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Star Trek: Trident - Changing Times Trilogy

Bry_Sinclair

Vice Admiral
Admiral
"Wounds"


March 13th, 2363

On the edge of her consciousness she was aware of voices, overlapping, hurried, panicked, serious. Lieutenant Motoko Kimura tried as hard as she could to open her eyes, but no matter what she did, her body wouldn’t respond to her commands.

Is this it? Am I dead? she asked herself.

The last thing she remembered was being onboard the Galileo, sitting at the controls, Ensign Yopshi-Krral next to her, every sensor display screaming at her. She had only glanced at them before the Type-7 shuttle had been thrashed around, but from what she’d gleamed it looked like they had been in the path of a quantum filament. I must be dead. No way could a shuttlecraft withstand a filament.

From far off in the distance, one gruff voice cut through all the others. “Lieutenant Kimura, can you hear me? Lieutenant?”

Why is Doctor Grav here? He wasn’t on the shuttle, she pondered in her dream-like delirium.

“Lieutenant Kimura, if you can hear me, please make a noise.”

“Doc?” she croaked, though to all those listening it sounded more like, ‘Dllorrk’. She wanted to say more, but her mind felt heavy, her thoughts jumbled, and her body willed her to drift off into blissful slumber. She succumbed to it, and soon she wasn’t aware of anything.

------

March 19th, 2363

She opened her eyes a crack and winced at the blinding lights above her, groaning at the dull throb of pain that crept up every nerve in her body. She became aware of the beeping of a medical monitor, the faint hum of the sterilisation field that enshrouded Starfleet medical facilities. From the middle distance she heard someone speaking, though not to her.

Kimura tried to open her eyes once again, slower this time. When she was able to look around once again, Doctor Grav was standing next to her biobed, running a medical tricorder over her torso.

“How do you feel?” he asked, his voice uncharacteristically soft.

“What…what happened?” she asked the Tellarite physician.

“The Galileo was hit by a quantum filament. You managed to avoid the worst of it, but she still took heavy damage. You were severely injured.”

She looked at the Nautilus’ CMO, her eyes boring into him. “My team?”

He held her gaze as he said, “Including yourself, there were only three survivors.”

Tears pricked her eyes, and she unashamedly let them roll down her cheeks. There had been eight on her team—a simple repair job to an unmanned communication relay. “Who…?”

“Petty Officer Samson and Crewman T’Loe.”

Though not a religious person, Kimura closed her eyes tightly, and uttered a silent prayer for the five men and women lost under her command. Hopefully some benevolent deity would hear her and guide them to a place of rest.

When she opened her eyes again, she noticed a deep look of sympathy of Grav’s face. The usual gruff scowl he wore was nowhere to be seen. He had lost his share of patients, and though it would never be easy, he always handled it well—all things considered. There was something else…something that had affected the cantankerous Doctor Grav.

“I have some bad news, Motoko,” he began. “During the accident, you suffered some severe internal injuries. If we had been able to get to you sooner, I might have been able to do something.”

Part of her mind knew what he was going to say, but she blocked it out, not willing to hear it, not willing to admit that it might be a possibility.

“I’m sorry to have to tell you, that you’ve lost the baby.”

She stared at Grav for a long moment. That was it. It was out in the open. There was no way he could take it back, or cover it up. The tears she shed for her dead shipmates increased, coming heavier, blurring her vision. A guttural wail escaped from her throat as she sobbed. Her hands rested on her bandaged abdomen. She felt Grav’s supportive hand on her arm. All around her, everyone and everything in sickbay stopped, as all the medical personnel, and the two injured engineers from her team, looked at her. The gut-wrenching display of grief touched everyone, even T’Loe.

But Kimura wasn’t aware of their sympathy. She focused on the emptiness inside, the life lost to her.

------

March 21st, 2363

The news went from bad to worse. During her six day coma, a memorial had been held for Ensigns Yopshi-Krral and Purcell, Chief sh’Sohka, and Crewmen Weir and Oii. She hadn’t been able to say goodbye to them, the men and women she had worked with for two years, people she had enjoyed working with, gossiping with. They had shown her the respect the Assistant Chief Engineer was due, but treated her like one of the gang, made her laugh, asked her for help with professional and personal problems. They had been her friends, and she had let them all down.

As hard as that was, it paled in comparison to the other news Doctor Grav had delivered to her the day she regain consciousness. Her injuries had been extensive—not surprising given that her stomach had been impaled by a support strut—with perforations to her bowel, liver, and kidneys, all of which had been repaired. But it was her uterus that had taken the brunt of the damage, resulting in the loss of her developing child, and the news that the injuries were so severe that it was unlikely she would ever be able to become pregnant again.

She had spent most of the last two days, curled up on the biobed, crying. The nurses had made sure she was alright, Counsellor Tundi had come in to offer her support and comfort, and of course there was Michael. But she had barely acknowledged any of them.

How could she begin to share with the Ship’s Counsellor her loss, and what it meant for her future?

And Michael? He had been as excited as she was at the prospect of a baby, and a family together. It was the one thing he had wanted most in his life, more than his rank or position. But she couldn’t give it to him. As much as she loved him, as much as she wanted a family of her own—like her sister Reiko, who had three kids already—it had been denied to both of them now.

When he visited, Michael just sat beside her, his eyes red rimmed. They just sat their in quiet reflection, having him close made her feel a little better—knowing that he felt some of what she did. But he would never know the emptiness.

------

March 29th, 2363

Motoko Kimura, formerly of the U.S.S. Nautilus, sat onboard the interstellar transport heading back for Earth. Doctor Grav had taken her off active duty and put her on medical leave, so she was heading back to the apartment she had in Manhattan to rest and recuperate, and try to decide what she would do next. Her whole life had involved Starfleet to some degree, due to her mother being an officer. She and her sister had spent years going back and forth from ship to station to planet, between their parents, occasionally together, but mostly apart. When she was thirteen, she knew she wanted the adventurous life her mother had, and really began to focus on getting into the Academy as soon as she could. Four years of hard work at high school saw her get her wish. Another four years of intensive study and she graduated in the top five percent of her class.

Her whole life had been open to her, and thanks to her parents, she knew that she could have a loving husband and a family of her own even with the demands a career would place on her. But now that big part of her life was closed to her. She could still marry Michael, but she knew that it would be a constant painful reminder of what she had lost—not that she could ever forget. But seeing him and knowing that, like her, he too had wanted a spouse and kids, and would now have to settle for one without the other, was just too hard.

So she had ended it. She had handed back the ring he had given her, a family heirloom, told him to find someone to share what he wanted with, and left before he could say anything more. What she wanted more than anything was some time alone.

Time to think. Time to heal.


END
 
"Home Truths"


December 24th, 2363

Motoko Kimura materialised on the communal transporter pad in Edinburgh City Centre. Her younger sister, Reiko, had demanded that she come over for Christmas and Hogmanay, and with no excuse not to, Motoko had agreed. Her sister’s house was a few streets away so she set off walking, a holdall over one shoulder and bags of presents in both hands. The winter air was cold and sharp on her exposed skin of her face; the rest of her was wrapped up tightly.

It was something she wasn’t used to, thanks to the perfect climate control that existed onboard starships. But seeing as how she intended to be on Earth for the foreseeable future, she would adapt.

All the Christmas lights were up, which gave the old city an ethereal glow. Though it wasn’t snowing yet, the meteorology reports forecast it to start later in the afternoon and to remain that way for up to three weeks. Her nephews and niece would be as high as kites, and she would be taken out the next day to help them build snowmen—no one made them better than aunt Motoko (thanks to her degree in structural engineering).

The people she past smiled as they went about their business, hunting for gifts, or real foods to give their festive celebrations that extra little something. She had done all of that over in New York, and was ready for whatever might come her way.

------

It was close to eleven when the twins and their little brother finally fell asleep, from sheer exhaustion rather than anything else. Motoko sat in the lounge, in front of the open fire, listening to the logs crack under the heat, and enjoying the warmth in the room. The real Christmas tree in the corner glittered with lights and baubles, whilst underneath presents in bright wrapping paper were stacked high. She could hear Reiko and Ross through in the kitchen, getting a few things ready ahead of lunch tomorrow. Ross McNamara was a trained chef, and as such there wasn’t a gram of replicated food to be found in the house.

She gripped her steaming mug of hot chocolate, with real whipped cream bobbing on top, and enjoyed the sweet aroma. Closing her eyes, she listened to the fire, the ticking of the grandfather clock in the hallway, her sister and brother-in-law talking in the other room—where faint tasty smells floated on the air.

Everything was just so peaceful that she was almost dozing when Reiko gave her a nudge. “Hey,” she said before heading to the seat on the other side of the fireplace and dropping into it.

“What did you do that for?” Motoko asked, scowling sleepily at her sibling.

“You were about to spill hot chocolate all over the rug, and that’s antique! Trust me, you’re life wouldn’t be worth living if that happened.”

“How do you keep the kids from making a mess?”

“You saw the den didn’t you? They can make all the mess the want in there, but in here they are on their best behaviour.”

“Mum’s iron will rules,” she quipped, setting her mug down on a small side table.

“Damn straight!” Reiko retorted.

They both chuckled softly. There was a brief pause, whilst Motoko looked into the fire, her sister studied her. She looked up at Reiko and the intense look she wore.

“What?”

“Mo, what are you doing?” Her little sister was the only person she let call her ‘Mo’.

“What do you mean?”

“Here on Earth. Won’t you’re medical leave be up soon?”

“Yes it will. But I’ve decided not to go back.”

“What?!” Reiko asked, jolting forward. “Are you nuts?”

In an instant she went from surprised, to hurt, to angry. “No I’m not! I’m finally seeing clearly.”

“And quitting Starfleet is what you’re seeing with your ‘clear sight’? Mo, I know you’ve gone through hell this last year, but that’s no reason to pack it all in and run away!”

“I’m not running away,” she retaliated, feeling defensive.

“Then what would you call it?”

“Starfleet destroyed my life!” she roared.

Silence filled the room. The fire cracked. Ross popped his head in from the kitchen, saw the intense stares between the two sisters, and knew better than get involved. He slipped back to see to his preparations for the next day.

Motoko held her sisters look for a long moment, before she felt the tears well up, and she looked away. She blinked back the tears, finally admitting what she had known since March. Ever since she had entered the Academy she knew she wanted to have a career and a family, to give her all to both. She had found a loving man in Michael Joplin, who wanted the same she did, and for seventeen weeks she had had everything she wanted.

But fate was cruel and her happiness was susceptible to its will, as much as anything else in existence. What she had wanted had been stolen from her, and what did that leave? A job and the sympathy of her shipmates. She wasn’t sure if she could handle going back to the collective pity.

She held back for a few seconds longer, but no more. The tears rolled down her cheeks. In that instant, Reiko was crouching in front of her, wrapping her arms around Motoko’s shacking body as she wept—her own mothering instincts telling her to care for someone in pain. She stroked her big sister’s hair and made soothing sounds, reassuring her that it would be all right.

Motoko cried unabashedly. Her sister was there to help her, as she always was.

“You’re hurting, Mo. You’ve been on Earth for nine months, wallowing in your own misery. Blaming Starfleet for a tragic accident, and convincing yourself that you can wrap your pain, loss and grief up the uniform and toss them out an airlock. It doesn’t work like that. You need to face all of it, everything you don’t want to. Find a way to make peace with it and then try to move forward. It won’t be easy, but you need to. I love you, and want to see you get better.”

She listened to her sister’s wisdom and found her asking, “When did you become a trained psychologist?”

“You kidding me? Every botanist is one, plants can be so temperamental and moody it’s not funny!”

Despite her tears, Motoko couldn’t help but laugh. Her momentary grief once again under control she dried her eyes and face. Reiko scooted back on her haunches, looking at her only sibling.

“You think I should go back.”

Reiko nodded. “You need it. You worked so hard to get where you are, it’s a big part of your life. To cut out your duty, as well as the accident, the baby, and Michael, all in the same year would be too much. You need something familiar around you, somewhere you can find help and support.”

“I couldn’t go back to the Nautilus.”

“Then don’t. Request a new assignment, Starfleet would understand. Go for a new career path if you feel that would help. But do something with your life, rather than just give up on everything.”

She smiled at Reiko. “When did you get so smart?”

“Oh, please! I’ve always been the smart one.”

Motoko lunged forward and pushed her little sister backwards onto her butt. “Smartass more like it!”

They chuckled between themselves again, before Motoko slipped down onto the floor and sat beside her sister in front of the fire in easy silence. Reiko wrapped her arm around her shoulder, and Motoko rested her head on her little sisters shoulder.

------

January 4th, 2364

Motoko Kimura stepped into her Manhattan apartment, with just as much luggage as when she left. She kicked off her snow wet boots, dropped off all the bags in her bedroom, hung up her coat and then headed through to her desk. The two and a half weeks she’d spent aside her sister’s family had given her the strength and encouragement to make some hard choices, and to reassess the decisions she had already made.

She sat down and activated the comm system, and opened a link to Starfleet Headquarters in San Francisco, Department of Personnel. A moment later a young-looking human lieutenant commander appeared.

”Personnel, Lieutenant Commander Johns. How can I help you?” the administrations officer asked.

“Lieutenant Motoko Kimura, service number SC-783-119-14D.”

Commander Johns entered her information into his computer and looked at her service record when in appeared on his screen. ”Is this related to your medical leave?”

“Yes Commander. I’d like to resume active duty as soon as possible.

”Understood Lieutenant. I’ll log your request. You will need to get a full physical and psychological examination at Starfleet Medical, before you can be returned to active status.”

“Understood sir. I’ll make an appointment to see them. Commander, I do have a request to make.”

”And that is?”

“I’d like to be entered onto the Operations transferral list.”

He tapped a few more controls on his console and studying a new screen. ”Your records show that you have kept up with Bridge Protocols and Operations Management training. Once you are cleared by Medical, I can add you to the appropriate transferral roster.”

“Thank you sir.”

”Is there anything else I can help you with today?”

“No sir.”

”Very well. We will wait for the report from Starfleet Medical. Have a nice day. Personnel out.”

The channel closed, displaying the Starfleet delta on her screen. Motoko took a deep breath and let it out slowly, feeling a little better than she had before she’d left for Edinburgh.


END
 
"Moving Forward"


January 15th, 2364

Her uniform felt tight and the material itchy—even though it was the same one that Motoko Kimura had worn ten months ago on the Nautilus. She kept tugging at it, and flexing her arms and shoulders, trying to get comfy in attire that had been like a second skin to her for six years.

She stopped when the doors opened and a transporter operator entered. He stopped when he saw her, a little surprised to find her already there. “Somebody’s eager,” the non-com said.

“I’ve been off active duty for a while, just want to get right back into it again Chief.”

He moved to the controls and started entering commands. “Well good luck to you Lieutenant.” He hit the companel. “U.S.S. Camelot, this is Starfleet Command. Ready to transport.”

”Understood Starfleet. We are ready to receive.”

The operator gestured to the large dais that dominated the room. “Whenever you’re ready Lieutenant.”

Kimura took a deep breath and let it out slowly, before she stepped up onto the platform, her duffle bag over one shoulder—the crate with the rest of her personal possessions would be beamed up to the Camelot’s cargo hold, and then delivered to her quarters. She clutched the PADD on which were her new assignment orders. She still couldn’t quite believe that she’d gotten a billet as Chief Operations Officer right off the bat, but she wasn’t about to turn down the offer.

She nodded at the operator. “Energise.”

He tapped a few controls, and in moments she felt the transporter take effect. The sensation of beaming was always one that made her relax, knowing that her very existence was in the care of a tried and tested system. Eight seconds later, she stood on a smaller platform in a smaller transporter room onboard the Excelsior-Class starship.

At the controls stood a middle aged human woman, whilst also in the room was a diminutive, green-skinned alien, with large pointed ears. He wasn’t much taller than her knee, but he had wise eyes and a presence that told her he was aware of every little thing around him. His uniform was red and he bore four gold pips on his collar.

“Lieutenant Motoko Kimura, reporting. Requesting permission to come aboard, Captain.”

“Permission granted,” he said, looking her over. “Welcome. Tattok, my name is. Captain of this vessel, I am.”

She stepped down and handed him the PADD. She had to stoop a little so he could take it. He looked at the small computer display and nodded. “Cleared for duty, you are. Ordered to see our counsellor, as well,” a look of sympathy crossed his face. “A friend of mine, Captain Galloway is. Told me she did, of your accident. My deepest sympathies, you have.”

Kimura was a little taken aback. She hadn’t expected for her new CO and her previous one to know one another, let alone speak about the incident. Captain Tattok saw her distress.

“Told no one, I have. You’re past, not mine to bring up.”

“Thank you sir. It’s still something I’m coming to terms with.”

He gestured towards the door. “Come. Show you you’re quarters, I will.”

She followed him out into the corridor. Her impression of the little green man was increasing given his willingness to show her about himself, rather than getting the ship’s XO or Second Officer to do it. As they headed through the ship, various officers and crewmen acknowledged Tattok, their respect and admiration obvious, and he in turn addressed each of them by name—an impressive feat given that the Camelot would have anything up to or above five hundred and fifty people onboard. It also surprised her that even a towering Caldonian bowed towards the much shorter Tattok as a mark of respect. Though she knew that there was a variety of species in Starfleet, from the very tall to the very short, the sight of Tattok wasn’t what most people had in mind when it came to a starship Captain.

As they headed through the ship, he gave her some of its highlights—where to find the mess hall, lounge, gymnasium, holodecks, Ops centre, sickbay, the counselling offices—as well as general information on previous missions, and the current crew roster. Everything was committed to memory, and she suspected that everything was completely accurate as well.

They stepped into a turbolift and as they headed up two decks and forward, he looked up at her. “A question I have for you, Lieutenant.”

“Of course sir.”

“Needed my security clearance was, for your trunk. Many weapons, you possess. Use them, do you?”

She blushed at the slip up she had made, kicking herself for not remembering to declare the small collection of swords and knives she always carried with her. “Um, yes I do Captain. It’s been a while though.”

“Skilled are you?”

“I’ve trained at martial arts since I was six, and with the weapons since I was thirteen. It’s only been in this last year that I haven’t practiced. May I ask, why?”

He smiled slightly. “An opponent, I seek. Too long, since I sparred. Interested Lieutenant?”

“I could use some practice Captain,” she replied coolly, wondering how good could he really be, and looking forward to finding out.


END
 
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