1006 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
1006 lines
42 KiB
Plaintext
Even Captains Have Needs by Mercutio (mercutio@europa.com)
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She couldn't do anything about it, and in any case, it was a
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ridiculous desire. He was half her age, or nearly so, young
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and... well, he wasn't idealistic anymore. And that drew her to
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him as surely as the woundedness inside him did. But that was
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silly, very silly. With her own Mark she knew she valued
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stability and comfort far more than anything else, far more
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certainly than loyalty overlaid with a bitterness he could never
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quite conceal.
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Paris was quite out of her reach, and Janeway knew it, knew it
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and hated herself for even wanting it, wanting him. She had
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won his loyalty by treating him as trustworthy, by giving him
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the same responsibility as any other member of her crew, when
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so many people looked at him with scorn. To mistreat that
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loyalty now would be a crime.
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She bit her lip. *Why* was she even *thinking* such things?
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What was *wrong* with her? She was the captain of this ship,
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for God's sake, and not some young ensign who could do as she
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pleased. And Kathryn didn't *want* to be anything else.
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Responsibility was hers, and she would have taken the
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responsibility upon herself all over again, because that was the
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kind of person she was.
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But even captains had needs.
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****
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They'd only stopped to see what was happening on the planet,
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to check, as they always checked even knowing that it was
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hopeless, to see if these people had any way of sending them
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home, anything that could help them get there.
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Janeway had beamed down with Paris and Tuvok, leaving
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Chakotay behind to mind the ship, unwilling to disturb him
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during one of his medicine rituals. Given the circumstances
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they now found themselves in, that might have been a mistake.
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But he couldn't have done anything differently, and they would
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all still be trapped in this desperate situation. And Janeway
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would not have willingly let someone else suffer in her place.
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The aliens, an outwardly human race, had let them beam down,
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and then captured them, removing their badges before they
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could take any action. Tuvok had been separated out, and she
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and Paris had been thrown into a cell. They didn't know why,
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and they didn't know what had happened, or what would
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happen.
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Paris sat on his bunk, back against the wall, knees drawn up.
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His posture was elaborately unconcerned, but his face was grim.
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Janeway sat on the edge of the bunk facing him. "If only we
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knew what they wanted."
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"What they want? What does anyone want in a set up like
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this?"
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"Ransom, perhaps. We have technology far greater than ours.
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Perhaps they hope to force Voyager to give them something
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they can't do for themselves." Janeway sounded almost hopeful
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about that possibility.
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Paris didn't move. "As long as they don't want our bodies."
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The grim statement was a reminder of how he, along with
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B'Elanna Torres and a now deceased crewman had been
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captured. Janeway felt responsible for that, for not being more
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aware and for not taking more precautions. A man had died,
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and she hadn't been able to prevent it. "I don't think they do.
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But as to what they want, there must have been a reason they
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separated Tuvok from us."
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"They can't have recognized him as a Vulcan."
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"True, Mr. Paris."
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Before they could speculate further, two of the Halamvids
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stopped outside the door, dressed in the faceless armor that
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made them look like something out of ancient Egyptian myth,
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entirely inhuman.
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Paris tensed, and Janeway stopped him with a look. "No, Mr.
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Paris." She turned to the men. "I am Captain Kathryn Janeway
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of the..."
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"Silence!" The man raised his arm threateningly, but didn't
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strike her.
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Janeway wasn't deterred by the possibility of violence. Things
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far more important than her safety were at stake. "I must speak
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with your leader. I have much to say that could be of..."
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This time the man gave no warning, bringing the blunt end of
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his weapon sharply down.
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Before she could react, Paris was there in front of her. He took
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the blow, and went down. The last thing she saw was his
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unconscious body being dragged off before a heavy thud
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descended on her as well and she went mercifully out before the
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pain could reach her.
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****
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She awoke in nothingness, aware of nothing, unable to tell she
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was conscious at all aside from a feeling somehow that this was
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reality whether or not her senses agreed. Kathryn had heard of
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total sensory deprivation, but had never been exposed to it.
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Now she wished that could still be true. She could see nothing;
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it was as dark with her eyes open as closed. She could hear
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nothing, not even her own breathing. She couldn't feel, and
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that was the worst of all. No matter how often she closed her
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eyes, or enjoyed the brief blessing of silence, she could never
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escape feeling. Her skin, her hands, every part of her was
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constantly feeding kinesthetic input back to her brain. That was
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gone too. It was as if she were a disembodied brain, as if these
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unknown aliens had dissected her, taken her brain out, somehow
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leaving it alive, and left it on a shelf somewhere to descend into
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insanity.
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The possibility was high, given the kinds of things the Voyager
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had already encountered in this quadrant so far from home, and
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as soon as Janeway thought of the idea, it overwhelmed her with
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panic. She tried kicking, tried screaming, but it was useless.
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There was nothing there with her but her own thoughts.
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She tried to regain control of herself, and for a moment
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succeeded. She was a captain after all; she hadn't gotten this
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far to succumb to hysteria. When the Voyager had first been
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flung here, she had remained calm, in control, despite the
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gruesome deaths of many of her crew. This was no worse.
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And yet it was. The mind depended on the constant stimuli it
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was required to sort. It could overload with too much, causing
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negative and antisocial reactions, but too little was far, far
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worse. There was literally nothing for her mind to do but think,
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and Kathryn was not equal to the task.
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Slowly, very slowly, she began to crumble.
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****
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This wasn't the first attempt at breaking Paris. Nor the second.
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Or even the fifty-second. As brittle as he looked, he didn't
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break. The bleak truth Paris hugged to himself even as he
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feared it was that it was impossible to break something that had
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already been ground down into sand.
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****
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She couldn't isolate when the change occurred. After so long
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trapped inside that awful place, coming out into the open was
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like being dropped into the warp core of a starship. Sensory
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overload, sights, sounds, sensations, all too raw and powerful
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for her to handle. She couldn't walk, couldn't move on her
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own, and a short, although terrifying time later she was dumped
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back into her cell.
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Warm hands cradled her head. "Captain? Are you... all
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right?"
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The sound was too much for her and she almost sobbed. She
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couldn't focus on anything, everything was overwhelming her
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after that brief, endless, time isolated with her own thoughts.
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Paris stayed where he was, slumped against the wall, wanting to
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pull his hand away, to regain some control, but he couldn't. He
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needed the contact too much at the moment, even as he wished
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he didn't have that weakness, knew that *she* was the wrong
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person to have a weakness in front of or for. Not that the
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captain would say anything. She was far too honorable and just
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a person for that. She *looked* at him, and that was all, and
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more than enough. She'd never mention that he'd taken a
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liberty, never dress him down for it, and for that he respected
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her. None of his previous commanders, no one he knew in the
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current Starfleet, somewhere back in the Alpha Quadrant, would
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ever extend Tom Paris even so much as a moment's leniency.
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And for that reason alone he had to stop this. He had to be
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more than he was for her, because she did trust him, because no
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one else would. He drew his hand away and set it in his lap,
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using all the self-control no one believed that wild Tom Paris
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had.
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They laid there in silence for a long while, Janeway huddled in
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a fetal ball, Paris crumpled by her head. That silence was filled
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with sensory input, the little noises of breathing, of ventilation
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shafts and power thrumming at a distance, the dank smell of the
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prison and the air moving against them.
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"They're trying to break us," Janeway said into the silence, not
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moving. She knew she had to, wanted to in order to restore her
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dignity, but she couldn't.
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"Yes," Paris said. "At least they're professionals," he said,
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striving for a light tone, and failing.
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"Yes," Janeway said, in dark agreement. She levered herself up
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on shaking arms, bringing herself up face to face with Paris,
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inches away from him.
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They froze in place for a moment, neither one moving. The
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distance was so short, and both of them were in a vulnerable
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state. The uncertainty on Paris' face was matched by the
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shattered expression of Janeway's.
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She pulled away, turning away from him to tuck her hair back
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into place, the small action giving her time to put her emotional
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facade back into place as well. She had to be strong. She was
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the captain. If she fell to pieces, she was neglecting her
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responsibility to Paris.
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When she finished, she turned back around, seating herself
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neatly at the end of the bunk, but not offering to move to the
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other one on the opposite side of the room. "I don't know what
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they want. They've made no demands."
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Paris looked up at the ceiling as if the rock were more yielding
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than their captors. When he spoke, his voice was hoarse.
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"They want to break us."
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"But why?"
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He looked at her, and his eyes were bitter. "Why not? They
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don't need a reason."
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She would have asked him why, but his manner was clear, and
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she knew enough of his history not to press him. She settled
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back against the bunk, planning. There was nothing she could
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do; she was trapped and she had no control of the situation. It
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was a frustrating, horrible helpless thing for someone of her
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nature to be, and yet she didn't give into despair. There had to
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be a way. There was always a way.
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****
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When the Halamvids came again, Janeway and Paris tried a
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sneak attack. It didn't work. They were efficiently clubbed and
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dragged off to be mindwashed again.
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Paris regained consciousness in the darkness. *Again*, he
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thought to himself. *It's happening again.* Grim hopelessness
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washed through him. He had already given up. He would have
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begged now if anyone had wanted him to, had done so many
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times before for a variety of different torturers, all of whom
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thought him to be scum. It didn't matter anymore. Begging
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meant nothing to him. The only thing he had left to him at the
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end of what he'd come through was his pride, and not even
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much of that.
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He didn't know how much longer he could stand this. He
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wanted to give in, but there was no one to give in *to* and he
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was holding onto nothing, aware of nothing, and only that voice
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in his head was telling him he was alive at all.
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****
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This time she would not give in. Janeway tried to feel
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confident. It wasn't as if she were being physically tortured.
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Her body was all right, and her brain wasn't being removed as
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she had feared the last time. This was a cynical exercise on the
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part of a people who hadn't even made their demands yet. She
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was all right. This was only the removal of sensory stimulus.
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She could survive this.
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She tried to concentrate, to pull her thoughts around herself and
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meditate, but her mind kept wandering to the loss of its sensory
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inputs, like a tongue to the site of a missing tooth. Even as she
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tried to focus on her spirit animal as Chakotay had taught her,
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or on the endless and shortening inventory lists for Voyager, her
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mind was pulled away. She'd never developed the mental
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disciplines, and now she regretted that as her conscious mind
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slipped out of her grasp, retreating even faster than it had the
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day before into that shadowy chasm where sanity was not and
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her thoughts mixed with dreams.
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****
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This time she screamed when they brought her out, and
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continued to scream long past the point when her throat was
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raw. They ignored it, dumping her back in the tiny cell.
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Janeway didn't care, only noticed the lack of motion as one less
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disturbing input to deal with and began to cry shamelessly,
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uncaring that the Halamvids might be listening in, that Paris
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might be there.
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The void had opened up before her and she had been sucked
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under, had been unable to prevent herself from being dragged
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in. Her own weaknesses had betrayed her, and she didn't know
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if she were crying because of her own vulnerability or because
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of how good it felt to be back in the real world again, to have
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scratchy fabric under her chin and a firm surface under her.
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The tears were more cathartic than she knew; her own image of
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herself, tattered as it was at the moment, reasserted itself, and
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she sat up, scrubbing at her eyes, trying to pull herself together.
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*You're a captain, damnit. Behave yourself.*
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She looked around the cell. Paris wasn't there. The Halamvids
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hadn't brought him back yet. She was grateful he hadn't seen
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that little lapse of control; she wasn't ashamed of it, however
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she was nonetheless grateful. On the other hand, she was
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concerned about him. Why had they kept him longer? Had
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they started other, worse tortures on him?
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She leaned back against the wall, keeping the door in sight, still
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struggling to bring her mind and body back under her control.
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She had enough left to keep from sobbing in hysteria, but that
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was all. She was white and visibly shaking. She didn't know if
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she'd survive another time in that chamber of horrors. She
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didn't have a choice.
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Some time later, an eternity in a place without chronometers,
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but still less time than in that deprivation chamber, Paris was
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carried in like a sack of grain and dumped on the bed. The
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Halamvids left, inhuman visages always alert despite her current
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inability to do anything.
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"Captain," Paris said weakly. He was lying on his side on the
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opposite bunk, too shattered to move. He opened his eyes and
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looked at her.
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"Yes, Tom, I'm here."
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"I always said... ladies first."
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She smiled at him, a weak grin. "I appreciate your gallantry,
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Mr. Paris." He needed time to recuperate, as did she. She
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closed her eyes, still terrified by the darkness of mind she found
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behind her eyelids.
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"Captain?"
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"Yes?"
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"You... I can't survive that again... the next time... I don't
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know who I'll come out as." His voice was wavering.
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"You'll survive it, and that's an order, Mr. Paris. As long as
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we can resist, we will resist." The words were bravely meant,
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but she knew how untrue they were. The horrible terror she felt
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on coming out of the blackness, how easy it had been to descend
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into the downward spiral of nebulous panic, non-thought and
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madness, all of this was enough to frighten her. But she
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couldn't say that. Even if she wanted to. She didn't have
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anyone to bring her through this, but she would be that person
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for him. As long as she could.
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"I can't," Paris said starkly into the silence. "I know what I can
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take, and I can't take this."
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"What do you mean?"
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"I... you know my record. I've been *unpopular* with many
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elements of Starfleet and many elements outside of Starfleet as
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well. I... they did a lot of unpleasant things..." his voice trailed
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off, hiding horrors too terrible to mention. The beatings, the
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fear, the bullying, even the sexual acts he'd performed. An
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admiral's son was a great prize for the kind of people whose
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hands he'd fallen into. He was as loathsome as a toad inside
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and he knew it. And yet, this was worse than all those things,
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was getting at him, at what remained of an inner core.
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"I understand, Mr. Paris."
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"You couldn't." He looked at her, eyes bright and desperate.
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"One more time in there and there won't be anything left of
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me."
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Janeway hesitated, torn between admitting to her own fears and
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uttering the lie of duty. "I... you don't have any choice, Mr.
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Paris. *We* don't have any choice."
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He stared at her for a long moment before rolling away. "Yes.
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I knew that."
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They laid there in silence, neither one wanting to admit
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anything, wanting to say anything.
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****
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Resistance being futile, the prisoners allowed themselves to be
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led to their destruction. Paris glanced once at Janeway before
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letting himself be taken away, his eyes filled with grim
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resolution. "You've been a good captain. I... I respected you."
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"You're a fine lieutenant, Mr. Paris," Janeway said, as he was
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roughly pulled away. She stood still for a moment, watching
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him, then fell obediently into step with her captor.
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The room they were led to was like any other medical
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laboratory of its kind, white, sparkling with efficiency, full of
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equipment and gadgetry. Janeway's eyes immediately went to
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the row of sarcophaguses along the wall, no doubt the
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instruments of their destruction.
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She wanted to run then, but something hissed against her arm
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and she went limp, the world fading around her.
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****
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The two unresisting, almost lifeless bundles were dumped
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carelessly together on the floor, as if there was no need for
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consideration toward these creatures who were almost things
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rather than people.
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Janeway moaned. She was somewhere, she didn't know where,
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but it was a place, not a darkness, and that was important,
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although she didn't remember why. Something, *someone* was
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there with her and that was important to. She didn't know who
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she was, couldn't even formulate the concept.
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Paris struggled up to consciousness, tears leaking from his eyes.
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There was someone next to him, and he cringed away
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instinctively, expecting pain. "No!" He meant to shout it, but
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it came out as the weakest of sounds.
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She turned her head toward the noise, blindly seeking the
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source. "What? You?" The words fell disjointedly from her
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lips, not coming out of the chaos in her mind. The world was
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running in wet watercolors around her, and he was the only
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point of stability in it. She didn't know why that was, but she
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fastened onto him nonetheless.
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They were lying close together, limbs overlapping, but too out
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of control to move. Paris tried to scuttle back, tried to lever
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himself up, ingrained fear motivating him even when there was
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little left of his reasoning mind to tell him what to do.
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But he couldn't move, and he was forced to stay there, close to
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the source of his terror.
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The look in his eyes was familiar, and she focused on that,
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trying to understand that. The blond hair, the face... she
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*knew* him. A word swum up out of her memory. "Tom?"
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Hysterical, weak laughter broke out of him. "Captain." He
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stopped struggling, tension draining away as the fear left him.
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He *knew* he didn't have to be afraid of her. Although
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something horrible was happening to him, something that left
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him as helpless as he had been at the lowest points of his life,
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he knew he was safe for the moment.
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Janeway dropped her head forward until she was almost
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touching him. Dizziness flooded over her, but she was all right
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now. She knew who she was, and although that wasn't
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everything, it was enough.
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"Captain?" Another voice broke in. Janeway knew the voice,
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but she couldn't identify it, couldn't move to see the face that
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went with it. Someone stooped over her, and there was a hand
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on her forehead, turning her until she could see the dark face.
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The movement was too much for her, and she closed her eyes,
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trying to regain the little equilibrium she'd reacquired while
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lying motionless on the floor.
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"Voyager, three to beam up to Sickbay."
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****
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Captain's Log
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I have placed Commander Chakotay in charge of the Voyager
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until further notice. I am not in command of my own mind,
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and thus am not fit to command others. I and Lieutenant Paris
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are on indefinite medical leave until this matter can be resolved.
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Personal Log
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The Halamvid incident has been resolved peacefully, thanks to
|
|
Mr. Tuvok, who was able to persuade them of the correct
|
|
course of action. Apparently his otherworldly appearance and
|
|
resistance to mental pressure was able to convince them of his
|
|
credentials. If not for his actions, I and Mr. Paris would be
|
|
even now reciting everything we know of Federation methods
|
|
and technology for their amusement. I didn't believe that to be
|
|
possible. Now I know better. I suppose it's important to learn
|
|
I'm not invincible, but I can't say as I like the lesson very
|
|
much.
|
|
|
|
****
|
|
|
|
The holodeck already had an occupant. Paris hesitated at the
|
|
door. He didn't have much else to do, not without his job, and
|
|
with everyone he cared to socialize with busy at work. He
|
|
didn't feel very much like going back to his quarters and staring
|
|
at the walls again. As long as it wasn't a private program and
|
|
wasn't someone he couldn't stand, he could always join them.
|
|
Holodecks were much bigger on the inside than on the outside.
|
|
He didn't have to socialize if he didn't want to. And he didn't
|
|
want to. His edges felt even more rough than usual.
|
|
"Computer, who is in the holodeck?"
|
|
|
|
"Captain Kathryn Janeway."
|
|
|
|
He heard the words and stared at the door. Squaring his
|
|
shoulders, he went in.
|
|
|
|
The door opened into a library. Paris blinked, letting his eyes
|
|
readjust. The room was dark, a sharp contrast to the bright
|
|
light of Voyager's halls.
|
|
|
|
He didn't see the woman sitting on the rug in front of the fire
|
|
until she spoke. "Mr. Paris. This is a surprise."
|
|
|
|
He came around the couch to where he could see her. She was
|
|
out of uniform, in a white cabled sweater, with her knees drawn
|
|
up to her chest, and her hair down around her shoulders. She
|
|
looked like she'd been staring into the fire, searching for
|
|
something. Perhaps the same thing he was missing.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sorry, Captain. I didn't mean to intrude. I... I'll be
|
|
going."
|
|
|
|
"Nonsense, Mr. Paris, have a seat." She motioned to the
|
|
leather couch.
|
|
|
|
Reluctantly, he sat.
|
|
|
|
She sat there in silence, staring at each other, Paris perched
|
|
uncomfortably on the edge of the couch, resisting the urge to
|
|
fidget under her cool gaze.
|
|
|
|
"How are you feeling?" she asked, her voice almost gentle.
|
|
|
|
He started to make the automatic response, trained into him by
|
|
too many prying inquiries into his feelings after what had
|
|
happened to him before. But this was different. She had gone
|
|
through it with him. And he couldn't see giving the captain,
|
|
this captain, anything less than honesty. "Better."
|
|
|
|
She nodded. "I feel better as well. It would be hard not to."
|
|
She looked down, away from him. "I still don't feel in
|
|
control." Her voice was very soft. "I don't remember what
|
|
being me was like."
|
|
|
|
The admission cut at him. Hearing *her* say it was shattering.
|
|
Hesitantly, he spoke, his voice layered with years of bitterness
|
|
and pain. "You'll remember."
|
|
|
|
The sound of his voice recalled her to her place and position.
|
|
She felt ashamed of herself for even feeling such a weakness,
|
|
much less speaking it. He was one of her crew, she couldn't be
|
|
anything less than the captain to him. But then, everyone was
|
|
her crew now, and the only person she could ever be completely
|
|
herself before was an infinitely long distance away. Which was
|
|
why she had created this holodeck scenario. But there was no
|
|
satisfaction in it, no catharsis. "You've gone through this
|
|
before."
|
|
|
|
It wasn't quite a question, but he responded as if it were, a
|
|
pained looked crossing his face. "I have. You'll remember.
|
|
I... I can't say that you'll be the same person though."
|
|
|
|
A look of sympathy crossed her face. "You weren't the same
|
|
person afterwards?"
|
|
|
|
"How could I be?" Paris asked bitterly. "The proud young
|
|
admiral's son died there. I... He was a fool and he deserved to
|
|
die. Who I am now is an entirely different person, and I can't
|
|
always say I like him very much."
|
|
|
|
She scooted closer to him, feeling an empathy with him.
|
|
"You're a fine person now, Mr. Paris. I'm proud to have you
|
|
as one of my officers."
|
|
|
|
He looked at her, trying to see something in her eyes. "I didn't
|
|
break back there, you know."
|
|
|
|
She made a small sound in her throat, trying to encourage him.
|
|
|
|
"You can't break something that's already broken. I... I'm not
|
|
what you think I am."
|
|
|
|
"You're more than good enough for me, Mr. Paris." She
|
|
reached out to him, covering his hand with her own in a quick
|
|
expression of comfort.
|
|
|
|
He reacted as if struck, holding very still then, searching her
|
|
face for any sign of mockery or possible danger. Finding none,
|
|
he still held taut, unable to accept the small gesture.
|
|
|
|
She pulled back, seemingly without noticing how he'd frozen.
|
|
When she spoke, her voice had a hint of self-deprecation in it.
|
|
"I suspect you'll recover much faster than I will. I had never
|
|
imagined an experience like that."
|
|
|
|
"I'd rather have been beaten."
|
|
|
|
She lifted an eyebrow at him, acknowledging the double
|
|
entendre. "Really, Mr. Paris?"
|
|
|
|
He colored despite himself, and then grinned. "I see you've
|
|
heard about my reputation."
|
|
|
|
The corners of her mouth lifted. "I wouldn't judge a person
|
|
based on gossip."
|
|
|
|
Abruptly he sobered. "No, you wouldn't." He looked at her,
|
|
studying her slender form clad in the soft, clinging sweater. "I
|
|
appreciate that, captain. I can't tell you how much I appreciate
|
|
that."
|
|
|
|
"It's all right, Mr. Paris." She smiled at him, an approving
|
|
look. "Your work has always been more than satisfactory."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you." He dropped the habitual air of defensiveness he
|
|
wore for a moment. "You don't know how much that means to
|
|
me."
|
|
|
|
"I think I have an idea." She smiled at him, then dropped her
|
|
eyes again, remembering again why she was there at all, what
|
|
had happened to draw them together like this. "That... that was
|
|
the most intensely unpleasant experience in my life. I would
|
|
never have believed that the total lack of feeling or seeing or
|
|
hearing could be so devastating."
|
|
|
|
Paris held silent, honoring her confession.
|
|
|
|
She continued, talking more to herself than to him. "When I
|
|
found out that we'd been in there less than an hour each time, I
|
|
felt even more like a failure. An hour? Three hours total and I
|
|
couldn't even last that long. We... The third time, I couldn't
|
|
even remember who I was until you called me 'Captain'." She
|
|
shook her head, as if trying to clear it of thoughts she'd rather
|
|
not have. "What would have happened if they'd done it again?"
|
|
|
|
She shivered, despite her heavy sweater and the fire.
|
|
|
|
Without thinking about it, Paris dropped down next to her,
|
|
kneeling by her side. He didn't touch her. "You can't blame
|
|
yourself that way. I... I didn't think I'd even survive that time.
|
|
Once more..." He looked at her with a direct look in his clear
|
|
eyes. "If you hadn't been there, I would have given in before
|
|
then. You gave me the courage I needed to keep trying."
|
|
|
|
She looked at him, so close to her. He was trying to comfort
|
|
her now, and comfort was the one thing she couldn't accept and
|
|
desperately needed. "I was as frightened as you were, Mr.
|
|
Paris. Even more because I am responsible for you and for
|
|
what happens to you."
|
|
|
|
He shook his head, but didn't say anything. What she was
|
|
saying was only the truth, but he couldn't remember the last
|
|
time anyone had taken responsibility for him, had cared what
|
|
happened to him.
|
|
|
|
They were very close to each other, and Janeway was intensely
|
|
of conscious of that, of Paris' presence there. He wouldn't do
|
|
anything; she had no fear of him. Traditions old as time held
|
|
them bound. She was the captain, he would never take the
|
|
initiative, would not step over that line. She didn't know what
|
|
she wanted or what she was thinking.
|
|
|
|
With a soft sigh, she leaned over, giving him time to back
|
|
away. But he didn't move, just let her lean into him, until her
|
|
head was cradled against his shoulder. That acceptance was all
|
|
she needed to bring unwanted tears to her eyes, and she buried
|
|
her face in his chest, sagging against him. His arms came
|
|
around her, and she let him hold her. He stared over her head
|
|
at the fire, neither of them wanting to verbalize how much they
|
|
needed this comfort, how little they were able to expose of their
|
|
real selves to anyone.
|
|
|
|
After an eternal time, Janeway spoke, with her light tone trying
|
|
to establish some distance between them. "You don't seem so
|
|
cocky now, Mr. Paris."
|
|
|
|
"Well, I left my cocky uniform back in my quarters," he said.
|
|
|
|
She looked up at him then. The uncertainty in her face was
|
|
mirrored in his. Neither of them knew what they were doing.
|
|
But she seemed to see something else there as well, something
|
|
under that brilliant facade other than cynicism and defiance.
|
|
|
|
Before she could think better of it, she raised her hands to his
|
|
shoulders and levered herself up, kissing him.
|
|
|
|
His hands shifted to keep pace with her changing position, but
|
|
he didn't resist. Instead, he responded with a fervency of desire
|
|
that surprised her. His skill she expected, the way he waited for
|
|
her to make a move, then took control of it, his free hand
|
|
moving down her side in a slow caress to her hip. But she had
|
|
not expected to find that he had a need almost as great as her
|
|
own.
|
|
|
|
His lips moved over hers, warm and firm, the heat of that
|
|
contact burning through to her cold, sensation-starved soul. She
|
|
was breathing in his essence, being plundered, and it felt
|
|
*good*.
|
|
|
|
With a shock, she pulled away, dropping her head to his chest.
|
|
|
|
"What's wrong?" he asked, sick panic racing through him.
|
|
What had he been thinking? This was the *captain*. Talk
|
|
about abusing his position.
|
|
|
|
"I can't do this. I apologize... Tom." She looked up at him on
|
|
his name, then away again, unable to meet the concern and the
|
|
accusation in his eyes. "I should never have done that. I...
|
|
what you must think of me. I don't do things like this."
|
|
|
|
"Like what?" he asked, his habitual caustic tone lacing his
|
|
voice. "Play around with the notorious rake, Tom Paris?
|
|
You're not the only one who doesn't do things like that."
|
|
|
|
She reacted more to his tone than his words. "What do you
|
|
mean?"
|
|
|
|
He didn't want to explain, but he couldn't deny her anything.
|
|
"Do you really think anyone is going to want to throw away
|
|
their career on an ex-con?"
|
|
|
|
Forgetting her own troubles of the conscience, she looked up at
|
|
him. "Career? A brief affair is hardly something to derail a
|
|
career. And then there's the Delaney sisters..." She closed her
|
|
mouth and blushed.
|
|
|
|
He chuckled, and that embarrassed even her more. "I couldn't
|
|
even get lucky with a hologram. You've seen how they torment
|
|
me."
|
|
|
|
Her eyes twinkled. "And who programmed them?"
|
|
|
|
He pretended a look of offended innocence. "I have no idea.
|
|
Obviously a masochist with deep psychological problems."
|
|
|
|
She stirred in his arms, pulling away from his warmth. She
|
|
didn't want to, had needed this sort of contact for too long. It
|
|
had almost been like being home again, but it was all a fantasy,
|
|
and a very dangerous fantasy at that.
|
|
|
|
She turned to look at him, to apologize for her actions yet again
|
|
and set the barrier back between them.
|
|
|
|
He reached out to her, brushing a stray lock of golden-red hair
|
|
out of her face. His hand touched her cheek lightly, and she
|
|
leaned into it despite herself, wanting that contact and deeply
|
|
ashamed of herself for that.
|
|
|
|
She covered his hand with her own, stopping him. "No. We
|
|
can't. As much as I want to, it's not possible."
|
|
|
|
Her whole body was inclined toward him, even though she was
|
|
no longer quite touching him, and that he wanted her was
|
|
undeniable from his manner and his body.
|
|
|
|
"Because you're the captain?" Paris asked, the words quiet in
|
|
the still room. He didn't pull his hand back, and she didn't let
|
|
go of it.
|
|
|
|
"Yes. Because of that. And because I... don't want anything
|
|
more... and you do deserve more than that."
|
|
|
|
He smiled ruefully. "I don't think I've ever heard *that* speech
|
|
before. I've *given* it a couple of times, but I've never heard
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
She looked sternly at him, the captain in her coming to the
|
|
forefront. "Do you understand me, Mr. Paris?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I understand, captain."
|
|
|
|
"Good." Drawing all the regal dignity around her which she
|
|
could summon, Janeway waited for him to pull away, waited for
|
|
him to leave her alone with her endlessly downward spiralling
|
|
thoughts and the fire.
|
|
|
|
Instead he reached out for her again, pushing her gently back on
|
|
the rug while coming to rest next to her. She didn't resist. He
|
|
leaned over her propped up on one elbow, free hand tracing the
|
|
line of her jaw. "I understand that this didn't happen, that
|
|
neither of us was ever weak enough to want someone else, that
|
|
completely meaningless physical passion is the most I can
|
|
handle, and that you are too perfect, too far about human to
|
|
ever need someone else this way. Is that right?"
|
|
|
|
"And if it is?" Janeway asked breathlessly.
|
|
|
|
"Then we forget who we are for the moment and be what we
|
|
want to be." He looked down at her, eyes serious. "I can
|
|
cloak it in hundreds of pretty words, but I want you. I care
|
|
about you, my dear captain. You gave me trust when no on
|
|
else would, and you pulled me through this last situation when
|
|
nothing else worked. It would be an honor and a pleasure to
|
|
give a little back."
|
|
|
|
"And afterwards?"
|
|
|
|
"Toasted marshmallows?"
|
|
|
|
Her eyebrows narrowed, and he revised his answer. "You'll
|
|
still be the captain, and I'll still be Lieutenant Paris. What else
|
|
is there?" His voice was light, but his eyes were bleak, with no
|
|
hope in them.
|
|
|
|
She tugged on the front of his uniform, pulling him down,
|
|
trying to keep her own voice as light. "I don't think I've had
|
|
such an appealing offer all day."
|
|
|
|
"All *day*?" he asked, even as he let himself be pulled
|
|
off-balance. He covered her mouth with his own, not giving
|
|
her a chance to respond. Her mouth opened under his, warm
|
|
and inviting, and he lost himself in that sensation.
|
|
|
|
His hand moved down her body, stroking her over the sweater.
|
|
Watching her eyes, he pushed underneath until his hand was
|
|
touching bare skin.
|
|
|
|
She sighed, moving her hand to his cheek, pulling her mouth
|
|
away from him. "Yes. That feels good. You don't know..."
|
|
|
|
"Don't know what it's like to want contact with someone else
|
|
after having been locked inside your own head?" His eyes were
|
|
a little desperate, and she recognized what he was saying, what
|
|
he couldn't ask for, but wanted just the same.
|
|
|
|
Her hand trailed down his cheek to his neck, stroking the
|
|
exposed skin above his collar. Involuntarily, he shuddered.
|
|
|
|
Huskily, she said, "You may have a point." Janeway ran her
|
|
hand down his arm, and over his clothed chest.
|
|
|
|
"Don't... let me..."
|
|
|
|
"No. Allow me." She sat up, a small smile playing on her
|
|
face, and Paris was devastated by it. Bemusedly, he laid there,
|
|
still half-reclining next to her, while she ran her hands over
|
|
him, unfastening the uniform tunic, and gradually divesting him
|
|
of it. Unfortunately, he was still wearing the standard issue
|
|
shirt under it. "Starfleet uniforms," she murmured in an
|
|
undertone. "Efficient, practical, and a damned nuisance."
|
|
|
|
Paris was startled into a laugh, broken off abruptly when she
|
|
pulled the shirt up, hands playing over the bare skin of his
|
|
stomach.
|
|
|
|
She had the advantage on him now, and he didn't know whether
|
|
he liked that. In any case, he didn't have a choice. He watched
|
|
with spellbound interest as she pulled her sweater off over her
|
|
head, then leaned forward again, tugging his shirt upwards.
|
|
|
|
The first contact of skin against skin was a shock, tingling over
|
|
both of them. Paris couldn't stand the inactivity any longer, and
|
|
sat up, stripping the tunic off with quick movements.
|
|
|
|
And then she was against him, and the feeling of warm, living
|
|
woman against him was enough to bring a prickle of wetness
|
|
even to his jaded eyes. The experience with the Halamvids had
|
|
stripped more away from him than he had realized. He was
|
|
glad that this first time, this intensity, was being shared with
|
|
someone he could trust. He didn't know how much further his
|
|
facade would crack tonight, and the last thing he wanted was
|
|
someone thinking they had seen inside him and were therefore
|
|
some sort of friend or lover.
|
|
|
|
His hands roved down from her shoulders, over her back,
|
|
tracing an intricate pattern on her back.
|
|
|
|
She retaliated by kissing a line from his mouth down his jaw to
|
|
his throat. She was about to move lower, when he stopped her,
|
|
putting his hand on the side of her head, tangling in her hair.
|
|
"No. Let me."
|
|
|
|
Janeway looked up at him, then allowed him to lay her down on
|
|
the rug. She watched him, firelight dancing in his eyes, and
|
|
touching his hair and skin, giving him a warm, honeyed tone.
|
|
His eyes were intense as he looked at her, and she found herself
|
|
wondering how long he'd wanted her, or if this had come as
|
|
suddenly and powerfully as it had for her.
|
|
|
|
He came down to her, body settling against her, one leg hooked
|
|
over her own, a welcome weight holding her to him. He kissed
|
|
her first in the hollow of her throat, as a lazy hand cupped her
|
|
breast.
|
|
|
|
She caught her breath, closing her eyes in anticipation.
|
|
|
|
Lips followed his hand, a warm, moist caress tickling her,
|
|
swirling around the smooth skin, before finally settling over her
|
|
nipple. The sensation was intense enough on his own, but he
|
|
didn't leave it there, instead suckling at her.
|
|
|
|
Janeway groaned, an answering response moving through the
|
|
rest of her body, the needing sensation traveling through her
|
|
with a feeling akin to pain, only it wasn't painful. Her hand
|
|
moved up on his own, to rake through his hair, whether to pull
|
|
him away or to hold him closer, she couldn't have said.
|
|
|
|
He turned his head to look up at her. She wasn't watching him,
|
|
but it didn't matter. She wanted him, and that was gratifying to
|
|
his ego, which could always use boosting, despite the rumors to
|
|
the contrary.
|
|
|
|
"I believe it's my turn now," Janeway said huskily.
|
|
|
|
"We're taking turns?" Paris asked, a sensual look in his eyes.
|
|
"I don't need the encouragement."
|
|
|
|
She looked up at him, reading the truth of that in his eyes. She
|
|
didn't need to be in control here. And she didn't want to be,
|
|
despite a vague feeling that she should be. "Carry on."
|
|
|
|
He grinned at her. "I will." He transferred his attention to the
|
|
other side, and she closed her eyes again, letting him do
|
|
whatever he wanted to her.
|
|
|
|
The wetness moved down her body, and then gentle, practiced
|
|
hands were tugging at her slacks, easing them off her body,
|
|
freeing her from the suddenly all too confining clothing. She
|
|
had been cold all evening, but now she was entirely too warm,
|
|
needing to feel air on her skin.
|
|
|
|
Knowledgeable hands moved down her thighs, sweeping across
|
|
her skin in arcs which were at first merely soothing, but then
|
|
evolved into something more, the sensation unbearably erotic
|
|
and tender all at once. She didn't need to be teased any further.
|
|
What she wanted was him, the reassurance of his body against
|
|
hers to tell her that she was alive and that this was real and not
|
|
merely some hallucination she had dreamed up in the Halamvid
|
|
torture chamber.
|
|
|
|
She pulled on his shoulders, and he looked at her questioningly.
|
|
"Now?"
|
|
|
|
"Now." She tried to sound stern, but failed.
|
|
|
|
He stripped off the rest of his clothes, and came down over her,
|
|
placing his hands on either side of her. He held himself like
|
|
that, not making another move. "Are you sure?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
She ran her hand down his side, making him shudder almost
|
|
imperceptibly. "Are you?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes." He didn't wait any longer, but let his weight settle
|
|
into her, sinking as deeply into her body as he could.
|
|
|
|
He was being entirely too careful with her, and she didn't want
|
|
that right now. Opening herself wider, she reached down his
|
|
back to his buttocks and pulled on him.
|
|
|
|
He looked at her, surprised, and she squeezed. "I don't break."
|
|
|
|
"No?" He grinned at her, and then started moving the way he
|
|
wanted to, losing himself in the sensation of heat and wetness,
|
|
the tight slickness mixing inextricably with the heat of the fire
|
|
and the smell and feel of her.
|
|
|
|
She moved with him, reaching up to draw him down to her.
|
|
This might be a brief moment of insanity, but it was the only
|
|
moment of closeness she was likely to allow herself in an
|
|
otherwise lonely existence. She needed this right now, and
|
|
wanted it; however, it was as result of a horrible, shattering
|
|
experience. She couldn't have Paris, couldn't have anyone, and
|
|
that made this brief encounter all the more precious. She
|
|
scraped his back lightly with her fingernails, her hands moving
|
|
up into his hair.
|
|
|
|
He covered her mouth with his own, and she sighed softly. The
|
|
pleasure of it, the feeling of him moving inside her, of his lips,
|
|
his strength, all gave her a deep sense of contentment and
|
|
fulfillment. This was what she'd wanted, this elemental
|
|
experience. Nothing else mattered.
|
|
|
|
He shuddered and went still, pulling his head back, exposing the
|
|
line of his throat to her. She reached an idle hand up, and
|
|
traced the muscles of his chest as he continued to move inside
|
|
her, not yet wanting to finish this.
|
|
|
|
Paris looked down at the woman under her. "Now?"
|
|
|
|
She shook her head. "No. That was... quite enough."
|
|
|
|
He moved off her, to the side, looking quizzical. "I don't
|
|
mind."
|
|
|
|
She rolled on her side, looking at him, still tracing the lines of
|
|
his chest, a slight smile playing on her face. "No."
|
|
|
|
He shrugged. "If that's what you want. Never refuse a lady
|
|
anything, that's my motto."
|
|
|
|
She smiled. "It would be."
|
|
|
|
In a moment, they'd have to return to the real world, where she
|
|
was his captain and this had never happened, where she had
|
|
never shown this damning vulnerability. But that was in a
|
|
moment. For now...
|
|
|
|
Janeway moved closer to him, resting her head against him,
|
|
until he closed his arms around her. "This is what I want."
|
|
|
|
He stroked her arm. "If you're sure..."
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure. Ssh."
|
|
|
|
He was quiet then, and held her as they both listened to the
|
|
crackle of the holographic fire.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--the end--
|
|
|