PART TWO

 

He felt cold inside. He looked at their faces; they were blurs mostly, yet he knew he wasn't crying. There were no tears in his eyes. He hadn't felt any since he left sickbay. Instead, the cold had gripped him and refused to leave, even when so many crew stood around him and he could feel the warmth on their breaths when they shared with him an anecdote, or just the body heat that sprang from their nearness.  Their sympathetic glances, their compassion which in the circumstances should have produced some energy within him, whether from anger or just accepting their commiserations, did nothing. It just left him cold.

 

Maybe that was Tom Paris standing on the other side of the torpedo casing, and B'Elanna stood next to him. Why shouldn't she? They were together, weren't they? They were happily married, weren't they? Was that Noah Lessing standing near someone - Tuvok - or was it the other way round? It had to be Noah. The man was as tall as a California redwood. Chakotay heard them - voices that sounded strained, compassionate, sympathetic.

 

And he didn't hear them. They were distinct and indistinct at the same time, hushed in their reverence of the occasion.

 

Only one voice sounded clear, untainted by the day's events. No hint of sorrow or compassion. For one brief, mad moment he wanted to kill Kathryn Janeway for sounding as if it were just another day in the life of a starship captain. How could she sound so cool, so collected when he felt like dying himself? Inside him, for one whole day, his world was turned upside down. Pain was not a red-hot poker that drove mercilessly threw his body. It was not a thousand screaming banshees in his head that terrorised him and made him aware that he was alone.

 

It was just cold. He was afraid of it. The brief moment of madness temporarily allowed in some warmth, but it was gone, too soon. The captain's voice droned on.

 

"We imagine we are invincible, only to be confronted with our own mortality when facing imminent death," he heard her say, her voice coming from a long way off, yet boring into his brain. "Even the strongest among us must pay homage to a power greater than us, an unstoppable destiny as it chooses to take away at will, with little regard for rank or creed or sex or age..."

 

He remembered Seven's words to him one night when they had an argument.

 

"I am Borg, Chakotay. I am in control of my destiny... I'm going to live a long time..."

 

The torpedo casing stood in the centre of the lounge - stark, silent witness, cradle to the body of Seven of Nine who thought that she was invincible.

 

"And so we pay our last respects to Ensign Dillinger and Seven of Nine," Kathryn Janeway said in her clear, cool voice. "They have been valued crew on this vessel. We shall miss them..."

 

After that, Tom Paris spoke, and Harry Kim said something. Someone played a lonely tune on an oboe.  Was it Nicoletti? The tune was haunting, a lost melody, chords that floated about the quiet observation lounge.

 

How long was it after the tune played and Kathryn had given the order for the transport of the coffins to the shuttle bay? It seemed an eternity.

 

Chakotay watched as everyone turned to face the viewports of the observation lounge.

 

Silently, like a derelict drifting in space the two torpedoes carrying the bodies of Seven of Nine and Ensign Dillinger headed on their unerring journey for their final resting place.

 

"Into the sun I go,

when my last breath from me shall flow."

 

Noah's deep voice resonated in the lounge as he read the poem.

 

He heard Seven's voice, impassioned, happy, confident...

 

"She'll look like you, Chakotay..."

 

"Nonsense, babies always resemble their mothers."

 

"And it will be a good thing?"

 

"Naturally. I'll look at our little girl and think of you."

 

"I'm very happy, Chakotay."

 

"Are you still going on the away mission?"

 

"Nothing will happen."

 

"I need my wife and daughter."

 

"You'll have them back. It's a routine inspection. Nothing can go wrong."

 

Chakotay gave a small cry, looked distraught around him and when his eyes met those of Kathryn, connected in a timeless capsule in which he knew she saw into the deepest parts of him. Hands stiffly at his sides, he turned suddenly and strode out of the observation lounge.

 

***** 

 

Kathryn Janeway pressed his chime twice before she heard a low, hoarse 'enter'. Chakotay's cabin was at very low illumination, almost totally dark as she stepped inside. She waited a few seconds for her eyes to adjust, realising that he wasn't going to help her.

 

Dimly she became aware of his silhouette as the porthole came into view. She moved closer and stood about a metre away from him. He sat hunched, as he did earlier in sickbay. She couldn't see his face, and again she noticed how he clenched and unclenched his hands.

 

"Look at me, Chakotay," she commanded softly.

 

It was tense moments later that he finally looked up. He didn't look any better than he had in sickbay or at the memorial service. Chakotay needed time, time he could ill afford to grieve silently and privately. It was the legacy of their precarious existence in the Delta Quadrant. They could package their sorrow and every now and then only, when time allowed, open it and wallow for precious seconds until eventually, pain became dimmer and dimmer, leaving only scar tissue that occasionally, when it was cold, thought to remind the body and the mind that once, he was a happy man.

 

"What do you want."

 

"I'm putting you on leave for two weeks, Chakotay."

 

"You can't do that - "

 

"I can and I have." Kathryn looked around her, thinking to see a corner of the cabin prepared for the baby. She had not been in Chakotay's quarters since he and Seven married. Now, it appeared empty, devoid of warmth. "Chakotay, have you made any preparations at all for Carina?" she asked suddenly, realising why it looked so empty.

 

"The crib...it's in the cargo bay. I finished it..."

 

"Good. Get it in here. In a few days Carina will have to room in with you, my friend."

 

"No..."

 

Kathryn sat down next to him and touched his shoulder. He didn't flinch this time and she gave a tight little smile. The situation was dire. Carina needed attention, and the father was too wrapped up in his grief to pay attention.

 

"Look, I realise you miss Seven very much, but your duty is with the little one. You're to get up and go to sickbay and take charge of Carina. She has only you. Your bridge and other duties will be shared during this period. It's an order. "

 

"That the Captain speaking?"

"Yes."

 

"And - and my friend?"

 

That gave Kathryn hope. He looked eager for once.

 

"I beg you, Chakotay. There's a little baby, too small to understand that her mother has died, who is going to need all the love you have in you. She's the most beautiful angel in the universe. When you see her, you cannot but want to wrap her in those big hands of yours and hold her to you..."

 

"I..."

 

"Please..."

 

"Carina...does she look like her...mother?" he asked softly, and Kathryn thought she saw a glint of pride in his eyes. The flash was gone quickly, but the way his body primed itself, she knew he was expecting confirmation.

 

"Yes...yes, she does, Chakotay. You should go and see for yourself..." She could have bitten her tongue off the way Chakotay's face suddenly creased the moment the words were out. Carina's birthday coincided with the death of Seven.  He looked visibly pale as he struggled to compose himself.

 

"I'm not on my best behaviour, Kathryn... I'm sorry..."

 

"No need to apologise. Look, the crew will help you take care of Carina. We'll draw up a roster for you, if that's okay."

 

Chakotay remained quiet for a long time, time in which Kathryn kept stroking his shoulder, hoping he would find solace in her presence, in her fervent plea. He was hurting so badly, and she... She wondered how she could reach him. He gave a wan, tired smile that hardly reached his eyes.

 

"I'll go tomorrow - "

 

"Now."

 

"No - no...it's - look, give me time, Kathryn.."

 

"You don't have time."

 

"Please."

 

"Tomorrow, then. That's an order, Commander."

 

****

 

At 0700 the next morning, Chakotay exited the turbolift on the bridge to the surprised lift of an eyebrow from Tuvok. Harry Kim gave a little gasp. Chakotay took no notice of them, his eyes going instinctively to the bridge rail behind the command chairs. He shook his head, walked briskly to the lower level and sat down next to Kathryn Janeway.

 

Tom turned and frowned.

 

"Commander, I thought - "

 

"You thought nothing, Paris. Keep your eye on the screen," Chakotay bit out.

 

When Kathryn had recovered sufficiently from her surprise to see Chakotay calmly taking his seat next to her, she felt the warmth suffusing her face.

 

"Commander, to my ready room. Now," she hissed softly. Then she rose and walked quickly away from him.

 

Chakotay shrugged and followed seconds later. He gave Tuvok a pointed look before the doors closed behind him.

 

"What is the meaning of this, Commander?" Janeway asked, her voice quivering slightly. He could see the angry flashes, the flushed cheeks. Closing himself off from feeling anything, he shrugged again.

 

"I came on duty, Kathryn. What's wrong with that?"

 

"A day after Seven died and your baby was born? I gave you a two week period of leave, Commander. Compassionate as well a family responsibility leave..."

 

"I must do something. I - "

 

"Have you been to sickbay at all, Commander?" she cut in. He had time to notice how she stood in her old, familiar pose: hands on the hips.

 

"No."

 

"You should have been there. It's your - "

 

"I don't have to be reminded of my duty, Captain."

 

"Well then, so help me, what are you doing here?"

 

"My duty."

 

"Your duty in this time, which by the way, I've given you, is with your newborn baby, Commander. You have leave. Make use of it. If you don't, I'll have the Security team carry you to sickbay."

 

"There's nothing - "

 

He watched how her eyes closed. How could he tell her he couldn't bring himself to walk into sickbay without thinking of Seven and how she lay so quiet in death? How could he tell her?

 

"Tell me, Chakotay..." Kathryn said as she walked round the desk to stand in front of him. "Believe me, I know what you're going through and I know it's very hard for you. But right now, there's a little baby girl waiting for her Daddy to touch her hand, to connect with her. You have to focus on those who are left behind..."

 

"I - I c-can't, Kathryn," he stammered, an image of his hands lacing through blonde hair causing him to frown furiously. Seven's hair... He couldn't look at the baby... If he did...

 

"You can't look at her," Kathryn whispered, and it shocked him that she could read his thoughts so correctly. "But Chakotay, at some point and it must be soon, you must take your baby home with you. Carina is your responsibility..."

 

"I know..." he conceded finally, tired suddenly of thinking, welcoming the cold that wouldn't leave him. Last night he slept in his bed, alone for the first time in three years. What did Kathryn know? He needed Seven...  He needed her or he'd go mad...mad...

 

"Then, as your friend, not your Captain, Chakotay, I'd like to help. In fact, you will have a lot of help..."

 

He nodded, too mute this time to reply. Kathryn reached up, her palm cupping his cheek. They had always done that, eons ago. They were friends, best friends... How many times had she done that before he married Seven? How many times did she touch him and make the gesture an indelible imprint on his memory? Now, the touch of her hand... It was tinged with softness, kindness, compassion...

 

He didn't want to remember...

 

Within seconds, he fled the ready room and strode like a drunken man to the turbolift.

 

*****

 

End Part two

 

Part three

 

EMAIL

 

J/C FANFIC