And if you trust in me
When; September 24
Rating; PG-13? TBA
Characters; Chakotay and anyone who wants to come across him today.
Summary; Chakotay is shriveling away and someone needs to fix it. (Already have someone lined up for him to fall to, but anyone else is welcome to bother him!)
Log;
In some ways, Chakotay felt as though he'd already been through this. There was that one time his DNA had been stimulated and he'd suddenly found his body looking and feeling as though he were over a hundred years old. Forming arthritis when he wasn't anywhere near an age that something like that would usually happen to hadn't been the nicest thing to suddenly be assaulted with. He'd hoped he would never experience anything like that again.
Apparently, the City seemed to have other ideas. At first, Chakotay couldn't quite tell if this was some recurrence of that or something else entirely. The beginning stages had him itching and scratching skin that flaked off like it was dust. Worrisome, to say the least. Later on, as he walked around the City proper, it seemed to get worse. Part of him was tempted to take a trip to the hospital to see if Doctor McCoy could figure out what was going, but at the same time, he wasn't sure if it was anything too serious.
Instead, he decided to head back to the lab or wherever else he has to go to find Kathryn. Maybe she might know. He wasn't expecting to run into anyone while walking around the City, but he wouldn't mind a little company at any point in his day.
Rating; PG-13? TBA
Characters; Chakotay and anyone who wants to come across him today.
Summary; Chakotay is shriveling away and someone needs to fix it. (Already have someone lined up for him to fall to, but anyone else is welcome to bother him!)
Log;
In some ways, Chakotay felt as though he'd already been through this. There was that one time his DNA had been stimulated and he'd suddenly found his body looking and feeling as though he were over a hundred years old. Forming arthritis when he wasn't anywhere near an age that something like that would usually happen to hadn't been the nicest thing to suddenly be assaulted with. He'd hoped he would never experience anything like that again.
Apparently, the City seemed to have other ideas. At first, Chakotay couldn't quite tell if this was some recurrence of that or something else entirely. The beginning stages had him itching and scratching skin that flaked off like it was dust. Worrisome, to say the least. Later on, as he walked around the City proper, it seemed to get worse. Part of him was tempted to take a trip to the hospital to see if Doctor McCoy could figure out what was going, but at the same time, he wasn't sure if it was anything too serious.
Instead, he decided to head back to the lab or wherever else he has to go to find Kathryn. Maybe she might know. He wasn't expecting to run into anyone while walking around the City, but he wouldn't mind a little company at any point in his day.

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A veritable Fort Knox that was currently unaware of Chakotay's ailments.
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"Kathryn?" Even his voice is a little scratchy. He hopes that is just the day's air and not whatever this is. If she isn't here, he supposes he'll just have to suck it up and go to McCoy.
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To her credit, it only takes her a few minutes to put everything up and drag something else out, the configurations for a chronometric monitoring system that Chekov's been helping her with laid out on the table in place of what she'd actually been working on. Now isn't the time to clue him in to what she's been doing; him nor anyone.
She opens the door, startled by his appearance. "You look like hell, Chakotay."
Which wasn't terribly unusual for any of them back aboard Voyager with the various scrapes they'd been through, but here? It was rare. Perhaps he'd contracted something... But shouldn't they be immune to most diseases of the 21st Century? Inoculations in their time prevented that, and she knew he'd had all of his.
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"I feel like it," he answers honestly. "I'm beginning to wonder if our scientist friends are up to their old tricks." Meaning the ones they'd run into who had decided to make a game of messing with his DNA to make him age considerably before his time. It almost feels like that time... only a little different, but he won't rule out something similar happening.
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"Considering I don't have a migraine the size of Bolarus IX, I highly doubt that's the case. Unless my piloting stunt through that pair of binary pulsars is making them think twice about crossing me again."
Which, to be honest, wouldn't surprise her -- but this has nothing to do with the enemies she's made and the tactics she carried out while making them.
She brushes by him, disappears around the corner into the living room, and reappears with her tricorder. "At the very least, the tricorder's reading you as the age you should be, 100% Human. And I know I made damn sure I didn't bring back a member of Species 8472."
A joke, though the underlying suspicion is there. It's not an insult or even a sign of distrust. This is just the way Kathryn Janeway operates. It's in her nature to be suspicious, to be calculating and questioning, to look at every possible angle -- even though she doesn't enjoy seeing. And unfortunately, this is a possibility. Maybe the Doctor's scans weren't so accurate after all. Maybe she did bring back one of Species 8472 and left the real Chakotay back on those faux Starfleet training grounds. Maybe this was his genetically altered body's way of reacting to being away from Fluidic Space for so long...
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"If you end up getting worried about my identity again, you could ask me questions again, but I would have thought I'd passed any test you could have come up with when I first arrived in this City."
He'd answered her grilling then by giving her the end to the story only the two of them knew. No one else had been near them when he'd told her that story. No one else knew what had happened between them while they were stuck on that planet. No one else could have answered the way he had.
"Unless you're content to toss me back into Fluidic Space when we open up another singularity. I'm sure I could learn to work with that."
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"I'd need a means to open a singularity first, and even with the means, only Seven ever had the know how."
Kathryn circles around him, continuing to scan him with the tricorder, as if drawing closer and taking readings from different angles will provide her with alternate answers. It doesn't, and she's left with the inconclusive results that aren't exactly a bill of clean health, but not displaying any indications of what might be wrong with him. She closes it, discards it on her dresser just inside the threshold of her room.
"As much as I'd hate to subject you to 21st Century medical technology being wielded by a 23rd Century physician, I may just have to order you to Doctor McCoy."
In other words: Why did you come here instead of going to him? She knows he was out, and knows he's smarter than that. Chakotay doesn't need to check in with her to see a doctor, especially when something's genuinely wrong with him. Inform her at some point, yes, but not come to her first. As much as the woman loathes to take herself to sickbay, it's medical attention first and talk to the captain later where her crew is concerned.
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"Somehow I think you could manage it if you set your mind to it."
Her actions don't go unnoticed and he stands still as she examines him. It's a little disconcerting that she can't seem to find anything wrong. Anywhere else, that would be a good thing, but with their lives, an unexplained disease is never a good thing. As for her question, he pauses for a moment. Why had he looked for her first? He couldn't quite explain it. All he knew was that something in him had wanted to come to her because he needed her expertise. Or something like that.
"I don't think that's what I need here." But what does he need? "If this isn't due to the scientists, maybe it's a curse."
That didn't explain why he's here instead of the hospital, though.
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Of course, the longer they stand here and debate the issue, the worse off he's getting.
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Except order him to McCoy, of course. She's holding back on that for now, willing to hear him out before she points to the door and sends him off in the direction of the hospital.
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In other words, ordering him to McCoy might not end very well. And if they're to judge the amount of time he has by how flaky he's getting, they might not have much time to debate the issue.
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The means to this end may not be conventional ones.
"Alright," she concedes, pushing away from the door frame and gently taking hold of his arm to pull him into her room. "Come. Sit." Kathryn ushers him in the direction of a chair, releasing him once he's settled into it.
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A frown crosses his face as he sits down and looks at her, studying her as he thinks on this.
"That felt strange, your hand on my arm."
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Bad, her mind hopes for in spite of the implications that hoping for as much means she wants this sickness to prolong itself. She doesn't, but a good strange would mean that whatever is ailing him is somehow tied to human touch or comfort in general. It was an unorthodox cure, but not entirely unheard of. There were psychological afflictions suffered by telepathic races that were healed by such means. But Chakotay isn't a telepath, and neither is she.
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It's the best way he can think of to describe it right now, though he's considering it a little further. For a moment, he'd felt as though his arm had been healed. It was the strangest sensation, bad strange in a way, but good in the way that she had asked. If his train of thought is correct in this instance, she might just be his cure somehow and that thought is just as nice as it is unsettling.
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But this isn't about her and the lines she carved into Voyager's hull years ago, ruts in the duranium that grew deeper and deeper with time. They weren't on Voyager, and she knew firsthand that curses weren't dissolved through conventional means. And the last thing she wanted was to see him suffer or worse.
So instead of recoiling further, she advanced, placing both her hands experimentally on his shoulders. "How's that?"
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But then her hands are on his shoulders and he slowly lets his hands fall so he can gaze up at her. His shoulders feel better, as though she's placing an old-fashioned salve on them, a cream to heal them. "Better," he answers slowly. "I'm not sure how this is going to help all of it... but it seems I was right about trusting you."
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"Always."
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He hates this place, he's decided. He hates the way the City can just decree things, pass judgment on them or force a particular frame of mind or condition of their bodies on them without so much as a millimeter of consideration for their personal difficulties. It's as though the City or whatever runs it -- as he's convinced that the Anonymous Movement isn't in any more control than the rest of them and maybe the deities weren't, either -- takes pleasure in offering them the worst situations. He isn't sure if it would be better or worse on Voyager should this situation arise in the Delta Quadrant and isn't keen on finding out.
Were they anywhere else, anywhere they might have even the tiniest sliver of hope about becoming something else, he would welcome something like this. But here or even on Voyager there's nothing for them. Nothing that he can see, anyway. She won't allow it. She never has and never will. And aside from that, he's almost certain she has something going on with James T. Kirk, something Chakotay would never be able to give her. Kirk is a fellow captain, someone she can be more herself with and less the strict, confident, no-nonsense captain, the face she holds to him and the rest of the crew. The idea hurts, yes, but at the same time, he's glad she has someone. That was really why he'd gone to see Kirk a while ago, to get the measure of him and let him know what kind of woman Kathryn is so he could be prepared.
He's on his way to letting her go and then this crops up, bringing everything crashing back like a beach at high tide. His feelings for her will never change and he hates that this curse is forcing her to act on something she likely will never give him. He hates that it's teasing them both.
So in a show of great willpower, he moves to stand. "I should go to Dr. McCoy." His eyes are soft as he tries to repress the emotions this whole thing is bringing up in him. The last thing he wants is to push something on her and if he has to sacrifice himself for her peace of mind, then that's how it will end.
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Which is exactly why she pushes back down on his shoulders when he tries to stand, pinning him to the chair. "And what? Tell him that the only thing that seems to make you feel any better is your captain's touch? What do you think he's going to tell you -- or me? It's a curse, and I sure as hell don't need to get into a battle of wills with Leonard McCoy again, or be told to do what I'm already doing."
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"Then what are we supposed to do about it, run your hands over me until we figure out how to stop this? The only thing I know is that I came to you because I trust you. I don't know how to break this."
Or rather, he doesn't know how to break the curse in a way that will keep their relationship, both friendship and command relationship, intact. And that's what's bothering him the most.
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"If that's what needs to be done, but you keep bringing up trust. I think this is less about a comforting touch -- though that's certainly part of it -- and more the trust that comes with it, that is the foundation of that comfort." Her expression softens. "I don't need to ask you if you trust me, Chakotay. I already know you do."
And she isn't bringing up the Borg. Not now. Not when they've put that disagreement behind them and have mended the damage their opposing views did to their friendship.
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"I feel like a flower, slowly wilting in the heat, but I don't know how that translates to our situation now." He also doesn't really know a whole lot about curses and their cures. This one feels pretty new to him. New, strange, and completely unwanted. "If it's an issue of trust, is the solution to put me in a situation in which I have to trust you fully?"
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"I don't know. I didn't design the curse. If I did, I would've made the solution a hell of a lot more complicated." A bad joke, but one nonetheless. She's not one to make things easy for someone. Be thankful she's not a deity or part of the anonymous regime. "Stand up."
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"All right."
What now?
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That's all the warning he's going to receive before she closes the gap between them and does just that, hoping some full body contact will improve his symptoms at a more rapid pace.
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It takes him a few minutes to be able to gather his thoughts and emotions enough to respond. "I think I'd rather skip out on the humanity lessons, if you don't mind." Seven can have those all to herself. "I think this is helping, but I don't think it's fixed the entire problem."
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Crueler than what she's doing to herself, as she finds she doesn't entirely mind being held like this. She rests her cheek against his chest, relaxing. "At least you're no longer in danger of crumbling."
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The question now is how long they would have to keep this up. Curses could be so unpredictable, who even knew if this would keep it from spreading at all? It might be temporary, it might not even work at all, or something else might be the cure. He's really starting to dislike this place.
"Better this than putting me back together like a puzzle."
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It was easier to joke and quote ancient nursery rhymes than to address anything about their current situation that didn't relate to the curse.
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He rests his arms loosely around her. As much as he's enjoying this, he's beginning to wonder if maybe finding the actual cure, assuming there is one, would be better than standing around like this. Not that he's complaining, exactly. But like everything involving the two of them, it's complicated.
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This is not a choice, this is fate delivered without even being given the option of walking down one path or another. It was too similar to Voyager's initial stranding in the Delta Quadrant for her to be comfortable with, and it was highly doubtful that she'd ever grow to like the City. Tolerate it and flourish within it? Oh, most definitely. But she'll never like it.
...but she likes this. It's been so long since Kathryn's been held by someone real, solid, and flesh instead of a projection of photons and force fields. She enjoys it more than she should, more than she's allowed to or okay with. Yet, a part of her is secretly alright with these turn of events, almost grateful for the opportunity to get close within valid reason without breaking protocol. No matter what happens, she can write it off as being in the line of duty. It sounds so impersonal, but it needs to be as impersonal as possible.
At least on
PADDpaper.Her hands move up his back, up, down, up, down, and up again until she's resting her palms against his shoulder blades. "Feeling any better?"
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"Much. Thank you."
He can't tell if this is fixing the problem, but it's certainly alleviating his discomfort. They won't know for sure until they release each other and he's loathe to do that too soon when he knows he'll never get this chance again, but he's fairly certain they won't have much of an excuse to continue it soon enough. His skin is starting to feel less flaky and painful, which is both good and bad. It means he's on the mend, but it also means he'll have to let go soon, whether he wants to or not.
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"And now?"
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"Fine. That seems to have worked. I guess it was a matter of trial, error, and faith that someone else could help."
It's a small joke, one that rings hollow in his ears, and he hopes she won't pick up on that.
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It didn't rank as high on her awkward list as Q asking her to mate with him, that's for sure. And they've both been through far worse than a couple of curses that demand physical comfort, trust, faith, and revert them back to a near adolescent state.
"I don't know about you, but I could use a cup of coffee."
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"I think I'll join you."
And he moves to see if they'll need to make another pot of coffee.