I am an historian and once upon a time I worked at an archive and did a recorded history project for them. I interviewed about 100 WWII vets on tape... from every theater and American service and rank... and that included Tuskeegee men and a few WACS and WAVES. I loved the project but it also haunted me (and I had to change my phone number)... some of these folks had NEVER ever told their stories before. Never. They didn't much talk about it when they came home and then later, well, you didn't discuss this kinda crap in front of the wife and kids. (Tho one of the men HAD been interviewed by Stephen Ambrose for Band of Brothers. I also got to meet Dr. Ambrose and we went to dinner and he kissed my hand...


A very lucky few of them had families who HAD heard and kinda got their stories. Or had friends from the time with whom they met and chatted... as well as chatted about beers and football and sending grandkids to college...
For Mick. I bet he's never told his stories to anyone. He would have lost the buddies when he lost Ray and even more so when he was turned. Vampires wouldn'tve been interested in his WWII stories... Lord knows what battles his vampire buds had seen, participated in, or gotten bored of... and he had a new battle to fight, of his own, at that point. So besides all the other crap he was dealing with, he had gone thru this war and his entire experience was negated by the ennui of others. In the mortal world and in his new world. Had to be the loneliest loneliest feeling.
Yet he still remembered it and used the war as a point of reference... witness his comments in Fever. And his dutiful use of his education in LLF.
