RETRIEVAL
RATED R
DISCLAIMER: Paramount owns the characters and the premise
behind Star Trek.
Based on Nemesis and Unforgettable
The corridor was quiet and empty in the
early hours of the morning for which Kathryn was grateful. There was nothing wrong with playing a quick
game of hover ball with her First Officer, of course, but she didn't
particularly want to be seen out of uniform, hot, sweaty and disheveled. Chakotay had beaten
her soundly. He walked beside her now,
dark face flushed with the exertion but not so obviously out of breath as
she. They stepped into the turbolift and
Kathryn leaned over slightly, one hand against the wall and the other clutching
her racquet. Chakotay
cast a glance her way.
'I think you overdid it, Kathryn.'
'I did nothing of the kind. I'm absolutely...fine, Chakotay,'
said Kathryn, wheezing. She tried
desperately to regulate and slow her breathing in order to keep from him the
fact that all she wanted to do at the moment was sit down.
'No you're not,' he countered. He gestured
to her throat. 'May I?'
She nodded at his upraised hand. He placed two gentle fingers on her carotid
artery and silently counted for a minute.
'You need to build up your cardiovascular system. Your pulse rate feels like the warp core - at warp nine.' He removed his fingers from her neck,
resisting the urge to brush her hair back from her face as he did so.
'There have been times it was
higher...and without...the benefit of exercise,' she panted.
'I can imagine. I've been urging you to spend more time on
the calisthenics programs, but whenever I suggest it, you're always too busy.'
'I accepted...your invitation...this
time.'
'Playing a game only now and then isn't
going to help you. You need exercise on
a regular basis. You were working to
improve your tennis game there for a while.
What happened to that?'
She leaned back against the turbolift
wall and dabbed at her sweaty brow with the small hand towel she carried in her
belt. 'Too much work to do, Chakotay.'
'Delegate more of it to me. That's what I'm here for,' he chided gently.
'Duly noted. I'll try to load you down with
responsibilities to keep your mind off hover ball for a while, at least,' she
grinned at him.
The turbolift doors opened to the
officers' quarters. 'See you on the
bridge in one hour, Commander,' she said as she headed off in the direction of
her private suite.
~ ~ ~
B'Elanna Torres entered the bridge at
the same moment as the Captain. Chakotay was already seated, scanning his chairside monitor.
'Yes, B'Elanna, what is it?' Janeway asked her Chief Engineer.
'I have good news, Captain - we've
completed repairs on the shuttles that were salvaged, and we rebuilt four with
parts from those beyond repair. There
were quite a few, as you recall.'
Janeway
nodded, her eyebrow cocked in a quirky expression as she recalled just how
many, indeed.
'Go on.'
B'Elanna's
reply was short. 'We need a test pilot.'
Janeway
cast a quick glance at Tom Paris. He was
undoubtedly the best pilot on board, and the area of space they were traversing
was unremarkable; vast and empty. Still,
she preferred him to remain at the helm rather than perform routine tests on
equipment repaired by B'Elanna's competent crew. Besides, from the way he shrunk down in his
chair, he didn't seem to be in the mood to volunteer.
B'Elanna, almost as if reading her
mind, said, 'You know who the second best pilot is, Captain. May I borrow him?'
Janeway
turned to Chakotay who sat expectantly awaiting her
orders. 'Looks like
he's eager for the job. You have
him, B'Elanna. Chakotay,
report to the shuttle bay.'
With a quick 'Aye, Captain!' Chakotay accompanied B'Elanna to the turbolift.
~ ~ ~
The small craft darted out of Voyager's
shuttlebay doors and veered a short distance away
from the ship. In preliminary maneuvers,
it darted here and there, turning, stopping, diving and soaring. Then it paused for a moment before shooting
off into space at warp speed.
So far, Chakotay
had put three of the rebuilt shuttles through a similar trial run and had found
them stable and in perfect working order, even at warp. It soon became apparent that this one wasn't
going to follow suit. Warp four had been
successfully sustained, but as the speed now diminished the shuttle began to
lurch. Chakotay
slowed and banked the vessel for the return trip, checking systems as he did
so. At full impulse, the stabilizers
failed, spiraling the small vessel out of
control. Chakotay
brought the tiny craft to a halt and tried hailing Voyager. Silence greeted him. He tried his own comm badge to no avail.
'Great,' he said to the shuttle. 'Why couldn't you reveal your flaws a little
closer to the ship?'
He wasn't unduly worried; he was within
Voyager's scans and they would come after him when he didn't return in the
expected time. Suddenly, the helm went
dark and one by one, every system in the ship shut down, save life
support. His hands danced over the
controls, none of which responded. It
didn't make sense. He trusted B'Elanna's work implicitly; even if she hadn't personally
done the repairs, she always closely supervised the work. Unless...
He peered through the helm window. What was that bearing down on him from the
distance? No way to tell with nothing on
scans and all systems down. He could do
nothing but watch the object approach.
It was a third the size of Voyager and moved swiftly and silently toward
him. Something like a tractor beam
emerged from the bottom of the inverted, conical object, reaching for the
shuttle like a bolt of lightning.
It hit before he could react, bathing
the shuttle in white-hot light, gripping it like a giant claw and whisking it
along several lightyears past the shuttle's testing
range. The light vanished, and the beam
released the shuttle. Inside, Chakotay sat stunned and unmoving, no longer aware of
anything, least of all the purple haze surrounding him. His atoms were disbursed and carried into the
matterstream of the alien transfer beam. He materialized lying on a softly carpeted
floor. The vessel silently whooshed away,
leaving the shuttle dark, silent and adrift in space.
~ ~ ~
On the bridge, Janeway
tapped her comm badge, smiling. 'How are the test runs coming, B'Elanna?'
That's
right, Captain, call before I can report, thought B'Elanna in
irritation. Her report would have to go
through now, ready or not. She had hoped
for more time. She took a deep breath.
'The tests were fine,
Captain - but - something's apparently gone wrong. Chakotay's last run is overdue.'
'How much overdue?' The Captain didn't sound worried - yet - just
concerned.
'It's been almost half an hour; I was
going to give him a little more time before I notified you.'
'Hail the shuttle, Mr. Kim,' Janeway ordered.
'Aye, Captain.' Several moments passed, while Janeway stared at Kim, waiting. He repeated the hail three times. 'No reply, Captain,’ he
reported.
'B'Elanna, which shuttle was being
tested?' asked Janeway through the comm.
'The Sacajawea, Captain. It
tested out in the pre-flight check and the comm system was working
perfectly. I don't know what could have
gone wrong.'
'Apparently something went wrong, or he wouldn't be late. Mr. Kim - begin long range scans for that
shuttle.'
'Aye, Captain...'
~ ~ ~
Soft,
muted lights with a pinkish cast over everything.
Soft pillows cradling his reclining body, indistinct, musically metallic
sounds in the background, hunger and thirst!
These sensations meander through Chakotay's mind as he slowly comes back
to awareness after two days of oblivion.
He sits up, grimacing as pain lances through his head. His body is speaking volumes, but his mind is
almost a blank. He looks down at his
hands, disoriented. As if he were
intoxicated, he rises slowly, looking in all directions. The circular room adds to his
disorientation. Something grabs his
attention and holds it long enough for him to walk unsteadily toward it. On bare feet he walks across the fluffy floor
to a shiny reflective surface on the wall.
He peers at the face of the man staring back: dark skin, black, stiffly
straight hair, full lips. His fingers
glide over the unfamiliar features. What
is this marking?! His mind screams with
the new awareness that he does not know himself. He has faint, vague memories and instincts,
but cannot grasp the situation well enough to make sense of it before a section
of the wall dissolves to admit a humanoid being.
He
stands expectantly, hoping for answers from this being. He has not lost the power of speech, but at
the moment he can't call up words. The
being is female, slender, willowy, and petite.
Light hair cascades down her back.
A delicate, horizontal ridge adorns her forehead, almost at the
hairline. Her skin is an odd color: very
pale, like the cream she poured into his coffee in her ready room, joking that
it was the finest organic suspension in the galaxy...but sparkly, like the
cubes of sugar that accompanied it... He
closes his eyes and shakes his head; the brief flash of memory has come and
gone. She is speaking in an unknown
tongue. Another vague memory stirs and
he taps his chest automatically, where once a tight uniform covered him and a
Universal Translator would have allowed him to understand her language. Now nothing but soft material draped over his
shoulders and belted at the waist. Short
panels of material continue below the belt and fall front and back. He is examining his clothing distractedly,
obviously not listening to her. She
understands, and triggers a key on her belt.
Now her language is recognizable, but understanding the language and
understanding everything else are two different things. He looks at her quizzically. She smiles and takes him by the hand and
leads him to the resting pad.
They
sit together and she hums to him while she opens a small container and extracts
a miniature instrument. He is entranced
by the pleasant tone of her voice and makes no protest as the stinging probe
enters his temple. He winces at the
brief pain then relaxes. The headache
vanishes. An awareness dawns in his
mind, a knowledge. Now he
understands. He is here for one reason:
to be with her. She explains that she is
Kaia, Crown Princess of the Konoz
people. Her species does not live on
planets but in vessels very much like the one in which only the two of them now
travel. No servants or family reside
with them. The computer sees to all
operations. Her journey has been one of
seeking. Her father is Ruler of the Konoz and indulges his only child until the day she
succeeds him, which is expected to be soon, surely no more than five
measures. Her mother no longer exists,
for her life span fell short. Her
father’s only requirement is for her to be mated. It is for this reason she has embarked upon
this journey.
Kaia has been disappointed, for the journey
has not met her expectations. She has
spent many measures roaming the galaxy without finding a mate - until now. The loneliness has been
all-encompassing. Finally he has
arrived. He will provide her with what she
needs and will be with her upon her Coronation.
Kaia indicates that he may speak now but
hesitantly, he tells her he can't remember who he is. Such a mellow, soft voice he has! She hastens to reassure him.
'I
know, my newfound, but do not allow this to concern you. I have saved you from your servitude and from
the blackness outside. I will name you
to suit myself. You are mine, now, are
you not? For now, you are to rest, relax
and nourish yourself.'
A
gesture from her brings a floating automated tray to rest in front of him. She lifts the heavy lid, releasing fragrant
aromas of succulent food. His body takes
over and he begins to eat, ravenously.
She watches him, smiling and nodding, stroking his shoulder.
'I
am no longer alone, my newfound.’
~ ~
~
Three days passed with no sign of
Commander Chakotay.
Janeway, sick with worry, stood staring out of her ready room window. A forgotten cup of coffee was cooling on her
desk. Her ready room door chimed, and
distractedly, she barked a quick response, 'Yes?'
The doors parted and Tuvok paused at
the threshold, as if unsure whether to enter.
Shaking her head at her rare lapse and impatient of protocol for once,
she blurted out the question at the forefront of her mind: 'Has there been any
word at all from Chakotay?'
Tuvok entered,
padd in hand.
'Negative, Captain. We have
scanned five sectors and are in the process of charting a new area for long
range scans.'
'He's got to be out there somewhere,
Tuvok. There are no planetary systems
for lightyears in this sector - nothing that the
shuttle could have crashed on, not even an asteroid! He can't just have vanished!'
'There may be the possibility of an
undetected wormhole that could have taken the shuttle, Captain -- or some other
spatial anomaly of which we are not aware.
Then again, the shuttle may simply be adrift, beyond our scans. If that is the case, Captain, we will not
stop searching until we find it.'
She nodded briefly. 'Continue scanning - and I want reports on
the hour.'
'Aye, Captain.'
~
~ ~
Chakotay
stood in the center of the room while Kaia circled
him, nodding her approval at his appearance.
She had dressed him in the new fabric, striped in thin reds and soft
browns and flecked with glitter. The
garment lay in strips over both shoulders and crossed at the navel, where a
wide belt held it closed at the sides.
From there the wide panels dropped to mid-thigh. Soft, leather-like boots were laced to the
knee. She smoothed the rich material
over his broad back, her hands gliding down his bare arms, then stood back and
admired her handiwork.
'These colors suit you, Kalig. Do you
agree?'
Chakotay
turned before the large reflective surface that rose from the floor. His hand brushed the front of the velvety
material that sparkled gently in the light.
'It's a handsome garment, Kaia...' He smiled
suddenly and crossed the floor to her, taking her face in his hands. 'You have done so much for me - you saved me
from the blackness outside - gave me food, drink - love - why? When I can't even tell you who I am?'
'But I know who you are, my newfound.
You are Kalig, my dark one, are you not? You have liked being here with me,
then?' Her fingers traced the strange
set of markings over his eye that never failed to intrigue her. He kissed her gently, lightly, over her
cheeks, her chin and finally her lips.
He held his face close to hers.
'I never want to leave,' he murmured.
'You never will. We will have measures and measures together.'
He swept her into his arms and spun her
around, his heart soaring with joy.
'Tell me. Have I always been in
love with you?'
'Since first we met,' she answered
truthfully, coyly. Her arms went around
his neck and her kisses set him on fire.
A few steps brought them to the resting pad, where they fell together on
the soft cushions, first playfully wrestling, laughing then lapsing into a
tense silence after which the only sounds that echoed through the ship were the
groans of passion...
~ ~ ~
It
is the normal sleep period on the Konoz vessel, and Chakotay is dreaming.
He walks through a multi-colored swirl of maroons and golds and blues, which finally coalesce into patterns. These become the images of people lined up on
either side of him as he walks down a long corridor. The colors settle on their shoulders and everything
else is black except for the floor and walls.
All of this is vaguely familiar somehow; and the faces he sees in
passing are somehow recognizable. He
senses a bond between himself and these beings - a closeness
- a yearning. He misses them. How could he miss them if he doesn't know
them? Far ahead, one of them steps out of
the line and stands directly in his path.
He advances between the human walls, looking right and left, then
halts. There she is in front of him - a
small one with reddish hair pulled high, four little round decorations on her
collar, standing with arms akimbo and frowning at him. What the hell is she calling him on the
carpet for now?
'Awaken, my
newfound.'
His mind instantly emptied itself of
the disturbing dream at her touch and he reached for his one with both arms,
pulling her down to him, enveloping her in a tight embrace. He was filled with joy at the anticipation of
yet another union. Her hands slid under
his tunic and he released the fastenings at her shoulders, letting the pale
gown slip down to the floor. Rising from
the soft cushions, he leaned forward to caress her, burying his face in her
soft flesh. She watched him, enjoying
the contrast of his skin against hers, and the long strands of pale hair
falling about his dark face.
Such lovely sculptured lips, nothing
like any of her species, who were so delicately featured and so
uninteresting! His brow and chin were
strong; the black hair made him look invincible. The fabrics in which she clothed him suited
him so well - dark greens, browns and an occasional scarlet. The usual pale colors issued by the textile
generator did not suit him. She kept him
in the togas, although many other masculine styles were certainly available in
the databanks. She simply liked the
simplicity of this style, which revealed much of his powerful physique and allowed
her easy access to his body whenever she wanted - which was frequent. He never refused.
She marveled again at her good
fortune! The long, lonely measures and
futile search were at last over. It was
but a small concern to avoid the searches of the large ship and keep him on the
medication after the initial probe; otherwise he could slowly regain the prior
identity. Being telepathic, she was
aware that it threatened to surface in his deepest sleep, and she hoped steady
doses of medication and hypnotic suggestions would annihilate it once and for
all.
Her musings were cut short, for his
mouth and hands were stimulating her beyond thought. Even in the hedonistic society in which she
lived, she had never before met anyone like him. His species must be incredible beings, for he
never ceased to take her breath with all the different ways he knew of giving
her pleasure. She cried softly when it
ended, and he looked at her worriedly, asking what was wrong.
'Nothing is wrong,' she assured
him. 'You give me great pleasure. I am already anticipating our next
union.' Now was a good time to cultivate
the theory of the dream, to explain away the prior identity still trying to surface. 'But I worry
about you, my newfound,' she confessed, 'when during those times when you are
in rest...sometimes you call to someone else.
Sometimes you speak out of your nightmare to her, as though she were
real. Am I falling short of pleasing
you, my newfound? Am I not everything a
woman could be to you? Am I not real,
and not a dream?'
He enveloped her in his arms. 'You are my reality and I love you,' he said,
running his hands through her hair. 'The
strange dreams I have been having will pass, for I will not allow them to
return to worry you.'
Satisfied, she kissed him, and they
clung tightly together to rest before the meal and their next union.
~ ~ ~
Janeway
paced her ready room. It had been over
three weeks, and in her heart she knew she might have to concede defeat - and
soon. She could not keep Voyager
circling forever, searching. She must
accept the fact that Chakotay - her First Officer,
her strong right arm and dearest friend - had been lost. How, she did not know. He had vanished as if a black hole had
swallowed him - a theory she had initially considered unlikely, but in all
probability now, as a fact. A
preliminary report for Starfleet records had already been drafted, recording
his disappearance and the unsuccessful steps taken to recover him. In it she had detailed his exemplary service,
and a eulogy for the anticipated memorial had been prepared. Tuvok had taken over as Acting First Officer,
and would be granted full promotion if...
The sound of the comm system startled
her. 'Captain - we've found Chakotay's
shuttle,' reported Harry. Black hole be damned!
she thought.
'I'm on my way!' Handing off the
bridge to Tuvok, she all but ran to the turbolift.
~ ~ ~
The
small vessel had been tractored in. B'Elanna was already completing the last of
the scans when Janeway arrived breathlessly in the
shuttle bay. 'What have you found,
B'Elanna?'
'This shuttle is in perfect working
order, Captain. Aside from some metal
fatigue, there's no indication of any malfunction.'
'Then what happened to it? Where is Chakotay?'
'I have a theory, Captain - a scan of
the systems, base metals and of the inside of the shuttle show energy
signatures of a type I've never seen before, but I'm certain of one thing -
this shuttle has been tampered with.
There are also faint energy signatures of some type of transporter. That plus the metal fatigue leads me to
believe the shuttle was pulled this far out of range and that Chakotay was beamed out of the shuttle.'
'Where?! By whom? And for what reason?'
'Captain – for now, these are
unanswerable questions. We're working on
it. With this new information, I can
recalibrate the long range sensors to look for these particular patterns. Don't worry, Captain. We'll find him.'
~ ~ ~
Chakotay
lay close beside Kaia, gazing up at the starfield
through the skylight in the conical ship, relaxed and content. The dreams and hallucinations that had
plagued him had all but ceased. He
believed himself to be Kalig, the dark one sent by
the blackness outside to be the one for Kaia, who
showered him with love and devotion.
These feelings he returned to her freely. The instinct he once had to suppress them -
in servitude to some faintly-remembered set of rules - he now dismissed, giving
himself to her with utter abandon. Here
was everything he could want. He wanted
no reminders of what might have been before.
Kaia
raised her head. The sound of the
musical chime signaling outside communication was so rarely heard; her ship was
being hailed. It could be her father,
but...suddenly wary, she rose, clothed herself, and stepped to the panel in the
wall while Chakotay watched from the resting pad,
puzzled.
The screen emerged from the wall and
flickered for a moment. Kaia sent adjustments through the circuits and the image
cleared. It was as she feared. She recognized the stern-faced woman with the
strange hair and red and black shoulders she had seen on the scans sent –
undetected - to the ship that had brought her Kalig. Despite her efforts, he had been traced! The translator sent the words in the Konoz language; the woman had comparable equipment to her
own. Cap-tain-Kath-ryn-Jane-way...Star-ship-Voy-ah-ger.
Chakotay
called to her to join him on the resting pad, but Kaia
gestured him to remain quiet. The woman
was speaking again, at once with impeccable courtesy yet with an edge to her voice,
as if she were angry.
'I am looking for a member of my
crew. Our sensors show he is aboard your
ship. May I speak with him?'
Kaia
haughtily glanced from the screen to Chakotay and
back again. Mystified, he rose from the
bed and came to stand close behind her, in range of the viewer. Janeway breathed a
sigh of relief to see him alive after so long and apparently in the best of
health. But had he been rescued or
kidnapped? The pale woman merely stood
there, refusing to speak, so Janeway addressed Chakotay directly.
'Chakotay! We thought we'd lost you. Stand by - we'll beam you over with a
skeletal lock.'
A look of utter confusion passed over
his face and Janeway's blood ran cold at his words. 'Do I know you? Kaia, what is
this? Explain this to me.'
Janeway
studied his eyes and facial expression.
Not a flicker of recognition could she detect. Not
only the shuttle was tampered with, she
thought. She watched him glance down at
the silent alien and heard him whisper in her ear. 'Is
this anything to concern ourselves with?' Kaia had remained
silent through the brief exchange but now shook her head as if to reassure him,
glaring defiantly at the viewscreen. Janeway saw him
slide his arms around the pale alien and hold her close, ignoring the woman in
black and red, burying his face in Kaia's hair. The look in his eyes disturbed Janeway, for there was an expression in them she had never
seen before; a mindless look of utter peace and contentment as she had once
observed on Molly’s face: Molly, her
Irish Setter, lying in front of a blazing fire.
Kaia
gave Janeway a sidelong glance and finally
spoke: 'You apparently have found the
incorrect person, Cap-tain-Kath-ryn.' Janeway saw her
turn into Chakotay's arms; watched as his hands strafed the alien, kissing her
passionately before the screen went blank.
Tuvok, impervious to the blatant
sexuality portrayed on the screen, spoke up, anticipating Janeway's
command. 'She has some unfamiliar
technology, but most of her systems are comparable to ours, Captain - and she
has no weaponry to speak of. I believe
she would be unable to prevent us from beaming aboard to retrieve the
Commander.'
Janeway
stood staring at the empty viewscreen for a moment,
then began barking orders.
'Tom, you have the conn. Tuvok, you're with me. I'm going over there now.'
~ ~ ~
A moment later, the two officers
materialized in front of the couple, still standing locked together, oblivious
to their newly-come visitors. Tuvok's brow went up and Janeway
cleared her throat. Kaia
pulled herself away from Chakotay to harshly address
the intruders.
'Begone! You were not invited here!'
'Chakotay?'
asked Janeway softly to him, ignoring the alien.
He stared at her for a brief moment, then spoke to Kaia. 'What is happening?'
Kaia
was furious at the intrusion. Never in
all the measures would she have thought this woman would simply appear to
intrude on their privacy! She spoke
haughtily to Janeway.
'I said begone! You cannot have him! He is mine!
He is my one!'
Tuvok calmly approached Chakotay, tricorder in hand. The indications on the unit clearly showed a
mind wipe and drug intervention.
'Commander, do you know who you are?' asked Tuvok.
'I do,' replied Chakotay. 'I am Kalig, Kaia's one. She is
to be Ruler in five measures and I will be with her.'
'You are Commander Chakotay
of the Starship Voyager. You have been
subjected to mind manipulation by this woman.
We are here to return you to our ship.'
'No,' said Chakotay
firmly. 'I must remain here. I'm in love with Kaia. I'm her one, chosen for her when she brought
me in from the blackness outside.' Chakotay approached Kaia from
behind and wrapped his arms around her.
‘I do not know either of you. Do
as she bids and leave us.’
Tuvok and Janeway
exchanged a glance. She spoke to Kaia. 'I think
understand what has happened here. You
needed a mate, didn't you? I can see
that he hasn't been mistreated; on the contrary - you seem to have made him
exceptionally happy. However - I cannot
allow him to remain here with you. This
isn't right.'
'Why not, if he is
content to stay with me?
He is mine. You heard him. He wants to stay.'
'That isn't the issue. He's being manipulated by you. He didn’t choose this. You chose it for him. He belongs with his own kind.'
'You may once have owned him, but he is
no longer yours. How could he be of your
species? He looks like none of those on
your ship! He can easily be mine as
yours!'
'So you've been monitoring us.'
'Yes, trying to avoid your searches to
keep him with me. I know what he is to
you. Nothing more than a servant,' she
sneered.
'I assure you, Kaia,
Chakotay is not a servant. He is second in command of my ship. He is much more to me - to all of us - than
he could ever be to you. And he doesn't
look like us because our species is made up of many different races. Tuvok is of yet another species - Vulcan -
which is also represented in many races, many colors. Chakotay is human,
like myself and several others aboard our ship. He is of a race from far away; he represents
the only one of his kind in this part of the galaxy. He is a unique individual. And...he belongs
with us.'
'He does not want to leave.'
'Not with your mind-altering
treatments, I'm sure. Keeping him here
under these circumstances is a criminal act according to our society.'
'You have many others to take his
place. He's the only one I want! I am royalty,
Cap-tain-Jane-way.
I will have him for my own!'
'I'm sorry, but you will not.
Royalty has nothing to do with it.
Tuvok, now!'
During the debate, Tuvok had slowly
circled behind Chakotay and now locked an arm around
his neck. Chakotay
struggled violently, but could not break the hold of the powerful Vulcan. He reached for Kaia
with both arms even as she reached for him, wailing her anguish, but Janeway pulled her back.
Tuvok administered his paralyzing pinch at the top of the shoulder and Chakotay dropped to the floor. Tuvok knelt beside him and tapped his comm
badge. 'Voyager! Two to beam directly to
sickbay!'
Kaia
screamed as she watched Chakotay vanish along with
the stern black being into a swirl of light.
Powerless, Kaia
turned to Janeway, tears of defeat streaming down her
cheeks.
'I'm sorry, Kaia,'
said Janeway, almost kindly. 'You will have to find someone else to fill
your life.'
'He was happy here; he made me
happy. I needed him. He was my newfound.'
'Believe it or not, Kaia
- I need him far more than you, and in ways you can't possibly imagine - or
understand.' With that, Janeway tapped her comm badge. 'Voyager - energize.'
Kaia
sank down in her rich fabric and sobbed uncontrollably. The last faint words of Janeway
could be heard echoing from the transporter beam, 'I'm sorry...'
~ ~ ~
Janeway
immediately ordered a force field erected around the ship to prevent further
interference from Kaia. At Warp Nine, Voyager soon outdistanced the Konoz vessel.
Breathing a sigh of relief, she headed for sickbay.
The EMH hovered around the biobed on
which Chakotay lay naked under a thermal cover. Janeway entered and
stood close by the biobed, her hand resting on Chakotay's chest. 'What can be
done for him, Doctor?'
'I've had to induce a coma in order for
his brain to heal. The effects of the
drugs will diminish now that he's not getting any more, but the initial mind
sweep burned parts of his brain, including the memory center. I'm infusing fresh brain cells from a
previous DNA sample. It may take some
time, but I believe the Commander's memory can be restored.' The Doctor showed Janeway
the monitor indicating Chakotay's brain patterns. Clearly marked were several dark areas,
notably in the frontal lobe.
The Doctor continued in his usual
pedantic manner. 'Unfortunately, at the
moment, Commander Chakotay still believes himself to
be Kalig, the dark one. He was demanding to be returned to Kaia. Given time and
proper treatment, however, and the familiarity of being back on board, he
should be able to reorient himself.'
'Thank you, Doctor.' The EMH stepped away and Janeway
leaned over the still form on the biobed.
'Come back to me, Chakotay,'
she whispered into his ear, 'I need you.'
~ ~ ~
Janeway
enlisted the help of the entire crew to work with Chakotay. After several months of treatment and reorientation,
Chakotay had regained much of his memory. The Doctor at last pronounced him fit for
command and he assumed his duties almost as if nothing had happened. He had of course been briefed on the basics
of the incident, of which he remembered virtually nothing. Janeway thought it
best to keep from him the details, which the Doctor feared would trigger a
relapse.
Chakotay
walked with her to the bridge after the final visit to sickbay. 'We thought we had lost you for good,
Commander,' Janeway remarked. 'We're all glad you're back.'
'Good to be back, Captain - although
the last thing I remember was being stranded after that last test run. Were you able to recover the shuttle?'
'Yes, Tom brought it in.'
'Good.
I think I'll let him take over any more test runs!' Janeway grinned at
the familiar wit, thankful for his return to the ship and to himself.
~ ~ ~
His hoverball
game certainly hadn't suffered, Janeway thought
wryly, as he continued to trounce her at every opportunity. She hadn't yet found time for a steady
regimen of exercise, and her lack of stamina still cost her dearly. He took charge of this, as he had so many
other things, by assigning Tuvok the bridge and taking her, protesting, to the holodeck for calisthenics.
Tuvok frowned at this breach of protocol, but Janeway
waved it off. She was too glad to have
him back, touched by his loyalty and devotion, which seemed not to have been
lost but somehow enhanced by his experience.
The old camaraderie was back in full force, and Janeway
again found herself leaning on his steady presence.
Sitting and chatting with Janeway over coffee in her ready room had become a frequent
part of his treatment, a practice that continued even after Chakotay
had fully recovered. However, on rare
occasion, he would grow silent and stare blankly at the pale cream and sparkles
of sugar with which she laced his cup. Kaia!
Then the coffee would assume golden
smoothness, the brief vision would vanish, and he would continue the
conversation as if nothing had happened.
These brief interludes of blank silence
would signal Janeway that he was still, deep within
himself, struggling with the false identity.
He was perhaps remembering on a subconscious level, his time on the Konoz ship, forcibly kidnapped and under the influence of
mind-altering drugs - true, but so in deeply in love with Kaia
and happier than she'd ever seen him.
She had always stood by her actions,
but at such times she would idly wonder if retrieving him had been the right
thing to do. Was her need of him worth
more than his happiness? Could their
close friendship, warm and satisfying though it was, ever ripen into love? Could that love ever compare with what he had
had with Kaia?
Could she ever give him that kind of contentment? Could anyone?
The End