The purpose is to experience fear. Fear in the face of certain death.
Rating: Gross sickly stuff.
Characters: Jim & you!
Summary: Catch-all log for Jim's friends! After the 16th when he felt ill, Jim's Augmented blood has started to fight back like it did during the two weeks he was out cold after dying in a decontamination chamber. His organs will be starting to slowly fail, blood (both his own and Khan's) will be coming up, and he's generally confined to his bedroom in his and Bones' apartment. As time goes on, his condition will be deteriorating until his essence rite is performed. Please put the date of your visit in the subject header! Forward/Back-dating and Prose/Action are all fine, as are video/audio/text which can be directed here for all personal calls while Jim is sick.
Log:
[ He finds himself thinking of Christopher, more than anything. Of the last time he saw him, specifically, in the Hall of the Missing. Of not being able to let go of him for so long and crying like a son lost in the thickest of woods, longing to find his way home only to briefly find it and have to turn back into the darkness once more. Chris had held him, kissed his hair like a father, soothed Jim in a way he had never had to before, but then again neither of them had died and been torn apart in such violent ways until the Augment came into their lives. Even in death, he's still been there when Jim needed him.
He stares out of the window in his room, propped up against pillows as coughs rumble in the pit of his chest, looking at the City below where the horizon meets a fake, beautiful sky. If he lets the migraines take over for long enough his senses go haywire and a drowsy kind of tactile memory swims under his fingers and into his nose, of an admiral's uniform scented with aftershave that soothes his anxieties almost as effectively as the real thing.
"It's going to be okay, son."
He wishes he could find a bar to drown his sorrows in. Chris always, always found him when he was at his lowest point in backwater dives.
And then on occasion, during his more painful moments where there's no one around to hear his muffled crying into a pillow or witness the sheets crumpling in his fists, his thoughts drift to the decontamination chamber. Jim wakes himself up several times after passing out with Spock's name on bloodied lips and hopes to God he hasn't started doing anything as embarrassing as crying out in his sleep to betray his fright; he has the use of his lungs still, unlike his final moments where he hadn't been able to tell his friend a wealth of things that suddenly seemed so important. Look after the crew, you're the captain now. I'll miss you. I don't want to go, stay with me. It's shameful, but a couple of times he calls for Bones just to have his company, terrified under a firmly schooled expression that he'll die in the here and now, well and truly alone.
If he had been given diagrammatics on his condition in the form of a vessel's specifics, he would have written it off by now. It's as if the effects of his descent into the warp core are being clawed out of his body in slow motion by the deepening fever-tide, leaving Jim to hate every minute of having survived. Which is counter-productive, he knows, because he very much wants to live. ]
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"Why?"
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"It's a long story, but in the process of trying to destroy the Enterprise he knocked out our central grid, it sent us into Earth's gravitational pull. The warp core was misaligned."
Lips pursing, he slips into a narrower scope of explaining, one he would use during debriefings.
"There was no time to go through the necessary procedures so I redirected the power myself once the manual override was hit. People were falling, screaming ... It was a mess. Nacelles were getting torn off like sticks." Wetting his dry lips, he stifles a cough. "I went in there and fixed the ship so she wasn't dead, but I couldn't get in and out fast enough. I got as far as the decontamination chamber where Spock met me on the other side and let me know that it had worked, I was so out of it I could barely tell."
The furrow on his brow is deeper than he means for it to be, professionalism taking a back-seat in his eyes if not his tone.
"The serum that Bones synthesized to bring me back later was made from Khan's Augmented blood, he tells me it repaired my irradiated organs after my body resisted accepting it. I woke up here right after he'd implemented the stuff back home, the first few days in the City were ... not a lot of fun. Kind of threw up in that fountain." A blue gaze sweeps up to meet Kathryn's. "He hasn't said anything, but it's obvious he thinks I'm relapsing. Frankly, I think that assessment's not too far off the mark."
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That was Spock in her time. Spock was the one who died saving the Enterprise, who was subsequently brought back to life -- though by a rather indirect series of events. Nobody made the decision to revive him, to harness the blood of an augment, but let him go in peace as she's done to more members of her crew than she likes to think about (but will continue to beat herself up about well past the day they cross the threshold into Federation Space).
Janeway nods, duty bound to respond in the way protocol demands and not the way she ultimately would like to.
"Like I said -- I will personally appeal to the City overlords if that's what it takes to get you through this."
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A smile slants on his lips, more for her benefit than his own. The sentiment is true enough even if he wishes he could believe it, having tasted his own mortality once it's hard to forget.
"Have you ever gotten sick?"
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"This badly? Once. Three years ago, during our second year in the Delta Quadrant. I had a rather violent reaction to an alien insect bite."
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"An insect bite? I hope that wasn't owing to the size of it."
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There's something alarming, near disturbing, about how coolly she's able to deliver such lines. How desensitized she is to the horrors the universe has to offer.
"You can see why I was against the idea of having my crew put themselves in harm's way on my behalf." Our, technically. She wasn't the only one bitten, but there is a reason she doesn't usually talk about this particular point in their journey.
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"I can, but after getting to know you a little better I can also see why they disobeyed your orders." Professional as she is, Jim hasn't seen her to be without compassion in measured doses. Again, he's reminded of Chris while talking with her. "Why did the Vidiians harvest organs?"
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She'd take being compared to Captain Pike as a huge compliment, if he ever voiced as much.
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They sound, in all honesty, like people Jim would have a hard time sympathizing with. To put it mildly.
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"No. There was one Vidiian, a physician our doctor had befriended, who was willing to provide assistance."
For Denara Pel, there is respect and understanding, but for the rest of the Vidiians... they can rot in hell for all she cares.
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"Yeah? Once you're through with them, refer them to me. If there's anything left by then."
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Says the woman who has the Borg Collective sitting at the top of her enemies list. They just might consider her more of a threat than Picard at this point. She's not entirely sure how she feels about that, for she never intended to become the Federation's leading expert on the Borg, but somehow that became one of her lots in life.
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"Yeah? I knew there was a reason I liked you."