Received: from [66.218.66.29] by n36.grp.scd.yahoo.com with NNFMP; 13 Jun 2004 03:59:13 -0000 X-Sender: stephen@trekiverse.org X-Apparently-To: ascl@yahoogroups.com Received: (qmail 87755 invoked from network); 13 Jun 2004 03:59:13 -0000 Received: from unknown (66.218.66.166) by m23.grp.scd.yahoo.com with QMQP; 13 Jun 2004 03:59:13 -0000 Received: from unknown (HELO swan.mail.pas.earthlink.net) (207.217.120.123) by mta5.grp.scd.yahoo.com with SMTP; 13 Jun 2004 03:59:13 -0000 Received: from sdn-ap-021dcwashp0066.dialsprint.net ([63.191.144.66]) by swan.mail.pas.earthlink.net with smtp (Exim 3.33 #1) id 1BZM9D-0003Q9-00 for ascl@yahoogroups.com; Sat, 12 Jun 2004 20:59:08 -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: 207.217.120.123 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: Sat, 12 Jun 2004 23:57:52 -0400 Subject: [ASC] NEW: TOS Motivational Maneuvers 1/2 (PG-13) Humor 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: 11 Jun 2004 21:13:26 -0700 In: alt.startrek.creative From: djinn@djinnslair.com (Djinn) TITLE: Motivational Maneuvers AUTHOR: Djinn CONTACT: djinn@djinnslair.com http://www.djinnslair.com SERIES: TOS RATING: PG-13 CODES: HUMOR PART: 1/2 SUMMARY: Is there anything worse than mandatory training? Only if making them act silly. Thanks to Rabble Rouser and Trekki for the beta! Chapel looked around the crowded conference center. She couldn't believe she had to come to this motivational seminar. She was motivated enough for three people. Working in Emergency Ops didn't give her any other choice. Do or die. How much more motivated did a person need to be? On the other hand, she was also about ready to transfer out of Emergency Ops, and Cartwright had thought she should go rub shoulders with the brass, give those who would be fighting over her an up-close and personal look. It wasn't necessary. She already knew what she was going to do. Kirk had asked her to come back to the Enterprise, and McCoy had followed up with a call of his own. He'd even offered to be her deputy if she'd just say yes. Of course, she'd said yes--to the deputy position, she had no desire to be in his job. After two years chasing fires, being deputy sounded nice and quiet. She shook her head. What was it about the Enterprise crew? They just couldn't get enough of each other during the last two five-year missions? They all had to sign up for more time in space together? They had to track down their lost lambs like Kirk and McCoy had done for her? She'd barely announced her intention not to extend in Emergency Ops for a third year when Kirk's call had come through. "God, I hate these things." She turned. Saw Kirk and Spock behind her. Spock's expression was neutral but Kirk looked like he'd rather walk through coals then be there. He looked like she felt. "I didn't know you were going to be here," she said. "Neither did we." Kirk gave her a hug. "Doctor Chapel," Spock said with a pleasant nod. "Captain Spock." She glanced at his rank. "It is still captain?" Before Spock could answer, Kirk said, "Call him lieutenant. It's what I'm going to bust him down to for not making up a creative excuse for why we couldn't be here." He glared at Spock. The Vulcan did not look upset. "As I have indicated, the comm informing us took me by surprise. I did not have time to assemble a colorful excuse." "Didn't have to be colorful. Black and white would have worked. Or the old standby." He turned to Chapel. "You know it, right?" She acted like she was hitting a switch. "Command, we've lost visual." Then she started to make staticky sounds. "I can't read you. Your signal's breaking up." She pretended to hit another switch. "Oops, lost them." He grinned. "See, Spock. Chris knows." "Yes, I can see that you two are well versed in deception. I regret I did not spend more time in Command when I was an instructor at the Academy. Perhaps I could be as accomplished." Chapel laughed. "I think we've just been insulted." Kirk made a "so what else is new?" face. "If we continue to stand here debating my merits as a prevaricator, the available seating will be gone, and we will have to separate." He shot Kirk a stern look. "I know you do not wish for that to happen." He did not wait for them, headed off to the nearest group of three seats. They followed him "Guess he told us," Chapel said. "At least he's not going for the seats in the front." "We had a long talk about that on the shuttle." Kirk grinned at her as he sat down. "It's good to see you again." His grin was infectious. She'd forgotten that. "It's good to see you." She nodded at Spock. "And him." "How long has it been?" "Since what?" She shot him a look. If he was going to bring up her damned crush, she was going to slug him, higher rank be damned. He seemed to be reading her mind. He shook his head. "Since we've all seen each other?" She relaxed. "Oh." At his look, she laughed softly. "Sorry. Guess I'm a bit sensitive. Seeing Spock again is not why I said yes." "Of course not." He glanced over at Spock, who seemed to be absorbed in the program. "Although, he's changed since you knew him. He's warmer." "Yes," she said, making a face. "He seems warmer." She rolled her eyes and he laughed. Spock glanced over at them, then went back to his program. Kirk tried to hide a grin. "Well, he's perhaps overly focused at the moment on our agenda. But he'll warm up, you'll see." He leaned forward in his seat. "So when was the last time? The post-Whale Roundup victory party?" She laughed. "I believe so. You spent the whole party waiting for Doctor Taylor to show up." "Well, not the whole party. Just most of it." He laughed, but there was something else in his expression. "She'd shipped out. I knew she wasn't going to be there." "Shipped out?" He nodded. "She said she was on a science vessel." "No, that would be 'Science Vessel.'" At his look of incomprehension, she said, "The remedial science simulator? She's not going anywhere--or touching any Starfleet machinery--until she is fully up to speed." He looked shocked for a moment, then began to grin. "It's wrong and bad of me, but I suddenly feel so much better." "Feeling a little used were you?" "Well, she did convince me to let her hop to the future on the pretext that the whales needed her, then she just took off." Chapel smiled. "She's still in the bowels of command on her make-believe ship. But she's doing quite well from what I hear." At his look, she shrugged. "I got to know her while we were waiting for the hearing. I liked her. Even if she did use you." "She was impetuous. It's not a completely bad trait." He grinned at her again. Then he turned to look at Spock, rubbing his arm from where the Vulcan had just elbowed him. "What?" "The first speaker is about to start." "Chris and I need to go to the bathroom." Kirk started to get up, sat down again slowly as Spock shook his head. Chapel had no doubt he'd narc on them to the seminar coordinator if they skipped out, then wondered what the coordinator could do to them. She leaned in, whispered in Kirk's ear. "Tell him it's my medical opinion that if we don't go, we might risk bladder damage, possibly a kidney problem." He snickered, then fell silent as Spock glared at him again. The Vulcan turned the glare on her. She suddenly understood why Kirk minded him. "I'll be good," she muttered. He turned away and she had to resist the temptation to stick her tongue out at him. She saw Kirk grin, and wondered if he was fighting the same urge. The coordinator introduced the first speaker. She was an admiral. Tough, starchy, and possibly the worst public speaker Chapel had ever heard. She was so bad she was de-motivational. Chapel snuck a look at Spock, who seemed in rapt attention, then pulled out the padd she'd brought to take notes on. She cleared the screen, called up a special program and slowly tilted it so Kirk could see it. "Hangman?" he said so softly it barely disturbed the air. She nodded. He grinned. "E." She input the letter, ___ ___ ___ E ___ ___. He smiled. "R." She shook her head; typed the letter in and a head appeared on the little figure hanging from the tree. He ran through the most common consonants, tried a few vowels. Was down to his last foot, when he picked, "L." She nodded. ___ ___ L E ___ ___. "What the hell?" Kirk said, frowning at the screen. A large, greenish hand suddenly covered her own, and Spock pulled the padd away from her. "Busted," Kirk mouthed, and she tried not to laugh. She expected Spock to put the padd away, but instead he input something on the screen and then handed it back to her. It said, "The word is 'phlegm,' which is, by the way, an excellent choice for its unusual consonant combination. Now, put the padd away and stop encouraging him to act up." She glanced over at Spock. He nodded toward the padd, and she stuck it back in her pocket. "Spoil sport," she mouthed at him. A slow rise of his eyebrow was her only answer. Sighing, she forced herself to pay attention. Kirk suddenly leaned in, whispered in her ear. "So what was the word?" She turned to him, her mouth close to his ear. She noticed he smelled good--some kind of subtle, spicy cologne. "Phlegm," she said. He gave her an impressed look, then his mouth was at her ear again. "If that was your opening word, I'd hate to see what you reach for as your big guns." He pulled away, then leaned back in. "I like your perfume, by the way." He suddenly jerked. "Another elbow?" she whispered. He nodded, made a pained face. "You're sitting in the middle after the break." "No way in hell," she said softly, then pretended to listen to the deadly admiral. For a very, very long time. ----------------------- Chapel looked at the line for the bathrooms and laughed. "I told you that it was better to get up in the middle of a boring lecture than wait." Kirk grinned. He'd snuck out too, although not when she did. Spock's glare had seen to that. "I do not understand why Starfleet would choose such poor speakers for this conference." Spock appeared to give up on the bathrooms and led them out of the stuffy conference room onto a large balcony. "I think it's a Romulan plot," Kirk said, with a grin. "Bore us to death or maybe make us all so unmotivated that we quit and go become latinum miners." "I've heard there's a big market in that now." Chapel sat down on the bench that wrapped around the edge of the balcony. She swung her legs over so she was facing out, over the gardens, legs swinging free. "This is one pretty place." Kirk joined her, legs swinging also. She laughed. They were like two juvenile delinquents set loose in an adult world. "It is pretty. Sin to be locked inside." He shot her a look. She knew what he was thinking. It was a short drop to the gravel path, and then they'd be home free. Lost among the lovely flowers and liberated from boring speakers. Spock sighed. "Must I separate the two of you?" "You could sit down. Smell the roses for a moment." Kirk indicated Chapel's other side. "Vacant seat over there." She shot him a startled glance. "Vacant seat over there too," she said pointing next to Kirk. Spock shook his head, moved to the far side of the balcony and sat down, legs facing the correct way. "What are you doing?" she said softly to Kirk. "Me? Nothing. Why?" "Well, stop doing it. It's not nothing. It's meddling." She realized she was kicking her legs with a great deal of gusto. He put a hand just below her knee, pressed down gently, slowing one leg at least. "Sorry." She nodded, forced herself to let her legs just dangle. He didn't move his hand. She looked over at Spock. "Are you enjoying this?" "The seminar?" "No, waiting for the damn bathroom. Of course, the seminar." She heard Kirk giggle. There was no other word for it. Spock shot her a surprised look. She had never spoken to him that way in the past. She really hadn't spoken to anyone that way. Emergency Ops had been an eye-opening experience, both for her career and her personality. In that "react now, think later" environment, sarcasm was a field to be mastered as diligently as medicine had been. She understood why being a smart ass had always held such appeal for McCoy--it was liberating. Spock shook his head, answering her question. "I am not enjoying this." He looked out over the flowers, then back to her. "How did you make that noise? I will need to know, should I be invited to one of these in the future." She and Kirk both made the crackling "we've got static up the yin-yang" noise. Spock echoed back a more than creditable version. "Now, you're getting it." Kirk smiled at her. "You're a very bad influence, Chris. Who knew?" "Me? You started it." She shrugged. "They could have made this motivational. Either of you would have been more interesting." "I am not sure that is a compliment," Spock said. "I believe a tribble would be a more interesting lecturer." She laughed. "Well, who would you want to hear?" "Sakoth has published some groundbreaking work on translinear physics as it relates to warp drives and subspace." "ZZZzzzzzzzzzzz," Kirk said softly. Spock didn't miss the sound. "You have a better suggestion, I presume?" Kirk shrugged. "Someone with charisma would be nice." "Khan perhaps?" They both shot a look at Spock. He was unperturbed, just went on with his list. "Garth? Gill? Karidian?" "Why is it the people with the most charisma turn out to be evil megalomaniacs?" Chapel looked at Kirk. "Are you going to turn evil?" "Are you saying I have charisma?" She laughed. "You know you do." He made a happy "what can you do?" face. "Yeah, I think after lunch I may turn evil." "Does that mean we go from being sidekicks to henchmen? Or would I be a henchwoman? That sounds odd." "What is a hench?" Kirk asked. "Is there a verb 'to hench'?" "It probably is related to hengest. Horse. As in a groom or page." Spock rose. "The line has dissipated somewhat." He headed off to the bathroom. They watched him go. "He knows the strangest things," Chapel said, then she smiled. "And I can't say he's exactly bubbling over with that warmth you mentioned." "Give him time." Kirk seemed to suddenly realize he still had his hand on her leg, had in fact moved it up a bit to sit on her knee. He pulled it away suddenly. She grinned at him, tried to show him no harm, no foul. He grinned back, relaxed. "You should have seen him right after the Fal-tor-Pan." "Gave stiff a bad name?" "And then some." He shook his head, his grin fading. "I wasn't sure the Spock I knew was ever coming back." "But he did." She smiled softly. "He always comes back to you. He loves you." Kirk's face lost all expression. "Hey, that's not a bad word. He does love you, you know that." He nodded. "I just..." He exhaled loudly. "There are some who think..." She smiled, shook her head. "That you two are lovers. Yeah, I know. I used to wonder about it myself. Why does it bother you?" He turned to look at her, seemed to realize she was serious, not teasing him. "It bothers me because I think it trivializes our friendship. As if we can't have any kind of bond unless it's a sexual one. He's my best friend. I would die for him. He has died for me. What more is there to say? Why does it have to be about sex?" She laid her hand on his. "I think for some people, that's all it can be about. Maybe they've never had a real friend?" "Maybe not." He shook his head. "I didn't mean to snap." "You didn't snap." She realized that there was no one else left on the balcony. "Seminar's started." "I know." He didn't move. "You don't want to go back in?" "Do you?" "No. But Spock will hunt us down." She grinned. "And make us pay." He looked down at where her hand was covering his. "He was an idiot." She sighed, pulled her hand away. "Could you please let that drop? It's over." "You don't have feelings for him? You're mocking him pretty intensively." "McCoy does that too. Are you saying he'd like to jump Spock's bones?" Kirk shrugged, gave her a silly smile. "Maybe." She laughed. "I don't have feelings for him. Okay?" "Okay." He swung his legs around and got up. She followed suit. They snuck back into the room, which had been darkened to show some strange picture of abstract art--or maybe it was a disassembled warp core. The speaker sounded like he had taken training in how to drone. And done well at the training. In fact, he could teach the class. "Once more into the breach," Kirk muttered, as he led her to their seats. ----------------------- Chapel took another sip of her drink, following Kirk and Spock into the lounge. Dinner had been long, and the special guest speaker had been so dull that one of the older attendees had fallen asleep in her soup and nearly drowned. Chapel had been worried she'd be called upon to do emergency measures. But another doctor had stepped in. The food had been awful too. Dry chicken filled with something...brownish-green. Salad that looked like it had been fresh during Cochrane's time. And desert that she thought was supposed to be a soft brownie--or maybe exceptionally hard chocolate pudding. Fortunately, the bread had been all right. She'd made a meal of it. Good thing too. Or the highball she was drinking would be going right to her head. The lounge was bigger than she expected. And there was a large dance floor. People were dancing to recorded music. She looked around the room, saw Kirk do the same. He drained his scotch, set it on the bar. "Wish me luck," he said as he winked at her, striding into the crowd toward an unattached woman. He wove a bit--he hadn't stocked up on bread. She looked over at Spock. He looked very uncomfortable. "He did it again," she muttered to herself. "I'll kill him." Spock turned to her, a quizzical look on his face. "Matchmaker Tiberius." Spock's expression lightened. "His efforts seemed to be in that direction. I was hoping I was mistaken." "Oh, no. He's playing yenta." She glanced at him; he seemed to know the reference. "Just for the record, you're safe from me." "That is good to know. However, I do not feel in danger." She laughed. "Well, that's a switch." She sipped at her drink. "I don't suppose you dance?" "I do not." She smiled. "I bet you can though. Amanda probably made you go to ballroom dance class, where all the Vulcan boys made fun of you after school. They taunted you with cries of, 'Your intelligence is substandard, and your mother dresses you funny!'" He actually looked amused. "You have a vivid imagination, Doctor." "It's true. I do." He'd be embarrassed if he knew just how vivid. In the past, he'd been a favorite fantasy. Thank god that was in the past. "Do you enjoy dancing?" She nodded. "There is a definite imbalance in the male-female ratio. I am sure someone will ask you momentarily." "Yeah, I noticed that imbalance. Not sure what it says for Starfleet promotion policy, but it definitely means I'll be a popular girl tonight." She turned to him. "But only if you go away. Nobody is going to ask me while I'm talking to you." "I can leave?" His face looked so hopeful, she burst out laughing. Quite a few heads turned. "Yes, you can go. I'll see you tomorrow." He nodded. "Thank you, Christine." She smiled. "You're welcome, Spock." She saw him find Kirk in the crowd, his eyes were thoughtful...concerned even. "I'll make sure he doesn't turn into a pumpkin." He nodded. "His conviviality these days is often forced." She took that in. "David?" She'd heard the tragic story from Uhura. He nodded. "David. My death and the stress of the retraining. McCoy's mental imbalance when he carried my katra. The destruction of the ship. The new ship--it has been slightly disappointing in its performance, I think." "All of it." He nodded. "He is depressed, I think." They both turned to look at him. Kirk was laughing at something a pretty redhead had said, he swung her in the dance and they both laughed again. "Yes, he looks like the poster child for depression." "We both know that depression can be masked. And Jim is quite skilled at hiding what he feels." She nodded. He was right. Depression could be masked, and if anyone could do it, it would be James "I'm having the time of my life" Kirk. "I'll look out for him, Spock." "Thank you. Enjoy yourself, Doctor." She smiled. "You too. With your meditation or whatever?" He did not answer, just shot her a gentle glare and left. It took about thirty seconds for her to get an invitation to dance. As she switched partners, enjoying the opportunity to mingle and dance, she realized she knew a good number of the people in the room. Many of them were men and women who had stopped into Ops during some crisis or other. She relaxed, enjoyed the warmth of this distant intimacy. "May I cut in?" Kirk asked her latest partner, a rather charming lieutenant commander. "Of course, sir." He smiled at her, let her go. "I left you with Spock." "Yes, you did." "And where is he?" "He was so unhappy that I couldn't keep him in captivity any longer. So I took him outside and set him free." She tried to keep a straight face. He burst out laughing, his hands tightened on her. "So if I want my first officer back, I have to go out on safari?" She nodded. "Vulcan net in hand. Calling, 'Spock! Spock!' until he comes to you out of love rather than fear and obligation." "You've watched a few too many nature specials." "Or read far too many of the old classics. Born Free. Thunderhead. White Fang." She laughed, enjoyed the way he held her. Such assurance. He was a good dancer. "I used to read those." He smiled. "I used to read anything I could get my hands on." "Me too." They danced in silence for a while. He pulled her close and she laid her head on his shoulder. "You did it again, didn't you?" She could feel him laugh. "Stop with the matchmaking. Even Spock is on to your clever scheme." He pulled away enough to see her face. "And is he upset?" "Well, he's not turning cartwheels." He pulled her closer. "His loss then." She smiled. This time he sounded like he might leave it alone. "So, how are you?" She thought she felt him tense. "Are you feeling all right?" she asked. "Depends on who's asking. My new deputy CMO? Or Chris, this lovely woman I'm dancing with." "I'm not sure you can separate the two." He sighed. "That's too bad." He started to pull away as the music ended. "Doctor, thank you for the dance." She didn't let go, saw his eyes narrow in surprise. She was a lot stronger than she looked. Nurse's hands, used to dealing with difficult patients, or just unconscious ones who needed to be moved. "Sir, please." He sighed. "You can call me Jim." She smiled, easing him back into the dance as the music started up again. "Really?" He'd never invited such familiarity in the past. Even when she'd been his deputy CMO the first time, she'd never been part of his inner circle. Never had actually wanted to be. Until now. She was enjoying his inner circle. He was fun. Hell, even Spock was fun when he was around Kirk. "Really," he said, pulling her closer. They danced through several more songs. She noticed that no one tried to cut in. ----------------------- Spock was thumbing through the program. "Anything good?" Kirk asked. He closed his eyes, rubbed at his temples. He looked like he had a bad case of too little food and too much scotch from the night before. "That would depend on your definition of good." Spock put the program away. "It looks much like yesterday's agenda." "That's tragic," Chapel said, handing Kirk two pills. "Here." He shot her a look. "Antitox?" She nodded. "Don't leave home without them." He smiled. "You need them a lot, do you?" She shrugged. "Command parties get pretty wild. Surely you remember?" He nodded. "When you're on call twenty-four/seven, you need to be able to sober up almost instantly." She sighed. "Not the best way to live, but it cuts down on hangover time." He took the pills, washed them down with his coffee. "Thanks." "Sure." She glanced at him, realized he was staring at her. "What?" "You realize you could do a lot better than deputy CMO on the Enterprise, right?" She nodded. "But frankly, I'm tired. And I'd like to come home." It was the right thing to say. His smile was very big. Spock shot her an approving glance. She hadn't realized he was listening in. "And home is ready to welcome you back, Chris." She smiled, couldn't say more because the coordinator got up and bored them for about fifteen minutes with administrivia. Then the first speaker rose. She had potential, started out interesting, but about midway through, Chapel was dozing. Maybe she should have taken some of those antitox for herself? She felt something being pushed into her hands, realized it was Kirk's coffee. Smiling at him, she took a large sip. Caffeine. Caffeine was good. She wasn't sure if he wanted it back, but he took the cup from her, took another sip, then slipped it back in her hand. He winked at her, turned back to the speaker and pretended to fall asleep. She had to work hard to stifle her giggle. The next speaker made the ones who had come before seem positively brilliant. It wasn't just his subject matter; his delivery was so stilted and slow that Chapel wanted to fill in his words for him. She was trying to do that in her head, making it a game, when she heard Kirk mutter, "Get the hook." She had a sudden vision of the speaker being hooked off the stage like in an Academy talent show. She started to laugh, trying desperately not to make a sound. It hurt, hurt badly to stifle her giggles. She couldn't stop her upper body from shaking. She looked down, at the back of the chair in front of her, anywhere but at Kirk. She could feel his shoulder shaking where it touched hers. He was laughing too. She leaned down, began to run through all the horrible diseases she could think of, calling up symptoms disgusting enough to make her stop laughing. It worked. Until she looked back at him. He actually sputtered slightly. Spock just sighed. She turned back to staring at the chair in front of her. Begin to run through the effects of bubonic plague. Finally, she felt the inappropriate hysteria subside. This time, she didn't look at Kirk. On the break, as she stood, she heard a man behind Spock tell the Vulcan, "Better not bring those two next time." Spock just nodded. She turned, and the man behind them winked. It was Commander Riffick from Supply. "Hello, Christine." "Tom." He was friends with Cartwright. Fortunately for her, he also had a very good sense of humor. Kirk turned to see who it was. He grinned. "Thomas, you old space dog. We were on our best behavior. You saw nothing." "Fine, I'll be part of the conspiracy. I saw nothing." Riffick smiled. "How the hell are you, Jim? I would have said hello, but you and Christine seemed a little preoccupied." He winked at her again. She hooked a thumb at Kirk. "It's his fault. I was listening raptly until he made a snarky comment." Kirk made a disbelieving face. "Me?" Riffick laughed. "Face of a freakin' angel. Nice to know time hasn't taken away your ability to get out of trouble, Jim." "Man will be eighty and charming his way out of situations," Chapel said. Kirk just laughed. Riffick looked at Spock. "How do you put up with these two?" "We all have our crosses to bear, Commander." Riffick laughed. "Oh, I can see Jim's rubbed off on you." "It is possible. Cross-cultural contamination is always a danger in these situations." Chapel smiled. Maybe Spock had warmed up a bit. Certainly this seemed to be a Spock more at ease with himself than she'd ever seen. Dying had apparently agreed with him. Riffick held up his empty cup. "I've got to get more of this if I want to stay awake until lunch." He turned to go, then looked back. "There's a pool going, by the way. Name the mystery desert from yesterday's dinner. Just so you know, 'big pile of goo" is mine." He winked at them and walked away. Kirk pretended to pout. "Damn it. I wanted 'big pile of goo.'" "You snooze, you lose," she said. Kirk nodded. "I'll get some coffee while there's still time." He took the cup from her. She was surprised to see him come back with just the one. "I can't have one of my own?" she asked, as she took the cup from him and sipped. He smiled, but his eyes weren't amused. They were intense. "Did you want one of your own?" He leaned in, said very softly, "I got the impression that you were enjoying sharing." His breath on her ear tickled, and she pulled away. He was smiling again, the intensity gone. Maybe she'd imagined it? "Sharing's good." "Your preschool teacher would be so proud." He winked at her, then sat down. She sat down too. Spock leaned over Jim. "Doctor, do you still have that pad?" She nodded. "Perhaps hangman would be a more beneficial pastime than nearly injuring yourself from trying not to laugh?" She grinned. "Are you saying you're bored and want to play too?" He took a deep breath, then nodded tightly. Kirk looked at him. "Spock? Really?" "I believe that question has been asked and answered, Jim." Kirk laughed, glanced at her. "A very bad influence," he muttered. She gave him her best innocent look. "I learned it all from you." She pulled out the padd. "Besides, he's going to wipe the floor with us. You do know that?" "I don't know. I wouldn't want to bet against our collective brain power." She smiled. He was right. They were all pretty damn smart. Only, if that was true, why were they all still sitting in this stupid conference room? Sheep. They were pretty damn smart...sheep. End part 1 of 2 -- 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. Comments and feedback should be directed to alt.startrek.creative or directly to the author. Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ASCL/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: ASCL-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ From ???@??? 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