Category: Delta Wild

  • Delta Wild – Chapter 11

    Dani struggled in vain to pull her arms free from the chains that bound her to the chair, but only succeeded in deepening the cuts the chains had created in her skin. She finally realized the futility of it and gave up.

    A large metal door across the room opened. Dani watched it expectantly. Finally, someone walked into the room. It was a woman. As she drew nearer, realized that the woman was a Cardassian!

    ‘In this area?’ Dani thought. ‘What is she doing here?’ A million questions like this raced through Dani’s mind.

    The woman stepped up to Dani.

    “Well, well, well…” she said, walking in a slow circle around Dani. “What have we here?” She stopped at Dani’s left. Dani refused to look at her. She was angry, confused, and, most of all, scared to death. What did the Kazon and this Cardassian want? Did they want her specifically? Maybe they’d wanted the whole team and only gotten her because the transport had failed.

    “What’s your name?” the Cardassian asked. When Dani didn’t answer, the woman walked around to the front of Dani and stooped so that the two were eye level to each other.

    The woman looked into Dani’s eyes. There was something familiar about them, but she couldn’t quite pinpoint it. “I said what’s your name?” the woman repeated, more forcefully. Dani did nothing but glare at the woman in front of her.

    The woman stood and looked down at Dani. She had seen that glare somewhere before. Someone else had looked at her like that in the past. That glare…and then she realized it – that was the icy cold stare of Captain Kathryn Janeway!

    The woman leaned down to get a better look at her captive, just to be sure. She looked into her eyes once again. ‘No,’ the woman thought, ‘it isn’t Janeway.’ She studied the girl a little longer. ‘But they’re definitely related,’ she decided. She started to sort this out logically. This person was too young to be a sister. Even if she were, what was she doing here, in the Delta quadrant? No. That was a big ‘if’.

    The woman looked at the person in the chair again and saw something she hadn’t noticed before. There was something around the girl’s neck. A small necklace. She picked it up off the young woman’s neck with her finger and examined it. She immediately recognized the miniature symbol that hung on the small chain. “Chakotay…” slipped from her lips.

    Dani looked up at the Cardassian woman. How did she know her father? The woman looked from the necklace to Dani. She knew she’d hit home when she’d uttered Chakotay’s name. And suddenly she saw it. That look of angry surprise that Chakotay, her former lover, had so mastered. That glare she’d gotten from the Starfleet captain so many times before. This was the daughter of Janeway and Chakotay.

    The woman stood up straight. It was time to visit some old “friends.”

    “Captain, I’m picking up a Kazon warship,” Tom reported. He’d returned to his position at helm. He and the rest of the bridge crew had watched Kathryn practically go out of her mind trying to figure out a way to get her daughter back. But she didn’t have the slightest idea where to even start. They hadn’t picked up anything remotely Kazon – until now, that is. Chakotay had remained calm on the outside, however one look in his dark eyes revealed that he was feeling everything Kathryn was feeling – anger, frustration, hopelessness, fear. However, at the report of a Kazon ship nearby, the tiniest glimmer of hope had appeared in his eyes.

    Kathryn looked at Tom. “Where?” she asked, referring to the warship.

    “A few kilometers off our port bow,” Tom replied.

    Kathryn stood. “Onscreen,” she said. The unattractive design of a Kazon warship appeared on the screen. “Mr. Kim?”

    “I’m on it, Captain,” Harry said. “Scanning for Dani’s signal.” After a few very tense moments, Harry finally spoke. “I’ve located her!” Kathryn turned to the young ops officer “…She’s conscious, and there’s someone with her.”

    “Kazon,” Kathryn assumed.

    Harry shook his head. “No, Captain.” He looked up from the sensor readings. “Cardassian.”

    Chakotay stood and looked at Kathryn, then at Harry. “Cardassian?” he asked.

    “Yes, sir. Female.” Chakotay looked at Kathryn again. They were both thinking the same thing, but…no, it couldn’t be. What would she be doing in the Delta quadrant? And with the Kazon, at that?

    “Captain, we’re being hailed!”

    “On screen,” Kathryn commanded. The view screen flickered, and a familiar face filled the screen. Kathryn and Chakotay looked at each other. They hadn’t wanted to believe it, but here she was staring them and the rest of the bridge crew in the face.

    “Seska…” Tom said, hardly believing his eyes.

    “Yes, Tom,” Seska said smoothly. “It’s me. Long time, no see, eh?” Seska looked from the pilot to the Captain. “Well, well, well…hello, Captain…” She looked at the first officer. “…Chakotay…” She looked at Kathryn once again. “It seems we’ve arrived at a very interesting situation.”

    “I want my crew member back,” Kathryn said pointedly.

    “Oh, come now, Captain,” Seska said coyly. “Let’s not beat around the bush. We both know she’s not really a member of your crew.” Seska saw Kathryn give a nervous glance to Chakotay. “She’s your daughter.”

    Kathryn’s first instinct was to deny it, but she decided against it. Instead, she asked, “What makes you think that?”

    “Well, you do have to admit that it is rather obvious. She looks just like you…” Seska looked at Chakotay. “…and her father.”

    Chakotay stepped up and stood beside Kathryn. “If you lay one finger on her-“

    “She is quite beautiful,” Seska interrupted. “You did a good job. She hasn’t said a word.”

    “If you hurt her, Seska, I promise you won’t live long enough to even realize the mistake you’ve made,” Chakotay threatened.

    “Commander,” Kathryn said sternly.

    “Yes, Commander,” Seska mocked. “You shouldn’t make promises you can’t keep.”

    Kathryn looked at Seska’s face on the view screen.

    “What do you want, Seska?” Kathryn asked. “Name your price.”

    “My asking price is too great,” Seska said.

    “You have my daughter,” Kathryn said. “No price is too great. Just tell me what I have to do to get her back.”

    Seska’s gaze fell on Chakotay. Everyone knew what – or rather, who – she wanted.

    “If I don’t have what I want in exactly one hour, I’ll kill her.”

    Kathryn looked at Chakotay, whose eyes remained fixed on the image displayed on the screen.

    “I’ll be there,” Chakotay said.

    “Good. I’m glad we see eye-to-eye.” The view screen flickered and Seska’s image disappeared.

    “Commander, my ready-room – now,” Kathryn ordered. However, it wasn’t in her usual command tone that she gave the order. It was more…fragile.

    “Yes, Captain,” Chakotay said, walking past Kathryn in the direction of her ready-room. Kathryn turned and followed Chakotay’s path. She stopped at the tactical station.

    “Tuvok, you have the bridge,” she said without looking up.

    “Aye, Captain,” Tuvok replied.

    Kathryn hesitated before walking into her ready-room. As soon as the doors slid shut behind her, her demeanor deteriorated from the tough captain to the worried mother. She and Chakotay looked at each other. She walked over to her desk and leaned against it. She bowed her head and brought one hand to her forehead.

    “They’ve got her,” Kathryn said. She sighed. “They’ve got her.”

    Chakotay walked over to Kathryn. “But we’re going to get her back, Kathryn,” he said.

    Kathryn looked up at Chakotay. “How do we know Seska won’t kill her once you get over there?”

    “Because I won’t let her,” Chakotay said confidently.

    Kathryn looked away. “This is all my fault,” she said. “I never should’ve let her go on that away mission.”

    “Kathryn, she couldn’t stay locked in our quarters forever.”

    “I know. I just…” Her eyes were filming over with tears that she was desperately trying to hold back. She wasn’t a woman who cried easily, but what kind of a mother would she be if she couldn’t even allow herself to cry for her own daughter? The tears flowed over, and she didn’t even make a move to wipe them away. She stood and few steps towards the middle of the room.

    “…I just wanted to…” She couldn’t find the words. Chakotay walked over to her and wrapped his arms around her and kissed the top of her head. She went nearly limp in his arms.

    Xxx

    “Well, it looks as if you could be getting out of here pretty soon.” Seska walked into the room in which Dani was being held. The girl looked up at her. “I thought that might get your attention.” Seska stooped in front of Dani. They looked at each other, and Seska continued.

    “It seems your father will be joining us. If everything goes well, you’ll be on your way home.”

    Dani spoke for the first time since she’d been in Seska’s captivity. “And if everything doesn’t go well?”

    Seska didn’t reply. She just smiled. But it wasn’t a friendly or comforting smile. It did everything but comfort Dani. In fact, it frightened her.

    Dani’s eyes fell on the figure who had appeared in the doorway beyond Seska. Seska didn’t have to turn around to know that it was a messenger. She stood. Her package hd arrived. She turned and walked toward the door and the messenger.

    Xxx

    Chakotay stood in a corridor on the Kazon vessel. Before he had even completely materialized, he was surrounded by armed guards. Immediately, one of the guards reached out and snatched his comm badge off his chest. The guard stepped back and looked at it curiously. Chakotay looked past the guards and saw a familiar figure walking towards him. As the figure neared, Chakotay realized that it was Seska. The guards parted, creating a path for her.

    “Chakotay,” Seska said. “So glad you could join us.”

    “Where’s Dani?” Chakotay asked strait-forwardly.

    “So, that’s her name?” Seska asked. “Dani? She wouldn’t tell me.” She took a step closer to Chakotay. “You and Janeway taught her well.”

    “We didn’t teach her anything she didn’t need to know,” Chakotay said.

    “True,” Seska agreed. She took a step closer to Chakotay and tried to stroke his face. He moved before she could touch him. She withdrew her hand. “I see you’ve let your hair grow out-“

    “-Let’s skip the small talk, Seska,” Chakotay interrupted. “You said you’d let her go when I got here, and I’m here.”

    “Not so fast,” Seska said. “What’s the rush?”

    “I just want my daughter out of here.” Seska took a few steps back from Chakotay. He eyed her suspiciously. “You haven’t hurt her, have you?”

    Seska looked sincerely hurt. “Of course not. What kind of person do you think I am?”

    “One who threatened to kill my daughter.”

    “If you’ll follow me,” Seska said in a sickeningly polite tone. Chakotay followed Seska past the Kazon. He walked a few paces behind her, while the Kazon guards walked directly behind him. One of the guards’ guns poked lightly into his back with each step.

    Chakotay followed Seska into a room. The guards followed. Chakotay’s eyes instantly fell on the figure bound to the chair in the middle of the room.

    “Dani!” He tried to run to her, but two of the guards restrained him with their guns. Dani looked at him.

    “Dad!” she said.

    Chakotay looked at Seska, his anger flaring.

    “You tied her up?!” he exclaimed. “She’s not a criminal.”

    “But she is a prisoner,” Seska argued. “You’re telling me you wouldn’t restrain your prisoner? Come now, Chakotay; you know I know you better than that.”

    Chakotay looked at Dani again. “You have me. Now let her go.”

    “You know, I’m not sure if I should,” Seska said. Chakotay looked at her. His eyes remained fixed on her as she walked towards Dani. Seska turned to face Chakotay once again. “What do you think, Culluh?”

    Chakotay noticed that Seska was looking past him at someone else. He turned to see a rather large Kazon warrior standing behind him. The guard backed off, allowing the new-comer passage.

    ‘This is the First Maje, the leader,’ Chakotay thought. He could tell by the silent authority he had over all the others.

    Culluh stepped around Chakotay, into the open space in front of Dani and Seska.

    “I think she could prove to be a very valuable prisoner, the daughter of a Federation captain,” the Kazon leader said. He walked up to Dani. “We could accomplish many things with this one.”

    “Over my dead body,” Chakotay growled. The crewmen held him in place.

    “We could carry out that request with very little effort, I assure you, Chakotay, but I was so sure you’d want to go a different route,” Seska said.

    “She’s very attractive, Federation,” Culluh said to Chakotay. He bent down to Dani. “Tell me – do you dance?”

    Looking him directly in the eye, Dani spit in Culluh’s face. The Kazon immediately retaliated by slapping Dani across the face. She closed her eyes. She was stunned more than hurt. No one had ever done that to her before. She refused to cry, to give Culluh the satisfaction. Instead, she looked back up at the Maje. She looked him dead in the eye and didn’t even falter.

    Chakotay had to be restrained by three guards. When he realized his attempts to get to his daughter were futile, he looked at Seska.

    “Seska, stop this!” he half-pleaded, half-ordered. “This is between me and you. Leave her out of this! Send her back to Voyager. Please.”

    “It’s not my call to make,” Seska said, shrugging.

    “Bring him to me,” Culluh ordered, still looking down at Dani. The guards obediently walked Chakotay over to Culluh. Two guards held him, while one tied his hands behind his back. They forced him down on his knees.

    “You’re going to do this to me in front of my own child?” Chakotay asked. “Can’t you leave me with even a little dignity?” He was answered by a hard blow to the face, which he was sure left a bruise almost instantly. He was also sure that it wasn’t the last he was to receive. There were more to come.

    “I guess that’s a no,” Chakotay said. He promptly received another blow to the face. This one more or less landed on his jaw.

    “Tell me Voyager’s command codes,” Culluh ordered.

    “No,” Chakotay refused. Culluh punched him again, splitting his lower lip.

    “I want Voyager’s command codes,” Culluh repeated.

    “No!”

    Culluh hit Chakotay again, this time, bruising his eye. “The codes!”

    “I’d die before I handed them over to you,” Chakotay said. Culluh backhanded Chakotay, sending him across the floor.

    “I’d reconsider if I were you,” Culluh suggested threateningly. He kicked Chakotay once in the stomach. Chakotay rolled onto his back. “Untie them,” Culluh ordered, walking to the door. The crewmen proceeded to untie Dani. One of them picked Chakotay up, threw him onto his stomach, and untied his wrists. They then left.

    Dani fell to her father’s side. Seska bent down to Chakotay. “Please, Chakotay,” she pleaded with mock concern, “don’t make this harder on yourself. Tell us the command codes. If not for yourself, then for your daughter.” Seska touched Dani’s face. Dani immediately moved out of her grasp. Seska stood.

    “I’ll give you a little time to think it over,” she said before leaving the room.

    Dani looked down at Chakotay. “Dad?”

    “I’m fine,” Chakotay said. He started to sit up. “A few bruises and scrapes. Ah!”

    “Easy,” Dani said, helping Chakotay to a sitting position. Chakotay leaned against the wall and closed his swollen eyes.

    “A broken rib,” he said, wincing in pain. “Or five.”

    “Dad…”

    “I’ll be fine,” Chakotay said. He opened his eyes and looked at Dani. A nasty bruise was starting to form on her face where Culluh had hit her. “What about you?”

    Dani instinctively touched the area right under her eye. “Me? I’m fine.”

    “Does it hurt much?”

    “Smarts a little. It probably looks worse than it actually is.” Dani moved and sat against the wall beside Chakotay. She felt like resting her head on his shoulder, but she was afraid it might be injured. “Well, what do we do now?”

    “We wait,” Chakotay said. “Your mother’s probably already realized that you should’ve been back a long time ago. At least that’s the way it would’ve worked out in our plan.”

    “What about you?”

    “We hadn’t gotten that far in the plan, yet.”

    Xxx

    Kathryn paced around the bridge. Neither Seska nor Chakotay had contacted her in almost an hour.

    “This is taking too long,” Kathryn observed. “We should’ve heard something by now.” She stopped pacing and turned to Harry. “Harry do we have anything, yet?”

    “No, Captain. I’m not picking up Dani any more, and I’ve lost the Commander’s comm badge signal, too.”

    Kathryn tapped her own comm badge. “Janeway to engineering. B’Elanna?”

    “Torres here, Captain,” B’Elanna said.

    “B’Elanna, have you found out anything new?” Kathryn asked.

    “Yes, Captain,” B’Elanna said. “We’ve confirmed that there is, in fact, a dampening field that’s blocking Chakotay’s and Dani’s signals. We’re working on a way to cut through and locate them now.”

    “Good. Keep working. I don’t know how much time we have.”

    “Aye, aye, Captain.”

    “Keep me posted. Janeway out.” Kathryn tapped her comm badge again, ending the transmission. She resumed her pacing.

    Xxx

    Dani opened her eyes at the sound of the doors sliding open. It was the loud sound of two metal objects sliding past each other. She looked in the direction of the door and saw Culluh, Seska, and four Kazon crewmen enter the room. The four crewmen pulled Dani and Chakotay to their feet. Culluh stepped up to the battered Chakotay.

    “Are you prepared to tell me what I want to hear, Federation?” Culluh asked.

    “I told you,” Chakotay began, “I’d rather die than give them to you.”

    “Believe me, that’s a very tempting offer, however, if you were dead, I still wouldn’t have what I wanted,” Culluh observed. He looked from Chakotay to Dani.

    “She doesn’t know them,” Chakotay said before Culluh could go on.

    “No,” Culluh agreed, “but I wasn’t going to ask her.” He held out his hand. Seska placed a rifle in it. Culluh pointed the rifle at Dani’s head.

    Xxx

    “Torres to Bridge!” B’Elanna exclaimed.

    “Bridge here,” Kathryn responded. “What is it, Lt.?”

    “Captain, we’ve located Chakotay and Dani!” B’Elanna reported.

    “Can you get a lock?” the Captain’s voice asked.

    B’Elanna worked speedily at her console in engineering. “I’ve almost got them.” Her fingers skipped over the sleek controls. If she didn’t work fast…damn! “Captain, I’ve lost them!”

    “Get them back, Lt.!” Kathryn said desperately.

    “I’m trying,” B’Elanna replied.

    Xxx

    The Kazon leader looked at Chakotay. “Physical torture didn’t work, so we have to take a different path. This rifle is set to kill. Tell me the codes, or I’ll fire.”

    Dani and Chakotay looked at each other.

    “Don’t do it,” Dani said to Chakotay. “Don’t.”

    “Aww, isn’t that sweet?” Seska said.

    “The codes,” Culluh demanded.

    Chakotay went over everything in his mind. If he didn’t tell Culluh the codes, Dani – his only daughter, his pride and joy, his flesh and blood – would die; but if he did, everyone onboard Voyager would surely perish. How was he supposed to choose? Voyager or his own daughter?

    “Tough call, Chakotay?” Seska asked. “You know, if you’d just given us the codes when we first asked for them, you wouldn’t be in this situation right now…so what’s it going to be, Chakotay?”

    “The codes,” Culluh demanded once more.

    Xxx

    “B’Elanna,” Kathryn said, “What’s our status?”

    “I’ve got them!” B’Elanna exclaimed.

    “Get them out of there!”

    Xxx

    Chakotay had made his decision. He looked Culluh directly in the eye and said, “No.”

    “Have it your way,” Seska said.

    Dani looked at the rifle. She didn’t think about dying, even though she knew her short life was about to come to an end. She thought about her life. She thought about the summers she and her parents had spent in Indiana when she was a little girl. She thought about the first time she’d ever tasted coffee or caramel brownies. She thought about the day her parents had brought Molly, her dog, home. She thought about her mother, her father. All these thoughts passed through her mind in a matter of seconds.

    At the moment Dani expected to feel a rifle blast rip through her body, she saw the familiar blue light of Voyager’s transporter stream.

    Xxx

    “B’Elanna, do you have them?” Kathryn asked anxiously.

    After a few moments delay, B’Elanna responded with, “I’ve got them.”

    “Transport them to sickbay immediately. Mr. Paris, get us out of here. Warp 5.” Kathryn started for the turbolift. “Mr. Tuvok, you have the bridge.”

    Xxx

    When Kathryn walked into sickbay, Dani and Chakotay were on biobeds. The Doctor was using the osteoregenerator on Chakotay. Kathryn was overjoyed to see that both were conscious.

    “Dani!” Kathryn said.

    “Mom!” Dani jumped off the biobed and ran into her mother’s waiting arms. Kathryn looked Dani over, stroking her hair, touching her to make sure she was really there.

    “Are you alright?” Kathryn asked. She placed her hand on Dani’s chin and turned her head so that she could study the dark bruise under her eye.

    “I’m fine,” Dani said. “Dad’s the one whose really hurt.” She turned and looked at Chakotay. So did Kathryn.

    “Chakotay…” Kathryn said. She walked over to the biobed on which he was sitting. Dani followed.

    “I’m fine,” Chakotay said. “It’s just a few broken ribs. Some cuts and bruises.”

    “You’re very lucky you only sustained one kick,” the Doctor said. “Anymore would have damaged some of your internal organs.” The Doctor waved a dermal regenerator over the bruises on Chakotay’s face. “It looks like we picked you up at just the right time.”

    “Actually, I wasn’t the one in danger when we transported,” Chakotay admitted. Kathryn looked at Dani.

    “There was a phaser rifle pointed right at my head,” Dani said. ” A few seconds later, and there wouldn’t have been anything to transport.”

    Kathryn embraced Dani again. This time, Chakotay joined in.

    Dani looked up at her parents. “You know,” she started, “I have a question.”

    “Okay,” Kathryn said. “What is it?”

    “It’s about home,” Dani elaborated.

    “Go ahead,” Chakotay urged.

    Dani looked at her mother and then her father, and then she asked, “Are we there, yet?”

  • Delta Wild – Chapter 10

    Dani was so excited to actually be on an official away mission. Even if it was only to collect dilithium samples. Even though her mother, and later, her father, had assured her they were serious about it, Dani still hadn’t believed it until she had dematerialized on the transporter pad with Tom, B’Elanna, and Seven.

    The away team materialized on the rocky, dry planet surface. The four members of the team, including Dani, pulled our their tricorders and started scanning the area. Kathryn had decided to let Dani participate as an active member of the team, carrying a tricorder and a phaser. She thought it would make her feel as important to the mission as the rest of the team, and it would provide her with good experience working with a team.

    “This way,” B’Elanna said, leading the away team into a nearby cave.

    On Voyager’s bridge, Kathryn shifted nervously in her seat and crossed her legs. It wasn’t two minutes before she shifted again, crossing and uncrossing her legs. There was no denying it – Capt. Kathryn Janeway was nervous. And with good reason. Her only daughter was on her first away mission. She was only 18. Maybe this was too soon for her. Maybe this had been a mistake…

    Kathryn uncrossed her legs and tapped her left foot repeatedly on the floor. When that didn’t satisfy her, she stood. Chakotay looked up at her. She took a few steps toward the view screen, stopped, and turned back to her chai, walking back to it.

    Chakotay stood. He had to put an end to this. Kathryn turned again. She was about to walk back to the view screen when Chakotay grabbed her arm and stepped close to her. She looked up at him and sighed.

    “I know, I know,” Kathryn said. “It’s just so hard. I should’ve at least sent a security team with them.”

    “Why? To protect them from the rocks?” Chakotay quipped. “The dilithium?”

    Kathryn knew that Chakotay was only speaking the truth. “Kathryn, they’ll be fine,” Chakotay assured her. She looked up at him and sighed. “Now, come, and sit down.” Chakotay escorted Kathryn back to her seat.

    Chakotay’s words had calmed Kathryn somewhat, however nothing would put her completely at ease, not even hearing from Dani, herself, that she was okay. That reminded her – B’Elanna should’ve reported back to her on what they’d found by now. Before the thought had even left her mind, Kathryn’s comm badge chirped.

    “Torres to Janeway,” B’Elanna’s voice drifted from the comm badge.

    Kathryn stood, bringing her hand to the brooch resting on her chest. “Janeway here,” she said. “Go ahead.”

    “Captain, we’ve located the dilithium deposits,” B’Elanna said. “They’re in a cave a few meters from our landing site.”

    “When do you think we’ll be able to send excavation crews down, Lt.?” Kathryn asked.

    “Oh, immediately, Captain,” B’Elanna replied optimistically.

    “Good work, B’Elanna,” Kathryn praised. Despite her overwhelming concern for her daughter, she resisted the urge to ask about Dani. “Janeway out.” Kathryn looked down at Chakotay. He was silent, but his eyes were saying, “I told you so.”

    Xxx

    B’Elanna turned to her team. It was time to go. “We just got the okay from the Captain,” she announced. “She’s sending evacuation crews down.”

    “There must be enough dilithium down here to last at least a year,” Tom remarked.

    B’Elanna snapped her tricorder shut. She was about to announce that they should get back to the shuttle when a troop of Kazon warriors stormed into the cave. In one swift motion, Tom drew his phaser and fired. The phaser blast hit one of the Amazon squarely in the chest, knocking him to the ground.

    Xxx

    “Captain, I’m picking up phaser discharge readings from below the surface!” Harry reported from the ops station.

    Kathryn stood and looked at the young ensign. She tapped her comm badge. “Janeway to Torres. B’Elanna, what’s going on down there?”

    “Captain, we’ve got Kazon down here!” B’Elanna was shouting over the phaser fire.

    “Where the hell did they come from?” Kathryn asked, addressing no one in particular. She looked at Harry again. “Why didn’t our sensors pick them up?”

    “I don’t know, Captain,” Harry replied.

    “Are sensors picking up any Kazon ships now?” Chakotay asked.

    “No,” was Harry’s bewildered reply.

    “Can you get a lock on our team?” Kathryn waited while Harry worked frantically trying to find any kind of way out of this sudden mess.

    “There’s too much interference from the planet’s upper atmosphere,” Harry said.

    Kathryn heart was starting to race now. “Can you compensate?” she asked.

    “I can try.”

    Kathryn activated her comm badge again. “Janeway to Torres.”

    “Torres here,” B’Elanna replied.

    “Harry’s going to try to get a lock on you. How long do you think you can hold them off?”

    Xxx

    Below the planet’s surface, B’Elanna fired her phaser from behind the boulder she was using for cover.

    “I don’t know!” B’Elanna shouted, replying to the Captain’s question. “Not very long!” She fired again. Then she turned around and pressed her back against the rock. She stole a glance at Dani. She’d almost forgotten that the girl had come along. Dani was holding her own with the Kazon, firing her phaser at them and doing very well. ‘Way to go, Dani,’ B’Elanna thought. She felt a phaser blast shoot past her head, and she turned back to continue the impromptu battle.

    Kathryn paced the area in front of hers and Chakotay’s chairs. There was nothing she could do until Harry got a transporter lock on the team. But what if he didn’t get a lock? What then? Would they be able to hold the Kazon off until she could send re-enforcements? What if-

    “Captain, I have a lock!” Harry announced. Kathryn stopped pacing and turned to Harry.

    “Get them out of there, Mr. Kim!” Kathryn commanded. Harry was already in the process before she even finished giving the command.

    Xxx

    B’Elanna, Tom, Seven, and Dani all watched in horror as the number of Kazon warriors doubled. All of them had their weapons raised and pointed at the Voyager away team. B’Elanna looked back at Tom, Dani, and Seven. Dani – she was so young. And she was facing this with so much courage. She didn’t look scared at all. That was one trait Chakotay and the Captain had definitely passed on to her.

    B’Elanna took a deep breath, turned around, and prepared to fire. The away team might not win, but they could at least try. Just then, the room started to fade into the blue particles of a transporter beam. They were being beamed out!

    “Got ’em, Captain!” Harry exclaimed. He looked from his console at the Captain with a smile on his face. Kathryn breathed a big sigh of relief. She heard Chakotay do the same.

    The blue transporter beam particles faded to the safe confines of Voyager’s transporter room.

    “Oh, thank God,” Tom exhaled as he stepped off the transporter pad. Seven stepped off next. Then B’Elanna. “That was a little close for comfort,” Tom said.

    B’Elanna stopped walking. Something wasn’t right. It seemed like someone was…missing. She looked at Tom and Seven, and then back at the now-empty transporter pad. It hit her like a lightening bolt. She hit her comm badge.

    “Captain, we have a problem!”

    Xxx

    Dani looked around the cave. The rest of the away team was gone! She was alone!

    “Drop your weapon, now!” one of the Kazon ordered. Dani didn’t have any choice. She was hopelessly outnumbered. She slowly stood, tossing her weapon to the ground.

    Xxx

    Kathryn looked at Chakotay with disbelief upon hearing the dreadful news. Chakotay had a similar look on his face. Kathryn had sat down, but she was now back on her feet.

    “Harry,” she said. She watched the young man work frantically at his station. He shook his head.

    “I can’t get her,” he said. He continued working anyway. “Getting them the first time was a miracle in itself.” He suddenly stopped working.

    “What is it, Mr. Kim?” Kathryn asked. Harry hesitated a few moments before looking at Kathryn. “Mr. Kim?”

    “I’ve lost her signal completely,” Harry said, finally looking up from his console.

    Kathryn felt as if the wind had just been knocked from her. Her daughter was now in the hands of those Kazon vultures.

  • Delta Wild – Chapter 9

    When Dani walked into the mess hall, she saw that Icheb was sitting at a table by the window waiting for her. As Dani approached the table, the Borg-human looked up at her. His face seemed to brighten a little at the sight of her.

    Dani walked over to the table and sat down across from Icheb.

    “Hi,” Dani said.

    “Hello,” Icheb said.

    Chakotay and Kathryn walked into the mess hall. They stopped short when they saw Icheb and Dani at a table together.

    “They sure have been spending a lot of time together lately,” Kathryn observed.

    “Yes,” Chakotay agreed. “At least she’s not on the holodeck.” He and Kathryn looked at each other.

    “True,” Kathryn said. She watched Dani and thought back to a time when she would never have allowed her daughter to socialize with a Borg drone. They seemed to be getting along so well. “Maybe we should join them,” Kathryn suggested, already starting to walk over to Icheb and Dani’s table. Chakotay reached out and touched her arm.

    “No,” Chakotay said. Kathryn looked at him. “She just turned 18 a few days ago. Don’t you remember when you were her age? You didn’t want your parents hanging around your friends, did you?”

    Kathryn felt as if she’d just been insulted. She squared her shoulders. “But I’m-“

    “-her mother,” Chakotay said, finishing her sentence for her. His ending differed from what hers would have been, however. “Come on.”

    Giving one last look to Dani and her companion, Kathryn abandoned her mission and followed Chakotay to a table on the other side of the room.

    Xxx

    Icheb and Dani walked through the doors into her quarters. They sat down on the couch in the living room and looked at each other.

    ‘The things he must know,’ Dani thought, her eyes tracing over Icheb’s face, from his dark hair to the cortical implant near his left eye to his nose ridges.

    “What’s it like?” she asked him.

    “What is ‘what’ like?” Icheb asked.

    “Being you,” Dani asked. Then she realized how absurd this must’ve sounded to Icheb. “I mean, you used to be part of the Borg collective. What was it like?”

    Icheb looked at the table in front of them for a moment, while he gathered his reply.

    “It was…comforting,” he finally said, looking back at Dani.

    Dani was a little surprised. Comforting wasn’t exactly the term she would use to describe the collective. Then again, she had never actually been apart of the collective.

    “Comforting?” Dani asked.

    “Yes.” Icheb went on. “Every thought circulated throughout the collective. One was never alone. That is how it was comforting.”

    “Do you ever miss it?” Dani asked him.

    Icheb thought for a few more moments before answering, “No. I do not.”

    “Were you happy there?”

    “Emotion was irrelevant.”

    “It’s not irrelevant now,” Dani said. Both she and Icheb thought about this for a moment. “Are you happy on Voyager?”

    Icheb looked at Dani. There was an expression of revelation on his face. “Yes,” he said.

    Dani smiled. Icheb smiled also.

    “I’m glad you’re here, Icheb,” Dani said.

    “So am I,” Icheb said. “I enjoy your company.” He looked away from her, and his smile faded.

    “What’s the matter?” Dani asked, noticing the change that had taken place in him.

    “I am unsure,” Icheb said. “I am experiencing…feelings unfamiliar to me.”

    “Can you describe them?” Dani asked. Icheb didn’t answer her. “Icheb?”

    Icheb looked at Dani. He started to speak. “I…”

    “Yes?” Dani encouraged.

    Icheb looked at Dani. Then he unexpectedly leaned over and kissed her.

    Xxx

    “I think they have lot in common,” Chakotay said. He and Kathryn were on their way from the mess hall to their quarters. “They both had to learn how to accept tremendous changes in their lives. Icheb had to learn how to live away from the collective; Dani had to learn how to live away from Earth. I think they could have some very interesting conversations. They could become very good friends.”

    Kathryn and Chakotay stopped walking. They had reached their quarters.

    “Do you think they could become more than friends?” Kathryn asked with a raised eyebrow.

    “I don’t know,” was Chakotay’s reply. “Do you?”

    Kathryn smiled. “Nooo… Dani and Icheb?” She shook her head. “No.”

    “You never know,” Chakotay said, smiling. “There have been stranger pairings. Tom and B’Elanna, Neelix and Kes…you and I.” Kathryn looked at him before stepping up to the doors. They slid open and she and Chakotay walked in. They both stopped dead in their tracks. Dani and Icheb were on the couch engaged in a kiss. Before they could retreat back out the door, Icheb and Dani parted and looked up at them. Everyone remained frozen, not knowing how to proceed. Then Icheb stood.

    “Captain,” he said. “I…we…”

    Chakotay held up his hand. Icheb had addressed Kathryn, but she was still too stunned to say anything. “There’s no need to explain, Icheb. It’s alright.”

    “We did not mean any harm,” Icheb explained.

    Dani stood beside Icheb. “Icheb, it’s alright. We didn’t do anything wrong.” She looked at her parents. “Did we?”

    All the color had drained from Kathryn’s face. She looked as if she’d just seen a ghost.

    “No,” Chakotay said, answering Dani’s question. “You didn’t.”

    Dani turned to Icheb. “We’ll talk a little later, Icheb.”

    “I must apologize for this incident,” Icheb said.

    “Don’t worry about it.”

    Icheb walked over to Chakotay and Kathryn. Kathryn’s expression had changed very little.

    “I apologize sincerely,” Icheb said.

    “It’s okay, Icheb,” Chakotay said. “You didn’t do anything wrong.”

    Icheb looked at Chakotay and then at Kathryn. He looked at Chakotay and nodded slightly before leaving.

    Dani walked around the couch to Chakotay and Kathryn. Her father seemed to be okay, but her mother looked quite shell-shocked.

    “Dad, could you give us a minute?” Dani asked.

    “Sure,” Chakotay said. He walked across the room and into his and Kathryn’s bedroom.

    Dani looked at Kathryn.

    “Mom?”

    “Yes?”

    “Are you okay?”

    Kathryn blinked a few times. “Uh-huh. Yes.”

    “Um…I don’t know what to say,” Dani said.

    “Me either,” said Kathryn. “For a change.”

    Dani smiled. “Well, what are you thinking, then?”

    It was Kathryn’s turn to smile. “That you’re not my little girl anymore.” Dani smiled sheepishly at Kathryn.

    “Are you mad?” Dani asked.

    Kathryn shook her head. “No. Come on; let’s sit.” They both walked over and sat down on the couch. “I’m not mad at you, Dani. It’s just that this is a little…surreal to me. The idea of you…you know, when I look at you, I still see that twelve year-old little girl who sneaked aboard five years ago. It’s taken this to make me realize that you’re becoming a young woman. I suppose I should start treating you as such.”

    Dani studied Kathryn’s expression, as if trying to predict what she was going to say next.

    Kathryn continued. “I’m sending an away team down to the planet’s surface to collect dilithium. How would you like to go with them?” Voyager had recently arrived at an M-class planet that, the sensors had detected, contained vast deposits of dilithium.

    “What?” Dani asked. Her mother had never let her go down to a planet surface without her before. And even when Kathryn had beamed down with her, it hadn’t been on an away mission. It had just been shore leave.

    “B’Elanna will be leading the away team. Tom and Seven will accompany her.”

    Now, Dani was really surprised. Her mother wasn’t sending her father with them.

    “You’re not sending Dad?”

    “No. Your father and I will remain on board.”

    Dani couldn’t believe her own ears. “Are you serious?” she asked. “I mean, you’re not kidding me, are you?”

    Kathryn shook her head. “No. You’re on your own on this one.”

    Dani looked at Kathryn. Kathryn nodded. Dani couldn’t believe it; her mother was actually letting her leave the nest. She leaned over and put her arms around her mother.

    “Oh, Mom…” Dani said. “Thank you.”

  • Delta Wild – Chapter 8

    …Dani Janeway had just turned sixteen a few days ago. After a trial game, her mother had finally granted her the privilege of playing Velocity. But she wasn’t playing Velocity tonight. Tonight, she was going to a party.

    Dani looked herself over in the mirror. The red fitted turtleneck sweater and short black skirt she was wearing was perfect for tonight. Her eyes moved to her hair. She couldn’t decide whether she should wear it up or down. She held it up with her hand and studied the prospective style. Then she let it fall about her shoulders once more and brushed it. Ultimately, she decided to wear it up. She twisted it and placed a clip on it to keep it in place. She looked herself over once more and decided that she was ready.

    Dani walked into the living area. Her parents were together on the sofa reading a book. They looked up at her.

    “Where are you off to tonight?” Kathryn asked.

    “The holodeck,” Dani replied.

    “One of your party programs?” Chakotay guessed.

    “Yes.”

    “Have fun,” Kathryn said, turning her attention back to the book.

    “Thanks,” Dani said. A smile formed on her face as she turned to go. They hadn’t given her a curfew. That meant-

    “Be back by 2400 hours,” Kathryn said, interrupting Dani’s thoughts. Dani whirled back around to face her parents, her smile having faded.

    “2400?” she whined. She looked at the small chronometer strapped to her wrist. “But it’s 2100 now.”

    Kathryn turned a page in the book. “Then you’d better be going then,” she said. As an afterthought, she looked up behind her at Chakotay. “You were finished with that page, weren’t you?”

    “Um-hm,” Chakotay nodded.

    Kathryn looked back down at the book. “2400,” she repeated.

    Dani turned and walked out of the quarters. Kathryn watched the doors close behind her, then she closed the book.

    “I wasn’t finished with that page,” Chakotay said.

    “You don’t think 2400 is too early, do you?” Kathryn asked Chakotay, completely ignoring his complaint.

    “No,” Chakotay said. “Not at all. When I was sixteen, that was my curfew.”

    “But that was a different time,” Kathryn countered. “And different circumstances…” She leaned forward and placed the book on the coffee table. “The main reason for curfews was so that you could know where your child was. We know where ours is. What can happen to her here?”

    “I think the more appropriate question would be ‘what can’t?’”

    Kathryn thought about Chakotay’s statement for a moment. “You’re right,” she agreed. “Some strange things have happened on the decks of this ship.”

    “And who’s to say that what happens can’t happen inside the walls of these quarters?” Chakotay challenged. “The fact that she’s in here doesn’t automatically make her safe.” Kathryn looked at him, and he went on. “Safety isn’t the only reason for curfews, though. Curfews establish discipline, order. In some cases, they can be used as punishment.”

    “When do parents usually stop giving their children curfews?” Kathryn asked.

    “Well, my parents stopped giving me a curfew when I turned 18,” Chakotay replied. “What about you?”

    “Oh, I never had a curfew,” Kathryn said casually.

    “You’d better not let Dani hear you say that. She’d call you a hypocrite.”

    “No, it wasn’t like that. I mean, I never went out. There wasn’t any need for a curfew.”

    “Well, what about Phoebe, then?” Chakotay probed.

    “I suppose she stopped getting them at around 18, like you.”

    “I think the thing to remember here is that Dani just turned sixteen. The rules will have to change as she gets older, but right now, I think 2400 is reasonable.”

    Xxx

    Chakotay paced the living area. He looked at the chronometer on the wall. It was 0200 hours, and Dani still hadn’t returned from the holodeck.

    “I’m going to go get her,” Chakotay declared.

    “No,” Kathryn protested. “Let’s giver her a few more minutes.”

    “A few more minutes? She’s had two hours.”

    “Computer, locate Dani Janeway,” Kathryn commanded. The computer responded that Dani was on this deck. Kathryn and Chakotay looked at each other. That meant she was close. “Computer – lights.” The room instantly became dark.

    Dani stopped in front of the doors of her quarters. ‘Maybe I shouldn’t go in,’ she thought. ‘But if I were any later, I’d just be in more trouble. Maybe I’ll get lucky, and they won’t be up.’ She punched in the security access code. She got it wrong the first time, partly because she was so tired and partly because she was worried about what might happen when the door open opened. She got the code on the second try and the doors slid open. She looked around the room before she went in. It was completely dark. ‘Maybe this won’t be so bad, after all.’

    Dani walked in. The doors slid closed behind her, and she was enveloped in the darkness. She stood still for a moment before walking on, so that her eyes could adjust to the darkness. ‘Now, if I can just get to my room…’ She tip-toed across the living area to her room. She had expected to hear the whoosh of her doors sliding open when she approached the door, but she didn’t. She felt…a presence. A person. Someone was standing in between her and her bedroom. She sighed. The jig was up. “Computer – lights.” Light immediately flooded the room, and Dani saw that it was her father who was barring the way to her room. Dani turned around. Her mother was standing in the doorway of hers and Chakotay’s bedroom. Dani looked back at her father. Busted!

  • Delta Wild – Chapter 7

    …Dani Janeway had just turned sixteen a few days ago. After a trial game, her mother had finally granted her the privilege of playing Velocity. But she wasn’t playing Velocity tonight. Tonight, she was going to a party.

    Dani looked herself over in the mirror. The red fitted turtleneck sweater and short black skirt she was wearing was perfect for tonight. Her eyes moved to her hair. She couldn’t decide whether she should wear it up or down. She held it up with her hand and studied the prospective style. Then she let it fall about her shoulders once more and brushed it. Ultimately, she decided to wear it up. She twisted it and placed a clip on it to keep it in place. She looked herself over once more and decided that she was ready.

    Dani walked into the living area. Her parents were together on the sofa reading a book. They looked up at her.

    “Where are you off to tonight?” Kathryn asked.

    “The holodeck,” Dani replied.

    “One of your party programs?” Chakotay guessed.

    “Yes.”

    “Have fun,” Kathryn said, turning her attention back to the book.

    “Thanks,” Dani said. A smile formed on her face as she turned to go. They hadn’t given her a curfew. That meant-

    “Be back by 2400 hours,” Kathryn said, interrupting Dani’s thoughts. Dani whirled back around to face her parents, her smile having faded.

    “2400?” she whined. She looked at the small chronometer strapped to her wrist. “But it’s 2100 now.”

    Kathryn turned a page in the book. “Then you’d better be going then,” she said. As an afterthought, she looked up behind her at Chakotay. “You were finished with that page, weren’t you?”

    “Um-hm,” Chakotay nodded.

    Kathryn looked back down at the book. “2400,” she repeated.

    Dani turned and walked out of the quarters. Kathryn watched the doors close behind her, then she closed the book.

    “I wasn’t finished with that page,” Chakotay said.

    “You don’t think 2400 is too early, do you?” Kathryn asked Chakotay, completely ignoring his complaint.

    “No,” Chakotay said. “Not at all. When I was sixteen, that was my curfew.”

    “But that was a different time,” Kathryn countered. “And different circumstances…” She leaned forward and placed the book on the coffee table. “The main reason for curfews was so that you could know where your child was. We know where ours is. What can happen to her here?”

    “I think the more appropriate question would be ‘what can’t?’”

    Kathryn thought about Chakotay’s statement for a moment. “You’re right,” she agreed. “Some strange things have happened on the decks of this ship.”

    “And who’s to say that what happens can’t happen inside the walls of these quarters?” Chakotay challenged. “The fact that she’s in here doesn’t automatically make her safe.” Kathryn looked at him, and he went on. “Safety isn’t the only reason for curfews, though. Curfews establish discipline, order. In some cases, they can be used as punishment.”

    “When do parents usually stop giving their children curfews?” Kathryn asked.

    “Well, my parents stopped giving me a curfew when I turned 18,” Chakotay replied. “What about you?”

    “Oh, I never had a curfew,” Kathryn said casually.

    “You’d better not let Dani hear you say that. She’d call you a hypocrite.”

    “No, it wasn’t like that. I mean, I never went out. There wasn’t any need for a curfew.”

    “Well, what about Phoebe, then?” Chakotay probed.

    “I suppose she stopped getting them at around 18, like you.”

    “I think the thing to remember here is that Dani just turned sixteen. The rules will have to change as she gets older, but right now, I think 2400 is reasonable.”

    Xxx

    Chakotay paced the living area. He looked at the chronometer on the wall. It was 0200 hours, and Dani still hadn’t returned from the holodeck.

    “I’m going to go get her,” Chakotay declared.

    “No,” Kathryn protested. “Let’s giver her a few more minutes.”

    “A few more minutes? She’s had two hours.”

    “Computer, locate Dani Janeway,” Kathryn commanded. The computer responded that Dani was on this deck. Kathryn and Chakotay looked at each other. That meant she was close. “Computer – lights.” The room instantly became dark.

    Dani stopped in front of the doors of her quarters. ‘Maybe I shouldn’t go in,’ she thought. ‘But if I were any later, I’d just be in more trouble. Maybe I’ll get lucky, and they won’t be up.’ She punched in the security access code. She got it wrong the first time, partly because she was so tired and partly because she was worried about what might happen when the door open opened. She got the code on the second try and the doors slid open. She looked around the room before she went in. It was completely dark. ‘Maybe this won’t be so bad, after all.’

    Dani walked in. The doors slid closed behind her, and she was enveloped in the darkness. She stood still for a moment before walking on, so that her eyes could adjust to the darkness. ‘Now, if I can just get to my room…’ She tip-toed across the living area to her room. She had expected to hear the whoosh of her doors sliding open when she approached the door, but she didn’t. She felt…a presence. A person. Someone was standing in between her and her bedroom. She sighed. The jig was up. “Computer – lights.” Light immediately flooded the room, and Dani saw that it was her father who was barring the way to her room. Dani turned around. Her mother was standing in the doorway of hers and Chakotay’s bedroom. Dani looked back at her father. Busted!