I've rechaptered the story so that each new section posted is a new chapter. Makes it easier to keep track of for me, so here we go with the next part.
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Chapter Nineteen
USS Enterprise
Kevratas orbit
Stardate 57070.5
Drifting back to consciousness from the dark depths of hell, Lieutenant Sara Nave opened her eyes and slammed them shut again. She was no longer in the cave but aboard a starship. It wasn’t that so much as another feeling that struck her.
She was alive.
After pushing Worf out of the way of the rock fall, she had expected to feel nothing ever again. As the cobwebs cleared from her mind, she realised that she didn’t actually feel much of anything, except warmth. Neurons which hadn’t fired in two and a half days according to her internal clock sent signals to her left arm to wipe her forehead. When this failed to produce any type of response, Nave opened her eyes again and looked to her arm.
It was gone.
Deciding to take a full inventory of her body, she noticed that her right arm was still in place but below her torso, the blanket which was supposed to be covering her legs was conspicuously flat. Sitting up as best she could, and using her right arm, Nave pulled the sheet toward her and saw the cauterised stumps of both legs. She let herself fall back onto the biobed as a single tear made its way down her cheek. An intrusive finger wiped it away and a voice whispered something she didn’t quite hear.
‘Huh?’ she asked hoarsely as she blinked more tears away.
‘I’m here, Sara,’ Lieutenant Lionardo Battaglia said softly. ‘Right by your side.’
‘What happened?’
‘You got hurt, bad,’ he said. His voice was soft but stern at the same time. He was doing her a favour by not sugar-coating it. ‘You had almost a half-ton of rock crushing you. Doctor Tropp had to take your left arm and both legs so the rest of you could live.’
‘What rest of me?’ she spat with a dry mouth. ‘I’m a head, an arm and a chest.’
‘Mister Battaglia, I thought I asked you to stay away from my patient!’ Tropp said, intruding on their moment.
‘I’ll be back later,’ Battaglia replied and beat a hasty retreat.
‘I’m sorry, Lieutenant. I was planning to break the news to you a little easier than that.’
‘Why bother, there’s nothing you can do about it is there? I can’t get my limbs back.’
‘Actually, you can, but the technique is still in the experimental stages, though great strides have been made in the last few years.’
‘Will I be able to walk again?’ Nave asked, feeling slightly better about having almost three fifths of her body removed.
Tropp considered his answer. ‘If it works you’ll regain full mobility in your arm and legs, they’ll be grown from your own DNA.’
‘I want to talk to Doctor Crusher about this,’ she replied and saw Tropp’s expression. ‘She doesn’t know you’re offering me this, does she?’
‘No, the pioneer of the technology and Doctor Crusher don’t get along too well.’
‘I see, let me see the latest research.’
Tropp hesitated.
‘Doc, what are the chances of continuing my career with biosynthetic limbs, have they been used in someone as...crippled as I am before?’
‘No, they haven’t, which is why I’m suggesting the genitronic replicator.’
Doctor Tropp!’ Tropp winced at the sound of Crusher’s voice.
He turned round. ‘Yes, Doctor?’
‘My office please.’
Tropp nodded and walked away with a backward glance at Nave.
‘Doctor Crusher, what is going to happen to me?’
‘I was going to have you transferred to Starfleet Medical for rehabilitation.’
‘What about the device that Tropp was talking about?’
Crusher sighed. ‘Twelve years ago, Worf was severely injured and I asked neurogeneticist Toby Russell to consult. She brought aboard a pioneering new device which replicates DNA from damaged organs and grows new ones.’ She leaned in to Nave and lowered her voice to a near whisper. ‘Worf died on that operating table and it was only his Klingon physiology which allowed us to revive him. I’ve kept up with Russell’s research on genitronic replication and Starfleet approved the technique during the war on some near-terminal cases. With humans, her success rate is only fifty percent.’
‘But I can still go with biosynthetics if it doesn’t work, right?’ Nave asked and looked down. ‘If I don’t have my legs, why do they hurt?’
‘It’s called phantom pain,’ Crusher answered. ‘I honestly don’t know what will happen if the genitronic replicator doesn’t work. I can speak with Doctor Russell and pass across your information, see if she’ll take you on.’
‘I need to think about it for a little while. Can you get Lio for me?’
Crusher nodded. ‘Of course, if you need anything just call.’
‘I will,’ Nave replied with a wan smile as Crusher left.
She sighed. Everyone had suggestions for her to get her arm and legs back, but if she looked deep inside herself, she had to wonder whether she wanted to or not. And why she might not want to. Being in Starfleet was her dream come true, and piloting the flagship was the icing on the proverbial cake. Her mind was still sharp and she felt that that was the most important aspect of her current condition. Either she would spend months at Starfleet Medical getting new limbs made for her and learning how to use them again, to walk or to grip and then fly; or she would spend months in a lab having new legs and a new arm made for her, surgically attached and then learning how to walk again. Neither option was something that appealed to her, and yet, whether she decided to stay in Starfleet or not, she really could use all her limbs.
The biobed she lay in was in a small surgical wing off the main sickbay and kept her away from prying eyes. It also made her feel cut off, and she had no idea how many visitors she had received. Of course Lio would have spent every waking hour, and several sleeping ones, by her bedside, but she wondered if Worf had come by. Probably not, it would have been too dishonourable to see a crippled warrior, if that was indeed what she was. She sighed again, and felt a stab of pain in her chest, reminding her that for the moment, she was still alive.
‘Hey,’ Battaglia said as he came to sit by her bedside.
‘Hey,’ she replied with a smile. ‘We need to talk,’ she added, having come to a decision.