1618 lines
94 KiB
Plaintext
1618 lines
94 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
|
|
Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!darwin.sura.net!nntp.msstate.edu!Ra.MsState.Edu!plp1
|
|
From: plp1@Ra.MsState.Edu (patrick lane parker)
|
|
Subject: _Cruel_Mercy_ PARTS I and II
|
|
Message-ID: <plp1.708469717@Ra.MsState.Edu>
|
|
Sender: news@ra.msstate.edu
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: ra.msstate.edu
|
|
Organization: Mississippi State University
|
|
Date: Sat, 13 Jun 1992 21:08:37 GMT
|
|
Lines: 801
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek
|
|
The New Generation
|
|
|
|
_Cruel_Mercy_
|
|
|
|
_Part_I_
|
|
|
|
By Patrick Parker, June 1992
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Captain's Log, Stardate 48923.53. The Enterprise is
|
|
en route to Earth, where the crew will receive a much-
|
|
needed layover of one week. During this time, a team
|
|
of Enterprise engineers and Earth-One technicians will
|
|
install the Enterprise's newly improved navigational
|
|
deflector arrays.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
As the Galaxy class starship silently slid past Saturn, the captain
|
|
viewed the rings in wonder. No matter how many wondrous things he saw in his
|
|
travels, he was always impressed with the beauty of Sol's light reflecting off
|
|
the bands of dust and ice crystals that orbited the planet. It was always
|
|
good to return to this system.
|
|
It had been said that all human derived races felt a pull toward the
|
|
green and blue home world. Whether this was true, or it was just contagious
|
|
excitement, most of the crew was looking out the port viewers and windows in
|
|
barely contained anticipation. Of course bridge duty often had it's
|
|
advantages, and that day the bridge crew watched on the main viewer as the
|
|
massive, but graceful starship sailed past the ringed planet.
|
|
As they approached Mars, the Captain glanced up at the Klingon security
|
|
officer manning the comm station behind him. "Communications channel open to
|
|
Earth-One, please." As the Klingon was complying, the Captain straightened
|
|
the front of his jacket and sat up straight in his command chair. He then
|
|
looked up at the 3D communication sensor array and smiled.
|
|
"This is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Enterprise, requesting docking
|
|
clearance." This was, of course a formality. Earth-One knew to expect him
|
|
and had tracked the Enterprise since long before it dropped out of warp speed
|
|
near Pluto.
|
|
"Earth-One docking control to Enterprise, you are cleared to dock.
|
|
Please come around to port Alpha-four-three and initiate standard docking
|
|
sequence."
|
|
As they rounded the monolithic station and initiated standard docking
|
|
sequence, Worf announced the arrival of a priority message from planetside for
|
|
Lt. Commander Geordi LaForge and Dr. Beverly Crusher. The Captain tapped his
|
|
comm badge. "Dr. Crusher, Mr. LaForge, report to the bridge, please." In a
|
|
couple of minutes, the Chief Engineer and the Doctor stepped off the main
|
|
turbolift.
|
|
Picard nodded and Worf placed the message on the main viewer. It was
|
|
Dr. Kate Pulaski at Starfleet Medical. Everybody on the bridge was pleasantly
|
|
surprised to see her except Data, who raised his eyebrows and contemplated the
|
|
possible justifications for Dr. Pulaski contacting the Enterprise on a
|
|
priority channel.
|
|
"Captain." She nodded, acknowledging Picard, then turned to Geordi.
|
|
"Geordi, I'm afraid I have some bad news for you. Your mother is here at
|
|
Starfleet Medical Headquarters in a coma. She was brought here after
|
|
collapsing at her home outside San Francisco. We have diagnosed her as having
|
|
developed Boliara's Disorder." She looked like she was going to continue, but
|
|
fell silent. Beverly Crusher frowned.
|
|
Geordi stepped forward, his forehead creased with concern. "Boliara's
|
|
Disorder, what's that? Will she be OK?" Kate Pulaski looked for an instant
|
|
like she was looking for the right words. Before she could find them, Data
|
|
turned around halfway in his chair at the operations station. The android
|
|
looked at Geordi and his voice took on the tone of a lecture.
|
|
"Boliara's disease, first diagnosed 124 years ago by Dr. Lorien
|
|
Boliara..." He tilted his head to the right slightly and continued. "It is a
|
|
rare neuromuscular disfunction. Since it's discovery, there have only been
|
|
four known cases, now five. It is a condition that attacks human
|
|
neuromuscular pathways causing intermittent coma, pain, and loss of motor
|
|
control. None of the first four cases survived the onset of the disease for
|
|
more than..." Data stopped, his mouth still open. Suddenly realizing how
|
|
this related to his friend, he stopped his monologue and stared contritely at
|
|
Geordi.
|
|
Geordi felt his chest constricting. He looked at Dr. Pulaski and opened
|
|
his mouth to speak, paused and swallowed. Counselor Troi frowned and stood up
|
|
from her chair. Dr. Crusher grabbed Geordi's elbow to steady him.
|
|
Dr. Pulaski quickly continued. "We are trying a couple of treatments,
|
|
but Dr. Crusher was part of the medical team that treated the last confirmed
|
|
case of Boliara's disease and we need her help down here."
|
|
"We'll be right there." Said Dr. Crusher as she and Geordi started for
|
|
the turbolift doors.
|
|
"Mr. LaForge." Geordi turned around to the Captain. "Good luck, Mr.
|
|
LaForge."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
<Deanna, dear, Don't you think it was time you were beaming down. I am
|
|
waiting for you.>
|
|
Counselor Troi was in her room getting ready to disembark. She looked
|
|
around, surprised. Then realized the voice was in her head.
|
|
<Mother. I'm not scheduled to beam down for another hour yet. What are
|
|
you doing on Earth, anyway?>
|
|
<Oh, I'm here at a diplomatic meeting. These diplomats, however, are
|
|
possibly the most shallow minded creatures in the entire Federation. It
|
|
speaks poorly of their collective races that they were chosen as ambassadors.>
|
|
Deanna smiled at her mother's candid thoughts. The Betazoids,
|
|
particularly the females, were perhaps the most open humanoids in the
|
|
Federation. Deanna still thought it odd that an individual as brutally honest
|
|
as Lwaxana Troi be selected as ambassador for Betazed.
|
|
<Really, dear! How can you think that way about your loving mother. Oh
|
|
well, are you beaming down yet? Mr. Homm is preparing you a meal. Your
|
|
favorite Earth dish; almondine trout, English peas and wine.>
|
|
<Mother, I told you that I cannot beam down for another hour. Besides,
|
|
almondine trout is hardly my favorite Earth dish!>
|
|
<Another hour! Your trout will be cold by then.>
|
|
<Goodbye, mother. I'll see you in an hour or so.>
|
|
<Goodbye, that is such a final sounding word. Remember, dear I am
|
|
always with you...Hmmm English peas, perhaps I should invite Jean-Luc to
|
|
dinner.>
|
|
Troi started to reply that Captain Picard was French, not English, but
|
|
she felt her mother's presence leave her mind before she could finish the
|
|
thought. She continued packing for another fifteen minutes. She wanted to go
|
|
down to Ten-Forward and get one of Guinan's famous fudge sundaes, but that
|
|
would ruin her dinner. Cold trout, indeed! Perhaps she should go get that
|
|
sundae.
|
|
As she started to go to the door, her communicator beeped. It was Data.
|
|
"Counselor, I have just been informed that your mother is expecting you
|
|
for dinner tonight. Had I been aware of this, I would have modified the
|
|
computer-generated beam-down schedule to place you at an earlier time slot."
|
|
"Well, actually, Data, I ..."
|
|
"Do not fear, Counselor. I just rescheduled your transporter time. You
|
|
are now scheduled for beam-down in eight minutes."
|
|
"Data, you should not have gone to the trouble."
|
|
"Counselor. I have not 'gone to any trouble.' I am sure you realize it
|
|
only took a small fraction of my attention. I only hope that you are able to
|
|
make it to your dinner engagement on time"
|
|
Deanna sighed and rubbed her temples. "Thank you, Data. I appreciate
|
|
your thoughtfulness."
|
|
On the bridge, Data turned back to his console, pleased that he had been
|
|
able to salvage Counselor Troi's dinner plans.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Doctors Pulaski and Crusher stood at the foot of the bed examining the
|
|
flashing charts. Dr. Pulaski was filling Dr. Crusher in on the treatments
|
|
that had been tried. Geordi was standing at the side of his mother's bed
|
|
looking helplessly at her. A neuroscanner hovered over her head, constantly
|
|
feeding vast amounts of data to the medical computers, and a pair of
|
|
neuroprobes were attached to her temples. A pressure I.V. was strapped to her
|
|
upper arm and it would hiss periodically, injecting various fluids into her
|
|
body. Despite being unconscious, her hand or cheek would occasionally twitch.
|
|
Geordi had never seen his mother so helpless as this, and it frightened him.
|
|
Dr. Crusher took him by the elbow and led him away from the bed. "In
|
|
cases like this, the neuroprobe can only take the edge off the pain. To block
|
|
the pain completely could shut down the neural subprocessors in her brain that
|
|
control cardiac and respiratory function."
|
|
"Let me get this straight, doctor: you could block the, but then she'd
|
|
die?" He tilted his head back and blew out a breath, his cheeks puffing out.
|
|
"It's quite possible. We are trying to reduce the pain levels as much
|
|
as possible and still maintain normal bodily functions; a pretty tricky task."
|
|
Dr. Pulaski continued. "Right now she is pretty stable, so we are going
|
|
to begin running some more analyses on the data we have collected. With
|
|
Boliara's Disorder, each new case we get adds a great deal to what we know
|
|
about how the disease works. I think we can beat this thing this time." She
|
|
smiled at Geordi.
|
|
One of the computers beeped and the Doctors turned back to their
|
|
patient. "Geordi, she is coming around." Geordi stepped over to the bed and
|
|
leaned over, watching her eyelids flutter.
|
|
"Mom." Geordi reached out and took her hand in his. Slowly his mother
|
|
opened her eyes and focussed on her son.
|
|
Her lips quivered. "Am I dead and gone to heaven?"
|
|
Geordi smiled and squeezed her hand. "No, mom, you're not dead. You're
|
|
OK. We've got you at Starfleet Medical. You fainted, but you're gonna be
|
|
OK." Geordi couldn't tell if she had just squeezed his hand back or if it was
|
|
a muscular twitch. He brushed a strand of hair away from her face.
|
|
"Oh, Geordi, It is so good to see you again. It has been too long."
|
|
Geordi leaned over and kissed her on the forehead. She tried to hug him, but
|
|
began trembling.
|
|
"Geordi, I'm shaking. What is the matter with me?"
|
|
Before he could say anything her muscles clinched up and she screamed.
|
|
The pressure hypo on her arm discharged and her body began jerking. Dr.
|
|
Crusher rushed over and began pushing buttons on the neuroprobe while Dr.
|
|
Pulaski ran a medicorder over her patient's chest. A Vulcan intern came and
|
|
led the worried engineer away to allow the doctors room to work. As he was
|
|
leaving he strained to see and hear the doctors at work.
|
|
"We need eight units of Trioxin...neural degeneration in the
|
|
medulla...Alpha-Dextrin, 20 units...NURSE!..."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Will Riker sat in his quarters fidgeting. He looked at his chronometer
|
|
for the hundredth time. He and Deanna Troi had planned to beam down to
|
|
Memphis tonight. He had heard about this fabulous jazz club on the river and
|
|
he had asked his long-time friend to accompany him. She had agreed, but said
|
|
that she had to eat dinner with her mother first.
|
|
The Commander was experiencing what Deanna would call 'cognitive
|
|
dissonance.' He was torn between desperately needing his own command and
|
|
desperately wanting Deanna Troi. He could not let it interfere with his
|
|
duties, and few people even knew that it bothered him. Imzadi knew, though.
|
|
They had an 'agreement' because it was impossible for them to be any closer
|
|
right now, but it still gnawed at him. The fact that their situation was of
|
|
indefinite duration made it even worse.
|
|
He called down to Starfleet Medical again to check on the condition of
|
|
Geordi's mom. The intern that answered told him that there was 'STILL no
|
|
indication, and that they were STILL DAMNED busy...'" The communication
|
|
channel went dead. Riker wondered if every doctor in the Federation was as
|
|
single minded and cranky as the ones he knew.
|
|
He checked the time and decided he had to do something or he would go
|
|
stir-crazy waiting for Deanna. He looked around his room; Trombone, no, duty
|
|
rosters, no. Then his eyes fell upon his Anbo-Jitsu rod neatly stored beside
|
|
his bed.
|
|
"Definitely time for a short match before she gets back." He quickly
|
|
got dressed and, grabbing his sensor-rod, made for the holodeck.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Deanna Troi sat in her mother's suite fidgeting. She had pushed the
|
|
fish around on her plate until there at least appeared to be less than when
|
|
she had been served. Mr. Homm, Lwaxana's tall, grey skinned valet noticed
|
|
that Deanna appeared to be finished burying the fish under the English peas,
|
|
and silently removed her plate from the table. Deanna covertly smiled a
|
|
thankful smile at Mr. Homm, who smiled back and disappeared into the other
|
|
room.
|
|
"So, mother, what is your diplomatic meeting about?"
|
|
<Darling, I fear your abilities are going to waste on the Enterprise.
|
|
Why do you insist on using this backward verbal communication?>
|
|
"Mother, I speak verbally because I work around humans. You know as
|
|
well as I that human communication is far more complex than the verbal
|
|
component."
|
|
<Oh, do I?> Lwaxana frowned.
|
|
<...and besides, my mental powers are not going to waste on board the
|
|
Enterprise. In fact, I am becoming mentally stronger.> Deanna and her mother
|
|
shared a smile at that. <You have, however, avoided my question, mother.
|
|
What is the meeting about?>
|
|
<Oh, nothing really...The Cardassians are wasting our time with peace
|
|
talks again. They don't intend to sign a pact with the Federation any more
|
|
than I intend to marry that Klingon security officer of yours.>
|
|
<Then why did they send the ambassador here? Surely you ought to be
|
|
able to determine that just by being near him.>
|
|
<Oh, I don't know and neither does he. They have only told him what is
|
|
necessary for him to come here and distract us with talk.>
|
|
<Have you told the President yet?>
|
|
<Yes, but you know how he is...> The older Troi shrugged.
|
|
At this point, Mr. Homm came out of the other room bearing a covered
|
|
silver dish, which he placed in front of Deanna. He lifted the lid and
|
|
revealed an elaborate chocolate fudge sundae. She smiled a 'Thank-You-God'
|
|
smile at Mr. Homm, who quietly smiled and presented Deanna with a spoon.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"C-C-Commander..."
|
|
"Huh? Oh, hey Reg," said Geordi, raising his head. He had fallen
|
|
asleep at a table in the Medical Commissary and he was not completely awake.
|
|
"What're you doing here Reg?"
|
|
"Just -uh- checking. You know, sir." Reginald Barclay looked up at the
|
|
ceiling as if he would find a cue card with the right words to say floating
|
|
over LaForge's head. "The -uh- guys in Engineering were wondering how -uh-
|
|
your mother is doing. The shy engineer had been standing with his arms by his
|
|
side, but he became more uncomfortable and folded them in front of his chest
|
|
to have something for them to do.
|
|
"She is in a coma but the doctors are doing what they can."
|
|
"Well ... Are -uh- you ..." Barclay looked down and swallowed. " Are
|
|
you -uh- OK? You ought to c-come back to the Enterprise and get some sleep.
|
|
You know?"
|
|
"No, I'll be OK here, but there's something I'd like you to do for me.
|
|
I'll probably be here with mom for the remainder of the layover and I need you
|
|
to head up the project for replacing the navigational deflector arrays."
|
|
Barclay was positively ecstatic. "Great!, -uh- Who's on the team?"
|
|
"Whoever you think would be best, Reg. You are the most qualified man
|
|
to lead this project. This is your baby."
|
|
"Thanks, I think I should have Gomez and Baker do the harmonic analysis,
|
|
and -uh- Fredricks can install the data m-models into the ..."
|
|
"Whoever you think best, Reg. Now go get some rest so you can get
|
|
started on that tomorrow."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Troi was feeling wonderful now. She'd had a nice conversation with her
|
|
mother, and Mr. Homm's sundae certainly didn't hurt. Now she was looking
|
|
forward to the evening with Will. She was almost skipping on her way back
|
|
from the transporter. Thinking about what to wear, she almost ran over Reg
|
|
Barclay when she exited the transporter room.
|
|
"Good evening, Reginald. You seem to be in a good mood." She smiled a
|
|
charming smile.
|
|
"Yeah, -uh- Yes ma'am. I was sent by the fellas in engineering to see
|
|
if Lt. Commander LaForge was doing OK." Counselor frowned at the thought of
|
|
the engineers placing this uncomfortable task on Reginald. "But when I got
|
|
there he put me in charge of the navigational deflector p-project."
|
|
Deanna could physically feel the excitement and pride coming from the
|
|
engineer. "That's great, Reginald! He couldn't have picked a more capable
|
|
man. Did you find out how he and his mother are doing?"
|
|
"W-well...Geor, -uh- Lt. Commander LaForge looked tired, but he said he
|
|
would be OK." Now Reginald realized that Geordi had distracted him away from
|
|
his mission with talk of the project.
|
|
"Thank you. I'm sure the Lt. Commander appreciated your thoughtful
|
|
visit. I'll see you later, Reginald." She waved and started back down the
|
|
corridor.
|
|
"Bye, Counselor." Barclay started back toward his quarters.
|
|
The more she thought about Geordi's situation, the more weighted down by
|
|
it she was. As she walked back to her quarters, she thought about the death
|
|
of her father. She had cried for a long time, but living on Betazed had
|
|
helped her to come to terms with her grief. There it was impossible to hide a
|
|
feeling from others. It was much more difficult for some humans to get a grip
|
|
on their feelings because they tried to hide their emotions.
|
|
By the time she got to her quarters she was thoroughly worked-up over
|
|
Geordi. She decided she had better go see him. She paused outside her
|
|
quarters, then headed down the hall to the Commander's room. Will would
|
|
understand, he always did.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi sat at the same table where Lt. Barclay had left him. He was
|
|
resting his head on his hands and waiting for the doctors to come out and tell
|
|
him how everything was going. His mind was running in circles. He was
|
|
thinking about having been sick and how his mother had cared for him, thinking
|
|
about having been born blind and how his mother had done everything possible
|
|
to help him. It had been her efforts that allowed the experimental VISOR
|
|
technology to be tested on him. She had encouraged him when the going got
|
|
rough in the Academy. Now he sat helpless while the woman who gave him
|
|
everything was in dire need of help.
|
|
"Geordi?"
|
|
The engineer looked up, adjusted his VISOR. "Counselor. How's
|
|
everything going with you?" He tried to put on a smile.
|
|
"I might ask you that question." She pulled a chair up and sat opposite
|
|
Geordi.
|
|
"Well, the jury's still out. The doctors are working on her now, trying
|
|
to stabilize her, but beyond that I haven't heard." He scratched the back of
|
|
his head, then leaned on the table with his elbows.
|
|
"You feel helpless. I feel as if you are about to burst."
|
|
Geordi felt his chest tighten up again, and swallowed. He took a deep
|
|
breath trying to get his chest to relax. Deanna reached out and took his
|
|
hands in hers. At the same time she reached inward, lowering her defenses
|
|
that she found necessary for her to function around large groups of humans.
|
|
As Geordi felt the surge of emotion leave him like an exploding dam, she
|
|
felt the tide of emotion roll over her. The counselor and the counseled sat
|
|
and cried until there were no more tears. She then convinced Geordi to go to
|
|
bed and get some rest so he could be strong for his mother the next day.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
The bearded starfleet officer sat alone in the corner of the dimly lit
|
|
room. Around the room sat scattered groups of twos and threes. On the stage
|
|
a woman in a red dress sang a song that made the officer's gut churn. As the
|
|
woman's song wound to a close there was scattered applause and a waitress came
|
|
over to the officer's table.
|
|
"Y'all want another drink?" The waitress glanced at the empty chair
|
|
opposite the dark haired man, then back at the man himself.
|
|
"Yeah."
|
|
She picked up the two empty glasses and placed them on her tray, then
|
|
slid away. The officer cradled his head in his hands and stared at the table.
|
|
The room was already beginning to list to the side. He thought about calling
|
|
for the android to check the inertial dampeners, then remembered he wasn't in
|
|
space. He was in Memphis. He was in a jazz/blues bar. And he was talking to
|
|
himself now.
|
|
"Imzadi, why? Why can't we..." He didn't know how to finish the
|
|
sentence. He had been through this a dozen times with his ex-lover, and now a
|
|
billion times in his mind. They had good reasons that they couldn't be any
|
|
closer right now. He had to have his own starship. She defined herself by
|
|
the number of people that she could help. But these and numerous other
|
|
reasons couldn't stop them from wanting it.
|
|
The waitress brought two drinks. She set one in front of the drunken
|
|
Commander, and set the other in front of the chair next to him. Then she
|
|
moved off to other tables. The Commander reached over and picked up the drink
|
|
that was not sitting across from him, downed it, then put it down.
|
|
"Goodness, Imzadi! You sure are guzzling the rotgut tonight."
|
|
He had already turned down two chances to have his own command,
|
|
partially because of Deanna Troi - Imzadi to him. Deanna had turned down
|
|
numerous opportunities, both inside and outside Starfleet. Her motivations
|
|
were also partially motivated by her Imzadi. Despite both of them sacrificing
|
|
choice opportunities, neither could turn away from their individual dreams to
|
|
be with the other. Will Riker rocked his head in his hands.
|
|
"Oh, Imzadi..." His voice trailed off.
|
|
"Am I interrupting something, Commander?"
|
|
Commander Riker looked up to see the woman he least expected to see.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Star Trek
|
|
The New Generation
|
|
|
|
_Cruel_Mercy_
|
|
|
|
_Part_II_
|
|
|
|
By Patrick Parker, June 1992
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Lwaxana! -uh- Mrs. Troi, What are you doing here?" Lwaxana Troi was
|
|
standing over the intoxicated Will Riker. She sat down in the chair next to
|
|
Riker, wrinkled her nose, and pushed the empty glass away.
|
|
She leaned as close to Riker as she could and still breathe oxygen
|
|
instead of alcohol vapor. Her voice was soft and had her typical air of
|
|
authority. "First of all, Commander, this is not an appropriate activity for
|
|
an officer of the Enterprise."
|
|
"Wha... How did you..."
|
|
"Secondly, you have been throwing around the word 'Imzadi' so carelessly
|
|
that any full-Betazoid on this side of the planet would probably be blushing."
|
|
"Oh, you heard that."
|
|
"Dear boy, you can't have expected ME not to feel you thinking that
|
|
word. Your poor alcohol-ridden cortex couldn't stand a chance of blocking
|
|
that. Not that any human could stand a chance mentally against a member of
|
|
the Fifth House of Betazed anyway. Commander, why are you here getting
|
|
drunk?"
|
|
Will gave her a look that would freeze nitrogen. "You should already
|
|
know why I am here. Just use your 'Fifth House' mental prowess to traipse
|
|
around in my booze ridden cortex..." He did not enjoy having his drinking
|
|
bout interrupted by any telepath, particularly this one.
|
|
Lwaxana sighed impatiently. "Will. I am not inside your mind because
|
|
humans have a complex about that sort of thing, but I can guess that this is
|
|
about my daughter."
|
|
"Brilliant deduction."
|
|
"If you were to allow me into your mind this wouldn't take even an
|
|
instant to clear up. I would like to help you, but I couldn't possibly use
|
|
this primitive verbal communication of yours to communicate the ideas I need
|
|
to."
|
|
"I'd rather you didn't. Now, if you will excuse me, I'll be going."
|
|
Riker pushed his chair back from the table, stood up, and promptly collapsed
|
|
into a heap on the floor.
|
|
"All right, Commander. Have it your way - for now." She stepped around
|
|
the chair, leaned down, and pressed his communication badge. "Oh, transporter
|
|
man..."
|
|
From the badge came the sound of a confused transporter operator. "Yes,
|
|
who is this?"
|
|
"Nevermind that. Lock onto the Commander at this position and beam him
|
|
directly to his quarters."
|
|
"Yes ma'am...I've got him now. I am reading a tremendous amount of
|
|
alcohol in his blood. Do you think I should set the transporter to filter it
|
|
out?"
|
|
"No, I think the Commander needs something to remember this night by..."
|
|
She stood smiling as the transporter beam took Riker.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Doctor, how's she doing this morning?" Geordi sat in Dr. Pulaski's
|
|
office. He was feeling remarkably good this morning due to the release of
|
|
emotion and the sleep last night.
|
|
Dr. Pulaski, however, was looking older than usual. Having taken
|
|
Geordi's mother under wing, she was driving herself beyond her normal working
|
|
schedule. "Not well, Geordi. We were unable to completely stabilize her
|
|
condition, so Dr. Crusher and I sat up monitoring her. She is more stable
|
|
right now, but we have something we think you should see." Geordi followed
|
|
her out of her office and into a turbolift which sped them to Geordi's mother.
|
|
She lay motionless with even more equipment hovering over her than last
|
|
time the Lt. Commander saw her. Over her, the pale blue field of a
|
|
restraining field shimmered. Beverly Crusher sat at a computer console
|
|
monitoring the patient. She waved at Pulaski and Geordi and motioned for them
|
|
to come closer so they could talk.
|
|
"I'm sorry, Geordi, but we had to place her in a restraining field to
|
|
keep her from hurting herself any more. She was spasming so violently that
|
|
she was knocking herself against the probes and the side of the bed."
|
|
"I understand, Dr. Crusher. Have you been able to come up with anything
|
|
yet?"
|
|
"Well, actually we have come up with something. It's kind of risky, but
|
|
we may have to fall back on it. Look at this." She pulled up a three
|
|
dimensional scan of Mrs. LaForge's brain on a holographic projector. portions
|
|
of it were indicated in red. Labels floated in the air over various lobes of
|
|
the brain as it rotated above the table.
|
|
"These red areas are the areas that are currently affected by the
|
|
disorder. If we could temporarily knock out these areas using the neuroprobe,
|
|
the pain levels would drop drastically. But as we said before, these areas
|
|
control breathing and heart rate, among other things." She paused to catch
|
|
her breath and punch a few buttons on the computer.
|
|
Dr. Pulaski picked up where Crusher left off. "But, using the neurodrug
|
|
Alpha-Dextrin and the probe, we may be able to reroute these neurons here and
|
|
here." The hologram of the brain zoomed in on the red portion and high-
|
|
lighted a set of points. "These are the actual neural subprocessors that are
|
|
controlling cardiac and respiratory output. If we can reroute the impulses to
|
|
these subprocessors that are not in the red area, we can knock out the pain
|
|
and spasming almost completely and let the new subprocessors take over
|
|
breathing and cardiac control."
|
|
"And that," Crusher added, pointing to the hologram. "if successful,
|
|
will give us the time to try to find a cure for the real problem." The
|
|
doctors examined the hologram another moment, looking hopeful.
|
|
"But you said that there was a risk involved?"
|
|
"Yes, Geordi." Pulaski answered. "This is pretty risky and I wouldn't
|
|
recommend attempting it unless her condition deteriorates. Right now, she is
|
|
pretty stable, and we can start letting our assistants monitor the scanners
|
|
while we continue to try to find a safer procedure."
|
|
"We just wanted to let you know what we have come up with so you won't
|
|
be surprised if we are forced to attempt it."
|
|
"Thank's. I know she's in the care of the best doctors around. If you
|
|
need me for anything, I'll be out in the lobby where I won't get in your way."
|
|
Crusher and Pulaski gave the Lt. Commander reassuring smiles as he left.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Can you believe this? Have you heard who is heading up this team?
|
|
Boy, LaForge's mom must have really gotten to him." Lieutenants Gomez,
|
|
Pierson, Baker, and Fredricks were standing in the main shuttlebay, waiting
|
|
for the skiff to arrive with the team of Earth-One technicians and part of the
|
|
new deflector array. Gomez was standing with her arms folded in front of her
|
|
chest, taping one foot angrily. Pierson and Baker were leaning against a
|
|
parked shuttle, and Fredricks was fiddling with a data pad.
|
|
Gomez pointed a finger at Pierson and the look in her eye suggested that
|
|
fire would shoot forth from that fingertip. "You've never given him a fair
|
|
chance. Reg Barclay is a damned good engineer, and if you rabble don't give
|
|
him too hard a time, I'm sure he'll make a decent team leader. Lt. Commander
|
|
LaForge knows EXACTLY what he is doing, so who are you to second guess him?"
|
|
"Yuh-Yes Ma'am." Pierson snickered behind his hand. Baker laughed
|
|
along. This prompted Gomez to punch Pierson in the arm and move to stand by
|
|
herself a short distance away. "guh-guh-gawsh, ma'am...I-I-I'm -gulp- sorry"
|
|
Pierson mumbled.
|
|
"Look, you guys," Called Fredricks to the others. "Here comes the
|
|
skiff."
|
|
They all turned around and watched the shuttlebay environment
|
|
containment field flash as the long, flattened shuttle passed through it. The
|
|
skiff slowed, then sank to the deck. There was a hiss as the hatch seal was
|
|
broken and the door swung open. Pierson and Baker moved to help the Earth-One
|
|
technicians unload some of their equipment. One of the techs walked over to
|
|
them with a tricorder and smiled. "Where is the man in charge here? I need
|
|
him to verify the transfer of these materials."
|
|
Pierson spoke up. "Oh, he's in main engineering right now, running a
|
|
check on the power field before we shut 'er down. He'll be down directly, but
|
|
you can scan my badge for the materials."
|
|
"Alrightey." The tech pointed the tricorder at Pierson, it beeped, and
|
|
he checked the display. "Pierson huh? Glad to meet ya. My name is
|
|
Michaels." The two shook hands and began unloading materials. "So what is
|
|
the name of the team leader, so I can introduce myself when he gets here?
|
|
Pierson smiled a wicked smile, but Michaels didn't seem to notice.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker began regaining consciousness, and wished he hadn't. He was lying
|
|
in a heap on the floor of his quarters and did not remember just how he got
|
|
there. He could remember being in Memphis, talking to someone. As he lay
|
|
there his memory returned and he moaned. The vibrations of the moan hurt his
|
|
head.
|
|
He crawled into his bathroom and ran water on his head until he felt a
|
|
little better. He then stripped, took a shower, and ordered the computer to
|
|
synthesize him a new uniform.
|
|
"Damn, that was dumb." He leaned against the wall of his dressing room
|
|
as the replicator generated a clean uniform for him. He got dressed and
|
|
tossed his dirty uniform onto the replicator pad. "Computer, get rid of that
|
|
uniform." The uniform disintegrated and it's components made their way back
|
|
to the ship's stores.
|
|
Still feeling the effects of his first hangover in years, he made his
|
|
way to sickbay, where he was greeted by the terse Assistant Chief Medical
|
|
Officer; the Vulcan Selar. Before he could even speak she pointed him to a
|
|
table and pulled a medicorder from her smock. Waving the medicorder at the
|
|
Commander, she arched an eyebrow.
|
|
"Alcohol, Commander?"
|
|
"Oh, just get on with it, please doctor!"
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Lt. Barclay finished his tests and ordered the computer to begin the
|
|
shutdown of the navigational deflector arrays. With this done, he smiled and
|
|
started down to main shuttlebay, humming. This wouldn't be too bad, he
|
|
thought.
|
|
Arriving at the shuttlebay, he saw that his team was already there.
|
|
Pierson, Baker, and several of the techies had the major hardware for the
|
|
arrays laid out on the deck, and were cataloging it. Gomez and another tech
|
|
were looking at a terminal. Fredricks was at another terminal checking the
|
|
new deflector programs while a tech huddled over him. They seemed to be
|
|
disagreeing. The remaining eight techs were going to be removing the existing
|
|
deflector arrays from the outer hull today and they were currently crawling
|
|
into their vacuum suits.
|
|
Barclay moved over to the terminal where Gomez was working. Gomez
|
|
looked up, obviously excited.
|
|
"Reg, this is great! The lab figures and the preliminary tests here
|
|
show that these new deflectors will increase navigational protection by 120 to
|
|
128 percent AND reduce the stress on the defensive shielding power system by
|
|
about 13 percent"
|
|
"G-Great. Have you simulated the effect on the harmonics of the -uh-
|
|
main power busses during full phaser yield or warp drive?" He looked at the
|
|
pretty Lt. Gomez.
|
|
"No, but I'll get right on it, I'm glad you reminded me." She smiled at
|
|
him and he quickly averted his eyes as if that would keep him from blushing.
|
|
He stood there for another moment feeling awkward, then cleared his throat and
|
|
walked away.
|
|
"Freddie, how is ..." His words caught in his still constricted throat
|
|
and he just waved his arms indicating the console that Fredricks was working
|
|
on.
|
|
Fredricks looked up from the terminal. "Pretty good, Reg. I was just
|
|
checking over the data models that we received from Earth-One. They look
|
|
pretty good, but I think we can do better." The tech that was watching
|
|
Fredricks frowned. Lt. Barclay swallowed, finally clearing the obstruction in
|
|
his throat, and told Fredricks to carry on.
|
|
As Barclay picked up a spare datapad and walked off leaving Fredricks
|
|
and the Tech arguing about the efficiency of data models, one of the techies
|
|
that was cataloging materials stood up, smiled, and introduced himself.
|
|
"Hi, I'm Lieutenant Michaels from Earth-One. You must be the team
|
|
leader here. Lieutenant Broccoli, I've heard a lot about you." Barclay
|
|
groaned, Pierson and Baker snickered, and Michaels just looked confused.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi walked up to the slanted ward window and leaned on it, looking in
|
|
at his mother lying there. All the technology connected to her and floating
|
|
around her brought back painful memories of Reannon Bonnaventure.
|
|
The Enterprise had captured a Borg trooper after the destruction of a
|
|
Federation planet by a Borg scout ship. They had identified the body that the
|
|
Borg had incorporated as a free spirited smuggler named Reannon. Dr. Crusher
|
|
had managed to remove the technology implants, but her blank expression had
|
|
shown great emotional damage. Geordi had taken her under his wing to try to
|
|
help dig her soul out from the depths to which the Borg consciousness had
|
|
pushed it.
|
|
He had walked with her around the ship talking to her, had protected her
|
|
from aliens that wanted revenge on the Borg, had even become quite attached to
|
|
her. Upon coming to her senses and seeing the lives that she had helped to
|
|
destroy, she took her own life with one of Dr. Crusher's scalpels.
|
|
Geordi tried to shake the comparison between his mother and Reannon from
|
|
his head by thinking only about his mother. Earlier, she had come around for
|
|
a brief time before she returned screaming and spasming to unconsciousness.
|
|
She had not even recognized Geordi. Remembering that blank look took him
|
|
right back to his memories of Reannon lying on the deck in a pool of blood.
|
|
He closed his eyes and leaned his head against the window. Soon tears
|
|
streaked his face, his jacket, and the window.
|
|
He saw a reflection in the window and tried to stifle the tears.
|
|
Failing to do that, he screwed up his courage and turned around to find Wes
|
|
Crusher standing behind him looking like he didn't know what to do or say.
|
|
Geordi sniffed "Hey, Wes-man! What're you doing here? Is the Academy
|
|
not keeping you busy enough?" The Lt. Commander forced a smile.
|
|
"Actually yes, I have a pile of...Well no, I mean I'm never too busy..."
|
|
He looked at his feet and shuffled them. "When I tried to contact my mom on
|
|
the Enterprise, Data told me what had happened. I suppose I know how you
|
|
feel. When my dad died..."
|
|
"Hey! She's not going to die!" Geordi interrupted him, then tried to
|
|
hide that Wes had touched a nerve. "I mean, your mom and Dr. Pulaski have
|
|
this miracle cure that they are about to try."
|
|
"Sorry, Geordi." Wes had always hated visiting people who were
|
|
suffering because he felt totally useless in these kinds of situations.
|
|
Nonetheless, he felt that others expected him to be able to help. "Let's go
|
|
sit down and you can tell me about this miracle cure."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Troi felt like she was being run ragged. This was supposed to be a Rest
|
|
& Relaxation layover, but it was turning out to be far from relaxing for her.
|
|
Geordi's situation was mentally draining for her, and now she was getting bad
|
|
vibes from Will after having to delay last night's date. Will would have to
|
|
wait for the moment. She did not want to be cruel to him, but she felt that
|
|
he was stronger than Geordi right now. She was about to go talk to Geordi,
|
|
and desperately needed to center herself. Sitting in her office, mental
|
|
barriers at full-strength, she meditated. Just as she was beginning to feel
|
|
calmness descend on her, her door beeped to indicate a visitor. She opened
|
|
her eyes and sighed. "Come in, please." She smiled as Reginald Barclay
|
|
entered.
|
|
"Hello, Reginald. What can I do for you today."
|
|
Barclay wrung his hands and started in on his spiel at warp nine.
|
|
"Counselor, w-wwhat do I do. Lt. Commander LaForge put me in charge of the
|
|
deflector replacement and I can't do it. I -uh-..."
|
|
"Reginald, calm down. Last night when I spoke to you, you were pleased
|
|
that you had received the assignment. Sit down and let's talk about what has
|
|
changed since then."
|
|
The lieutenant sat down, crossed his legs, uncrossed them, and finally
|
|
gave up on trying to feel comfortable. "T-They won't -uh- listen to me.
|
|
I..." He swallowed and wrung his hands again. "I -uh- don't think I will be
|
|
able to get the job done." He threw his hands in the air, noticed the awkward
|
|
motion, and sat on his hands to keep it from happening again.
|
|
"Reginald, do you not trust Commander LaForge?" The Counselor asked
|
|
disarmingly. This put Barclay back in warp mode.
|
|
"Oh I like him, he's the best. I -uh- wish he could h-head up this team
|
|
and just tell me -uh- what to do."
|
|
"The Lt. Commander can't be up here right now, so he chose you because
|
|
he felt like you can get the job done. He knows you are a good engineer,
|
|
Reginald."
|
|
"Yeah, but P-Pierson is not going to listen to me. He has seniority on
|
|
me and now he has the techs calling me B-B-Broccoli."
|
|
"So, Reginald, why do you think Lt. Commander LaForge did not put
|
|
Pierson in charge?"
|
|
"Well, I -uh- suppose he d-doesn't know as much as me about deflector
|
|
arrays."
|
|
"Right! So you know you are the one most qualified to oversee this
|
|
project. The others know that too, even though they might not let on. They
|
|
also know that the Lt. Commander expects them to get the job done, so I think
|
|
they'll come around and start following your instructions."
|
|
Barclay smiled a big smile. He still didn't think he was a very good
|
|
leader, but he felt better anyway.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Kate Pulaski mumbled while she worked and it was really beginning to get
|
|
on Beverly Crusher's nerves. They'd had to put down their research when Mrs.
|
|
LaForge had begun jerking again. She was trying to scream, but couldn't make
|
|
her mouth and diaphragm work properly. The result was an almost constant
|
|
throaty groan that was worse on the doctors' morale than the screaming.
|
|
For the last couple of hours they had been trying everything in their
|
|
combined vast knowledge to calm the patient, but the patient would not be
|
|
calmed.
|
|
"The probes are not going to do any more good in this condition."
|
|
Pulaski mumbled, leaning back in her chair to stretch her back. Crusher's
|
|
glance showed her ire and she continued pressing buttons on the panel. "We
|
|
need to try the neuron substitution tomorrow, Beverly."
|
|
"Kate," Crusher's tone was one that she might use with a child. "There
|
|
is obviously a connection between the sub-molecular structure of the affected
|
|
neurons and the change in the enzyme ratio that is indicated by the scanners.
|
|
We don't need to perform that operation when we are this close to a
|
|
breakthrough."
|
|
"But there is no way to tell the direction of the causality in that
|
|
connection. If the disorder is causing the enzyme imbalance and we try to
|
|
correct the enzyme ratio, we could set up a positive feedback loop that would
|
|
cause the disorder to spread to the other subprocessors."
|
|
Crusher picked up the line of thought. "But if the enzyme ratio
|
|
imbalance is causing the disorder, and we tamper with the disrupted neurons it
|
|
could still initiate that feedback loop." She slumped back in her chair at
|
|
the thought of the no-win situation.
|
|
Pulaski looked at her hands, which were shaking from too much coffee and
|
|
too little sleep. She then looked up. "Computer, What is the likelihood of
|
|
the enzyme imbalance being caused by the disorder, as opposed to the
|
|
likelihood of the disorder being caused by the enzyme balance."
|
|
The flat, masculine voice of the computer came back with the answer
|
|
almost immediately. "Probability favors the likelihood of the disorder
|
|
causing the enzyme imbalance by 2.3 percent."
|
|
"Computer, if we attempt to change the mapping of the neurons in the
|
|
affected area, what is the chance of increasing the enzyme ratio?"
|
|
"53.7 percent."
|
|
Both doctors frowned. "That high?" Pulaski mumbled.
|
|
The computer responded to what it interpreted as a query from the
|
|
doctor. "Due to the limited amount of case data, the margin of error is 33.2
|
|
percent."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Basically, Geordi, we have hit a brick wall. We have found a clue as
|
|
to the cause of the disorder, but the computer can't reassure us as to the
|
|
likelihood of success."
|
|
The doctors stood at the window to the ward with Wes and Geordi. They
|
|
were looking in at the spasming patient and discussing possibilities. Geordi
|
|
could barely hear them. He was lost in thoughts of how his mother had helped
|
|
him into adulthood. He could remember coming to her, frustrated with
|
|
relationships, frustrated with school, frustrated with his inability to be
|
|
like other people because of his VISOR. She had given him wisdom from her
|
|
years of experience. She had...
|
|
Crusher placed a hand on Geordi's shoulder to bring him out of his
|
|
trance. "We can try to perform the neural remapping, but there is a certain
|
|
amount of danger of causing the disorder to spread. However, in the other
|
|
cases, it eventually spread without tampering with the neural mappings. It's
|
|
really up to you."
|
|
Geordi looked back to his mother. The restraint field shimmered,
|
|
resisting her body's efforts to shake itself to pieces. Mom, what would you
|
|
do? He leaned his throbbing head against the cool glass and tried to decide.
|
|
This close to the glass, he could hear her incomplete screams. The screams
|
|
echoed in his mind and disrupted his thoughts even more.
|
|
Pulaski broke in quietly. "Geordi, Dr. Crusher and I couldn't perform
|
|
the operation right now anyway. We are exhausted past our limits. Take your
|
|
time. Get some rest and decide tomorrow. She'll be OK till then." Pulaski
|
|
smiled her reassuring smile, but it was weak. Geordi did not feel reassured.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker stood outside the door with his hands behind his back. He shifted
|
|
his weight from one foot to the other waiting for the door to open. It opened
|
|
and he looked up into the thin face of Mr. Homm, who silently turned and moved
|
|
into the suite. If Riker had not previously known the silent butler, he would
|
|
have mistaken Homm's attitude for disdain. Instead, he tugged the front of
|
|
his jacket down and entered behind Mr. Homm.
|
|
From the other room, he heard Lwaxana's voice. "Commander Riker, It is
|
|
about time you were arriving. I knew you would be by here soon. You're
|
|
really not such a bad man, but the drinking has got to stop."
|
|
He stepped around the corner and saw Lwaxana sitting on a couch. he
|
|
moved into the room and started to speak. "I...wanted to come by and
|
|
apologize for my actions last night."
|
|
"That is immaterial. I know that is not your typical response to
|
|
frustration. The point is that I felt it intensely distressing that you were
|
|
calling my daughter 'Imzadi' while damaging your mind with alcohol. It is the
|
|
mind that gives that word meaning, and it has more meaning than you can
|
|
possibly know."
|
|
"Deanna has explained..."
|
|
"Oh, I am sure that Deanna has shared a great deal of the meaning of
|
|
that word with you. When I am in her mind I can feel that you are a part of
|
|
her. The problem is, as I said last night, this limited verbal communication
|
|
of yours. Even though Deanna has powers that may be amazing to humans, she
|
|
still cannot convey the meaning of 'Imzadi' to you."
|
|
The Commander took a seat across the coffee table from Lwaxana. "How do
|
|
the Betazoid people tolerate having their private thoughts laid bare to the
|
|
public? Whenever a Betazoid couple becomes close enough to refer to each
|
|
other as 'Imzadi,' everyone on the planet knows. There would be nothing left
|
|
for the couple to share."
|
|
"Oh, quite the contrary, Commander. 'Imzadi' has special meaning
|
|
between the individuals in the couple, but it is more than just saying 'lover'
|
|
or 'friend' or 'mate.' When the word is used between two people in the proper
|
|
context, it brings ... joy to the rest of the collective consciousness. When
|
|
the word is misused it ..."
|
|
Lwaxana paused looking for words similar to the idea she wanted to
|
|
convey. "... It diminishes the rest of us, as well as the couple." She sat
|
|
back on her couch and watched the Commander for a reaction.
|
|
Riker was not used to being chastened, and he was silent for a moment.
|
|
Finally his eyes met Lwaxana's. "Could you tell me more about what 'Imzadi'
|
|
means? I would really like to be closer to Deanna."
|
|
"No." Lwaxana almost shouted. "You miss the point. I can't TELL it
|
|
because it can't be told. You can never know what 'Imzadi' means, because you
|
|
close your mind and hide away behind your feeble mental barriers. I could
|
|
force feed your mind the concept, but it would be a little inappropriate,
|
|
don't you think? You will never be any closer to Deanna until you become more
|
|
open minded to others."
|
|
Mr Homm came into the room with a tray containing coffee cups and a pot.
|
|
He poured two cups, placed them on the table between Lwaxana and Riker, and
|
|
left quietly. Lwaxana sipped her coffee and returned it to the table.
|
|
"Just as your race will never get beyond where they are now because you
|
|
all bury yourself in your individual minds, contemplating your individual
|
|
troubles. I am often surprised that the collective human intellect does not
|
|
just collapse in upon itself, sending you all back to an evolutionary state
|
|
prior to the apes."
|
|
They both sat quietly. Lwaxana sipped coffee and watched as the
|
|
Commander fought a battle with himself. He was trying to find a way to defend
|
|
the closed-emotioned human mentality, but he found that he couldn't.
|
|
_I_want_to_understand_ he thought.
|
|
Lwaxana smiled <Do you?>
|
|
_Yes_
|
|
<Then you shall.>
|
|
It only took a few seconds to give the Commander a view of centuries of
|
|
Betazed culture, the likes of which he had never conceived of. She shared her
|
|
lifetime of experiences within a moment. When she was finished, they shared a
|
|
smile.
|
|
_So_that's_what_'Imzadi'_means!_
|
|
|
|
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
|
|
Path: moe.ksu.ksu.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!darwin.sura.net!nntp.msstate.edu!Ra.MsState.Edu!plp1
|
|
From: plp1@Ra.MsState.Edu (patrick lane parker)
|
|
Subject: _Cruel_Mercy_ PARTS III and IV
|
|
Message-ID: <plp1.708469769@Ra.MsState.Edu>
|
|
Sender: news@ra.msstate.edu
|
|
Nntp-Posting-Host: ra.msstate.edu
|
|
Organization: Mississippi State University
|
|
Date: Sat, 13 Jun 1992 21:09:29 GMT
|
|
Lines: 792
|
|
|
|
|
|
Star Trek
|
|
The New Generation
|
|
|
|
_Cruel_Mercy_
|
|
|
|
_Part_III_
|
|
|
|
By Patrick Parker, June 1992
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi could not sleep. He sat at his desk in his quarters, the
|
|
computer showing scenes from his childhood. He flipped through the dozens of
|
|
pictures numerous times, each one bringing back a cherished tidbit of memory
|
|
that had gotten buried under so much other stuff in his mind.
|
|
A picture of his father, who had died when Geordi was two years old. He
|
|
couldn't even remember the man. What he did remember was his mother who
|
|
raised him by herself. Geordi had not realized what a difficult
|
|
responsibility that had been for his mother until he was grown.
|
|
A picture of Geordi when he was only months old. His father was holding
|
|
him and his mother was smiling proudly at her child. The only thing out of
|
|
place was the child's sightless eyes.
|
|
A picture of young Geordi LaForge, standing by his mother and modeling
|
|
his new VISOR. There were very few experiences that he could remember from
|
|
that age, but this was one that he remembered vividly. He was terrified by
|
|
the shifting bands of light and color when they first clipped the VISOR on and
|
|
he "saw." His mother had coached him as best she could while he learned to
|
|
control the accessory.
|
|
A picture of his mother's second wedding. Her second husband was a good
|
|
man, but he'd died soon after the wedding. A picture of the funeral.
|
|
"Computer, discontinue images and rearchive."
|
|
Lt. Commander LaForge got dressed and wondered down to Main Engineering.
|
|
There was only a skeleton crew on duty there, and they were playing cards. He
|
|
waved at them, moved over to the main terminal, and sat down.
|
|
"Computer, what is the status of the navigational deflector project?"
|
|
"The main power feed has been disconnected and rerouted. The external
|
|
navigational deflector arrays have been removed. The data models have been
|
|
updated, but are not in service. All materials have been catalogued and an
|
|
inventory is now appearing on viewer three."
|
|
"Computer, discontinue listing."
|
|
Lt. Commander Laforge was impressed. He had been worried that Barclay
|
|
would have trouble getting the others to follow his lead, but apparently he
|
|
had picked a good team and they were getting the work done faster than
|
|
expected. Geordi made a mental note to commend Reg on his good work.
|
|
"Computer, place the duty roster for tomorrow's deflector project team
|
|
on viewer three. Hmmm... Baker, Barclay, Fredricks, Gomez, and Pierson." Reg
|
|
certainly picked the best people, even though Pierson and Baker could
|
|
sometimes get out of hand poking fun at Barclay. Fredricks would be too busy
|
|
checking the new data models to cause Reg any problems. Reg sure shouldn't
|
|
get trouble from Gomez. Geordi secretly thought that Gomez liked Barclay.
|
|
He smiled to himself. "Oh, well. Reg seems to be handling it pretty
|
|
well. Nothing left here for the old Lt. Commander to do."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi was at Starfleet Medical bright and early the next morning,
|
|
talking with the doctors. "Have you come up with anything else?"
|
|
Dr. Pulaski sipped on a cup of steaming coffee. She looked much better
|
|
this morning. "Frankly, no. We can attempt to swap the neural pathways, like
|
|
we talked about yesterday, although the chances of success are still uncertain
|
|
at best. Or we can continue trying to keep her stable and keep her pain
|
|
levels down as low as possible."
|
|
"How long can she last without the remapping procedure?" Geordi leaned
|
|
forward in the chair with his elbows on his knees. He stared at the doctor.
|
|
"I don't know? Dr. Crusher, you have more experience than I do with
|
|
Boliara's Disorder. What do you think."
|
|
Dr. Crusher shrugged her shoulders. "We have no way of telling just how
|
|
long she could last in her present condition, but we do expect that if
|
|
something is not done soon, that the disorder will spread to the unaffected
|
|
subprocessors in her brain and we won't even have the option of remapping
|
|
cardiac and respiratory functions."
|
|
"Well, doc, it looks like the best bet is to try the remapping
|
|
procedure." Geordi gave her a half smile that seemed more than just a little
|
|
forced.
|
|
"We will certainly do everything we can to get your mom back."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Awww C'mon, Freddie. You know it's harmless, and it'll be funny."
|
|
"No. I don't think he'll be cool about it. It'll get back to LaForge
|
|
and then we'll get it." Fredricks looked intensely at Pierson for a moment,
|
|
then went back to his programming.
|
|
"Oh, be for real. Broccoli is a pain in the ass, but he won't tell
|
|
LaForge on us. He hasn't ever before."
|
|
Fredricks looked up at Pierson, annoyed at having been interrupted from
|
|
his programming. "Look, I really don't think this is cool, and besides, if he
|
|
doesn't tell LaForge I think Gomez will."
|
|
At that moment, Barclay walked into Main Engineering with Baker and
|
|
Gomez. Fredricks was relieved to be able to get away from Pierson for a few
|
|
moments. They all gathered around Barclay to get their instructions for the
|
|
day.
|
|
"O-Ok, guys, Today we gotta fire up the new -uh- power transit and test
|
|
the harmonics at nodes f-fourteen through twenty-t-three." Just like the
|
|
Counselor had promised, Barclay had not had any more trouble from his team
|
|
since the Earth-One tech had mistakenly called him 'Broccoli.' He was
|
|
actually getting used to giving assignments since he had seen that the team
|
|
would do what he said.
|
|
"G-Gomez." He still couldn't look her in the face when he spoke to her.
|
|
"I need you to -ahmmm- G-go up on the catwalk over there and do the harmonics
|
|
testing for nodes fourt-t-teen through eighteen. Baker, you take the rest.
|
|
The test points are over there." They nodded at him.
|
|
"Freddie, you and P-Pierson stay on the computer over there and monitor
|
|
the data models. Uhm...Make sure to w-watch for race conditions and
|
|
bottlenecks on the -ahhhm- secondary processors. Those could cause trouble.
|
|
You guys shut the thing d-down if you see any problems over there. I'll b-
|
|
begin the p-power-up slowly so we can have time to, -uh- you know, check it
|
|
all real carefully."
|
|
Their meeting broke up and they all began taking their assigned
|
|
positions. Barclay got a datapad and began checking the information on it.
|
|
Gomez and Baker got their equipment and began ascending to the catwalks while
|
|
Pierson and Fredricks walked over to the console.
|
|
"Man, Freddie, I can't believe he had the nerve to tell YOU about race
|
|
conditions and bottlenecks. He ought to know you're a better programmer than
|
|
that." Pierson whispered as they were taking their places. Fredricks glanced
|
|
over at Pierson with a barely controlled look of irritation. They got to
|
|
their console and Pierson continued whispering to Fredricks as they pulled
|
|
their diagnostic programs up.
|
|
Meanwhile, Barclay was watching the other two ascend to their test
|
|
sites. When everybody was in place he called out to them. "Ahmmmm, OK here
|
|
goes nothing. C-Computer, apply power to the -um- deflector transit. Five
|
|
percent only."
|
|
They all listened as a faint hum filled the room. Barclay glanced up to
|
|
the two engineers on the catwalks. Two thumbs up. He checked something on
|
|
his datapad. and glanced over at the two on the computer console. Fredricks
|
|
was busy modifying some portion of the program while Pierson stood over him
|
|
watching. Looks good, Barclay thought.
|
|
"Ok, Computer. B-Bring it on up to fifteen percent." The whine
|
|
increased in frequency.
|
|
On the port catwalk, Gomez was reading the increase in power and as the
|
|
computer loaded the transit more, she frowned and called out to Barclay. "I
|
|
just read a brief fluctuation in the transit. A little more power will
|
|
probably burn the impurities out of the pathway and straighten this out."
|
|
Baker called out from the starboard catwalk "I'm not reading the fluctuation
|
|
over here. All systems green."
|
|
Barclay called out for the computer to increase the power load to
|
|
twenty-five percent. The pitch increased again. He looked up at Gomez who
|
|
was shaking her head. Still having fluctuations.
|
|
"C-Computer, what is the C-Current load on the port deflector transit?"
|
|
"The load on the port deflector array transit is..." The computer
|
|
paused. "T-T-T-Twenty-F-Five P-P-Percent."
|
|
Barclay looked up, flabbergasted that the computer was mocking him,
|
|
while Pierson fell back into his chair laughing. As Pierson laughed, a
|
|
flashing light on his diagnostic panel went unnoticed.
|
|
Suddenly the pitch of the whine in the compartment rose dramatically.
|
|
Gomez looked in shocked horror at her readings as the pitch steadily
|
|
increased.
|
|
"Shit!" Screamed Fredricks and dove for his console. He began
|
|
manipulating the transit power controls frantically.
|
|
Gomez suddenly realized her danger and dropped her tricorder. She
|
|
turned to climb down from the catwalk, but she was too late. The port transit
|
|
exploded directly behind her sending her flying through the air in a violent
|
|
spray of sparks and metal shards from the transit cabinet. Her body fell in a
|
|
smoking heap in the center of the compartment just as the lights went out.
|
|
Seconds later the red emergency lighting came on and the extinguishers
|
|
began choking the flames out. Barclay stumbled over to where Gomez lay and
|
|
turned her over. A pool of blood was forming under her hips, where a fragment
|
|
had sliced her inner thigh open. Barclay stuck his hand across the wound and
|
|
leaned. With his free hand he tapped his communicator. "Sickbay this is
|
|
Engineering. M-Medical Emergency." He then used his free hand to press off
|
|
the blood flow through the femoral artery. With his hands drenched in blood,
|
|
he waited for help.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi was worked up into a rare state. He paced back and forth in the
|
|
hallway outside the operating room waiting like an expectant father for news
|
|
of his mother's condition. Unlike an expectant father, however, he didn't
|
|
have a new life to look forward to. He had the distinct chance of losing his
|
|
mother. He looked at his chronometer. The doctors and assistants, dressed in
|
|
their red hooded outfits had entered the room over an hour ago.
|
|
Geordi jumped when his communicator beeped. Tapping the badge, he
|
|
responded. "LaForge here."
|
|
Worf's deep voice came over the comm badge. "Lieutenant Commander
|
|
LaForge. You are needed on the Enterprise."
|
|
"NOW, Worf? My mom is in the middle of..."
|
|
"Yes. There has been an accident in Engineering. Prepare to beam up."
|
|
As the transporter beam locked onto Geordi and he began to feel himself
|
|
dematerialize, he saw a group of interns round the corner wheeling a cart of
|
|
equipment. He saw them burst into the operating room at full speed, and then
|
|
he was on the Enterprise.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi and Worf stood surveying the damage to the Engineering
|
|
compartment. The gas from the fire extinguishers was beginning to clear from
|
|
the air. On one side of the compartment some medics were straightening out a
|
|
body and placing it into a body bag on a maglev. Even through the bag, Geordi
|
|
could see the body rapidly losing it's heat. He nudged Worf and pointed to
|
|
the body. "Who is that, Worf?" The engineer recognized people by their
|
|
electromagnetic aura that surrounded them in life. On this individual he
|
|
couldn't tell.
|
|
"That," Stated Worf, flatly. "Was Lt. Baker." The massive Klingon
|
|
turned away from the medics to shift through the rubble.
|
|
"What about the others. Who else was in here at the time."
|
|
Worf looked back over his shoulder. "Lts. Fredricks, Barclay, Pierson,
|
|
and Gomez. They are currently in sickbay. Gomez is expected to die soon."
|
|
Worf was obviously outraged that an explosion would happen on his ship, while
|
|
in spacedock. It simply did not look good for the security officer.
|
|
Geordi turned and followed the medics to sickbay. The outer ward of
|
|
sickbay was filled with nurses tending to minor injuries that occurred when
|
|
the ship was rocked by the explosion. Geordi moved through the crowd into the
|
|
inner ward where Picard and Riker were surveying the injuries.
|
|
Picard turned to Geordi. "Mr. LaForge. To say the least, I am not
|
|
pleased. I would like to see you and the remainder of the senior staff in the
|
|
conference room in thirty minutes. Bring along Barclay and Pierson."
|
|
"Aye aye, Captain. What about Gomez."
|
|
"Acting CMO Selar is operating on her as we speak."
|
|
As he said that, a door slid open and Selar appeared. Her face, in
|
|
typical Vulcan fashion, betrayed no emotion. Her olive complexioned face and
|
|
straight black hair were splattered with blood.
|
|
"Doctor." Picard turned to her. "How is Lt. Gomez?"
|
|
"Captain, Lt. Gomez will live. I have repaired her femoral artery and
|
|
have given her an infusion of replicated blood." The Vulcan doctor paused to
|
|
wipe some blood from her face. "However, Captain, It was Lt. Barclay who
|
|
saved her life." The doctor turned without another word and moved to tend to
|
|
another patient.
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Drs Pulaski and Crusher were so far down into the brain that it took the
|
|
largest fleet of medical computers in the Federation to keep them sorted out.
|
|
They had just finished the remapping when an enormous surge of impulses hit
|
|
the new pathways like a crew rushing for a single transporter on a dying
|
|
starship. The doctors watched, fascinated, for a moment as their handiwork
|
|
held up and performed it's function properly. Dr. Pulaski even ventured a
|
|
smile at the thought that their procedure had worked.
|
|
But suddenly Dr Crusher burst Kate Pulaski's bubble. "Well, the enzyme
|
|
ratio is holding, but take a look at the fourth sextant." She pointed to the
|
|
computer screen to a small section that was showing signs of neural
|
|
repolarization.
|
|
"Neural Sodium and Potassium level dropping fast." Pulaski indicated
|
|
for the computer to stabilize the neurochemical levels at nominal levels, but
|
|
before it could get the chemical level changed, the patient's respiratory and
|
|
cardiac functions seized up and refused to be restarted by the automatic
|
|
surgical support systems.
|
|
"NURSE!...get a cart in here. NOW!"
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
"Do you realize, men, the severity of your actions?" Captain Picard
|
|
continued his monologue. "By tampering with that computer, you neglected your
|
|
duties, causing the death of one crewman and almost causing the death of
|
|
another. If that explosion had broached the antimatter containment fields,
|
|
you would have destroyed at least the Enterprise, and perhaps Earth-One as
|
|
well." Picard turned away from Fredricks and Pierson and rubbed the top of
|
|
his bald head in aggravation."
|
|
"Captain, " Worf broke in. "These two may have sabotaged the power
|
|
transit deliberately." He looked at the two with disgust and rage. If they
|
|
could have sunk farther into their chairs, they surely would have.
|
|
Lt. Commander Data entered the room and informed the group of senior
|
|
officers that he had managed to get the glitch removed from the Engineering
|
|
computer, and that Earth-One and Enterprise engineering crews are beginning to
|
|
repair the damage.
|
|
Captain Picard turned back to the security officer. "Mr. Worf. Please
|
|
arrange to have these two transported to Earth to await trial." He then
|
|
turned back to the others at the table. "Dismissed."
|
|
As Worf took the two by their elbows and steered them out of the
|
|
conference room, LaForge turned to Barclay who had been sitting next to the
|
|
two ex-officers. "Reg, you obviously didn't do anything wrong. You couldn't
|
|
control what happened there, and this will not reflect poorly on you."
|
|
Counselor Troi picked up from there. "He is right, Reginald. I think
|
|
we should go to my office and talk." She stood, and she and the overwrought
|
|
Barclay moved to leave. They were stopped short by LaForge, who placed a hand
|
|
on Barclay's shoulder.
|
|
"Reg. When you get through at the Counselor's office, if she says it's
|
|
OK, I want you to get back to Engineering and head up the cleanup and repair
|
|
operations, as well as the deflector project.
|
|
"Oh, I-I-Idunno, I d-don't think..."
|
|
"Reg, If the Counselor says you're fit, I want you to do this. My
|
|
respect for your qualifications hasn't changed since this accident."
|
|
With just a little coaxing, Troi got Reg out of the room, and LaForge
|
|
sighed and started out, only to be called back by Picard."
|
|
"Mr. LaForge, you are becoming quite a good leader. That was, it seems,
|
|
a good way to get Lt. Barclay 'back in the saddle' as it were." He smiled the
|
|
smile that all of Picard's crew worked so hard to see. "Lt. Commander, I
|
|
think that will be all for now. You may return to Starfleet Medical.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
The horror that greeted Geordi when he returned to Starfleet Medical was
|
|
unlike any he had ever experienced. The tank was filled with a thin pink
|
|
Trioxin fluid and his mother lay immersed in it. She still had the
|
|
neuroprobes attached to her temples. The probes' flashing lights filtered
|
|
through the pink fluid, creating an eerie visual effect. Another set of
|
|
probes were attached to her chest just below the left breast and hat he was seeing. They had said that the operation was a failure, and that
|
|
she had been placed in a life support tank. They had told him, but he
|
|
couldn't have imagined it without seeing it for himself. He slowly turned
|
|
away from the tank. One of the doctors was saying something, but he couldn't
|
|
hear her. He didn't even remember the doctors catching him as he fell.
|
|
He saw his mother in a strange halo of color and light. She was leaning
|
|
over to kiss him on the forehead. Holding him as he cried about his first
|
|
lost love. Watching proudly as he graduated the academy. Smiling serenely as
|
|
her new husband lifted the veil. Smiling, was she smiling? No she was
|
|
screaming and Geordi could see her brain through her skull. He adjusted his
|
|
VISOR, but to no avail. He watched as her brain slowly dissolved. She was
|
|
screaming for Geordi to help her. Screaming for him to do something. Do
|
|
something. Do some...
|
|
There was a hiss, like someone's final breath. He tried to turn away
|
|
from it, but it had him. He couldn't move. Then there was voices, first far
|
|
away, then closer. Who was it. He recognized it. It sounded like...
|
|
"Doctor!" He tried to sit up, but Dr. Crusher pushed him back down. He
|
|
couldn't see her, but he could hear her talking.
|
|
"Lie still, Geordi."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Worf stood in his sparsely furnished quarters grinding his teeth. Dr.
|
|
Crusher had informed all of the senior bridge crew of the outcome of Mrs.
|
|
LaForge's surgery, and of the Lt. Commander's fainting. Of course Klingons
|
|
did not faint, but Worf had come to expect such weakness from humans, even
|
|
exceptional humans such as Lt. Commander LaForge.
|
|
Still, this was not the time for such weakness. There was no honor in a
|
|
perfectly healthy man lying in bed beside his half dead mother. Worf decided
|
|
he would pay LaForge a visit and inform him of how he should be acting in this
|
|
situation.
|
|
He left his room and his long strides carried him quickly to transporter
|
|
room eight. Down on the planet, he quickly oriented himself and made his way
|
|
to Geordi LaForge's room. Nobody at the hospital even attempted to detain him
|
|
or tell him he could not see the Lt. Commander. It would have been futile,
|
|
for it is truly difficult to oppose a Klingon who has a goal. He found the
|
|
Commander sitting in the ward with his mother.
|
|
"Lt. Commander, I see you are well." Worf stood in front of Geordi with
|
|
his hands behind his back.
|
|
"Yes, Worf. I will be OK. I was just sitting here..."
|
|
"Doctor Crusher informed me of your mother's condition." He glanced at
|
|
the life support chamber with obvious disgust. "You now have only one
|
|
choice."
|
|
"What are you talking about, Worf." Geordi was confused.
|
|
"You must...," Worf paused to emphasize his next words. "help her to
|
|
die well."
|
|
Geordi looked dumbfounded. "But Worf, we can't just give up on her.
|
|
She can still recover."
|
|
Worf rocked forward on his toes and lowered his voice. His outrage was
|
|
barely controlled. "She is already dead, Lt. Commander. It is the machines
|
|
that are still alive. You do not do justice to your dead mother by allowing
|
|
her to continue to..." Worf rocked back and pulled back his shoulders.
|
|
"...exist." The last word was said with blatant disgust.
|
|
Before Geordi could form words into a coherent reply, a voice came from
|
|
the door of the ward. "Now just you wait a DAMNED minute, Klingon!" Worf
|
|
turned to the speaker. The Klingon's teeth were exposed and he was ready to
|
|
attack.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Star Trek
|
|
The New Generation
|
|
|
|
_Cruel_Mercy_
|
|
|
|
_Part_IV_
|
|
|
|
By Patrick Parker, June 1992
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Leaning in the doorway was an incredibly old human. He was braced
|
|
against the door with one hand and had a cane in the other hand. The cane was
|
|
pointed directly at Worf.
|
|
"Isn't that just about par for the course for a Klingon. 'Death before
|
|
dishonor' and all that hogwash." The old man spoke with a slow, southern
|
|
accent and waved his cane in the air as he talked.
|
|
Worf ascertained that this man could not present a threat and resumed
|
|
his hands-behind-the-back pose. "WHO are you, and what do YOU know about
|
|
Klingon honor." Worf demanded.
|
|
"I'm Leonard McCoy." He smiled and nodded at Geordi. "That's ADMIRAL
|
|
McCoy to you." This last statement was directed at Worf and was not
|
|
accompanied by a smile. "And I know a bit about Klingons and about honor. I
|
|
didn't get to be this old and ornery by not understanding Klingons, and I was
|
|
fortunate enough to serve with Jim Kirk on the Enterprise - THAT is honor."
|
|
McCoy continued. "Hmmmph. Klingons and honor! Neither of those two
|
|
subjects has a bit to do with the question at hand, which is how long that
|
|
lady over there lives. Most humans can't just haul off and kill a parent.
|
|
It's just not NATURAL." McCoy seemed lost in thoughts of the past for a
|
|
moment, then looked back to Worf. "And it sure-as-hell isn't YOURS to decide
|
|
anyway!" He shouted, jabbing his cane in the air at Worf.
|
|
Before Worf could separate enough Klingon honor from his swirling anger
|
|
to reply, McCoy was turning to leave. McCoy was halfway down the hall when a
|
|
nurse came trotting out of a turbolift after him. Catching up, she took his
|
|
elbow to try to support him as he walked. He jerked away and continued down
|
|
the hall under his own power, brandishing the cane at the nurse the whole way.
|
|
Worf stood for a moment grinding his teeth back and forth. After he had
|
|
calmed himself a bit he turned back to Geordi. "Remember what I said, Lt.
|
|
Commander." With that he turned and left the ward.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Later that day, Geordi and Data sat in a corner of Ten-Forward talking.
|
|
Geordi was drinking an orange juice and Data was simply sitting with his hands
|
|
in his lap, talking and listening.
|
|
"I think I understand how this decision would be a difficult one to
|
|
make." The android tilted his head to the right slightly and held up his left
|
|
hand, palm up, as if holding something. "Life is held sacred in almost all
|
|
the major recorded philosophies of the Federation. One does not end the life
|
|
of any intelligent being unless absolutely necessary, simply because 'It is
|
|
wrong.'"
|
|
Data looked over at the empty hand, realized it would look ridiculous to
|
|
a human observer, and placed it back in his lap. He continued. "Considering
|
|
the recent universal theory that states that all matter, energy, and thought
|
|
is merely different forms of the same thing, it would seem wise to follow a
|
|
'Sacred Life' philosophy due to the uncertainty of the repercussions that the
|
|
death of an individual may have upon the remainder of the interconnected
|
|
universe."
|
|
"But Data, I think Worf's point was that you've also got to think about
|
|
the dignity of the person. I kinda understand where he's coming from."
|
|
"Lt. Worf 'comes from' Khitomir, a Klingon homeworld that was destroyed
|
|
when..."
|
|
"Yes, Data, but what I mean is that my mother has been a strong woman
|
|
her entire life and I would prefer to remember her in that way. If I let this
|
|
go on indefinitely I'm afraid I'll start thinking of her as a vegetable."
|
|
"A vegetable, Geordi?"
|
|
"Uh, yeah Data - an invalid."
|
|
Data nodded his comprehension. "So you are saying that in being human,
|
|
others memory of the lost vitality of the 'vegetable' is more important than
|
|
the possible future vitality, if that 'vegetable' were to be cured. Hmmmm,
|
|
curious."
|
|
"Well, I don't know if that's just it either. It's hard to describe."
|
|
"Geordi, in light of my being incapable of understanding the situation
|
|
enough to advise you on a decision, I would suggest perhaps visiting Counselor
|
|
Troi."
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Deanna Troi sat in her room trying to get the last traces of ice cream
|
|
out of the dish. She finally laid the spoon down and ran her index finger
|
|
around the bottom of the bowl. Licking the chocolate off of her finger, she
|
|
satisfied herself that she had gotten all the benefit out of this bowl that
|
|
she could.
|
|
As she sat there, eyes closed, enjoying the aftertaste of the chocolate
|
|
as only she could, her door chimed. She stood up and pushed her chair undeponses so that she could
|
|
read peoples' emotional states more accurately. It was not a deliberate
|
|
manipulation of the other person, just a part of who she was. Being only
|
|
half Betazoid, her mental powers were limited. She had subconsciously
|
|
developed the probing speech patterns to compensate for her lessened powers,
|
|
much the same way that a blind person might develop a heightened sense of
|
|
heies that made her an excellent Counselor.
|
|
"I'm doing well, Deanna. Sorry I haven't been around, but I've had
|
|
several things on my mind." He put on his charming grin, causing Deanna's
|
|
heart to skip a beat.
|
|
"Come sit down and tell me about it." She took his hand and started to
|
|
lead him to her couch, but the door chimed again before they could sit down.
|
|
Deanna shrugged apologetically at Will and took a step toward the door. "Come
|
|
in, please."
|
|
The door opened and Geordi stepped in. Seeing Will Riker he stopped.
|
|
"Oh, sorry. I know it's not office hours, but the computer told me you were
|
|
still awake so I thought I'd stop by and talk. It can wait."
|
|
"No, Geordi. I was just getting up off the couch to leave." The
|
|
commander straightened the front of his jacket. "Deanna, nice to see you."
|
|
He gave her another of his smiles which sometimes made her regret her
|
|
professional duties.
|
|
"Commander," Geordi smiled a knowing smile and tapped his VISOR. "That
|
|
couch hasn't been sat on lately. "I really ought to bug-out..."
|
|
Geordi backed up a step toward the door.
|
|
Riker and Troi shared a guilty look at having been caught in a fib.
|
|
"Nonetheless, Geordi, duty calls." Riker grinned and used the lame excuse to
|
|
get out of the awkward position he had dug himself. He made his exit as
|
|
gracefully as possible.
|
|
Deanna put a hand on Geordi's shoulder and pointed him to the couch.
|
|
"We are all very sorry to hear about your mother. Beverly told us about it
|
|
and we are all very concerned about you." The physical touch and Deanna's
|
|
soothing attitude calmed all of Geordi's reservations about disturbing her and
|
|
Riker. He sat down on the couch as the Counselor sat in her chair facing the
|
|
couch.
|
|
"I don't know what move to make next, Counselor. She's not hurting
|
|
anymore. They can't even tell how long she'll last before the machines just
|
|
can't keep up with the disease."
|
|
"You are considering letting it end, then?" Troi shifted in her chair.
|
|
"Yeah, kinda...It's just, I don't know if I should - or even if I can."
|
|
Troi could feel Geordi's guilt and uncertainty. It was an almost
|
|
physical presence that affected her. "You feel an obligation to her, but you
|
|
don't know exactly what that obligation is. You're not sure what she would
|
|
want you to do."
|
|
"Riiiight..."
|
|
"Well in most cases, her wishes would be the deciding factor, but in
|
|
this situation the decision rests on your shoulders."
|
|
Geordi scowled. "Are you saying that what she wants is not a factor
|
|
here?"
|
|
"No, of course not. What she _would_have_ wanted is certainly something
|
|
for you to think about. But in her present condition the probes that suppress
|
|
pain and keep her mind alive also suppress all higher brain activity. Simply
|
|
put, she has no desires right now."
|
|
"But Doc is still working on it. They may be able to heal her tomorrow
|
|
for all we know."
|
|
"Geordi, do you remember the three people that we found on the satellite
|
|
we picked up? The ones that had been frozen in the early twenty-first century
|
|
to stop the progress of terminal illnesses."
|
|
"Yeah. I remember 'Sonny' was an alright guy." He smiled at the
|
|
memory.
|
|
"Geordi, those three were the exception, not the rule. The vast
|
|
majority of all the people that attempted cryogenic suspension were never
|
|
cured. Many of their bodies were lost. Cryostasis was finally done away with
|
|
when the majority of people realized that it was simply too expensive -
|
|
emotionally, to cling to the past that fiercely."
|
|
"So you think I ought to let her die?" Geordi asked, still uncertain.
|
|
"What I think, Geordi, is that you are going to have to make a decision
|
|
that YOU can live with. I think that people are going to try to convince you
|
|
either in favor or against, but you mustn't let them decide this for you. In
|
|
the end, if you allow others to make this decision you will doing a great
|
|
injustice to yourself and to your mother."
|
|
"To my mother?"
|
|
"Yes, Geordi. You are a wonderful, talented, responsible person;
|
|
greatly due to her influence. She would want you to make your own decisions.
|
|
That would do her the most justice."
|
|
Geordi sat there for a couple of moments contemplating what she had
|
|
said. "Thanks, Counselor," He said, standing up. He left the Counselor's
|
|
room not sure if she had really helped him with his decision, but feeling
|
|
better anyway.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Transporter Chief O'Brien watched as Worf and his son, Alexander, stood
|
|
side-by-side in the transporter room. They looked quite similar, he thought,
|
|
particularly when they both stood there, arms behind their backs, feet
|
|
shoulder-width apart, chests proudly stuck out. O'Brien smiled faintly.
|
|
"What are you staring at?" Worf demanded, noticing the Chief's
|
|
attention.
|
|
"Oh, nothing, Sir." O'Brien turned back to his controls and pretended
|
|
to be checking the settings."
|
|
"Lieutenant, they are signaling that they are ready."
|
|
"Then energize..."
|
|
As the sparkling transporter effect faded, Jeremy Aster stepped off the
|
|
pad beaming with anticipation.
|
|
"Khal'tre Ahr'eK," said the young human in fluent Klingonese."
|
|
"Khal'tre GluR," replied Worf and Alexander in unison. Worf motioned
|
|
for Jeremy to join them as they turned to leave.
|
|
Jeremy and his mother, Marla, had been stationed on the Enterprise, but
|
|
his mother had been senselessly killed when a long-forgotten mine exploded
|
|
during an away mission on a planet whose warring occupants had long since
|
|
destroyed themselves.
|
|
As the away team leader, Worf had felt responsible for the death of
|
|
Marla Aster, and had adopted Jeremy in a traditional Klingon ceremony. The
|
|
ceremony had made them the equivalent of brothers. Now Jeremy was living on
|
|
Earth and preparing to enter the Starfleet Academy.
|
|
"I am glad you invited me up to the Enterprise again. I'd heard you
|
|
were in dock here and I hoped to get to see you." Jeremy had to walk quickly
|
|
to keep up with the long Klingon strides.
|
|
Just then, they reached the door to Worf and Alexander's quarters.
|
|
"This is more than just a visit, Jeremy. I have something to discuss with you
|
|
and Alexander." Alexander and Jeremy remained standing as Worf seated himself
|
|
at his desk. He removed an isolinear storage card from a slot in his computer
|
|
terminal and placed it on his desk in front of Jeremy. It lay on top of a
|
|
stack of Alexander's drawings and paintings from art class. The paintings
|
|
were simple, but they were the types of things a father proudly displayed in
|
|
prominent places.
|
|
"As you know, Jeremy, your mother's death was instant; painless. She
|
|
died standing up, as one should." Jeremy shifted uncomfortably, but nodded.
|
|
Worf looked back and forth between his two young charges as he spoke.
|
|
"There are times when one is not so fortunate as Marla Aster. Some are
|
|
rendered helpless. Useless..." Worf thought back on his recent spine injury
|
|
that nearly left him paralyzed. Alexander and Jeremy both looked disturbed by
|
|
this unusual lecture. Jeremy leaned forward.
|
|
"Worf, you're not going ..."
|
|
"Silence!" Worf realized too late that he was too abrupt. "No, I am
|
|
well, but I am a warrior. One is never certain..." Jeremy leaned back and
|
|
looked at Alexander, who shrugged.
|
|
Worf pointed at the card on his desk. "This storage device contains a
|
|
copy of my wishes, should I be rendered..." He paused, out of distaste for
|
|
the subject. "Useless." He pressed a button on his computer and began
|
|
playing a copy of the living will.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
The room was dark, except for an old fashioned lamp sitting on a night
|
|
table. It shed its faint light throughout the room. On the walls were
|
|
paintings - real ones, not computer generated prints. The bed was an ancient
|
|
four-poster with real, hand-stitched quilts. A computer sat on a table in a
|
|
dark corner of the room, but it was covered up with piles of ancient books and
|
|
newspapers.
|
|
On the bed lay another relic. The venerable doctor who had served for
|
|
so many years on the Enterprise. NCC-1701, and then 1701-A. A half empty
|
|
bottle of Kentucky bourbon lay on the bed beside him. The nurses would have
|
|
blown a gasket, had they known.
|
|
"Damn that green-blooded sonofabitch."
|
|
Leonard 'Bones' McCoy lay on his back in the middle of the bed. The
|
|
wrinkles in his skin made it hard to tell if his eyes were even open, but he
|
|
was awake. These crevasses in his face were filled with bitter tears.
|
|
"Damn my own horse doctoring. What do I know, anymore, anyway." The
|
|
argument with the Klingon had revived long-buried pains.
|
|
After his father's death, McCoy had been possessed, obsessed with
|
|
helping people, any and every way he could. What did that get him? He had
|
|
been mind-raped by Sybok, and imprisoned at Rura Penthe by the Klingons. He
|
|
had fought with the last of his outdated medical skills as Jim lay dying. Now
|
|
he was living out the last of his days surrounded by halfwit nurses. But to
|
|
this doctor who had seen death in many forms over the years, it was better
|
|
than the alternative.
|
|
He threw his legs off the bed and sat up with a groan. Opening a drawer
|
|
on his night table, he dropped the whiskey bottle in the drawer and stood up.
|
|
McCoy stumbled over to the computer table and began shuffling through the
|
|
papers and books. Where was it. He knew it was here somewhere. Suddenly he
|
|
saw the cracked corner of the book. When he picked it up, the papers slid off
|
|
the desk and cascaded to the ground.
|
|
Hugging the book close to his chest, he sidled back to the bed. He
|
|
examined the book. The gold letters had long since rubbed off of the cover,
|
|
and the corners of the cover were frayed. He opened it carefully to the leaf
|
|
page. 'To the best Doctor in the galaxy, from your friend, Jim.' McCoy
|
|
looked over to the photograph of Jim Kirk that sat on his night table.
|
|
Returning his attention to the book, he held it by it's binding and let
|
|
it fall open to an often read villanelle:
|
|
|
|
Do not go gentle into that good night,
|
|
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
|
|
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
|
|
|
|
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
|
|
Because their words had forked no lightning they
|
|
Do not go gentle into that good night.
|
|
|
|
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
|
|
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
|
|
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
|
|
|
|
Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
|
|
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
|
|
Do not go gentle into that good night.
|
|
|
|
Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
|
|
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
|
|
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
|
|
|
|
And you, my father, there on the sad height,
|
|
Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
|
|
Do not go gentle into that good night.
|
|
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
The room was dark, except for a solitary light strip on the ceiling. It
|
|
shed its faint light throughout the room. On the walls were paintings - not
|
|
originals, of course, but tasteful computer generated prints. A computer sat
|
|
on a table in the center of the room, it's screen showing a photograph of a
|
|
woman and a child.
|
|
On the bed lay a young man. The bright Chief Engineer who served on the
|
|
latest of a long line of proud vessels, Enterprise. NCC-1701-D. Lying beside
|
|
him was an intricate device that allowed the man to see. On his temples, a
|
|
pair of optical input ports blinked rhythmically. The young man slept.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
<Deanna, dear. I think you're neglecting that young man of yours."
|
|
<I have certainly not neglected Will, mother! I've just been busy with
|
|
Geordi for the last few days.>
|
|
Lwaxana and Deanna sat in an open air cafe watching the people move back
|
|
and forth on the sidewalks of San Francisco. Despite the crowds, Deanna could
|
|
allow herself the luxury of relaxing and allowing her mental shields to fall.
|
|
Her mother was more than capable of protecting Deanna from the chaotic
|
|
thoughts of the masses. To any onlookers it would appear that the two were
|
|
quietly sitting in the morning sun, but they were really having one of their
|
|
frequent conversations.
|
|
<When was the last time you were alone with him for any length of time?>
|
|
<Last night, in fact.>
|
|
Lwaxana smiled. <Oh, really! Did it go well?>
|
|
<Actually, we were interrupted by Geordi. He came to talk about his
|
|
mother.> Deanna frowned, realizing what her mother was talking about. <Will
|
|
did say that he had some things to talk about.>
|
|
<What could Geordi have possibly had to say that was so important that
|
|
he had to interrupt you and Will?>
|
|
<Mother! You know I can't...MOTHER!>
|
|
The smile on Lwaxana's face slid off. She had just inadvertently read
|
|
directly through Deanna's lowered mental shields into the part of her mind
|
|
that held topics that she considered confidential.
|
|
"Deanna, I'm so sorry. I didn't mean to pry." The look on her face
|
|
begged for forgiveness.
|
|
"That's alright, mother" Said Deanna. She did forgive her mother, but
|
|
still began slowly raising her mental shields once again, almost unaware of
|
|
doing it.
|
|
"I didn't know about Geordi's mother. I'm terribly sorry."
|
|
"Mother, I really can't discuss Geordi's private business with you.
|
|
That would violate his trust in me." The two sat in silence for a few
|
|
moments. Lwaxana seemed to be disturbed by more than the mental slip.
|
|
Finally her eyes became misty and she spoke softly.
|
|
"I never told you about Timicin's Resolution. It seemed to really touch
|
|
his family deeply. I'm afraid they did not think very highly of me for trying
|
|
to interfere." Deanna suddenly realized the memories that had just been
|
|
stirred up in her mother.
|
|
The thought of 'mercy killing' had caused her to remember Timicin again.
|
|
She had fallen in love with the scientist just before he had been forced to
|
|
end his life by his people's customary 'Resolution.' This was done in mercy,
|
|
so they claimed, to allow the individual to die in dignity and to prevent him
|
|
from becoming a burden to society.
|
|
<Mother...> Deanna allowed the wall around her mind to crumble again.
|
|
Lwaxana smiled faintly and mother and daughter embraced mentally, sharing the
|
|
experience completely for the first time.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Geordi woke up and groped for his VISOR. He had fallen asleep thinking
|
|
about what Deanna had said. He knew she was right. His mother would want him
|
|
to be his own man, and to be strong. Strong like her. He looked back to the
|
|
computer at the picture of he and his mother holding hands. He had just
|
|
played a successful baseball game and she was so proud of him. Imagine that -
|
|
a blind boy playing baseball. He smiled at the memory.
|
|
"Computer discontinue images and rearchive."
|
|
The computer chimed its acknowledgement as Geordi made his way to the
|
|
bathroom to get cleaned up. After a long, hot shower, he stood in his
|
|
dressing room looking into the mirror. Actually, his VISOR was directed at
|
|
the mirror, but he was looking inward.
|
|
"Mother, I know now what I have to do. You want to be strong again, but
|
|
you know the doctors don't think you can. I love you mom. I have to let you
|
|
go." He could almost hear her speaking back to him. Reassuring him that this
|
|
was the right decision. He could see her face in his minds eye. She was so
|
|
proud of him. Geordi finished dressing and left to tell the doctors his
|
|
decision.
|
|
He did not beam directly to Starfleet Medical. Instead he had himself
|
|
beamed to the park that adjoined the hospital. After a mind clearing walk, he
|
|
arrived at the Hospital. He went directly to Dr. Pulaski's office but she was
|
|
not to be found. He walked up to the nearest computer terminal.
|
|
"Computer, where is Dr. Kate Pulaski."
|
|
"Dr. Pulaski is in the Life Support ward. Twenty-seventh floor."
|
|
Geordi rode the turbolift to the twenty-seventh floor. When the door
|
|
whooshed open he just stood there, lost in thought. Finally the turbolift
|
|
asked for a destination and Geordi snapped out of his reverie. He took a deep
|
|
breath and headed for the ward. Just as he got there, Dr Pulaski stepped out
|
|
of the door. She looked disappointed when he told her, but she nodded and
|
|
turned back into the room.
|
|
Geordi stood at the side of the tank as Dr. Pulaski disconnected the
|
|
mechanisms that kept Mrs. LaForge alive. He nodded and thanked her as she
|
|
turned to leave. He thought he saw a tear roll down her cheek as she turned
|
|
to leave Geordi with his dying mother.
|
|
He didn't know how long he stood there before he felt the touch of a
|
|
hand on his shoulder. The grip was strong and reassuring. He turned around
|
|
to find the aged face of Admiral McCoy.
|
|
"Son. I know how this has been on you." His eyes sparkled in such a
|
|
way that Geordi knew that the old man was right. Strangely, this old man
|
|
seemed to understand even better than Deanna Troi what he had gone through.
|
|
The old man held something out to Geordi. It was an ancient book. Geordi had
|
|
seen books like this only a couple of times in his life.
|
|
"I want you to have this. It was given to me when I was hurting like
|
|
you are now. It'll do more good in your hands than mine." Geordi looked like
|
|
he was going to refuse the extremely valuable gift, but McCoy shook it at him.
|
|
"Go on, boy. I've got the damn thing memorized anyway."
|
|
Geordi took the book reverently and examined it. The gold lettering had
|
|
almost completely rubbed off of the cover. He opened the cover and discovered
|
|
that the first page had been ripped out. On the title page, however, there
|
|
was a message written in a careful script handwriting.
|
|
|
|
From a grave man, near death, who sees with blinding
|
|
sight
|
|
|
|
To a blind man, whose eyes can still blaze like
|
|
meteors and be gay.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
In the newly repaired engineering room of the Enterprise, the engineers
|
|
stood at attention as the Captain and Chief Engineers inspected the repairs
|
|
and cleanup.
|
|
"Well, Lt. Commander LaForge, it appears that your people have done an
|
|
exemplary job." Captain Picard smiled at the group of engineers and at the
|
|
Chief Engineer.
|
|
"It seems, however, that I have other business here in the Engineering
|
|
room of our Enterprise." Captain Picard slowly moved down the line of
|
|
uncomfortable looking engineers. He stopped when he stood in front of
|
|
Reginald Barclay.
|
|
"Lt. Barclay, I am told that you supervised the installation of the new
|
|
Navigational Deflector Arrays."
|
|
"Yuh, -uh- I... Yes Sir." Barclay looked like he least wanted to be
|
|
here.
|
|
"And that they have been tested and are fully operational."
|
|
"Yes S-Sir"
|
|
"And that during the unfortunate accident you performed well and saved
|
|
the life of Lt. Gomez."
|
|
"Well, I..." Barclay didn't know what to say to that one. He stole a
|
|
glance down the line at Gomez, who smiled at him. He blushed and turned back
|
|
to the Captain.
|
|
"Well done, Barclay, well done indeed." Picard smiled and shook
|
|
Barclays hand. The engineer almost fainted. LaForge clapped his appreciation
|
|
for Barclay, and the rest of the engineers took his lead and joined in.
|
|
Picard dismissed the group and they huddled around Barclay clapping him
|
|
on the back and congratulating him on having gotten to shake the Captains
|
|
hand. As the group was dispersing, Barclay spotted Gomez through the crowd.
|
|
He seemed hesitant, but Geordi patted him on the shoulder and encouraged
|
|
him and he moved over toward her. She grinned at him and limped over to meet
|
|
him. She hooked her arm around his elbow and grinned
|
|
"I seem to be having some difficulty walking on my own, Reg. Would you
|
|
mind terribly, helping me back to my quarters?"
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
Riker was sitting in his quarters when Deanna came by. They seated
|
|
themselves on the Commander's couch and Deanna began talking.
|
|
"Will, I'm sorry I've been so busy with Geordi. He has really had a
|
|
rough time this week. You said you had some things on your mind. Tell me
|
|
about them."
|
|
"I can't tell you." Riker looked mischievous.
|
|
"Why not, Will? You have always been able to talk to me before."
|
|
"It can't be told. Not with words."
|
|
Deanna had been probing his mind, trying to detect some clue as to the
|
|
reason for his strange mood. Suddenly she felt his mind open up and her
|
|
consciousness almost fell into his. He smiled and reached out for her hand.
|
|
She returned the smile and pulled him closer.
|
|
"Oh, Imzadi!"
|
|
Back on Earth, Lwaxana Troi sat sipping coffee in her suite. She
|
|
smiled.
|
|
|