Subject: Caution: Humans​ May Be Fragile
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Posted on: 2018-05-29 14:41:00 UTC

June 2010, joint mission, Agents Dawn McKenna and T'Zar (DOGA) with Agent Abaddon. Dawn is seventeen:


"You're joking," Abaddon said. "You've been an agent for how long, now?"

Dawn glared at him. She'd liked him well enough the first few times they'd met. Right now, though, she could only think sourly that she wished he'd stayed far away from T'Zar after the Vulcan was repartnered with her. "Three years."

"Three years, and you've never broken a bone!" Abaddon laughed. He even looked stupid, Dawn decided, with his stupid punk look and his stupid floppy hair and the stupid little braid in his floppy hair. "How does it feel?"

Forget everything: Dawn picked up the nearest object and threw it at him. "It hurts, you moron! What do you think?" She was tearing up again, half from frustration. Why wasn't T'Zar back yet? Abaddon had managed to find the regular strength painkillers, but neither of them knew how to set a broken bone in anything more than theory. Which left Dawn stuck leaning against the wall with a broken leg supported by their packs, and only a stupid, laughing nineteen-year-old boy for company.

"Sorry, sorry," Abaddon said. He'd managed to catch the notebook she'd thrown; now he set it aside and cautiously moved to sit next to her. "I'm a prat sometimes."

Dawn looked away, trying to blink back tears. It didn't work. "You are."

"I really am," Abaddon agreed. Quite awkwardly, he put an arm around her shoulders. "T'Zar should be back soon. She'll know what to do--and she's got the RA."

Dawn sniffled, and could barely bring herself to hate that she'd done it. "The painkillers aren't working."

Abaddon winced. "I'm sorry. And I'm sorry I laughed before--it's just, I broke my first bone before I even became an agent, so it's..." He glanced at her. "Not funny, not at all, just different--"

Dawn closed her eyes, and tried to pretend she wasn't leaning into him. She didn't even like him anymore: he was just T'Zar's annoying ex-partner, who looked and sometimes sounded a bit too much like the latest Doctor for his own good (which...made absolutely no sense, come to think of it. He'd said something about fancasting, when she'd idly commented that he was really kind of the new Doctor in blond and black, but had anyone even known Matt Smith before this role? Well, some people must have, she thought. Just because she hadn't heard of him didn't mean no one had.)

"Go on," she said dully. She needed a distraction from wondering how much longer T'Zar would be, and she now knew from experience that Abaddon could talk forever if no one stopped him. "What's the story there?"

"Oh, well." Abaddon shrugged and pulled one knee up, resting his free arm on it. "I was a kid--only about eleven, I think--and we were visiting my uncle. He's brilliant, my uncle--have I ever--? No? Another time. Anyway, my mum and dad were being boring with him, so I thought I'd go exploring. Clambered over everything, like some sort of ibex--or, you know, like a young idiot." He shifted, rolling his shoulder. "I fell, obviously. My balance wasn't as good as I thought it was back then." He glanced at Dawn. "Rolled down a hill, hit a tree, and then just lay there screaming for a bit. I thought I'd broken my neck, but it was really just my collarbone."

Dawn made a face, eyes opening again. "That sounds awful." Uri had been eleven not too long ago; it was a little hard not to picture her little brother in Abaddon's place, especially since he did like to climb things when the family went camping. He'd never broken anything doing it, but there had been some close calls...

"Oh, it was," Abaddon said. "Dad found me, though. Always seems to, really...anyway, he and Mum and my uncle sorted me out. Never even reached a hospital. But I didn't get to climb anything for the rest of the trip." He paused. "I...I must've scared them, really. They didn't say it in that many words, but Dad barely let me out of his sight for the rest of the day--and he usually says he doesn't actually need his eyes to keep an eye on me."

There was a brief silence before Dawn spoke again. "What do your parents do, anyway? I told you about mine earlier, but you never--"

"Dawn?" T'Zar was back, a tiny frown creasing the skin between her eyebrows. "Why are you crying?"

"She broke her leg," Abaddon said quickly. "You know how to help with that, right? Neither of us have ever done it. Oh! I gave her painkillers, but they're too weak to do anything." He stood up, hovering while T'Zar put down her bags and knelt to examine Dawn's leg. When she finished, Dawn was crying outright.

"I will portal you to Medical," T'Zar told her. She hesitated, then put a hand on Dawn's shoulder. She'd told Dawn, on multiple occasions, that she did not understand both the human need for comfort and the idea that touch alone could give it, but here she was doing it anyway. Dawn wanted to hug her. "They will have stronger painkillers, and the ability to repair the broken bone. Abaddon and I will finish the mission and meet you there."

Dawn wiped her cheeks and nodded. "O-okay. Okay."

"Okay," T'Zar repeated, in the dry tone that Dawn was really starting to think meant she was teasing. "I have broken bones as well, Dawn. The statistical probability that you would--"

"Oh, stuff the statistical probability," Abaddon said cheerfully. "Your partner's in pain. Open a portal to Medical so she can get out of it, yeah?"

T'Zar raised an eyebrow, and pulled out the remote activator to input coordinates. "I was about to do so."

"'Course," Abaddon said. He leaned down to pat Dawn's shoulder. "You'll be alright. Hey, maybe we'll find you a souvenir from here! You like chips, right? They have a weirdly awful scene in a chip shop later--"

Dawn barely had time to say that, yes, she did like 'chips,' only they were called French fries where she was from, before the portal opened underneath her and deposited her on a bed in Medical with barely a centimetre's discrepancy. T'Zar followed via a second portal, and stayed long enough to catch the eye of one of the Medical staff and give strict instructions regarding Dawn before disappearing through a third portal.

The staff member in question smiled down at Dawn. "Don't worry, honey, we'll have you fixed up in no time. First broken bone? I don't remember seeing you in here for one before."

"Let me guess," Dawn said. She knew this woman, if not very well. With a bit of effort, she managed a strained smile. "Do you have a story about the first broken bone you ever got?"

The woman laughed. "Me? Oh, no." She smiled at Dawn, and turned to pick up the nearby scanner. "I've never broken a bone in my life!"

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