Trials 04 Shadow's Trial

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Trials 04 Shadow's Trial Page 9

by Terri Zavaleta


  later?" Kim got to his feet and stretched before moving toward his

  music stand and picking up his clarinet. "With coffee?"

  "I thought you were stuffed?" she teased as she came in and settled on

  his couch with a padd in hand.

  "I am. But you put temptation in my path! Forget Aphrodite! I've

  changed my mind. I think you're more like Circe---an enchantress." He

  looked up and caught her gazing at him with rapt intensity. "What?"

  She shook her head, smiling. "Nothing."

  "No, really. Why are you looking at me like that?"

  She shrugged. "I don't know. How am I looking at you?" She dropped her

  eyes shyly to the padd in her hand.

  He put the clarinet down and came to sit next to her on the couch. He

  took her hand in his. "Like you're trying to memorize me?"

  "Oh, but I have to memorize you, Harry. I don't have any pictures of

  you to look at when you aren't around." She still didn't meet his

  eyes.

  He pretended to consider that. "You could always download my service

  record picture," he suggested.

  "Harry, do you know how stuffy you look in that one?" she protested,

  wrinkling her nose at him. She tried to back away from him.

  He grasped her wrist to keep her near. "Oh, I do, do I? And how would

  you know that, Crewman Shadow? Have you been sneaking a peek at my

  service record?"

  She bit her lip as she nodded. He brought one thumb up to free her lip

  from its trap between her teeth.

  "Really? Why?" He was intrigued.

  "Harry." She was blushing.

  "Malista," he crooned, smiling broadly.

  "To tell you the truth---promise not to tell Tom? He'd never stop

  teasing me about it."

  His smile widened. "Sure."

  "I sort of had a crush on you and I got your service record

  picture---just to look at." She giggled at his astonished countenance.

  "I know it was childish and silly, but---the first time I saw you, I

  thought you were very good-looking. Even if that picture does make you

  look stuffy. I still think you're the handsomest man on the ship."

  He chose to ignore that ego-building exaggeration. "When?"

  "When what?"

  "When did you have a crush on me?" Harry'd had no idea she'd been

  interested in him at all before Tom had brought them together. In

  fact, he'd had the impression she didn't like him at all. In

  hindsight, he decided it was her shyness and self-consciousness that

  had made her appear unfriendly and standoffish.

  She tugged her wrists free and brought her hands up to cover her

  reddened cheeks. "Oh, probably since the second day the Maquis were on

  Voyager." And of course, he hadn't noticed her at all. "And you

  didn't know I existed till Tom befriended me."

  "I must have been blind," he marveled.

  "No. Just not ready to pay attention to anyone," she said softly.

  "I saw your service record picture too," Harry replied, not wanting to

  stay on that topic. Tom had told him repeatedly that Libby was a

  forbidden subject---at least until Malista was more secure in her own

  relationship with Harry.

  "Really? When?"

  "At the staff meeting when the captain found out you were working two

  shifts." He thought he saw a flash of guilt in her eyes, but

  dismissed the idea. She couldn't still be feeling guilty about that

  piece of deception. That was months ago.

  "Oh? And what did you think?" she asked coyly.

  "You weren't smiling at all. You looked stern and forbidding. Scared

  me half to death," he lied boldly.

  She smacked him lightly on the shoulder. "Liar. You don't scare that

  easily."

  He snatched her hand and kissed her palm. "Remind me and we'll get Tom

  to take a flattering picture of the two of us. Two pictures. One for

  your quarters and one for mine."

  A fleeting shadow crossed her expression, but before he could question

  her, she pushed him toward the music stand. "Practice, Harry.

  Practice. You have a concert next week."

  "Yes, mother," he whined boyishly. He began to play as she settled

  down to read from the padd. Or at least she was reading every time he

  looked up from his music.

  ***********************

  The doctor looked up as Malista Shadow came through the doorway of his

  office. "Crewman Shadow, Commander Chakotay tells me you are

  interested in training to be a field medic."

  "Yes, sir." She was standing at attention.

  The hologram indicated the chair opposite his. She sat down. "It will

  require hours of study and practice, Crewman. Are you willing to make

  that kind of commitment and effort?" His brusqueness could easily be

  mistaken for unkindness, but Malista had spent quite a bit of time in

  Sickbay---as a patient and working on the equipment. She was

  accustomed to his direct manner and dry wit and not intimidated by

  him---at least not much.

  "Yes, sir."

  He nodded approvingly and held out a padd. "Since our crew is

  predominantly human, we will begin by studying emergency procedures

  for the treatment of humans. This will give you information about

  human anatomy and first aid procedures. I will work with Lieutenant

  Torres to schedule time for you to work in Sickbay so that you may

  learn to operate the specialized equipment. If an emergency should

  arise, you should report here for duty. Unfortunately, this ship seems

  to experience uncommonly frequent emergencies resulting in traumatic

  injuries."

  She looked over the information on the padd, then glanced back up at

  him. "Thank you, Doctor. Kes tells me you're an excellent instructor."

  The EMH gave a pleased, slightly embarrassed smile. "She did? Well, of

  course, she did. I am. My programming---" The doctor missed Kes, his

  first friend. The Ocampan had been spending less and less time in

  Sickbay as she pursued other courses of study in various ship's

  departments in an effort to satisfy her endless curiosity.

  "I don't think it could be just programming, Doctor. I think part of

  it is your personality," Malista said thoughtfully.

  "I am a hologram. I don't have a personality," the doctor announced

  decisively.

  Shadow chuckled, "Trust me, Doc. You have a personality. And you're

  developing a sense of humor. In fact, you remind me of my Uncle

  Dionysus."

  "Really? Dionysus?" He seemed to be trying the name on for size.

  Her lips curved upward as she reminisced. "Yes. He was my favorite

  uncle. He was a very compassionate man, but many people thought he was

  forbidding. He frowned a lot, you see."

  The doctor's brow creased. "Do I do that? Frown? I was not aware of

  it."

  "Maybe you should smile more, Doc. But only when you mean it," she

  added hastily as he peered at his reflection in the polished surface

  of his desk and stretched his mouth experimentally in a wide,

  insincere grin that was far more scary than reassuring.

  The Doctor turned his attention back to her. He studied her appearance

  for a moment and then said, "Crewman Shadow, your uniform appears to

  be too large. Have you been losing weight or
is there a flaw in the

  replication system?"

  She immediately distracted him without answering the question. "Have

  you heard about my holoprogam? The circus?"

  "Yes. Kes tells me you and Mr. Paris are going to perform in the next

  talent show."

  "I've been getting a lot of exercise there. You know, any good circus

  needs a ringmaster. In our circus at home, that was my Uncle Dionysus.

  I was just wondering if you might consider being the ringmaster---the

  master of ceremonies."

  "Yes. Yes, of course. I would make an excellent master of ceremonies.

  I'll find a proper costume in the databanks. Thank you for asking me."

  Malista got to her feet. "I have to get back to work, Doc." She held

  up the padd. "I'll get to work on this right away."

  Recalled from his daydreams of glory as a ringmaster, the doctor

  nodded briskly. "Of course. When you're ready for another assignment,

  contact me. I'm available twenty-four hours a day, you know."

  Malista darted an assessing glance at him. There didn't seem to be any

  underlying meaning to his words so she smiled at him again. "Bye,

  Doc."

  He'd already dismissed her from his mind. He was busily accessing the

  computer's databanks for information on circuses.

  ***********************

  Voyager, as always, was on the lookout for replacement parts or the

  raw materials with which to create their own parts. According to the

  starcharts obtained from the Travelers, there were three uninhabited

  planets in the next system that possessed lush vegetation that would

  allow the Starfleet crew to stock up on edible plants, fruits,

  vegetables, and seedlings. Janeway had ordered long range scans of the

  uninhabited planetary systems which they were approaching.

  "No humanoid life signs were detected," Ensign Kim reported. "In fact

  no signs of life at all except for vegetation."

  "If the planets are as fertile as the Travelers suggest in their

  report, I'd think someone would have colonized them by now," Chakotay

  stated.

  "There was no sign of colonies or space travel. But we did find

  these," Kim leaned forward and punched a control. The viewscreen

  sprung to life showing a number of small objects floating in space

  within the system. "They appear to be artificial satellites of some

  sort."

  "Possibly monitoring devices," Torres chimed in. "We received some

  telemetry from the nearest one, but we haven't been able to make any

  sense of it."

  "Some kind of warning buoy?" Lieutenant Tuvok speculated.

  Paris sent him a disbelieving smile. "Not necessarily. It could be

  someone is thinking about colonizing these worlds and sent out

  preliminary probes to gather information."

  Tuvok raised an eyebrow at the younger man. "An optimistic theory, Mr.

  Paris, but one with no factual basis."

  Tom snorted and leaned forward to respond. The captain caught his eyes

  with hers and the gray steel convinced him to settle back in his chair

  and await developments.

  "Keep working on decoding the telemetry, Mr. Kim. I would like to know

  if we're trespassing before we reach the system and begin harvesting

  food," Janeway instructed. "Anything further? No? Dismissed."

  As the rest of the staff filed out of the briefing room, the first

  officer lingered. Janeway glanced up at him. "Did you have something

  to discuss, Commander?"

  "Yes, Captain," he sighed, "but in private."

  She gestured to the chair next to her as she reseated herself. He

  sank into his chair and tried to decide how to begin. "Is something

  wrong?" she asked.

  "I haven't brought this to your attention before, Captain, because I

  wanted to find out how serious and widespread the problem is. But I've

  been having difficulty doing that," Chakotay paused. "It seems there

  has been a resurgence in tension between the two crews."

  Janeway's gray eyes widened. "Really? I thought we'd gotten past

  that---after we were marooned by the Kazon on Hanon IV."

  Chakotay shrugged. "There are still a few hard heads, but basically

  you're right. Most of the ill feeling had subsided or been worked out.

  It's experienced a recent revival."

  "Why?" Janeway was concerned. She cast her mind back over the events

  of the last few weeks and could think of nothing that should have

  polarized the crew.

  "That's part of the problem. No one is talking. To anyone," the first

  officer elucidated. "The Maquis have----withdrawn from their easy,

  social relationships. They seem to be watching the 'Fleeters as if

  they expect an attack. The last time I saw them react this way was

  when we were in Cardassian space."

  "Do you think it might have something to do with the crew evaluations

  and promotions lists we've been working on?"

  Chakotay shrugged. "I don't know. I suggest we hold off on scheduling

  the evaluation meetings and announcing the results. It might help ease

  things a bit. But whatever the cause, the tension has been steadily

  rising for the past few weeks."

  "And you have no idea what set this off?" Janeway was puzzled.

  "No one's talking to me, either. In fact, they're watching me, too.

  Trying to see what I'm going to do about it. Don't read me wrong,

  Captain. They aren't actively hostile. They just aren't friendly. And

  the Starfleet personnel aren't talking either. It seems to be about

  ten of the Starfleet crew who know what is going on and are somehow

  involved. In whatever. The others are puzzled, but neutral. It makes

  for an interesting ambiance in the common areas of the ship," Chakotay

  added wryly.

  "I hadn't noticed," Janeway confessed regretfully. "Maybe I need to

  spend more time socializing."

  That reminded the commander of the question he'd forgotten to ask

  before. "Yes, Captain. You did seem to be enjoying yourself at

  Sandrine's the other night with Tom Paris and his crowd. Would you

  mind telling me why everyone at your table was staring at me?"

  To his mild surprise, the captain flicked a grin at him as she

  remembered the occasion. "Oh, yes. It seems that Tom and Malista

  invented a game. The object is to identify every crew member with a

  literary figure. We'd just been discussing the character Malista had

  chosen to represent you." The grin was now reminiscent of a Tom Paris

  smirk.

  Chakotay winced in anticipation as a few ideas of their possible

  choices for him popped into his head. "And?"

  "Oberon." She waited for recognition to set in.

  The light slowly dawned. "The character from Shakespeare? The fairy

  king?" His voice became progressively louder. "Why?"

  Janeway's grin widened. "I was hoping you'd ask. Other than 'A

  Midsummer Night's Dream', other references to Oberon credit him with

  having the gift of insight into men's thoughts. Malista thought that

  was appropriate because of your----counseling duties." She was

  beginning to splutter.

  Chakotay knew she hadn't reached the punchline. "And?"

  "And though he's only three feet tall---he has an---angelic face!" At


  the expression on her first officer's 'angelic face', Janeway

  succumbed to laughter, falling back in her chair and holding her

  sides.

  Chakotay looked bemused. "Angelic face? Me? She thinks *I* have an

  angelic face?" He grinned at the captain. "Angelic. That's not the

  word I would have used to describe myself."

  "That's what * I * said," Kathryn burbled, watching as his eyes

  narrowed in suspicion. "I said bear-like---if you remember? When I was

  guessing about your animal guide."

  "Grizzly bear?" the first officer asked impishly. His dimples flashed.

  Janeway gasped, "That's what *Tom* said! Grizzly or teddy?"

  Chakotay groaned as she laughed again. "I don't think I want to hear

  the rest of the conversation, Captain. Unless---" He eyed her

  speculatively. "Captain, what character did they assign to you?"

  She sobered in a heartbeat. "I beg your pardon?"

  She was stalling for time and he knew it so he pressed his advantage.

  "Captain? What literary figure did they choose to represent you?"

  She stood and pulled her uniform into perfect alignment. "Commander,

  don't you have work to do?" She was frowning, but her gray eyes were

 

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