
Arguing with the Muse
Muse: MLA has a new challenge: explain where Mick’s ring and/or pendant came from. Let’s just focus on the ring. I like Moonlighter’s idea that he got it in the war. How about this: Mick’s unit is on a patrol through a little village. A young couple with a daughter around 8 years old asks to walk with them back to their farm. On the way they are ambushed. Mick throws the girl down and covers her with his body. In the process she sprains her ankle. Mick bandages her up, carries her on his back to their farm. He tells his unit he will catch up with them the next day. It turns out the wife’s maiden name is ‘St. John’ and when she discovers that is Mick’s name, she gives him the family heirloom ring to thank him and to remind him of them.
Me: A gold ring for just a sprained ankle?
Muse: Hmm. Okay, let’s say they find an enemy intruder in the house when they return from the village and Mick saves them. Now they are REALLY grateful. He puts the ring in his knapsack/backpack/kit bag/whatever and it eventually ends up in his footlocker. After he is turned by Coraline, he goes back to wherever he was living (not his parents' – what 30 year old man in the 1950’s lives with his parents?) and collects the few items from his human life he wants to keep (Army footlocker and pictures of Lilah for starters). He discovers the ring in his footlocker and decides to wear it from then on to remind him of his human life and helping others.
Me: So where is this village?
Muse: Italy. You know, ‘We’re in a forest. In Italy.’
Me: Well, if the couple is Italian, then the wife’s maiden name can’t be St. John.
Muse: Okay, so we’ll make her English. Or the ring is her great-grandmother’s, who came from England.
Me (to husband): In WWII were the Italians friendly to the Americans like the French were?
Husband: Well, Italy was the enemy.
Me: Oh, right. Mussolini. He sided with Hitler.
Husband: Right. But I think people in little towns were thankful to the Americans like in the little French towns.
Muse: Okay, okay, so then we can make them French if you want.
Me: *Calls up Fever on YouTube. ‘Winter. Battle of the Bulge. Ardennes.' Googles ‘Battle of the Bulge.’* Oh great. Most of it was in Belgium! I hate history. *Looks at maps.* Well, this little part of Italy is near the part of France that’s at the edge of the ‘Bulge’ line. Mick clearly said they were in Italy in WLB. Let’s keep them in Italy.
Muse: Fine. Italian couple, but the wife is English.
Me: Why is the husband with them?
Muse: What?
Me: The husband and father of the little girl. Why isn’t he off fighting in the war?
Muse: Sigh. Okay, no husband.
Me: Would a young wife be willing go off with a bunch of scruffy looking soldiers with her young daughter in tow?
Muse: You’re driving me crazy! Okay, how about a father or father-in-law?
Me: Okay, but why would he let a strange soldier carry his granddaughter? He’s running a farm! He’s a strong guy!
Muse: So make him injured. Or injured and he’s back at the farmhouse. Or even a great-grandfather.
Me: Okay, I guess I can work that part out later.
Muse: Yes! So we’re good?
Me: Not quite.
Muse: What now?
Me: Why would Mick’s unit leave him alone to detour off to the farm and travel alone the next day to catch up with them when they just got ambushed on that same road? And btw, do Medics carry guns? *Googles Medics carrying weapons, which leads to Geneva Convention, which leads to which Geneva Convention treaty was in effect in WWII* Did I mention that I hate history?
Muse: So what’s the answer?
Me: Medical personnel carried side arms only and were only allowed to use them for self-defense or the defense of wounded. They are not considered combatants and cannot go on the offensive. This is still true today it seems.
Muse: Okay, then we can say Mick and the family were shot at while approaching their farmhouse. Happy?
Me: It will do. One more thing.
Muse: Still?
Me: Who carries Mick’s pack if he’s carrying the little girl? Oh wait. *Views more war flashbacks from WLB* Never mind, they didn’t show him or the others carrying packs. So can we just gloss over that and not mention it?
Muse: Works for me.
Me: Now, would Mick’s unit leave him alone to catch up with them the next day?
Muse: You might have a point there. That seems unlikely to me. Guess we still have to work that part out.
Me: Guess so.