goal, considering his family, and power had never really interested him.
He wanted to help. He felt responsible. Why would he be so good at this if he wasn't meant to use it, to do what he could?
Ever since River went to the Academy, that sense of responsibility narrowed down to a single point focused on her recovery, but he's not going to ignore a problem that's right in front of him. He's going to do what he can.
"The God Complex of a doctor. They get handed out when you start medacad," is meant to be a joke, but there's more truth in it than he'd like to admit.
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"There are worse things."
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He doesn't laugh when he agrees, just a tired, "Yeah, a lot worse," before the autodoc beeps its indication of being done with the scan. He also doesn't elaborate on that observation, just pushes off from the counter to undo the cuff for Holden.
"That's all I need for now. I'm sure you have other things to take care of."
BET YOU THOUGHT YOU'D SEEN THE LAST OF ME
And then Simon suggests returning to his own system for medical supplies.
"Excuse me?"
SURPRISE, BITCH
For this conversation, though, they're in the kitchen. With coffee, because neither of these men know how to just stop and rest, and this is something Simon has been considering for a while.
"There's a treatment plan I think is worth attempting, but the drug series is only available through Alliance-based pharma." He says it steady, like he's rehearsed it in his head.
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His mind goes to River, because that's the natural assumption. It's usually River's treatment that's the concern, Simon constantly troubleshooting her health and trying to figure out better ways to help her approach some semblance of normal.
"What drug series is this? Maybe we can try finding it on the black market before making a trip over there."
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He considers Holden's suggestion, though.
"We can check, of course. But cancer meds barely make it out to the Rim, let alone to inter-system black markets."
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And then Simon's answer fully registers, and he turns around.
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"We can always try to get in contact with the Serenity again, if we need to."
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He punctuates that with holding his hands out briefly so Simon stops.
"You want to go back to your system, the same place where you and your sister are fugitives, where the government is experimenting on kids, to find...some different anti-cancer meds?"
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Though he does stand back a little, arms crossed in what is an attempt to look casual and not defensive.
"I think want is a little hyperbolic."
Want doesn't factor into it, really. Getting Holden better treatment is what he's supposed to do, end of story.
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He crosses his own arms, not exactly demanding, but. Definitely judgmental.
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"They get the best results with the lowest risk of catastrophic side-effects."
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Then he shakes his head, turns to pick up his almost-forgotten second (third? fourth? of the day? who knows?) mug of coffee.
"No, it's not worth the risk."
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And, look, smarting off is not the best option, but it's a familiar one. It's a well worn path he's helpless to walk sometimes, stuck between being an authority figure and being beholden to one.
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"I tolerate my current meds well, they're cheap and easy to get, and side-effects are minimal." Just to make the point that he's not being completely irrational here, even if Simon isn't wrong. "Convince me that what you're looking at is a better option."
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So he does.
He outlines the actual problems Holden doesn't see with his current meds, the long term damage being done, the tumors that still grow with them in his system, the lack of an end in taking them. And then he talks about the new drugs. Not that they don't have side-effects, too, but they won't cause long term damage. Holden will still have a liver, his kidneys, at the end of treatment. Which will have an end -- not soon, and maybe even not ever, but there's a chance.
"It's your treatment, you get to decide, but as your doctor that's the course I'm advising."
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She doesn't speak until after Simon finishes, because she knows what's going through her captain's head. How he'd agree without much convincing if it were for River or any of the rest of them. How he's weighing the dangers in his head against the temptation of the benefits.
"What do we have to do to get those treatments?"
She walks into the kitchen properly then, eyes on Simon.
Though she acknowledges Holden's reproachful look with a, "It sounds like a good option, Jim."
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Still, his stance shifts a little awkwardly at the very legitimate question now on the table.
"Theft, probably. We can check the black markets, but I doubt they've gotten this far." Simon pauses, looks between Naomi and Holden. "If it's any comfort, this wouldn't be my first time planning the theft of hospital supplies."
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Because he's not sure Naomi heard that part, and it's a salient point. Also, like, lest they forget the dangers of this idea.
Naomi takes that in, and Simon's answer, with the appropriate amount of concern. She crosses over to where Holden stands, says, "Anything that means we might get to keep you around longer is something I want to hear about. And we all get to decide what risks we take."
Then, to Simon, "That does help. If we do this, we have to do it right. There might not be a second chance to get more of the medicines."
"And we don't do anything until we've had this discussion with the whole crew." Holden reminds them. "Alex, Amos, River, everyone."
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"Of course."
It's certainly a different method of decision making than there had been on Serenity, where Mal made the decision and everyone else figured out how to live with it.
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bet you thought you'd seen the last of me pt 2
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