Received: from [66.218.66.28] by n23.grp.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 07 Jun 2004 03:27:57 -0000 X-Sender: stephen@trekiverse.org X-Apparently-To: ascl@yahoogroups.com Received: (qmail 91953 invoked from network); 7 Jun 2004 03:27:55 -0000 Received: from unknown (66.218.66.167) by m22.grp.scd.yahoo.com with QMQP; 7 Jun 2004 03:27:55 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO falcon.mail.pas.earthlink.net) (207.217.120.74) by mta6.grp.scd.yahoo.com with SMTP; 7 Jun 2004 03:27:55 -0000 Received: from sdn-ap-022dcwashp0064.dialsprint.net ([63.191.160.64]) by falcon.mail.pas.earthlink.net with smtp (Exim 3.33 #1) id 1BXAne-0001cW-00 for ascl@yahoogroups.com; Sun, 06 Jun 2004 20:27:51 -0700 To: ascl@yahoogroups.com Organization: Alt.StarTrek.Creative Virtual Staff Office Message-ID: X-Mailer: Forte Agent 1.92/32.572 X-eGroups-Remote-IP: 207.217.120.74 X-eGroups-From: Stephen From: Stephen X-Yahoo-Profile: oldmanasc MIME-Version: 1.0 Mailing-List: list ASCL@yahoogroups.com; contact ASCL-owner@yahoogroups.com Delivered-To: mailing list ASCL@yahoogroups.com Precedence: bulk List-Unsubscribe: Date: Sun, 06 Jun 2004 23:26:41 -0400 Subject: [ASC] NEW TOS: The Lost Years: Dirty Secrets 2/3 [PG-13] Slayer Series Reply-To: ASCL-owner@yahoogroups.com Content-Type: text/plain; charset=US-ASCII Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit X-ELNK-AV: 0 Forwarded by the ASC-VSO Posted: 5 Jun 2004 19:43:03 -0700 In: alt.startrek.creative From: djinn@djinnslair.com (Djinn) TITLE: The Lost Years: Dirty Secrets (Slayer Series) AUTHOR: Djinn CONTACT: djinn@djinnslair.com http://www.djinnslair.com SERIES: TOS RATING: PG-13 CODES: Ch, K, U, Others PART: 2/3 SUMMARY: The eighth in the Lost Years series. Christine barreled out of the restaurant, could feel Jim close behind her. "Chris. You need to calm down." "You don't know what's at stake." She spun on him. "How can I? Neither of you have told me a thing." He touched her arm. "And you don't have to now. But just calm down and think rationally before you go charging off." She sighed. He was right. She took a deep breath, then another. "Better?" She nodded. "You hate to see suffering. I understand that. But she's safe for now. What are you going to do?" "I need to talk to LaVelle. I can't just hand over the keys to Kirsu." She fiddled with the necklace. He gently pulled her hand away. She realized what she had been doing and made a face. "No harm, no foul." He grinned. "Just looks a bit odd, playing with nothing." He started off, heading for the waterfront. "I presume we're bound for Tolvar's?" "Yes." He reached down for her hand, squeezed it gently. "We can't give in to emotion. Not where he's concerned. He'll read us too easily if we don't keep our cool. Okay?" She nodded. "You're better at that then I am. I tend to prefer opening a can of whup ass to keeping my cool." He laughed. "I haven't heard that expression for years." She smiled. Looked down at their joined hands and sighed. Soon this would be over. This touching, the sharing. Too soon. "Chris. Ow." She realized she was squeezing his hand really hard. She let go. He laughed ruefully as he rubbed at his hand. At her guilty look, he said, "No broken bones. Don't worry." He grinned. "But now I know how poor Carol felt." She laughed. "She had it coming." "I'm not sure she did. I make her nervous and angry. Just seeing me now seems to set her off." "Well, she needs to get over it." She didn't want to talk about Carol. She hadn't liked the way the other woman had looked at Jim. Yes, Carol been mad once Christine had appeared. But before? The look she'd seen on Carol's face hadn't looked like anger, so much as interest, and Christine had felt a brief moment of panic--the woman had a history with Jim that she could never share. When Christine had gone in all macho slayer and terrorized Carol and her hand, she'd been acting more territorial than Jim seemed to realize. Which was fine with her. He didn't need to know. She pushed Carol Marcus out of her mind and hurried through the small crowd to Tolvar's booth. It hadn't been easy telling him of Emma's sickness, but he'd nodded sadly, as if he had known it all along. And maybe he had, being psychic or so his sign claimed. He had spent a great deal of time with Emma during her last weeks, and it had been clear that he cared for her deeply. He looked up as they walked up. "Christine." He smiled at Kirk. "And Admiral." "It's just Jim here." Tolvar looked pleased. "Jim." Christine smiled. "I need to make a call again if you don't mind." He dug into his pocket, tossed her the keys. "Take your time." He gestured for Jim to sit. "I'll tell your fortune." Jim shook his head. "Thanks but no." "You don't want to know what your future holds?" Jim looked positively mournful as he said, "No." Tolvar shrugged. "Suit yourself." Christine headed for the storeroom, opening the door and locking it behind her. The portal was getting easier to call. She'd had no trouble with it the last time, when she'd taken LaVelle's dress back. The brightness of the Kirsu sun was a shock after the cool darkness of San Francisco. Two slayers were sitting on the steps talking when Christine stepped out of the portal. One of them ran inside, came back out followed by LaVelle. "I need to talk to you," Christine said. "Well, come in then." Christine shook her head. "Can we walk? I need to talk to you alone." LaVelle walked over to her. "All right." They moved away from the house. The day...or night--Christine wasn't completely sure what time it was in Kirsu--was warm with a light breeze. "Is it always like this? Pleasant. Sunny." LaVelle nodded. "How big is Kirsu?" "Why? Are you thinking of relocating?" Christine shot her a look. "No, I want to put in vacation rentals." LaVelle didn't laugh. "I know some people who need to get off Earth." "What kind of people?" "Well, they're humans," Christine said. "Most of the time." "And what are they the rest of the time?" "Werewolves." Christine turned to see LaVelle's expression. It was not a agreeable one. "How many of these mostly human people are you talking about?" Christine swallowed. "I'm not entirely sure. I think it would be much like with you and the slayers. When a new one was found..." "So potentially a lot." Christine nodded. '"Yes. A lot." She held out a hand to stop LaVelle's answer. "But they won't change into werewolves here. They'd be human the entire time." LaVelle shook her head. "Why do they need to come here? Can't they find somebody else's dimension?" "Why should they? If it's a whole dimension, surely there's room to share?" LaVelle took Christine by the arm and turned her. "What do you see?" Christine studied the landscape in front of her. "The house. The sky. Grass." She sniffed. "I can smell the sea." "Yes. I can too. I've never seen it." She pulled Christine back around. "Run with me." She took off, heading away from the house, loping easily through the grass, her long strides eating up ground. Christine followed her, her boots not the best for running but serviceable. It felt great to open up, to try to catch LaVelle. They ran for a long time. LaVelle turned her around. "What do you see?" The house was still in sight. As big as when they'd started running. "We don't understand it yet," LaVelle said softly. "We think that it opens up. That the more space we need, the more we get. But at the same time there is no space. We can run and run...all day, if we want. And when we turn around, the house will always be there." "I didn't know." LaVelle laughed. "Neither did we. We'd been fighting Anacost. For as long as I can remember, that was our life. We didn't have time to worry about how much space there was here or what Kirsu was really like. Now, we do. And a lot of us have gone exploring. But we never seem to get very far." Christine looked down. "I can't tell you that we'll live cheek to jowl with a bunch of werewolves when I'm not even sure yet that there's room for all of us. We're crowded in, Christine. We're going to try to build some new houses. Explore this place--if that's possible." Christine looked around. "You've never seen the sea?" "No. The smell's there. Sometimes so strong it makes me crazy with the need to find it. To see the water again, to splash in it, maybe swim. But I can't get to it." LaVelle sighed. "I'm sorry I can't tell you yes." "Well, not yet is better than no." "I think that might depend on your perspective." LaVelle sat down on a large rock, her back to the house. "And from the sound of it, these people you know are in a rush to get here?" Christine sighed. How was she going to tell Lori that she'd have to wait? "You're not wrong." She sat down in the grass. "They'll just have to wait. Or find another solution to their problem." LaVelle studied her. "I thought you'd argue with me." Christine shook her head. "Your way of illustrating the problem was quite dramatic. This world may be smaller than any of us realize." "I know. It scares me." Christine looked at her, startled to hear LaVelle admit that. The other slayer met her gaze. "Before we met Anacost for the last time, it was starting to get crowded. But then we lost so many in that battle and it bought us time." She looked down. "There's water here to drink, and we grow some food. But we bring most of it in, even after all these years. Marion and I provision the others. We leave and go to worlds where no one questions who we are. Hit their markets. Shop." "I wondered where you got the clothes. That was a nice dress." LaVelle nodded. Then she looked at Christine guiltily. "Haven't you wondered where we got the money?" She made a face. "We relieve not-so-nice people of their wealth." "You steal it?" "They stole it first. Or made it through doing bad things." LaVelle smiled, as if mocking her own simplistic terms. "You have to survive. It's not like the watchers pay us." Christine shook her head, remembering David's words on that score. "No, it's not." LaVelle sighed. "And we'll need even more if we have to start looking for another home for most of the girls. I'm afraid that Kirsu may turn out to be only a place to rest in between dying and starting a new life. Or a place to launch the next battle from. There will no doubt be someone who rises to take Anacost's place." "Do you want me to keep an eye out for a nice place?" LaVelle shot her a confused look. "We don't want to go back to Earth." Christine shook her head. "I mean a nice planet. I'm shipping out again. On the Enterprise. The ship I was on before." "Is the annoying Kirk man going with you?" Christine laughed. "Most people just call him Admiral. Or Jim." She looked down. Sighed. "And no. He's not coming." "So the other one will be there? Spock?" "No. He's gone. For good." LaVelle shot her an amazed look. "You mean you're going on your own? No man?" Christine made an exasperated sound. "I spent many years of my first tour on the Enterprise alone. Without a man." "No, you didn't. You were looking for that watcher of yours. You may not have been with him, but you were still tied to him." Christine sighed. "Someone far cleverer than you already covered this ground." She felt a pang, sent a silent apology to Emma for speaking so cavalierly of her. "Right. And besides. What do I care? We're not friends." LaVelle laughed. "We're not, are we?" LaVelle shook her head. "Do you think we could be?" Christine smiled. "You did loan me your dress." "And had it fumigated when you brought it back." "Right." Christine smiled. "It doesn't matter if we're friends or not. We're of an age. And we're slayers. That's all that matters." She pushed herself to her feet. "I'll show myself out." LaVelle didn't say anything. Just sat on her rock, staring out to the distant, possibly unreachable, sea. ----------------------------- Kirk was running out of things to talk about with Tolvar. They could only go on about what a great guy Weasel was for so long. He looked over at the storeroom, wondered what was keeping Chris. "She's fine." Tolvar seemed to read his mind. "Inter-dimensional calls can be a bit tricky." "I know." Kirk felt restless and began to pace. He was full of pent-up energy that was just itching to go somewhere, preferably in Nogura's direction to make the man pay. It had been a shock to see Lori in such a bad state. A shock...and sobering. She was so strong--stronger than he was by a long shot. If she couldn't keep Nogura's magic away, what chance did he stand if his boss ever decided to go after him for real and not just with a little coercion spell? Tolvar looked up from the table. "You sure you don't want your fortune read?" "I'm sure." "Then sit down. You're making me nervous. And I doubt I'll get any other customers tonight." Kirk sat, but the restlessness persisted. He jiggled his leg, the vibration making everything on Tolvar's little table shake. "Anxious?" Tolvar asked. "Antsy." "Ah." He smiled. "What?" "Well, it's just semantics, isn't it?" Tolvar smiled again. "Antsy being less pejorative than anxious. Less unmanly?" Kirk shrugged. "Words are tricky." "Yes, they are." Tolvar didn't press any further. A few moments later, he asked, "You went to Emma's funeral?" "Yeah." "Was it nice?" Tolvar made a face. "Well, it was a watcher event, so nice probably doesn't apply. Did they honor her?" "Some did." Kirk shook his head. "They were not welcoming to you?" Kirk laughed bitterly. "Let's just say that Chris isn't one of the finalists in the slayer popularity contest." "No. I don't imagine she is. It's one of the reasons I like her so much." Tolvar sat back. "Isn't her energy remarkable?" Kirk could feel his eyebrows heading skyward. Tolvar laughed. "Oh, I didn't mean it that way. I've only tasted it from a distance." Kirk grinned, a little sheepishly. "Oh." "You, on the other hand..." Kirk shot him a look. Tolvar held up a hand. "I know, I know. I'm a terrible gossip." He seemed about to say more, but the door to the storeroom opened, and Chris came out. She did not look happy. "Not a pleasant call?" Tolvar asked. "Not the result I'd hoped for." She didn't look like she was relishing telling Lori. Kirk got up. "We should go?" She nodded, tossed the key back to Tolvar. "Thanks. I hate to abuse your hospitality and run but..." He nodded. Waved them away. "Go. You're in a hurry, I can tell." She walked quickly away from the pier, not talking for a few minutes. Finally, she turned to him. "As dimensions go, Kirsu may not be much of one. It's possible it's too small to support even the slayers." He took that in. "How long before LaVelle knows more?" Chris just shook her head. He rubbed at his eyes. "Lori needs our help now." "I know that, Jim. But Kirsu isn't the way. There must be another answer." They walked in silence, then he had a thought, touched her arm to get her to slow down. "Didn't Weasel say the motel was a dimensional way station?" She began to smile. "I think he did." "Then maybe he can help?" She nodded, looking a bit happier. "Maybe he can." The restaurant came into sight. There were, if possible, even more werewolves crowding in. Kirk could feel the strangeness of being in such a shielded place warring with the overwhelming energy of that many werewolves so close to him. His body went into high alert. Chris headed downstairs and he followed her. Lori was still at the table, slumped over it. If anything, she looked grayer. She looked up at them, her expression one of cautious hope. "Well?" Chris looked down. One of the men at her table slammed his hand down. "Did you even try? Or don't we matter to you?" Chris looked up, her eyes full of regret. "You do matter. But Kirsu isn't what you think. It's limited. Possibly incredibly so. Until the slayers can survey it, see how much room there is..." "And how long will that take?" Lori asked. Her voice was low, angry. "I don't know. But long enough to make it no longer an option." "Then what? We just sit here and wait for Nogura to find us?" "We have another idea," Kirk said softly. All eyes turned to him. "We need to check it out first. But if we could get you to another dimension...?" Lori closed her eyes. Shaking her head, she said, "You don't know what you're saying. We don't know what kind of dimension we might end up in. It might be a worse hell than this...than the pens." "That's why we have to check it out," Chris said. "We're nearly out of time," Lori said. "We can't afford to waste what's left." She forced herself to her feet. "I need to talk to the slayers in Kirsu." "That's impossible," Chris said. Lori walked toward her; every step seemed an enormous effort. "I must talk to them. If they see, if they understand...just get me there, and I'll do the rest." She was standing very close--too close--to Chris. Her eyes were wild, frantic. "No. I'm sorry." Chris stood her ground, didn't budge. A surge of anger flitted across Lori's face, then she clamped down on it. "Of course. You have to protect them. You're a slayer...one of them." She turned away, walked back to the table as if she was a hundred years old. "Go away then. You can't help us." "Let us check out this other solution," Chris said. "Please." "Fine. If it makes you feel better, go ahead." Lori's voice left no doubt that she didn't feel any better for the suggestion. "I'm sorry." Chris shook her head. "I wanted it to work out for you." "I'm sorry too, Christine." Lori held her eyes, there seemed to be something dark in her expression. Then it was gone. She sighed and looked away. "I'm tired. Go away." A low growl started in the room; it became louder as more voices took it up. Chris motioned for him to go; she took the rear, following him up the stairs. The upstairs room was filled with the sound of growling too. The low tone seemed to pass right through his bones, straight into his heart and stomach and soul. He and Chris had failed them, the growl seemed to say. They had failed them utterly. ------------------------ Christine slowed once they were well clear of the restaurant and all those accusing faces. She wasn't in any rush to hear Weasel tell them he couldn't help--bad news seemed to be the only thing they were getting. She looked over at Jim. He looked as dejected as she felt. And he didn't even know the full story. It was just so much in his nature to help, to want to make a difference. Even for a bunch of werewolves. He glanced at her, gave her a sad smile. She reached out, and he took her hand. "Maybe Weasel will have better news than LaVelle did," she said, trying to sound hopeful. Although Lori hadn't seemed very thrilled with their alternate solution. "Maybe," he said softly. They passed the cemetery and she looked through the iron fence, remembering all the times she'd patrolled it with David shadowing her. She missed him. She'd been willing to destroy him, but she still missed him. Jim squeezed her hand. She smiled, looked over at him. His own smile was sad. He knew. He always seemed to know what she was thinking. "Help. Please help." Christine whirled, pulling Jim with her. A young woman was running out of the bushes from the center of the cemetery. "Please wait," she said, running straight for them. Christine and Jim both hurried to meet her. "Oh my god. It was horrible. It was clawing itself out of the ground...out of a grave." She sobbed, short of breath and obviously scared out of her wits. She looked at Christine. "Its face was all--" "--Bumpy?" Christine was surprised there were any vampires left in San Francisco. She turned to Jim. "Go on. I'll catch up." "Be careful," he said. "You too." She turned back to the woman. "Where was the grave?" The woman pointed back the way she had come. "Near the big mausoleum. Just behind it. I was cutting through the cemetery on my way home. It knocks ten minutes off my walk." "Don't do it again." Christine studied the woman, remembering how David had met her the first time in much this way, pretending to be there innocently. She drew out her cross, held it against the woman's arm. The woman stared down at the cross. "Is that to bless me or something?" "Something like that. Now go, get out of here. And don't cut through the cemeteries, okay?" "Not a problem." The woman looked at her curiously. "But what are you going to do?" "What I always do." Christine laughed bitterly. "Don't worry. Just get home safe." She turned away from the woman, headed into the heart of the cemetery. She reached the mausoleum quickly, walked around but didn't see any disturbed graves. She started another pass, figured she must have missed it. As she came around the back of the mausoleum, she heard a strange pop, then felt a sting in her neck. She reached down, felt cold metal, and pulled out a dart. She stared at it, confused. "What the hell?" She turned. Too fast, much too fast. She nearly fell as her head started to spin. She felt her legs begin to tremble, her arms tingled, as if they'd fallen asleep. And it was hard to breathe. "I'm sorry." Lori walked out of the bushes. She looked different somehow, but Christine was having trouble focusing on her. Lori moved closer, held up a small weapon. "Don't try to fight it, Christine. You can't. It's a very fast-acting nerve agent. It's paralyzing but not fatal. You'll lose control of your limbs soon, so you might want to sit down before you fall down." Christine could feel her legs about to give out. She sat, heavily and gracelessly. She tried to catch herself with her arms, felt the muscles screaming as they gave out and she fell to her side in the grass. "Why?" Lori walked over to her. "I don't have any choice anymore. I was hoping you could get me Kirsu. But you didn't come through." She knelt down, stroked Christine's hair. "I wish it didn't have to be this way. I do like you." "Be what way?" Christine couldn't move but she could still talk...with effort. "Jim...Jim's going to get help for you. We'll find another way. Whatever you think you're doing, you don't need to." Lori leaned down, sniffed along her neck. "I would have liked to have gotten to know you better." She laid her lips on Christine's neck, not a kiss as much as a nuzzle. One animal to another. Or predator to prey? Christine tried to move. Couldn't. "I don't understand." "I know." Lori drew away. "I need Kirsu. Another dimension just won't work for me. And I'm out of time. You let me down, Christine. I was counting on you, and you didn't deliver. Now, I have to look out for my people. I don't have a choice." "So you kill me?" "Not me. Him." Lori moved Christine's head so she could see the vampire moving across the lawn. "Where...there was no grave." "No. There wasn't. She was one of mine, dear." Lori stood up. "I made a deal with this nice vampire. He's going to kill you slowly so the slayers in Kirsu will have plenty of notice that you need help. I expect them to come rushing in very soon." Christine felt her stomach sink. "Lori, no. It won't work. Not if you're here." "Oh, I plan to hide. And once they're busy with you, I can borrow their means of travel and go to Kirsu. Once I'm there, I can bring my own to join me. I'm out of other options, Christine. One way or another, you'll deliver Kirsu to me." Christine waited, but Lori seemed to have moved away. Then she heard her footsteps on the path. "Slowly." Lori's voice was neutral, as if she was ordering a junior officer to take a reading or run a diagnostic. "Remember, she can't fight you." "She's really a slayer?" "You're not seeing her at her best. Believe me, if she was feeling better, she'd kick your ass." Christine tried to send a silent message to LaVelle, and to Marion. Don't come. It's a trap. The vampire picked her up; she hung helplessly from his grip. He tightened his hold on her neck, cutting off her air. She tried to kick; her legs didn't even move. He laughed and punched her in the stomach hard. Her middle erupted in pain. She tried to punch him back, couldn't get her arm to even twitch, much less strike. He kicked her away from him, and she landed on a gravestone, her back wrenching. He stalked over and dragged her off the marker, shaking her as he pulled her up. "If it were going to be quick, I'd rip your throat out here and now." He opened his mouth, horrible teeth coming closer and closer. "But she said to make it slow. So your neck is off limits." He bit down hard on her shoulder, tearing away a chunk of skin. Then he drank. Pain shot through her. This was nothing like David's bite. She heard a whimper, realized it was coming from her. This was how she would die? "What the hell is going on?" The voice was commanding, but she couldn't place it. The vampire looked irritated that anyone would interrupt his fun. He turned, and she could see who was standing on the walk watching them. Nogura. He lifted his hand, muttered something, and the vampire's shirt caught on fire. He let go of Christine and dropped to the ground, rolling, putting out the flames. She landed on her side, tried to crawl, couldn't even inch away. She heard Nogura murmur something, and she suddenly felt as if she was in an isolation tank. The air felt funny, and the normal sounds of the night seemed muffled. And when the vampire reached for her, his hand was repelled, as if by a forcefield. "Lori," Nogura said loudly. "I know you're here." There was no answer. "She has darts," Christine managed to say. "It doesn't matter." He walked over to her. She heard the vampire charge, could only see his feet as he ran past her. There was a moment's struggle, then she heard a scream and the familiar sound of an undead body turning to dust. Nogura knelt down next to her. "She was trying to call the slayers, wasn't she?" Christine didn't answer. Hoped he'd think she was out of strength. "It was a good idea. Except for the fact that they aren't here." He muttered something that sounded like Latin, and the air returned to normal around her. She tried to take a deep breath, felt as if her lungs were tightening up. "If I have an emergency medkit beamed to me, can I reverse the drug's effects?" "I don't think so. But a toxicology kit might work." She heard him open his communicator, there was the whine of connection and then he was ordering both kits from someone named Ellie. He left the communicator open, set it down just to his side. "Why are you helping me?" "Why wouldn't I help you?" He pulled her shirt away from her torn shoulder. "This has to hurt." She didn't answer. "I know you don't trust me, Lieutenant." He set his hand over her torn skin. If she could have pulled away from him, she would have. But she was frozen, at his mercy. As long as he didn't touch the necklace, she'd be okay. Fortunately it was hanging down, away from the shoulder that had been bitten, away from him. "Just relax. I'm not going to hurt you." He pressed down. She felt as if he'd shot her full of anesthetic, the pain fled under his touch. "What are you doing?" "Fixing your shoulder. You're bleeding badly." "Why?" "Why am I helping you?" She tried to nod, couldn't. "Yes." "Starfleet's made an investment in you, Doctor. It wouldn't do to let you die before we get any value back. And I could hardly let you bleed to death out here." He let go of her shoulder. "There, that's better." His communicator beeped, and then the medkits materialized next to it. She saw him open one, his large hands digging through the kit. "What am I looking for?" She tried to think. Lori had said nerve agent. "Load the hypospray with the canister that has orange stripes on the casing." He did it. "On the neck?" "No," she said quickly, afraid again for the necklace. "My arm." He pulled her sleeve up, injected her, then put the hypo back in the bag. A wave of pain roared up her spine. She'd hit the gravestone at an odd angle, and so hard. Could her back be broken? She couldn't afford to let Nogura check her out with the scanner. Not while she had the necklace on. She could scan herself once her arms and legs were working again. The pain came again. There were other meds in the kit. It would be easy to tell him which one to load up, easy for him to give her some relief. But an analgesic might mask the feelings of the nerve agent rubbing off. And she had to keep her head around him--drugged she'd be far more vulnerable to his magic. She was a slayer. She'd heal fast. She could live with the pain. "How long will it take to wear off?" Nogura asked. "I don't know if it even will work." "If it doesn't, we'll have to get you back to Starfleet Medical. I'd rather it worked." "Hate to take time from the hunt?" She wasn't sure why she was baiting him. Maybe it was because she was feeling helpless--it made her damned cranky. "Actually, I think it's time you and I and Jim talked. And he'll listen to me better if you're along. And I'm a bit old to be carrying women through the streets of our fair city." "You don't have to carry me. Or are you out of transporter credits?" He laughed. It was a surprisingly normal laugh. "No. I just prefer to leave no trace of where we're going. I assume Jim is with his sensei?" She decided not to answer. He sat down next to her. "Do you have any idea where Lori went?" She stayed silent. "She tried to kill you. Why are you protecting her?" "She's desperate." "Yes. I imagine she is." His voice dropped dangerously. "Where is she, Lieutenant Chapel?" "I wouldn't know, sir." He sighed. "This is why the three of us need to talk." "Talk won't change anything." She groaned as her back spasmed again. "You are in pain." He reached for her. "Don't touch me." He pulled his hand back. She felt her legs begin to tingle, tried to move her foot and was gratified when it jerked just slightly. She reached with her hand, felt a finger move. "It's working?" he asked. He actually sounded relieved. "Seems to be." "Then we wait until you can walk again." He settled down next to her. "Have you ever heard the story of Sachiko Nogura, Lieutenant?" She nodded, was surprised when her head actually moved a tiny bit. "It's an interesting tale even the second time. And maybe you heard a different version? I'll tell you mine while we wait." Christine felt her hand twitch, moved her thumb and wiggled her fingers. She wasn't going to die. Or be paralyzed forever. She closed her eyes, waiting for her body to come back to life. And as she did, her body's resurrection was accompanied by the curious sound of an Admiral recounting slayer lore. His version wasn't all that different than the story Emma had told her. She wished her watcher were here now. Not this Admiral she would never, ever trust. Even if he had just saved her life. End part 2 of 3 -- Forwarded to ASCL by: Stephen Ratliff ASC Stories Only Forwarding In the Pattern Buffer at: http//trekiverse.crosswinds.net/feed/ ASCL is a stories-only list, no discussion. 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