
Posted originally on the Archive_of_Our_Own at https://archiveofourown.org/
works/622687.
  Rating:
      Explicit
  Archive Warning:
      Graphic_Depictions_Of_Violence, Rape/Non-Con, Underage, Major_Character
      Death
  Category:
      M/M
  Fandom:
      Star_Trek:_The_Next_Generation
  Relationship:
      Jean-Luc_Picard/William_Riker
  Character:
      Jean-Luc_Picard, William_Riker, Data, Beverly_Crusher, Kyle_Riker, Deanna
      Troi, Geordi_La_Forge, Guinan, Alyssa_Ogawa, Q_(Star_Trek), Mac_(OC),
      Joao_da_Costa_(OC), Dr_Ignacio_Sandoval_(OC), Worf_(Star_Trek:TNG/DS9),
      Stoch_(OC), Dr_Alasdair_McBride_(OC), Lt_Yash_Fisk_(OC), Elizaveta_C
      Riker_(OC), Djani_Tekka_(OC), Gwyn_Otaka_(OC), Jai_Patel_(OC), Mot_(TNG),
      Vance_Haden_(TNG), Thomas_Laidlaw_(OC), Renan_Balum_(OC), Cortan_Zweller_
      (TNG), Jorge_Garcia_(OC), Sovok_(OC), Lt_Tarana_(OC)
  Additional Tags:
      Angst, Child_Abuse, Childhood_Sexual_Abuse, Child_Abandonment, Post-
      Traumatic_Stress_Disorder
  Stats:
      Published: 2013-01-03 Completed: 2014-09-29 Chapters: 123/123 Words:
      319361
****** A Million Sherds ******
by miloowen
Summary
     William Riker has a problem. Picard must sort it out.
Notes
     Written for ukdgr, who asked. This work originally began as a one
     shot, connected to an earlier piece. However, the characters took
     over, and it is now a novel. This novel deals with Post-Traumatic
     Stress Disorder as it develops from child abuse. While I have tried
     to maintain integrity to the canon here, there are elements of AU as
     well. For those of us familiar with the survivors of extreme child
     abuse, William Riker's character resonated, as his "good child"
     persona, so over-the-top; promiscuity, hyperactivity, risk-taking
     (when combined with timidity), refusal to leave the ship, and his
     sexual insecurity are all symptoms of a severely abused child. None
     of us believed the episode "The Icarus Factor," which was a complete
     abdication of responsibility on the part of the screenwriters in so
     many ways. Yet the bitter Admiral Riker in the AU timeline was very
     much in keeping with an adult survivor of abuse who has never been
     healed. While this novel is not for the faint-of-heart, I do offer
     hope from all of us out there who have not only survived abuse but
     have chosen to thrive. Lastly, in my heart I hold dear two young
     people who suffered horrific abuse as children but who continue to
     grow in ways that constantly amaze me.
***** Chapter One *****
Chapter One
 
 
            “Come,” the captain said.
            I walked into his ready room.  “Sir? You wished to see me?”
            “Yes, Number One,” he said.  “Sit down.  There’s a matter I wish to
discuss.”
            I pulled the chair over and sat in it.  I was a little confused,
not being aware of any matter at hand.
            He looked up at me.  “I’ve been speaking with Dr Crusher,” he
began.  “I understand you have been in her office several times over the past
six weeks.”
            Okay, at least I knew what the subject was now.  “Three times,
sir,” I said.  “In eight weeks.”
            “Holodeck accidents?” He looked down at the padd on his desk.  “A
broken collarbone?  Two fractured ribs.  A dislocated elbow, contusions, and a
concussion.  That,” he said, “was last week.”
            “Sir.”
            “What have you planned for this week, Number One?  Broken legs? 
Jaw?  Herniated disc, perhaps?” His look was not exactly friendly.  “Just what
the hell is going on?”
            I shifted in my seat.  “Just a vigourous program, sir,” I said. 
“Perhaps a little too vigourous,” I added ruefully, grinning.
            “Is there a joke that I’m missing, Mr Riker?”
            He was angry.  He was covering it well, but he was angry.  I drew
in my breath.  “No, sir,” I said.  “No joke.  I’m sorry to have taken up your
time with this, sir.  I’ll be more careful in the future.”
            “Indeed.”  He stood up.  “I’m not entirely convinced of that,
Number One.”
           “Sir?” Now I was back to being confused again.
            “You see,” he said, coming around the side of the desk, and leaning
against it, so that he was looking down at me.  “I took the liberty – I’m sure
you don’t mind – of reviewing your current holodeck programs.”
            “You what?” I said.  This was a breach of privacy and protocol.
            “You have to understand, Will, that Beverly contacted me,” he said,
sounding a little bit more conciliatory.  “She is thinking of grounding you.”
            “What?” Now I was flabbergasted.
            “Look at your injuries,” he said, reasonably.  “More and more
severe.  I told her that I would find out the source of the problem and talk to
you, before she takes you off the bridge and sends you to Deanna.  I assume,”
he said, wryly, “that this is not an issue you wish to discuss with Deanna?”
            “Captain, there’s no issue,” I said.  “Perhaps the program’s too
much, or I’ve been a little careless.  You’ve warned me now, sir.  It won’t
happen again.”
            “Well, the problem is, Will, that I don’t believe you,” he said. 
“I believe the problem will get worse.  And it needs to be sorted out.  You
need to be sorted out, or I’m afraid that I will have to concur with Beverly’s
assessment, that you are currently not fit for duty.”
            “But – “
            “Yes?  Is there a program you’d like to explain to me in
particular?” he asked.
            Oh.  I felt the colour rise in my face.
            “It seems to me, William,” he said, gently, “that there is a theme
running through your most recent programs.  One which concerns me.”
            “Sir.” What had happened to my day?  I’d gotten up.  It had been a
perfectly ordinary day.  A little fun in engineering with Geordi, a good class
in the morning, an interesting discussion with Data, and then it ends up with
death by embarrassment.
            He bent down and put his hands on my shoulders.  “Look at me,” he
said.
            Oh, God.  If it were possible to just die now – I looked at him. 
“Captain – “
            “Why, William, do you feel the need to punish yourself?  What
exactly have you done to deserve such treatment?”
            “I’m not – “
            “You are.  You have created this incredible persona – I must hand
it to you, it’s superbly crafted, and it’s held up so many years.  The perfect
Mr Riker, yes?  Brave, loyal, strong, kind, compassionate, dutiful, funny, and
saviour – don’t deny it – of the Federation.  So what did you do?  Did you snap
at Geordi?  Tease Data?  Pull a prank on Worf?  What exactly have you done that
doesn’t fit in your Mr Perfect mold, so that you feel this obligation to negate
yourself?”
            “Please – “ I found myself blinking back sudden tears, and where
the hell had they come from?
            He let me go and leaned back against the desk.  “That one program
that I saw, Will,” he said quietly.  “It was quite abusive.  And I couldn’t
figure out what you were getting, from that level of abuse.  And then it came
to me – you didn’t have to be the persona you’d created in that particular
program.  You didn’t have to be anything. And it's true, Will -- you never seem
to be able to give yourself a break from the persona, even on leave.  But I
believe I know you, Will.  You are not your persona.  So now what?  Which is
cracking?  The persona, or you?”
  “I – I don’t know what to say,” I muttered.  I looked up at him.  His eyes
were full of kindness and concern, nothing else.  Did he pity me? I wondered. 
Was he ashamed of me?  I would have to transfer.
            “I took the opportunity to dig a little deeper,” he was saying. 
“You seem to be mirroring some of the injuries you sustained as a child. 
Injuries that are very suspicious in a child, Will.  I’ve never personally
liked your father, and fortunately for me, I have only dealt with him that one
time.  But I looked at some of your childhood medical records and I discover
that it appears the man was systematically abusing you.  Yes?”
            “It wasn’t abuse,” I said, looking down.  “I was difficult.”
            “Really?  And if there were a child on this ship, who was showing
up in sickbay with broken bones and contusions, what would you do?”  He
sighed.  “Don’t answer, because I know what you would do.  What else did your
father do?  Besides beat you and emotionally abuse you?  Will?”
            “Nothing,” I whispered.
            “Even when you were hospitalised with internal injuries?”
            “I don’t remember --“
            “If you’ll pardon my saying so, bullshit.” He sounded angry again. 
“Why didn’t the Federation do something?  Or the local authorities?”
            “They did,” I said.
            “After he abandoned you.”
            “Permission to be dismissed, sir,” I said.  “I’ll stay out of the
holodeck.  Sir.”
            “Oh, that’s not the point, and you know it,” he said.  He paced
around the room for a minute, before stopping at the replicator and ordering
his tea.  “Do you want something to drink?” he asked.
            I shook my head.  He sipped the tea and then placed it on his desk.
            “So what now, Will?” he asked.
            “I’ll have to transfer,” I said.  My hands were shaking, and I
pressed them into my knees.
            “Ah, Will,” he said.
            “You – “ I began, but I couldn't figure out what it was I wanted to
say.
            “I felt such sorrow," he said, "watching you."
            “Please," I said. "Permission to be dismissed."
He sighed, and then he said, "I've known for some time, Will. It's not against
the rules, you know. We are both at comparable ranks. You could have been
captain now, many times over, and have been acting captain too often for me to
count. It doesn't fit in with your persona -- but then, you are not your
persona, are you?"
"I don't know what you want me to do," I said, finally.
            He came to me again, lifting my face so that I had to look at him. 
“Did you think that I might reject you?  Abandon you, too?  Because,” he said,
and he brushed my hair off of my forehead, “I can assure you that I would do
neither.”
            He let me go, and moved back to his desk.  He picked up the mug of
tea, but then he didn’t drink it.  I tried to absorb what he said.  My thoughts
were spiraling.  I didn’t know how we had gotten here – and then I didn’t know
what to do, now that we were here.
            “I – I thought you were only attracted to women,” I said. 
            “Clearly not,” he replied.
            He was waiting for me to say something.
            “Will?” he said now. “Can you let the persona go?  You don’t feel
safe, even now, to tell me what you want?”
            “I don’t disgust you?”
            “Mère de Dieu,” he said.  “How could you possibly disgust me?”
            “The program – “
            “—was a cry for help,” he finished.  “You’re brave enough to face
the Borg.  Are you brave enough to ask me for what you want?”
            I’d been holding my breath, without realising it, and I exhaled,
slowly.  “I think I've been in love with you, Jean-Luc,” I said, and watched
that carefully-constructed William T Riker shatter into a million sherds on the
deck.
            I was enveloped in his strong arms, then, and he kissed me on the
top of my head.  “Finalement,” he said.  “I will very happily give us both the
day off, Number One, if you will accompany me to my quarters.  Lunch, perhaps?”
He brought my face up to him, and kissed me softly.
            “Perhaps,” I said, and kissed him back.
 
***** Chapter Two *****
Chapter Summary
     A flashback.
Chapter Notes
     This is a serious work. There are triggers here, for those who may
     have been abused as children. And for those who are
     tender-hearted.
Chapter Two
 
 
 
            When he was six, his father let him join the local Little League
team, only because Matt, from two cabins away, was also joining the team and
Matt’s parents (his dad was part of the park service, and his mom was an
artist) could take him to practises and games.  William – now that he was six,
he refused to call himself Billy anymore – had always played with Matt when he
had the chance to, so he was pretty happy about getting to play baseball with
him.
            Matt’s older brother had taught William how to throw a fastball
correctly, and had helped Matt learn how to play shortstop, so tryouts were a
breeze.  Both boys were athletic:  Matt was smaller but very fast, with good
hands; William was taller and stronger, and he threw pretty darn fast for a kid
who was only six years old.
            Of course this first year was mostly coach pitch, but when both
Matt and William made the team, Coach Mike promised that he’d let William throw
batting practises and that he’d continue to teach William how to pitch.
            Practises were Tuesdays and Saturdays, and the games were Mondays
and Wednesdays.  Nobody ever asked William where his father was; they all knew
his father was in StarFleet and rarely home.  And William never said anything
about wishing his father could be there.  Coach Mike and Coach Ben – they were
both dads of two of the players – found it a little odd that William never said
anything about his father, and that they’d only seen Kyle Riker once, to sign
William up, something Matt’s dad couldn’t do for him.  Since William was a
plucky little kid, and seemed happy enough, they let it be.  They were simply
too busy trying to teach six and seven-year-olds the basics of what has always
been a complicated game.
            William discovered that while he wasn’t the fastest runner on the
team, he could steal a base, because he could read when the pitcher was going
to release the ball.  He had such long legs that it was easy for him to make
the tag before anyone else even knew what was happening, and he was pretty good
at first base, too, with his long reach.
            He liked it.  He liked running around and letting off steam.  He
liked eating sunflower seeds and spitting them into the dugout, seeing who
could spit them the farthest.  He liked singing “Hey, batter, batter” and “No
batter, no batter.”  He discovered that if he said silly things to the catcher,
the catcher would often miss the ball, and the runners could advance.  He
discovered that he could talk trash to the first baseman, and then take off for
second, and the other team would stand around and look like the losers they
were.  He could reach his long arms out and stop a ball from going into right
field, and he could take the wild throws from the little kid who was their
third baseman.  He and Matt and Sammy, who was their second baseman, developed
a rhythm together, and would even make double plays sometimes, a pretty decent
accomplishment for kids at the coach pitch level.
            It took him a while, but he started to get the hang of it at the
plate too.  He remembered that Matt’s brother had said to picture in his head
where the ball would be, and he found that was something he could do.  He
learned to dig in at the plate, and take his time, and not fidget, and by the
middle of the season he could hit a homerun or two, using those long, strong
legs of his to just push into the ball.  Coach Mike let him hit fifth, and then
finally, towards the run for the championship, William found himself hitting
clean-up.
            They always went out for pizza or hamburgers after the games.  They
weren’t the best team in the league, but they were pretty good, and it was
obvious that they were in contention for the championship at their level.  The
kids who were first and second in the league would be placed in the pool for
summer All-Stars, and it was pretty clear that William and Matt and Sammy would
be on that summer team.
            They were at Nick’s, the pizza place, and crowded into the booths,
four and five little kids apiece, all thirteen of them, with Coach Mike and
Coach Ben and some of the parents sitting far enough away that the kids could
have fun but close enough to monitor hurt feelings and spills.
            William was squished into the end of the booth with Matt and Sammy
and the only girl on the team, Rosie.  Rosie was their catcher, a big stocky
Aleut girl with hands like bear paws.  The kids teased her that she didn’t need
a catcher’s mitt, and she would just cross her black eyes at them and laugh. 
They liked Rosie, she could hit better than William, and she could stand
herself right in front of home and make a little kid wish he were dead rather
than slide into her.  In fact, William liked everyone on the team, even Jesse,
who pretty much sat out most of the games because he was the smallest and could
barely throw the ball.  Jesse was funny, and he could make the soda they drank
on pizza night come out of his nose.  That alone was worth a spot on the team.
            They’d won their game, by ten to six, and William had hit a double,
and a homerun, and had stolen a base.  They were feeling pretty pleased with
themselves, and they were very busy stuffing themselves full of cheese and
chips and blowing bubbles in their drinks to make them fizz.  William was
sitting next to Rosie and Matt, and they were talking not about baseball, but
about dogs.
            “The puppies will be ready next week,” Rosie was saying.  Her
family raised sled dogs, and those pups that for some reason her parents
thought weren’t going to be working dogs, would be sold as pets.
            William wanted a dog.  Desperately wanted a dog.  He’d seen Rosie’s
puppies, and there was one little pup – not the smallest, but one that clearly
was going to be a pet – with a white chest and white paws and a white tip on
its tail that he’d fallen in love with.  He could picture his puppy sleeping on
his bed, and he could picture teaching it how to play catch and shake hands. 
He could see running through the woods with his dog, and taking her fishing,
and coming home from school with her waiting on the porch for him.  He hadn’t
asked his father, but he’d talked about it to Mrs Shugak, who was his
babysitter when his father was away.  She’d thought having a puppy to care for
was a good idea and William thought her feelings would certainly be more
important than his own when he presented his case to his father.
            “I can come see them again tomorrow?” William asked.  He tried not
to sound too eager.  He knew already that he should be happy just to be playing
baseball, and there was a small voice inside his head that told him that asking
for a puppy on top of playing baseball was probably too much.
            “Sure, after practise,” Rosie agreed. 
            “Cool,” William said.  Rosie lived next to Matt; it was light long
into the night now, and it was no big deal to walk to Rosie’s after practise.  
He thought about the puppy.  He’d already chosen a name for her, although he
hadn’t told Rosie.  He’d gone onto his padd to look at names for dogs, and had
discovered that one-syllable names were often recommended by trainers.  He was
going to call his puppy Bet.
            That was when the door to Nick’s opened and William’s father walked
in.  He was a short stocky man and William didn’t look at all like him. 
Sometimes William wondered (most often when he was safely in bed and he could
hear his father rattling around downstairs) how his father could be his father
at all.  They didn’t seem to have much in common, except that they both had
blue eyes.
            Nobody else seemed to notice among the kids, but William stopped
talking and sort of shrunk back into the booth.  Rosie noticed this; she was an
intelligent girl from a very large family, and she’d seen William’s behaviour
before, in some second cousins she saw in the summertime.  No one else
recognised William’s behaviour, least of all Coach Mike or Coach Ben.
            They got up out of their booth, and welcomed Mr Riker by shaking
hands, and offered him some pizza and a beer.
            Kyle Riker turned them down.  “I’m just here for Billy,” he said.
            It took Coach Mike a minute before he realised that William and
Billy were the same child; everyone called him William.
            “Sure,” Coach Mike said.  “William, your dad is here.”
            As if William didn’t know.  Rosie and Matt had to pile out of the
booth and they did so quietly.  Rosie did something she’d never done before;
she gave William a quick hug.  He looked at her when she hugged him with his
dark blue eyes and Rosie was suddenly afraid.
            She said, “I’ll keep your pup for you, if you like.”
            “Okay,” William said, hugging her back.  “Thanks.”
            “Don’t forget about practise tomorrow, William,” Coach Mike said.
            William had never once forgotten about practise.  “I won’t,” he
answered.
            “He hit a homerun tonight,” Coach Mike told Kyle Riker.  “He won us
the game.  He’s a great kid, your son.”
            William walked over to his father, and he looked at the floor.  “I
didn’t win the game,” he said softly.  “The team did.”
            Coach Mike grinned.  “See, he’s a great kid,” he said.  “The lynch
pin of our team.”
            “What do you say, Billy?” Riker looked down at his son.
            “Thanks, Coach Mike,” William said automatically.
            “Let’s go,” Riker said, and wrapped his hand around his son’s arm.
 
            William didn’t say anything in the aircar, just sat quietly in the
back.  He didn’t like to sit in the front seat with his father because his
father said he fidgeted too much.  The cabin had the porch light on and Riker
parked the car under the carport and waited for William to get out.
            “You won the game?” he asked as they walked up to the porch.
            “Yes, sir,” William said.
            “And the score?” Riker asked as he opened the front door.
            “Ten to six.”
            The door opened, and William ducked through, not because the door
was small, but because the hairs were standing up on the back of his neck.  The
door closed behind him and he heard his father lock the door.
            “And you hit a homerun?” Riker turned the light on in the living
room and went into the kitchen, leaving William standing in the small foyer of
the cabin.  “Billy?” he called from the kitchen.
            “Yes, sir.” William left the foyer, and stood next to the sofa in
the living room. 
            His father came out of the kitchen with a beer.
            “You do anything else?” his father asked, standing there in the
middle of the room.
            William knew where this was going, and a tear slid down his cheek.
            “I hit a double, I stole a base, and drove in three runs,” he
said.  Then he said, and he didn’t know why, except that he suddenly wanted,
even more than his puppy, for his father to just once be pleased with something
he’d done.  “Coach Mike says that I’ve already been picked for All Stars this
summer.  And that they’ll let me pitch.  My fastball is pretty good.”
            ‘You got an A minus on your science report,” Kyle Riker said. 
“What was that about?”
            William felt his stomach cramp.  “I got points off because of
spelling,” he whispered.
            The blow knocked him across the room and into the coffee table. 
William hit his head, and he lay quietly on the floor for a minute.  He didn’t
know whether he was hurt, and he knew better than to cry.
            “Get up,” his father said.
            “Yes, sir.”
            William got up and the look on his father’s face made him want to
clutch at his penis so he wouldn’t wet his pants.  Kyle Riker took off his
belt, and he dragged William over to him, and bent him over the sofa.
            “You think you’re so smart, don’t you?” he said as he yanked
William’s baseball pants, and his jock, and his sliding shorts off.
            “No,” William said.  “I don’t, Dad.  I don’t.”
            “You’re just a little punk-assed kid,” Kyle Riker said.  “That’s
all you’ll ever be.”
            William said nothing, because there was nothing to say.  His nose
was running but he didn’t dare move.
            “Answer me,” Riker said.
            “Yes, sir,” William said, and he started to cry.
            “What are you?” Kyle Riker said.
            “I’m a little punk-assed kid,” William repeated, his face pressed
into the sofa.
            He sobbed as his father brought the belt down, using all his adult
strength against the boy’s buttocks, and thighs, and lower back.  William tried
not to scream, but in the end it didn’t matter, because no one would hear him
anyway, and no one ever seemed to care to. 
            “Try sliding into base now, you little asshole,” his father said
when he was finished.  “Go to bed.”
            “Yes, sir,” William said, and he gathered up belongings and headed
up the stairs, blood trickling down his legs.
            He crept into the bathroom, and used the rag to wipe himself off,
and then he washed his face and brushed his teeth.  He emptied his bladder, and
hoped fervently that the amount of urine in the toilet meant he wouldn’t wet
the bed; something he usually did after his father would beat him.
            He didn’t bother to turn on the light in the bedroom.  He stripped
and put his pajamas on – they were baseball pajamas that Mrs Shugak had bought
him for his birthday – and he lay down on top of the quilt.He didn’t cry; he
just lay there.  He thought maybe his father would take away playing for the
baseball team now, and he knew deep in his heart that his father would never
let him keep the puppy.  Then he remembered that Rosie had promised she would
keep Bet for him, and it felt just a little bit better.  The truth was that
maybe his father would hurt a puppy, especially if the puppy did things like
not try its best, or make a mess on the floor.  Maybe Bet would be safer with
Rosie and he could visit her every day and still play with her.  Bet already
knew she belonged to him, anyway, and Rosie knew how to feed and train dogs.
            When his father came in later in the night, and whispered that he
was sorry, and did the painful things his father always did that somehow seemed
to make his father feel better, William didn’t cry, and he didn’t struggle; he
just let his father kiss him and stroke him and take him, because he knew that
his beautiful puppy would always be safe, even when he wasn’t.
                                                           
           
 
***** Chapter 3 *****
Chapter Summary
     The captain offers Will a somewhat unusual counselling session.
Chapter Notes
     Those of us who have survived the kind of trauma Will had often don't
     realise when we are in the middle of a cycle of flashbacks and night
     terrors and body memories. Will, cruising towards forty, has reached
     the place where he must heal if he is to ever grow as a person. The
     series was completely accurate in offering us that bitter and angry
     Admiral Riker -- surely Will's fate without help.
Chapter Three
 
 
            I’d gone back to my quarters, since I’d been given the day off, to
change out of my uniform and to try to regroup before I was supposed to meet
the captain for lunch.  He’d given me an hour, but it took twenty minutes to
shower and change and then there was all that time left over.  My stomach was
roiling and I doubted very much that there would be any chance of my being able
to eat anything.  That is, if lunch were really on the agenda – oh, God.  I sat
down on the sofa in my dayroom and put my head in my hands.
            What the hell had happened?  How had a perfectly normal day ended
up with my life being turned upside down?  And what the hell was the matter
with me, anyway?  He was right, of course, as he always was, that I was
perilously close to being unfit for duty.  I wasn’t sleeping.  Oh, I could go
to sleep all right.  But then I’d wake up at two, or three, or sometimes even
four, in the morning, with my heart pounding and my head throbbing as if I’d
just run five miles or jumped out of an airlock.  At first I thought maybe I
was having nightmares about the Borg again.  It had taken almost a year to
recover from them, to let go of the nightmares and the anxiety attacks and my
constant need to check on the captain to make sure he was okay.  But I didn’t
have any memory of any dreams at all, least of all dreams of the Borg.  I was
just waking up in a full adrenalin surge.
            And he was right, too, that the holodeck programs – there were
three of them – were crazy.  He hadn’t given me any indication that he’d
reported the content of them to anyone else, more specifically Beverly or, God
help me, Deanna.  I could just imagine Deanna’s face when faced with the
program – the truth was, I was making myself ill.  Even now I was fighting the
urge to go into the bathroom and puke.  Just what the hell was the matter with
me?
            I had told the captain the truth.  I had told him that I loved
him.  I’d known it for a while, certainly in those weeks after he’d come back
to us from the Borg and he was so fragile.  Maybe I’d been aware of it even
before then, I don’t know.  But I’d put the knowledge and the feelings in the
back of my head, in one of those deep file cabinets that everyone keeps, right,
with all the knowledge that you don’t want anyone – including yourself – to
know.  Especially if you have a certain chronically nosy half-Betazed onboard. 
So if I’d been hiding it from myself, how come he knew?  And did that mean that
Deanna knew?  That everyone knew?
            It was as if I were in a feedback loop.  My head was starting to
hurt, behind my eyes, the way it always did when I’d been crying.
            And where had that thought come from?  I’d shed a few tears in his
ready room, surprising the shit out of me, but I hadn’t been crying, had I?  I
haven’t cried in years, except when Tasha died, and when I was forced to treat
Data so badly in his trial.  So why should I be having a sinus headache, and
how on earth do I explain why any headache should be linked to the way I was
feeling?
            Except that he’d mentioned my father.  Well, I wasn’t going there. 
            It was almost time to leave.  Did I really want to do this?  After
all, what was I going to do, really, besides have lunch with the captain?
            Fuck.  I was truly losing it.
            It took me ten minutes to walk to his quarters, because I didn’t
want to be early, and I didn’t want to look stupid.  I pressed the door chime,
and he told me,
            “Come.”
            He’d called me brave, but it still took me a minute or so to walk
through the door.  He’d changed out of his uniform, too, and was wearing those
loose-fitting trousers he always wore, with a light-coloured tunic.  He had a
glass of wine in his hand.
            “I’ve a good wine here from my brother, Will,” he said.  “Or, if
you prefer, there’s some Irish whiskey in the cabinet over there.”
            “In the middle of the day, Jean-Luc?” I asked.
            He grinned as if he were a naughty schoolboy.  “What the hell,
Number One,” he said.  “I’ve given us both the day off, after all.”
            I felt a little calmer, and I smiled back at him.  “I’ll take the
whiskey, then,” I said, “if you don’t mind.”
            “Help yourself,” he said.
            I found the bottle and took the small glass he offered me.  “Ice?”
he asked.
            “Neat,” I said, and took a sip.  There was the pleasant, smooth
burn of good whiskey going down my throat.  “When did you pick this up?” I
asked.
            “When I went home last,” he said.  “Robert had it for me, to take
back to the ship, along with a case of our wine.”
            “It’s good,” I said.
            He sat on the sofa, seemingly calm, or at least calmer than me. 
“Sit, Will,” he said.
            “Sir,” I answered, and pulled the other chair over.
            “Here,” he said, “on the sofa.  Next to me.”
            Oh, God.  I sat.
            “Having second thoughts?” he asked.  “Or just nerves?”
            “Second thoughts?” I echoed.
            He gave a small smile and reached for my hand, and then took it in
his, which was warm and surprisingly strong.
            “I did invite you for luncheon,” he said, “but I thought that a
counselling session might be in order first.”
            “Counselling?  Don’t we have a ship’s counsellor?” I asked.
            “Yes, a very fine one,” he answered, “and one who has some intimate
knowledge of some of your issues.  However – “ he said, and he looked directly
at me, “I think this is a job I ought to take on myself.”
            “My issues?”
            “You’re not sleeping, are you?”
            This was the second time today that he’d totally lost me.  Maybe I
was stupid.
            “No,” I said.  “How did you know that?”
            He reached over with his other hand and touched underneath my eye. 
“Dark circles, Will,” he said kindly.  “No real magic, there.  Just
observation.” He let his hand linger, and I felt myself begin to tremble. 
“It’s all right,” he said softly.  “For this kind of counselling, Will, you
just have to let go.”
            He pulled me in to him and kissed me, his lips dry and soft.
            “Can you allow yourself this?” he asked.  “If I offer you the kind
of love and affection you seem to want, can you be brave enough to take it as
it’s offered?”
            “It’s a very unorthodox form of counselling, sir,” I said, letting
him kiss me again.
            “True, Number One.” He grinned.  “It’s one I’d thought would appeal
to you, though.”
            I couldn’t help it; I laughed.
            “There we go,” he said.  He suddenly wrapped me in his arms, and
brought my head against his shoulder, and I could feel him kissing me on the
back of my neck.  “That’s the Will I’d like to have back, if I can.”
            I could feel his heart beating, and his hands were caressing my
back, and his lips were brushing along my ear, in the same way he’d done when
he’d been with me in the program.
            “That feels good,” I said, and I could feel all of that anxiety
just sort of drifting away.
            “Mmmh,” he murmured.  “There’s only one small problem, Will.”  His
lips were right next to my ear.
            “What’s that, Jean-Luc?” I felt his hand slide down to my crotch,
and he squeezed me gently.
            “You’re wearing too much,” he said, and he was opening my trousers
and then pushing me back onto the sofa.
            He kissed me again, pressing into my mouth, and when we broke for
air, I said, “I’m not sure that this is the type of counselling Starfleet had
in mind, sir.”
            “I’ll leave the details out of my report,” he answered.  Then he
said, “This sofa’s too damned small, Will,” and he pulled me up and gently led
me in towards his bed.
 
           
 
 
           
 
***** Chapter 4 *****
Chapter Summary
     William learns that even heroics can have negative consequences.
Chapter Notes
     As before, there are triggers here, for those who have been abused.
     We all know Riker's story about the fish his father wouldn't let him
     catch. This is my take on the backstory.
Chapter Four
 
 
 
            William’s father didn’t take the baseball team away that summer,
because there was a problem somewhere, and he had to go to fix it, and Mrs
Shugak came to stay.  She offered to let William bring his puppy home from
Rosie’s, but William turned her down.  He liked keeping Bet with Rosie.  Rosie
showed him how to train her, and together they went for long walks in the
woods, he and Bet and Rosie and her dog Patch.  If William didn’t play very
well for a week or so after his father had taken him home, nobody ever said
anything.  After all, he was only a little kid, and his coaches didn’t expect
high school level consistency out of a coach-pitch team.
            So William’s father never saw William play in the championship game
for his level, which they won, and he never saw William get chosen for All-
Stars.  True to form, the coach of the All-Star team allowed William to pitch,
and convinced Mr Shugak that William should be at the next level the next
year.  Mrs Shugak was against it; William’s birthday was in August, past the
cut-off time, which was July, so he technically had another full year of coach-
pitch to go.  But he was so big, and he could throw fast, and somehow it got
worked out, and William knew that he would be pitching when the season started
the next year.  All-Stars was fun; playing with Rosie and Bet was fun; Mr
Shugak made him laugh, and Mrs Shugak was her usual quiet and competent self.
            Mrs Shugak’s children were all grown up, but she had grandchildren,
and one of them came to stay.  William was a little worried that his father
might not like it, but Mrs Shugak promised that she’d already spoken to his
father and gotten permission.  Dmitri was ten, four years older than William,
but William was almost the same size.  Dmitri’s parents were part of the
tribe’s salmon fishery; they were going to be away for a month and Dmitri would
stay with his grandmother.
            William tried to be friendly.  He was, after all, a reasonably
friendly child, and most people – even kids – were charmed by his smile and his
blue eyes.  He was active and he was silly, and that only added to his charm. 
Aside from William’s father – and William tried not to think about the reasons
why his father didn’t like him very much – William had never really met anyone
who didn’t like him.
            Dmitri didn’t like him.  Dmitri took an instant dislike to
William’s smile and his big blue eyes.  The first time William turned the full
wattage on him, Dmitri scowled and said,
            “What are you, a girl?  What do I care how cute you are?”
            William was insulted.  People called him cute all the time, but not
ten-year-old boys.  “I’m not cute!” he responded in an outraged voice.  “Call
me that again and I’ll punch you out.”
            “I’d like to see you try,” was Dmitri’s reaction, and Mrs Shugak
had to break them up.
            Dmitri hated baseball.  “That’s for mainlanders,” he said when
William showed him his trophies and his gear.  Dmitri played hockey because he
had Canadian cousins.
            “I like hockey,” William said, insulted again.  He was good at
hockey.  He was good at any sport.
            “I like hockey,” Dmitri repeated in a very high voice, and Mrs
Shugak had to separate them again.
            William knew you were supposed to be good to guests.  Even though
William had no Aleut blood himself, he was a sourdough; hospitality is
ingrown.  Guests are important; they are meant to be treated better than
oneself.  He invited Dmitri to come hiking in the woods and berry picking with
Rosie and Patch and Bet.  On the edge of the park one never travelled anywhere
without a dog for protection; in the middle of berry season it was twice as
important to have a dog. 
            “I’m sure,” William said to Dmitri, “that you can borrow one of
Rosie’s other dogs.”
            “Why would I want to go out in the woods with a baby and a girl?”
Dmitri asked.  “Honestly, Willy-am, why don’t you just leave me alone?”
            William was beginning to feel very familiar with outrage.  “You are
my guest,” he said, and he tried to sound like a grownup.  “I am supposed to
invite you places and include you.  Those’re the rules.”
            Dmitri snorted.  “And of course Mr Federation follows the fucking
rules.”
            William would not be outdone by one Dmitri Gorin.  “Don’t fucking
come with us, you fucking asshole,” he said.  “Stay here with your fucking
grandma.”
            This time Mrs Shugak didn’t separate them until there were black
eyes and bloody noses.
 
            William was eating a sandwich with Rosie in her yard near the
kennel.
            “You’ve met Dmitri,” he said.
            “Auntie Tasya’s grandson?” Rosie asked.
            “Yeah.”
            Rosie bit into her sandwich.  She broke off a piece and handed it
to Bet, who looked at William first before being allowed to take it.  “What
about him?”
            “I fucking hate him,” William said.
            Rosie threw herself down on the ground laughing.
            “It’s not funny.”  William stood on his dignity.
            “You said fucking!” Rosie screeched, still laughing.
            William rolled his eyes.  “Even my father says fucking,” William
said.
            “Fucking, fucking, fucking!” Rosie repeated.
            William sighed.  “What do I do about Dmitri?” he asked.
            Rosie tried to calm herself down.  “Just beat him up,” she advised.
            William said, “I did.  I gave him a black eye.  It didn’t do any
good.  He’s still a jerk.”
            “How much longer does he have to be in your house?” Rosie said. 
She gave Bet another piece of her sandwich.
            “I dunno,” William said.  “Forever, I guess.”
            He seemed so downhearted that Rosie felt bad.  “I could get George
and Pete to help you,” she offered. 
            George and Pete were Rosie’s older brothers.  William brightened at
the thought of a beat down involving himself, George, and Pete against Dmitri,
but then he sighed.  “No,” he said.  “It wouldn’t be right, and Mrs S would be
mad at me.  She was really mad at me when I gave him the black eye.”
            Rosie looked at him slyly.  “What did he give you?” she asked.
            “A bloody nose,” William said.  Then he grinned.  “His eye is all
purple now, and my nose is fine.”
            “Well,” Rosie said.  “If I think of something, I’ll let you know.”
            “Okay.” William was downhearted again.
 
            William knew he wasn’t supposed to go down to the creek by
himself.  He was a good swimmer; that wasn’t the problem.  The problem was that
the water temperature and the speed of the rapids would make it impossible for
any child who fell in the creek to last for long.  Nevertheless, William
decided that he was almost seven, and at almost seven, perfectly capable of
catching a fish all by himself.  He went into his father’s study for the
fishing gear, and that’s where Dmitri found him.
            “Are you supposed to be in here?” Dmitri asked.
            “What do you care?” William said. 
            He’d gotten the tackle box down and was choosing a fly.
            “Those are some cool flies,” Dmitri said, looking.
            “My dad tied them,” William said.  For once, he could say something
nice about his dad. 
            “Take these two,” Dmitri suggested. 
            “Okay.” William was impressed; Dmitri had picked two of the best.
            “Where are you going?”
            “Down to the creek,” he said.  He thought for a minute, and then he
said, “You want to come?”
            Dmitri thought for a moment as well.  “Yeah, sure,” he said.  “I
don’t have anything else to do.”
            That was something William hadn’t thought of.  Of course, Dmitri
didn’t have anything else to do.  His parents had gone to salmon camp without
him; Matt’s brothers were away to the mainland; there was only William, and
Rosie, and Matt, all of them seven years old.  He felt bad for calling Dmitri a
jerk.  When he was ten, he wouldn’t want to hang around a seven-year-old
either.
            “Okay,” he said.
            He took another rod out of the closet, and got his waders, and the
creel, and his father’s knife.  Dmitri helped him organise everything.
            “What will you tell my nan?” Dmitri asked.
            William grinned.  “Mrs S!” he called as he walked out of his
father’s study.  “I’m going to Rosie’s to see Bet!”
            “Come back for supper,” Mrs Shugak said.  She was in the kitchen.
            William laughed.
            “I’m going with William,” Dmitri called.
            There was no answer to that.
           
            The path to the creek was a rough one, but William had travelled it
many times before with his father and with Mr Shugak.  They were very careful
to watch for both moose and bear; the summer was at its fullest, and the
animals were well on their way to preparing for winter.
            The creek was beautiful.  William led Dmitri to the special deep
pool on the other side of some riffles, and Dmitri was suitably impressed. 
They tied the flies to their lines, and then cast them into the pool.  William
wished that Bet was with him; he knew he wasn’t supposed to be this far away
from the cabin without an adult or a dog.  Still, Dmitri was older and a lot
more experienced, so he felt sure they would be okay.  And while he really
hoped he would catch a fish, he knew it was unlikely.
            The boys stayed in companionable silence.  They cast their lines in
to the pool with a patience born of children brought up in the bush.  Finally
Dmitri got a bite, and expertly he tugged the line to secure the fish, and then
reeled the trout in.
            “It’s a keeper,” William said, impressed.
            It was a beautiful fish, about four pounds or so, the red and
silver of its scales glistening in the dappled sunlight.  Dmitri put the fish
in the creel and cast again.  William hoped that he could catch a fish too,
even though he was glad that Dmitri had caught one first.  Maybe Dmitri
wouldn’t be so mad at him all the time.  For the next hour they cast and
recast, until the long summer afternoon was coming towards a close.  William
was getting hungry; he knew it must be close to supper, and that if they didn’t
show up on time, Mrs Shugak was sure to send at least Mr Shugak out to look for
them.
            Suddenly he got a bite.  He gave a short tug to his line; the fish
grabbed on, and he pulled it, reeling it back in.  Dmitri put his rod down and
grabbed the net to scoop the fish up as soon as it was near them.  William
could see the fish glistening beneath the water; it was putting up a fight, and
he let out a whoop of joy as he brought it in.  It was a big one, all right, at
least bigger than Dmitri’s, and as he swung it towards him Dmitri bent down to
swoop it into the net and fell in.
            For one stunned minute William stood there near the bank of the
creek, the water pressing against his waders, the fish still tugging on his
line.  Dmitri yelled, and then tried to stand up, but he was too close to the
pool, and as he stepped into the hole, he went below the crystal clear water of
the creek.  William threw his rod down, and, without thinking, dove in after
Dmitri.  Water cascaded into his waders, just as they had done to Dmitri’s, and
the weight of it pulled him down too, down into the deeper, colder water of the
pool.  The current was surprisingly strong, and William opened his eyes as he
went under the water to see Dmitri already flowing past him, down towards the
middle of the creek.
            William was only seven years old, but he had had wilderness
survival skills ingrained into him the way some children learn their
alphabets.  He pushed towards the surface of the water, and struggled briefly
and finally successfully to kick off the waders that were holding him down.  He
could float just fine, and he let himself coast on the surface of the water
while he looked around for Dmitri.  All thought of his fish, and his father’s
rod, and everything else had vanished; he didn’t know how well Dmitri could
swim, and he didn’t really understand the concept of the water temperature and
its affect on both of them.  He saw Dmitri surface, about seven feet from him,
and he pushed forth with those long, strong legs of his towards him.  Death is
a concept not foreign to the children of the bush; William had already lost his
mother, years before; every year cheechakos died when they came to hunt and
fish.  Dmitri tried to yell at him but swallowed water; William knew better
than to open his mouth – it was the one thing his father had hammered into him
when they went fishing.
            Dmitri had found a branch and was clinging to it; William reached
him with the help of the current and grabbed hold.  They were closer to the
other side of the bank now than the one they’d walked in on.  William wrapped
his long arms underneath Dmitri’s shorter ones and kicked off from the branch
toward the bank.  Dmitri knew better than to resist; he was cold and exhausted
already, and he relaxed himself into William’s half-hold as he pushed them both
to shore.
            Climbing out of the creek was not easy.  Their hands were frozen;
their clothes were sodden and heavy.  William half shoved and Dmitri half
climbed onto the bank, and then Dmitri helped pull William up.  The two of them
sat there, not speaking, their bodies already shivering even though the
afternoon sun was still quite warm.
            Dmitri recovered first.  “Strip,” he said to William.
            William nodded, knowing at once that the best thing to do was to
quickly shuck off their wet clothes.  They did so, teeth chattering, not
speaking.  They didn’t have to say anything; they knew how much trouble they
were in.  They were on the wrong side of the bank; no one knew where they
were.  They had drifted maybe twenty feet or so down the stream.
            “Leave our clothes here,” Dmitri said.  “We need to get back across
from where we were.”
            William didn’t want to do it.  The rule was to stay where you were,
to find vegetation to make a nest if you had to, but to wait for someone else
to find you.  The side of the bank they were on was more overgrown; they would
have to cut through and around the shrubs and berry bushes to get back to where
they’d been.  Still, they shouldn’t separate either.  If Dmitri insisted on
trying to get back, William would have to go.
            “We should stay right here,” William said.  “Your nan will miss us
and send a party out to find us.  They’ll have the dogs. We’ll be okay.”
            “We should go back,” Dmitri said stubbornly.  “We’ll be easier to
find if we’re right across from the trail.”
            “But – “ William protested.
            Dmitri set his jaw, and William knew he was defeated.  What could a
seven-year-old do against a ten-year-old, anyway?
            “It’s a bad idea,” William said.  “My dad says – “
            “Your dad,” Dmitri said scornfully.  “My father is on the tribal
council.”
            “All right,” William agreed.  “But it’s still a bad idea.”
            Dmitri rubbed his arms and jumped up and down a few times.  Then he
headed back in the direction of the trail, through the scrub.  William
followed, sucking in his breath as he was scratched by twigs and thorns.  He
was hungry and thirsty, and he could tell by the colour of the light that it
was nearly supper time.  Mrs Shugak knew he was rarely late.  She would call
Rosie’s house.  Rosie would say William had never shown up.  Then the search
would be on.
            Ahead of him, Dmitri fell and swore.  William caught up with him,
but didn’t say anything, because Dmitri looked mad.  Together they struggled
silently through the scrub until at last they came to the pool where they’d
been fishing.  Their gear, of course, was on the opposite side of them; the
creel and Dmitri’s rod.  William’s rod and fish had fallen in the water; as had
the net.  Both boys had lost their waders.  Dmitri cleared a place and sat
down, wrapping himself in his arms, and William did the same.  Their briefs
were still soaking and William hated the feeling of the damp, cool ground and
his wet briefs.
            “My gramps is going to kill us,” Dmitri said.
            William had never seen Mr Shugak angry, but two soaking boys, Kyle
Riker’s missing rod, and the basic disobedience of going to the creek would be
enough to make any grownup angry.  Other children said things like, “My parents
will kill me;” William knew it didn’t really mean anything when other kids said
it; he knew that Mr Shugak would never do anything to Dmitri.  But as he sat
there next to Dmitri and shivered and waited for the Shugaks to figure out that
they were in trouble, he was very, very grateful that his father was not home.
 
            William should have known it wouldn’t last.  They had been found,
and the Shugaks had been happy, and then mad, and then happy again.  Dmitri had
told over and over and over again how it was William who had saved him from
drowning in the creek; William’s quick thinking; William’s good swimming.  He
had even bragged that the fish that William had lost was way bigger than the
fish he himself had caught.  William was embarrassed by the attention, but glad
that Dmitri didn’t hate him anymore.  There was even an article about him, with
a picture of both boys.  The Shugaks grounded them both; even to not allowing
William to go to Rosie’s to see Bet unless an adult was with him.  Dmitri’s
parents came back from camp to pick him up; it was almost time to go back to
school, and William’s father came home.
            The transition from the Shugaks to his father being home again was
always difficult.  But this time there was a big fight, because of what
happened.  William’s father blamed them for not keeping a closer eye on
William.  He blamed Dmitri, for being a bad influence.  Even though William
knew what it meant – he really knew what it meant – he stuck up for his new
friend.
            “It was me, Dad,” he said as he stood in the kitchen doorway,
listening to the fight between his father and Mr and Mrs Shugak when he was
supposed to be in bed.  “I decided to go fishing.  I asked Dmitri to come.  It
was all me.”
            His father said nothing.
            William said, “I lied to Mrs S about where I was going to be.  She
trusted me.  I told her I was going to Rosie’s and it was a lie.”
            Still his father said nothing.
            “William, go to bed,” Mrs Shugak told him.
            “I lost your rod in the creek,” William said.  “I took your gear. 
I did it all.”
            His father said, “Mrs Shugak told you to go to bed.”
            William was desperate.  “It was my fault,” he whispered.
            “Billy, go to bed,” his father repeated.
            “Yes, sir.”
            He turned around and went up the stairs to his bedroom.  He sat on
the edge of his bed and waited.  He heard Mr and Mrs Shugak leave the house. 
He heard them start their aircar and drive away.  He heard his father go to the
refrigerator – Mrs Shugak had bought a case of beer when she’d learned that
William’s father was coming home.  He heard his father come up the stairs.  He
waited for his father to open the door. 
            When it was over, William spent five hours in the emergency room. 
His collarbone was broken, as were two ribs.  It was easy for the doctors to
see what had happened, but William told a story about how he’d decided he could
climb to the roof of his cabin, and how he’d fallen, all the way to the
ground.  Kyle Riker was an important man.  A nice lady came to the house;
William showed her where he’d fallen.  Somewhere a report was generated.
            And William learned that it didn’t matter if ultimately you’d been
a hero.  What mattered was not that you’d saved someone’s life, but that it was
your mistakes and bad decisions that had caused the situation to develop to
begin with; and that the consequences to those mistakes were swift and brutal. 
It was a lesson he wouldn’t forget.
 
 
           
 
           
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
           
 
***** Chapter 5 *****
Chapter Summary
     The captain diagnoses Will's sleep problem as night terrors and
     suggests a course of action.
Chapter Notes
     While night terrors are quite common in children around three years
     of age, night terrors in adults are rare and can often be the result
     of stress, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder. Adults who
     have been traumatised early are more prone to re-experiencing the
     phenomenon after another stressor or traumatic event. Night terrors
     are also common in adults who have been physically or sexually
     abused. While night terrors can be eased with sleep disorder
     treatment and cognitive therapy now, there is no real cure. Here's
     hoping for one in the 24th century.
Chapter Five
 
 
           
 
 
            I couldn’t breathe.  My throat was constricted; the pain in my
chest was excruciating.  I struggled for air, struggled against the weight
pressing down on my chest.  My arms were pinned behind me.
            “Will.  Just breathe,” a voice beside my ear said.
            I opened my eyes.
            “Deep breath,” instructed the voice.  “That’s it.  Now let it out. 
Good.  Again.”
            My eyes were adjusting to the darkness.  I could feel myself
breathing, could feel the weight being lifted from my chest.
            “Are you awake now?” the voice asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Good.  I’m going to let your arms go, if you promise not to fight
me.”
            “Yes,” I said.
            My arms were unpinned.
            “Do you know where you are?”
            “I’m in your quarters,” I said, and; I’m in your bed, I thought.
            “Keep breathing,” he said.  “It’s all right.  You’re safe, here. 
Just breathe.”
            I could feel the panic subsiding.  “I’m sorry,” I said.  I’d had
another one of those episodes where I woke in full adrenalin surge; I could
just imagine what he thought of that. 
            “I’m going to put my arms around you,” he said.  “May I?”
            I turned towards him.  “Yes,” I said.
            He sighed, and wrapped his arms around me.  “You do not have to
apologise,” he said.  “Did I hurt you?  I had to hold onto your arms fairly
hard.”
            My arms were sore.  “No,” I said.
            “Good.  I was afraid you would do yourself an injury.”  He kissed
me lightly on the cheek.  “How long has this been happening?”
            “A while,” I admitted.
            “A while,” he echoed.  “A week?  Two weeks?  Eight weeks?”
            I shifted, and felt him pull me back.
            “I don’t know,” I said. 
            “You’ve had these before now?” he asked.
            “Waking up like this?”
            “Night terrors, Will,” he said.  “They’re called night terrors.”
            “I’m not dreaming,” I said.  “I’d remember, if I were.”
            “No.”  He kissed me again.  “Night terrors are not dreams.”
            I tried to think.  “Not on the Enterprise,” I said.  “I don’t
remember ever having them here, not even after the Borg.”
            “But you’ve had them before.”
            “Yes.”
            “It’s all right,” he repeated.  “You won’t have them again
tonight.  Just let me hold you.”
            “I’m sorry,” I said.  “You said I was fighting you?” I shuddered.
            I could feel him smiling.  “Relax, Will,” he said.  “You were
panicking.  Nothing I couldn’t handle.  And nothing,” he said, somewhat
sternly, “to be embarrassed about.”
            But I was.  Embarrassed.  Or perhaps mortified is a better word. 
You spend years longing for something – even if you don’t admit it to yourself
– and then it finally happens, and you go and screw it up.
            “I think,” and I was trying for lightness, “that perhaps I ought to
ground myself.”
            He let me go, and sat up.  He had a small reading lamp, and he
turned it on.  I sat up too, propping up the pillow behind me.
            “Not so far away, Will,” he said, smiling, and I moved closer to
him.  “There, that’s better,” he said, and draped his arm around me.  “I
wouldn’t,” he said, and it was in his usual deliberate way, as if he were
weighing every option – as if it weren’t the middle of the night, with his
first officer in bed with him.  “I would suggest a small vacation.  You have
enough leave time built up to take off for the next three years, if you wished
to.”
            “As do you,” I said.  “Except that you could probably take off ten
years.”
            “Ah, well, boredom, I’m sure, would set in.”  He grinned at me. 
“Take off a week or so, no more than ten days.  We’re not doing anything, just
this survey.  Everything is remarkably calm.”
            “Q will probably show up,” I said, morosely.
            He laughed.  “Don’t say his name in vain, please,” he said.  “You
being here with me would undoubtedly infuriate him.”
            That was funny, and I laughed.  He pulled me close and kissed me.
            “Don’t go anywhere, stay shipboard.  Read a book, play some music. 
Light, easy stuff,” he said.  “No holodeck unescorted, I’m afraid.”
            “I’ll delete the programs,” I said.  I was beginning to be on a
first name basis with mortification.
            “I already have,” he said.
            Oh.
            “Relax, I’m not scolding you,” he said.  “Walk in the arboretum. 
Swim.  Nothing terribly physical in your exercise programs, do you understand?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “No fighting with Worf,” he added.
            “I get it, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “Cheeky bugger,” he said.  Then he said, “I’m taking you to Beverly
in the morning, Will.  Now that I know what your sleep problems are –Beverly
should run a scan to make sure nothing neurological is wrong – she should be
able to help.”
            “Neurological?” I asked. 
            “Mmmh,” he said, suddenly sounding sleepy himself.  “Night terrors
are a neurological issue.  Something about being caught in non-REM sleep or
something, I don’t even remember now.  I don’t know about you, Will, but I’m
knackered.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            He shut the lamp off.  “D’you think you can sleep now?” he asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Come here, then,” he said, and he slid back down into the bed.
            This time I wrapped my arms around him, and he was asleep before I
could even fix the pillows.  I could feel him breathing against me.  He’d been
surprisingly gentle with me when we’d made love, and I found myself wondering
how he really felt about me.  Clearly he’d been worried about me for some time;
clearly there was a depth to his feelings for me that I’d never even
considered.  Aside from flirting with Q, which seemed to be more designed to
annoy Q rather than to have much substance to it, his shipboard company had
been female, and yet he’d shown to me that he knew exactly what he was doing in
bed with a man.  I supposed, sighing, that the same could be said of me.  In
for a penny, in for a pound, my old babysitter used to say.  I kissed him on
his forehead, and found myself drifting, finally, to sleep.
 
 
 
            “Will.”
            I opened one eye. 
            “I’m afraid I didn’t give myself today off,” he said softly into my
ear.  “You are welcome to sleep as long as you like.”
            It took me a minute to remember where I was.  I was awake, then. 
“Should I be seen leaving your quarters, sir?” I asked.
            He closed his eyes for a minute, as if he were asking for
patience.  “Do not,’ he said, “’sir’ me in bed.”
            “Jean-Luc,” I amended.
            “Up to you,” he said, and despite the fact that it would have been
barely dawn earthside, and neither one of us had had much sleep, he was wide
awake and grinning.  “It’s my ship.  I can do what I wish.”
            I rolled my eyes at him.  “A side of you I rarely see,” I said.
            “Hah,” he answered.  “Just remember I’m taking you to Beverly when
you do get up.”
            “That’ll be awkward,” I remarked.
            “No more awkward than when you go chasing after every female you
see and report back to Deanna about it,” he retorted, and he swung his legs out
of the bed.
            “I do not report back to Deanna,” I said.
            “Likely story,” he responded.  “Oh-ten hundred, no later, yes?”
            “Sir,” I said.
            He wheeled around, but I was laughing.  “I thought you were
supposed to be grumpy in the morning,” he said.
            “People lie,” I said.  “I am always the poster child for
amiability.”
            “Dear God,” he replied, and then he was back in the bed and
pressing me against the pillows.
            I pretended to struggle for a bit, but he would have none of it. 
This time when we made love, there was a playfulness about it that was
surprising but gratifying.
            “I could get used to this,” he said.
            I kissed him.  “You’re going to be late,” I said.  “You’ll be
hearing from Data.”
            “Oh, dear,” he said.  “I’m up.  You are a bad influence,” he said
to me.  “Do you want coffee?  I’ll bring you a cup.”
            “Cream only,” I said.  “No sugar.”
            He grabbed his robe and wrapped himself in it.  I sat up, but
before I could get up, he was back with my cup of coffee.
            “Doesn’t Beverly usually have breakfast with you, Jean-Luc?” I
asked.
            “Not every day,” he said, and then he smiled.  “And not today.  I
cancelled, yesterday.”
            I was impressed.  “Your multi-tasking skills are a wonder to
behold,” I said.
            “Oh, shut up, Will, and drink your coffee.”
            He disappeared into the head and I heard him run the shower.  He
came out dressed, immaculate as usual.
            “Use the shower,” he said.  “I’ll be on the bridge.”
            I had to bite my tongue not to say ‘sir’.  “Yes, Jean-Luc.”
            He just looked at me and shook his head.  I could hear him laughing
as he left the room.
***** Chapter 6 *****
Chapter Summary
     William feels lost without the Shugaks, but a birthday present helps
     him find a new way to communicate with his father.
Chapter Notes
     Just a short piece set around William's seventh birthday.
Chapter Six
 
 
 
            William’s father decided that it was time he stayed home.  William
missed Mrs Shugak terribly.  He missed her cooking; she made huckleberry
pancakes that were so warm and fluffy, and a wonderful moose stew.  He missed
her kissing him on the top of his head before he went up the stairs to his room
at night.  He missed her teasing Mr Shugak at the breakfast table in the
morning; the way she looked at him when he came inside from having been out
playing with Matt or Rosie or Bet.  He remembered the year before, how he had
made himself miss the mother he’d never known, and realised how silly it was,
because Mrs S was almost his mother, the only one who’d taped his knees and
washed his face and made him drink his orange juice (William hated orange
juice).  His chest felt heavy all the time, but it also felt empty, as if there
were some sort of a hole there that nobody could see but he could feel. 
            His father had stopped touching him, had stopped hurting him, and
had stopped doing the private things he’d done at night.  William tried to be
glad that everything had stopped, but he was so lonely; he missed being touched
so much that he wished sometimes he could be brave enough to do something so
bad that his father would have to beat him, just so he could feel those big
hands on his shoulders and pressing into his back.
            He let Bet lick his hands, and he let her put her sloppy wet nose
against his arms, and he pressed his face down into her stinky doggie fur. 
Sometimes he would tackle her, and she would yelp and run around in circles,
and then flop down on the ground with her soft belly up, and William would rub
her and then rest his face against her.  Rosie’s mother watched William playing
with Bet one morning, when school was just a week away, and she said,
            “William, why don’t you let me talk to your father, so you can
bring her home with you?”
            William knew that Rosie’s mom was only trying to help.  He wondered
if maybe now he could bring Bet home.  He thought about having Bet at the foot
of his bed, of hearing her doggie snores and listening to the click of her
toenails on the wooden floor, of having something warm and soft that he could
snuggle with.
            “No thanks, Mrs Kalugin,” he said.  “My father will be going away
again, and I think Bet should stay here, if that’s okay with you.”
            Rosie’s mother looked at William, and she remembered how Rosie had
tried to explain to her why it was necessary for Bet to remain with them. 
Rosie had promised that William would take care of her, and he had, coming over
at least twice a day.  Rosie’s mother wanted – so much so that it physically
hurt – to take William into her arms, and hold him tightly and tell him that
one day he would be big and strong and things would not hurt as much – he had
named the dog Bet, which had made her want to cry – but she did none of those
things.  He was not her son.  She could only help him through Rosie, and
through allowing the dog to stay at their home.
            “Of course it’s okay, William,” she said now.  “Bet will always
have a home here.  You take wonderful good care of her.  You are so good with
the dogs, much better than my boys.”
            William grinned.  “It’s easy to take care of her,” he said.  “She’s
such a good dog.”
            “She is a good dog,” Rosie’s mother agreed.  “You’ve done a good
job, training her.”
 
            William started school, and still his father stayed at home.  His
father bought a replicator – no one in the village had one of those – and
that’s how he prepared the meals for the two of them.  William missed the
smells of cooking.  He missed hearing the clatter of pots and pans, of the
clink of washing dishes in the sink.  He’d seen Mrs S in the market, and she
had asked him how he was doing, and then what he’d wanted for his birthday. 
She was very surprised when he told her, but she found one for children and
wrapped it and delivered it to his house.  It was waiting by his plate when he
woke up on his birthday, along with the new fishing rod his father had bought
him.  William was glad to have his own rod, but it made him remember why Mrs S
no longer took care of him.  His father was curious about the present from Mrs
Shugak.
            “Why would she get you a book?” he wondered, sipping his coffee. 
“Do you even like to read?”
            William didn’t know what to say to that.  Of course he liked to
read.  Didn’t everyone?  He was currently reading a book about a boy who’d
fallen off a big ship and had been picked up by a fishing trawler like the ones
Dmitri’s parents owned, only the fisherman was Portuguese.  It was a good book,
even if the boy was a bit of a jerk, in the way that Dmitri had been before
William had gotten to know him.
            “It’s a special book,” he said to his father.  “At least I hope it
is.”  He unwrapped the paper carefully, trying not to rip it, not noticing his
father’s impatience, and how his father managed to mask that by sipping more
coffee from his mug.  William was happily surprised.  He hadn’t known that
there were cookbooks made for kids, but Mrs S had found one, and he opened it
up and saw at once that there were instructions and recipes that he could
understand and easily follow.  “See, it’s a cookbook,” he said, showing it to
his father.  “I can learn how to cook now.  It’s for beginners, like me,” he
said.  “It has a chapter on food, and then it has recipes.”
            Kyle Riker stared at his son, taking in the familiar dark hair,
curling just a bit at the nape, and the dark blue eyes, so much deeper than his
own, and he said, “We have the replicator.”
            William didn’t seem to hear him.  “It’ll be fun,” he said.  “I can
start with breakfast, that looks pretty easy.”
            “Billy,” his father said.
            William put the book down.  He’d heard that tone of voice before,
but it had been some time since he’d heard it.  “Yes, sir?” he said.
            “We have the replicator,” Kyle Riker repeated.
            William considered his options.  He wondered if it was because Mrs
S had given him the book that his father was not happy.  He wondered if it
might be better – as it had been with Bet – if he should just leave the idea of
cooking for another life.  He wondered if he could try cute with his father –
but he remembered that his father didn’t like him much, and perhaps what worked
with other people simply wouldn’t work with him.
            Finally he said, “I’d like to try, Dad.  I won’t make a mess, I
promise.”
            His father said, “I’ll keep you to that promise.”
            William didn’t smile.  “Yes, sir,” he said.
            “Stoves are not toys,” his father said.
            “Yes, sir.”
            “I don’t want to be obligated to watch you every second of the
day.”
            William thought about that one.  There was a very little voice
inside of him – one he usually never acknowledged – that said sharply, “Then
why are you even here?” but William was smart enough not to say that aloud. 
Instead, he asked, “Could I make an appointment?”
            Another parent might have melted, but Kyle Riker was a glacier. 
“You could,” he said.
            “Okay,” William said happily, thumbing through his book. 
“Thanks.”  He glanced at his father, who was still watching him.  “There’s a
recipe for pan fried fish in here,” he said.  “After we catch some fish, I’ll
be able to cook them.”
            If Kyle Riker realised he was being manipulated by his son, he
didn’t acknowledge it.  Instead, he said calmly, “That’s a good idea, Billy,”
and the matter was put to rest.
***** Chapter 7 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will has a meeting with Dr Crusher and the captain, and a
     neurological scan. Night terrors are confirmed; Will worries about
     his diagnosis.
Chapter Notes
     There's been a lot of talk about PTSD because of returning veterans.
     Childhood PTSD is very different from war-induced or other adult-
     trauma induced PTSD. Because of the repeating nature of physical,
     emotional, and/or childhood sexual abuse, children with PTSD present
     with different symptoms in childhood and then present with other
     symptoms in adulthood. Also, not all symptoms need to be present for
     a diagnosis of PTSD.
Chapter Seven
 
 
           
 
            I’d showered and gone back to my quarters, and then, reluctantly,
found myself in sickbay at oh-ten hundred, as I’d agreed.  He – Jean-Luc, it
was going to be hard for me to think of him like that – was already there, in
Beverly’s office, which made me wonder what exactly he’d told her – or wanted
to tell her – before I showed up.
            “Sit down, Will,” Beverly said, and she was simply herself, as if
perhaps he hadn’t told her that he’d diagnosed my having night terrors while
sleeping with me.   “Jean-Luc says you’re having night terrors; that you had an
episode last night.”
            I sat, and didn’t look at Jean-Luc.  “Yes,” I said.  “That’s what
he says they are.  I just thought I was waking up in an adrenalin surge.”
            “How long has this been occurring?” she asked.
            I shrugged.  “A couple months, I guess,” I said, “but not every
night.”
            “Often enough,” the captain said, “to prevent you from sleeping
regularly.”
            I sighed.  “Yes.”
            “A couple months,” Beverly repeated.  “That’s before, or after,
your first holodeck injury?”
            “Before,” I said, after a few moments.  “I’m pretty sure before.”
            “Something to investigate,” he said to Beverly, “in terms of the
diagnosis.”  He turned to me.  “Will,” he said, “I’d like to look at your log
for the past several months.”
            “You don’t have to ask me, sir,” I said.  Then I said, “You mean my
personal log?”
            “Yes, both,” he replied.  “I’m looking for what the trigger is, or
was.”
            I was very uncomfortable.  First the holodeck programs, and now my
log.  Suddenly I was very tired of being embarrassed, and of feeling as if I
was constantly missing information.  “Trigger?” I said.  “And what diagnosis
are we talking about here? The night terrors?”
            “Will,” he said, and he was speaking in that very mild tone of
voice he used when he was asking you to pay very special attention to
something.  “I want you to calm down,” and he took my hands, so that I had to
face him, instead of Beverly.
            “I am calm,” I said.
            He said, “Beverly, would you give us a moment?” and for perhaps the
hundredth time in the last twenty-four hours I simply wanted to disappear.
            “Of course, Jean-Luc,” she said.  She looked rather sharply at both
of us, I thought, but she didn’t say anything else.
            He waited until she left and then he said, “You’re upset, and you
don’t have to be.”  He still held my hands in his.
            “I – “ I started, but I didn’t really know what to say.
            “What?” His voice was still mild.
            “I feel,” I said slowly, “as if I’m being ganged up on.”
            “Ah,” he said, as if somehow that revealed everything he needed to
know.  “And you’re angry?”
            “I’m not angry,” I said, but even as I said it I knew it wasn’t
true.  I was angry, but I wasn’t really sure who I was angry with or at. 
            “Will,” he said again.  “You’ve had a great deal to take in, over
the past twenty-four hours.  I think anyone would be upset in your place.  But
I want you to understand that no one is ganging up on you, as you put it.”
            “But –“
            “Shhh,” he said.  “Stop.  Think for a minute.  Look at me.”
            “Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “You’re here because I’m worried about you,” he said.  “Because I
care for you, and because Beverly is concerned about you as well.  It’s what
friends do, Will, when someone’s in trouble.  They try to help, and that’s all
that this is.  We’re trying to help you.”
            “I’m not in trouble,” I said.
            “William,” he said.
            I was silent, and the two of us sat there, with him still holding
my hands.  “I already grounded myself,” I said.
            “I know,” he answered.
            “What else do I have to do?” I asked.
            “Listen to what Beverly and I have to say to you,” he said, “with
the understanding that I believe you are in trouble, and that you need my help,
and Beverly’s.”
            Beverly opened the door.  “Jean-Luc?” she asked.
            “I think he’s ready to listen,” he said, and she went back to her
desk.
            “Will,” Beverly said.  “The night terrors – if that’s what they
are, and from the captain’s description of the episode, that’s what it sounds
like – are just a symptom.  One of a cluster of symptoms that you’ve been
presenting over the past few months, since that first holodeck accident.”
            “Symptoms of what?” I asked.  “I don’t feel ill.”
            “Don’t you?” the captain said.  “If you were being completely
honest with yourself?”
            I said, “You’re doing it again.”
            I expected him to shut me down, as he’d done before, but instead he
said, “You’re right.  I’m sorry.”
            I was so shocked I didn’t say anything.  I was quiet for a minute,
trying to think about what he might be referring to.  “I’m not sleeping,” I
said.  I waited for him to say something, but he didn’t.  “It’s affecting my
ability to pay attention.  I’m careless, so I’ve gotten hurt.  I’m – “ I looked
down, and I wanted to pull my hands away.  “I’m irritable, I guess.  And
jumpy.”
            “And?” he asked.
            “Over-emotional,” I said, finally.  “And these are symptoms?  Of an
illness?”
            “Are you having flashbacks, Will?” Beverly asked.
            “Flashbacks?” I was stalling for time.  “You mean, like memories of
the Borg or something?”
            “Flashbacks are not really memories, per se,” she replied.  “It’s
like reliving a scene, like a waking dream.”
            “No,” I said.  “Are you going to tell me what you think I have?”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “It’s all right.”
            Beverly said, “I’m going to run a neurological scan to make sure
that your sleep problems are night terrors.  If they are, there’s a medication
that I can give you to help you.  It won’t make them go away completely, but it
will make it less likely that you’ll have them.  It will also help you with
your anxiety.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “And the diagnosis?”
            “Is not complete,” she said.  “I’ll let you know when I’ve finished
the scan.”
            I sighed.  “Fine,” I said.
            “Would you like me to stay here?” Jean-Luc asked.
            “No,” I said.  “You’ve got a ship to run.  I’ll behave myself.”
            “Oh, Will,” he said.  “It’s not a question of you not behaving.” 
He let go of my hands and stood up.
            “Isn’t it?” I asked.
            “No,” he said.  “You’re anxious.  If you want me to stay with you,
I will.  The ship can wait.”
            I stood.  “I’ll be okay, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “As long as Beverly
doesn’t keep me here all day.”
            “It will take thirty minutes at the most, Will,” Beverly said, “and
then you can enjoy your time off.”
            “I can handle thirty minutes,” I said.
            He looked as if he were going to say something, but then he just
smiled, and he touched me lightly on my arm.  “I’ll be on the bridge, then,” he
said, “if you need me.”
            “We’ll be fine,” Beverly reassured him.
            He nodded, and left the room.
            “Come on, Will,” Beverly said to me.  “Let’s get this scan done.”
 
 
 
 
            The first day of a vacation – unless it’s one that you’ve spent
months planning for at a special place – is a total washout, or at least it is
for me.  I’d gone from working my usual eight-hour beta shift, along with
teaching two classes, handling personnel issues, and meetings with my
department chiefs to doing absolutely nothing.  I couldn’t go to the holodeck
by myself, and everyone else was working.  Honestly, I didn’t really want to go
to the holodeck.  I didn’t know if I could really trust myself anymore.
            I went to the gym after the scan – which had proved two things:
one, I had night terrors, and two, it wasn’t for neurological reasons. 
Everything physical is normal, which of course means that I am losing it,
cracking up, or whatever anyone else wants to call it.  My persona is
shattering – that’s what the captain had said.  Fuck.  Anyway, I went to the
gym and worked out a bit, took a swim which was good, actually, showered there,
and then came back to my quarters with nothing else on the agenda, except to
look forward to yet another meeting with Beverly and Jean-Luc when they finally
tell me what’s going on.
            Well, I’m a lot of things, but I’m not stupid, despite what many
people think (or do I let them think that?), so I input my symptoms into my
padd and came up with the big one:  post traumatic stress disorder.
I read about it, and it seemed the whole ship had suffered from it after the
Borg attack, including myself and the captain.
            But we haven’t had any new issues with anyone in a while, just the
ongoing issues with the Romulans, and the Cardassians are gearing up to be a
major pain in the ass.  So it doesn’t really make much sense to me that I
should be having any problems of this sort now.
            Except that when the captain talked to me yesterday – God, was it
only yesterday? – he kept mentioning my childhood and my father.  But that’s
over and done with – we’d come to somewhat of an understanding, I guess, after
the Aries.  He sometimes contacts me; I never contact him, although I do send a
reply.  I don’t think about him.  I don’t think about Alaska, except my one
fishing program.  And yet the captain – why do I keep calling him that? – said
that I was “mirroring injuries” that I’d gotten as a child, whatever the fuck
that means.
            Broken collarbone.  And suddenly I couldn’t breathe.  It was as if
an elephant just came in and sat right down on my chest.  The pain was awful,
just this dead weight, and I was gasping, and I just couldn’t breathe.  I
thought I was having a heart attack.  I thought I was dying.  I continued to
not breathe for what seemed like hours before the pain lightened just a little
bit, and I could feel my chest heaving, as my lungs were sucking in air.  I
felt lightheaded and woozy.  My lungs hurt.  My chest hurt.  I stood up and
walked around, trying to work it out, trying to calm down.  I felt trapped;
like I was stuck in a Jefferies tube or something; I had to get out of here.
            But there was really nowhere for me to go.  This whole huge ship,
and where could you go, if you didn’t want to talk to anyone, and you were not
allowed to go to the holodeck? 
            The door chimed.
            “Come in,” I said.
            “I thought I’d see how you were doing,” he said, smiling at me.  “I
already got the good news from Beverly about your scan.”
            I was not going to tell him about my waking night terror, or
whatever it was that had just happened.  He was already spending too much time
worrying about me.  Time to get over it; time to just get back to work.
            “I’m okay,” I said.  “A little tired,” and suddenly I was.  Very
tired.  As if Beverly’s medication had all of sudden just kicked in.
            He sat down on the couch.  “Nothing to prevent you from going back
to bed, Will,” he said. 
            “No,” I answered.  “I think that’s what I’ll do.”
            “I’m sorry about this morning.  This – “ and he stopped, as if he
didn’t know what words to use, “what I feel for you – what we might have – is
very new to me too.  And I’m far from perfect,” he said, and he grinned.  “I
like to have everything fixed and shipshape, right away.  It works well for
ships; not so well for people.”
            “Is that what you were trying to do?  Fix me?” I asked, but I was
smiling.
            He shrugged.  “Why don’t you come sit here?” he asked.
            I did, and he pulled me into his arms and kissed me. 
            “I’m a little worried,” he said, and as I started to sit up, he
pulled me back against him.  “Just stay here, for a minute, and hear me out.  I
don’t want to make things harder for you, Will.  I don’t want to add to your
stress, or make you feel overwhelmed.  I don’t want –“ he paused, searching for
what he wanted to say.  “I don’t want to take advantage of you, of your
feelings for me.  I don’t know if I’m making any sense here.”
            “You’re afraid that I’m not together enough to know what I want?” I
asked.
            “No,” he said, and he let me sit back up.  “No, I know what you
feel for me, Will.  I’ve known for some time.  But I’m worried that my
responding to you now is not going to help you.  And yet,” he said, “is it
terribly selfish of me to say that I have truly enjoyed being with you?”
            “You’re allowed to be selfish, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “I’ve enjoyed
being with you too.  And – “ I stopped him from speaking by bringing his face
to me and kissing him,” maybe I’m not one hundred percent right now.  But I’m
cognizant of the issue – if I think you’re being overbearing, I’ll just tell
you to cut it out.”
            He laughed.  “Is that a promise, Will?” he asked.
            “Yes,” I said; the anxiety that I’d felt when he’d arrived just
disappeared.
            We kissed again, his hands strong on my shoulders, pulling me into
to him.  The kiss deepened and I felt myself becoming hard.
            “You’re still on duty, Jean-Luc,” I said, when we broke for air.
            He sighed.  “So I am,” he said.  “You’ll be all right?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “Although you’re leaving me with a different sort
of a problem.”
            He placed his hand against me.  “This is a problem I could fix,” he
said seriously, and I just about fell off the couch.
            “Go,” I said.  “You’re incorrigible.”
            He grinned.  “As you wish,” he said.  “How about meeting me at
Holodeck Four around seventeen thirty?” he asked.  “I’ve a program you might
enjoy.  Then dinner, perhaps?”
            “I’m not riding any horses,” I said.
            “If there’s any riding happening, Will,” he said, “it won’t have
anything to do with horses.”
           
           
           
           
           
           
 
 
           
           
 
***** Chapter 8 *****
Chapter Summary
     William begins cooking, and starts his first martial arts class, and
     begins the special educational program that will take him to
     Starfleet Academy. But William's father cannot hold himself together.
Chapter Notes
     This chapter is not for the faint-of-heart. Explicit child abuse and
     child sexual abuse occurs.
Chapter Eight
 
           
 
            William had made his first appointment to cook on the Saturday
after school started, and while he could tell his father was not exactly
thrilled, he was patient and helped William with some of the questions he had. 
William had no problems following or understanding the recipes, and he seemed
to instinctively grasp the chemistry behind the art of cooking.  Two more
sessions on successive weekends followed, and William was allowed free reign in
the kitchen, to experiment as he wished, as long as he kept his promise to
clean up.
            William wasn’t sure why his father was still home, except because
who would stay with him if his father went away, since he could no longer see
the Shugaks.  He did see Mrs Shugak, of course, he just didn’t tell his
father.  He met her on Thursday afternoons in the market.  Thursday had always
been her shopping day, and William had prevailed upon his father to allow him
some credits, so he could do his shopping for the weekend.  Mrs Shugak waited
for him just inside the market, and then they would walk the aisles together,
and she would talk to him about vegetables, and fruits, and fish, and meat.  If
anyone wondered about the pair of them, no one said anything; the village
certainly knew not to say anything to Kyle Riker.  Mrs Shugak’s uncle Andrei
ran the market, and when he learned that William was teaching himself how to
cook, he would save something special to give to him – a nice chop; once, even
a couple of blood oranges from the mainland.
            School was somewhat of a disappointment.  William was bright, very
bright – and second grade was boring.  He tried to be good, he really did.  But
he was an active child, and it was very hard not to fidget when he was already
working on algebra and geometry at home with his father, and the other kids
were adding and subtracting.  Miss Anna was his teacher, and she was very nice,
and he liked her, and all his friends were in his class.  But it was still
boring.  Finally Miss Anna asked him to stay for a few minutes after the lunch
bell rang.
            “What do you like to do, William?” she asked him.
            “I like to fish,” he answered.  “I play baseball in the spring.  I
wanted to play hockey, but my dad said no.”
            “How come?” the teacher asked.
            “I hurt myself,” William said.  “My father thinks I could get hurt
again.”
            “I see,” she said.  “Maybe a sport that wasn’t so rough?”
            William was interested.  “Like what?” he asked.  Then he said
quickly, “I mean, like what, Miss Anna?”
            Miss Anna didn’t want William to be afraid of her, but she also
didn’t want him to be embarrassed.  “Have you thought about taking a martial
arts class?  I hear Henry is teaching judo after school on Tuesdays and
Thursdays.  You might like that, and you wouldn’t get hurt.  You know Henry,
he’s very careful.”
            Henry was the school janitor and village fix-it man.  He was a
large man – probably as large as William would one day be – but he was also
well-known among the schoolchildren for being cautious and safety-conscious. 
            “I could ask my dad,” William said.  “He might let me do that, as
long as it’s Henry.”
            Miss Anna smiled.  William was very charming.  “What else do you
like to do?”
            “I’m learning how to cook,” William said.  “I can make breakfast
now.  And I’m making dinner, two nights a week.”  Miss Anna looked a little
surprised, and William explained, “My mom died when I was little.  So it’s just
me and Dad.  He doesn’t like to cook, so I’m learning.  It’s fun.”
            Miss Anna had an idea.  “William,” she said, “I know you’re
learning math at home with your dad, right?”
            “Yes,” William said.  He looked worried again.  “You’re not mad,
are you?  I’m probably not supposed to, am I?”
            Miss Anna didn’t know whether she wanted to hold the child or shake
him.  “Why would I be mad about you wanting to learn something?” she asked,
smiling.  “That would be a silly thing for a teacher to be mad about, wouldn’t
it?”
            William thought about that, and then he smiled.  “Yep,” he said. 
“I guess that would be silly.”
            “If you like cooking,” Miss Anna continued, “I think maybe you
would like chemistry too.  And since you’re learning the math, I think it’s
something you could do.  I’m going to make an appointment to talk to your
father, and then we’ll get permission from the principal.  How does that
sound?”
            William was suddenly quiet.  “It’s not to say anything bad, right?”
he asked.  “You won’t say I’ve been bored and fidgeting too much, will you?  My
dad – he doesn’t like to hear that I haven’t been doing my best.”  William’s
voice was very soft.  “He doesn’t like it when I fidget.”
            Miss Anna’s stomach hurt, but she soldiered on.  “William,” she
said.  “You’re going to take judo with Henry, right?  That will take care of
your fidgeting.  You’re just the kind of boy who needs to be involved with a
sport all year, that’s all.  That’s not a bad thing, William.  That’s just who
you are.  We teachers know that there are children who are kinesthetic
learners.  You’re one of those learners.  That’s perfectly okay.”
            “It is?” He was still worried.
            “Of course it is,” she promised him.  “We all have our own style of
learning, even teachers.” And she smiled reassuringly at him.  “As for the
being bored, I bet the chemistry will help.  And I’ll help you find some good
books to read,” she added.  “And help you figure out some interesting projects
to do.  It’ll be okay, William.  I promise.  Your dad won’t be upset.”
            William wasn’t completely convinced, but Miss Anna was so nice that
he felt bad about disagreeing with her.  When William came home with the note
from Miss Anna, he was afraid that his father would yell at him, but instead,
Kyle Riker agreed that taking judo lessons from Henry was a good idea.  William
was surprised to find out that his father knew a lot about martial arts, and
that he knew judo and ju-jitsu and a special calming exercise called tai chi. 
William thought that maybe he should learn tai chi, so he wouldn’t be so
fidgety in school, but he decided he save that question for Henry to answer.
            Kyle Riker took William to the meeting with Miss Anna and several
other teachers, including two high school teachers, and the school
superintendent.  A program would be specially designed for William.  For the
first time in William’s life, an adult asked him seriously what he wanted to be
when he grew up.
            “I want to go to the Academy,” William said.  “I want to be a
Starfleet officer.”
            Mr Demetrioff was the high school physics and chemistry teacher. 
“That’s a very rigourous course of study, William,” he said.  “You’ll have to
get top-notch marks in all your math and science classes.  And you’ll have to
learn to fly.”
            William didn’t look at his father.  “I can do that,” he said.  “And
I want to learn to fly.”
            The superintendent, Mr Davies, a mainlander who had been in the
Valdez school system for many, many years, said quietly, “You shouldn’t be
surprised, Kyle.  He is, after all, her son.”
            Kyle Riker said, “I don’t want to talk about it.”
            “Maybe not,” Gareth Davies countered.  “But you won’t deprive the
child of his future, just because he looks like her and thinks like she did.”
            William looked at his father, and he looked at everyone around the
room.  He wanted very badly to hold himself, because he suddenly needed to
pee.  He caught Miss Anna’s eye, and she smiled her warm, safe smile at him,
and gave him a thumb’s up.  He looked down.  Nobody ever spoke to his father
that way.  And nobody ever spoke about his mother.  Not since he’d made a fool
of himself in kindergarten.
            “Starfleet killed her,” Kyle Riker said.  “I’m supposed to let
Starfleet take my only child, too?”
            Ever the peacemaker, William said, “Dad, I don’t have to go to the
Academy –“
            Riker snapped harshly, “Billy, shut up.  If you want to go to the
Academy, you’ll go.  You’re smart enough.”
            The room was quiet.  No one liked the way Riker treated his son,
but the boy was his, and so nothing was said.
            “Then we’re agreed on the program?” Gareth Davies asked.  “Max?
Paul?” They were the two high school teachers, Mr Demetrioff and Mr Levesque. 
“Anna?”
            “It’s agreed,” Kyle Riker said.  “Set it up.  Whatever Billy needs,
I’ll supply.  And if there’s another child who can benefit from this program,
I’ll help supply for that child too.”
            “Kyle,” Gareth Davies said, “there isn’t another child in Valdez
who could take this program.  But thank you for the offer.”
            So it was set.  William would take judo with Henry, and he would
take chemistry, algebra, physics, and geometry with Mr Demetrioff and Mr
Levesque.  Miss Anna would keep him in her class with independent study
projects in English and history and languages.
            “Kyle,” Davies said as they were walking out.  “There’s an entire
village here, who loved Elizaveta, and who are willing to help you with her
child.”
            “I don’t need any help,” Kyle Riker said.
 
 
            William waited for everything to fall apart.  He knew it would.  He
would wake up in the morning with his hair standing up on the back of his
neck.  He would come home from school and his father was there, waiting to go
over his work, waiting to see the moves that he learned from Henry in judo
class.  William was very glad that Henry had agreed to teach him tai chi,
because otherwise he felt he might have spent that fall throwing up every day. 
As it was, except for the two hours in judo with Matt and Rosie, who had
decided to take it with him, and the hour he spent with Mrs Shugak on
Thursdays, William’s life was one long period of waiting for his father to
decide what he was going to do.  William hadn’t been raised, as Rosie was, in
the Russian Orthodox Church, so he didn’t really know much about God or Jesus
or the saints, not the way Rosie did, but Rosie had taught him how to pray, and
so every night before he went to bed, and every morning when he woke up, he
prayed to whomever was out there that something terrible would happen in the
Federation and his father would be needed to fix it.
            It happened on a Saturday.  William got up early, because it was
his job now to make breakfast, and it was something that he enjoyed doing, and
it seemed to be something his father enjoyed too.  So he went downstairs, and
he put his father’s coffee on, and he took out the eggs and the milk and the
cheese and the peppers and the onions and the tomatoes, and set about making a
frittata.  He didn’t have an omelet pan – you really needed an omelet pan, he’d
decided, to make a good omelet, so he was going to ask for one for Christmas –
but a frittata was just as good as an omelet, and he didn’t have to worry about
flipping it over.  He was busily chopping vegetables and listening to the
coffee perking away and so he didn’t hear his father enter the kitchen.
            “Where did you get that?” his father asked.
            William hadn’t felt the hairs on the back of his neck rise; he
hadn’t felt anything.  He turned around cheerfully, and asked, “Where’d I get
what?”
            “Get it off,” Kyle Riker said flatly.  He had moved closer to the
boy.
            William was confused.  “Get what off?” It had been almost two
months since anything had happened; maybe that’s why William didn’t see it
coming.  Maybe little boys naturally have short attention spans.
            His father reached out with his large hands, and grabbed the boy by
the neck, and jerked him up.  He ripped the apron off the child, and then he
ripped the child’s shirt off, and yanked his jeans down, and his briefs, and
then he dragged the child out of the kitchen, smacking him over and over and
over.  William was so surprised he didn’t even open his mouth, but when he
realised where he was going, and what was going to happen, he began to scream. 
He continued to scream and wail as his father half-carried, half-pulled him up
the stairs, and then when his father threw him on the bed he stopped, his chest
heaving, his cries coming out in little half-gasps.  His father took off his
belt, and turned the boy over, and pressed him into the mattress.
            His father brought his face close to William’s ear, and he hissed,
“Whore.  Slut.  Who the fuck do you think you are?” and he brought his broad
hand down on William’s naked buttocks hard again and again.
            William could barely breathe.  He could feel the air being squeezed
out of his lungs as the weight of his father rested on him, and then as he
heard the sound of his father’s zipper coming down he began to gasp for air. 
When the air didn’t come – because the pain was so excruciating that his whole
body seemed to shut down – he went someplace far away, inside himself, where he
didn’t have to watch a little boy being raped by his own father.  He didn’t
come back until he awakened in the hospital, and Mr and Mrs Shugak were there
sitting by his bed, and his father was already on a ship taking him far away to
some outpost in the Federation.
           
 
           
           
 
           
           
***** Chapter 9 *****
Chapter Summary
     William learns more about his illness; Jean-Luc takes William to the
     beach.
Chapter Notes
     There may be triggers here, for those who have been abused. William
     has a flashback triggered by memory and smell.
Chapter Nine
 
 
 
 
            I’d gone to bed after the captain left.  I hadn’t even bothered to
change, just collapsed onto my bed and I was asleep in minutes.  When I awoke I
was groggy and disoriented, the way you are when you’re not used to sleeping in
the middle of the day.  It was only fifteen-thirty, so that left me with time
to get my wits together.  I was hungry, so I ordered a sandwich and a glass of
juice, and sat down and ate it at my desk, reading through my messages.  There
was one from Deanna, saying that Beverly had talked to her and asking me to
make an appointment.  Something to look forward to.  And there was one from
Jean-Luc, which read simply, “We are going to the beach.  Dress appropriately.”
            I am not necessarily a beach person, although I do love the water. 
Sitting on the sand and getting it in one’s suit, laying in the sun and getting
burned are not exactly on my list of things I like to do.  On the other hand, I
do love to swim, and I know Jean-Luc’s love of sailing (even if his idea of
sailing is much more grandiose than mine) mirrors my own.  He made no mention
of what kind of beach, so I assumed I should just wear my trunks under my
trousers and leave it at that.
            I sighed.  I kept replaying the meeting in Beverly’s office in my
mind, worrying at it, the way my dog used to worry at a stick or a bone.  Jean-
Luc had mentioned the word “trigger,” when he was talking about my supposed
illness, and so I went back to the site that explained PTSD and read about the
concept.  Assuming Jean-Luc and Beverly believed that my illness dated to
childhood, my current symptoms would have been triggered by something – a
smell, a sound, even a colour, according to what I was reading – that I
associated with what the article called the inciting trauma.  I’d started
having the night terrors a couple of weeks before I’d fallen when I was hiking
in the holodeck, so if Jean-Luc were correct in his assumption that it was
childhood trauma that had precipitated this, there might be something I might
recognise in my personal log.          I still wasn’t completely comfortable
with the idea of him perusing my log, but then, after viewing my holodeck
program, what could possibly be in my log that would be more embarrassing than
that?
            I shut the program down and then sighed again.  There wasn’t enough
time to go back to the gym, so I went through my music and put on something
smooth and light, Sarah Vaughan and the Cole Porter songbook.  There was the
nav class I was teaching and papers to read in that; also, Deanna had
recommended a while back a new author from Betazed she thought I might enjoy. 
But the truth is, I like being busy.  I’m good at multi-tasking.  I hate
sitting around and doing nothing.  It makes me want to pick up a broom or a rag
or something.  And for some reason I remembered one year, when Mrs Shugak was
still taking care of me while my father was away, that I was to be with her
over the holidays.  I must have been five or six, I guess.  Usually the Shugaks
stayed in my house, but, because it was over Christmas, I was staying with them
instead.  I remember standing on a chair in the kitchen, listening to music and
smelling vanilla and cinnamon, helping Mrs S and her daughter Katya polish
silver.
            But then I felt a sharp pain in my gut, and suddenly I wasn’t five
or six.  The smell of silver polish was overwhelming.  It was in my nose and
burning my eyes, sinking into my gut.  I could feel the soft felt cloth in my
hand, see the glint of my face in a small silver cranberry spoon, but I wasn’t
standing on a chair, I was sitting on the counter, my legs swinging down, and
there was music playing, horns and bells, and the smell of silver polish, and
cinnamon, and something copper….
            I was in the head and throwing up, on my knees, cramped up against
the wall, snot and food and tears all streaming out.  I’d barely managed to get
in there in time, and even after I’d thrown up everything that was ever in my
gut for the last three years, I still hung over the bowl, my stomach heaving. 
For a minute or so I thought I would pass out, but then my stomach finally
started to settle down and I was able to get up off my knees and clean myself
up in the sink.  I looked like shit.  I cleaned up the toilet and ran the
shower, using water this time, just allowing the head to fill with steam, so I
could just stand there and force myself to relax.
            When I came out of the shower I was startled to realise that it was
almost time to meet Jean-Luc.  Surely I hadn’t spent an hour in the head, but
it seemed that I had.  I combed my hair and tried to make myself not look like
I’d just gotten over some dreadful version of the ‘flu.  I found my pair of
swimming trunks and put them on, and then pulled a pair of light khakis and a
blue shirt on.  I felt weird wearing sandals shipboard, so I just put on a pair
of deck shoes; they would have to do.
            He’d said something about dinner, and I didn’t think I could look
at food again, at least not for today, but perhaps I could just pretend to eat
for his sake.  Once again I could feel embarrassment creeping up on me.  I
really did need to get a grip.  I’ve had about a half dozen relationships since
I left the Academy, some serious and some just fun, and yet with Jean-Luc I
felt like a fifteen-year-old.  Not because, I don’t think anyway, of his being
male – I’ve had sex with men before, certainly, and one relationship that might
have gone somewhere if he hadn’t been posted to another ship – but because it
was Jean-Luc.  Stupid, because I’d wanted this, but there I was, feeling less
than a hundred percent to begin with, and feeling like an infatuated kid on top
of that.
           
            I walked to the holodeck, meeting Geordi along the way.  He’d heard
that I’d taken some leave, and he was curious, but I told him I was just tired
and needed to recharge my batteries.  He’d thought that was an excellent idea,
something that he might consider doing at some future time (yeah, right), and
he’d be around if I wanted to hang out in Ten Forward.  Was poker night still
on?  (Yes.)  I walked on, acknowledging several other crew members, and ended
up at Holodeck Four exactly at seventeen-thirty.
            I walked in, not knowing what to expect.  I was in what was clearly
an outdoor hotel patio, completely devoid of guests, overlooking a smooth,
sandy beach that seemed to go on for kilometres in either direction.  There was
a row of deck chairs below the café, at the beginning of the beach, brightly
coloured with sunshades, and then maybe a kilometre or so of sand all the way
down to a great expense of aqua-coloured sea.  The waves came in steadily,
glittering green water turning into white foam before it hit the sand and
rolled back out.  The sky was light and mackereled with clouds.  It made me
remember that Hopkins poem, how did it go, “…For skies of couple-colour as a
brinded cow….”
            “Sir, would you like a drink?” A waiter had appeared at my elbow,
speaking standard with an accent I couldn’t really place.  I wondered if Jean-
Luc had set this program in France.
            “I’d recommend Sangría, Will,” Jean-Luc said behind me.  “They make
an awfully good one, here, very fresh and citrussy.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            “Dues Sangrías, per favor,” Jean-Luc said to the waiter, who bowed
and left.
            “Where are we?” I asked.
            Jean-Luc took me by the arm, and led me to a small table at the far
end of the patio, so that we were overlooking the beach.  There was a light
wind blowing, and the temperature was quite mild, warm enough to have one’s
shirt off but not hot.  He was dressed in light-coloured trousers and had his
shirt open, revealing his still-toned chest with its sparse white hair.  He had
on a sunhat, which he took off when we sat down.
            “This,” he said, “is a little town in Catalunya called Sitges, just
outside of Barcelona,” he said.  “We would sometimes come here when I was a
child, and I came here several times myself, when I was younger.”
            “It’s beautiful,” I said, and it was.  There were sun-lightened
rows of stucco buildings along to my right, perhaps summer homes, and low
mountains to my left.
            He smiled.  “Gràcies,” he said to the waiter, as he set down our
drinks.  “The wonders of the holodeck,” he said.  “On a day like this one, the
beach would be filled with people, as would this café.”
            “I’ve never seen the Mediterranean,” I said.
            “You’re joking,” he responded.
            I shrugged.  “I’m from Alaska, remember?” I said.  “The other side
of the world.”
            “You’ve been to Europe, surely,” he said.
            “Sure,” I answered.  “Meetings in London, once.  I took a week off
and visited Paris and Amsterdam.”
            “Amsterdam?” he asked.
            “Riker’s Dutch,” I said.  “I was curious.”
            “Of course.  Although I must say you hardly look Dutch.”
            “Well, it was a long time ago,” I said.  “when the Rikers came to
America.  Back when New York was New Amsterdam.”
            I sipped the drink.  He was right, it was refreshing.
            “You were able to rest?” he asked.  He took my hand, traced my palm
with his thumb.
            “Yes,” I said.  “I slept a couple hours.”
            “Good,” he said.  “I’ve got a blanket and a couple of deck chairs
down by the water, Will.”
            “I didn’t bring a towel,” I said.
            “I’ve got towels.  The water is lovely at this time of year,” he
said, standing.  “Bring your drink.”
            “What time of year is that, Jean-Luc?” I asked.
            “Mid-September,” he said.  “The crowds are gone, the weather’s
mild.”
            I followed him down the stairs and we walked across the sand.  I
stopped once and took off my shoes, marvelling at how the program managed to
get the texture and warmth of the sand exactly right.  He’d spread out a
checked blanket, as he’d said, and had several towels as well as a picnic.  The
deck chairs had a cup holder and I set my drink in one.
            “I’d talked about supper,” he said to me, “but I thought a picnic
on the beach would be more fun.”
            I grinned at the idea of Captain Picard having the words “more fun”
come out of his mouth.
            “What?” he said.
            I looked at him.  He was happy; it was as if he were ten years
younger.  He’d stripped out of his trousers and was wearing a suit that left
nothing to the imagination.  I remembered his comment about riding, and felt
myself colouring, hating – not for the first time – that I was so fair-skinned.
            He grinned.  “Come on, Will,” he said.  “Get out of your clothes. 
We’ve got the whole beach to ourselves, courtesy of the holodeck.”
            I nodded, and stripped to my trunks.  I followed him down the sand
to the water and found the sea refreshing but not cold.  He dove in, and swam
out a bit, waiting for me to join him.  I swam out to him, and then we drifted
out to deeper water.
            “Did you program sharks in the water, Jean-Luc?” I said.
            “Yes, and giant groupers too,” he said, and laughed.  “Sorry,
Will.  There’s not one dangerous fish in these waters.”
            “You used to come here to swim when you were little?” I asked. 
“Why here, and not the south of France?”
            He said, “One of my mother’s closest friends was Catalan.  She had
a summer villa here.  That’s where we used to stay.”
            “Is that the language you were speaking?” I asked.
            “I’m pretty rusty now,” he said.  “I used to be fairly fluent when
I was a child.”
            Suddenly he dunked me, and then he pulled me to him and kissed me,
and I could feel him pressing against me.
            “Have you ever made love on a beach before?” he asked me.
            We’d moved into shallower water, and I brought him to me, and
kissed him back.  “No,” I said.  “Have you ever seen what the beach looks like
in Valdez?  The only making love done there is by sea lions.”
He laughed, and we swam back to the beach, and returned to the blanket.  The
tide was ebbing, and there were even small shells along the tide line.  He
tossed me a towel.
            “Here, let me help you with that,” he said, and he began to dry me
by rubbing the towel in circles across my back and then down to my trunks,
which he quite efficiently removed.  He applied a little bit of pressure so
that I sank down to the blanket, and then he continued to dry me, circling the
towel around me and then kissing me on the spots he’d already dried.  I could
feel him behind me slipping off his suit, and we made love, slowly, listening
to the quiet lapping of the waves against the sand. When we finished, he lay
beside me, and he wrapped me in his arms.
            “Are you all right, cheri?” he asked. 
            “Yes,” I said simply.  “But I need to clean up.”
            “As do I,” he said, sitting up.  “Then we can have our supper.”
            We walked down the sand to the water, and he held my hand.  The
water was still the perfect temperature, one of the great accomplishments of
the holodeck.  In real life, it would have been late in the afternoon and the
sun would be setting; the water would be cooler, but in the holodeck….The swim
was refreshing, as was watching Jean-Luc swim.  Somehow I doubted that I would
look like that in my sixties.
            “I did program the sunset, Will,” he said as we walked out of the
water.  He shook himself, like a dog, and I laughed.
            “Then we’d better eat before it gets dark,” I said.
            Back at the blanket we both put our trousers back on, without the
wet suits, and dried off as best we could.  He set out the picnic, which was
quite Gallic, I guess – cold chicken, bread, cheese, some sort of chutney, it
looked like, olives, and pears.  Not an Alaskan picnic, that’s for sure.  He
handed me a bottle of ale and I laughed in surprise.
            “You aren’t going to rat me out, are you?” he said seriously.
            “Anyone would think you had a problem, Jean-Luc,” I said, trying to
calm down, “what with the Aldebaran whiskey behind your couch and Romulan ale.”
            “How did you know about the whiskey?” he asked, severely.
            “I know everything that happens on my ship,” I answered, “sir.”
            “Your ship, Mr Riker?” he said, opening a bottle and then handing
me the church key. 
            “Please,” I said.  “Everyone knows the ship belongs to the first
officer.  I just loan it out to you.”
            “Indeed,” he said, but he was smiling.  “An annoying trait of first
officers.”
            “One you undoubtedly shared when you were First,” I said
comfortably.
            “Absolutely,” he agreed.
            We ate in companionable silence and the meal he’d prepared was
surprisingly good.  I was relieved to see that my earlier stomach problems had
disappeared, and that, after the exercise of the afternoon, I actually had an
appetite.  As promised, the sun began to set in glorious colours, and I tried
to picture him as a little boy playing on this beach in this shimmering light.
            “You have something to tell me, I think,” he said after a while. 
He took my hand.
            “I don’t know how to describe it,” I said.
            “Well, let me clean up,” he answered, “while you think about what
you want to say.”
            “Okay.”
            Efficiently he packed everything up, and then he put his shirt back
on, although he left it unbuttoned.  He handed me my shirt, and I put it on and
buttoned it up halfway.
            “It’s difficult?” he asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Why don’t you let me hold you, then, and we can watch the sun
set,” he suggested.  “You don’t have to say anything at all if you don’t want
to.”
            “Okay,” I agreed.
            I lay down on the blanket, and he stretched out beside me, and
pulled me to him, so that we were spooning, as if we’d been in bed.  He kissed
the back of my neck, and wrapped his arms around me, and we lay there quietly,
watching the clouds and the play of the swirling colours in sky and sea.
            I said softly, “Glory be to God for dappled things--/For skies of
couple-colour as a brinded cow….”
            And Jean-Luc answered, “He fathers-forth whose beauty is past
change:  Praise him.”
            He kissed the top of my head.  “I didn’t know you had the soul of a
poet, William,” he murmured against my neck.
            “You don’t know everything about me, Jean-Luc,” I said, but I was
smiling.
            “I wouldn’t mind learning, if you don’t mind sharing,” he
answered.  “Your favourite poet, then?  Hopkins?”
            “I have a fondness for the Victorians,” I said.  “And the Pre-
Raphaelites.”
            “And jazz,” he said.  “An interesting combination.”
            I thought about Sarah Vaughan and the Cole Porter songbook.  “Maybe
I just like a good lyric,” I said, and he chuckled.
            “There was an incident, today,” I said, “actually, there were two.”
            “Yes?”
            “Before you came in to see me this morning,” I said.  “After the
meeting.  I was – I was thinking about what you said yesterday, about my
father.”
            “And what did I say?” he asked.  He was stroking my hair, and his
voice was very mild.
            “You said my holodeck injuries were mirroring ones that I’d had as
a child,” I said.  “That was the word you used.  Mirroring.”
            “Yes.” He continued to card his fingers through my hair.
            “When I fell in the holodeck program,” I said, “I broke my
collarbone.  And when I thought of it – just the words – it was as if I were
having another night terror, only I was awake.  I couldn’t breathe.  It felt
like I was having a heart attack.”
            “You were having a panic attack, perhaps?” he asked.
            “I don’t know.  I’ve never felt that way before, I don’t think.  I
felt trapped, like I had to get out, but there was no place to go.”
            “And that happened just before I came to see you?”
            “Yes.”
            “You were fairly calm by then,” he said.
            “It went away pretty quickly.”
            “You didn’t say anything.”
            I felt his grip tighten on my arm.  “No,” I said.  “You’re already
too worried about me.”
            He sighed.  “What exactly is too worried?” he asked.
            I was quiet, watching the last bit of the sun sink below the sea. 
The stars were slowly appearing, and the lights had come on in the hotel behind
us.
            “There was another episode?” he asked.  “A second panic attack?”
            “No, at least I don’t think that’s what it was,” I answered.  “I
don’t know what it was.”
            “Can you tell me?”
            “You’ll relieve me of duty,” I said softly.
            “Is that something I should do?  Will?”
            I felt my eyes fill.  “I’m where I want to be,” I said.  “I don’t
want to be anywhere else.”
            He kissed me softly on the back of my neck.  “William,” he said. 
He was using that voice again.  “This is your home.  Don’t you think I know
that?  That you don’t have anywhere else?  Or that you don’t think you do?  I
am not going to send you away,” he said.  “Not for any reason.  If you need
more time to heal, then there’s more time.  You do not have to be afraid.”
            Obviously I was ill, just as he’d said.  I didn’t want him to know
I was crying, but he reached around and wiped my face anyway.  I took a deep
breath.
            “After I woke up, I was feeling a little disoriented,” I
continued.  “You know, the way you do when you’re sleeping at an odd time, like
when you’ve changed shifts.”
            “Yes,” he said.
            “And I didn’t know what to do with my time,” I said.  “So I was
reading about triggers.  And I put some music on.  And I was trying to figure
out what I should do next, grade some papers or read a book.  And I remember
thinking about how I hate having nothing to do.  How it makes me feel like I
should at least be cleaning something, if nothing else….”  I waited for him to
comment on that, but he didn’t.  “And then it was like I was remembering
something, except I wasn’t.  Wasn’t remembering, I mean.  It was like I was
there.  I was smelling silver polish, and something – something –“
            “Breathe,” he said.  “That’s it, just breathe.  It’s all right,
you’re right here now, I’ve got you.”
            My heart had started to race and I was trembling.  “There was
another smell,” I said, and I had to fight myself not to get up and run.  “It
was – it was wrong, it was bad – there was cinnamon, and silver polish, and
then –“
            “Guillaume,” he said, and it took me a minute before I realised he
was speaking to me in French, “mon cher, you are right here, with me, in
Holodeck Four.  You are not anywhere else.  There are no smells.  You are
safe.”
            “What is wrong with me?” I said. 
            “You have post-traumatic stress disorder, I think,” he said, “and
Beverly thinks so too.  We have talked to Deanna, and Deanna concurs with the
symptoms.  Something triggered this – we don’t know what – but this is not an
incurable illness, Will.  It can be a chronic one, true, but it doesn’t have to
take over your life.  It will be all right, I promise you.  You trust me, yes?”
            I nodded.
            “Then trust me when I say you will be all right,” he said simply. 
            “I don’t want to be a burden to you, or anyone else,” I said.  “You
have a ship to run.”
            He sighed.  “William, there are times,” he said.  “If you were a
burden, would I be here?  Would I be holding you like this?  Please.”
            I was quiet.  Finally I said, “You’re not mad at me?”
            He didn’t answer and for a moment I thought that he was.  Then he
said, as if I were some recalcitrant child, “William.  Love.  Mon cœur.  I
think you know me well enough to know that if I were angry with you, you would
not have to ask.”
            I took a deep breath, and he kissed me on the top of my head.
            “You are,” he said, and I could tell he was smiling, “as you have
always been, a royal pain in my arse.  But I am not mad at you.”
            I could feel myself relaxing, and I snuggled into his arms.  “I
love you,” I said. 
            “There,” he said, hugging me tightly. “Je t’aime aussi.”
            “Despite my being a pain in your ass?” I asked.
            “Mais oui, Guillaume,” he whispered.  “It’s because you are a pain
in my arse, not despite, that I love you.  You keep me young,” he said.  “You
make me laugh.  You,” he continued, “make me a better captain than I ever was. 
So don’t ever talk to me about being a burden again.  You understand?”
            “Sir,” I said, and he snorted in a very undignified way.
            “Come, Will,” he said.  “Let’s go back home.”
 
 
***** Interlude *****
Chapter Summary
     A journal.
Chapter Notes
     The inciting trauma.
Interlude
 
 
 
13 December 2337
 
 
            As I write the date I can’t help but marvel at using the old style
Terran calendar again.  I’m so used to keeping a log; not writing my thoughts
at the end of the day has been too strange.  Somehow Kyle knew and as a joke
got me this antique journal with real paper and this beautiful gold pen.  So
it’s fitting, then, that I should use the old style date; fitting too that it
should be my first time celebrating St Lucia’s day since I was a little girl. 
Of course, we didn’t really celebrate it; there’s no girl in this family to
dress in white and weave a laurel to put in her hair.  The idea of getting
Billy to sit still long enough to put a laurel wreath in his curls is enough to
make me want to laugh out loud.  He’d probably eat it, the silly thing.  Isn’t
laurel poisonous?  (Note to self:  make sure all winter celebrations do not
include poisonous greenery.)
            But we lit candles in the windows and we went to the celebration in
the gym at the school.  The amazing thing about living in a community where
everyone is either Scandinavian or Russian is that there are so many reasons to
celebrate at this time of year.  Kyle, of course, didn’t see the need to offer
prayers to St Lucia, but I explained to him that the holiday is not really so
much offering prayers to some dubious child-saint but the idea of keeping light
in the darkest time of the year, the week before the winter solstice, when
there’s just the half-light that constitutes day both here and in Scandinavia. 
Anyway, Billy liked the lights, and he sat like a big boy on my lap for most of
the ceremony.  Afterwards, we met up with Vera and Greg and their three,
Georgie and Pete and Rosie, and Billy and Rosie sort of sat on the floor and
looked at each other and it was so cute.  Then out of nowhere Billy got up and
started running around in circles, and the next thing we knew it was utter
chaos.  Kyle grabbed Billy and told him no in a very stern voice, and Billy
burst into tears and then it was obvious it was time to go home.
            Despite an overtired toddler, it was a good day, and it made me
wish that in a year or two there could be a sister for Billy, one who would
wear a white dress and carry the candles.  I always thought I’d have a daughter
– I’d even thought about names once, asking Kyle what he thought about
Julianna, because it’s both Norwegian and Dutch.  But that won’t ever happen,
and I suppose I shouldn’t dwell on it.  I’m lucky to have Billy, lucky to still
be here to watch him grow.
 
 
22 December
 
            I begged and begged – what an odd concept that is, me who has run a
starship and who can make men quake in their boots – and Kyle finally relented
and said we could have a few friends over to celebrate Christmas.  Of course,
we’ll be going to Nan’s for Russian Christmas; it’s been years since I’ve been
able to join the family for any celebration, let alone this one.  But I wanted
to invite just a few of the friends that I’d had in school, hoping that Kyle
would meet a few of the guys, like Greg Kalugin and Marty Shugak and Tom
Jesperssen.  He’s so shy, and this is such a close-knit community, and I never
expected that he’d agree to come back here but it’s so important, for Billy,
that Kyle make some effort to know people here.  He’ll need them, when I’m
gone.
           
 
27 December
 
 
            So much has happened.  I wanted to get it all down before I forget
it, before the meds kick in and everything becomes so hazy.  I never knew it
would happen so fast.  I thought I’d have a couple years.  I thought I’d see
Billy safely out of babyhood and off to kindergarten.  I look at him, and I try
not to think it, but it’s so hard, knowing that he’ll never remember me.  He
won’t know that it was me who held him, and me who nursed him, and me who sang
him to sleep at night.  I’ve asked Kyle to be sure to tell him these things, so
he’ll know that even if he doesn’t remember me, I was there, and I loved him.
            We were getting ready for the party.  The cabin looked great –
despite Kyle saying that these things didn’t mean much he’d done such a good
job at decorating.  The tree was perfect, and there was a candle in each
window, and the whole cabin smelled of allspice and cinnamon and greenery.  The
best was that he’d found some old fashioned Christmas music – where he’d found
it I have no idea – and so it was playing and the house smelled like sugar
cookies and eggnog and Christmas.
            Kyle had to go out, and Billy and I were in the kitchen.  He’s such
a little helper, always wanting to do whatever I’m doing.  I was polishing the
last of the silver, and that old song “Silver Bells” was playing, and Billy was
sitting on the counter “helping” me polish the last of the fancy spoons.  I’d
given him a cloth and a spoon – of course I hadn’t given him any polish, not
with the way he puts things in his mouth – and he was rubbing the spoon and
swinging his legs against the counter in time to the music and even though he’d
never heard this song before he was humming along with the singers.
            And everything was so right.  I could almost pretend I had a
future, even if it wasn’t going to be in Starfleet anymore.
            And then I felt a little dizzy, and then the blood was gushing out
of my nose, and I can remember thinking that I couldn’t fall, because if I did,
it would leave Billy by himself on the counter, and what would happen if he
fell, with Kyle not back, and I could hear Billy screaming over and over and
over.  I must have managed to pick him up and place him on the floor, because
that’s where Kyle found us, Billy huddled next to me as I did my damnedest not
to bleed out on our kitchen floor.
 
           
6 January
 
 
            I’ve got the nurse writing this for me.  All those years, at the
Academy and then on one ship after another, I’d longed to have just one more
Christmas at home with my nan and my cousins and all the aunties, Auntie Tasya
and Auntie Raisa and everyone.  And here I am in the hospital, instead of Nan’s
house.  Kyle is here, but he left Billy with Auntie Tasya, who’s promised me
that she’ll take care of him.
            I won’t feel sorry for myself.  My people, the Norwegians and the
Russians and the Aleut, are all strong, tough people who never gave up in the
face of forces outside their control.  I’m losing this battle but I don’t have
to act like a mainlander about it.  I’m still Lt Commander Elizaveta
Christianssen Riker, even if I do weigh half what I used to.
            I remember Nan told me about her younger brother that she lost. 
What was his name again?  I can’t seem to remember now.  Anyway, they’d been
travelling along the river, close to break-up, and one minute her brother was
there, standing beside her, and the next minute he was gone.  There wasn’t even
a chance to try to save him, all she could do was walk home and let her mother
know what had happened.  In a way it was like that for me.  One minute I’m on a
routine mission, and the next minute I’m infected with a virus that changed my
whole world.
            I’ve asked Kyle to bring Billy the next time he comes, but Kyle is
reluctant.  He says that Billy’s not sleeping, and that he’s fractious, and
that he’ll tire me out.  I want to tell him that of course Billy’s not
sleeping, we’d only just gotten him settled in his new bed, and he was used to
me tucking him in, and reading him a book, and singing to him, and I’m not
there.  Kyle’s promised that he’s doing the same bedtime ritual, but it’s
normal that Billy won’t understand.  It would be better if Kyle would bring
him, so he can see me here and know that this is where I am, but he’s so
stubborn, so sure he’s right, that it’s better for Billy not to see me like
this, even if he won’t remember anything about this at all, and he’s right, I’m
just too tired to fight it. But I’d just like to hold Billy one more time.
 
 
 
16 January 2338
 
 
            Betty died this morning. 
            She asked me to save this.
            What am I going to do?
 
 
***** Chapter 11 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will has his first appointment with Deanna. It's a difficult session
     for both of them.
Chapter Notes
     Deanna is in a very awkward position as a counsellor here, because of
     her prior relationship with Will. It makes it both easier and harder
     to deal with Will's reluctance to talk.
Chapter Eleven
 
 
 
            If I’d been worried about spending another night in Jean-Luc’s bed,
and disrupting the captain’s sleep, I needn’t have been.  He’d sent me to my
quarters to get my things, and we’d spent a quiet couple of hours together. 
He’d put on some music – Fauré and Satie –and worked on some paperwork, the
bane of shipboard life, and I’d found that novel that Deanna had recommended
and started my way through it.  There was a certain comfort in this, knowing
that I didn’t have to entertain him nor him me; but that we could work
separately and yet still in some intangible way be a part of one another.  He
was right with that bit about my persona.  How does he have the ability to be
right all the time?  It would piss me off, except that I can’t help but just
watch in admiration.  I’ve always felt the need to perform for the person I’m
with; to be amusing, to be happy, to be charming, to – I don’t know, is woo the
right word here?  Even with Deanna, whom I’ve known since I was just a raw-
boned youth, I often feel the need when I eat with her in Ten-Forward to make
her laugh, instead of just allowing myself to be with her.  Deanna’s smart, so
damned smart; yet she’s never once called me on it.  And yet Jean-Luc, with the
precision of a skilled surgeon, just reaches in and cuts it right out.  So we
spent a few quiet hours together, and I’d gotten fairly well hooked into the
book when Jean-Luc closed his padd down and stood up and stretched.
            “Some of us,” he said, “still have to work in the morning, Will. 
I’m going to bed.”
            “You’re just jealous,” I said, without looking up.
            He smiled.  “Are you joining me?”
            I shut down my padd and stood up.  “Yes,” I said.  “It’s been a
long day, even if some of us didn’t work.”
            “Come on, then,” he said, holding out his hand.  He told the
computer to shut off the lights and the music, and we walked into his bedroom.
            I waited until he was finished getting ready; even the captain’s
head is not big enough for two men at the same time.  He crawled into bed, and
I joined him.
            “Where are the ropes?” I asked.
            For the first time in two days, he was the one who was confused.
            “Ropes?” he repeated.  “Do I know you well enough to be asked that
question, William?”
            I grinned.  “In case I try to destroy you in the night again, Jean-
Luc,” I said.  “Although the other idea has interesting possibilities, too.”
            He was silent, and, for a minute, I thought maybe I’d pushed him a
little too far.  How does one judge insubordination when one is sleeping with
the captain? He sighed.
            “Did I mention that you are a pain in the arse?” he said.
            “Sir,” I answered.
            His response was to kiss me deeply, which of course led to other
more interesting possibilities.
            “I don’t believe you’ll have any night terrors tonight,” he said,
after.
            “I hope not,” I murmured.
            “So you’ll just go to sleep, yes?” he said, leaning into me and
closing his eyes.
            “I am asleep,” I said.
            He has a captain’s ability to sleep anywhere at a moment’s notice,
and was already asleep even as I answered him.  I pulled him close and lay
there, listening to him breathe.  I was more than ready to believe him, that I
wouldn’t be waking, and finally I fell asleep as well.
 
 
            He was singing in the head.  I opened one eye.  I really, really
hate Gilbert and Sullivan.  There should be a law against it in the
Federation.  Something about distorting the space-time continuum or something. 
Maybe I should ask Q to simply make it disappear the next time he shows up.
            “I told you a long time ago you weren’t getting enough,” I said.
            “You’re a cheeky bastard,” he replied.
            “I hate Gilbert and Sullivan.”  I put the covers over my head.
            “I thought,” he said, walking out of the head, once again in
pristine uniform, “you musicians enjoyed all types of music.”
            “Gilbert and Sullivan is not music,” I said.  “It was a plot
against the civilised world perpetrated by the British Commonwealth.”
            “You had a good sleep,” he said, smugly.  He sat down on the bed
and unravelled me from the covers.
            “It’s too early to be smug, Jean-Luc,” I complained.
            “I am never smug,” he said, kissing me.  “It’s bad manners.”
            “Did you eat breakfast already?” I asked.
            “Worried about Beverly?” He grinned.
            “And you said I was cheeky.”
            “I’m the captain.  While you can be – and you often are – cheeky to
me, it is never the other way around.”  He stood up.  “Breakfast is in five
minutes,” he said.
            “I don’t have to get up this early, do I?”
            “You have an appointment with Deanna,” he said.  “At 0900 hours. 
So, yes.  You have to get up.  Four minutes, now, to breakfast.”
            He left the room, and I sighed.  I hadn’t really made an
appointment with Deanna that early, had I?  Reluctantly I got out of bed and
showered and dressed in time to sit down at the table with Jean-Luc, who was
already buttering his croissant.
            “I have no idea what you eat for breakfast, Will,” he said,
“although I’m guessing it’s not tea and a croissant.”
            I looked at him closely, but I couldn’t tell whether he was making
a comment on my struggles to maintain my weight or not.  I sipped my coffee,
hot, dark, and with cream, no sugar. 
            “Usually a poached egg and toast,” I said.  “And copious amounts of
coffee.”
            “Are you telling me that your boisterous personality is primarily
due to caffeine consumption?” He glanced at me, one eyebrow raised.
            “No, sir,” I said.  “It’s a paradoxical reaction, sir.  Caffeine
calms me down.”
            He choked on his tea and I gave him a smug smile.
            “Enjoy your eggs, William,” he said, smiling.  He stood up, cleared
away his dishes, tugged down his tunic, and kissed me on the top of my head. 
“Let me know how it goes with Deanna,” he said, resting one hand on my
shoulder.  “Try not to be too anxious.”
            “I’ll be all right,” I said.
            “Plans for the day?”
            “Light workout and a swim,” I said.  “I do have class work I need
to finish.  Geordi talked about having lunch in Ten Forward.”
            “If you’re good, you can come sit on the bridge for an hour,” he
said.
            “I’ll be good,” I promised.  “I’ll even be nice to Deanna.”
            “She didn’t choose the appointment time, Will, I did,” he said. 
“Thirteen hundred, if you feel like coming to the bridge.”
            He squeezed my shoulder lightly, and left.
            “You’re doing it again,” I said, but of course, he was already
gone.
 
 
            “You look well,” Deanna remarked, “for someone who is falling apart
at the seams.”
            I’d just entered her office.
            “Why, Will,” she said, all pretend sweetness and light, ‘you’re
blushing.  Have you something to tell me?”
            I sat down in her “client’s” chair and glowered at her.  “You are
pure evil,” I said.  “You know that, don’t you?”
            “I did not make the appointment time,” she protested.
            “Yes, I know,” I said.
            “So –“ She leaned in toward me, another move I’d seen her pull on
her “clients.”  “Do tell.”
            “Which part?” I asked.  “The falling apart at the seams, or the
looking well?”
            “How about the looking well first,” she suggested.
            “I am not a chocolate sundae,” I said.  “You make me feel like
you’re going to devour me.”
            She laughed.  “You’re too much,” she said.  “And you’re stalling
for time.  Do you want something to drink?”
            “Coffee,” I said.  “It calms me down.”
            She shook her head.  “That sounds like an inside joke,” she
replied. 
            She brought me a mug of coffee, and sat back down.  We waited for a
few minutes.
            “You already know, so why do I have to say anything?” I asked,
finally.
            “Despite what’s going on, you seem happier,” she said.  “I’m
pleased for both of you.”
            I was quiet.  “Really?” I asked.  “I wondered –“
            “Will,” she said, and it was Deanna speaking, not the ship’s
counsellor.  “You and I are a good friends.  I care very deeply for you, and
you know this.  So I am very happy for you.  You’ve wanted this for some time.”
            “God, does everyone know that except me?”
            “Why do you say that?”
            “Because Jean-Luc said the very same thing,” I answered.
            “We just know you, Will, that’s all.  It’s nothing to be paranoid
about.  There’s certainly no ship’s gossip.  Not yet, anyway,” and she grinned
her evil grin again.
            “I’m sure there will be soon enough,” I said.
            “Are you keeping it a secret?”
            “No, I guess not.”  I hadn’t thought that through.  “I don’t think
so.  Jean-Luc would have said something, surely.  Just being discreet.”
            “He seems very happy, too,” she said, and I found myself flushing
yet again.  “Of course, he is very worried about you, as we all are.”
            “Who constitutes all?” I asked.  I did not want to talk about how
happy Jean-Luc seemed.
            “Myself.  Beverly.  The captain.  Even Worf mentioned something to
me, that you seemed not yourself.”
            I sighed.  “Beverly said you agreed with her diagnosis.”
            “What diagnosis is that?” Deanna asked.  “As far as I know, we
haven’t made an official diagnosis yet.”
            “Jean-Luc said you thought I have PTSD,” I said.
            “You have many of the symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,”
she agreed.  “But there are other disorders that mimic those.  We have to rule
everything out.”
            “Oh,” I said.  “What other disorders?  Like I’m going crazy
disorders?”
            “Will,” she said firmly.  “People do not ‘go’ crazy.  And you
certainly are not ‘going’ crazy.”
            “It feels as if I am,” I said.
            “In what way?”
            “I don’t want to be a client,” I said.  “I hate this.”
            She sighed.  “Are you sure the coffee is calming you down?”
            “Why does everyone think I’m not calm?”
            “Will.  Because you aren’t.  You are not exhibiting any signs of
psychosis as far as I know,” she said.  “And in layman’s terms, signs of
psychotic behaviour are ‘crazy.’  So relax, okay?  I’m not going to treat you
like a client, I promise.”
            I looked down at the floor.  She was right.  All my muscles were
tense.  I was ready to bolt out the door.  I put the mug on the table in front
of me and looked up at her.  “You’re right,” I admitted.  “I’m sorry.  I don’t
like talking about this stuff.  It’s awkward.  I feel stupid.”
            “And that makes you just like every other human male I’ve ever
talked to in here,” she said.  “It’s difficult, Will, I know that.  And you’re
not stupid.  I wish you would stop saying that.”
            “I thought you weren’t supposed to judge your clients,” I said, but
I was smiling.
            “I thought you weren’t a client,” she retorted.
            We both laughed, and I felt some of my anxiety lessen.  She came
over and sat next to me, and took my hand.
            “Why don’t you talk about what’s bothering you the most right now?”
she suggested.  “We don’t have to hash out the past eight weeks in one
session.”
            I was going to protest that I wasn’t doing “sessions,” but then I
figured I was just delaying the inevitable.
            “A couple of things happened yesterday,” I said.  “After I met with
Beverly.”
            “Yes?”
            “We were discussing the night terrors I’ve been having,” I
explained.  “Then I had the neurological scan.  I went to the gym and did a
light workout and had a swim.  When I went back to my quarters, I was at a loss
as to what to do next.  So I looked up what Jean-Luc had mentioned, the
triggers.  And that got me thinking about what he’d said about my injuries.”
            “The injuries from the holodeck?”
            “Yes.  And then it was as if I was having a waking night terror.  I
started to have trouble breathing, and my chest hurt, like I was having a heart
attack or something.  And I felt as if I couldn’t get away fast enough, yet
there was really nowhere to go.”
            “And have you ever had this feeling before yesterday?”
            “No,” I said.  “I’m pretty sure I’d remember it if I did.  It was
very unpleasant.  It only lasted a few minutes in real time, although it felt
as if it went on forever.”
            “What you’re describing is a panic attack,” she said.  “It’s caused
by anxiety, which, of course, you already have.  The problem is often the panic
attack itself produces more anxiety.”
            “That’s certainly true,” I agreed.  “I keep waiting for it to
happen again.”
            “Didn’t Beverly give you something for your anxiety levels?”
            “She gave me a hypo spray for the night terrors,” I said.
            “I’ll tell her about the panic attack,” Deanna said.  “She needs to
know.”  She paused, and then said, “You said there was something else?”
            “Yes,” I answered.  “After the panic attack and Jean-Luc’s visit, I
took a nap.  When I woke, I was thinking about how bored I was, and then I
started remembering a time when I was helping my childhood babysitter polish
some silver.  I know that doesn’t make any sense,” I said.  “My babysitter had
a habit of using boredom as an excuse to clean.  The impulse is still there,” I
explained.  “The feeling that if I’m bored, I could at least be cleaning
something.”
            “Okay,” she said.  “I certainly can understand that.”
            “But then I wasn’t remembering anymore,” I continued.  “I was
smelling silver polish, and cinnamon, and I was hearing music.  Horns, and
bells.  It was overwhelming.”
            “And you were feeling?” she prompted.
            “Terrified,” I said.  “Out of control.  There was another smell –
it was awful.”
            “Do you remember the other smell?”
            I swallowed.  “No,” I said.
            Deanna waited for a minute, as if she didn’t believe me.  Hell, I
didn’t believe me.  I know damn well what that smell was.  I just don’t know
why.
            “You had a flashback,” Deanna said.  “In a way, it confirms the
Post-Traumatic Stress diagnosis.  They can be quite sudden and very stressful
to experience.  Is this the first one you’ve had?”
            “I don’t know,” I answered.  “Certainly it’s the first one I’ve had
in a very long time.”
            “And you don’t want to tell me what the other smell was?” she
asked.
            “No,” I said softly.  “I can’t.”
            “The treatment for PTSD, once we confirm the diagnosis,” she said,
“consists of medication, cognitive therapy, and several other types of therapy,
including one developed on Betazed.”  She waited for me to say something, but
my job as First is to listen and process information.  I sat back a little, and
she went on, “The point is that, there’s no real cure.  Medication can help
alleviate some of the symptoms, such as anxiety and depression.  You have to
want to participate – otherwise, the other tools that we have to treat PTSD are
meaningless.”
            “You’re scolding me?” I said in disbelief.
            “William Riker,” she said, “don’t look at me like that.  I’m
speaking to you as your friend right now.”
            “It’s hard to know when you’re wearing which hat,” I said.
            “Bullshit,” she said.
            “Ouch.”
            She said, “This will not be fun, Will.  I’ve known about some of
your childhood issues – how could I not? – and the captain has shared with me
some of the things that he’s found out.  But you are the only one who knows
what really happened.  And you’ve deliberately forgotten more than you remember
as a coping mechanism, which – don’t say anything – is very typical for adult
survivors of child abuse.  The only way to deal with repetitive trauma is to
actually deal with it, Will.  Running away from it, forgetting it, pretending
it never happened, or saying that it happened because it was your fault – not
one of these strategies is going to help you anymore.”
            “Is the lecture over yet?” I asked.
            “No,” she said, and she moved back over to her “therapist’s”
chair.  “These strategies are no longer working, Will.  That’s why you’re
having night terrors, and panic attacks, and flashbacks.  It’s why you’re
hurting yourself.”
            “I wasn’t,” I said, irritably, “hurting myself.”
            “I’ve read the medical reports,” Deanna said in an infuriatingly
calm voice.  In her “therapist” voice.
            “I thought you said you weren’t going to treat me like a client,” I
countered.  “You’re making me feel like Broccoli.”
            “You’re going to be very difficult,” she said.  “I told the captain
you would be.  You’ve got way too much vested in your old methods of coping to
want to cooperate in any way.”
            “I’ve always been difficult,” I said, before I realised what I was
saying.
            “I am not going to listen to Kyle Riker,” she said angrily.  “So
you can please shut him up and tell him to go the hell away.”
            I looked away.  My eyes were suddenly filling with tears again.
            “Will,” and it was Deanna who was speaking.  “You are in so much
pain.  Don’t you want it to stop?”
            “Yes,” I whispered.
            “Then you have to be willing to do the work,” she said simply.  “I
know you, Will.  You don’t shy away from the hard jobs.  You can do this. 
We’ll be here to help you with it, I promise.  But you have to commit to doing
it.  It’s going to be hard.  It’s going to hurt.  And I know it’s frightening. 
But you’re suffering from a real illness, Will.  One that could truly harm
you.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            She took a deep breath.  “The captain said you’re taking leave?”
            “He gave me a week to ten days, but he also said I could take
more,” I answered.
            “Do you have a plan for each day?”
            “Going to the gym,” I said.  “Other than that, no.  I’m just
throwing things together.”
            “I’d like you to have some structure,” she said.  “A lack of
structure is just as bad as you on a full workload.  Let me speak with Beverly
and the captain and we’ll come up with something to offer you, okay?”
            “Just as long as I get some choice in it,” I said.
            She looked surprised.  “Of course,” she said.  “Oh – the
appointment time.  I get it.” She looked as if she were trying not to laugh. 
“He can be very strong-minded.”
            “Bossy and overbearing is a better description,” I muttered.  “I
was going to see you today.”
            “He’s just so worried, Will,” Deanna consoled.  “He’s not showing
it to you.  But he is showing it to us.”  She touched my hand.  “Plans for
today?”
            “The gym,” I said.  “Light workout and a swim.  Lunch with Geordi
in Ten Forward.  The captain said I could spend an hour on the bridge at
thirteen hundred.  Then I have work for my classes to do, lessons to prepare
and papers to grade.”
            “Good,” she said.  “I don’t know why you can’t continue to teach
your classes, if you want to.  Let me know if you do, okay?”
            “It would be easier if I did,” I said.  “Data could take them over,
but he’s stretched thin at the moment, covering for me on the bridge.”
            “Then we’ll keep those in your light schedule,” she promised. 
“I’ve got a real client about to show up,” she said, and she was laughing. 
“You go do your workout.”
            I stood up, and she put her hand on my arm.
            “Will,” she said, “if you need me, you know how to get me.”
            I looked down at her and saw that she was serious.  To offer that –
what exactly were they all so afraid of, I wondered, Jean-Luc and Beverly and
Deanna?  I’d been barred from the holodeck, and was pretty much out of harm’s
way.  There’s no way Jean-Luc would let me back on the bridge if we were
actually expecting anything.
            “I’ll be fine,” I said reassuringly.  “I promise you.”
            She didn’t look convinced, which, in a way, scared me more than the
panic attack did.  Then she covered her concern and smiled at me.
            “Have a good workout,” she said, and I left her office and headed
to the gym.
***** Chapter 12 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's recovery from his father's abuse is slow and not without
     difficulty.
Chapter Notes
     Alice Miller said that the reason why some children who have been
     severely abused manage to gather themselves together and go on to
     become good people is because they manage to have an adult witness to
     their pain, someone who validates their experience and who helps them
     integrate their experience into their whole selves. William Riker as
     a child faced the classic set up for a psychiatric illness called
     reactive attachment disorder that is severe and very difficult to
     treat. His primary caretaker (his mother) died when he was too young
     to understand the experience, and his attachment to her was severed.
     His attachment to his father was insecure and his father was abusive.
     So why did William Riker become the exemplary individual that he was?
     In this story, William has two adult witnesses to his pain.
Chapter Twelve
 
           
 
 
 
            William returned home from the hospital to find Mr and Mrs Shugak
firmly in place, as if they had never left.  Even though Mr Shugak explained to
William that it was perfectly all right to have Bet with him, because his
father was going to be on a far-away mission for a very long time, William
insisted that Bet live with Rosie.  Only the Shugaks knew what had happened to
William; the rest of the village knew that Kyle Riker had had some sort of
breakdown and the boy had been hurt.  Vera Kalugin told the Shugaks that Bet
could remain with them forever, if that’s what William wanted, and so Bet’s
place was settled and life seemed to return to normal.
            William went back to school.  He spent the mornings with Miss Anna
and his friends, sometimes in the classroom and sometimes in the school
library, working on his projects.  The long afternoons were spent with Mr
Demetrioff and Mr Levesque.  Mr Demetrioff was not only a physics, chemistry,
and space sciences teacher, he was also a pilot; arrangements were made for
William to study flying on the weekends.  At the end of the long afternoons,
William would be walked to the gym to meet Henry and either Mr or Mrs Shugak. 
He would have supper there; then he would spend thirty minutes on warm-ups and
forty minutes working through his tai chi program.  At six the other children
would show up for Henry’s judo program.  William would stay for that, and Mr or
Mrs Shugak would take him home.
            Mr Shugak shuttled back and forth between his job and his own
house, but Mrs Shugak lived with William.  William’s old bed had been thrown
out and his room completely redecorated while he was in the hospital; there
were posters from Starfleet and the Academy, models of starships, and some
really good photos of Bet that Rosie’s brother Pete had taken.  There were
bookshelves for William’s books and a wooden desk that Mr Shugak had built
himself.  Mrs Shugak continued with William’s cooking lessons, and their
Thursday afternoons at the market.  Sometimes Dmitri would come over and spend
the night, and he and William would play games all night long.
            This seemed to work for a while.  But while many people think that
most children are resilient in the face of trauma and tragedy, a child’s
resilience is dependent on a variety of different factors.  Did the child have
a strong attachment to the primary parent or caregiver?  What personality type
was the child?  Were there genetic factors that contributed toward a tendency
for depression, or anxiety, or any of the other psychological or psychiatric
disturbances that could occur?
            William had had two solid years of a strong attachment to his
mother, but that attachment had been severed with his mother’s illness and
death.  The attachment to his father was insecure at best, and as William grew
older, the relationship became unstable and the attachment was finally severed,
leaving William without an attachment at all.  He had a secondary attachment to
Mrs Shugak, but that was insecure as well, because he was now aware that Mrs
Shugak could be removed from his life if his father so wished.  The abuse that
William suffered compounded his incipient reactive attachment disorder; William
learned that adults could not be trusted; that caregivers came and went,
without his control or say in the matter; and that love and pain were entwined.
            Mrs Shugak was no scholar.  She was not a stupid woman by any
means; but her gifts were instinct and emotion, rather than intellect.  She had
raised five children, all successfully; she had eleven grandchildren; even
William’s one-time nemesis Dmitri was a well-brought up and loved child.  When
William woke screaming in the night, and couldn’t be roused or consoled; when
William seemed to fade, sometimes, just drifting off into another place; and
when William’s rage would manifest itself in towering temper tantrums, Tasya
Shugak knew she needed to find someone who could navigate William through the
damage that had been done.  She had no idea where to find this person; their
village, outside the park, was very small; Valdez too was very small.  She
talked to Gareth Davies at the school, and he promised to find a school
psychologist who specialised in the kind of trauma that William had suffered.
            It was Henry, however, who contacted Tasya Shugak about helping
William.  Henry, who had been known for almost a decade as the village fix-it
man and the school janitor (and unofficial playground monitor and martial arts
instructor), was actually Master Chief Henry Ivanov, a man who had retired from
Starfleet after thirty years of service and who had settled in the village, as
many mainlanders do, for the peace and quiet it offered him.  Henry was no
stranger to trauma.  Thirty years in the ‘Fleet encompassed all manner of wars
and massacres and bizarre situations, along with all the wonder and discovery
and friendships.
            It was a Tuesday, and William was unfocused.  He seemed to be only
half-aware of his surroundings, drifting in and out of attention.  Henry had
noticed it during warm-ups, but it became more pronounced during tai chi.  Tai
chi was developed as a solution to this problem, but it wasn’t helping William.
            Finally, Henry said, “Will, are you tired?”
            William looked down at the floor.  “Yes,” he said finally.
            Henry walked over to one of the benches alongside the wall, and
motioned for William to follow him.  William sat down on the bench, but not
next to Henry.  Since the accident, William stayed his distance from other
people, even people he’d previously been friendly towards.
            “Did you not have a good sleep last night?” Henry asked.
            William said, “I never sleep good.”
            “How come?” Henry asked.  He didn’t look at the child, keeping his
focus on the floor.
            William shrugged.  “I dunno,” he said.  “I wake up in the middle of
the night and I don’t know where I am.”
            “That sounds scary,” Henry said.
            “I guess.”
            “Every night?” Henry asked.
            “Yeah.”
            “Must be hard on Auntie Tasya,” Henry said.
            William looked away.  “She doesn’t know what to do,” he said.  “She
talked to Mr Davies and I have to go see a doctor in Valdez.”
            “That sounds kind of scary too,” Henry said.
            William nodded.  “I’m tired of doctors,” he said.  “I’m tired of
everything.”
            Henry didn’t say anything.  They sat for a few minutes.  Then he
said, “Why don’t you be my helper tonight, instead of working out?”
            William looked up.  His eyes were teary, but Henry saw interest in
them too.
            “The thing is,” Henry continued, “you know Jake and Lucy are so
little that they need extra help, but then I spend all my time with them, and
so the bigger kids, like you and Matt and Rosie and Dmitri, you guys don’t get
the attention you need.”
            William said, “I could help with Jake and Lucy.”
            “I know,” Henry agreed.  “You’ve already learned all the basic
stuff.  If you could be my helper tonight, I can really work with the older
kids.  Would you like that?”
            “It’s okay?” William asked, unsure.
            “Of course it is,” Henry said, smiling.  “It’s my class, isn’t it?”
            William smiled back.  “I’d like that,” he said.
 
            William was good with the little children, patient, and kind. 
Henry saw that in working with the littler children, William forgot about
himself, and simply concentrated on the task at hand.  And as he had hoped, he
was able to work with the older children, and William got a much needed break.
            When Mrs Shugak came to pick William up, Henry asked if he could
speak to her while William was in school.  He told her what William had said
about waking up in the night; he told her that William had said he was tired of
everything.  He was very concerned, but he didn’t want anyone to panic.  He
thought taking William to the doctor in Valdez was a good idea.
            Tasya Shugak agreed to meet Henry right after dropping William off
at school.  They walked to Murphy’s, which was a combination café and tavern,
and really the only place where you could get a cup of coffee and a doughnut
for breakfast, and a really good moose burger for lunch.
            Charlie Isaksen came around from the bar and served them coffee and
fresh fried doughnuts; his daughter, Marie, who was the waitress, wouldn’t show
up for another hour to begin prepping for lunch.
            “Will says he hasn’t been sleeping,” Henry said, sipping his
coffee.
            “He wakes up screaming almost every night,” Auntie Tasya agreed. 
“When he’s like that, I can’t wake him.  He’s still asleep, but he’s
hysterical.”
            “It’s good you’re taking him to the doctor,” Henry confirmed. 
“Sounds like night terrors.  I never heard of an older kid having them,
though.  My daughter had them when she was a baby, around eighteen months’ old
or so.”
            Auntie Tasya had never known that Henry had a daughter, but she was
too polite to say anything.  “How did they stop?” she wondered.  “Or how did
you help her?”
            “It sounds silly,” Henry said, “but the best thing that worked was
putting her in a tepid bath.  She’d wake up naturally then.  She loved baths,
and she’d go right back to sleep.  She outgrew them, of course.  It lasted a
month or two but for my poor wife, it seemed to last forever.”
            Auntie Tasya nodded.  It did, indeed, seem to last forever.  “I
can’t imagine getting William in the bathtub,” she said.  “He fights me if I
try to hold him.”
            “Does he like music?” Henry wondered.
            “You know,” Auntie Tasya said, “Elizaveta used to tell me that he
would be a musician when he grew up.  She said he could sing any song, and his
pitch was true.  I’d forgotten all about that.”
            “You could play some music,” Henry suggested, “and see if it will
wake him up.  Do you have a piano there, at his home?”
            “Elizaveta’s old piano is still there,” Auntie Tasya said.  “It’s
one thing Kyle didn’t throw out.”
            “Maybe I’ll come over on Sunday and see how out of tune it is,”
Henry said.  “When do you go to Valdez?”
            “Next week,” Auntie Tasya replied.  “Marty will drive us.”
            “Good,” Henry said.  “You should tell the doctor the boy said he
was tired of everything.”
            “Yes,” Auntie Tasya agreed.  “I will be sure to tell the doctor
that.”
 
 
            Henry met William at recess in the gym.  (It was much too cold for
anyone to be outside.) 
            “Hi, Henry,” William said.  It had taken him a while to call Henry
by just his first name, and he still tended to stumble over it.  Most elders in
the village were Uncle and Auntie; even though the Shugaks were village elders,
Kyle Riker had always insisted that William call them Mr and Mrs Shugak.
            “Hey, Will,” Henry said.  “Not playing today?”
            William shook his head.  Most of the older kids were playing hockey
across the gym floor.
            “I don’t feel like it,” he said.
            “I heard you’re pretty good at street hockey, though,” Henry
offered.
            William didn’t even smile.  “Yeah, I guess,” he said.  “I like
baseball better.”
            “I heard you’re really good at that,” Henry agreed.  “Look at that
Rosie; she’s the best player out there.”
            “She was the best hitter on our team,” William said, watching
Rosie. 
            “You were a good hitter too,” Henry said.  “I saw you beat that
other team for the championship.  Now that was a good baseball game.”
            “Yeah,” William said.  “I probably won’t play this year.”
            Henry didn’t say anything.  If William wanted a rise out of him, he
would have to work harder than that.  Finally, Henry said, “Listen, thanks for
helping me out with the little kids.  You did a good job.”
            William looked at Henry.  “It helped you, didn’t it?” he asked. 
“You worked hard with the other kids.  Matt was really happy.”
            “Yeah, I was that pleased,” Henry said.  “Maybe you could do it
again sometime.”
            “Okay.” William seemed a little calmer.
            “You know,” Henry began, “I was speaking to your Auntie Tasya.  She
said she’s got a piano needs tuning.”
            William was surprised.  “My mother’s piano?” he asked.
            “Oh, is that who the piano belongs to?” Henry said.  “You know, I
heard your mom could play a pretty mean keyboard.”
            William shrugged.  “I don’t know,” he said.  “I never heard that.”
            “I hear you can sing,” Henry continued.
            “Who told you that?” William asked.
            “I don’t know,” Henry said.  “Maybe it was Miss Anna.”
            “Oh.”
            “Anyhow, I’m coming over to tune the piano on Sunday,” Henry said. 
“Maybe check it out a bit, play a few songs.”
            “Is she gonna sell it?” William asked.  He had no idea why suddenly
Mrs Shugak would want the piano tuned.  He’d never heard it played.
            “I think, Will,” Henry said, “that the piano is yours, so I doubt
if Auntie Tasya could sell it without you telling her to.”
            “The piano’s mine?” William repeated.
            Henry nodded.  “Your mother left it for you,” he said.  “So what do
you say?  I play a pretty mean keyboard myself.”
            “Okay,” William said.  Then he said, “Do you play anything else?”
            Henry grinned.  “Boy, I am a one-man band,” he said.  “I can play
the cornet, and the trombone, and the clarinet as well.  I could rock this
whole village.”
            “Maybe I could learn to play something,” William said.
            “We’ll try on Sunday, okay?” Henry wanted to put his arm around
William and give him a hug, but he refrained.  William still seemed so
skittish.  “I’ll bring some of my instruments.”
            “Sure,” William said.
 
 
 
            Henry came on Sunday, and stayed for lunch.  He brought his tuning
kit for the piano, and both the Shugaks, and Dmitri, and William watched him
work on the instrument.  He’d also brought his clarinet and his trombone, and
he let both boys play with the mouthpieces.  Dmitri didn’t do much, but William
could blow through the trombone mouthpiece.  Then Henry sat down at the piano
and played a few pieces.  William seemed to enjoy it, and Henry taught him the
scale.  He left thinking that even if William didn’t play baseball this year,
he might have been attracted enough to the piano and/or the trombone to want to
play an instrument instead.  Henry felt that with William helping him as well
as learning judo, and with the music, maybe they could get William over his
more immediate troubles.
 
 
            William woke on Monday feeling tired and out of sorts.  He had a
paper due for Miss Anna that he had almost finished.  He had worked on some
problems for Mr Levesque, and he had a lab with Mr Demetrioff.  He’d wakened in
the night, crying and tearing up his bed, and Mrs Shugak had put on some music,
but it hadn’t really seemed to help too much.
            He got out of bed and went downstairs.  Mrs Shugak was already up,
and she’d placed an egg and bacon sandwich in front of him, along with a glass
of orange juice.  William sat down, and moved his food around.
            “What’s the matter, William?” Mrs Shugak asked.
            “I hate orange juice,” William said.
            “Have four sips,” Mrs Shugak answered.
            “Two,” said William.  He drank it and made a face.
            “Eat your breakfast.”  Mrs Shugak sat down with her coffee and
watched William as she stirred the milk and sugar in.
            “I’m not hungry,” William said.
            “Are you sick?” she asked.  She’d never known a boy who wasn’t
hungry.
            “No,” William said.  “I’ll eat.”
            He took a few bites of the sandwich, and one more sip of the hated
orange juice.  “I’m ready,” he said.  “I’ll get my stuff.”
            “Mr S will take you today,” Mrs Shugak said.  “Marty!”
            Mr Shugak appeared from the mudroom and smiled at William.  “Go get
your stuff, then,” he said kindly.  “Cold as troll’s breath out there.”  Mr
Shugak’s grandmother had been born in Norway.  He frequently told stories about
trolls and frost giants.
            William rolled his eyes and went to get his backpack.  Before he
would have hugged Mrs Shugak and she would have kissed him on the top of his
head; now he just said goodbye.  He put his down parka on and his hat and mitts
and boots and then joined Mr Shugak in the aircar.
            Mr Shugak was a nice man, but William was tired of hearing about
trolls.  He tuned Mr Shugak out, and tried to think instead what it might be
like if he were made out of stone.  He wondered if people who were turned to
stone could think or feel or even know that they’d been people once.
            Mr Shugak dropped him off at the school, but he didn’t wait to see
if William went in.  He never did.  As Mrs Shugak had trusted William to go to
Rosie’s when he’d said he was going, it never occurred to Mr Shugak that
William would get out of the aircar but then not go into the school.
            William wandered onto the playground, and then he left his backpack
by the frozen swings.  He walked out of the playground, feeling his eyelashes
turn to ice crystals.  He wondered if he sat down in the snow somewhere, if
he’d just turn to ice.  He thought it was probably not possible for people
who’d become ice or stone to realise that that’s what they were.  He thought
they probably just went to sleep, and then their bodies froze, and they went
wherever things went when they just stopped being.  Rosie said that people went
to Heaven, where they were with Jesus, and that his mother was probably in
Heaven waiting for him to be with her again.  William thought that might be
okay.  He’d forgotten what she looked like, but presumably she would recognise
him.
            He found a quiet place and sat down, and waited to be turned into
stone.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 13 *****
Chapter Summary
     "But you're suffering from a real illness, Will," Deanna said. "One
     that can truly harm you."
Chapter Notes
     The pain of PTSD can suddenly be overwhelming. For caregivers, it can
     be exhausting, and, sometimes, even vigilance is not enough to keep a
     loved one safe.
Chapter Thirteen
 
 
 
 
           
 
            As I was walking to the gym, I remembered feeling this way before,
tired and out of sorts, in a way drifting in and out of focus.  I must have
walked past crewmembers; they must have acknowledged me, their XO, but I don’t
remember seeing anyone.  I felt lightheaded and a little queasy, as if maybe
I’d drunk too many cups of coffee, even though I’d only had two.
            The gym was mostly empty.  Alpha shift was in full force; beta
shift was about to start; those on gamma were already in bed.  I changed and
started my routine, but there was little joy in it.  It wasn’t as if I were
having a panic attack, or even what Deanna had said was a flashback.  I just
couldn’t seem to stay in the present, but I wasn’t remembering the past,
either.  I was just sort of floating.  It’s very hard to explain.  Except that
I knew that I’d felt this way before, because in a bizarre way it felt so
familiar, like when you put on your favourite shirt, as old and crappy as that
shirt may be.  It felt comfortable.
            I ended my workout early, because when you’re on the equipment you
need to pay attention, and clearly I was not capable of paying attention.  I
swam for a bit, not really doing laps, just sort of idly swimming.  The outing
at Jean-Luc’s beach had been enjoyable, the water cool and refreshing without
being cold.  I’d only been in the Pacific once without a wetsuit, back at the
Academy when we’d all decided to go to the beach for a swim; it was not a “fun”
experience.  I may be from Alaska, but I do not particularly enjoy
hypothermia.  I didn’t really want to think about the captain – Jean-Luc –
because I felt already like everything I was experiencing wasn’t truly
happening.  The fact that Jean-Luc had taken me to somewhere important to him,
had shown me someplace that he’d been as a little boy, meant that he was taking
what I felt for him seriously.  He didn’t often let people in, even those of us
who were presumably close to him, yet he was letting me in now, when I was not
sure that I could handle it.  Sure, I’d been attracted to him, the way it seems
I’m attracted to almost anything that walks (another thing I don’t want to
think about), and I’d wanted him to fuck me, had fantasised about it, and then
I’d decided I was in love with him, but – wasn’t this the same as it had been
with Deanna, all those years ago?  I can’t be his First forever, I know that; I
keep telling myself that I’ll take the right assignment when it comes, but I
don’t have a very good track record for sticking around when someone says that
they love me back.  Do I really want to be the one that hurts him, if he cares
about me the way he’s been showing he does?
            Maybe none of this was real anyway, just more of the same waking
dreams I’d been having.  I got out of the pool, and showered, and decided it
was time to see if Geordi still was meeting me for lunch.  We could be having a
warp core meltdown, for all I would know anymore.  I didn’t want to think about
that, either.
           
            I walked into Ten Forward and for some odd reason, was glad to see
that Guinan was not on shift.  Geordi had said he’d meet me, so I took my usual
table by the window, and Mac came over to take my order.  I’d had more than I
usually eat for breakfast, so I wasn’t really hungry, but I ordered some iced
mint tea, something that Deanna had introduced me to a long time ago.
            Geordi showed up about five minutes later, grinning and sort of
chuckling to himself, the way he does when he’s got a good story to tell.  He
was holding a bandage around his hand, but he didn’t seem too concerned about
it.  He sat down and when Mac came over he ordered a cup of coffee.
            “What’s so funny?” I asked him.
            He shook his head.  “You won’t believe it, Will,” he said. 
“Murphy’s law, of course.”
            “It has to do with Barclay, doesn’t it?” I said.  At least I’d
remembered to call him by his real name this time.  Poor guy, he was nice
enough, and brilliant in the same way Wesley was, but shit.  I still couldn’t
get over that damned program of his.  I tried to avoid him; I made Deanna do
his performance evals, because I honestly didn’t think I could be fair.  Who
would have thought that I’d be the kind of guy who would hold a grudge over
stupid stuff?
            “It sure does,” Geordi agreed.
            “How did you manage to get hurt?” I asked.
            “Oh, this is nothing,” Geordi said.  “The usual tool malfunction,
doesn’t have anything at all to do with Reg.”
            “Was anyone else hurt?” I asked.
            Geordi said, “I thought you were off-duty?”
            I tried to relax.  “On leave or not, I’m still responsible, Geordi,
you know that,” I said, but I said it lightly.  “You filed a report?”
            “Yes, Will, I filed an accident report,” Geordi grumbled.  “And I
went to sickbay.  Every t is crossed, every i dotted.”
            “Sorry,” I said.  “Force of habit, I guess.”
            Mac came back with our drinks, and Geordi ordered soup and a
sandwich.
            “Aren’t you eating, Commander?” Mac questioned.  “We’ve got a
quiche, if you’d like something light.”
            “What’s the soup?” I asked.
            “We’ve got two,” Mac said.  “A simple tomato bisque and for some
reason, Lt Commander Worf requested we do a borscht this week.”
            “I’m having the tomato, Will,” Geordi said.
            “You serve it with sour cream, right?” I asked.  Mrs Shugak had
made a regular supper of black bread and borscht when I was growing up.
            “Yes, Commander,” Mac said.  “We do it correctly.  Mr Worf was
quite concerned that we do so.”
            “I’ll have that, then,” I said.  I still wasn’t particularly
hungry, but soup is something you can move around and it looks like you’re
eating it.  Besides, while it wouldn’t be Mrs S’s, it might just be good.  I
bet Worf’s mother did make a good borscht.
            Mac left, and Geordi said, “Beets, Will?  Really?” He shook his
head.
            “It’s better than black-eyed peas,” I said, “if you want to be
ethnic about it.”
            He shook his head.  “You’re not even Russian.  I mean, borscht
probably tastes good to a Klingon.”
            “I like Klingon food,” I said, laughing.
            “The stuff that’s alive or the stuff that isn’t?” Geordi countered.
            I laughed.  Geordi has no idea how important he is among our senior
staff.  He’s so quiet and he’s so unaware, but he’s easy-going and kind and if
you’re down, Geordi’s the person you want to be with.
           
            Geordi told me the story about Barclay’s latest foolishness – this
time he’d decided he was having premonitions – and when our food came, I
discovered that Worf’s mother’s recipe for borscht was almost as good as Mrs
Shugak’s.  Of course, I’m sure Worf’s mother used real food, and maybe that was
all the difference.  Mrs Shugak, as with many people in our village, used the
small but prolific summer growing season for vegetables, and her beets were
always from her garden.
            I wasn’t having any trouble following Geordi’s conversation; he was
talking about the latest project he and Data were working on.  It sounded
vaguely interesting, but over my head.  I seemed to have lost that unreal
feeling I’d had in the gym, and was grateful.  I knew I should stop by sickbay
and talk to Dr Crusher.  Deanna and Jean-Luc had both said they were going to
fill Beverly in on my latest symptoms, but maybe I should talk to her myself. 
I felt like I was all over the place; Deanna was right; I was very anxious and
maybe Dr Crusher could help me with that.
            Geordi was demonstrating part of what he and Data were working on,
and he knocked his bandaged hand against the table.
            “Shit,” he said.  “That hurt.”
            He held his hand up to look at it, and I felt it hit me in the pit
of my stomach.  There was so much blood.  I could smell it, that raw, coppery
smell, I could taste it, there was cinnamon, and silver polish, and oh my God
the blood, and I couldn’t breathe, I couldn’t breathe and my chest hurt, and I
was up and overturning the chair.
            I thought I heard Geordi say my name, but I couldn’t turn around, I
couldn’t smell or see anything but all the blood, and then I was heading back
to my quarters, sort of on auto-pilot, just the one place where I could get
away and try to deal with the smells and the unreality of everything. 
            In my quarters I went into the head, but even as I tried to wash my
face the blood kept coming back, I kept smelling it and tasting it and hearing
it.  Someone was crying and there was music playing and I couldn’t breathe, and
it has to stop.
            I felt calmer then.  It has to stop.  I can make it stop.  I can
make everything stop.
            There’s so much blood.
 
 
***** Chapter 14 *****
Chapter Summary
     William is found.
Chapter Fourteen
 
 
 
 
            William found himself drifting in a world that was white.  It was a
strange world, fuzzy and indistinct.  He thought he saw Bet, and felt her
slobbery tongue on his arm.  Then he thought he heard music, far away.  He felt
like crying, but his body was already turning, it seemed, into stone.  He
wanted his father.  But he had been bad, and they had sent his father away.  He
closed his eyes and went to sleep.
 
 
            When Matt Jesperssen came with a pass to the gym where Henry was
having his mug of coffee, asking for Miss Anna if William were there, Henry
knew immediately that the boy was in trouble.  He put his coffee down, and sent
Matt back to Miss Anna with the answer that he hadn’t seen William all
morning.  Then he walked quickly to the front office to tell Mrs Fraser, the
principal, that he would lead the search party for William.
            Linnea Fraser called Marty Shugak, and discovered that William had
been dropped off in front of the school.  She called Max Demetrioff and Paul
Levesque, to see if William had been to the high school; she called Charlie
Isaksen and Tasya Shugak; Vera Kalugin, Martha Jesperssen, and finally, the
Federation office in Anchorage.
            Henry gathered the search party of himself and John Sutherland, one
of the fifth grade teachers, and Frederik Holm, the PE coach.  They found
William’s backpack almost immediately, where he had dropped it by the swings.
            Henry said to Mrs Fraser when he brought it in, “He can’t have gone
far.”
            “Marty and Tasya are on their way,” Linnea Fraser said.  “I’ve
called the state troopers in Valdez.  I have to stay here.  The Federation is
going to try to patch me through to Kyle Riker.”
            Wisely, Henry said nothing.  He did not think Linnea Fraser needed
to know his thoughts on the boy’s father.
            When the Shugaks arrived with Charlie Isaksen and Tom Jesperssen in
tow, Henry organized the search party.  Marty Shugak would stay with him;
Charlie and Tom, Max and Paul, and John and Rick Holm would all set out on
foot.
            No one said anything about the time.  It had been eight-thirty when
William was dropped off.  It was nine-forty-five now.
 
 
            William was found at ten-seventeen.  He had made himself a little
snow cave, up against the trunk of a tree.  He was barely alive.  Having
alerted the state troopers, a medivac was waiting, and William was airlifted to
the hospital in Valdez.  Henry and the Shugaks followed; Linnea Fraser had made
contact with Kyle Riker, who would be on a ship back to Earth as soon as he
could find one.
            Tasya Shugak had heard stories of children who had fallen in icy
water and yet had survived.  She hoped that William’s snow cave had kept him
warm enough to do the same.
 
***** Interlude: Two *****
Chapter Summary
     "Picard," Guinan said. "You need to find him. You need to find him
     now."
     Picard was unable to save Jack Crusher. Can he save Will Riker?
Chapter Notes
     The risk of suicide among those diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress
     Disorder is significant. Those at highest risk for suicide are
     military personnel, especially those with repeated battlefield
     deployments. Prior trauma, such as Will's, only increases the risk
     even more.
Interlude:  Two
 
 
 
Chapter Fifteen
 
 
 
 
            Picard was in his ready room, reading the latest information on the
survey from the astrophysics department, when he heard Guinan’s voice over his
comm badge.  
            “Picard,” she said.
            “Here,” he responded.
            “There’s been an incident with Commander Riker.  I have Geordi
here.  He was involved.”
            “Mr LaForge?” Picard said.
            “Sir,” came LaForge’s voice.  “We were eating lunch.  I don’t know
what happened, sir.  He seemed okay and then he just seemed to – I don’t know,
it was like he saw a ghost or something.  I know how stupid that sounds – “
            Picard said, with a voice that indicated patience but belied the
panic that was rising in his chest, “Just tell me the physical facts, Mr
LaForge.  Where is Commander Riker?”
            “He ran out of Ten Forward, sir,” LaForge answered.  He sounded
confused.  “He just took off.  I don’t know where he went.”
            “Picard,” Guinan said.  “You need to find him.  You need to find
him now.”
            “Acknowledged,” Picard said.  He stood up and tugged his tunic. 
“Computer, where is Commander Riker?”
            “Commander Riker is in his quarters.”
            The image of Jack Crusher’s body flickered briefly before Picard’s
eyes, but he forced those thoughts away.  He said, “Picard to Crusher,” and
waited for her response.
            “Crusher here, Captain.”
            “I need you and a medical team to Commander Riker’s quarters,” he
said, knowing that there was no justification for this at all except the
urgency in Guinan’s voice.  “Meet me there.”
            “Acknowledged,” Crusher said.
            Moving quickly but quietly towards the turbo lift, Picard tried to
organise his thoughts.  There was no point to giving in to the fear that he’d
been refusing to acknowledge since Will had told him about the panic attack and
the flashback; there was no point, he told himself savagely, but the barely-
contained lid on the regrets that were Jack Crusher were threatening to tumble
forth.  Eight weeks, he thought angrily, eight bloody weeks it had taken him to
call Will on his injuries, to get Will in to see Dr Crusher, to finally pay
attention to what was happening with Will.  His Will.
            “Deck eight,” he said to the turbo lift.
            He would not give in to the recriminations.  Not now. There was no
time, and yet his hands were trembling at his own stupidity.  What was the
matter with him that he couldn’t see that Will was teetering on the edge?  He’d
known damn well how close he was, and what was the matter with Deanna, and
Beverly – no, he wouldn’t lay blame, not yet.  But if there were blame to be
laid – if he’d lost Will – it would be squarely at his own bloody stupid feet.
            “Picard to Troi,” he said.
            “I’m on my way,” Troi responded.  She sounded as agitated as he
felt.
            “Did he contact you?” Picard tried to keep the hope from his voice.
            “No,” Troi said succinctly.  “Dr Crusher did.”
            “Picard out,” he said.
            How, he thought, could he have been so slow, so bloody distracted –
and there was the truth of it.  When he’d confronted William with the truth,
that he’d known how Will felt, when he’d offered – out of compassion? – a
response to Will’s feelings, he hadn’t expected his own reaction to change so
quickly, to have gone from trying to help Will to finding that there were real
feelings of his own for Will, unacknowledged but just waiting to be acted
upon.  Will’s response had been so genuine, so sweet, that in a way he’d been
overwhelmed, when he’d been worried that he would be the one to overwhelm
Will.  And so he hadn’t fucking bloody seen it, he thought viciously, but it
was right there, staring him in the face.  Will had said it himself.  Mirroring
my injuries from childhood.  That’s what had twigged his own radar to begin
with, the similarities between the holodeck injuries and the childhood medical
records.
            The turbo lift opened, surely the world’s longest ride, and he
strode towards Will’s quarters, hoping that his own anxiety and anger wasn’t
spilling out.  He overrode Will’s door and was met with the quiet and darkened
dayroom of Will’s quarters.
            “William?” he called, and then, “Mr Riker!”, hoping that Will would
respond immediately to the familiar authority of the captain’s voice.
            He called out, “Lights!” and moved into Will’s bedroom.
           
            His first thought was that Will was already gone, that he’d lost
him.  He immediately quashed that thought, along with the eruption of the
litany of all the other losses in his life.  This, he told himself sternly, was
not about him, and he shoved all feelings aside to be dealt with at a later
time.
            Will was on the floor in the head.  The mirror over the sink was
broken, and there was blood, bright red and pooling, around and underneath
Will’s body.  Picard closed his eyes, briefly, forcing back the surprising rise
of tears, and took a deep breath.  He sank down to one knee and felt for Will’s
carotid artery, not daring to breathe a thought of a prayer for a pulse, and
yet there was one, faintly, but there.  He couldn’t think of the medical
description but at least Will was still alive.  He’d broken the mirror – how,
Picard didn’t know, since the glass was supposed to be unbreakable – and it
appeared that he used a sherd to lacerate both arms and then made an attempt at
his neck.
            “Picard to Crusher,” he said, and he was surprised that his voice
sounded so normal.
            “Two minutes ETA,” Crusher responded.
            “He’s bleeding out, Beverly,” Picard said.  “What do I do?”
            “Use a towel, apply pressure.  We’re coming down the corridor.”
            “Picard out,” he said.
            He stood up and grabbed a bath towel, realised that it was too
unwieldy, and then simply stripped off his own tunic and began to wrap it
tightly around Will’s arms.  He heard the door to Will’s quarters open, and he
immediately backed up, hoping that he wouldn’t be in the way of the med team
and the gurney.
            He watched silently, as Beverly and her team worked efficiently to
tourniquet the wounds and load Will onto the gurney.  He heard the door open
again and glanced at Deanna, white-faced, in the doorway of Will’s bedroom.
            “He’s fading, Beverly,” Deanna said.
            “His pulse is thready but it’s there,” Beverly answered.
            The two ensigns were moving the gurney out of the head and through
the bedroom, and Picard followed behind Beverly, Deanna at his side.
            “Use your bond,” he said.  “Tell him to stay with us.”
            “He doesn’t want to,” Deanna said numbly.  “He’s tired – “
            Picard said, “I know.  He’s tired of everything.”  He didn’t bother
to keep up with Beverly; she and her team knew what they were doing; he’d only
be in the way.  He would walk with Deanna; he would help her maintain contact. 
“It’s what he said,” Picard explained, turning back and looking at what seemed
to be all of Will’s blood on the tiled floor. 
            “When?” Deanna asked.
            “When he was a child,” Picard answered simply.  “He told a family
friend that he was tired of everything.  He was seven.  And then,” Picard said,
and the fury at himself was barely contained in his voice, “he walked out into
the snow to freeze to death.  He later said that he’d just wanted to be turned
into stone.”
            “Jean-Luc,” Deanna began, reaching out to place her hand on his
arm.
            “No,” Picard said bitterly.  “Don’t say it.  We all bear this
responsibility, but neither one of us has time to think about that now.  Just
try to let him know we’re here.”
            “I am,” she said quietly.
 
            In sickbay, Picard paced as he watched the team work on Will. 
There’d been other times, with Will, that he’d been in this kind of jeopardy;
the illness that had paralysed him and nearly taken his life.  Usually Picard
avoided sickbay – what could he do, except be in his CMO’s way – but this time
was different.  He didn’t glance at Troi, although he knew she was forcing
herself to remain still, concentrating on her bond.  He didn’t realise she was
behind him until she spoke.
            “Go in there,” she said, and he wheeled around in surprise.
            “I’ll just be in the way,” he said.
            “You won’t,” Deanna said firmly.  “He needs you.  Go in there and
be with him.”
            Picard said, bitterly, “It’s you he needs.”
            Deanna didn’t even blink.  “No,” she said.  “If you love him, Jean-
Luc, go in there now.”
            Picard stopped pacing and stood perfectly still.  He stared at
Deanna, but she didn’t back down.
            “Now,” she repeated.  “He needs you now.”
            Picard felt himself nodding, as if his head were no longer part of
the rest of him.  He turned away from Troi and opened the door to the unit.
            “Good,” Beverly said, glancing up at him.  “Get the captain a
chair, Alyssa,” she said to Ogawa.  She turned back to Picard.  “We’ve stitched
him back up and we’re transfusing him now.  He’s in a coma, but his vitals are
better.  He won’t wake for sometime – and it will be some time before I can
assess the possible damage done – but he’s got a good chance to pull through,
now.”
            “A good chance?” Picard asked.
            “We’re in wait and see,” Beverly replied.  “He’ll know you’re
here.  That will help.”
            Picard said, “Damage?”
            “Possible brain damage, due to oxygen deprivation.  Again, we have
no way of knowing yet what we’re dealing with.”
            “But he’s fighting to stay alive?” Picard hadn’t wanted to ask this
question; he didn’t want to know the answer.
            Beverly didn’t flinch.  “We are keeping him alive,” she said.  “For
now.”  She softened, and placed her hand on Picard’s.  “There are no
guarantees, Jean-Luc,” she said.  “You know that.  But he does know that you
are here.”
            Ogawa came in with the chair, and Picard sat, angling as close to
the biobed as possible.  He took a breath, and then he reached out and took
Will’s hand.  He didn’t say anything; there was nothing to say.  Beverly left
the room; Picard watched her join up with Deanna as they both walked into
Beverly’s office.
            The rage he’d felt at himself had dissipated and now he just felt
deflated; weak.  Will’s hand, usually so large and strong, lay limply in his
own.  He clasped his other hand over it, as if he could bring his own warmth to
it. 
            “Here, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said, beside him, offering him a mug of
tea.  “I don’t need you passing out.”
            He smiled grimly, but he took the mug.  He sipped it, relishing the
burn in his mouth.
            “I knew he was in danger,” he said.  “I knew it, and I did
nothing.”
            Beverly rested her hand on his shoulder.  “You can’t help him now
by blaming yourself,” she said.  “He needs your strength now, Jean-Luc.  We can
all take the blame for this after he’s recovered.”
            “If he recovers,” Picard said, but instantly regretted it.
            “Jean-Luc,” Beverly said. 
            Picard didn’t look up; he knew that tone of voice.
            “He is not Jack,” she said.
            “Please,” Picard said.
            “You love him,” she said.  “He needs to know. If anything will keep
him with us, it’s that.”
            She left the room.  Picard sat there, listening to the machines
whirring, holding Will’s hand, and hoped, with all his heart, that that was
true.
           
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Interlude: Three *****
Chapter Summary
     Q makes an offer.
Chapter Notes
     I wasn't planning for Q to show up. He just did.
Interlude:  Three
 
 
 
 
            He’d fallen asleep sometime in the night, still holding onto Will’s
hand.  When he awoke, suddenly, groggy and disoriented, the first thing he
realised was that Beverly must have wrapped a blanket around his shoulders at
some point while he was asleep.  The second thing he realised was that Will was
still alive.  The third thing was that he was not alone.
            “What do you want, Q?” he said.
            He wasn’t surprised.  Will had said himself that Q would show up,
once he realised there’d been a change in Picard’s life.  He was too tired, too
bruised to really care.  Will was still hooked up to all the machines that were
keeping him alive.  He uncorked his back, stretched his legs, and let go of
Will’s hand, hoping to jar some feeling back into his own.  Sleeping in a chair
was a young man’s game; he felt every centimetre of every one of his years.
            He said again, “What do you want, Q?”
            “To understand,” Q replied.
            Q was behind him; he could see his shape out of his peripheral
vision.  Picard did not turn around to face him, but angled the chair just a
little closer to Will’s bed and took Will’s hand in his again.  Privately
Picard could hear his mother’s brief prayer, “Give me strength,” in a corner of
his mind and he almost smiled.
            “Why,” Q said, “would Riker do this?”
            Picard sighed.  “I don’t owe you anything, Q,” he said.  “Not this
go ‘round.  And I am not using my pain, or Will’s, to edify or amuse you.”
            “Oh, Jean-Luc,” Q said, and his voice was guileless.  None of the
sardonic or petulant undertones.  “Do you really think I’m here to gloat?” he
asked.
            Picard turned around swiftly and said in a very low voice, “I don’t
really give a fuck why you’re here.”
            Q was silent.  Picard turned himself back to Will’s bed, and
readjusted the blanket so that it was around his lap, rather than his
shoulders.  For several minutes there was nothing.  Just the sound of the
machines whirring, the sound of his own breathing.  Then he said,
            “You’ve taken us out of time.”
            “Yes,” Q acknowledged.
            “Why?  Is Will gone?” He couldn’t bring himself to say the word
“dead.”
            “No,” Q answered.  “But the crisis is on hand.  And, despite the
voices of so many on this ship, he doesn’t want to stay.”
            “I know,” Picard said, his chest aching.  “The pain has gotten to
be more than he can bear.”
            “I don’t understand,” Q said again.  “Doesn’t he have what he
always wanted?”
            Picard didn’t want to play this game, but if he didn’t play the
game, Q’s unpredictability was sure to cause more pain than answering Q’s
stupid questions would.
            “And what is that, Q?” Picard said.
            “You.”
            You bastard, Picard thought, but instead he said, “Too little, too
late.”
            Q huffed beside him.  And here it comes, Picard thought, and braced
himself.
            “I can give him back to you,” said Q.  “I can take away his pain.”
            Picard stood up, the blanket dropping to the floor.  “How dare you
offer me that?” he roared. “How dare you?  Get off my ship.”
            For a brief moment, Q looked a little surprised, or maybe a little
scared.  He backed up one step, and Picard felt a childish sense of victory
before the crescendo of depression hit him again.  Then he just felt old and
foolish, and he sat back down in the chair, and reached for Will’s hand.
            “I could wake him,” Q offered, “here, in this time, without hurting
him.  You could talk to him.  Convince him to stay.”
            “Why would you do that, Q?” Picard asked.  “I have nothing to give
you, nothing to trade for.”
            Q said petulantly, “As if I were some merchant in a bazaar.”
            “Aren’t you?” Picard closed his eyes.
            “I like Riker,” Q said.  “I don’t understand why, when your lives
are so abysmally short to begin with, he would want to make his even shorter.”
            “I thought you knew everything,” Picard said irritably.  “You
already know the answer to that.”
            “I may know the answer, Jean-Luc, but that doesn’t mean I
understand it.” Q moved over to stand beside Picard and reached out and touched
Will’s face.
            “Then you and I are on equal footing for once, Q,” Picard said.
            “If I bring you back, Jean-Luc,” Q said, “the crisis will occur. 
Dr Crusher and her team will do their best, but Riker will die.”
            “Then you’d best do it,” Picard said softly, “so that the rest of
us can try to pick up the pieces and start living.”
            “You won’t –“
            “No.”
            Q said, “Oh, Picard.”
            “Get out, Q,” Picard said, “and leave me alone with him.”
            For a moment Picard thought Q would continue the argument, but Q
said merely, “As you wish, mon capitaine,” and things were apparently back to
normal.
            Beverly came in.  “You’re awake, Jean-Luc?” she said.
            “Yes,” Picard answered.
            She checked Will’s vitals.  “This is the time I hate the most,” she
said.
            “Why?” Picard asked simply.
            She sighed.  “Any doctor will tell you, Jean-Luc.  This hour, just
before dawn, is when the crisis, if there is one, will occur.  It’s when if
we’re going to lose a patient, we’ll lose one now, at this time.”
            “But he’s still stable,” Picard said, after a moment.
            “Yes,” Beverly answered.  “He’s still stable.  He hasn’t improved,
but he hasn’t crashed.”
            “Will he improve?”
            “That’s up to him,” Beverly said.  “You could go lay down, Jean-
Luc.  There’s a cot in my room.  I’ll stay with him.”
            “No, I’ll stay,” Picard replied.  “There will be time to sleep,
later.”
            She brought in a chair, quietly, and they sat there together,
waiting for a crisis they both knew was coming.  Beverly took Picard’s hand;
his other hand was still holding Will’s.  When Will’s heart stopped, Beverly
was already there, and the crash team worked steadily to pull him through.
            Picard had backed up against the wall, and was not surprised to
find Q standing next to him.
            Picard said, “He won’t die.”
            “No,” Q agreed.  “Not now.”
            “What did you do?”
            Q shrugged.  “I told her you’d asked for her,” he said.  “Perhaps
all that was needed was a few extra seconds.”
            Picard was quiet, watching Beverly as she and her team restabilised
Will. “Thank you,” he said.
            “There’s always more than one customer in a bazaar, Jean-Luc,” Q
said.
            Picard knew that if he looked around, Q would be inordinately
pleased with himself, so he stayed focused on Will.
            “He’ll be all right, for now,” Beverly said, and Q was gone.
            “Yes,” Picard agreed.  “I’ll be in my quarters, for an hour.”
            Beverly took his hand.  “I didn’t give Q anything,” she said.  “He
just came and told me you were awake.  Get some sleep, Jean-Luc.”           
            Picard glanced at Deanna, standing in the doorway, and then back at
Will.
            “An hour,” he said.
            “An hour, then,” Beverly agreed, and Picard left the room.
           
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 17 *****
Chapter Summary
     William wakes up in sickbay, but he is fragile, and recovery is slow.
Chapter Notes
     Child abuse destroys the ability to trust in any relationship, even a
     relationship that is both wanted and positive. Will's inability to
     trust, coupled with his prior experience from his childhood suicide
     attempt, complicates his medical treatment. Part of what makes PTSD
     such a difficult illness to treat is that the responses to trauma are
     so logical. If your parent is the one to traumatise you, it is
     logical that you will not be able to trust the significant players in
     your life. Treating PTSD means unravelling all those previous learned
     responses that were logical in the past but that are destroying the
     patient in the present.
Chapter 17
 
 
 
 
 
            The first thing I was aware of was pain and nausea.  I could tell
that I was in sickbay; I could hear a conversation between an orderly and Dr
Crusher; I could smell the disinfectant; I could feel that I was on a biobed
and that I was cold.  Someone was holding my hand; when I flexed my fingers I
heard the captain say,
            “Will?  Are you awake?”
            I struggled to open my eyes.
            “Take your time,” he said, his voice very close to me.  He let go
of my hand, then, and placed his own on my cheek.  “It’s all right. You’re
safe.”
            Had I not been safe?  I tried to open my eyes again, but the
lighting was painful.
            “Beverly?” I heard him call.  “He’s becoming conscious.”
            “Will?”  It was Dr Crusher now.  “Are you in pain?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “This should help, then,” she said, and I felt the pressure of a
hypo spray in my neck.
            I opened my eyes, squinting at the light.  Both Dr Crusher and the
captain came into view.
            “Do you know where you are?” he asked.
            “Yes, “ I said.  “In sickbay.”
            “What hurts, Will?” Beverly asked.
            “My arms,” I said.  “My neck.”  I could feel that both my arms were
wrapped; there was a bandage around my neck.  “What happened?” I asked.
            “You don’t remember?” the captain asked.
            “No,” I said.  “I – I don’t know.”
            “He may not remember for some time, Jean-Luc,” I heard Beverly say.
            “I understand,” the captain said.
            I closed my eyes again, feeling another wave of nausea.
            “You should get some sleep, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said.
            “I did,” the captain said, and I heard an undercurrent of steel in
his voice.
            “If you say so,” Beverly said, and I heard her leave the room.
            I opened my eyes.  The captain was sitting in a chair next to me,
and he was once again holding my hand.
            “I don’t remember much,” I said.
            “Don’t worry about it, Will.”
            “I’m in the ICU?”
            “Yes,” he said.  “We -- I,” he amended, “nearly lost you.”
            “I had lunch with Geordi,” I said.
            “Will.” He placed his hand lightly on my face.  “You don’t have to
remember now.  All you have to do is rest.  And get well.”
            I said, “You won’t tell me what happened?”
            “That’s up to your doctor, Will,” he answered.  “I don’t
particularly want to cross her right now.”
            “What did you do?” I asked.  I wanted to smile, but it was too
hard.
            He shrugged.  “Not go to bed when she told me to, apparently,” he
replied.
            I looked at him.  He looked exhausted.  His face was grey.  There
were deep dark circles under his eyes, and stubble on his cheeks, as if he
hadn’t had time to use the depilatory.  His uniform looked as if he hadn’t
changed it in two days.
            “How long have I been here?” I whispered.
            “Forty-eight hours or so,” he answered.
            I looked away, my eyes suddenly filling.  “You’ve been here the
whole time?”
            “Just about,” he said.  He put his hand on my shoulder.  “We took
turns, Deanna and Beverly and I, Will.  I’ve slept.  Deanna’s supposed to be
sleeping, now.”
            “I’m sorry,” I said.  “I didn’t want to be a burden –“
            “William,” he said.  “You may be a pain in my arse, but you’re not
a burden.”  He kissed me lightly.  “I’m glad you’re back,” he said.
            I was silent.  “I didn’t want to come back,” I said, finally.
            He said, “I know.  I won’t hold it against you.”
            I felt tears on my cheeks.  “You said you wouldn’t send me away.”
            “And I won’t, Will.”
            “You have to.  You’ll have to send me to a facility.”
            “You’re not well enough to be transported anywhere,” he said.
            He hadn’t written a report, then.  “I can’t remember anything after
I had lunch with Geordi.”
            “I know.”
            I could feel the bandages on my arms and my neck.  “I don’t --”
            “Will.  Just rest,” he said.  “That’s the only thing you need to
do, now.  Rest and regain your strength.”
            I nodded. 
            “Close your eyes,” he said, placing his hand on mine again.  “You
need to sleep.  Don’t worry needlessly, Will.  Everything is under control.”
            I closed my eyes.  I heard Beverly come in again, and felt yet
another hypo spray.  I heard Beverly say, “You need a meal and a shower, Jean-
Luc.  Go – he’ll be fine.”
            “We need to come up with a plan,” he said.
            “We don’t need to do anything.  You need to leave sickbay, before
you become a patient yourself.  And you’re a terrible patient, Jean-Luc, so
please, go away.”
            I heard Beverly laugh, and then I thought I heard Jean-Luc say
something, but it was muffled, and then I was asleep.
 
 
 
            When I awoke again, I was alone.  I was still in the biobed, still
in the isolation unit.  I was thirsty, terribly thirsty, and the pain was
back.  I could hear voices outside the room, and I supposed that I could find
the alarm, to bring someone in here, but I wasn’t sure I wanted to.
            I tried to remember the sequence of events that had brought me
here.  I remembered I’d been to see Deanna, and I vaguely remembered what we
talked about.  I remembered going to Ten Forward, to meet Geordi for lunch.  I
remembered something that Geordi had done to his hand.  And then – I remembered
the smell of blood.     
            “Will,” Beverly was saying, “take it easy, you’re all right.”  She
was right beside me.  “I don’t want to sedate you again, Will.  Can you open
your eyes and look at me?”
            “Yes.”
            “Do you know where you are?”
            “Sickbay,” I said.  Then I said, “I was with Geordi and there was
so much blood….”
            “Geordi hurt his hand,” Beverly agreed.  “But it wasn’t bad, Will.”
            “I could smell it,” I said.
            “Can you smell it now?” she asked.  “Will?”
            “No.”
            “Good,” she said.  “It’s over, for now.  Are you sore again?”
            “Just a little,” I answered.  “I’m thirsty.”
            “I’ll get you some water.”
            She left the room.  Geordi had hurt his hand, I remembered that
now.  He’d come into Ten Forward with his hand wrapped.  He’d said it was just
an accident.  He’d said he’d written an accident report.
            “Here you go, Will,” Beverly said.  “Easy.  Just a sip.  That’s
it.”
            I had a few sips of water, just enough to wet my mouth.
            “Where’s the captain?” I asked.
            “I sent him to bed,” she replied.
            “Good,” I said.
            “Yes, indeed,” and she smiled at me.  “You feel a little better,
now?”
            “I still can’t remember anything after Ten Forward,” I said.
            “Don’t press yourself, Will.  Deanna will help you, when it’s
time.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            “If you need something, just press this,” she said, handing me the
call button. 
            “You mean I’m not your only patient?” I asked.
            She laughed.  “’Fraid not,” she said.  “Your celebrity status is
over.”
            She left.  I wondered if Deanna had finally gotten some sleep, and
when she would come back.  I wondered what Jean-Luc meant about having a plan. 
He said he wouldn’t send me away, but I knew damn well that there was no way he
could justify me being on a “vacation” now.  He’d have to relieve me; and he’d
have to send a report.  I could feel myself start to shake.  There was
something about being sent away, something that seemed to be hovering right
around my memory, but I just couldn’t bring anything to light.  Just as I could
see Geordi’s bandaged hand, but then it was as if nothing else were there.
            I closed my eyes. 
           
 
 
            I was hungry.  I opened my eyes to one of the orderlies, I forget
his name.
            “He’s awake,” he said, and then, “Up and at ‘em, Commander.  You’ve
spent too much time in this bed.”
            Okay, so the worst part about being in sickbay is not what brought
you to sickbay to begin with.  It’s not the injury or the illness or whatever
it was originally; it’s not the pain, and the nausea from all the hypo sprays,
and the disorientation and the grogginess and that weird detached feeling you
get from being sedated.  It’s not being trapped, naked, in a biobed, and no one
will tell you what happened, or why you’re there, and you’ve got a catheter in
your damn dick and you’re thirsty and can’t even have a drink.
            No.  It’s being manhandled by two orderlies who think it’s funny to
boss the XO of the ship, who think it’s amusing to shove him around and tell
him what to do, and yank the fucking catheter out and make him wear a stupid
gown with his entire ass hanging out while they clean him up and put him in a
normal bed.
            So.  I am no longer in the ICU, or a biobed.  I actually have the
privilege of being able to pee in the head by myself.  Deanna has promised that
she will go to my quarters and bring me back my robe and some socks and my
pyjamas, as well as my toiletries.  (Apparently I still have to be here for
another few days.)
            I have been allowed to sit up.  I have actually been given water
that is not in a two-year-old’s sippy cup.  And I have been given something to
eat, even if it was crap.  (How can the very same replicator, which prepares my
meals, make crap here in sickbay?  That will definitely be on my agenda, if I
ever get the opportunity to have my job back.)
            “I’m so glad to see you’re feeling better, Will,” Deanna remarked.
            “How can you tell I’m feeling better?” I asked.  I was standing in
my bare feet with my ass hanging out waiting for them to fix my bed.  I was
definitely not feeling better.
            “Because you look like you’re about to go Klingon on someone,” she
said, laughing.  “You must be feeling better.”
            I rolled my eyes.  “Is that the best you can do?” I asked.  “Let’s
trade places and see if you enjoy having your ass on display.”
            “Oh, Will,” she said.  “Any crewman in here has experienced the
same process.”
            “That makes it so much better,” I replied.
            Beverly stopped.  “What’s the matter with my patient?” she asked.
            “He’s having a temper tantrum,” Deanna said, still laughing.
            “Good, it means he’s feeling better.  We’ll have you out of here in
no time, Commander,” and she vanished into her office.
            “I don’t have temper tantrums,” I said as I was finally allowed
back in the bed.  “I never did have temper tantrums.”
            “Of course not, Will,” Deanna said.  She was suddenly by my side,
helping me into the bed as I seemed to have lost my balance.  “There you go. 
We’ll ask the latest crop of ensigns if you don’t have temper tantrums.”
            I sighed.  “I’ve never yelled at my ensigns,” I said, as she
apparently had decided I needed tucking in.
            “No,” she agreed.  “What you do is even worse.” She paused, as if
she were waiting for me to respond.
            “Okay,” I said.  “I’ll bite.  What do I do to torment poor, under-
aged and semi-trained ensigns?”
            “You go silent.  You give them a look with your ice-blue eyes that
makes them feel as if their lives are about to end.”
            “They should feel that way,” I said.  “And how is a look a temper
tantrum?”
            She shook her head.  “Trust me,” she said.  “They come in to me
certain that their careers are over.  Half the time they don’t even know what
they’ve done.”
            “Besides not have a fucking clue?” I asked.
            “And of course you were the perfect ensign, Will,” she said.  “You
always had a fucking clue.”
            “Deanna!” I said, horrified. 
            She laughed again.  “You think you’re the only one with a mouth,
William?” she asked.  Then she said, “Is there anything else you want from your
quarters, except clothes that don’t show your lovely arse?”
            “My padd,” I said.
            “For what reason?” and she was the ship’s counsellor, instead of
Deanna.
            “Do I suddenly not have clearance or something?” I said.  It was a
little shocking, to see her change so quickly.
            “Actually, Will,” she replied, “you don’t have clearance.  Not for
work.  You are off duty.  I’m not sure the captain would want you to have your
padd.  And I’m afraid I would have to agree.”
            I said quietly, “When was I relieved?”
            “You have not been relieved of duty,” she explained.  “You are on
official sick leave, which means you are off the duty roster, but not
relieved.”
            “Am I to be sent to a facility, then?” I asked.  I was trying very
hard to maintain a matter-of-fact tone.  I was not going to break down in front
of Deanna; I was not going to weep in sickbay.
            “Oh, Will,” she said, and held my hand.  “No one is sending you
anywhere.  I thought Captain Picard already made that clear to you.”
            “He said I wasn’t well enough to be transported anywhere.  He
didn’t say I wouldn’t be sent to a facility when I was well enough.”
            “William,” Deanna said.  “You are staying here.  You are not being
sent to a hospital, or a facility, or anywhere else.  Okay?”
            “And how long will that last?” I asked bitterly.  “Just until
Starfleet finds out that I tried to kill myself.”
            There was silence, then, in the room.
            “What do you remember?” she said.
            “I don’t remember a goddamned thing,” I said angrily, “but I’ve got
bandages on my arms, and scars where I was put back together, and I’m not
fucking stupid.”
            The doors to sickbay opened and the captain walked in.
            “What’s going on?” he asked as Beverly came out of her office to
greet him.
            “Will is convinced that he will be sent to a facility,” Deanna
said.
            “I thought,” Beverly added, “that he needed to hear from you.”
            He came over to my bed.  “Didn’t we have this discussion already?”
he asked me.  He did not look particularly happy with me.
            “Why are you angry with me?” I asked.  “If you had just let me die,
there wouldn’t be any problem at all.”
            I thought for a moment that he was going to hit me.  He turned away
from me briefly, and I could see him visibly bring himself back in control.  He
said, “Clear the room.”
            Beverly began, “Jean-Luc –“
            “Did I not just give an order?” he asked.
            “Sir,” Beverly said, and she shooed everyone out, the orderlies,
Ogawa, and some other nurse whose name I didn’t remember.
            The captain remained at perfect attention, and Beverly took Deanna
and they disappeared into Beverly’s office.
            “You,” he said to me, “are completely out of order.  Do you
understand me?”
            “Sir,” I said.
            “What I decide, or not decide, to do is none of your business, do
you understand?” he said.
            I didn’t say anything; it had been a while since I had seen him
this angry.
            “I asked you a question, Mr Riker,” he said.
            “Aye, sir,” I answered.
            “This will be the one, and the only, time I tell you this, Mr
Riker,” he said.  “I will not tell you again.  You had an accident in your
quarters.  You were badly injured.  You are on official sick leave, until you
heal.  That is what my report reads.  There is absolutely nothing in that
report that is untruthful.  You do not need to be sent anywhere.  I have a
fully functional sickbay that is better than most hospitals, and the best CMO
in the fleet.  You will continue to do as you are told, by myself, and Dr
Crusher, and Counsellor Troi until we determine that you are well enough to
return to your position.  Have I made myself clear to you?”
            “Sir,” I said.  I was hit with a wave of nausea.
            “Acknowledge that I have made myself clear to you, Mr Riker,” he
said.
            I said, “Aye, sir.”
            “You will never – and I mean never – pull that kind of bullshit on
me, or any other member of my staff again, do you understand me?”
            “Aye, sir.”  I didn’t know what was happening to me.  My stomach
was roiling and I could feel myself on the edge of panic.
            He stood there, staring at me, as if he had more to say, but was
physically stopping himself from saying it.  I was clutching the sheet in my
hands, trying desperately to control the waves of nausea.
            “Captain,” Deanna said, “please, he’s panicking.”
            “How convenient,” Jean-Luc said, and I started to cry.
            “I’m sorry,” I said, “I’m sorry.”
            “Will – “ Deanna began, coming towards me.
            “Leave him,” Jean-Luc said.  He put both his hands on my shoulders
and forced me to look at him.
            “Jean-Luc, I’m giving him a sedative,” Beverly was on the other
side of me.
            “Not yet,” he said, and she stopped.
            “Look at me,” he said.  “William.  Look at me.”
            I looked up at him, afraid that I would see him angry, afraid that
he would continue to yell at me, even, though he had never ever done so, afraid
that he was going to hit me.
            “Sir,” I said.
            “You are not seven years old.  And I am not your father,” he said. 
“Take a deep breath, and realise that you are here, on the Enterprise, in
sickbay.”  He paused.  “Where are you?”
            “In sickbay,” I said.
            “We will do everything in our power to help you,” he said. 
“Whatever it takes.  But you have some responsibility here as well.  And one of
those responsibilities is to not hurt the people who are trying to help you,
just because they are trying to help you.  Do you understand?”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.
            He pulled me to him, and wrapped his arms around me.  “Now,” he
said to Beverly, and I felt the pressure of the hypo spray in my neck again. 
“There’s no need to cry, Will,” he said.  “You’re exhausted and you’re
overwrought.”
            “I’m sorry – “
            “I know,” he said.  “I know.  Just go to sleep.”
            He let me go, and helped me back into the bed.
            I said, “I don’t want to be alone, Jean-Luc.”
            “I will be back at the end of my shift,” he replied.  “Maybe Dr
Crusher will set up a cot for me.”
            “Okay.” I could feel the sedative pulling me into sleep.  “You
aren’t mad at me anymore?”
            “No,” he said.  “I am not angry with you anymore.  The only person
I am angry at, Will, is me.  Now just go to sleep, mon cher.”
            I closed my eyes.
           
           
           
***** Chapter 18 *****
Chapter Summary
     William spends time in the crisis stabilisation unit.
Chapter Notes
     I have absolutely no knowledge of the Providence Hospital behavioural
     unit in Valdez, Alaska, and I am sure that it is not like the crisis
     stablilisation unit that I am describing here. Perhaps, in the 24th
     century, facilities like this one won't exist. They certainly do now.
     CPI is the abbreviation for Crisis Prevention Intervention. It is a
     way of holding a child in crisis without hurting the child, and
     without the child hurting you. Nonetheless, to a child, CPI is very
     scary and feels very much like being hurt.
     This was a difficult chapter to write. The children who find
     themselves in CSU's are often tremendously damaged. They act out on
     themselves and other children what has been done to them. They have
     an uncanny ability in recognising a fellow sufferer of violence and
     abuse, particularly sexual abuse. Not all children who undergo sexual
     abuse become predators or abusers themselves; often, that has been
     used to make the victims of sexual abuse feel even more traumatised
     and abused than they already are. But child sexual abuse victims
     require specific interventions and should never be left alone with
     other child abuse victims for their own safety as well as the safety
     of others.
     Do not read this chapter if you are susceptible to triggers. If this
     happened to you when you were a child, please get help. Help is
     available. It is possible to recover from child sexual abuse.
Chapter Eighteen
 
 
 
 
 
            The hospital in Valdez had both a specialised paediatric unit and a
crisis unit that was equipped to handle children’s psychiatric cases; William
spent a week in the specialised care unit, recovering from hypothermia, and
then was transferred to the crisis stabilisation unit.
            Visiting hours were severely limited, to only one hour every
evening after dinner, and the Shugaks, despite their best efforts, were not
able to visit William every day.  A visiting pool was organized, then, and it
included Mr and Mrs Shugak, Henry, Rosie and Matt’s mothers, and Gareth
Davies.  The hospital knew that Kyle Riker was on his way back to Earth, and
then to Alaska; the Shugaks were listed as William’s legal caregivers.  Three
days a week someone from the village was there to visit William; that left four
days when he was on his own, including the weekends.
            William’s story had once again made the Valdez news, especially
since it was the same little boy who’d saved his friend from drowning.  It was
discovered that William had had several emergency admissions to the hospital;
then Starfleet from Anchorage made its presence known, and William’s case
disappeared from public view.
            The crisis stabilisation unit was a small one, with only four beds
for young children, and six beds for adolescents.  They were on a small wing
off the larger CSU for adults, but kept separate from the adults by several
locked doors and different mealtimes in the unit cafeteria.  The unit served
Valdez and the surrounding villages and parkland; when William arrived, the
adolescent beds were all full, but there were only two other young children
close to his age.  Ailsa Rogers was five, on the unit because there were a
variety of neuro-developmental disorders; a syndrome was suspected.  Christian
Larsen was nine, almost ten; he was a behaviour problem, running away and
getting into fights.  William was seven; he’d attempted suicide, and child
abuse was suspected.
            William shared a room with Christian, and he hated it.  As an only
child, he’d never had to share a room with anyone.  Even when Dmitri had stayed
with him, Dmitri had slept with his grandmother in the guest room.  He hated
the noises Christian made at night when he slept.  He hated having to get up
and go to the bathroom, where the light was always on, and listening to
Christian’s breathing, and his snuffling, and all the other sounds people made
when they slept.  He wasn’t allowed any shoes, or any pyjama bottoms with
drawstrings, and he had to hold his pyjamas up as he crossed the cold linoleum
floor.  If he flushed the toilet it would gurgle and make strange noises, and
Christian would wake up and start swearing at him.  If he didn’t flush the
toilet, the bathroom smelled like pee in the morning.
            The b-techs woke them at six.  Then it was up for a shower that was
timed; if you went over three minutes, you were pulled out, wet and soapy. 
William learned quickly to clean himself or do without; they’d only pulled him
out of the shower once, and had CPI’d him because he was crying and struggling
to rinse his hair.  The b-tech watched him brush his teeth and comb his hair,
and then put his toiletries back into a locked box.  Mrs Shugak brought William
his clothes; he could have jeans with buttons or zippers but no track pants; he
could have socks, but no shoes; his jacket could have no strings for his hood. 
After William was allowed to dress, while Christian was in the shower, the boys
would be joined by Ailsa and they would wait at the door for the older kids,
and then all walked down together, nine children and four b-techs, to the
cafeteria for breakfast.
            William had never been a fussy eater, but he was used to the home-
cooked meals of Mrs Shugak, or his own breakfasts that he’d made before they’d
sent his father away.  The only thing William was fussy about was orange juice,
which he hated.  In the unit, it didn’t matter whether you liked something or
didn’t like it; if you didn’t eat or drink what you were given, it went on your
report.  Sometimes they’d be given milk or apple juice; still, William learned
to drink orange juice without making a face, and to eat rubbery eggs, and
sodden oatmeal, and burnt bacon.  Being CPI’d hurt; William was tired of
hurting.
            After breakfast, there was group with one of the staff social
workers, or the doctor would come, to check on them physically, particularly
William.  Then there was school, with a hospital teacher.  William’s first day
of school was a nightmare; he’d been given second grade work, which he finished
in about twenty seconds, and the teacher had accused him of cheating off
Christian’s work.  William had been outraged; he’d never cheated in his life
(why would he have to?), and when he’d tried to point out that Christian’s work
was older and wrong, he’d been CPI’d and sent into the lockdown room.  That had
been one of the nights that Gareth Davies had shown up for visitation; William
had had his visitation rights revoked, and it had been Gareth Davies who had
thrown a temper tantrum.
            Two days later, William had been given his work from Miss Anna, and
from Mr Demetrioff and Mr Levesque, and the hospital teacher had been told to
leave William alone; Mr Davies would be responsible for William’s schoolwork.
            It was at that point that William realised that Christian hated
him, and that, unlike Dmitri, Christian was a fairly dangerous child.
            William had been in the CSU for almost six days when Christian
began his campaign.  Children who are damaged recognise each other right away;
William knew why Christian was the way he was; he was, after all, just like
Christian.  Christian acted his rage and aggression outward; William had turned
it against himself.  Christian knew when William was touching himself at night
to get relief so he could sleep; Christian didn’t bother to even hide what he
did.
            Bedtime was eight-thirty; lights out at nine.  Christian waited
until the lights went out and the b-tech, a big, burly guy named Brec had
finished his rounds, and then he said,
            “I bet you liked it when your dad fucked you, eh?”
            William didn’t say anything.  He pulled the woolen blanket up
around his face and turned his back to Christian.  He felt his hand creep down
towards his penis, but he stopped it.  He tried to pretend he was asleep.
            “Did he make you suck him?  I bet you liked that,” Christian said. 
“I bet your mouth gets all wet just thinking about it.”
            William tried to block out the pictures that were forming in his
head.  He closed his eyes tightly, and a tear trickled down his cheek.
            “I bet he tore you all up when he shoved his big dick in your
hole,” Christian said.
            William could hear that Christian was sitting up.
            “I bet you’re hard, just thinking about it,” Christian whispered.
            “Shut up,” William said.
            “I know I’m hard,” Christian continued.  “Why don’t you come suck
me, William?  I bet you’ve got a sweet mouth.”
            “Shut up,” William repeated.
            “Come on, William,” Christian said.  “I won’t fuck you right away,
I promise.  You can just suck me tonight.  You can get used to it, like with
your dad.”
            William heard Christian get out of the bed.  He pulled the blanket
up over his head, and shrank down under the covers.  He heard Christian’s bare
feet slap against the linoleum floor, until Christian was standing right beside
him.
            “I know you want it, William,” Christian said.  “I’ve heard you
doing it.  After you suck me, maybe I’ll jack you off, make you feel good,
William.”
            “Leave me alone,” William said from underneath the covers.  “I’ll
call the b-tech.”
            “Go ahead,” Christian said.  “What makes you think he won’t fuck
you too?  Especially since we all know that’s what you like.”
            “Please,” William said, crying.
            Christian climbed onto the bed and pulled the woolen blanket off
William’s face.  “Don’t cry, baby,” he crooned, taking William’s face in his
hands.  “You don’t have to cry.  It’ll be all right, I promise.  You just take
it in your mouth, there’s a good boy.”
            William opened his mouth, and let Christian stroke his face and his
hair.
            “That’s a good boy, William,” Christian said softly, wiping away
William’s tears.  “You’re such a good boy.  Take it all, that’s it.  That’s a
good boy.”
            William closed his eyes.  When Christian was finished, he put the
blanket back up against William’s face and whispered in his ear,
            “Did your daddy tell you that he’d kill you if you told, William?”
            “No,” William answered.  Christian was holding the blanket against
his mouth.
            “Really?” Christian seemed to find that difficult to believe.  “You
didn’t tell anyway, did you?”
            William shook his head.
            “Maybe your dad wouldn’t kill you if you told,” Christian said, and
he pulled the blanket taut against William’s mouth.  “But I will.”
            Christian took the blanket away.  William felt warmth spreading
along his legs and pooling down into the bed. 
            “I won’t tell,” William said.  “I’ll be a good boy.”
 
            In the morning William was CPI’d for refusing to drink his orange
juice, and spent the day in lockdown.  It was noted in the report that he’d
begun to wet his bed.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 19 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will Riker's physical recovery is nearly complete, but his
     psychological crisis is ongoing.
Chapter Notes
     In this chapter, Picard tries to help Riker stay in touch with his
     feelings. This would not be a recommended course of action for
     someone with PTSD who has recently attempted suicide. Riker is at
     extreme risk for another suicide attempt. Picard, while well-
     intentioned, will have to recognise that Riker needs specialised
     treatment for PTSD.
Chapter Nineteen
 
 
 
 
 
            I was dreaming.  At least I think I was dreaming.  I couldn’t
breathe.  Something was pressing down on me and my chest hurt and I couldn’t
breathe.  At first I thought I was underwater, because that’s what it felt
like, sinking down into cold water, but that’s not what was happening.  I kept
thinking that there was a problem with the blanket, that it was covering my
face, and that’s why I couldn’t breathe, but I couldn’t move my arms in order
to get the blanket off my face, and then I was somewhere else, like in a closet
or something, and it was that weird darkness that you get that’s not really
dark but you can’t see, and the door wouldn’t open, and then the blanket was in
my face again and I kept smelling that moist woolly smell, like mothballs or
something.
            I heard Dr Crusher say, “I’m concerned about constantly sedating
him.”
            Deanna said, “Hypno-therapy was proven unsuccessful with complex
PTSD, Beverly.  You can’t let him remain in this state.”
            “I know, but I don’t have to like it,” and I felt another hypo
spray in my neck.
 
 
 
            When I woke again, it was probably close to dinner time.  Alyssa
Ogawa came over to me and asked if I wanted help from an orderly to go to the
head and clean up a bit.
            “You can even have a shower if you want, Commander,” she said.
            “What about the bandages?” I asked.
            “I’m sure we can remove them now,” she said.  “I’ll just check with
Dr Crusher.”
            “I’d like a shower,” I said.
            “Good.  I’ll be right back.”
            She returned with Beverly and one of the orderlies, a crewman named
da Costa.  I wasn’t sure why Beverly should be involved in something minor like
removing my bandages, but then I remembered my earlier behaviour, and perhaps
Ogawa thought I would flip out when I saw what I’d done to myself.  I don’t
know.  Maybe Beverly thought I would flip out.  I had no intentions of flipping
out; I just wanted a shower and something to eat.
            “Da Costa will help you into the shower, Will,” Beverly was saying
as Ogawa unwrapped my arms.
            Of course the wounds were healed, but the scars were long and
livid.
            “It’s a good thing my uniform has long sleeves,” I said.
            “They’ll fade with time,” Beverly said, but she said it sharply, as
if she didn’t find me funny.
            “Do I need a minder to take a shower?” I asked.
            “Yes,” Beverly said, “I’m afraid you do.”
 
            I felt bad for da Costa.  It wasn’t his fault I was an abject
failure at committing suicide.  He followed me morosely into the head, and
studiously averted his eyes as I slipped out of my pyjamas.  The head was so
small he might have well just come into the shower with me.  I thought about
asking him to wash my back, but I supposed that was pushing it.  There was
hardly enough room for me to step out of the shower to dry, so I had him hand
me the towel so I could dry off in there.  He gave me my pyjama bottoms, which
I put on in the stall, and then stepped out of the head so I could put the top
on and run a comb through my hair.
            “You don’t have to bandage my arms anymore, right?” I said to
Ogawa.
            “No, sir,” she said.  “Can I get you anything before I go off duty,
Commander?”
            I thought of a list of things that might make this experience more
bearable.  There wasn’t one thing on that list that she could help me with.
            “No, thanks,” I said.
            I got back in the bed, and watched Ogawa leave.  Da Costa was still
hovering around me.
            “What?” I said.
            “Sir,” da Costa responded.
            “This is a room full of people,” I said.  “You still have to hover
around me?”
            “Dr Crusher said I was to stay with you, sir,” he replied.
            “Jesus Christ,” I said.  “Well, can you stay about ten feet away
and watch me?  Unless you’d like to climb into bed with me?”
            “Sir –“
            “For fuck’s sake,” I said.
            I sighed.  If I’d thought I’d been bored before, now I’d made it a
hundred times worse for myself.  Without my padd I couldn’t even finish the
novel I’d started.  And with da Costa three feet away from me – what was I
going to do, anyway?  Jump an orderly for surgical scissors?
            Beverly came out of her office, looking wiped out, and walked over
to me.
            “Jean-Luc said he’ll be along in twenty minutes or so,” she told
me.  “You can eat in my office, if you’d like some privacy.”
            “Do I have to offer da Costa food, too?” I asked.
            “Will,” she said.  “We all have a job to do, and da Costa is
following orders.”
            “I understand that you don’t think you can trust me,” I said.  “I
don’t trust me.  But does he have to breathe on me?”
            “If I didn’t have your medical records,” she said, “I’d guess that
you were about Wesley’s age right now.”
            “So I’ve regressed,” I said.  “Just because I understand the order
doesn’t mean I have to like it.  Why can’t I just be discharged? I’m not in any
medical danger now, am I?”
            She actually rolled her eyes.  “I’m beginning to think I liked you
better when you were sedated,” she said.  “Will.  As your doctor, I am telling
you that not only do you need to be here – still need to be here – but that you
also need Mr da Costa as well.  And since I am in control of the hypo sprays,
it’s a good idea not to annoy me.”  She smiled, as if that would mitigate what
she was saying.
            “So what are you going to do with me, then?” I said.  “Do we have a
locked psychiatric unit on this ship?  Because I don’t remember one.  Maybe,” I
said, “you could just leave me with Worf in the brig.”
            “You know, Commander,” she said, “if I have to create a locked
ward, I will.  So why don’t you just settle down before the captain gets here?”
            There were any number of things I supposed I could have said, but I
must have some small instinct for self-preservation left. 
            “If the captain still wants to spend the night here, I’ve left
orders for a cot to be set up,” she said.  “Otherwise, Will, I am going to my
quarters.  Dr Sandoval is on for tonight.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            I’d forgotten that I’d asked Jean-Luc to stay with me.  I wondered
if he was still angry.  Obviously I still was.  I closed my eyes and tried to
concentrate on breathing, on letting go of the irritation and – I wasn’t sure
what else I was feeling.  Frustration, maybe.  If I could remember what had
happened, I could at least have the illusion of control, but there was still a
wall there.  I just remembered tasting the borscht, and then Geordi hitting his
hand.  After that, nothing.
            “Will?”
            I opened my eyes; Jean-Luc was standing beside my bed.
            “I didn’t mean to wake you,” he said.
            “I wasn’t asleep,” I said.  He was still looking very tired.
            “Have you eaten?” he asked.
            “No,” I said, “I was waiting for you.”
            I started to get out of the bed and he reached out to grab my arm,
and I saw him flinch and then mask it.
            “They look pretty bad,” I said.  My earlier anger was giving way to
embarrassment.
            “Yes,” he said.  “You were quite effective, I’m afraid.  How is the
pain?”
            I shrugged.  “Not so bad,” I answered.  “Just achy.”  I turned to
da Costa, who had been standing at attention when Jean-Luc entered the room. 
“This is Mr da Costa,” I said.  “He’s been taking care of me, despite my best
efforts to drive him away.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            “Mr da Costa,” the captain acknowledged.  “Commander Riker and I
will be eating in Dr Crusher’s quarters.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said.  “Dr Crusher had informed me, sir.”
            “Good,” Jean-Luc responded.  “Come, Will.  I missed my lunch, so
I’m hungry.”
            He’d given up his lunch so he could come to sickbay and yell at
me.  Well, that was a good way to begin an evening together, I thought.
            “I’m sorry,” I said as we walked into Beverly’s office.
            “For?” he asked.  “Lights, fifty percent.”
            Beverly had a small table, and he pulled it over and arranged her
two office chairs around it.
            “This afternoon,” I said.
            “Ah.”  He turned from the replicator and looked at me.  “Sit down,
Will,” he said.  “I understand you’ve been giving Dr Crusher a hard time, too.”
            I sat, and looked at the floor. 
            “Will?” He was waiting for a response.
            “She gives as good as she gets,” I offered.
            He sighed.  “Do you think you’re amusing?” he asked.  “Because
you’re not.”
            I didn’t say anything, because I could feel the anxiety pooling in
my gut again.  He walked back from the replicator and pulled the chair over, so
that he was sitting next to me.
            “Will?” he said.  “Look at me.”
            I looked up, trying to keep myself in control.  I was so tired of
feeling like a little kid, ready to weep at a moment’s notice.
            “The only way this is going to work, William,” he said, “is if we
are both open with each other.”
            I nodded.
            “You have to understand, Will, that I care very much for you.  You
do understand that, yes?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “I would like – “ and he paused, searching for what he wanted to
say, in that kind, deliberate way he had, “for us to continue as we were before
you hurt yourself.  Is that what you would like?”
            Fuck, I was going to cry anyway.  “Yes,” I said.
            “Then you also have to understand,” he continued, his voice
hardening somewhat, “that I am very angry with you, and likewise very angry
with myself.  What you did – it hurt, Will.  It hurt me.  And I’ve gone a very
long time without putting myself into that kind of place, where I could get
hurt like that.”
            “Jean-Luc – “
            He took my hand.  “Let me finish,” he said.  “So I’m angry,
William, because you frightened me, because I nearly lost you when I’ve only
just had you; because you didn’t think what we might have was worth staying
here for.  And I’m angry with myself, because I knew you were so close to the
edge.  I knew you were in tremendous pain, and I knew about what you’d done
when you were seven.  I could have prevented this, Will, except that I deluded
myself into thinking we had more time.”
            “I’m sorry,” I said, miserably.
            “I know,” he said.  “It’s perfectly normal, Will, for me to be
angry.  You’ve lived so long without knowing what feelings are normal that this
is very hard for you, but being angry with both you and myself is a normal
reaction to what happened.  I want you to understand that,” he explained,
“because I want you to understand that it’s nothing that I can’t handle, and
it’s something that we both can work through.  Does that make sense to
you?”         
            “I guess,” I said.  “I don’t think this is stuff I’m very good at.”
            He smiled.  “Of course you aren’t,” he said.  “The truth is,
neither am I.  If I were good at this stuff, as you say, Will, I’d be back in
LaBarre with ten children and a winery, most likely.  But just because I’m more
comfortable fighting Romulans doesn’t mean I won’t work to do what needs to be
done.”
            I said, “You aren’t giving up on me, then?”
            “No,” he said.  “I don’t give up that easily.  Surely you know
that.”
            Yes, I knew that. 
            He waited for a moment, still holding my hand.  Then he said,
“You’re angry with me, and you’re going to have to acknowledge it, Will, if you
want this to work.”
            “I’m not – “
            “You said,” he began, “when we were on the beach, that you trusted
me.  Is that still true?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “What do you think will happen if you admit to being angry with
me?”
            “Nothing,” I said.  “I’m not fucking stupid, Jean-Luc; I don’t
think the world will end if I say I’m angry.”
            “No? Didn’t it, nearly?”
            “But – “
            “But what?”
            “I didn’t try to kill myself because I was angry,” I said. 
“Certainly not because I’m angry with you.”
            He said, “I can’t think of any action that’s more filled with rage
than what you did.”
            “What do you want me to do?” I asked.  “Just tell me.  Please.”
            “It is normal, Will, for you to be angry and resentful, I think. 
Were I in your place –and,” he looked at me intensely, “—I very nearly was,
after the Borg, I would be very angry and resentful of whoever was responsible
for not letting me die.  Can you acknowledge those feelings, do you think?”
            I looked at the floor again.  “Haven’t I already said that?”
            “No,” he said.  “What you said was meant to hurt, and it did.”
            “I can’t do this,” I said.  “I don’t know how to do this.”
            He was still holding my hand. 
            “You found me?” I asked.  “Because I don’t remember anything.”
            “Yes, mon cher,” he said.  “Guinan called me from Ten Forward.”
            “You want me to say that I’m angry because you saved me?”
            “Will,” he said patiently.  “I don’t want you to say it if it’s not
true.”
            “I don’t know,” I said, and then it was as if weeks of anxiety and
stress and all the shit that went with it, the night terrors and the panic
attacks and the flashbacks and the pain, just detonated like uncontrolled
ordinance.  “I don’t know!” I shouted.  “I don’t fucking know!” I jumped up and
knocked over the chair and the table; I pushed the captain away and then I was
throwing whatever was in front of me, just hurling things against the wall.
            The door opened, and da Costa charged in, with the doctor not far
behind, but Jean-Luc stood in front of them, keeping them away from me.
            “Stand down,” he said to da Costa.  “Mr da Costa.”
            “But, sir – “ da Costa protested.
            “I have this,” the captain said.  “Just leave, please.”
            “Sir – “ da Costa insisted.
            “Now.” the captain said, firmly.
            He turned to me, after shutting the door on both da Costa and the
doctor.  I was against the wall, breathing heavily, surveying the destruction
that was Dr Crusher’s office.
            “Oh, God,” I said, sliding down to the floor.
            He walked over to me, carefully avoiding the debris, and then sat
down next to me.
            “Come here, Will,” he said, and he pulled me into his arms.
            “You should have left me,” I said.  “Why didn’t you just leave me?”
            “Because I’m a selfish bastard,” he said, “and I didn’t want to
lose you.”
            I said, “You saved my life because I’m good in bed?”
            He kissed the back of my neck.  “And other reasons,” he added. 
“Where would I get another first officer, at such short notice?  Who would run
the poker game?  Who would keep Mr Worf from eating ensigns?”
            I was laughing, then, and so was he.
            “You’re going to waste away, because of me,” I said.  “First I make
you miss your lunch, and now your dinner.”  I looked at Beverly’s office.  “You
didn’t save my life for long, Jean-Luc.  Beverly’s going to kill me, when she
sees this.”
            He stood up, and helped me to my feet.  “At least you didn’t break
anything,” he remarked.  “It was a very controlled outburst, Will.  We can get
poor Mr da Costa in here.  He’ll help us clean up.”
            “I’m sure Dr Sandoval already called Beverly,” I said.  “She’ll
create that locked ward for sure, now.”
            He was righting the table, and he looked at me.  “What locked
ward?” he asked.
            “I was being an asshole,” I said, “and Beverly threatened me with a
locked ward.”
            He shrugged.  “It’s her unit,” he said.  “I wouldn’t cross her.”
            He opened the door, and let both da Costa and Dr Sandoval in.  “No
harm done, Mr da Costa,” he said.  “Why don’t you give us a hand?”
            “Sir,” da Costa responded.
            It was much more efficient to let da Costa do it, so I stood back
and watched him right Beverly’s office.           
            “Dr Crusher is on her way,” Sandoval reported.
            Jean-Luc sighed.  “You needn’t have bothered her,” he said.  “I had
things under control.”
            “I’m sorry, sir,” Sandoval replied.  “But Dr Crusher had standing
orders that if Commander Riker became upset, I was to send for her.”
            “I guess we’re both in trouble now, Will,” Jean-Luc said.
            Da Costa had finished setting the room to rights, and he and Dr
Sandoval left the office, I guess to wait for Beverly’s arrival.
            “It will go better for us,” Jean-Luc said, “if we’re both eating
when she gets here.”
            I looked at him in surprise, and then laughed.  “You’re a devious
man, sir,” I said.
            We were both sitting rather placidly at the table when Dr Crusher
did arrive.  We both stood as she entered the room, and I watched in amazement
as the captain poured her a glass of wine and sat her in his seat.
            “If you think for one minute, Jean-Luc,” she said, “that I can’t
see through your charm – “
            He said mildly, “There was no call to send for you, Beverly.  It’s
true Will had somewhat of an outburst, but he was never out of control, and I
was right here.  I pushed him a little too hard, that’s all.”
            He was leaning against her desk, smiling at her, and I had to look
away.  Beverly, however, didn’t appear to be particularly taken in or amused.
            “The description I got was that all hell had broken loose,” she
said, “and that Commander Riker trashed my office.”
            “Now you can see that’s not the case,” Jean-Luc said reasonably.
            She looked sternly at me.  “Finish your meal, Commander,” she
said.  “I’ll take your vitals myself, thank you.  And if your blood pressure is
up at all, I’ll have you sedated and put to bed, do you understand?”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.
            “As for you, Jean-Luc,” she said, “if you’re going to upset my
patient, I’ll revoke your permission to stay here tonight.”
            “Of course,” Jean-Luc agreed.
           
 
            My blood pressure was up, and despite my protests that I was calm,
and that I would behave myself, Dr Crusher made good her threat and gave me yet
another hypo spray.  She let da Costa help me get settled in bed, and she and
Jean-Luc stayed in her office for a few minutes.
            After she left, Jean-Luc came over to me.
            “Have you been sent away?” I asked.
            “No,” he said.  “If you still want me to stay with you, I will.”
            “You’re exhausted,” I said.  “You won’t get any sleep in here.”
            “I’m perfectly capable of taking care of myself,” he answered. 
“It’s up to you, mon cher.”
            “Could you stay just until I fall asleep?” I asked.  “I think she
gave me a dose that would knock out a horse.”
            “Of course, Will,” he said.
            Da Costa brought a chair over, and he sat next to me, and took my
hand in his.
            “You held my hand the entire time I was unconscious,” I said.
            “Yes.  I wanted you to know that I was with you.”
            “I did know.”
            “Deanna said you would,” he told me.
            “She sent you in with me?” I asked.
            “Yes.”
            “I’m sorry I hurt you,” I said after a while.  “It wasn’t
deliberate.”
            “I know that.”
            “There was just so much blood,” I said sleepily.  “And I just
wanted it all to stop.”
            “It will be all right, mon cœur,” he said.  “Just go to sleep now.”
            I closed my eyes.
            Beverly said, “He’s talking about after he cut himself?”
            “No,” I heard Jean-Luc say.  “I don’t believe so.  He saw LaForge’s
hand.  That’s what started the flashback.  No,” Jean-Luc said again, and his
voice was very controlled, but I could hear the fury in it, “the blood is what
he wanted to stop.  It’s time, I think, to get Kyle Riker involved in this.”
            “Are you sure, Jean-Luc?” Beverly asked.
            I tried to open my eyes to tell him no, but everything felt so
heavy.
            “Oh, yes,” the captain said, “I’m very sure.”
             
           
           
           
           
           
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 20 *****
Chapter Summary
     The turning point in William's hospitalisation.
Chapter Notes
     Childhood PTSD resembles a variety of different disorders which are
     currently being diagnosed -- some might say over-diagnosed -- in
     children. Childhood Bi-polar Disorder (particularly Type I),
     Childhood schizophrenia, Childhood schizo-affective disorder, and
     even attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder present many of the
     same symptoms as childhood PTSD. Mood swings, severe anxiety, rages,
     night terrors and other sleep disturbances, bedwetting,
     diassociating, hallucinations (particularly auditory and olefactory)
     are all common symptoms of many of these disorders.
     PTSD at its heart is a severe anxiety disorder which reorganises a
     child's brain. A child who perceives himself in constant danger shuts
     down all but the most essential brain functions. It is a perfectly
     logical response to the repetitive trauma of child abuse.
     I hope that in the 24th century a child psychiatrist would be able to
     recognise childhood PTSD and treat the cause and the symptoms. For
     the purposes of this story, that does not happen.
     Again, as with all the chapters telling the story of William Riker's
     childhood, there are triggers here for those who have been abused.
Chapter Twenty
 
 
 
 
            It was determined that William would remain in the CSU until his
father arrived; his father’s ETA was in six more days.  Besides, William’s
doctor and social worker had noticed that William was regressing; he was crying
easily, he was wetting his bed (something that Mrs Shugak had assured them he
had almost outgrown), and he was unable to focus on his schoolwork, even when
Mr Davies was there to help him.  The b-techs reported that William startled
easily, that he appeared to be disassociating more often, and that he seemed
afraid of nighttime.  The doctor was preparing to make a diagnosis, rare but
still viable, of childhood schizophrenia.  William was given a combination of
an anti-psychotic and a sedative in hopes that his psychological state would
stabilise.
            William didn’t like the way the medication made him feel.  He was
hungry all the time, but food had no taste.  He was sleepy, but his sleep was
filled with scary images he couldn’t understand.  Sometimes, when people spoke
to him, it sounded as if they had pillows in front of their mouths.  Worst of
all, when Christian came to him in the night, even though Christian didn’t
threaten him anymore, he still wet his bed, despite the promise that the
medication would help him stop.
            There were times when William didn’t really mind Christian coming
to him.  No one touched you in the unit, unless it was to CPI you, which was
scary and really hurt.  Christian’s voice was soothing, and he called William
his “baby;” he stroked William’s hair and petted him.  One time Christian fell
asleep next to him, holding him, and didn’t leave his bed until William
inevitably wet it.  Christian hadn’t made good on any of his threats, but
William hadn’t told either.  He didn’t really think that Christian could kill
him – he was, after all, bigger and stronger than Christian, and he’d had
Henry’s judo lessons – but he was worried about the b-techs, the one called
Brec in particular.  In a way, Brec reminded him a little of his father; there
was a coiled violence there.  When Brec CPI’d you, it was very frightening. 
And Brec’s touch lingered just a half second too long.
            Gareth Davies complained about the medication William was on, and
the dosage was lowered.  William found he tolerated this better; he was capable
of thinking, rather than simply wandering around in a half-dream state. 
Christian immediately noticed the difference.
            “I think,” Christian said, as he came towards William’s bed for his
nightly session, “that it’s time we fucked, William.”
            “No,” William said.
            Christian climbed into the bed, and once again tightened the
blankets around William’s face.  “I will tell Brec what you like,” he said. 
            “No,” William repeated.
            “So you choose, baby,” Christian said.  “Me or Brec?”
            “Okay,” William said.
 
            William decided he needed a plan.  He watched Christian’s
activities for a day, and he looked at the schedule that was posted by the
nurse’s station.  He endured more nights of Christian’s attentions, all the
while thinking how many bones of Christian’s he could break.  He remembered the
force his father had used when he’d thrown William against the wall and broken
his ribs and his collarbone.  He knew he could subdue Christian easily; he
could imagine hearing Christian’s arms snap.  He just had to make sure to do it
when Brec was off-duty.
            Two days before William’s father was scheduled to arrive, William
put his plan into action.  Christian disappeared after lunch to use the
bathroom in their room; William knew exactly what Christian was doing when he
went in there.        
            At lunch William said, “You don’t have to wait until tonight, you
know.”
            Christian eyed him with interest.
            William shrugged.  “I’m just saying,” he said.
            Christian leaned in closely and whispered, “You are so hot, baby.”
            William gazed at Christian underneath his long black eyelashes, and
Christian sucked in his breath.
            “After,” Christian said.
            William, remembering what Dmitri had once said, turned the full
wattage on Christian and knew that he’d once again been able to set the hook.
 
            William waited until Christian disappeared into the bathroom.  It
was supposed to be a free hour; William usually stayed in the rec room and read
a book, or simply gazed at the wall.  Brec was not on; the b-tech who was was
more concerned with chatting up one of the nurses, and didn’t care if you were
in your room for the hour or in the rec room.  As long as your door was open,
it was okay.
            William drifted down the hallway, and slid into his room.  He
pulled the sharpened stylus out of his jeans pocket and set it between his two
fingers.  Then he walked into the bathroom, his hand in his pocket, where
Christian was waiting, his shorts down around his ankles and a welcoming smile
on his face.
 
           
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 21 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will begins his treatment program.
Chapter Notes
     The self-assessment worksheet mentioned is a useful tool in beginning
     cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) for PTSD. Recent studies have
     shown that oxygen deprivation and poor nutrition can also contribute
     to the crippling anxiety that is a symptom of PTSD. The tests that
     Deanna Troi gives Will are designed to show brain damage and
     traumatic brain injury, both of which are known causes for PTSD.
     Repetitive trauma in childhood restructures the brain; in Will's
     case, this is added to both the childhood and adult injuries he has
     sustained.
Chapter Twenty-One
 
 
 
 
           
            I know that I’d heard Beverly say that she didn’t want to keep
sedating me, but I’d actually slept the entire night.  I didn’t have any dreams
that I remembered, and I woke up for the first time in I couldn’t remember when
without anxiety eating away at my gut.  The other good thing was that nobody
had to awaken me; I’d awakened on my own, at the usual time that I awoke to get
ready for my shift.
            Mr da Costa – I still didn’t know his first name, and I certainly
wasn’t going to ask him – was apparently doing another double shift, because
he’d been with me through beta and gamma shifts yesterday.  Today he was here
at alpha shift, and I knew something must have been up, because there was no
way that I’d approve that kind of a schedule for anybody, least of all a
medical crewman.
            “Good morning,” I said, “Mr da Costa.”
            “Commander Riker, sir,” he said.
            I resisted rolling my eyes.  There’s a certain kind of young
officer or crewman who always overdoes it on the deference routine; saying
“Aye, aye” for example.  Clearly Mr da Costa was one of those. 
            “I can have a shower?” I asked.
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            Well, that was neither a yes nor a no, and I certainly didn’t want
to start yet another day by pissing Beverly off.  I could hear her in her
office, but I didn’t want to bother her.  She’d been working the same long
schedule as Jean-Luc, thanks to me, and Data was falling down on his job as
first officer if he hadn’t yet taken both of them in hand and told them to get
some rest.
            I said, “So I’m going to get out of bed – no, I don’t need any help
– and I’m going to take a shower.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said.
            I shrugged, since obviously I wasn’t going to get more than that
out of the man, and I got myself out of bed, relieved that I didn’t seem to be
having any of the balance issues I’d had yesterday either. 
            “Do you know where my things are?” I asked.
            “Aye, sir, I’ll get them,” he said.
            I waited for him to return and grabbed my robe and toiletries and
went into the head, with da Costa close on my heels.  The head had already been
restocked with fresh linens, which was convenient, but I’d decided to take a
sonic shower so as not to have to worry about wetting da Costa too, even though
I prefer a water shower.
            I finished up, and put my pyjamas back on.
            “Do you think Dr Crusher would allow me access to my quarters so I
can get some clothes?” I asked.
            “I don’t know, sir,” da Costa said.  “I’ll let her know you’re
awake.”
            I thought, she could hardly not know, seeing as how this morning I
was the only patient in here.
            “Could I get some coffee?” I asked.
            At that point one of the orderlies came over to me with a breakfast
tray.
            “Here you go, Commander,” he said.
            He set up a tray table next to my bed, left the tray, and
disappeared.  I looked at the breakfast, which consisted of toast and fruit, a
poached egg, several pills, and orange juice.
            “I don’t drink orange juice,” I said.  “What I’d like is a cup of
coffee.”
            Da Costa said, “Aye, sir.”
            I stood up and moved the tray table over.  I picked up the glass of
orange juice and handed it to da Costa.
            “Here,” I said.  “You can either drink this, or you can throw it
out.  I am walking to the replicator and fixing myself a cup of coffee.”
            Da Costa took the orange juice that I’d handed to him and said,
“You don’t have permission, sir.”
            I looked at him.  “I am not on a locked ward,” I said, “and I am
not in a psychiatric facility.  I am still – as far as I know – the first
officer of this ship.  I do not need permission to have a fucking cup of
coffee.”
            “Commander,” da Costa said stoutly, “I’ll get Dr Crusher.”
            “You do that, crewman,” I said.
            I walked over to the replicator, watching an orderly watch me.  I’m
not sure, but I think at that moment I was fully capable of taking down the
next person who moved towards me.
            “Coffee, dark roast, three creams,” I said to the replicator.  The
mug appeared, steaming, and just the aroma of the coffee was already working
its magic.  I glanced at the orderly, who seemed to be edging closer to me.  “I
will make you wish you had never been born,” I said to him.  “I am taking my
coffee, and I am going back to my bed, where I am going to sit down and eat my
breakfast like a good boy, you understand?”
            “Sir,” the orderly said.
            I walked back over to my bed and sat down.  I pulled the tray table
back and looked at the now- cold toast and egg.  Well, at least the fruit was
still edible.  It was an odd assortment of whatever we’d picked up on our last
supply run from God knows where, but I ate it anyway.  The group of pills
looked like vitamins and supplements of some sort and I swallowed them.
            I watched Beverly come towards me, da Costa trailing in her wake
like a stupid baby duck.
            “What seems to be the problem, Commander?” she said.
            “No problem, Doctor,” I replied.  “See?  I’m eating my breakfast. 
I’m trying to behave.”
            “Was there coffee on your diet?” she asked.
            “There was orange juice, which I loathe,” I said.
            “You,” she said, “are suffering from extreme anxiety, and caffeine
is the last thing you need to be consuming.  A diet has been prepared for you,
to help you with the various medications you are taking and to rebuild your
strength and your immune system.  Do you understand, Commander?”
            “I have,” I said, “a paradoxical reaction to caffeine.  It calms me
down.”
            “That,” Dr Crusher remarked, “is the biggest load of bullshit I
have heard from you yet.”
            I said, “You can look it up if you don’t believe me.  People who
are hyperactive are calmed by caffeine.”
            “Commander, I do not have to justify my medical degree to you.  You
will eat what you are given, because it is my medical opinion that it is
appropriate for you.  Coffee is not on that list.  And it’s not going to be on
the list.  And the idea of you staying in the brig with Mr Worf is beginning to
have a strange appeal to me.”  She turned around and walked away, saying to the
orderly, “He can have this cup of coffee.  But he’s not to go near the
replicator again, do you understand me?”
            “Sir,” the orderly said.
            I sighed.  So much for starting the morning not pissing Beverly
off.  I ate the cold egg and one piece of what was clearly five-hundred grain
and inedible toast.  It would have been nice to have some jam for the toast –
blueberry, maybe, or my favourite, lingonberry – but since everyone in sickbay
was already eyeing me as if I were an escaped Borg I decided to say nothing. 
            I went back into the head to clean up and brush my teeth, with da
Costa again at my heels.  I was proud of myself, though; I resisted the urge to
fling another sarcastic remark his way.  After all, as Beverly had said
yesterday, he was just doing his job, which was to make my life more miserable
than it currently was, and it was almost like shooting fish in a barrel anyway.
            The day seemed to stretch before me endlessly.  I sat for a moment
on the edge of my bed and considered my options.  If I couldn’t be dead, said
option having been removed from my choices, what exactly did I want?  I thought
about what Jean-Luc had asked me, if I’d wanted to go back to the way things
had been with him before I’d hurt myself.  I’d said yes to him, but was that
what I wanted? 
            Reflection, of course, is not a strong suit, but it is enforced in
the routine of the first officer.  Every log has to include reflection on
performance.  Well, currently my performance sucked.  I would have myself in
remediation, were I looking at my own performance review.  Which was, I guess,
exactly where I was now, in remediation.  So I could cooperate with the
program, and get my job back, or I could continue to be an asshole, and feel
sorry for myself, and piss everyone off, starting with my remediation team.
            I’d succeeded in pissing both Jean-Luc and Beverly off yesterday,
and today I’d already succeeded with Beverly.  This did not bode well for the
rest of the day.  I assumed that at some point I’d be meeting with Deanna, and
the thought of pissing her off, and her going all aristocratic on me, was not
an enjoyable prospect either.  And I wasn’t completely sure that I couldn’t
succeed in enticing Jean-Luc to violence.  He’d come pretty close to it
yesterday, and frankly, I’d seen him violent.  It was always controlled, but
that made it more terrifying.  I prefer Worf’s violence, because it’s
predictable, which makes it easier to deal with.
            What I needed to do now was take control of the program.  I glanced
at da Costa, who was standing at parade rest (literally; this guy really was a
throwback and I wondered how on earth he had ended up in sickbay when clearly
he would thrive under Mr Worf) not three feet away from me.  Apparently he
believed that I was indeed capable of jumping an orderly for surgical scissors.
            “Mr da Costa,” I began.
            “Sir,” he responded, straightening to attention immediately.
            “Would you please ask Dr Crusher if I can see her for ten minutes?”
I asked.
            “Aye, sir.”  Then he said, “I’ll ask Nurse Ogawa to ask Dr Crusher,
sir.”
            Ogawa was clearly visible, talking to a lieutenant named Palmieri
who was currently assigned to engineering.  I realised that of course, da Costa
was not allowed to leave my side.  He motioned to Ogawa, who nodded and
eventually came over.
            “Mr Ogawa,” I said, “I’d like to speak with Dr Crusher.”
            “I’ll let her know, sir,” Ogawa said.
            She walked away, and as da Costa returned to parade rest I gave in
and rolled my eyes.  She was back in a few minutes and told me that Dr Crusher
would see me.  Now I was Mrs Mallard as da Costa and I walked into Beverly’s
office.
            “Sit down, Will,” Beverly said.
            I did.  Da Costa remained hovering in the doorway.
            “Can I speak to you without the presence of Mr da Costa?” I asked. 
“He can clear your office of sharps first, if it will make him feel better.”
            “Will,” Beverly said.  She threw me a pointed look, and resumed
whatever she was writing on her padd.
            I sighed.  “I thought there was such a thing as doctor-patient
confidentiality,” I said.
            “If you continue on your current regression,” Beverly said, “you’ll
be an infant tomorrow.  Mr da Costa, you have permission to step outside.  I
will call you should I need you.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said.
            He left the room, and I sat and waited for Beverly to finish what
she was doing.  Finally she put her padd down and looked at me.
            “Yes, Will,” she said in a voice that indicated infinite patience
on her part.
            I said, “I’m sorry about the coffee.”
            “And?” she asked.
            I drew in a breath.  “I’m not deliberately being an asshole,” I
said.  “I just don’t seem to be able to stop.”
            “Will,” she said.  She reached out across her desk to me, and I let
her clasp my hand for a moment.  “We are on the same side here.”
            I shrugged.  “I don’t seem to be capable of much rational thought
at the moment,” I said.
            “That’s to be expected, Will,” she replied.  “There have been
physiological changes and your brain is trying to adapt.  What makes it hard is
that your anxiety is interfering with your cognitive functions – which is a
typical symptom of PTSD, Will, as well as the depression you’re experiencing –
and so you are unaware of the damage that you’ve suffered because of your
injuries.  You almost bled out, Will.  Your heart stopped.  You suffered oxygen
deprivation.  You severely damaged the tendons in your arms.  You have physical
injuries, internal as well as external, which your brain is dealing with, along
with the psychological symptoms and affects associated with your diagnosis of
PTSD.  You are a complicated mess right now,” she said, “and you need to be as
patient with yourself as I need to be more patient with you.”  She paused. 
“And I’m sorry for not seeming to be involved in your case,” she continued.  “I
am; deeply involved, Will.  We – your treatment team – are meeting at 01000
hours to finalise your treatment plan.  Once we have the components in place,
we’ll invite you in so that you can participate in organising your treatment. 
Okay?”
            It was 0830 now.  “What do I do until then?”
            “Deanna should be here any minute.  She has some work for you to
do.”
            I sighed.  I could just imagine the “work” she had for me.
            “In fact, here she is now,” Beverly said as Deanna opened the door.
            “Good morning, Will,” she said.  She gave me a quick hug.  “How are
we feeling this morning?”
            “I’m morose,” I said.  “I have no idea how you’re feeling.”
            “You can use Room 2,” Beverly said.  “Have fun.”  She sounded
irritatingly cheery.
            “The captain will be here?” Deanna asked.
            “He hasn’t indicated that he wouldn’t be here,” Beverly replied.
            “Good, I have some news for him,” Deanna said.  “Come on, Will. 
I’ve got some work for you to do.”
            I stood up, and followed Deanna out of Beverly’s office.  Da Costa
had been right outside the door, and I saw him move to follow us.
            “Are you my therapist?” I asked Deanna.
            She stopped, surprised.  “For the time being,” she said,
guardedly.  “Why?”
            I searched her face.  “Are you being taken off my case?” I asked.
            “Not as your case manager, no,” Deanna said.  “We’ll discuss this
later, Will, at your treatment meeting.  Again, why?”
            “Well, I was just going to mention that I didn’t want da Costa in
the room,” I said, “under the grounds of patient-confidentiality, but now I
want to know what’s going on.”
            “Mr da Costa can remain at his post outside the door,” Deanna said,
looking over my shoulder at da Costa.  “I doubt I’ll need you, Joao.  Commander
Riker will be fine with me.”
            “Dr Crusher said I was to remain with him at all times,” da Costa
reminded her.
            “Oh, my God,” I muttered.  “But not in private conversations with
my therapist or my doctor, da Costa.  Just because I’m ill doesn’t mean that
you can overstep your bounds, do you understand?”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.  “I’m following orders, sir.”
            “Yeah, they said that at Tarsus IV,” I said.
            “Will!” Deanna scowled at me.  “Go in and sit down, please.  Mr da
Costa, you will remain outside the door in case I need you.”
            I walked into the room and I heard da Costa say smartly, “Aye,
sir,” to Deanna.  I sat down in one of the armchairs and stretched my legs.
            Deanna came in and shut the door, and then looked at me.  “Oh, no,
William,” she said.  “You are not playing games with me.  In that chair, over
there, by the table.  You’ll need a surface to write on.”
            I waited for a minute, and then I grinned at her.  “Okay,” I said. 
I got up and sat down where she’d told me to.  “I get my padd back?” I asked.
            “No,” she said, but then softened.  “Soon, Will.  Stop trying to
rush things.  Two days ago you were at death’s door.  You need to give yourself
time to heal.”
            She turned to the door.  “Joao, would you hand me my things from
over there?”
            Da Costa returned with two padds.  “Thank you.”  Deanna shut the
door, firmly, and sat down behind the desk.  She slid the padd over to me. 
“There are some things I need you to do, Will,” she said.  I opened my mouth
and she said, “Do not say anything.  You are not going to want to do this, I
already know.”  She was trying to look severe, but I could tell she wasn’t
really angry, more or less resigned in an amused sort of way.  “So don’t bother
to tell me how stupid this is, or how you don’t want to do this, or how you
don’t see to point to any of this.  Furthermore,” she said, and now she was
smiling, “I don’t want to hear how you’re perfectly fine, and how you can go
back to your quarters now, and how everyone else has been picking on you,
particularly Beverly.  So we’ll just pretend that you have already told me all
of this, okay?”
            I grinned at her.  “Okay,” I said.  “But Beverly has been really
mean to me, just so you know.”
            Deanna rolled her eyes.  “You,” she said, “are lucky she hasn’t
called Worf in to deal with you.”
            “She wouldn’t dare,” I said.
            “Push her far enough and see what happens,” she said.
            “I can handle Mr Worf,” I said.
            “Not now, you can’t.”
            We were at an impasse.  I sighed.  “What do you want me to do?” I
asked, finally.
            “I have a self-assessment worksheet that I need you to fill out,”
she said.  “Then I have a few tests I want to run.”
            “You’re joking, right?” I said.  “Self-assessment?  Really?”
            “William,” she said.  “Let’s get you relaxed first.  Maybe that
will help you with your resistance.”
            “I get a massage?” I asked hopefully.
            “Certainly, Commander,” Deanna said, “I can put in an order for you
to receive a medical message.  That’s probably an excellent idea.”
            “Ouch,” I said.
            She stood up, and moved over towards me.  “Okay,” she said.  “Close
your eyes.  Place your feet flat on the floor, that’s it.  Hands on your
knees.  Just resting, William.  Not so tightly.  There you go.”
            “Deanna – “
            “Hush,” she said.  “Your breathing is too shallow.  Take a deep
breath.  Hold it.  Hold it.  Now let it out.  That’s it.  Again.”
            We went through this for about five minutes until I could feel my
shoulders and my hands relaxing.
            “That’s it, Will, that’s good.  Let’s work on some imagery, now.”
            I tried to follow what she was saying, which was pretty strange in
some ways, although not in others.  A component of the classes that Worf and I
lead in the mornings, as well as a component of tai chi, has always included
grounding imagery, but this was a little weird. 
            “You’re resisting again,” she said.  “Let’s go back to breathing.”
            So we did some more breathing exercises, and then she tried the
imagery again.  I was supposed to imagine myself in the chair, but that instead
of the deck underneath the chair there was ground, earth ground, and I was to
imagine that my spine was growing down out of my seat and into the ground,
deeper and deeper and forming roots, which were growing and spreading all
around me.  Somewhere along the way her imagery had started to work, and I was
almost asleep when she said,
            “Open your eyes now, Will.”  She waited for me as I did, and then
she said, “Where are you?”
            “In sickbay,” I answered, blinking.
            “What I have for you to do on this padd, Will, is a brief pro-and-
con worksheet regarding your short and long term goals for healing.  Read it
and fill each space, as honestly as you can.”
            I looked at the worksheet, which was a simple spreadsheet.  There
were two rows and four columns.  The two rows were entitled “Continuing as I
am” and “Getting help.”  The columns were short-term, pro and con, and long-
term, pro and con. 
            “Who is going to read this?” I asked.
            “This is for me, as your case manager,” Deanna answered, “and your
treatment team.”
            “Which consists of?”
            “Myself, Captain Picard, Dr Crusher, and Gwyn Otaka,” she said,
“who is your nutritionist, and your therapist, when he arrives.  I imagine, but
I don’t yet know, that we will be adding Jai Patel as your physical therapist
to the team.”
            “Not Starfleet?”
            Deanna said, “Captain Picard has already discussed that issue with
you.  I need you to answer this honestly, Will.”
            “But – oh, all right,” I said ungraciously.
            She went to work on her padd – probably finding more stupid self-
assessments for me to take – and I looked at the spreadsheet.  Short-term goal,
Continuing as I am, pro.  It was hard to think there were any reasons in the
short-term for me to continue to be a resistant asshole, except that maybe  -
- just maybe – it gave me some semblance of control.  I wrote down that I had
some control over my current situation by being where I was.  The cons were
pretty obvious.  Being in sickbay, being treated as if I were unsafe, being
yelled at by everyone, having nothing to do.  For getting help in the short-
term, I put down that maybe people would stop yelling at me.  Or maybe I would
stop pissing people off.  The cons were filling out self-assessment forms and
having to talk about stuff I didn’t remember.  For the long-term, the pros were
that I didn’t have to think about the bad stuff, that I could continue to
pretend it didn’t exist, and that maybe PTSD was a bit like other illnesses,
and I could go into some sort of a remission on my own.  The cons were that I
would lose my job and have no where to go.  The pros – Deanna had said that
there were better treatments for what I had.  Jean-Luc said that he wouldn’t
send me anywhere, and that I could trust him.  I wrote down that maybe I could
get better, and I could get my job back.  The cons were pretty simple – none of
this stuff would work, and I should just go ahead and try to end everything,
only do it correctly this time.
            “Will you send it to me?” Deanna asked.
            I nodded, and clicked send.
            “We’re going to breathe for another five minutes,” Deanna said,
“and then I have some tests I want you to take.  They will appear random and
maybe a little strange to you, Will, but there is a definite medical reason
behind them.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            She took me through the breathing again, and then gave me a series
of tests that had to do with picking out one number, or one letter, or one
word, out of a series.  Then she gave me some memory tests, where I had to
recite alphabet letters and nonsense words back to her, as many as I could
remember.  This went on for about thirty minutes or so, until I was ready to
have another meltdown.
            “We’re done,” she said at last.  “You don’t have to start throwing
things, Will.”
            I felt my face colour.  “You know about that?”
            “Of course,” she said.  “I’ve talked to the captain about leaving
the therapy to me.”  She smiled.
            “Is that what he was trying to do?” I asked.  It was hard not to
smile back at her, even though she’d given me those stupid tests.
            “He assures me that he was not actually trying to take a
therapeutic approach to you,” she said, “but at this point, talking to you
about your feelings is probably going to produce more ‘feelings’ than the
captain was expecting.”
            I snorted.  “He was as cool as a cucumber,” I said.  “Da Costa came
charging in like the fucking cavalry and he simply told him to stand down.”
            Deanna said, “He’s handled scarier situations than your temper
tantrums, my love.”
            “So if he’s no longer in charge of my counselling – “ and I paused
here, remembering what he’d called “counselling,” “—what is he in charge of?”
            Deanna smirked.  “We’ve made him in charge of hugs and kisses,” she
said.
            I could feel myself turning scarlet, and she laughed.  “There are
times when I really, really hate you,” I said.  But I could just see Jean-Luc’s
face as Deanna and Beverly told him his new job, and I burst out laughing.
            She stood up, and came around the desk and hugged me.  “See, you
feel better already,” she said as she kissed me on my cheek.
            “What am I supposed to do while you are all in there talking about
me?” I said.
            “You can go back to tormenting Joao da Costa,” she quipped, and she
opened the door to da Costa standing right outside it.
            I had to hand it to da Costa.  He’d have had to be deaf, not to
have heard what Deanna had said, and yet he never even twitched.
            “If I can keep the padd,” I said hopefully, “I could finish that
novel you told me about.  I’ll be good, I promise.”
            Beverly walked out of her office.  “Actually, Will,” she said, “I’m
going to check your vitals before we decide anything.”
            “You’re not going to sedate me again,” I said.
            “I’d prefer not to,” she replied.
            The doors opened and the captain walked in, and both Deanna and I
just about fell to the floor.
            He looked perplexed.  “You seem in better spirits, Number One,” he
said.
            I pulled myself together.  “I’m trying to be good,” I said.
            “Indeed.”  He looked a little sceptical.
            “You’re doing fine, Commander,” Beverly said, as if there weren’t
two conversations going on around her.
            I sat back down on the bed.  “So I can have the padd?” I asked.
            “That’s up to the captain,” Deanna said.
            “I thought that wasn’t his job anymore,” I said.
            The captain said, “I’ve been relieved of a job?”
            Deanna said, warningly, “Will.”
            “Just your counselling job,” I said innocently.
            He stared at me for a minute and then he said, “I hope no one’s
taking away riding too.”
            I heard Deanna choke, and I looked at the floor.
            “At some point,” Beverly said, “someone had better clue me in on
all the innuendo flying around here.  In the meantime, Commander,” she said,
looking rather pointedly at me, “you may use a padd as long as it is, as you
said, to finish the novel you were reading.”
            “Sir,” I said.
            “Now,” Beverly continued, “that we’ve got that settled, the meeting
needs to get started.”  She turned to da Costa.  “You may give Commander Riker
a padd.  He can read or he can rest in bed.  If he wants something to drink, he
can have juice –“ she looked at me “—other than orange – or water.  You’re
scheduled for lunch at noon, Commander.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            Beverly turned and walked into her office, and Deanna followed, but
not before giving me a quick smile.  Jean-Luc waited until they’d left, and
then he said,
            “I’m sure you’ll elucidate the joke at some point, Number One.”
            “Aye, sir,” I said, my face colouring again.
            He stared at me for a minute, and then he shook his head.
            “I know,” I said, “I’m a royal pain in your arse.”
            “How true.”  He gave me a bemused smile, and walked into Beverly’s
office.
            “Well, da Costa,” I said.  “It’s just me and you again.”
            I wasn’t sure, but I thought I saw da Costa roll his eyes as he
went into Room 2 to fetch the padd.
 
 
 
           
 
           
           
           
 
***** Interlude: Four *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard gets some advice from an old friend.
Chapter Notes
     "The effects of trauma can extend far outward, touching those around
     the survivor...." Zayfert and DeViva, pp 230.
Interlude:  Four
 
 
 
 
 
 
            Picard was knackered after watching Will fall asleep.  He’d spoken
briefly to Beverly, and then had left sickbay with the intention of returning
to his quarters and passing out.  But in the turbo lift he realised, suddenly,
that his quarters would be empty.  That Will wouldn’t be on his way there, with
his toiletries and a handful of clothes, not surreptitiously coming down the
corridor but discreetly, perhaps, not wanting to be seen by a crewman walking
by as the first officer ducked into the captain’s quarters with his
bedclothes.  The last night they’d had together had been more than Picard had
hoped for, without even realising that he’d been hoping at all.
            Well, he wasn’t going to get all sentimental over it, but perhaps
it would be nice to have a small drink, and he turned himself around and headed
to Ten Forward.  He didn’t actually think he wanted companionship – he could
have just stayed in sickbay and had a drink with Beverly, she looked as if she
could have used one – but he didn’t want to face his empty bed just yet.
            He walked into Ten Forward and was immediately aware that there was
surprise in the room; the captain showing up was a bit out of the ordinary. 
Still, he was sure that the entire ship was well aware of the first officer’s
life-threatening injury – that’s how it had deliberately been given out – and
so perhaps there might be some indulgence, if, after a long day, the captain
felt the need of a drink.  He saw Data and Worf and Geordi together at a corner
table – he knew he’d have to say hello, at least – but he had no real desire to
update them on Will’s status.
            He stood at the bar and ordered a whiskey.  He hated synthehol, and
he knew Guinan kept some real whiskey under the counter for him, but she wasn’t
at the bar -- He was looking at the table by the window, currently empty, where
Will usually held court, particularly when he was one-on-one with someone,
talking over personnel issues with Deanna, or having lunch with Geordi –
            “Picard,” Guinan said, “you don’t want to drink that.”  She took
the shot glass of synthehol away, and poured him a shot of the real stuff she
kept for him.  “Here, drink this down, then have another.”
            He felt his lips curve upward a fraction.  “Have one yourself,” he
said.
            “Don’t mind if I do,” she replied.  “Commander Riker’s table is
free,” she commented.  “Let’s go sit.”
            He sighed, but took the glass and followed her to Will’s table.  He
pulled the chair out for her, and she smiled, briefly, before she sat.  He sat
down slowly, as if his bones were aching.  He felt – even though he rarely sat
at this table, with Will – curiously bereft.
            Guinan sipped her drink.  He looked at his and then gazed out the
window.  They were wrapping up the survey; would be done in a day or so.  Then
it would be on to Starbase 515 to pick up the specialist in Will’s treatment. 
He looked back at the table, and then picked up the glass and took a sip.
            “I should give you the stuff I have in my quarters,” he said.
            Guinan said, “It’s not wrong, Picard.”
            He looked up at her, surprised.
            “What’s not wrong?” he asked.
            Guinan took another drink and watched him.
            “It hasn’t seemed to help him,” he replied, finally.
            “How would you know that?” she asked quietly.
            “Look at where he is,” he said bitterly.  “Look at what he’s done.”
            “Exactly,” Guinan said.  “He’s in sickbay.  Not a cargo hold.”
            Picard sighed.  “If Starfleet finds out – “
            “No one on this ship will tell them,” Guinan said.
            “No.” He took another drink and finished the glass.
            “What bothers you the most, Picard?” she queried.  “What he did?”
            “No,” Picard said.  “I can understand the desire to stop the pain.”
            “That he doesn’t love you enough to want to work things out with
you?”
            That hit too close to home.  “Is it that which hurts so much?” he
asked.
            Guinan took his hand.  “Picard,” she said.  “William Riker doesn’t
remember what love is.  He lost it when he was a baby.  You can’t fault him for
not knowing how to do it.”
            Picard said hopelessly, “Then what do I do?”
            “That’s easy, Picard,” Guinan said, smiling.  “That little boy had
a mother who loved him.  You’ve seen her records.  She would have fit well, as
first officer on this ship.  As her son does now.  Help him remember her.”
            “We’ll need the father for that,” Picard said.  “And currently I’d
like to kill him.”
            “It was a perfect storm of circumstances that hurt that little
boy,” Guinan said.  “Kyle Riker was only part of it.”
            “The essential part,” Picard said.  “The part that did the most
damage.  I had so much trouble, I thought, pleasing my father, trying to get
him to love me the way I was, not the way he wanted me to be.  But he always
loved me.  He always was a father to me.  He always did his best for me.  I
don’t understand the evil that is someone like Kyle Riker.”
            “And yet look at the tremendous good he has done for the
Federation,” Guinan said.
            “Fuck the Federation,” Picard said.  “They had a responsibility to
protect Will, and they fed him to that monster.”
            “Life is much more complicated than that, Picard,” Guinan said. 
“It’s never that clear-cut.”
            “There is never,” Picard responded in a low voice, “justification
for sexually abusing a child.”
            “No,” Guinan agreed. 
            Picard sighed.
            “LaForge needs to hear from you that this was not his fault,”
Guinan said after a while.  “And Data has some questions that only Will can
answer.  And Worf is not totally convinced that there wasn’t some sort of an
enemy that he should have been protecting Will from.”
            Picard groaned.  “In the morning,” he said.
            “Don’t leave it too long.  Especially not LaForge.”
            “No,” Picard said.  “The treatment plan meeting is tomorrow.”
            “Are you going to call Kyle Riker?” Guinan persisted.
            “There is no way that Will is ready to face his father, not now,”
Picard said.
            Guinan repeated, “Are you going to call Kyle Riker?”
            “It’s what I should do,” Picard said.  “His flashback is about his
mother, I think.”
            “He loves you, Picard,” Guinan said.  “As best he can, he loves
you.  He needs you to be strong where he can’t be.”
            “Yes,” Picard said.  “I will communicate with Kyle Riker.  I’ll
bring it up tomorrow at the meeting.  But Deanna is not going to like it.”
            “Deanna needs to let him go,” Guinan said.  “It’s you he needs
right now, Picard.”
            “How are you so wise?” Picard asked wonderingly, and was amazed to
find that there were tears in his eyes.
            Guinan’s face widened into a broad smile.  “Live as long as I have,
Picard,” she said, “and you’ll find you don’t have a choice.”
            Picard found himself smiling in return.  “Thank you, my friend,” he
said simply.
            Guinan shrugged.  “Q isn’t the only one who can help Will,” she
said, “and I can do it without distorting the space-time continuum.”
            Picard choked back a laugh.  “Indeed,” he said. 
            LaForge came over and stood waiting patiently for Picard to notice
him.  Guinan smiled at LaForge, and left the table, nodding once to Data and
Worf.  She disappeared behind the bar, talking as she did so to Miles O’Brien
and the crew chief from bio.
            “Yes, Mr LaForge?” Picard said.
            “How is Commander Riker, sir?” LaForge asked.
            “He is recovering,” Picard said.  “It will be some time before he
is well enough to return to duty.”
            LaForge said, “I should have stopped him.”
            Picard stood up, and tugged at his tunic.  “Mr LaForge,” he said. 
“I don’t believe that any one of us could have stopped him.  It won’t help his
recovery to feel guilty over what happened.  We just have to support him now,
so that he can heal.”
            “Yes, sir,” LaForge said.  He sounded like a little boy, and Picard
rested his hand on LaForge’s shoulder.
            “Geordi,” he said.  “You and Guinan did what you could.  And those
seconds that you saved, by realising that something was terribly wrong and
contacting me directly, are what enabled us to save Will’s life.  I am very
grateful to you, for that.”
            He brought his hand down, and then he walked away quickly, before
he made an utter fool of himself in front of Geordi LaForge.
 
            In his quarters, he organised Will’s belongings, giving him a
drawer where Will could put his clothes, and tucking Will’s padd away in the
nightstand.  Then he opened up communications with the Federation, and patched
through a request for Kyle Riker to contact him at his earliest convenience.
 
           
 
***** Chapter 23 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will remembers what happened in the CSU when he was seven.
Chapter Notes
     Cognitive-Behavioural therapy only works if the patient is allowed to
     work through the traumatising memories. By constantly retelling the
     memory, adding details and understanding the traumatising situation
     and the reasons for his reaction (at that time) to it, the patient is
     able to process the memory correctly and store it properly, where it
     will no longer be triggered by stressful situations. This is an
     extremely painful process, one the patient does not want to
     participate in, but one in which he must.
Chapter Twenty-Three
 
 
 
 
 
           
 
            My head was pounding so hard I could barely breathe.  It felt as if
someone were slamming it, over and over again, into concrete, or maybe it was
tiled floor, because I could smell disinfectant or bleach burning my nostrils
and my eyes.  I was begging him to stop, to stop hurting me, please stop
hurting me, oh God my head, it hurts please I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean
it….
            From far away I could hear someone calling out, and then I felt
strong arms holding me, and I could hear someone – I didn’t know who – telling
me that I was going to be all right, but my head hurt so bad that I couldn’t
really hear what he was saying, couldn’t really tell what was going on, and I
kept asking for it to stop.
            I thought I heard Jean-Luc say, “Thank you, Mr da Costa, I have him
now,” and I felt Jean-Luc’s arms around me, almost as if he were cradling me,
and I heard da Costa say,
            “Captain, he’s in the middle of it, just talk to him softly, you’ll
be able to bring him out of it,”
and then I heard Jean-Luc say, in that mild voice of his, right next to my ear,
            “Mon cher, it’s all right, you’re going to be all right.  You’re
right here in sickbay, and I have you.  No one’s hurting you.  You can open
your eyes; you’re all right.”
            I heard Deanna say, “He can’t go on like this.  We have to get Dr
McBride now.”
            Beverly said, “It’s all right, Will, I’m going to give you
something for the pain.”
            “The pain isn’t real, Doctor,” da Costa said.  “It’s remembered
pain.”
            And Jean-Luc said, “I don’t care whether the pain is real or
imaginary.  Just help him.”
            I felt a hypo spray in my neck.
 
 
 
            I opened my eyes.  I was in a room, not the ICU, but one of the
small private rooms off the main ward of sickbay.  I hesitated to move, because
I was afraid if I did, my head would start hurting again, but there was no real
pain now, just a dull ache behind my eyes.  My arms hurt.  I tried to sit up,
and suddenly da Costa was beside me, helping me up and propping the pillows
behind my back.  I recognised the strength of his arms; he’d been the one who
had first held me when my head was hurting.
            “Do you know where you are, Commander?” he asked.  His voice was
surprisingly mellow, with a small accent to it that I hadn’t noticed before.
            “Sickbay,” I said.  “Why have I been moved in here?”
            “Dr Crusher was concerned that you were being over-stimulated by
being in the open ward, sir,” he said.  “She thought you would rest better
here.”
            “My head hurt, and she created a locked ward?” I asked.
            “Sir,” da Costa said, and he bent down, so that he was eye level
with me, and I suddenly realised why he was assigned to me, why he was a
medical crewman, and not working with Worf.  “The door is open.  There is no
locked ward.  Your flashbacks are being triggered, and, as of yet, we don’t
know what the triggers are.  It’s best to keep you in a controlled environment,
until it can be determined just what you’re reacting to.”
            “When my head was hurting,” I said, slowly, “that was a flashback.”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa said.  “You were reading and you seemed to
fall asleep.  However,” and he looked at me a little grimly, I thought, “you
were more or less in a disassociative state.  Then the flashback occurred.”
            “I was remembering my head hurting,” I said.  “I heard you say
that.  That was you, wasn’t it?”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa confirmed.  “You were remembering the pain.”
            “But I don’t remember anything else,” I began, but then I said,
“That’s not true.  I remember the smell of disinfectant, a hospital smell.”
            Da Costa said, “Do you smell it now?”
            “We’re in sickbay,” I said.  “It’s not as strong, but it’s there.”
            Da Costa was quiet for a moment, and then he said, kindly, “Would
you like me to get Dr Crusher for you?”
            “No,” I said.  “It’s not the same, now.”
            “Would you like some water, sir?” he asked.
            “Yes,” I said. 
            There was a pitcher of water on the table, and he poured me a cup. 
He handed it to me, but my arm was so sore I could barely hold it.
            “Here, sir,” he said.  He held the cup for me – I noticed that it
was a cup, not a glass – and I took a few sips.  “You’re in pain again, sir? 
Are you sure you don’t want me to call Dr Crusher?”
            “I don’t want anymore drugs,” I said.  “I feel so woozy as it is.”
            “Don’t let the pain go on too long, sir,” he said.  “Otherwise, it
will be overwhelming.”
            “Okay.”  I lay back against the bed and closed my eyes.
            I felt him wipe my jaw and neck where I’d spilled some of the
water, and then he pulled the covers up around me.
            “Can I get you anything else, sir?” he asked.
            I shook my head.  I could still feel the ache, just around and
above my left eye.  “I should know you,” I said.
            “Sir.”
            “I signed your orders when you came aboard,” I added.
            “Aye, sir.”
            “You’re Portuguese.” I was trying to remember something, but it was
eluding me.
            “Yes, sir,” he said.  “Don’t worry about it, sir.  You need to
rest.”
            “Haven’t I got that treatment meeting to go to?” I was trying to
stay awake.
            “It was postponed until you’re feeling better, sir,” da Costa said.
            I said, “We’re at warp speed.”
            “Aye, sir,” he agreed, sounding a little surprised.
            I opened my eyes.  “It’s my ship,” I said.  “I know when we’re at
warp speed.”
            “Of course, sir,” da Costa said.
            I glanced at him, wondering if he was patronising me, but he didn’t
seem to be.  Then I remembered him.  “I was on the Hood,” I said.  “We were
called to evacuate a science station near the Neutral Zone….That was you, I
think.  Your family.  There was some sort of chemical disaster, and it was
complicated by the Romulans….You must have been a kid,” I said.
            Da Costa said, “I was fourteen, sir.”
            “Your brother was injured,” I said.  “I remember that now.”
            “My mother,” da Costa said, “would want you to know that my brother
is fine, now.”
            I opened my eyes again and looked at him.  “You’re here because of
that?” I asked.
            He said, stiffly, “We pay back what we owe, Commander.  It’s a
matter of honour.”
            “I remember that word, ‘honour,’” I said.  “I don’t know that I
have any, anymore.  I was so concerned about it when I was younger.”
            He said, with some emotion, “You are one of the most honourable men
I have ever met, sir.”
            “I’ve been an asshole to you,” I said.
            “Sir,” da Costa said.  “You are struggling with a difficult
illness.  You are used to command, yet you are being treated as if you were a
child.  I understand that, sir.”
            I was quiet, trying to calm what felt like an emotional storm
rising in me.  “You know this illness,” I said, finally.
            “Sir,” da Costa said.  “You need to rest.”
            “I’m tired of resting,” I said, but I closed my eyes.
 
 
 
 
            I heard Jean-Luc say, “Mr da Costa,” and da Costa reply, “Captain,
sir.”
            “Has he been asleep all this time?”
            “No, sir,” da Costa said.  “He was awake for a little bit.”
            “You’re doing too many shifts,” the captain said. 
            “Beta shift is almost over, sir,” I heard da Costa say.  “I’ll be
relieved then.”
            The captain said, “Does he know who you are?”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.  “He remembered when he was awake a few hours
ago.”
            I felt Jean-Luc’s hand on mine, and I heard him say,
            “Will.  You missed your lunch.  Are you hungry?”
            “No,” I said.  “I feel nauseous.”
            “I have him, Mr da Costa,” the captain said.  “Go take a break.”
            “Aye, sir.”
            I felt Jean-Luc sit on the edge of the bed next to me.  “Move over
a bit, mon cher,” he said quietly.
            “I’ll fall out,” I said, but I scooted over a bit.
            “We wouldn’t want that,” he said, and I could hear amusement in his
voice.  “Do you want me to get Beverly?”
            “No,” I said.  “I don’t want any more drugs.”
            “Are you in pain?” he asked.
            “My arms hurt,” I said.
            “So I should get Beverly, then,” he said.
            I opened my eyes.  “Please,” I said.  “I don’t want any more hypo
sprays.”
            “For now, then,” he said.
            I closed my eyes again, and felt him take my hand.
            “Don’t you have a ship to run?” I asked.
            “I’m running my ship,” he said.  “My shift is over, Number One. 
I’m on call, now.  You’re not accusing me of not doing my job, are you?”
            I could tell he was smiling.  “Who’s on the bridge?”
            “Mr Worf,” he said.  “Is there a personnel problem we need to
discuss, Number One?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “You need a new first officer.”
            He was quiet.  “Why is that, Will?” he asked seriously.
            “Because I’m not going to get better,” I said.  “Not anytime soon. 
If ever.  You need to replace me, or they will.”
            “Are you giving up, mon cher?” he asked. 
            I looked at him.  “Sir,” I said.  “I officially resign my position
as first officer of this ship.”
            He sighed.  “I won’t accept it, mon cher,” he said.
            I closed my eyes. 
“You’ve never given up on difficult assignments before, Will,” he said.  “So
why are you giving up on yourself?”
I said, “You can take this ship at warp nine, sir, and you can pick up this
doctor, but –“ I opened my eyes and looked at him, “I am not functioning.  I
don’t see how I am going to be functioning. It would have been better –much
better – if you had just let me die.”  I closed my eyes.
“Are we back to that, then?” he said.  “I thought we had resolved that issue.”
“You had,” I said.  “I’m tired, Jean-Luc.”
“Jean-Luc?” I heard Beverly say.
He stood up, paused, and then bent over and kissed me on my face.  “You rest,
then, mon cher,” he said.
I heard him leave the room, and then I was aware there was someone else
standing near my bed.  I opened my eyes and saw that it was da Costa’s
replacement, a crewman named Stoch.  I could hear Jean-Luc’s voice, low and
insistent, talking to Beverly, and hers, slightly higher, with an edge of
frustration, but I couldn’t make out what they were saying, and, truly, I
didn’t care.  He’d ordered the survey to end early; he’d ordered the ship at
warp speed – probably four, I thought – en route to Starbase 515 to pick up
this doctor, Deanna’s specialist in PTSD.  He hadn’t sent a truthful report to
Starfleet command about what I’d done, but their radar would be up and running
with his actions now.  True, we were close to the Neutral Zone already, with
this survey, but Starbase 515 was much closer, and I didn’t see how he could
justify picking up an eminent specialist in PTSD coincidentally after the first
officer has an unspecified and life-threatening accident.
It was better, I thought, still fighting the ever-present nausea and the dull
ache behind my left eye, for me to just come clean.  There would be a lull in
the monitoring of me at some point, probably during the quiet hours of gamma
shift, when I could make a simple report to Starfleet and offer my letter of
resignation.  Jean-Luc wouldn’t get in trouble, then, and neither would Beverly
or Deanna, for colluding with him and leaving the flagship without a first
officer at the edge of the Neutral Zone.  I closed my eyes, and tried to ignore
the pounding of my head and the waves of nausea.
 
 
Someone was smashing my head into the floor.  His hands were large, as large as
half my head, and he was pounding me, face first, into a tiled floor that
smelled of bleach and disinfectant.  I could feel the bleach burning my
nostrils and my eyes and my mouth, which was open, because I was screaming, and
there was blood pouring down my face, and the copper smell was mixing with the
bleach smell, and then I was choking on the blood that was streaming down my
throat, and I couldn’t breathe, I was screaming but I couldn’t breathe, and I
thought – when did I think that? – I thought, Jean-Luc, because he wouldn’t let
anyone smash my head, but I was so confused, it hurt and I wanted Jean-Luc
because he could make it stop.
I felt Jean-Luc wrap his arms around me again, and for some strange reason I
heard da Costa say, “Make him tell you what he’s remembering, sir,”
and I heard Beverly say, “Deanna’s on her way, Jean-Luc, but I think it’s best
to heavily sedate him.”
“Will,” Jean-Luc was speaking in a calm voice into my ear, “Will, tell me what
you are seeing.”
“The floor,” I said, “there’s blood on the floor.”
“Whose blood is on the floor, Will?”
“It’s my blood,” I said, and I could feel there were tears running down my face
and down my neck.
“Why are you bleeding?” He was wiping my face with something warm.
“My head,” I said.
“Your head is bleeding, Will?” he asked.
“Jean-Luc, his blood pressure is too high,” Beverly said.
I heard Deanna say, “The captain is right.  He has to voice the memory.  It’s
consuming him, Beverly.  He has to talk it through or this will never stop.”
“Help me hold him, Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said, and I felt another pair of
strong arms on the other side of me, holding me down.
“Listen to me, Number One,” the captain said.  He was using the captain’s
voice.  “Can you hear me, Mr Riker?”
“Aye, sir,” I said.
“Good.  I am going to give you a direct order, do you understand?”
“Aye, sir,” I said.
“I want you to tell me everything you see,” he said.  “Tell me about your
head.  Tell me why it’s bleeding.  Tell me about the floor.  That’s a direct
order, Commander.”
“Sir,” I said.  “The floor is tiled,” I said.  “It’s grey, I think.  With
swirls in it.  White swirls.  There’s a man – he’s big, bigger than me – he’s
got me on the floor, and he’s banging my head into the floor.”
“Breathe, Will,” Deanna said.
I took a breath.  “It hurts,” I said.  “It really hurts.  He’s banging my head
again and again into the floor.  And I hear a crack, it sounds just like a
crack, and there’s blood coming down my face, from my head and from my nose. 
The floor smells of bleach.  It’s burning my eyes and my mouth.  I’m telling
him to stop – no, I’m crying, and I’m screaming at him to stop, but then
there’s blood in my mouth and I’m choking, I can’t breathe,” I said, “I can’t
breathe, it hurts –“
“Commander,” the captain says, “you’re not telling me everything.  Why is the
man banging your head into the floor?”
“I killed him,” I said.  “I killed him.  I stabbed him, and he screamed, and
there was blood, and then the man came, and threw me to the floor, and then he
was banging my head.”
“What happened after you were choking?”
“The doctor was shouting, and someone pulled the man off, and then they put me
on a bed and I was being wheeled down the hall.  I don’t remember,” I said.  “I
don’t remember after that.”
“You were in a hospital?” Deanna asked.
“I was on the unit,” I said.  “I was there because I’d been bad.”
“He was there,” Jean-Luc said, “because he’d walked out in the snow to try to
kill himself.  This happened when he was seven.”
“You told me about this, Captain,” Deanna said.  “You said he wanted to turn to
stone.”
“Who did you kill, Commander?” the captain asked.
“I can’t remember,” I said.
He said, “I gave you a direct order, Number One.”
“He’s had enough, Jean-Luc,” Beverly protested.
“He has my orders, Dr Crusher,” the captain said sharply.  “I don’t accept
that, Number One.  You know very well what happened.  Tell me.”
“I don’t want to,” I said.
“Jean-Luc, please,” Beverly said.
“He has to tell,” I heard da Costa say.  “He has to.”
I was crying.  “I didn’t know it would be like that,” I said.
“That’s not an excuse, Number One,” the captain insisted.  “What happened?”
I said, “I went into the bathroom and he was waiting for me.  The stylus was in
my hand and my hand was in my pocket.  He went to hold me and I stabbed him.  I
stabbed him in the neck and the chest and his arm.  He started to scream and I
tried to run away.  I don’t want to tell this,” I said.  “Please don’t make me
tell this.  And then the b-tech came and threw me across the room and on the
floor and then he was pounding my head in the floor saying that I’d killed
him.”
“Dear God,” Beverly said.
“You should have let me die,” I said.  “You should have let me die.”
“William,” Jean-Luc said.  “Look at me.”  He held my face up, so that I had to
look at him.  “You are remembering something terrible that happened when you
were a little boy.  Whatever happened then is past. It’s over.  It can’t hurt
you now, in the present.”
Deanna said, “The memory keeps coming back because you didn’t process it then,
because you couldn’t.  But we can help you work through it now, Will.”
“I don’t want to remember,” I said, and I couldn’t help the sullen tone in my
voice.  “I did terrible things.”
“Did you?” Jean-Luc asked.  “So far I’ve pieced together the story of a very
bright little boy who had terrible things done to him.”
I didn’t say anything, because the tone in the captain’s voice was one that you
didn’t argue with.   Beverly was checking me again, and then she turned to da
Costa, who should have been off-duty but who for some reason was in the room
with me.  The other crewman – I didn’t remember which one – was gone.
“He’s dehydrated and his blood pressure is up,” she said.  “Get Ogawa to set up
fluids.  Captain,” she said, “he’s had enough.  I’m taking over here.  I want
everyone out.”
            “I don’t want to leave him,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Then stay out of my way,” Dr Crusher said, “and let me take care
of my patient.”
            “Of course,” Jean-Luc said mildly, and he let me go and stood up,
moving out of Beverly’s way.  “Can you treat him in here?”
            “Yes,” she said testily, “if you will all just leave him alone.” 
She came over to me.  “Will,” she said, and her tone was very calm.  “I am
going to give you something for the nausea and the pain.  I am also going to
give you fluids.  When you wake up, you should feel a little better, all
right?”
            I nodded.  “I don’t want to remember anymore,” I said.
            “I know, Will,” she said, and I realised she was using the same
voice she’d used when she was speaking to Wesley.  “It will be all right, I
promise.  You just try to rest.”
            This time I was relieved when I felt the pressure of the hypo spray
against my neck.
             
 
 
 
           
 
           
           
           
           
 
           
***** Interlude: Five *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard speaks to Kyle Riker.
Chapter Notes
     I think Picard says it all: "Oh, Will, how could you ever have been
     so afraid of this terrible little man?"
Interlude:  Five
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
            Eventually Picard had retreated to his ready room, because he was
still on-call and because the situation in sickbay was so tense.  Beverly was
furious because Will’s condition had deteriorated so quickly, and while they’d
gotten some useful information from Will about the nature of one of the
flashbacks, it had been at a tremendous cost.  The truth was, they were flying
blind, and he would be relieved when Dr McBride was finally onboard.  Deanna
had promised that she would, working with Mr Data, attempt to find out what had
happened to Will in the hospital in Valdez. 
            The idea that Will thought that as a seven-year-old he had killed
someone chilled him to the bone, and yet he remembered that Tasha Yar had had
similar stories from her own traumatised childhood.  And yet the Will that he
knew was a man who used humour to maintain morale and solve personnel issues,
who had a way with children that Picard could only envy, and whose affable
nature as first officer created a well-ordered working environment.  That such
a man could develop from a child who had killed didn’t make any sense.
            It had to be a mistake on Will’s part, Picard thought, and he hoped
that Troi and Data would find out the answers quickly.  Will’s mood had been
deteriorating along with his physical health, and Picard was worried that Will
was spiraling into a deeper depression.
            He’d tried to work on the backlog of paperwork, most of it not
urgent but all of it having been ignored since Will’s suicide attempt, but he
found he didn’t have the patience or the attention span to do anything other
than glance at the growing pile.  Finally he’d moved from behind his desk to
the sofa, and he found himself lying down.  If anyone needed him – and he hoped
sincerely that no one did – he would be easily found.
            He heard the door chime, and he attempted to sit up before the
doors opened.  Worf said,
            “I’m sorry to bother you, sir.”
            “No bother, Mr Worf,” he replied, sitting up.  “I thought I’d just
rest my eyes for a bit.”
            “You should go to bed,” Worf responded, “sir.”
            “I’m still on call, Mr Worf,” Picard said.  “I’ll make it an early
night, though.”  He paused, waiting for Worf to state his business, and then he
said, kindly, “You needed something, Mr Worf?”
            “You have an in-coming communication from Kyle Riker,” Worf
informed him.
            “Yes,” Picard said.  “Patch it through to here, please.”
            “Aye, sir,” Worf said.  Then he said, “Commander Riker --?”
            “He’s holding his own,” Picard said.  “I’ll let you know when he’s
well enough to receive visitors.”
            “Aye, sir,” Worf said.  He didn’t say that Picard’s request to
speak to Will Riker’s father had sent a shock wave through the senior staff. 
Usually, the captain spoke to family members for only one reason.
            “Truly, Mr Worf,” Picard said.  “Commander Riker is in serious but
stable condition.”
            Worf seemed relieved.  “Aye, sir,” he said, and left to send the
communication through.
            Picard went into the head and washed his face and hands.  He didn’t
look at himself in the mirror, because he knew what he’d see:  a man who was
too old to be pulling all-nighters, with dark circles under his eyes and a
pasty complexion.  The only cure for the way he looked was sleep, and he had a
feeling that sleep, after speaking with Kyle Riker, wouldn’t be happening.
            He sat down at his desk, and considered what he wanted to say to
the man.  He opened his padd and looked at the growing file of information he’d
collected on Will, paging through hospital records – those he could access –
and personnel files, as well as the notes accumulated by himself, and Beverly,
and Deanna.  His Academy records were there, mostly stellar, since he’d
graduated eighth in what had been a highly competitive class.  Education
records from Valdez, with the ad hoc program that had been put together when
the public school had recognised that they’d been dealing with an exceptional
child.  He should really, he thought, start putting calls through to the people
left in Valdez, the ones whose names he saw over and over again:  Martin and
Anastassia Shugak, Gareth Davies, Maxim Demetrioff, Henry Ivanov.  He glanced
at the name Ivanov again, and realised that it belonged to a Starfleet master
chief whom he had known briefly from his very first ship.  Perhaps Ivanov was
still alive; he could pull a few strings and find out from Starfleet.
            He looked at the questions he wanted to ask Riker, and then put his
captain’s face on, firmly, when the call came through.
            “Captain Picard,” Riker said.  He looked mostly the same, since the
last time Picard had seen him, when he’d arrived to brief Will on the Aries. 
Older; his face a little more florid; his hair whiter.  Picard could see
absolutely no resemblance at all between this stocky man and his own tall first
officer.  Will was, apparently, truly his mother’s son.  Riker was a man known
not to beat about the bush.  “What’s wrong with my son?”
            Picard stopped himself from saying, waspishly, You tell me.  Before
he could say anything, Riker said, in an odd tone,
            “Are you notifying me?”
and Picard wondered just what Kyle Riker had been expecting.
            “William was in a shipboard accident,” Picard said instead.  “He
was badly injured, and it was touch-and-go for about forty-eight hours.  He
has, however, begun his recovery.  He currently is in –“ and he echoed the same
thing he had told Worf, “serious but stable condition.”
            “He’s been injured before and you haven’t notified me,” Riker
said.  “Why are you notifying me now, Picard?  What kind of an accident?”
            “I think,” Picard said, in a very slow and dangerous voice, “that
perhaps you ought to allow me to ask the questions here, Mr Riker.”
            Riker didn’t show any surprise at this change in tone.  He was
quiet, and then he said, “So it’s started, has it?”
            “Has what started, Mr Riker?” Picard asked.
            “He is, Captain Picard, exactly the same age that his mother was
when she died.”
            “And?”
            “And I wondered,” Riker said, and briefly Picard saw a flicker of
emotion cross the man’s face, “if this would act as a catalyst for Will’s
memories.  What I mean is,” Riker said, and there was absolutely no guile on
the man’s face, and yet Picard couldn’t help but wonder how he could say what
he was saying without any understanding of the horror of what he was saying,
“Will has forgotten most of his childhood, primarily the years before he was
ten.  What he does remember is simply what he’s been told, over and over, so
that he has superficial memories and can tell a few stories, as if he actually
remembered them.”
            “Like his going to kindergarten and saying his mother was still
alive,” Picard said.
            “Exactly,” Riker replied.  “He was told that story so many times he
thinks he remembers it.”
            Picard was quiet.  He wondered if Riker even cared that Picard knew
– at least a little bit – why Will had forgotten his childhood before the age
of ten.
            Finally Picard said, “I need information, Mr Riker.  Critical
information to help in William’s recovery.”
            “So this was not an accident, then,” Riker said.
            “Why do you say that, Mr Riker?” Picard was not a violent man, but
he was beginning to feel a spool of rage coiling in his gut.
            Riker shrugged.  “You’ve contacted me, when you’ve never needed to
before.  And he’s done this before, once.”
            “When he was seven,” Picard said.
            “Yes,” Riker answered.  “What did he do this time?”
            “I’m not sure you need that information,” Picard replied.  “I need
to know what happened.  I need to know specifically what his mother died of,
and how she died, and if William was involved in her death in any way.  And
there are other memories which are coming to the surface.  These memories are
preventing him from healing.  I need to know what happened to him, what the
traumas are, so that we can successfully treat him.”  Riker’s face was simply
set, as if he were listening to Picard talk about warp coils or
nanotechnology.  Picard said, coolly, “I need you to be completely honest, Mr
Riker, about your part in this as well.”
            “So you want my cooperation, to help my son,” Riker said.  “Does he
have a diagnosis, Captain?”
            “He does,” Picard said, “but again, I’m not sure that’s information
you need.”
            “I am his father,” Riker said.
            Picard breathed slowly, thinking about the fathers that he had
known; his own father, Jack Crusher, Miles O’Brien, Robert, his grandfathers. 
He uncoiled his hands and rested them in front of him, on the desk, so that
Riker could see them. 
            He said, “I’m not sure I would use that word to describe you, Mr
Riker.”
            “So you are judge and executioner, then, Picard?” Riker said
bitterly.  “What do you know about being a father or having children?”
            “I know,” Picard said between his teeth, “that fathers do not
physically, or emotionally, or sexually, abuse their children.  I know that as
a son, and a brother, and an uncle.”
            “I have already paid for my sins, Captain Picard,” Kyle Riker said.
 “I have paid heavily.  I do not need to be judged by the likes of you.”
            Picard smiled.  Any one of his crew, upon seeing that smile, would
have wished to have been born in a different time, or a different universe;
Riker’s affect remained exactly the same as it had been.
            “Mr Riker,” Picard said in a low voice, “you will cooperate with
me.”
            “Are you threatening me, Captain?” Riker said.
            Picard smiled again.  “I never threaten,” he said.
            Riker was silent.  Perhaps, Picard thought, he was considering his
options.  Picard certainly hoped that he was.  The rage that was still coiled
in his gut was hoping for something else.
            “What do you need to know?” Riker asked;
            and Picard thought, oh, Will, how could you ever have been so
afraid of this terrible little man?
            “Tell me about William’s mother,” Picard said.  “Tell me about Lt
Commander Elizaveta Christianssen Riker.”
            “She was a good officer,” Riker said.  “I met her on assignment. 
She was brilliant at everything she did.  She played the piano.”  He was
silent.
            “She became ill?”
            “She caught a virus,” Riker continued.  “It was a routine away
mission.  Standard in every way.  Sample collecting.  She didn’t even have to
go, except that she always went on away missions.  She said it was one of the
reasons she loved space.”  Again he paused.  “Did you ever meet her, Picard?”
            “No,” Picard said.  “To my regret.  I heard many good things about
her, of course.  It was one of the reasons I picked your son’s name out of the
file of applicants for first officer.”
            “The virus was in the soil,” Riker said.  “It took only a year to
destroy her, when we’d hoped she’d have had five.  Her goal was to see Billy
off to school.”
            “Billy?” Picard asked.
            “We called him Billy,” Riker said, “when he was a baby.  She used
to sing that song to him; you probably don’t know it.  ‘Oh, where have you
been, Billy Boy, Billy Boy, oh, where have you been, Charming Billy.’”  Again,
Riker seemed lost in a world only he could see.  “When Will went to school he
told everyone his name was William, and that’s what everyone called him.  Henry
Ivanov shortened it to Will.  Eventually I stopped calling him Billy.”
            “Will gets his love of music from her,” Picard said.
            “They would sing together, in the kitchen,” Riker said.  “He was a
baby and yet he could harmonise with her.”
            “It sounds,” Picard said cautiously, “as if you were happy.”
            “She was dying, Picard,” Riker said.  “I tried to be happy, for
her.  It wasn’t in her nature not to be happy.  She loved Billy, and Billy
adored her.”
            “One of the flashbacks that William has described,” Picard said,
“includes the smells of silver polish and cinnamon.  He hears music.  He keeps
seeing blood.”
            Riker looked as if he had been punched.  “He was two, Picard,” he
said.  “How could he possibly remember that?”
            “I am not a psychologist, Mr Riker,” Picard replied.  “Our ship’s
counsellor, Deanna Troi, has explained that William was attached to his
mother.  When she died, the attachment was severed.  The trauma and the
psychological problems stem from that.”
            Riker said, “She told me to bring him to the hospital to see her. 
I told her he was too young, that he wouldn’t remember.  I told her he wasn’t
sleeping, that he wouldn’t behave.  That seeing her would frighten him.”
            “Perhaps not seeing her was even more frightening,” Picard said. 
“Regardless, the damage has been done.  What is it that he is remembering, so
that we can help him work through it?”
            “It was Christmas, and she wanted a party.  It was such a small
thing to ask for,” Riker explained.  “She never asked for anything, other than
that she wanted us to return to her home, and that she wanted Billy to be
raised there, with her people.  We’d decorated the house.  Set up a tree, put
candles in the windows.  She’d been baking.  And she was polishing the special
spoons for the party.  Billy was always her helper, no matter what she was
doing.  I had to go pick up the special cake she’d wanted.  When I left, Billy
was sitting on the kitchen counter, helping her polish the spoons.  I’d found
some old Christmas music, and it was playing.  She was talking to him, and he
was singing to the music.”
            “And?” Picard asked.
            “And when I came home, she was on the kitchen floor, bleeding, and
Billy was beside her, screaming and covered in her blood.  It was the beginning
of the end, Picard.  She’d hemorrhaged from her nose.  She went into the
hospital, and she never came home.”
            “Had he fallen onto the floor?”
            “No,” Riker said in a flat voice.  “She always thought about other
people first.  She’d had the presence of mind, even as she was bleeding out, to
lift him up off the counter and set him on the floor.”
            “I need one more piece of information for now, Mr Riker,” Picard
said.  “We will have to talk again, because there is so much you know, and we
know so little.  Will’s memories come in the form of smells, primarily, and
sounds.  Most of them have to do with blood.”
            “He was hurt a lot,” Riker said.
            Picard drew in a breath.  He was so glad the man was far away. 
“You mean, you hurt him a lot,” he said.  “Do not be disingenuous with me.  You
will regret it, Mr Riker, if you are.”
            Riker said nothing.  “Your threats are empty, Picard,” he said. 
“Nothing can be done to me that hasn’t already been done.”
            “Your son is fighting for his life,” Picard said, “and you expect
me to feel sorry for you?”
            Riker said, wonderingly, “You love him.”
            “Yes,” Picard said, and he was amazed at how good it made him feel
to say it.  “He is a man who is easy to love.  He is kind, and generous, and
brave.  And he is dying, because the one person who should have loved him
didn’t.”
            “What else do you need to know, Captain?” Riker asked, and he
suddenly sounded old and tired.
            “William was in the hospital in Valdez,” Picard said, “after he
tried to kill himself.  On the unit, he called it.  What happened there?”
            “What does he remember?” Riker asked.
            “He remembers someone smashing his head into the floor.  He
remembers blood, and pain.  He remembers stabbing someone.  He is convinced,”
Picard said, “that he murdered a child, even though he was a child himself.”
            “He stabbed a boy who was on the ward with him,” Riker said.  “I
don’t remember what he used.  Something he made.  The boy was ten, and Billy
was seven.  They were sharing a room, something that should never have
happened.  I was away, but I’d been notified that Billy was in the hospital as
soon as Ivanov had found Billy in the snow.  I was on my way home – and it
happened two days before I was supposed to arrive.”
            “Why did he do it?”
            “The boy was hurting him.  Apparently the boy had suffered some
sort of abuse at home – “
            “As had William,” Picard interrupted.
            Riker ignored him.  “And he was acting it out on Billy.  So Billy
stabbed him, multiple times.  One of the behavioural techs broke them apart,
and Billy was injured too.  He was transferred to the ICU with a skull fracture
and a broken nose.”
            “Because the man was pounding his head into the floor,” Picard said
grimly.  “What happened to the other boy?”
            “I don’t know,” Riker said.  “By the time I got there, Billy was in
bad shape.  When he was well, I took him home.  And things were different.”
            “You don’t know,” Picard repeated.  “He’s convinced he killed this
child.”
            “That’s not possible, Picard,” Riker said.  “Billy never hurt
anyone or anything.  He was defending himself.  There were no charges, no
police investigation.  I’m sure the boy was fine.”
            “Things were different, how?” Picard asked.  “You stopped abusing
him at that point?”
            Riker was silent.  “I’ve given you the information you need,
Picard,” he said.  “I think we’re done here.  Please update me on Will’s
status.  Riker out.”
            Picard swore quietly.  He’d made a mistake, allowing his anger to
get the best of him.  They still needed Riker’s knowledge and his cooperation. 
Still, perhaps he could have Dr McBride speak to Kyle Riker about the abuse. 
He was a good diplomat, but there was no way he was going to be able to listen
to Riker’s justifications for raping his seven-year-old son.
            He stood up from the desk, and stretched his aching muscles.  He
was so tired, and yet he knew there was absolutely no way he could go to sleep
now.  He thought about Will, and wondered if Beverly had given him enough to
knock him out for the night, or if he was suffering, by himself, without even
da Costa to stand by him.
            Well, he wasn’t one to dither.  He closed his padd, and left his
quarters.  He’d let Beverly kick him out of Will’s room once.  He wouldn’t let
her kick him out again. 
 
 
 
 
           
           
 
 
 
 
 
           
***** Chapter 25 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will struggles with the knowledge of his memories; Jean-Luc decides
     to take Guinan's advice.
Chapter Notes
     Partners of patients with PTSD must come to terms with the difficulty
     of living with and loving a person who desperately needs love and
     support and yet who will consistently mistrust those who give it and
     will actively push them away. The struggle to love a person with PTSD
     can be exhausting. However, assertiveness, coupled with setting
     simple goals in the relationship, can ease the strain for the
     caregiving partner and help rebuild trust in the partner with PTSD.
Chapter Twenty-Five
 
 
 
 
 
 
            When I awoke again, I didn’t really know where I was.  It was dark,
but the kind of half-dark that is common on hospital wards, where you can see
low lighting outside your room and you can just make out shapes in the
darkness.  For a minute I didn’t remember which hospital I was in.  I had to
close my eyes and reopen them to orient myself as to where and who I was.
            I realised that I was in sickbay, but that I was in the private
room that Beverly had moved me into after I’d had the first flashback.  I
remembered da Costa, then, and I glanced around to see if he was still there,
but of course he wasn’t; it was the middle of the night.  I wondered where the
other medical crewman was, the one who’d taken over for da Costa at the
beginning of gamma shift, the one who’d let da Costa take over even though he’d
been off duty.
            I closed my eyes again.  I didn’t want to think about da Costa, or
about what had happened before.  I didn’t want my head to start hurting; I
didn’t want the nausea to return; I didn’t want to think about what I’d
remembered; what I’d told the captain.
            But it was right there, on the surface, just like a scab waiting to
be picked.
            You have a picture of yourself, of who you are.  You think you’ve
got it fairly accurately, both your good points and your bad.  You pride
yourself on being realistic about yourself.  You know you have your faults: 
you’re too hasty to judge, you use humour as a mask so that people don’t get
too close, the persona you’ve created can be a little too over-the-top.  You’re
sometimes, especially when you were younger, too easily influenced by persons
with authority, or by ideas that can’t really stand the bright light of day. 
At heart you’re a tactitian, or perhaps, a simple pilot.  You enjoy taking
things on the wing, but you’ve grown to temper that with considerations for the
actual crewmembers involved.  You’ve killed, as a soldier, when it was
necessary; when it was defence; when it was war.  You’ve had to send crew to
their deaths, but you haven’t done it eagrely, and you haven’t forgotten it,
ever. 
            So how could you have forgotten the part about yourself where you
killed someone in cold blood?  Where you committed premeditated murder?  How
could you have forgotten that part of yourself?
            It plays like a film in your mind.  You can feel the stylus in your
hand, the denim cloth of your pocket.  You can see yourself drifting – and
that’s what you were doing, drifting – down the hallway, as if you have nothing
better to do than to enter your room in the middle of the day.  You see the
look on his face when you walk into the bathroom.  How can a child have such an
old look upon his face, a look of anticipation, of lust?  You feel his arms
around you and you hear him whisper your name in your ear.  And then you bring
out your hand from its denim hiding place, and you feel the stylus cut through
his skin just like butter, and you watch the blood pooling out, dark and red….
            I opened my eyes and scanned the dark room.  The crewman who was
supposed to be with me was not there.  The room was empty.  I sat up slowly,
because I didn’t know how much Dr Crusher had given me, and I didn’t want to
fall.  I took a couple of deep breaths, letting my eyes adjust to the
darkness.  All of sickbay was quiet; it was probably after midnight.  I swung
my legs over the side of the bed and then had to grab onto the nightstand to
steady myself.  Only last week I’d been able to do anything I wanted; now I
could barely sit up.
            I stood up, my hand still resting on the nightstand to steady
myself, and paused, swaying a bit, while I tried to get my balance.  When I was
sure that I could walk without falling, I let go, and stood in the centre of
the room, trying to make up my mind.  There were two possibilities, both of
them viable:  I could do what I’d intended to do earlier, which was to contact
Starfleet and tender my resignation, or I could find something and end things
the way I should have before.  The first one was fairly easy; as I was sure the
padd was still in Room 2.  I could slip in there, since no one was around and
be done with it, and go back to bed.  Then it didn’t matter whether I
functioned or not; they could drop me off at Starbase 515 if they chose and let
the doctor treat me there, and they could shove me out an airlock; it didn’t
matter, my life was effectively over anyway.  I still didn’t remember anything
after having lunch with Geordi so that meant, it seemed to me, that I was in
the middle of a flashback when I’d tried to kill myself.  Well, I wasn’t in the
middle of a flashback now, I was completely rational, and that meant I could
get the job done.
            I walked to the doorway and looked out.  The crewman who was
supposed to be with me was sitting outside the door, but he’d fallen asleep. 
Since he was only working the gamma shift, he should have been wide awake; it
was a personnel issue that would have eventually come across my desk. Since he
had already abandoned me once, when he’d let da Costa help the captain, I
didn’t feel bad at all about making his life more difficult. Clearly he didn’t
belong in his current assignment.
            I could hear Dr Sandoval and Lt Fisk talking in Beverly’s office,
and I knew there was supposed to be at least one orderly around, but I didn’t
see anyone in the main ward, other than the sleeping crewman, whose name I had
forgotten. 
            I crossed the room quietly and entered Room 2.  The padd was still
on the desk where I’d left it; I guess, in the emotion of my falling asleep
during the meeting and then having yet another flashback, Deanna had forgotten
it.  I turned it on and sat down at the table, thinking about what I would say
in my report to Starfleet.
            “Don’t do it, Number One,” the captain said from behind me.  “Put
the padd down.”
            I said, “But – “
            He walked up to me and put his hands on my shoulders.  “That’s an
order, Mr Riker,” he said, but he said it softly.
            “Sir,” I said.
            “You won’t be able to overpower me, Number One,” he said, bending
his head down to my ear, “so just give me the padd.”
            “Why are you here?” I asked.  “You should be in bed.”
            “Give me the padd, mon cher,” he said.
            I handed him the padd.
            “Stand up, now, Will, and let’s get you back to bed,” he said. 
He’d tucked the padd under his arm, and then he wrapped his other arm around me
as he stood me up.  “Steady now,” he said.  “Do you want me to walk you to the
head first?”    
            “You don’t need to,” I said.
            “Since you are clearly without supervision at the moment,” he said
in a neutral voice, which belied, as I well knew, how he really felt, “I do
need to.”
            He guided me out of the room, and I saw both Dr Sandoval and Lt
Fisk come towards us.
            “Do not,” the captain said, “say anything to me.  I am taking Mr
Riker to the head.  Then I am taking him back to his room.  Once he is safely
in bed – and supervised – I will discuss what has happened here.  Not before.”
            “Aye, sir,” Dr Sandoval and Lt Fisk said at once.
            The crewman – Stoch, a Vulcan, I’d remembered his name – was
standing at attention, clearly awaiting a reprimand from the captain.  The
captain, however, didn’t say anything else, but walked me into the head, where
he waited patiently for me to urinate and wash my hands and face.
            “I don’t need to be guided, sir,” I said, as we left the head.
            “I don’t want you to pass out,” he replied.
            “I’m not going to,” I said.  “I’m okay.”
            “William, you’re shaking,” he said mildly, and I looked down at my
hands in surprise.  He saw the look on my face, I guess, because his next words
were, after he’d said “Lights, thirty percent,” “It’s all right, Will, I’m not
angry with you, mon cher, not at all.  You don’t need to be upset.”
            I realised that I was, once again, crying. 
            “William,” he said, as he helped me back into the bed, “truly, I
was expecting this, after what you said earlier.  I’m just grateful you were
choosing to hand in your resignation, rather than trying to kill yourself.”
            “I was thinking of that, too, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “I know, I know,” he said soothingly, and he sat down on the edge
of the bed and held me.  “You’ve been so brave, mon cher.  I just wish that I
could make you understand what’s happening outside of these rooms.”
            “What do you mean?” I asked.
            “You have no idea,” he said.  “We’ve kept you isolated, because
you’re so fragile, and so easily over-stimulated, and we don’t know what’s
triggering the flashbacks.  But, Will,” he said, and he smiled warmly at me,
“this whole ship is in an uproar.  I can’t walk down one corridor without being
asked repeatedly how you’re doing, when will you be back on duty, what can be
done to help you.  There isn’t one person,” he said, and he kissed me on the
top of my head, “not one person on this ship that you don’t know, apparently. 
I have no idea who these people are.  But they have messages, and offers of
help, and they want to bring food, and flowers, and who knows what else.  There
are cards, William – I think Deanna has them – from every single child on this
ship, all of them handmade.  And then,” he continued, “there is our senior
staff, who walk around all day as if each one of them has been personally
wounded.  Geordi, who despite the fact that I have talked to him, and Guinan
has talked to him, and Deanna has talked to him, still thinks it’s his fault
that you’re here.  Worf, who is shattered, and who keeps wanting to personally
guard you.  Mr Data, who is valiantly trying to fill your shoes.  The list is
endless, Will.”
            “I don’t understand,” I said.
            “What don’t you understand?” he asked.  “That there are people on
this ship who love you, and care about you, and who want you to be well?”
            “How can anybody care about me?” I asked, and it wasn’t because I
didn’t believe him, but because I really didn’t understand.  “I’ve done
terrible things.”
            “You only remember part of the story, Will,” he said, “and we are
working on finding the whole truth. But we’ll discuss that in the morning.  I
don’t want you upset any more than you already are.”
            I saw Dr Crusher walking towards me, and, as she stood in the
doorway, she said, “Jean-Luc, what’s happening?”
            He sighed, and stood up.  “I came back to see if he was sleeping,
and I found him completely unsupervised.  I would like, Beverly, to get him
settled down, and then we can discuss what has occurred.”
            “All right, Jean-Luc,” she replied, and she turned away.
            “I’m sorry,” I said.  “You’re both so tired.  I’m not being fair to
either one of you.”
            He crossed the room and shut the door, and then returned to me,
sitting back down on the edge of my bed.
            “I am going to handle this situation, Will,” he said.  “Quietly, so
as not to upset you further.  Then I would like to come back here and just sit
with you until you fall asleep.  Would that be acceptable to you?”
            “You should go to bed yourself, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            He turned away from me, just briefly, as if he were trying to calm
himself down, as he had done before, when he was so angry with me.  Then he
looked directly at me, and I couldn’t read what was behind the intensity in his
eyes.  He brushed my hair, lightly.
            “Will,” he said, and he sighed.  “Deanna tells me I should be
patient, because you have ‘trust issues’.  Guinan tells me I should be patient,
because you don’t know how to love, having lost it so long ago.  I understand
that, or at least I think I do.  But must you make it so hard for me,
Guillaume?  I would like to come back here and sit with you until you fall
asleep.  I would like to do this because I love you.  Because I’m worried about
you.  Because I just want –“ He paused, and then he said, “Because I just want
to be with you.  So – is it acceptable if I return to sit with you?”
            I didn’t know what to say.  I felt my mind start to spin in about
twenty different directions, until I was able to still it.
            “Please,” I said, because all I could think of was how hard it must
have been for him – for him, for  Jean-Luc – to say this.  “Yes,” I said again,
and he wrapped his arms around me and kissed me.
            “Bien,” he said, letting me go.  “We will give Mr Stoch a chance to
redeem himself, and I need to speak to Beverly.  Will you be all right here,
then?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “I won’t add to Mr Stoch’s burden.”
            “Bien,” he repeated, and he crossed the room and opened the door.
 “Mr Stoch,” he said.  “You will position yourself, as Mr da Costa has been,
next to Commander Riker’s bed.  If he needs anything, or if anything happens,
you are not to leave him alone.  You are just to press the call button, and one
of us will be right there.  Do you understand?”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch said.
            Jean-Luc waited in the doorway until Stock had positioned himself
next to my bed, and then he said to me, “Just rest, Will.  This shouldn’t take
more than half an hour.”
            “Okay,” I said, lying back against the pillows.
            He paused for one minute more, and then turned to Beverly, who was
waiting for him, and I closed my eyes.
 
 
 
            “Will?  Are you asleep?”  It was Beverly, resting her hand on my
arm
            “No,” I said, opening my eyes and sitting up.
            “Easy, Will,” she said.  “I’m just going to check your vitals
before I go.”
            “I don’t want to be sedated again,” I said.
            “I know,” she answered.  She ran the scanner and then she said,
“You’re doing fine.  You must be exhausted, though.”
            “Not as exhausted as you and Jean-Luc,” I replied.  “What’s going
to happen with Dr Sandoval and Lt Fisk?”
            “Oh, Will,” she said, smiling.  “You’re off-duty, remember?  The
captain and I handled it.”
            “Shouldn’t there have been at least one orderly?” I asked.
            “It’s been taken care of, Will, really,” she said.
            I nodded.  Then I said, “Where’s Jean-Luc?”
            The door opened, and the missing orderly – or the missing two
orderlies – entered with a bed, which they brought and lined up next to mine. 
Efficiently one of the orderlies made it up, and then followed the other out.
            “He’s gone to get what he needs,” she answered, “since he’s
spending the night here.”
            “What’s left of the night, you mean,” I said.  “He doesn’t trust me
or Mr Stoch, I guess.”
            “Will,” Beverly said, and she sat down next to me on the bed. 
“I’ve known Jean-Luc for many, many years.  His being here has nothing to do
with not trusting my crewmen, or not trusting you either, for that matter.  He
loves you, Will,” she said, “it’s as simple as that.  He’s a man who doesn’t
love quickly, and he doesn’t love lightly.  You need him, and he will be here
for you.  That’s who he is.”
            I said, “I don’t deserve it.”
            “What, Will?  What don’t you deserve?  You love him – that’s
obvious,” she said.  “You don’t deserve to have the one you love, love you in
return?”
            I looked away.  “I’m not good enough for him,” I said.
            “Will,” she said, in that same voice she used with Wesley, “he
thinks you are.  And he is a man of sound judgment.”  She stood up, and then
she said, “Will, I don’t give this kind of advice very often.  Let him love
you.  Don’t fight him.  He’s a good man, with a kind heart.  He won’t hurt you,
Will.”
            “But I don’t want to hurt him,” I said.  “I’m fucked up, Beverly. 
My own father didn’t even love me.  I killed a child.  I can’t even function
for a few hours before falling apart.  He doesn’t need this.  No one does.”
            “You have an illness,” she said, kindly, “a chronic illness,
perhaps, but a manageable one.  There are all kinds of disabilities, Will, and
people learn to function and manage them and often overcome them.  You may be
temporarily disabled, or you may be permanently disabled – we don’t know.  It’s
early yet, and our specialist is due today.  But would you deny love to Worf,
or Geordi, or any member of this crew simply because of a disability?  Of
course you wouldn’t,” she responded.  “So don’t deny yourself.”  She came back
to me, and bent over and kissed me on my cheek.  “You’re a good man, Will. 
Trust him.  He knows what he’s doing.”
            Jean-Luc came in, then, with his things.
            “Is everything all right?” he asked.
            “It’s fine, Jean-Luc,” Beverly replied.  “His vitals are good.  He
doesn’t want a sedative, and I don’t think he needs one.”
            “Good,” he answered.  “So you’ll try to get a few hours of sleep,
then?”
            “Yes,” she said.  “I will see you both later this morning.”  She
turned back to me.  “Get some rest now, Will.  Don’t worry about anything in
the morning.  Sleep as long as you can.”
            I nodded, and she left for her quarters.
            “I’m going to change in the head,” Jean-Luc said to me.  “You’re
doing better?  You still look upset.”
            “I’m not upset, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “I’m okay.  Beverly and I were
just talking, waiting for you.”
            “In a minute, then,” he said, and left.
            “Can you help me with this?” I asked Stoch, and he came over and
helped me put the pillows back down.  My arms were a little achy, not really
painful, the way they’d been, but I was still having trouble getting things to
work.
            Jean-Luc came back in, and sent Mr Stoch back outside, gently but
firmly, and then he shut the door.  “Lights, ten percent,” he said, and he took
off his robe and climbed into the bed next to mine.
            “Come here,” he said.
            “Will the beds stay together?” I asked dubiously.
            For the first time in several days, he grinned at me.  “I certainly
hope so,” he said.  “I’d prefer not to fall on the floor.”
            I slid down in the bed, and then moved closer to him, and he put
his arms around me.  I put my head on his chest, and felt him kiss my neck and
my ear.
            “I’ve missed this,” he said softly.
            I nodded, not wanting to say anything, just wanting to do what
Beverly had said I should do.  He kissed me lightly, and then he said,
            “You’ve made it almost impossible for me to do my job, William.”
            I was confused.  “What are you talking about, Jean-Luc?” I asked. 
“What job?”
            “Surely you haven’t forgotten already, mon cher,” he said, and I
could tell he was smiling.  He kissed me again along my neck.  “It could be a
lucrative one, too,” he said, and now I knew he was laughing.  “Imagine if I
got paid by the kiss,” and I could feel him shaking with silent laughter.
            “You are incorrigible,” I said, but I was laughing too, and then he
was kissing me, and for the first time in days I felt as if maybe, just maybe,
I could get better.
           
           
           
 
           
***** Chapter 26 *****
Chapter Summary
     William goes home, and reaches an understanding with his father.
Chapter Notes
     Kyle Riker's abuse of his son stems from an inadequate man's need for
     domination and control. William's attempt to take control of himself
     establishes the pattern for the over-competitive and hyper-aggressive
     young Riker, the one who graduated eighth in his class, defied the
     crew of the Pegasus, abandoned Deanna Troi on Betazed, and wanted to
     become the youngest captain in the Fleet. As always with the chapters
     dealing with William's childhood, there may be triggers here for
     those who have been abused.
Chapter Twenty-Six
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
            After two surgeries, and three months total in hospital, William
Riker was taken home by his father.  The doctor who had wanted to diagnose
William with childhood schizophrenia was encouraged not to, given that the boy
had been actively abused on the doctor’s watch, and William’s diagnosis was
left at severe depression, following multiple hospital admissions and a suicide
attempt.  The abuse that led to the hospital admissions – the various broken
bones, the tearing in the rectum due to probable rape – was buried under
Federation paperwork.
            The problem that was William Riker was deemed solved.
            William knew he’d been in the hospital, but the head injury and the
trauma had left him without any conscious awareness of why he’d been there in
the first place.  He’d “forgotten” what his father had done; he’d “forgotten”
his suicide attempt; he’d “forgotten” what had happened on the unit and what
he’d done to Christian.  The Federation doctor, after examining William,
assured Kyle Riker that this kind of amnesia frequently followed a severe head
injury and trauma, and told him that it would be unlikely if William would ever
completely remember any of it.  It would be more likely that William would
remember pieces of it in dreams which would fade in time.  This suited Kyle
Riker, so he did nothing to follow up on William’s head injury or his
psychological state.
            Riker was home about five weeks after William returned, during
which he organised William’s care with Tasya Shugak and Henry Ivanov, and re-
enrolled William back in school under his specialised program.  Gareth Davies
was worried that William’s injuries might have caused permanent brain damage,
but after giving the child a series of intelligence tests, it appeared that he
was still functioning in the high intellectual capacity in which he’d
functioned before.  Maxim Demetrioff organised the flying lessons, which took
place on Fridays, in lieu of William attending school.
            William’s regular paediatrician recommended that William wear
protective headgear when he played baseball or took Henry’s judo lessons, but
did not forbid either activity.  William’s routine was established.  Spring was
coming, and with it baseball practise; Henry Ivanov was teaching William piano
and trombone; Miss Anna was giving him voice lessons, and Tasya Shugak
continued to help him in the kitchen.  Rosie continued to keep Bet at her
house, and William was back to going over to see his dog twice a day.  He
continued to be friends with Matt, and Rosie, and Dmitri.
            He took special medication to help with the anxiety and the night
terrors and the bedwetting.  It was felt by William’s paediatrician that
William would resolve these issues, given time and a routine.  What Kyle Riker
thought about these issues, he never said.
            The changes in William seemed small.  He was quieter, which was
attributed to the medication; he was not as hyperactive as he had been. 
Perhaps, because of all the extras that had been built into his schedule, he
was using up the extra energy with activity.  He was still silly, but only
sometimes.  He still smiled and laughed, but there was a feeling of it not
being quite real, something that both Mrs Shugak and Henry noticed over time. 
He was more serious about his work.  He was intense about flying.  When
baseball practise started, he was intense about that.  There was a drive to him
that hadn’t been there before.  It made him seem older than he was, and this,
coupled with his height, resulted in everyone treating him as if he were a much
older child.  He seemed to appreciate this, and, since almost everyone in the
village remembered his mother when she was a child, inevitable comparisons were
made.  He was, it seemed, his mother’s son, in intellect and ambition.
 
 
 
            Kyle Riker watched this, and decided that he needed to take control
of the situation.  After all, William wouldn’t be eight until August; allowing
a seven-year-old this much autonomy was probably not a good idea, given this
particular seven-year-old’s history.  Perhaps other people had forgotten that
William had nearly drowned because he thought he was grown enough to go fishing
by himself.  Perhaps other people had forgotten that the suicide attempt had
begun with William’s refusal to simply walk in the school door, as he was
supposed to have done.  Kyle Riker didn’t forget these incidents; he didn’t
particularly like the cool appraisal he saw in his seven (seven!) year-old
son’s eyes.
            Kyle Riker was a Starfleet liaison; he had never been to the
Academy, having never had the desire to go.  As a Federation diplomat and
troubleshooter he appreciated nuance and language and gesture.  As a father, he
ran his home as if it were the Academy itself.  There were rules and
regulations which were to be followed.  If you said you would do something,
then you did it:  no questions asked.  William had grown up under this military
style; since it had been backed up by his father’s unpredictable physical
violence, William had rarely questioned any of the rules or regulations.
            William had been home almost a month when his father decided it was
time to reestablish his authority.  William was working on a paper for physics;
it was deceptively simple:  Describe a wave to someone who has never seen one;
who has no reference, visual or otherwise, to understand the phenomenon, having
never seen the ocean or other body of water.  He had fixed dinner for himself
and his father, but then he had gotten distracted by trying to draw the cycle
of a wave.  He had left the dishes; he would deal with them later.  His father
had retreated to his study to work.  It had gotten late, and William went to
bed, leaving the dishes for the morning.
            He was awakened by his father pulling him from his bed and dragging
him down the stairs to the kitchen.
            “We had an agreement, Billy,” his father said.  “I allow you to use
the kitchen.  You clean up your mess.”
            William stood in front of his father in his pyjamas and his bare
feet.  He glanced at the dishes that he hadn’t stacked in the dishwasher, and
at the counter that he hadn’t cleaned.  His father stared at him, waiting for
his response.  Waiting, William realised, for him to cry.
            “My name is William,” he said, “not Billy.”
            Kyle Riker’s face never changed.  “Regardless,” he said, “of what
you think your name is, we had an agreement, which you broke.”
            “I did break the agreement,” William said.  He watched his father
carefully.  “I will clean up the mess now.  I’m sorry.  It won’t happen again.”
            “I’m glad that you’re acknowledging this,” Kyle Riker said.  “You
will clean up the mess.  It won’t happen again.  And I will punish you, to make
sure that it doesn’t happen again.”
            William looked at the floor and waited for the tears to come, but
for some reason, they didn’t.  He thought perhaps he would never cry again.  He
was done crying.
            “You won’t send me to the hospital ever again,” William said.  “You
won’t break my bones.  You won’t throw me.  You can spank me, or you can take a
privilege away.  I don’t care.  But you won’t ever hurt me again.”
            “And what makes you think that you can tell me what to do?” Riker
seemed to be amused.
            William said, “One day I will be bigger than you.  And you know
what I can do.”
            “And what do you think you can do, Billy?” Riker asked.  He was
genuinely curious.
            “I can kill you,” William Riker said.  “And I won’t even care. 
I’ll just forget it, and everyone will feel sorry for me again.”
            Kyle Riker smiled.  “We can play this game if you want to, Billy,”
he said.  “You still have to live to grow up to be bigger than me.”
            “Go ahead and kill me, then,” William said.  “I don’t really care.”
            “Oh, I don’t think so,” Riker replied.  “You’re too interesting, at
the moment, to want to kill.  What other rules have you decided for yourself?”
            William thought for a moment, and then he said, “You won’t ever
fuck me again, either.”
            “Not even when you want it, Billy?” Riker grinned.  He was enjoying
this new version of his son.
            William shrugged and looked away.
            “Because you will want it, William,” Riker said softly.  “You know
that you will.”
            William looked up at his father and his eyes were curiously blank. 
“I hate you,” he said.  “I will always hate you.  It doesn’t matter any more
what you do to me.  It will never change the fact that I hate you.  And if she
were alive she would hate you too, because of what you’ve done to me.” He
thought about stepping back for a moment, and then he said, “I made the
dinner.  You do the fucking dishes, or leave them for me to do in the morning. 
I’m going to bed.”
            He walked out of the kitchen and did not look back.  Kyle Riker
stood there and watched him leave.  In the morning he introduced William to the
martial art called anbo-jyutsu.
           
           
           
           
***** Chapter 27 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's flashbacks and memories increase in intensity, and Dr
     Alasdair McBride arrives shipboard.
Chapter Notes
     One of the most recently successful treatments for PTSD is the
     hyperbaric chamber, which is also used to treat brain injury. As
     oxygen deprivation is a significant issue with those who suffer from
     the crippling anxiety of PTSD, treatment with increased oxygen levels
     in a hyperbaric chamber has been shown to heal the brain. For the
     purposes of this story, Dr McBride will be using cutting edge
     treatment for PTSD from our time, as well as reasonable "new"
     treatments for PTSD in his.
Chapter Twenty-Seven
 
 
 
 
 
 
            I felt Jean-Luc stir beside me, and then he kissed me, lightly, and
said in a still sleep-filled voice, “Will, I have to get up now.  You sleep as
long as you can.”
            I opened my eyes and said, “Are we at SB 515 now?”
            “We are in orbit,” he said.  “You go back to sleep.”
            He’d swung his legs over the bed when I said, “You’re not going to
leave me here, are you?”
            He’d grabbed his robe, and he turned back to look at me.  “Whatever
gave you that idea?” he said.
            He didn’t seem angry, but there was a tone to his voice that woke
me thoroughly.  I sat up and answered, “I don’t know.  It’s a medical centre. 
It would make more sense.”
            He was quiet, and then he stood up and put his robe on.  “I’m going
to shower,” he said, and he simply walked out of the room.  I heard him say to
the crewman, “I’m taking a shower, Mr Stoch.  You’ll need to return to your
post beside Commander Riker until I return.”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch said in a low voice, and he entered my room
silently and stood next to the bed.
            I sat up and rubbed my eyes.  “Fuck,” I said.  I started to get out
of the bed and then I thought better of it.  I’d have to wait for Jean-Luc at
any rate, since there was only the one shower facility, and I needed someone to
ask one of the orderlies if I could get some clothes.  If Jean-Luc was
determined to bring this doctor onboard, then there was no way I was going to
meet him in my pyjamas.
            Jean-Luc returned in about ten minutes and I could tell he was
pissed off at me.  I was sitting on the edge of the bed when he came in,
dressed in his uniform with an absolutely neutral expression on his face.  I
sighed.  He was really pissed off.
            “What are you doing?” he said in his neutral “I’m furious with you
but I’m determined not to say anything” voice.
            “I was going to take a shower, Jean-Luc,” I said, as mildly as
possible.
            “I thought I told you to go back to sleep,” he said. He stood in
the middle of the room and stared at me, that neutral expression still on his
face.
            The tone was back.  “Is that an order, sir?” I asked.
            “If you wish to take it as such,” he said.
            I wondered briefly what he would do if I threw something at him. 
“Sir,” I said, and got back in the bed.
            He stood there for a minute longer, staring at me, and then he
turned around to leave.
            “I love you too, Jean-Luc,” I said, and I thought I heard Stoch
draw in his breath.  When I glanced at him he had that perfect Stoic Vulcan
face on, but I’d heard him.
            Jean-Luc was frozen by the door, and he said, as he turned around,
“You are perilously close to being insubordinate, mister.”
            I was already in a shit load of trouble, so I decided to brazen it
out.  “I don’t understand why you’re angry with me,” I said.  “All I did was
ask you a perfectly reasonable question.”
            “If I were you, Mr Riker,” he said, “I would lie back down in the
bed and be quiet.”
            “What are you going to do, sir?” I said.  “Confine me to quarters? 
Send me to the brig?  I know,” I said brightly, “you can put a reprimand in my
file, right after the part where you said I tried to kill myself.”  And then,
before I could stop myself, I added, “Oh, I forgot.  You didn’t put that part
in.”
            If I’d had a way to document it, I could have shown his model of
self-control to the graduating classes at the Academy.
            “You are being a child,” he said, finally, “and I have work to do. 
If Dr Crusher asks for me, I will be on the bridge.  Dr McBride will be
arriving at oh-eleven hundred, and I will see you then.”  He glanced at Stoch. 
“You are not to leave him alone, not even for one second, do you understand
me?”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch said.
            “I suggest, William,” he said, looking back at me, “that you make
an attitude adjustment before I return.”
            “Sir,” I said.
            He wheeled around with military precision and left the room.
            “Fuck,” I said again. 
I was pretty sure I hadn’t been this much of an asshole before this all
started, but maybe I had been and was only just noticing it now.  I felt
completely out-of-control, as if I no longer had an internal compass to
regulate my moods and so they were everywhere, all the time.  I knew that
wasn’t true of before, because I’ve always been fairly easygoing, with really
the period after the Borg attacks being the only time (well, and maybe the
Pegasus, if I wanted to be completely honest with myself) I’ve dealt with
issues like depression and irritability. 
I sighed.  I still wasn’t sure why Jean-Luc was so angry with me, but it
certainly was an inauspicious start to the day.  I looked up at Stoch.
“I’m taking a shower anyway,” I said.  “And, unfortunately, you’ll need to come
with me, per the captain’s orders.”
“Aye, sir,” Stoch replied.
I stood up, and went to find an orderly to get my toiletries, with Stoch
following me.  It was still early, not quite alpha shift, and yet Beverly was
already in her office.  I saw the nurse, Lt Fisk, and an orderly, and asked if
one of them would get my stuff.
“Will,” Beverly said, opening the door to her office, “what are you doing up so
early?”
“I’m awake,” I said shortly.  “I’m going to go ahead and take a shower.”
“I saw Jean-Luc leave,” she said.  “We both were hoping you’d get some extra
sleep.”
“Look,” I said, “I know I’m easier to deal with when I’m asleep.  But I’m not,
so I’m going to take a shower and I’d like – “ and I took a breath, to try to
calm the anger that was threatening to surge forth,  “– to get some clothes. 
These are dirty, and I don’t want to meet this doctor when I’m in dirty
pyjamas.”
“He’s not due until oh-eleven hundred, Will,” Beverly said, but she must have
seen the look on my face, because she added, “I’ll send an orderly to your
quarters to get your clothes, if you’ll tell him what to get, all right?  We’ll
do it right now, so that you don’t have to put those back on after you’ve taken
your shower.”
I took a deep breath.  “Thank you,” I said.  “I’m trying not to be a pain in
the ass.”
She smiled.  “I know, Will,” she said.  “Why don’t you have your breakfast now,
while you’re waiting for your clothes?”
“Okay,” I said.
“In fact,” she continued, “why not have your breakfast with me?  It would be
nice to have company.”
“Did Deanna tell you I said you were being mean to me?” I asked.  “I was
joking.”
“Perhaps,” Beverly said, “but I have been impatient with you.”
She called over one of the orderlies, and I explained where my clothes were and
what I needed.  I walked into her office with her, and Stoch followed. 
“Would you see that Commander Riker gets his breakfast order now, Mr Stoch?”
Beverly said, and then she went to her replicator and ordered a tea. 
She sat down behind her desk and sipped her tea, and I sat across from her.
“Can you tell me about this doctor?” I asked.
“He’s from Betazed,” Beverly answered.  “He’s human, but he has a Betazed
grandmother, I believe.  His name is Alasdair McBride.”
“Any relation of yours?” I asked, alluding to her Scots ancestors.
“No,” she replied, smiling.  “The Howards and the McBrides are not related,
clan-wise.”
“So that’s how Deanna knew about him?” I said.
“She’d spoken to him before, I believe,” Beverly said, “after we defeated the
Borg.”
“He specialises in PTSD?” I asked.
“He’s written several books,” Beverly confirmed.  “He uses a combination of
some very old treatments that he discovered had been used a few centuries ago,
and some new therapies he’s developed on his own.”
The orderly brought in my breakfast, and when I saw the orange juice again I
felt as if I were floating, outside of myself, outside of gravity.  I could see
the breakfast tray, I could see the orange juice, even the condensation on the
cup, and I could see that Beverly was trying to say something to me, but it was
as if I had been wrapped in cotton.  I stood up, banging against the chair, and
found myself backed up into the wall.
Beverly stood as well, and came around to me, but her face looked all
distorted, as if she were yelling at me, yet I couldn’t hear anything.  I kept
looking at the orange juice and I had the strangest sensation, almost as if it
were alive, as if it were just going to turn into this – I don’t know, this
thing – and I was trying to get away, but I’d backed myself into a corner, and
Beverly was coming closer, and I didn’t know what to do. 
My hands felt as if they didn’t belong to me.  They were in front of my face,
covering my eyes, and then I lost control of my legs too, and it felt as if I
was falling, and I closed my eyes, but even with my eyes closed I could still
see the orange of it, and smell it, that sharp, tangy smell, there were bubbles
in it, like white froth along the edges of the glass, and I could hear a voice
telling me to drink it, and I tried to push it away.  I tried to push
everything away.
 
 
 
Once again I was dreaming.  This time I was little, or at least I felt little. 
There was a table, and the edge of it was level with my eyes.  I could feel
myself climbing up onto a chair.  The chair had a pad on it, like a cushion,
which sort of slipped when I climbed on, and I can remember almost sliding off,
and large hands grabbing me, and holding me and setting me down on the
cushion.  I could see the cushion; it was a sort of a light green, with a
pattern of something, of flowers, I think, and it was tied to the chair, and
yet I could remember the sensation of sliding off, or almost sliding off, and
of being put back by the hands, large hands, whose hands I couldn’t see, but
there was such a feeling of what seemed to be menace, almost, as if the lifting
and setting was not a kind gesture, of preventing me from sliding off, but more
keeping me there, on that cushion, on that chair.  There was a feeling of
something bad about to happen, and yet in the dream I was almost an observer,
and I could remember thinking how could there be anything bad about to happen
with just a chair and a cushion and a table.  Still there was a pressure there,
and it kept building, and I could see myself and I was myself at the same time,
sitting on a slippery cushion, my legs dangling down, my hands resting on the
table.  I realised that there was something on the table, then; it was right in
front of me, and yet I didn’t want to look.  I remember closing my eyes so I
wouldn’t have to look, and then the hands were guiding me to it, and I was
crying, and trying to get away, and the pressure kept building, and the fear
was increasing, and I couldn’t see, because my eyes were closed, but the
observer part of me needed to see, I needed to see what it was that was so
scary, but I couldn’t get the little me to open his eyes….
 
 
 
I woke, then, feeling nauseous and in more pain than I had the day before.  I
had no idea how long I’d been asleep, but when I saw Mr da Costa standing
beside me, I knew that I’d probably lost several hours.  The last thing I
remembered was being in Beverly’s office, but I couldn’t remember why I’d been
in there; I did remember that I’d had a fight with Jean-Luc and that I’d wanted
to take a shower, but everything after that just wasn’t there.  I didn’t know
why my arms were hurting so badly again, until I looked down and saw that my
left arm was rebandaged, and my right arm was bruised.  My right hand was
swollen, too.
I sighed, and immediately Mr da Costa was beside me.  “Do you need some help,
Commander?” he asked.
In a stupid way I was glad da Costa was back.  For some reason he made me feel
safe in a world that wasn’t working properly for me anymore.
“I just wanted to sit up,” I said.
“I’ll help you, sir,” he said, and he lifted me up and placed the pillows
behind my back.
I closed my eyes, because I felt as if I were going to pass out.
“Sir?”
“I don’t feel well,” I said, and then I was puking everywhere.
He must have pressed the call button, because it wasn’t but a minute or so
before Ogawa appeared, and then an orderly. 
Da Costa said, “Lieutenant, if you’ll ask the orderly to bring wet towels and
the Commander’s robe, I’ll clean him up enough to get him into the shower.”
“I’ll get a cover for the bandage,” Ogawa replied, “and let Dr Crusher know
what’s happened.”
“It’s all right, sir,” da Costa was saying to me.  “I’m sure it’s a reaction to
the sedative and the pain medication.  I’ll get you cleaned up, and then you
can take that shower you’d wanted earlier.”
“I don’t think I can stand,” I said.  “I still don’t feel well.”
“Don’t worry about it, sir,” da Costa said.  “Djani and I will take care of
you.”
The orderly returned with the towels, and da Costa wiped me up and the two of
them helped me out of the bed.  Ogawa returned with the wrap for my arm and
expertly covered it.  I could have asked her, I guess, what I’d done, but there
didn’t seem to be much point.  Whatever it was, my condition was getting worse,
not better, and I hoped that Deanna’s doctor would be able to stop my downward
slide.  It seemed as if it had been years – instead of hours – ago that I had
actually thought I had a chance to get better.
 
 
 
Da Costa and the orderly Djani got me cleaned up, and I was able to put the
clothes on I’d asked for earlier.  I had to wait in Room 2 for my room to be
cleaned, and, of course, da Costa waited with me.
“Will you tell me what happened?” I asked. 
“This morning, sir?” da Costa replied.  “You had another flashback.”
“And I injured myself?” I was looking at my bandaged arm and wondering if I had
tried to kill myself again.
Da Costa seemed to be thinking about what he wanted to say.  Finally he said,
“Stoch says you put up quite a fight.”
“He was trying to take me down?” That familiar cottony feeling was coming back.
“Sir,” da Costa said, and he came around to me, and then he sat me down, and
then he bent down and looked at me, the way he’d done before.  “Listen to me. 
You were in a flashback.  You were, according to Mr Stoch, very frightened and
losing control.  No one tried to take you down, sir.  No one tried to put you
in a hold or subdue you in any way.”
“Then how did I hurt myself?” I asked.
“Commander,” da Costa said, and then, surprisingly, he said, “William.  Stay
with me.  You’re safe.  No one is going to do anything to you.  I’m not going
to do anything to you.”
I could feel myself losing it.  “I just want to know what happened,” I said,
and while I was saying it I could hear myself sounding like a little kid, and I
wanted to throttle myself.
The orderly Djani came in, then, and da Costa said, “Let me help you back in
bed, sir,” and between the two of them, they lifted me up out of the chair and
placed me back in my bed.
Ogawa came in and took my vitals.  “Dr Crusher will be right here, Commander,”
she said.  “Would you tell me what number your pain level is at?”
“I don’t know,” I said irritably.  “I don’t understand why someone won’t just
tell me what happened.”
“I’m sure Dr Crusher will talk to you, sir,” Ogawa said soothingly, except that
it only made me want to shout with frustration.  “Your pain level, sir?  On a
scale from one to ten, with one being the lowest number – “
“Oh, for God’s sake,” I said, “I know what the hell it is.  I don’t want
anymore pain medication.  I don’t want any more medication.  I’m still feeling
nauseous,” I said, “and I’d like to know what the fuck happened.”
“Commander,” da Costa began.  “Just tell the Lieutenant what she needs to
know.”
I felt defeated.  “Fine,” I said.  “I don’t give a shit anymore.  Do whatever
the hell you want.”  Then I said, “Six.  It’s a fucking six, okay?  Just leave
me the fuck alone.”
“I’ll let Dr Crusher know,” she responded.  “I’m sure she can give you
something to take the edge off, Commander.”
At that point I just wanted to throw myself at her.  I said in a low voice, “If
anyone comes near me with a hypo spray –“
“I’ll get Dr Crusher,” Ogawa said, and left.
“Don’t say anything to me, da Costa,” I said after she left.  “That’s an
order.”
“Sir,” da Costa said, but he said it in a mild tone of voice.
I sat in the bed and waited for Beverly to come and yell at me.
 
 
 
 
 
I was not sleeping.  I had resolved that there was no way I was going to go to
sleep again and have that dream, the one that made no sense – how could anyone
be afraid of a table and a cushion and a chair? – and yet I could feel it
hovering around my eyes, just waiting to restart as soon as I closed them. 
There was so little that I could control anymore.  In a week’s time I’d gone
from being the First Officer of the flagship, with over a thousand people under
my command, to a shell of a person who couldn’t even sit up without help.  Who
couldn’t even function for more than an hour at a time.  Who didn’t even
command enough respect anymore to be told the truth about himself, even if said
truth were difficult.  I’d been reduced to the status of a person who didn’t
even qualify for “need to know.”  When there is so little left that you can
control, you control what you can – and I was doing what Beverly had told me –
had ordered me – to do.  I was resting, but I was not going to fucking sleep. 
Not with that dream lurking around my consciousness.
Despite my objections, she’d given me two hypo sprays, one for the pain and one
to “calm” me, as opposed to sedate me.  She added an anti-nausea drug to the
mix, and then had left, telling me that she was meeting the captain and Deanna
in the transporter room to welcome Dr McBride. 
So I was laying here with my eyes closed but not sleeping, aware that Mr da
Costa was standing right beside me, trying to avoid thinking about the dream,
trying to avoid thinking about hope, and this doctor.  I wished that I’d been
well enough to have attended the treatment meeting, because perhaps Deanna
could have given me some specifics about the doctor, but I hadn’t even seen her
today, although undoubtedly she’d been called when I had lost it the last
time.  In the past twenty-four hours I’d gone from suicidal to hopeful to
suicidal again, and I didn’t have any illusions about the chances of one
doctor’s ability to stabilise my moods and stem the tide of unwanted flashbacks
and memories.
Because that’s what this was, and I knew it, had been forced to admit it.  All
those years that I had no knowledge of, all of those memories that I pretended
I remembered – all those blank spaces were trying to fill themselves all at
once.  The Federation must have truly felt it owed me, because how on earth
could I have ever passed the psych exam for entrance to the Academy when I
didn’t remember half of my own life?  The memory of killing that child, the
flashback where I’d smelled silver polish, and cinnamon, and blood – those were
real memories, not just stories I’d made up or other people told me so that I
could have something to say when people asked.  I used to live in dread, at the
Academy, for the time someone would say, “Hey, do you remember what you did for
your sixth birthday?” or your tenth, or even your twelfth, and I would just
have to fucking make something up, and hope that I could keep track of all the
bullshit I told.  Because the truth was no, I didn’t remember.  Not much,
anyway, before around eleven or twelve or so.  I do remember when my father
took my fish – that’s real.  I do remember my first solo flight, when I was
eleven.  I do remember when my dog Bet died.  I do remember waking up one
morning and realising that once again, my father was gone, only to slowly
become aware that he wasn’t coming back.  That he’d left me for a more
interesting job.
But the stuff that I was dreaming – the blanket around my face, the chair with
the cushion, the fear – were they memories too?  Were they flashbacks that I
was dreaming, like when my head had hurt and I’d realised it was because
someone was pounding me into the floor?  Was my childhood really one long life
of terror and that’s why I’d forgotten it?  What had been so terribly wrong
with me, that I couldn’t have had a mother who had lived, and a father who
didn’t hate me?  I knew many of the children on this ship, like Miles and
Keiko’s daughter, or the twins that belonged to Sindal in astrophysics – how
could anyone hate a little kid?  What had been so wrong with me?  What had I
done?
“Sir,” da Costa said, “are you all right?”
I opened my eyes.  “I’m fine,” I said, and tried to force my hands to stop
shaking.
“Dr McBride is on his way,” da Costa said.  “I heard Dr Crusher let Lt Ogawa
know that they were en route here.”
“They?” I said, stupidly.
“The captain, sir, and Dr Crusher, and Counsellor Troi,” da Costa said
patiently.
“So it’s a three-ring circus,” I said, and I couldn’t keep the bitterness from
my voice.  “They’re expecting him to perform miracles or something?”
Da Costa said, “Sir, it’s okay to be afraid.”
“Don’t psychoanalyse me, Mister,” I snapped.  “I’m not your goddamned patient.”
“Sir,” da Costa responded mildly, and I wondered if I could just once, just
once, smack him.
I heard the doors to sickbay open, and the commotion of the group entering.  I
sincerely hoped that they all weren’t going to troop in here and act like I was
some fucking zoo animal.  In a few minutes, however, Deanna came in.
“Don’t ask me how we’re feeling,” I said.
“I won’t,” she answered.  “Beverly said she gave you something for the pain?”
“Against my wishes,” I complained.  “That seems to be the order of the day.  Do
whatever you want to Riker, whether he wants it or not.”
“It’s not good for you to be in prolonged pain, Will,” Deanna said reasonably.
“It’s not good to puke up your last three meals either,” I said.  “I’ve no
desire to re-experience that.”
“Prolonged bouts of nausea, and sometimes even vomiting, are symptoms of PTSD,
Will,” Deanna said.  “I’m not entirely convinced that you were reacting to the
medication.”
“Whatever.” I looked away.
“I’m sorry you’re having a difficult day,” she said.  “Is there anything you’d
like, while you’re waiting for Alasdair?”
“Would you like the list?” I asked.  I didn’t comment on her use of the
doctor’s first name; Deanna, being who she was, knew absolutely everyone of any
importance from Betazed.  It didn’t surprise me that she knew Dr McBride; I’m
sure his grandmother went to school with hers, and I would be dealing with yet
another member of Betazed’s ruling aristocracy.  “Why don’t you just bring me a
padd, Deanna, so I can tender my resignation?  That would be a start.”
“The captain told me that you’d tried to resign last night, Will,” she said. 
“That’s a decision I don’t think you’re prepared to make right now.”
“You mean you think I’m too crazy to know that I shouldn’t be first officer of
this ship?” I said.
“Oh, Will.” 
I rolled my eyes.  The captain walked into the doorway and said, “Beverly would
like to talk with you for a moment, Counsellor.”
“Sir,” Deanna said.  “I wouldn’t worry too much, Will.  You’ll like Alasdair. 
He’s a good man.”
She left, and the captain came in.  “Mr da Costa,” he said.
“Sir,” da Costa responded.  He pulled the chair over so that the captain could
sit with me.
“Why don’t you take a few moments, Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said.  He sat in the
chair, and reached for my hand.
“Sir,” da Costa replied, and he left the room, shutting the door gently.
“Are you still in need of an attitude adjustment?” he asked.  He folded his
hand over mine.
“What are you suggesting?” I said.
“I made a promise to you, William,” he said.  “I gave you my word that I would
not send you away.  I understand that in your childhood there were very few
people, if anyone, whom you could trust.  But in the years that you have been
on this ship, have I ever broken my word to you?”
“No, sir,” I said.
“Dr McBride will be working with you on this ship,” the captain said.  “All the
protocols have been worked out.  He has a new study he’s working on, and
because we were one of the few survivors of the Borg attack, we are the perfect
venue for his work.  So there will be others that he’ll be working with too,
including Dr Crusher and Counsellor Troi.” 
I didn’t say anything.
“Will,” Jean-Luc said.
“I don’t want you to be angry with me,” I said.  “I’m sorry, for this morning.”
He sighed.  “I know,” he said.
I closed my eyes, because I knew it was unlikely I would get an apology from
him.
“Would you look at me, please?” he said.  He’d taken both my hands, as he
usually did when he wanted to convey something of importance to me, and I tried
to control the trembling in them as he held them.
“Sir?” I looked at him.
“I have two things that I want to say to you, before Beverly brings Dr McBride
in here,” he said.  “We are going to have to negotiate the boundaries for
ourselves between our professional relationship and our personal one, and I
don’t for one minute think that it’s going to be always easy or perfect.  And
this is complicated by your illness, and my need to respond to your illness
both professionally and personally.”  He paused.  Then he said, “I’m sorry, mon
cher, if I hurt your feelings this morning.  It’s very frustrating for me, when
I know to myself that I have only your best interests in mind in everything
I’ve done since I first realised the trouble you were in, and then you
challenge my assumptions with worst-case scenarios.  No – don’t say anything,
hear me out, please, Will.”  He sighed again.  “You need reassurance from me,
which is perfectly reasonable.  As you said this morning, you’d asked me a
reasonable question.  And I responded as if you were challenging my authority
or my ability to know what’s best for you.  So.”  He paused again, and then he
touched my face, lightly.  “The second thing I wanted to say is that the only
way, I think, to solve this confusion is for me to be completely honest with
you, and hope that you will feel, if I am giving you all the information – as I
would when we have our briefings – that I’m not keeping anything away from you,
that there won’t be any surprises, and maybe we can build some trust together
in that way.”
“I was obnoxious to you this morning,” I said, “but, Jean-Luc, it’s because I’m
scared.”  I could feel my eyes filling up again.  “Part of me just wants to
die, because I can’t take this anymore, it hurts and I feel so goddamned
useless.”  I wiped my eyes.  “But there’s a part of me that wants to get
better, and I’m scared I won’t ever get better.  That I’ll spend the rest of my
life like this.  And that this doctor is my last chance and if he can’t help
me, then I might as well be dead, because I can’t do this anymore.”
“Come here,” he said, and he slipped out of the chair and sat on the bed, and
pulled me into his arms.  “You go ahead and cry, if it helps, mon chou.  I’m
right here.”
“I’m okay,” I said.  “You said you were going to be honest with me.  Please be
honest with me, Jean-Luc.  No one else is.”
He let me go, but didn’t leave the bed.  “What I said about Dr McBride’s work
is true, Will,” he replied.  “Deanna had already been working with Dr McBride
about this before you became ill.  When we began to suspect what was happening
with you, she contacted McBride immediately to see if he would be willing to
speed up the process and come aboard, and he was.  He has even given us specs
to create a special treatment room for you, including a hyperbaric chamber,
which is being constructed even as we speak.  And I am taking my promise to
you, not to send you off ship, seriously, because I have some understanding –
especially now – why you are so afraid of being sent to a facility, as you call
it.”
“But?” I said.
“But,” he replied, “Dr McBride is responsible for your care, with Counsellor
Troi acting as your case manager, and Dr Crusher as your primary physician. 
I’m your captain, so I must act with your best interests in mind in that
capacity, and, as your captain, I want you well.  I need my First Officer, and
I’m unwilling to give him up.  And I am also acting in my capacity as – “ and
he held my hands again “ – your partner,” he said, “and, as your partner, I
will do everything I can to ensure that you recover.”  He took a breath and
said, “I’ve made it quite clear to Dr McBride how frightened you are, Will, at
being sent off this ship, and why.  He understands that it’s part of a
significant trauma.  He understands that removing you from this ship could
conceivably do more harm than good.  But – as you said this morning – this is a
medical centre, and he has everything here on site that could help you.  If he
says that it would be best for you to return with him to his centre, then I
must consider that option.  Even though at that point I would be breaking my
word to you, and, perhaps, ending our relationship.  I would do it,” he said,
firmly, “because it’s most important to me for you to be well.  Even if that
means I lose you because of it.”  He was silent then, and he looked away. 
“And that’s everything, Jean-Luc?” I said.  “There’s nothing more?”
“No,” he replied.
“Okay,” I said.  “I understand.  Thank you, for telling me.”
“Will – “ he said.
“It sucks,” I said.  “I know it sucks.”
“I don’t believe that Dr McBride will use that option,” he said.  “We are
building the hyperbaric chamber.  But I said I would be honest with you.”
“If you come to me, Jean-Luc,” I said, “and you tell me that all the other
options have failed, and that my only chance at recovery is going with Dr
McBride to his centre on the starbase – if you come to me and say that – then I
will do as you ask.”
“I don’t know,” he said, “that I deserve your faith in me, but I will do
whatever I have to not to lose it.”
We sat for a few minutes, quietly, with him holding my hands.  Then he leaned
in and kissed me lightly on my forehead, and said, “I’ll get Dr McBride.”
“You really think this will work?” I asked as he stood up.
“I do,” he said simply.
“Okay,” I said, and he left the room to find Alasdair McBride.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 28 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride diagnoses William as being in a severe crisis and outlines
     his treatment plan. Joao da Costa reveals his role as part of
     William's treatment team, and William learns about his father's
     involvement.
Chapter Notes
     As Dr McBride has said, William Riker is in a life-threatening
     crisis. His brain, badly injured from the recent concussion and the
     severe anxiety accompanied by oxygen deprivation, which are symptoms
     of his PTSD, is beginning to shut down all non-essential functions.
     His mood swings, his forgetfulness, his inability to understand what
     is happening around him, are all the symptoms of acute complex PTSD.
     Without specific interventions in the treatment of this illness,
     William will not survive.
Chapter Twenty-Eight
 
 
 
 
Da Costa came back in, and retook his position next to my bed.  He didn’t say
anything; he didn’t even look at me.
“How the hell do you know so much?” I said, but my tone was light.
“Sir,” he replied, and I sighed.
I’d thought that the three of them – Beverly, Deanna, and Jean-Luc – would
bring Dr McBride in, but he came in by himself.  He was a very tall (almost as
tall as me), thin man, older than me but probably ten years or so younger than
Jean-Luc.  He may have been mostly human, but he had a Betazed look about him
that I instantly recognised.  I’d probably met his family at some point when
I’d been stationed on Betazed all those years ago.
“Joao,” he said in a genial tone of voice, “how good to see you again.  How is
Joaquim?”
“Dr McBride,” da Costa said in a warm voice.  “He is good.  Married now.”
“Excellent,” McBride said.  “Wonderful.  I understand you’ve been working with
Commander Riker.”
“Yes,” da Costa said.
“Good,” McBride replied.  “I was very pleased to hear that you were on this
ship, and that the Captain had assigned you to Mr Riker.”  He came over to me
and said, “Commander.  I’m Alasdair McBride,” and he offered me his hand.
I took it, and I noticed that he just held it lightly, before he let it go.  “A
little swollen still, I see,” he said.  “Dr Crusher said you’d broken it, this
morning.  If the swelling’s not down by tomorrow, we’ll need to take another
look.”
“I have no idea,” I said.  “I don’t remember what happened this morning.”
“Of course you don’t,” McBride said agreeably.  “That’s been your chief
survival skill, hasn’t it?  What you don’t remember won’t keep hurting you and
making it impossible for you to function.  It’s served you well, for you to
achieve the success which you have.  As Deanna has said, you are a singularly
strong individual.”
I didn’t say anything.  He took the captain’s chair, and sat in it.
“I’m sure you must have many questions for me,” he said.  “And I’m sure you’re
conflicted about my being here at all.  In a normal situation,” he continued,
“Commander, if you had come to me on your own, needing help, there’d be time
enough to talk about the different therapeutic options, to discuss my program
and how it might benefit you, and to slowly introduce you to myself, and my
ideas, and my work concerning your illness.  I would have everything that I
needed to have about you, and we would begin the therapeutic relationship
carefully.  Very much in the way I helped Joao’s brother,” and he looked up and
smiled at da Costa.  “Whose life I understand you saved, which is why I was
able to help Joaquim, and why Joao is here working with you.”
“I wasn’t aware,” I said slowly, “that Mr da Costa was working with me.”
“Oh, I think you are,” he said.  “Whether you’ve wanted to acknowledge it or
not is a different story.”  He paused, and then he said, and his tone
completely changed, “The thing is, Commander, that we don’t have that luxury,
to begin our therapeutic relationship in the way I just outlined.  You have
already tried to kill yourself once, and you are – as this morning proved – at
grave risk to try again.  Your body is exhausted from the recent traumas, and
your brain – in an effort to conserve energy – is shutting down non-essential
systems.  Your flashbacks are increasing, both in number and in intensity. 
Your mood swings are rapid and unpredictable.  In short, young man, you are in
extreme crisis, and if I don’t begin my program with you now, at once, you are
at risk for not surviving this at all.”
I was silent as I tried to understand what he was saying to me.  In a way, he
was confirming what I already knew, which was that I couldn’t go on like this. 
That my condition was deteriorating.  That I wouldn’t be able to tolerate much
more.  That something was about to give, and that something would either be my
physical self or what was left of my mind.
“I have been trying to tell Jean-Luc this,” I said, finally.  “It’s not that I
don’t want to live – although it would have been a hell of a lot easier, and
less painful for me, if I’d just been allowed to die – but I don’t think I
can.  Not like this.”
“Yes,” McBride said.  “I’ve been told that you are brilliant, and I can see
that.  But of course there was no question, Commander, of anyone allowing you
to die.  You are a valuable human being, to your friends and to Starfleet.  And
I’m not a pessimist.  I want you to understand that I am very realistic about
where you are in the course of this illness – you are in crisis, in a life-
threatening situation – and I am very realistic about how difficult this
illness is to treat.  Especially in a case like yours, where the initial trauma
is due to severe abuse, and then has been exacerbated by your repeated
deployments in wartime situations.”  Surprisingly, he smiled at me.  “But I’m
never a pessimist, Commander.  You’re an intelligent young man.  You have a
wonderful support team.  And my program works.  It has a high rate of success. 
It’s worked for others who have had the severest form of this illness, as you
do, and it will work for you, too.”
There was nothing to say to that, except that I didn’t believe that what he was
saying was true.  In a way he sounded like he was trying to sell me something,
and I could feel both irritation and dismay rising at the same time.  I
wondered if anyone had actually vetted this man.  Then I remembered he had a
personal relationship with da Costa, and that Deanna – and if there were anyone
I did trust, it was Deanna – had contacted him, not the other way around.
“So,” he said, standing up.  “I understand you’ve been having problems with
nausea?”
“Yes,” I said.
“When’s the last time you had anything to eat or drink?”
I shrugged.  “Last night, I guess,” I said.
“We’ll see if we can’t get a little something in you,” he said.  “You need your
strength, since we’re to begin today.  Has he been taking fluids, Joao?”
Da Costa said, “Not since I’ve been here, sir.  He vomited when he woke, and he
hasn’t had anything since.”
“Well, that’s not good,” McBride said.  “You’ve been having problems with
dehydration as it is.  See if you can’t get him to drink something, regardless
of what it is, Joao.”
Da Costa glanced at me.  “It’s very hard,” he said mildly, “Doctor, to get the
Commander to do something he doesn’t want to do.”
McBride smiled.  “I’m sure it is,” he answered.  “That’s what makes life so
interesting.”
I could have sworn I saw da Costa roll his eyes.  “I’ll do my best, sir,” he
said.
I was beginning to like McBride.
“I’ve got your treatment meeting, Commander,” he said to me.  “So I’ll see you
in about an hour, and I’ll outline our program for you then.  We’ll start your
first session.  See if you can’t eat and drink a little bit, all right?”
“Yes,” I said, “I’ll try.”
“I’ll tell Gwyn to give you something you like, for once,” McBride said, still
smiling, “instead of making you eat all of that stuff that’s good for you.”
I glanced at da Costa, who was avoiding making eye contact with me.  “I’d like
a cup of coffee,” I said, and I heard da Costa give a little snort.
“No doubt you’re in the middle of caffeine withdrawal, on top of everything
else,” he agreed.  “Joao, see if you can’t get the Commander a cup of coffee. 
If he feels well enough to drink it, I doubt he’s having problems with his
stomach right now.”
“Aye, sir,” da Costa said.
McBride turned to leave and I said to da Costa, “I like it dark –“
And he answered, “Aye, sir.  Three creams, no sugar.  I’ll let Djani know.”
 
 
 
I’d had my cup of coffee, which had tasted wonderful, and discovered that
having something familiar that tasted good – when had I stopped tasting things?
– lightened my mood considerably.  Da Costa was able to get some toast and a
little bit of chicken broth in me, and he made me drink – slowly – a cup of
water.  He helped me to the head, but I was able to walk a little better, and,
as much as I hated to admit it, having had the pain medication was making it
easier to manoeuver. 
I wondered what the treatment program would entail.  Clearly da Costa knew,
since McBride had treated his brother.  I knew what a hyperbaric chamber was,
but I didn’t understand how this would be part of treatment for me.
I closed my eyes, not intending to sleep, because McBride had said he would see
me in an hour, and I wanted to be alert, but then I was seeing the table again,
and climbing up on the chair, and the green cushion was sliding off, and I was
slipping down, and the hands were coming –
“Do you want him to talk this one through, Doctor?” da Costa said.
“We need to know what the trigger is,” McBride responded.  “If you could wake
him up, Doctor.”
I felt a hypo
spray, and I opened my eyes.
“Sleeping is a major issue, isn’t it, Commander?” McBride said kindly.  “Night
terrors, flashbacks, nightmares, waking dreams.  It’s hardly any wonder your
health is not improving, when you need to sleep in order for your body to
restore itself.”
“All I do is sleep,” I said irritably.
“But not the kind of sleep you need,” he responded.  “Thank you, Dr Crusher. 
I’ll take over, for now.  Let me talk to Mr Riker about his treatment plan, and
then I’ll start his first session.”  Both Deanna and Beverly turned to leave,
and then McBride said, “Ask the captain to stay, will you?  I may need him at
some point.”
“Of course, Alasdair,” Deanna said, and she and Beverly left.
“Would you close the door, Joao?” McBride asked, and he sat in Jean-Luc’s
chair.
“Mr da Costa is staying?” I asked, remembering the fuss I had made before.
“Mr da Costa is on your treatment team, Commander,” McBride said.  “Yes, he’s
staying.”
“But he’s a kid,” I protested.
“A kid who has more knowledge of my program than anyone else on this ship,
including your counsellor.”
Da Costa shut the door, and returned to his post.
“I’m going to start by calling you William,” McBride said, “and you are free to
call me Alasdair or Sandy, if you prefer.  I generally go by Sandy to my
friends.”
“I’m your patient,” I said, “not your friend.”
“And a soldier,” McBride said, “in a service that claims it is not military. 
Nevertheless, you may call me either one.  I would prefer, however, that you
try to stop calling me ‘doctor’ as we are going to have to become quite close,
quite quickly, and we really don’t have the time to go through all the trust-
building exercises I usually use with my patients.  Calling me by my name will
help you accept the possibility of trusting me.”
I didn’t say anything.  I was getting that feeling of being sold something
again.
“It’s a simple concept,” McBride said, “but one we humans – and I’m mostly
human, being only one-quarter Betazed – have a hard time accepting about
ourselves.  You graduated from the Academy in navigational and physical
sciences, yes?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Eighth in your class, if I remember correctly,” he continued.  “And you had
early admission too.  So you took the normal science course load, then,
including all the biologies and organic and inorganic chemistries?”
“Yes,” I answered.
“The brain is an organ,” McBride said, “just as your heart and lungs and liver
are.  It’s a remarkable organ, in that it has this amazing capacity to redesign
itself after injury in the way no other human organ can.  Post-traumatic stress
disorder is a disease of the brain.  It often develops from brain injury but it
also causes brain injury.  I approach your illness the way any doctor would
approach an illness of the body, holistically, looking at your symptoms as they
function as part of a whole system, and then treating your system, not your
symptoms.  To that end, we must heal the organ that is no longer capable of
healing itself.  Just as,” he said, “if you were suffering from a disease of
the heart or the blood, I would be treating both the organ and your whole
body.  In this case, I will be treating your brain, and in order to do that, I
must treat your body as a whole.”
He smiled at me.  “Bear with me, William,” he said.  “Your attention span isn’t
long, I know, and this is elementary stuff.  So, to start, I am going to treat
you on a variety of different levels, using your entire treatment team.  To
begin with, we start with the very basics.  Oxygen, nutrition, and sleep.  PTSD
prevents you from achieving optimal levels of the very basic elements you need
to survive.  You are suffering from chronic oxygen deprivation.  In fact, I can
hear right now that you are not breathing properly, and so are receiving
insufficient oxygen for you to function.  With your physical therapist, you
will begin a breathing program.  I will also be using the hyperbaric chamber,
which your friend Mr LaForge has constructed, to raise the oxygen levels of
your brain.  Working with your nutritionist, I am outlining the nutrients and
supplements that your body needs to heal your brain and improve your sleep. 
Lastly, with Deanna, we will be working together to help you regain normal
sleep, so that your body has the time to heal itself.”
I thought for a minute and then I said, “Okay.  I understand this, mostly.  But
how does this stop the flashbacks and everything else?”
“The flashbacks are symptoms, William,” he said patiently.  “Symptoms of an
illness, just as a runny nose is a symptom of a cold.  We restore the brain,
and with it, your body, to health.  That’s the first step.  Some of your
symptoms will be alleviated by that.  The night terrors, for example, which are
currently being somewhat controlled by medication, will be alleviated by the
program I’ve just outlined, as they are neurological symptoms of a distressed –
and disordered – brain.”
“Disordered?” I echoed.
“Deanna told me that she ran some of the preliminary function tests,” McBride
said.
“You mean the words and memory tests she gave me?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.  “Mr da Costa and I will be running further tests along those
lines.  You have suffered traumatic brain injury, as the tests indicated.  Your
functioning is impaired.  It’s only because you have adapted to your repeated
injuries so many times that you function at all.  Your brain, if I may say so,
William, is truly remarkable.”
“You mean when I was a child?” I was feeling very uncomfortable. 
“We can start with the childhood injuries,” McBride agreed.  “I’ve gone over
some of the information that Captain Picard has collected, including the new
information he received from your father.  But you also – “
“Stop,” I said.  “Just stop.”
He did.
 “Commander?” da Costa said softly.
“When did the captain speak to my father?” I said.
“Yesterday, I believe,” McBride replied.  “Your father – “
“Shut up,” I said.  “Why wasn’t I told that he was going to speak to my
father?  Why didn’t he tell me he spoke to my father?”
“William,” McBride said.  “I am sorry if you are upset that Captain Picard
contacted your father.  It was on my instructions, as well as based on his own
need for information.  It was an agreed-upon course of action by your treatment
team.  If he didn’t tell you he was going to do this, it’s because he had a
reason not to.  Do not hijack your treatment this way, as it will not help
you.”
“Don’t speak to me as if I’m a child,” I said.  “I’m not a child.  And I
deserve honesty in my so-called treatment.  The captain said he would be honest
with me, not an hour ago, and now I find out that he has spoken to my father
behind my back.”
“I think we’ll take a break now,” McBride said, finally.  “You are, obviously,
feeling overwhelmed.”
“I’m feeling ganged up on,” I said.  “That’s what I’m feeling.”
McBride said, “I could assure you, William, that that is not the case, but I
doubt you would believe me at this moment.  You need a break, to process all
the information you’ve been given, including the information about your
father.  Perhaps Mr da Costa will get you something to drink, and give you a
chance to move around, exercise a bit.”
“Mr da Costa is not allowed to leave me alone,” I said.  “Per the captain’s
orders.”
“Of course.  I’ll send in an orderly, then.”
He left, leaving the door open.  Within a minute the orderly Djani came in with
a new cup of water, which I waved away.
“Would you like to go to the head, sir?” da Costa asked.
“Given my current feelings about the captain,” I said, “that’s probably not a
good idea.”
“Sir,” da Costa answered.  “You should drink the water, though.”
“Oh, fuck you,” I said.
I swung my legs over the side of the bed and stood up, without da Costa’s
help.  I waited a moment, to see if I felt dizzy, and when I didn’t, I stood
up.  My back was sore and tight from being in the bed for so long, and my arms
were starting to hurt again.
“Some simple stretches might help,” da Costa said.
“If you say one more thing to me,” I told him, “I will take you down.”
Wisely he said nothing, as, considering the state of my arms, that scenario was
unlikely.  Still, it felt good to tell him that.  I went ahead and did a few
stretches, though, as that had been my intent, and then I drank some of the
water on my own.
And then I felt like a complete child.  As in, no, I don’t want to go to bed,
and then, five minutes later, crying because you’re so tired.  I sighed.  I sat
back down, but in the chair, and stretched my legs.
I did need to go to the head, but I was afraid that if I saw Jean-Luc I would
behave badly, and I was so confused by what McBride had said and by what Jean-
Luc had promised me that it was better to avoid the situation.
I understood the part about treating me holistically, and about repairing my
brain, and I was sure there would be more information given to me concerning
nutrition and oxygen deprivation, and how the hyperbaric chamber treatments
would work.  I wasn’t sure how Deanna’s simple tests could show that my brain
was injured, but Deanna always did her homework, so I could trust that to be
true as well.  As for my brain injury, four weeks ago I’d come in here after
falling in the holodeck with a concussion, one of the series of injuries that
had caused Dr Crusher to notify the captain that there was a problem.  And the
memory that I had recalled – the one where I killed that boy whose name I still
didn’t remember – had started with my head hurting, because I was being pounded
into a tiled floor.  Since I’d been bleeding in that memory, undoubtedly I had
sustained a head injury there too. 
So I could understand that.  But why had Jean-Luc told me there wasn’t anything
else I needed to know, when he’d spoken to my father yesterday?  He’d said he’d
give me all the information I needed, and yet here was a glaring example of
that not being so.  Unless, of course, he was still relegating me to “need to
know.”  I had to think through this logically, if I was going to be able to
tolerate McBride and his session.  And logically was not something I was
particularly good at, at the moment.  I took a couple deep breaths, to try to
let go of the anger – and hurt.  I was hurt.  He’d told me he’d be honest, and
he’d lied, and it hurt.
I tried to recall what he’d said to me.  Something about us having to negotiate
where our professional and personal boundaries began and ended, if we were
going to continue to have a relationship.  And then he was telling me about Dr
McBride, and his treatment program, and whether I could be treated here on the
ship, as he’d promised I would be, but that if McBride said I couldn’t be
treated here, then he’d defer to McBride and I’d be sent to his centre on SB
515. 
 Jean-Luc was methodical and logical.  Had he merely meant that he was going to
be honest about my being treated by Dr McBride, and that didn’t include the
fact that he’d talked to my father?  I supposed it was possible, but it
beggared the point.  How could you be honest about one thing, and not about
another?
 “Perhaps,” da Costa said quietly, “in the face of everything that has happened
over the past twenty-four hours, sir, the captain simply forgot.”
“I thought I told you not to speak to me,” I said.
He came around to me, and bent down again so that he was making eye contact
with me.  “You love him, yes?” he said.
“That’s none of your business, mister,” I answered.
“You frightened him, when he found you trying to resign, because you’d had the
opportunity to kill yourself when you were alone.  Then you had the flashback
this morning, and you injured yourself again.  You both hold yourselves to
impossibly high standards,” da Costa said.  “And unreasonably so.  It’s
reasonable that he meant to tell you, but it got lost in more important things,
such as making sure you were safe, and that you understood Dr McBride’s
program.”
“Shut up,” I said.  “I won’t tell you again.”
“Part of loving someone is forgiving them,” da Costa finished, and he turned
around and went back to his post.
“Oh, fuck you,” I said, but I didn’t mean it.
 
 
Jean-Luc stood in the doorway.  “Mr da Costa,” he said.
“Sir,” da Costa answered.
“Give us a moment,” he said.
“Aye, sir.”
Da Costa left, and Jean-Luc shut the door.
“We seem to have spent this entire day on the wrong foot,” he said, looking at
me.
I felt like a sullen child.  “You said you would be honest with me.”
“Mère de Dieu,” he said, but he didn’t move away from the door.  “Are you going
to throw something at me?” he asked.  “Or can I come near you?”
“You’re not funny,” I said.  Then I said, “I don’t think I could throw
anything, anyway.”
“Your arms hurt again?” he said, walking over to me.
I shrugged.  “I asked you,”  I said, “if there were anything else, and you said
no.”
He sighed.  “Your father has information we need,” he said.  “William.  It was
a judgment call that I made after your flashback, the first time you had it.”
“When did you speak to him?”
“Yesterday, late in the evening, before I came in to you,” he answered.  “The
call came through.  I told him you’d had an accident and that we needed
information.”  He paused.  “He’d been expecting me to call.”
I looked up at him.  “Why?”
“He thought that your being the same age as your mother was when she died might
make you remember.  He knew right away what you’d tried to do.  As I said, he
was expecting it.”
“When you came in to me last night, you didn’t say anything,” I said.
“William, I found you trying to resign,” he replied.  “That was hardly the time
or the place.”
“When were you going to tell me?”
“When Dr McBride thought you would be able to handle it,” he said.
“Goddamn it,” I said. 
“Will.”  He sat on the edge of the bed.  “Let’s start again, shall we?”
I was tired of feeling like a recalcitrant child, but I didn’t know how else to
feel.
“I have spoken with your father,” he said.  “He has information that we need. 
He was able to help with two of your flashbacks.  It was not,” he said, “a very
pleasant experience.  I am afraid that I have made your father’s cooperation
more difficult.  However, Dr McBride has agreed to talk with him, for further
information.”
I said, “How did you make his cooperation more difficult?  Why is he even
cooperating?”
“I could not,” Jean-Luc said, “contain my anger.  He took offense.  Why
wouldn’t he cooperate?  He apparently enjoyed the attention.”
I knew then, why he hadn’t told me.  He knew more than I did; what my father
had done.  Why I couldn’t remember.  Why I couldn’t function.
“You’re protecting me,” I said in a surprised voice.
“I love you,” he said simply.  He reached out for my hand, and I let him hold
it.  “Can I tell the doctor you’re ready to continue?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said.
He stood up, and then he bent down and kissed me.  I let him hold me.
“I forget,” I said.  “I don’t know why, but I do.”
“I’ll come in every hour and hold you, then,” he said, smiling, “so you won’t.”
“Please,” I said.  “I don’t want to forget anymore.”
“I’ll get Dr McBride,” he said, letting me go.
I sighed.  “I don’t want to do this,” I said.  “I don’t think I’m going to like
his session.”
“I won’t leave you, mon cher,” Jean-Luc said.  “I’ll be in Beverly’s office, in
case you need me.”
I wanted to ask him about the ship, but I knew that the ship would be fine.  It
was time to stop making excuses.  Time to just let him take care of me.
“Yes,” I said.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 29 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride begins his first session with William, and one of the
     triggers is revealed, along with the memory it represents.
Chapter Notes
     It is estimated that approximately 15% of men and 20-30% of women
     have experienced childhood sexual abuse. About 20-30% of childhood
     sexual abuse survivors experience significant and lasting negative
     effects, including reexperiencing and hyperarousal, anxiety and fear,
     low self-esteem, shame, and depression. Disassociation, substance
     abuse, and suicide -- all symptoms of PTSD -- are more common among
     childhood sexual abuse survivors. Other problems associated with
     childhood sexual abuse include earlier physical maturation, risk-
     taking behaviours (especially among males), problems in interpersonal
     relationships, mistrust of others and social anxiety, promiscuity or
     complete negation of sexual activity, and an overall inability to
     regulate emotions.
     Sexual abuse perpetrated by the father seems to be the most traumatic
     type of sexual abuse. This may be because it indicates greater
     overall family dysfunction; because it severs the attachment of child
     to parent; because less support within the family structure may be
     available for the child; and because it's less likely that the child
     will be believed if the child discloses. The betrayal and loss of
     trust is profound.
     Please do not read this chapter if you are triggered by scenes of
     child abuse or child sexual abuse.
Chapter Twenty-Nine
 
 
 
 
 
Dr McBride entered the room, with the same genial attitude he’d had as before,
as if I hadn’t been such an asshole.
“Did you work things out with your captain?” he asked.
I looked at him suspiciously.  “Yes,” I said.
“Good,” he replied.  “The way this is going to work, William, is probably
different from what you’ve ever experienced before, although Joao tells me that
he and your captain did talk you through one flashback yesterday.”
“Yes,” I said cautiously.  That was something I didn’t want to think about.
“I assume you’ve had some therapeutic sessions with Deanna,” he continued.
“Over the course of my assignment here, yes,” I said.  “Particularly after the
Borg.”
“Yes,” he agreed.  “That was when Deanna first contacted me about my work. 
Obviously, she was concerned about the crew as a whole, but she was especially
concerned about you and Captain Picard.  What we are going to do here, William,
has very little to do with a traditional talk therapy session.  We are
specifically looking for the trigger of the flashback that you had this
morning, the one that you had again as soon as you fell asleep a little while
ago.  Once we identify the trigger, we are going to explore the memory.  In a
flashback, you feel as if you are reliving or re-experiencing the trauma.  You
feel frightened; you feel threatened; it may be, in fact, that within that
particular trauma, your life was in danger.  I know that the flashback you were
helped through yesterday was one in which you were physically and emotionally
damaged.”  He paused.
I sighed, and looked down.  “I don’t want to do this,” I said.
“Of course you don’t,” he responded.  “Who would?  The whole reason why you’ve
forgotten these memories is because they cause you so much pain.”
“Then why are you going to make me go through it again?” I asked.
He reached out and took my hand.  “But I’m not going to do that, William,” he
said.  “You are not well enough to integrate these memories.  Your body is
failing.  Your brain is shutting down.  Re-experiencing the traumas that are
torturing you – and I’m not going to sugar coat this, William – that’s what
you’ve been experiencing – is not going to help you at all.  In the worst case
scenario, it could permanently damage you, if not kill you.  Captain Picard and
Joao took a calculated risk in talking you through the flashback yesterday, but
they did it because you were in extreme distress.  Nevertheless, it did a
considerable amount of damage to your system.  Dr Crusher was right to be very
concerned.”
“I don’t understand, then,” I said.
“We are going to find the trigger,” McBride explained calmly.  “This will
likely cause a flashback, but one that we are going to control.  The first
thing I am going to have you do is work with Deanna on your breathing and
relaxation exercises.  You’ve done this before with Deanna, haven’t you?”
“Yes,” I said.
“Good, so you should have very little resistance to it, then,” he said.  “I
understand that you and Deanna are close.”
“I was stationed on Betazed,” I said.  “We’re good friends.”
“And you trust her?”
“Implicitly,” I said.
“Good.  You’ve been working with many of the members of your treatment team for
a long time, which is wonderful, as there’s already trust there.  It will make
my work so much easier, since it’s going to be hard for you to trust me.  So,”
he continued.  “Breathing.  The next step is to discover the trigger.  Joao has
suggested it has something to do with mealtimes, and after seeing what happened
earlier, I’m inclined to agree.  You had a flashback after receiving your
breakfast this morning.  You were upset over your breakfast yesterday.  You
were upset when you were having dinner with the captain.  You had a flashback
and attempted suicide after having lunch with your friend Mr LaForge.  You are
not eating.  You are suffering from dehydration.  Clearly mealtimes are a
source of extreme anxiety for you.”
I didn’t say anything, because it was hard not to see it, when he’d laid it out
in that fashion.  Still, it didn’t make much sense to me.  I enjoy food.  I
like cooking.  And I’ve not had a problem with eating before, unless the fact
that I now need to watch my weight counts as a problem.
“What we will do, William,” he continued, “is recreate your breakfast of this
morning, one item at a time.  When the trigger is revealed, I am going to guide
you through the memory.  You will not have a flashback.  You will not be in the
memory, but watching the memory, as if it were a recreated story for you.  You
will not feel anything at all.  Instead, you will merely describe to me what
you see.  We will build a metaphorical wall between you and your memory.  In
that way, you will be protected.”
I was back to wondering if anyone had really vetted this guy, regardless of
Deanna’s involvement.  Metaphorical wall, my ass.
“How do you propose to do that?” I asked.
He smiled.  “I am merely going to suggest to you that we build this wall
together,” he said.  “It isn’t hard.  I understand you’re sceptical now, but it
will make sense to you.”
He stood up, but then he said, “There was one more thing that I needed to ask
you, William.”
“Yes?” I said.
“You are close to Deanna, but I’m thinking that you are closest to your
captain.  Is that correct?”
“What are you asking?” I wasn’t sure where this was heading.
“I am asking,” McBride said, calmly, “William, if you and the captain are in a
relationship.”
“Why do you need to know that?” I asked.
I had to hand it to McBride.  He wasn’t impatient at all.  He said, still
calmly, “You have no family onboard the ship, right?  You are an only child. 
Your mother died when you were two, and your father is a source of great
anxiety for you.  I usually like to have my patients surrounded by the people
they trust and love.  If you are in a relationship with your captain – if he is
the person that you are closest to – then he needs to be here, with you, as a
participant.  He will be providing you with support, physically and
emotionally.”
“What do you mean, physically?”
Da Costa said, “Commander.”
I sighed.  “Yes,” I said.  “Jean-Luc has already said he would be here, if I
needed him.”
“Good.  Let’s get Deanna in here, so she can start the program.”  He left the
room.
           
           
Deanna came in, and with her the orderly, first bringing in one of the chairs
from Room 2, and then bringing in what looked like a Betazed-style loveseat,
like the kind Deanna’s mother had in her conservatory, lower to the ground and
constructed with material that was meant to retain and reflect warmth.
“What’s that for?” I asked.
“You and the captain,” she answered.  “Alasdair will explain it, I’m sure.  You
and I are going to go through some breathing exercises, just as we did before,
Will.”
She wasn’t exactly short with me, but she was in her professional mode, and
looking at her face, I could see that she was under some sort of strain, and I
wondered if it was because my emotions had been all over the place, and if I
was wearing her out.
“Are you okay?” I asked.
She smiled, then, and said, “I’m fine, Will, really.”  She turned the captain’s
chair so that it was facing hers and said, “Okay, out of bed, and into the
chair, just as before.  Feet flat on the ground, hands on your knees.  Sit up
straight, Will.”
I did as she asked, and we went through the breathing exercises that we’d done
before I’d taken those tests with her.  Then she went over a grounding
exercise, just a mild one, getting me to feel each limb, each muscle, and
release and relax.  She had me close my eyes, and then we did an old exercise
that she’d had me do after the Borg, asking me to relocate my safe place, and
then to go there in my mind, reviewing what it looked like, concentrating on
how it felt and what I heard.  There was a place that I used to go salmonberry
and blueberry picking as a child, and I’d chosen that as my safe place, and so
I pictured it in my mind, choosing salmonberry season, and imagining that the
berries were almost ripe, hearing the buffleheads swimming in the water,
watching the dappled light play over the leaves of the bushes.
“That’s it,” she was saying, “just breathe, breathe in and breathe out, good. 
You’re doing fine, Will.”
I could feel myself relaxing, could feel my breathing evening out.
“How is he doing?” I heard McBride say.
“He’s fine,” Deanna answered.  “Relaxed.  Breathing well.”
“Good,” he said.  “Will, leave your safe place now, and open your eyes.”
I did, reluctantly.
“Joao, if you can help William onto the couch,” McBride said, and I was being
guided by da Costa from the chair over to the Betazed couch. 
The cushions were firmer than the ones that Deanna’s mother used, but made of
the same material; as soon as I sat down I could feel my own body heat start to
radiate up underneath me.  The firmer cushions were designed so that I had to
sit up straight, and the angle was such that I could slide back and my lower
back was completely supported, with my feet still flat on the floor.  It was
not an uncomfortable position, but it was not a normal one either.
McBride took the captain’s chair and sat in it, and angled it closer to me by a
bit, but away from the centre of the room.  Da Costa moved Deanna’s chair over
to the other side of the couch, and the orderly came in with two more chairs,
which were seated somewhat behind Deanna’s chair and the couch.  The orderly
moved the beds back a bit, more towards the wall.  Beverly came in, then,
followed by Jean-Luc.
“If you’ll sit beside Will, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.
I opened my mouth to say something – who was he to call the captain by his
name? I wondered – but I was distracted by Jean-Luc sitting beside me, and
sliding one arm behind my back, so that his hand was resting on my hip, and
then he held my hand.
“Of course you know your treatment team,” McBride said.  “Dr Crusher will be
monitoring your vital signs; Deanna is here to monitor your anxiety levels. 
Joao will be recreating your breakfast from this morning.  Jean-Luc is here as
family, to provide you with emotional and physical support.”  McBride paused
and then said, “He is here as Jean-Luc, not the captain.”
“Breathe, Will,” Deanna said, and I breathed.
“You’re probably wondering why the furniture is arranged in this way,” McBride
continued, “and it’s simply because we’re going to create the wall, to separate
you from what Joao will be bringing in, and we need to keep the door on the
other side of the wall.”
I resisted the urge to roll my eyes, primarily because Jean-Luc lightly but
pointedly squeezed my hand.  I remembered to breathe, so that Deanna wouldn’t
have to remind me.
“Joao, if you’ll go get the first item,” McBride said.  “William, the wall is
made of a very thick clear polymer.  You can see through it, but you cannot go
through it.  It begins at the doorway, and it ends right over here,” and he
turned and pointed to the wall on the other side of the night table.  “We’re
going to keep Joao on the other side of the wall for now, but he can cross
through where Dr Crusher is standing.  The door – the door through the wall –
is there.”
I concentrated on breathing, because a part of me was ready to just say fuck
everything and laugh.  This was patently ridiculous, and it was fairly clear to
me that we were taken in – not the first time, either, I’d remembered on
several missions where we were supposed to meet eminent scientists who turned
out to be just plain nuts.  Jean-Luc leaned into me, and said in a low voice,
“Just give this a chance, mon cher.”
I sighed.
“When Joao brings the first item in, Will,” McBride said, “I want you to look
through the wall and just describe what you see.  Are you ready?”
I nodded.
“Bring it in, Joao,” McBride said, and Joao came in carrying the tray table
from Beverly’s office.
This was going to be a long, long session.  I felt Jean-Luc squeeze my hand
again, and then he pressed himself just a little bit closer to me.
“I see the tray table from Beverly’s office,” I said.
“Next,” McBride said.  His voice was even; calm; sounding very Betazed to me.
I heard Deanna say softly from behind me, “Breathe, Will.”
I breathed.  Da Costa brought in a tray from the replicator; then a fork and
spoon; then a napkin; then a plate –
“It’s all right,” Jean-Luc said in my ear, “it’s all right,” and I felt him
pull me to him a bit.
“Let’s pause for a minute,” McBride said, “and see if we can’t get you
breathing again, William.”
When had I stopped breathing?  I wondered.  Deanna’s voice calmly instructed me
through the breathing exercises again, and I realised that Jean-Luc was
breathing with me.
“Do you need to go to your safe place for a minute, Will?” she asked, and I
could feel her rest her hand on my shoulder.
“No,” I said, confused.  I didn’t think that I was acting anxious.
“Joao,” McBride said,
and I could feel myself tensing up as I saw da Costa bring in the food from
this morning, the egg and the toast and the little bowel of fruit.
“We know what the trigger is,” McBride said, “bring it in, Joao,”
and I knew too, and I could see the table, and the cushion, and the chair, and
the plate with scrambled eggs and toast cut up into four squares on it, and the
berries in a little plastic bowl with kittens and puppies on it, and the glass
of orange juice at the edge of the table, condensation running down it; and I
felt the cushion slipping, and then the hands were lifting me up and tying me
to the chair so that I couldn’t move –
“Tell me what you see through the wall, William,” I heard McBride say from
somewhere very far away; and I felt Jean-Luc tighten his arm around me, and say
into my ear,
“You’re safe, William, nothing can get through the wall; you’re not there, you
are here with me.”
I could feel Deanna’s hands on my shoulders, and I thought I heard her telling
me to breathe, and then I could feel Jean-Luc breathing, and Beverly said,
“His blood pressure is rising,”
and McBride took both my hands, in the same way that Jean-Luc did when he
wanted me to pay attention, and he said calmly, “You are looking through a wall
at something that happened a very long time ago.  It cannot hurt you now, in
the present.  You are here in sickbay and you are safe.  Nothing that you see
can come through the wall to hurt you.  You are not on the other side of that
wall, William.  You are on thisside of the wall, with Jean-Luc beside you, and
your treatment team here to help you.  Describe what you see.”
I said, “I see Billy climbing up on the chair, and the cushion sliding off, and
breakfast is there, scrambled eggs on the puppy plate with toast in corners and
the berries in milk are in the kitty bowl, and there’s a glass of orange
juice.”
“You’re doing fine, mon cher,” Jean-Luc said, and I could feel his arms wrapped
around me.
“Where is Billy?” McBride asked.
“In the kitchen,” I said.  “At the kitchen table.”
“Is there only one chair?”
“No,” I answered, and it was as if I were looking at a viewscreen.  Somewhere
inside of me I knew that Billy and I were the same child, but I was separated
from Billy by the wall.  “Four chairs.  The chairs have cushions, to sit on,
because they’re wooden, with open backs and slats going up, and cushions are
tied by a string to the chairs through the back.  The cushions are – they’re
cream-coloured, I guess, with green flowers – no, it’s ivy, it’s green ivy
twining in a pattern.”
“Is Billy going to have his breakfast?”
I felt my throat start to close up, and Deanna said behind me,
“Just breathe, Will, you’re all right, we’re right here.”
I took a breath and felt Jean-Luc breathing again right beside me.
“Tell me what you see,” McBride said.  “Who else is in the kitchen?”
“Billy’s father,” I said, and I could see him, wearing jeans and a tee-shirt,
reaching down and catching Billy as he slid off the chair.
“Tell me what you see.”
“The cushion is loose, and Billy’s sliding off with it,” I said.  “The hands –“
“Whose hands?”
“His father’s hands, they catch him – oh, God,” I said, “don’t, please don’t.”
“Shhh,” Jean-Luc said, “You are here, with me.  You can feel me holding you,
can’t you, Will?”
I could feel Jean-Luc holding me.  “Yes,” I said.
“Where are you, William?” McBride said.
“Sickbay,” I answered.  “I’m in sickbay.  Behind the wall.”
“That’s right,” McBride said, and his voice was so calm and soothing, it
sounded almost like Deanna’s voice, that hint of an accent to it.  “You are
behind the wall.  You are watching Billy.  What happens to Billy cannot happen
to you, because you are right here, safe, with us.  Where are you?”
“In sickbay,” I repeated.  “I’m in sickbay, and I’m safe, behind the wall.”
“Bien, mon chou,” Jean-Luc said softly to me.
“Billy’s father caught him, so he wouldn’t fall off the chair,” McBride
restated.  “Tell me what you see.”
“He’s tying Billy to the chair,” I said, “with like some sort of a cloth,
around his arms and chest, so he can’t move.”
“Is he hurting Billy?”
“No – he’s scared,” I said.  “Billy’s scared.  He’s crying.  He wants his
mother.”
“His mother can’t help him,” McBride said.  “His mother is gone.”
“She’s dead,” I said.  I could feel tears running down my face.  “She can’t
help him.  No one can help him.  No one can ever help him.”
“Shhh,” Jean-Luc said, and I could feel him wiping my face.  “It’s all right. 
I’m here.”
“What do you see, William?” McBride insisted.
“His father is turning the chair,” I said dully.  “He’s opening his fly.  He’s
taking his penis out.  It’s erect –“
“I’m here,” Jean-Luc repeated, and I felt his arms tighten around me again.
“What do you see?” McBride said.  I could feel him holding my hands.
“He’s putting his penis in Billy’s mouth,” I said.  “He’s making Billy take
him.  He’s thrusting.  It’s too big.  Billy’s choking and crying.  He doesn’t
care,” I said, “He doesn’t care.”
“You are behind the wall,” McBride told me.  “Nothing can hurt you here, behind
the wall.  You are safe, William.  Billy is not, but you are not Billy.  You
are safe.”
When had I started to cry?  I said, “He makes Billy swallow it.  Some of it
spills out of Billy’s mouth.  Oh, please,” I said.  “Do I have to do this?  I
don’t want to do this.”
“What do you see?”
“His father takes the glass of orange juice,” I said.  “He puts it against
Billy’s mouth.  He’s saying he can have the orange juice now, to take the taste
away.  He’s telling Billy to drink the orange juice.  It’s cold,” I said, “it’s
cold, and it’s sour, and it smells like semen – and Billy’s throwing it up, the
orange juice and the semen, he’s throwing it up, all over the food, and the
table.  Don’t hit him.  Don’t hit him.  He’s just a little kid.  How can anyone
do this to a little kid?”
I turned my face into Jean-Luc’s shoulder and felt him kissing me.
“Joao, would you take it away now?” McBride said.  “Dr Crusher, now would be a
good time, I think.”
“Will,” Beverly said, resting a hand on my shoulder, “I’m just going to give
you something to help you sleep,” and I felt the familiar pressure of a hypo
spray in my neck.
“Let’s get you to bed, mon cher,” Jean-Luc said, and he and Dr McBride were
helping me up from the couch, and leading me back to my bed.
I don’t remember everything being put back the way it was before, but it must
have been, because I was in the bed, and Jean-Luc was sitting beside me,
holding my hand, sitting in his usual chair, and I was under the blankets and
the room was dark.
“You should try to sleep some more,” he said.
“I’ve been asleep?” I asked.  “I thought I just was in the bed.”
“For a couple of hours,” he answered.  “Do you need anything?  Shall I get Mr
da Costa to help you to the head?”
“No,” I said, “I’m tired.”
“I know,” he replied, stroking my hair.  “You’ve had a long day.”
“Will you stay with me?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.  “I’m going to be spending the night with you.”
“It doesn’t bother you?” I asked.
“What doesn’t bother me?” He seemed genuinely confused.
“That I’ve been damaged,” I said.  “That I’m not clean.  That I’ve done
terrible things.  That I’m disgusting.”
He was silent.  “William,” he said, and this time he didn’t turn away, I could
see the tears start to run down his face.  “You,” he said, “are not – nor have
you ever been – disgusting, or dirty, or shamed, even though you were made to
feel that way.  You are not the one who is responsible.  You are not the one to
blame.  You did the best you could, to try to survive.”  He wiped his face, and
then he moved from the chair to the edge of my bed, and took my hands, and
said, “You are a good man.  You are kind, and generous, and brave, and funny,
and loved, William.  I don’t know how you managed to survive and become the man
you are – I don’t think for one moment that I could have survived or become the
man you are if it had been me – but you did, and I am grateful you did.”
“I don’t feel any of those things,” I said.  “Brave, or good, or anything.”
“I know,” he answered.  “I know.”
“You think McBride can help me?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.  “He can help you.”
“And you don’t think I’m disgusting.”  I was feeling very sleepy again.
“No,” he said.  “I don’t think anything of the sort.”
“And you’re going to spend the night with me,” I said.  “Like last night.”
“Yes, just like last night.”
I was quiet.  “You’ll still want me?” I asked, finally.  “Because I don’t see
how anyone could.”
“Yes,” he said fiercely, pulling me into his arms.  “I will always want you.”
“I’ll go to sleep now,” I said, “don’t be too long.”
“I won’t,” he promised, but I was already asleep.
 
***** Interlude: Six *****
Chapter Summary
     At an impromptu meeting in Ten Forward, Picard and Guinan come up
     with a solution to Will's refusal to eat.
Chapter Notes
     Loving someone with PTSD -- especially in its acute form -- is
     exhausting and difficult. Likewise, treating a patient with acute
     complex PTSD can be a source of strain and anxiety for the primary
     therapist. Building a treatment team is essential to prevent
     exhaustion and burn out on the part of the primary therapist. In
     Will's case, the treatment team that has been assembled -- consisting
     of Dr Crusher, as the primary physician, Deanna Troi, as case
     manager, Gwyn Otaka, as nutritionist, Jai Patel, as physical
     therapist, Joao da Costa, as secondary therapist, Dr McBride, as
     primary therapist, Guinan, as food specialist, and the captain, as
     caregiver -- are all necessary components to treating his illness
     holistically.
Interlude:  Six
 
 
 
 
 
It hadn’t started out as a treatment meeting.  Picard had left sickbay to
return to the bridge for a few hours; he’d promised Will he’d spend the night
with him, but Will was so confused, time wise, that he’d thought it was already
evening when in fact it was only mid-afternoon.  He’d tried to wake Will to
explain, when he’d realised Will’s mistake, but Beverly must have given him –
what had Will said before? – a dose large enough to knock out a horse.
So he’d left Will in the capable hands of Joao da Costa, whose shift wouldn’t
be over until the end of beta shift, when the young crewman Stoch would take
over.  Picard’s interview with Stoch had left the crewman visibly shaken, even
for a Vulcan; Picard would put no reprimand in the boy’s record; it would be a
life lesson, after all.  It would have been the end of Starfleet for the boy
had Will harmed himself; that was enough for the crewman to meditate upon.
They were in orbit, no real reason for the captain to be on the bridge at all
except that a presence was needed; his presence having been felt, he retreated
to his ready room, intending at last to focus on at least the paperwork for
McBride’s continuing residence on the ship, along with everything that McBride
had requested in order to set up shop.  He spent a dreary hour sipping tea and
signing requisitions; then he opened his communications, dreading either
notification or a query from the Fleet.  Of all the admirals who might zero in
on his continued presence this close to the Neutral Zone – despite his laying
down track so that the McBride project was already approved and had a paper
trail – it was Nechayev he didn’t want to hear from, and so it was Nechayev he
was expecting.  Luck prevailed, however; no communications from HQ yet; no idle
admiral sniffing around.  There was, however, an equally dismal request from
Kyle Riker for an update on his son.
When hell froze over, Picard thought, and closed out his padd.  He realised he
would, at some point, have to apprise Troi of his revenge fantasies – despite
her outwardly mild appearance, she was her mother’s daughter and he suspected
they could indulge in a few before he, at least, would have to let his go.
Synchronicity seemed to be a common occurrence amongst the senior staff of the
Enterprise; Picard was not surprised to hear his door chime and see Deanna walk
in.  She looked a little better than she had in the morning; he knew that
Will’s suffering and rapid mood swings were taking a toll on her.
“We’re having drinks in Ten Forward, Captain,” she said.  “I thought perhaps
you’d like to join us.”
“After today,” Picard said agreeably, rising from his desk, “a drink sounds
like a good idea.”
“Good,” Deanna said, and she smiled, a warm one, indicating that whatever she’d
done in the past few hours had helped her regain her equanimity.
“Who is ‘we’?” he asked, accompanying her into the corridor and toward the
turbo lift.
“Alasdair, Beverly, Gwyn,” she answered.  “Joao is, of course, staying with
Will.  I think Iñaki will probably join us.”
“Who is Iñaki?” Picard asked.
“Oh, sorry, Captain,” Deanna said as she stepped into the turbo lift.  “Dr
Sandoval.  His first name’s Ignacio.”
“Of course,” Picard said, reaching back into his memories of Catalunya.
“Were you able to get some rest, sir?” Deanna asked.
Picard felt his lips turning upward in what might have been a wry smile.  “I
made a very small dent in some paperwork,” he replied, and then he gave a very
Gallic shrug.
Deanna’s mouth twitched, as if she wanted to laugh, but the doors to the turbo
lift opened, and they walked out into Ten Forward.  Beta shift hadn’t quite
ended, so it was fairly quiet.  It was much too early for the dinner hour, or
even before dinner drinks, and a little too late for a late lunch.  Mac and
another of the staff had put two tables together, and he and Deanna were the
last to join what seemed to be on the way to becoming a convivial group.  They
stood as a whole when the captain entered, even McBride, although it took him a
moment to recognise the protocol.  Picard nodded, briefly, so that they could
all retake their seats, and then pulled out a chair for Deanna, who slid in
gracefully, diplomat’s daughter that she was.
The seat they’d left for the captain was with its back to the observation
windows and facing the doors, and Picard was grateful – and he checked himself
for any sense of the maudlin and found it absent – that he wasn’t facing Will’s
table.  Mac sauntered over and took drinks; a second round for McBride and
Otaka, who would be off shift; nothing but juice for Sandoval, who would be
coming on; Beverly seemed content to be sipping a glass of wine.  Deanna
ordered some sort of a chocolate confection, laced with what he suspected might
be something stronger, and he ordered one of his brother’s table reds.
He sipped his wine and listened to McBride tell some amusing anecdotes about
the life of his grandmother on Betazed, who apparently had had a number of
escapades with Deanna’s grandmother; and then one especially amusing story
about Deanna’s mother – Deanna having wickedly given McBride permission to tell
his version of it – when she was around ten years old.  Beverly was quiet but
clearly enjoying herself; Gwyn Otaka and Ignacio Sandoval were not as familiar
with the lady in question but had certainly heard stories and so seemed to be
enjoying themselves.  It was all quiet and civilised; the lady in question
would have happily told the story herself, had she been there, he suspected. 
No one would ever have guessed, watching this small gathering, the enormous
strain that they were all under; Sandoval undoubtedly was still recovering from
the failure of the other night; Otaka was dealing with a patient who wasn’t
taking in any nourishment at all; and after today, there was certainly an
understanding as to why.
There was a natural lull in the conversation, and then McBride said, “How much
weight do you think William has lost over these past two weeks?”
Beverly put her glass down and replied, “I will tell you exactly.  Twelve
kilos.”
Picard was startled out of his reverie.  “As much as that?” he asked.
“Yes,” Beverly answered.  “If he’s not eating in the next twenty-four hours,
I’m ready to move him back to the biobed.”
“He’s not drinking anything either,” Otaka said.  “He has to be forced to drink
a little bit of water.  Da Costa said he finally got his cup of coffee this
morning, but he only drank about half of it.”
“Suicide by starvation is a very slow process,” Deanna said carefully.
Picard drew in his breath.  “Is that what he’s doing?” he asked.
“Whether he’s consciously doing this or not, Captain Picard,” Dr McBride
responded, “the results are exactly the same.”
“Surely,” Picard said, “after this trigger was revealed, along with the memory
associated with it, he won’t have the same flashback now at mealtimes?”
“He has yet to integrate the memory, Captain,” Deanna said.  “Just because we
know what the trigger is doesn’t mean that the power of the memory – and its
ability to hurt Will – has been defused.”
“The problem, as I see it,” said McBride, “is that we can likely assume two
things about this memory, given the information we have based on the captain’s
interview with Kyle Riker.  The first is that Will stopped calling himself
‘Billy’ when he started school, so this memory predates that.  And I suspect
that Will was much younger than five in this memory, given his difficulty in
climbing, as he said, onto the chair and sliding off the cushion.  I am
guessing he was closer to three than to five, or perhaps it occurred sometime
after his mother’s death, when he was two and a half, but before, say, four
years old.  Given that William has always been tall, he probably was younger
than four.  The second assumption we can make is that although this might have
been the first time his father abused him at the table, I sincerely doubt –
with the severity of Will’s reaction, and the severity of Will’s illness – that
this was the only time this type of abuse occurred.”
“That was my impression as well,” Picard said.  “Riker sidestepped my repeated
attempts to get him to admit to abusing Will directly when I spoke to him, but
he all but acknowledged that the abuse was chronic until Will returned home
from the hospital in Valdez.  At that point, he said that things were
‘different.’”
“Will’s illness is complicated by two layers of trauma,” McBride said, and the
genial tone of his voice was gone; this was an expert giving an expert’s
opinion.  “The first is the repetitive trauma of child sexual abuse, which in
Will’s case included physical violence, emotional manipulation and abuse, and
psychological terror.  Whether this type of abuse stopped when Will was seven,
we don’t know – but I sincerely doubt it did.”  McBride waited; Picard realised
that this was the doctor’s method of giving his listeners time to digest the
information they’d been given.  “The second layer is Will’s repeated deployment
on the battlefield, culminating with the war against the Borg and the
destruction of half the fleet, which by definition would have included many
people that he had worked with over the years.  I will work with Will
exclusively on his childhood traumas.  The program that I have designed, the
prototype of which will be tested on this ship, can then be used to further
Will’s treatment for his war-related PTSD.”
“If all goes well,” Deanna said, “he will have the tools he needs by then to
process his treatment more quickly.”
Picard said, finishing his wine, “It still leaves us with the problem of how to
get Will to eat.” He was silent for a moment and then he said, “I really don’t
think, Beverly, that he would tolerate being returned to the biobed.  I think
that will make things worse.”
“I am not,” Beverly said, and she was speaking as the CMO, “going to allow my
patient to die right before my eyes.  Not when I can prevent it.”
“The difficulty is, Captain,” McBride said gently, “to do with attachment. 
Will was securely attached to his mother for two and a half years.  His
childhood was normal up until then.  When she became ill, so that she was
hospitalised, she vanished from Will’s life completely.  The attachment was
severed.  At that point, the father became the primary caregiver.  My feeling
is that in this particular memory, we witnessed the severing of the attachment
Will had – however tenuous it might have been – to his father.  Now we have a
very young child who is unattached.  He has learned some terrible things.  He
has learned that there is no trust in the world.  People vanish without warning
or explanation.  He has learned that love – a parent’s love, the most primal
love – hurts.  He has learned that the world is unsafe and he is alone in it. 
Suicide – whether at seven or thirty-seven – is the only logical response to
such knowledge.”
“Then what do we do?” Picard asked, and he didn’t think he had ever felt so
hopeless in his life.
“Is this a closed party, or can someone else join in?”
Picard looked up into the kind face of Guinan.
“By all means, Guinan,” he said, “please join us.”  He turned to face McBride,
who was rising from his chair.  “Dr McBride, this is the proprietor of Ten
Forward, Guinan.  Guinan,” Picard said, “Dr Alasdair McBride.”
As Ignacio Sandoval brought a chair over for Guinan, McBride took her hand and
clasped it warmly in both of his.  “An El Aurian,” he said.  “I’m so very
pleased to meet you.”
Guinan sat between Otaka and Deanna.  “You are the doctor who is here to treat
Commander Riker?” she asked.
“Yes,” he replied.
Guinan gazed at Picard and then said, “Is this a treatment meeting, then?”
“We’re talking about Will’s treatment,” Beverly said, “and the difficulties in
treating him, but it’s not an official meeting.  Guinan,” Beverly said, looking
at McBride, “is the reason why we were able to save Will’s life to begin with. 
She was the one to contact Jean-Luc about Will’s flashback here.”
“William is a fortunate man,” McBride said, “to have so many people who care
about him.”
“If only he could see how many of us care about him,” Picard said, and then
mentally shrugged.  There was no longer any point in being discreet; at least
not amongst this group.
“How do you know Will?” McBride asked.
Guinan smiled, and her eyes went to the empty table by the window.  “Will does
much of his work as first officer at that table over there,” she said.  “Having
trouble with your supervisor?  Mr Riker will invite you for a coffee, and you
can talk about it.  Crew evaluations?  Four hours and four chocolate sundaes
later, and they are all done.  Are you hoping for an assignment which will show
your capabilities?  You can talk to Mr Riker, as he will invite you to lunch.”
McBride glanced at the empty table, and at the room that was filling with
people, now that beta shift had ended.
“What difficulty were you discussing?” Guinan asked.
“Commander Riker is unable to eat, due to a trauma revealed to us earlier
today,” Gwyn Otaka said.  “He is dehydrated and losing weight.  It’s not a good
situation.”
“Having to do with his father?” Guinan persisted, looking at Picard.
“Will associates meals with his father’s sexual abuse,” McBride said.  “The
trauma is significant.”
“The Will I know,” Guinan said, “loves food.  He’s a great cook.  We’ve spent
some good times, talking about food, sharing recipes.”
“And yet almost every one of his flashbacks,” McBride countered, “has occurred
at a mealtime.”  McBride paused, and then he said, “He cooks?”
“He’s a good cook,” Deanna agreed.  “He’s made some wonderful meals for me.”
“When did he learn to cook?”
“He was very young,” Picard answered, “or at least that’s how he tells it.”
Guinan said, “He told me he learned to cook because his father wouldn’t.  His
housekeeper – Mrs S, he calls her – bought him a cookbook for his seventh
birthday.  She helped him learn, taking him to the market, teaching him about
food.  He has some excellent recipes from her.”
“He was an amazingly resourceful child,” McBride said, shaking his head.  “He
learns to cook, to take control of mealtimes.”
“Guinan,” Picard said, “he trusts you.  Why don’t you and Mr Otaka meet with
Will so he can design his meals himself?  You know what he likes to eat.  Mr
Otaka knows what he needs, according to Dr McBride’s program.  It gives Will a
chance – as Dr McBride just noted – to regain some control.”
“It also has the added attraction,” McBride said eagrely, joining in, “of
removing surprise from mealtimes.  Patients with this kind of trauma cannot
tolerate any surprises, no matter how small.  And,” it seemed McBride was just
getting started, “we can remove the orderlies – who are all male – from the
process.  We’ve just seen how early the abuse started.  We need to go further
back in time, to when Will felt safe – and that was when his mother was alive,
and he received nourishment from her.  Having Guinan take on this role – a
woman he already associates positively with food – is perfect.”
Picard remembered his earlier conversation with Guinan and said, “Then make it
so.”
Guinan rose, and the male members of the meeting rose with her.  “Gwyn,” she
said to Otaka, “I know you’re off duty, but we’ll need to talk about supper
before you leave.”
“Right now,” Otaka said.  “He’s scheduled to have his meal in thirty minutes,
and we’ll need to work fast, if we want to move the orderlies out of the
picture.”
“I’ll give you twenty-four hours,” Beverly said, also rising.  “If he shows any
progress in eating, I’ll be satisfied.  But if he doesn’t improve, even just a
bit, I’m placing him back in the ICU.  Regardless,” and she looked directly at
Picard, “of what anyone thinks.”
For a minute everyone looked at Picard, but Picard smiled and merely said, “Of
course, Beverly.”
She stared at him for a minute, and then she rolled her eyes and laughed. 
“It’s been a pleasure,” she said, not a little ironically.  “Iñaki, I’ll walk
with you back to sickbay.”
“Captain,” Ignacio Sandoval said, and he and Beverly walked off towards the
turbo lift.
Otaka nodded to the captain, and left the table with Guinan, leaving Deanna,
McBride, and Picard still seated.  Picard thought about his promise to Will
earlier, about staying the night with him, and Will’s time confusion, the
looming dinner hour, and Will’s inability to remember that, in fact, Picard was
perfectly willing to love him.  He was fairly sure that Deanna would have made
plans to have dinner with McBride, seeing as how he was clearly a family
friend, and he had no desire to intrude.  Still, he had the feeling that there
was something McBride wanted to discuss.
“You said, earlier, Dr McBride,” he began, slowly, using his familiar
deliberate searching for words technique, one that frequently allowed him
insight into the person with whom he was speaking, “that Will’s brain was
shutting down non-essential functions.  What exactly does that mean?”
“One of the surest signs, as a diagnostician, of PTSD is the presence of what I
call a disordered brain,” McBride responded, in a similar tone to Picard’s. 
“The preliminary function tests that Deanna ran on Will showed impaired memory,
recall, logic, and reasoning.  This is an indication of traumatic brain injury
– he had a concussion three weeks ago – and a symptom of PTSD.”
“Practically speaking,” Picard said, “this means what?”
“He has mood swings, and an inability to stabilise his moods.  Sometimes, an
inability to recognise his moods – thinking, for example, that he is being
perfectly reasonable, when in fact he is irritable, or that he is calm, when he
is highly anxious.”
“We have,” Deanna said, “seen that quite a bit.  He frequently says he is calm,
when he is not.”
“He is struggling to comprehend complex instructions,” McBride continued.  “He
is unable to understand what is happening around him.  And he is having
difficulty retaining information.”
“He said to me earlier,” and for Picard, this was the crux of the conversation,
“that he forgets I love him.”
He was looking at McBride, but out of the corner of his eye he saw Deanna’s
face, and he reached out his hand to her.  She hesitated for just a moment, and
then she took his hand; he remembered that Guinan had said Deanna needed to let
Will go, and he realised, as he held her hand for that brief moment, that she
had.
“Yes,” McBride said.  “You and I will have to talk – tomorrow, at some point –
about your relationship with him.  But I wanted to tell you, Captain – if you
will allow me to – that your instincts with Will are very good.  It must be
very difficult – given that you are both command officers of this ship – for
you to be so demonstrative with him.  He needs unconditional love and affection
desperately – even as he is forgetting, as you say, how much you care for him,
and, at times, pushing you away.”
They were suddenly straying into uncharted waters, and Picard, aware that
Geordi and Worf were at a table not that far away, stood up.
“I’ll leave you to your meal,” he said, “unfortunately, I need to put in
another hour in my office.”
“Are you going to check on Will first?” Deanna asked.
He thought for a moment and then said, “No, I don’t want to interfere with
whatever Guinan and Gwyn Otaka are doing.  I promised Will I’d be with him
tonight.  I’ll just make an early night of it.”
“Perfect,” McBride said.  “Will needs you to be as physically close to him as
you can be.  Spending the night with him will do him good, as he needs the
contact.  But we’ll talk more about that in the morning,” McBride finished,
smiling.  “He has a full day tomorrow, his first full day of treatment.  I
suspect he sleeps better when you are with him.  He’ll need the rest.”
Picard tugged at his tunic, and he thought, for a moment, that there was a
glint of something – amusement?  fondness?  -- in Deanna’s eyes.
“Good night, then,” he responded, and, nodding briefly to Geordi and Worf, he
walked purposefully towards the turbo lift.
 
 
 
***** Chapter 31 *****
Chapter Summary
     Guinan begins her program with Will and Will has a discussion with
     both Joao da Costa and Stoch. Jean-Luc must navigate between Will's
     desire for intimacy and his concern that intimacy might cause Will
     pain.
Chapter Notes
     Physical and emotional intimacy is extremely difficult for survivors
     of sexual abuse, childhood sexual abuse, and sexual assault.
     Survivors may experience anxiety about sex in general; they may feel
     anxious before, during, or after particular sexual activities, or
     even when being touched. They are prone to dissociation during sexual
     intimacy. Survivors may experience a loss of interest in sex or
     sexual activity, and they may have performance issues, such as
     impotence, lack of arousal, and an inability to achieve an orgasm.
     However, survivors may also suffer from hypersexuality, an elevated
     desire for sex, which may alternate with periods of anxiety and/or
     complete dissociation during sexual intimacy. Partners of survivors
     must learn to cope with emotional numbing, dissociation, intrusive
     images, depression, and anger, all of which make it hard to sustain
     the closeness necessary for intimacy. Often partners find themselves
     caught between the proverbial rock and hard place: sexual activity is
     fraught with pain and anxiety, so partners become reluctant to
     subject the survivor to further trauma, which the survivor then takes
     as rejection, adding to their sense of shame and low self-worth.
Chapter Thirty-One
 
 
I realised, when I opened my eyes again and saw the familiar form of da Costa
standing at his post, that I must have been confused when I’d spoken before to
Jean-Luc.  I’d thought it was evening, and Jean-Luc would be returning soon,
but it obviously wasn’t even the end of beta shift now, since da Costa was
still here.  It made me wonder what else I’d been confused about, what else I
wasn’t getting.  McBride had said my brain was shutting down, and it seemed to
me that here was hard evidence that he was speaking the truth.  It didn’t make
any sense, then, for Jean-Luc and Deanna to oppose my resignation.  Clearly –
on sick leave or not – I would not be able to fulfill my duties as first
officer.  Here we were, so close to the Neutral Zone – I did, at least,
remember that – and if we were in a firefight, on sick leave or not, I would be
called upon to function, and I didn’t even know the time of day anymore.  I had
a broken hand, and a reinjured arm; I was having debilitating flashbacks, my
emotions were out of control – how could I be anything but in the way?  It
would be safer for the ship if I resigned.  As a civilian, I could help a
little bit in a civilian capacity, or they could drug me and keep me under
confinement until the danger was passed.
Jean-Luc was letting his personal feelings for me get in the way of running
this ship, my ship.  Somehow I had to make him understand that he was
endangering us all by his inaction.  It was exactly the same as his wanting to
be on dangerous away teams.  It would be my last duty as first officer to see
that Data was promoted in my place.
“Do you need anything, sir?” da Costa said.
“Can you help me sit up?” I asked.
“Of course, sir,” he replied, and he rearranged my pillows and the covers so
that I was comfortably sitting against the headboard.
“What time is it?” I asked.
“Twenty minutes to end of beta shift, sir,” he said.  “Mr Stoch will be
reporting, sir.”
“Is he okay?” I asked.
“Sir?” da Costa said.
I grinned.  “I’ve been on the receiving end of a few of the captain’s ‘chats’
over the years,” I said.  “It’s not a particularly pleasant experience.”
Da Costa returned my grin.  “No, sir,” he agreed.  “Mr Stoch is still pretty
shaken up.  I’ve yet to have that experience, sir.”
“Take my advice and keep it that way,” I said.  “The first time he called me in
his ready room, I expected he’d yell at me and that would be that.  It was,” I
said, “Captain de Soto’s method.  Captain Picard does not yell.”
“No, sir,” da Costa said.  “I couldn’t imagine him yelling, sir.”
“I was singularly unprepared,” I said.  “He very quietly and efficiently cuts
you down to size.  In fact,” I said, “I used to be three inches taller.  I’ve
shrunk, over the years.”
I was rewarded with da Costa’s laughter.  Maybe I could still function a little
bit, after all.
“Is this a private party,” Guinan asked, “or can I join in the fun?”
“Guinan,” I said.  It had been so long since I had seen anyone from outside
sickbay.  “I’m allowed to have visitors now?”
“Well, Commander,” she said, coming into my room, “I’m not sure that you can
meet with all of engineering, but I did have permission from the captain to
come.”
I grinned.  “That’s okay,” I said.  “I don’t really want to meet with all of
engineering.  You can sit in the captain’s chair,” I offered.  “This is Mr da
Costa, who has been doing his best to keep me from causing havoc in here.”
“I’ve seen you in Ten Forward,” Guinan said.  “Mr da Costa.  You have a very
difficult job, then, if it’s to keep this man from causing havoc.”
“Yes, ma’am,” da Costa said, and he was smiling.  “I haven’t always been
successful.”
“I keep him on his toes,” I said lightly.  “It prevents him from being bored.”
I did see him roll his eyes then.
“I notice they don’t have anything in here that you can throw, William,” Guinan
remarked.  “They learn quickly.”
Da Costa turned his face away, so I couldn’t see him laugh.
“Does the whole ship know about that?” I asked, reddening.
She shrugged.  “You know where I heard it,” she answered.  “I’d say that was a
good guess.”
“So much for command presence,” I said.
“Oh, I think,” Guinan said, “that it will only add to your charm,” and she
reached out and held my hand for a moment.
“How come the captain gave you permission to see me?” I asked.  “Dr Crusher has
to chase Worf away.”
“He was in Ten Forward with your team,” Guinan explained.  “I asked.  He said
yes.”
“Today?” I asked.  “He was there today?”
“Yes,” she said.  “Your doctor McBride, and Dr Crusher, Troi, the captain –
they were having drinks.  Troi’s having dinner with Dr McBride now.  I’m
assuming they’re related?”
“They might as well be,” I said.  “Something to do with his grandmother and
hers.”
“Ah,” Guinan said.  “Anyway, Will, while I’m here, I have a question for you,
if you don’t mind.”
“I don’t mind, Guinan,” I said.  “I’m so bored.  Anything.”
“I suppose,” Guinan said, grinning, “once they took your toys away so you
couldn’t throw them anymore, you would be bored.”
Now I rolled my eyes.  “Okay,” I said.  “I give up.  No more.”
“I’m sorry, Will,” she said.  “I just wished I could have been there.  I think
half the ship wishes they could have been there.”
“I know da Costa wishes he hadn’t,” I said, because I was sure I could hear da
Costa chuckling softly.
“Just the look on the captain’s face – “Guinan continued.
“Please,” I begged.  “I’ll never hear the end of it from da Costa if you don’t
stop.”
“Oh, all right, Will,” she said, and she held my hand again. 
“You had a question,” I reminded her.
“Yes,” she said.  “Indeed I did.  Do you remember when we were talking – oh, I
think it was three or four weeks ago – about summer and summer foods?”
I thought for a minute.  “Oh, yeah,” I said.  “It was because Geordi had said
something about a certain soup his mother made only in the summer.”
“And we got on the subject of favourite summer foods,” she said.  “For me, the
first crop of – I guess you’d call them peas, in standard – from my
grandmother’s garden.  We’d pick them and eat them raw, still in their pods. 
It meant that summer had really started.”
“The first berries were mine,” I said.  “We used to take the dogs and baskets
and go pick them.”
“That’s right,” Guinan said.  “You said your friend’s mother used to make a
drink – do you remember?”
“Sure,” I said.  “We’d bring home the berries.  It was Rosie’s mother.  She’d
separate them, some for jam, and some for dessert.  And then she’d make a
smoothie with them.”
“That was it,” Guinan said.  “I didn’t know what that was.  And then, I don’t
know, work, I guess, and I forgot all about it, but I remembered it today, and
I thought, you know, we had some berries in that last shipment of fruit we
brought on board.  And I wondered if you’d give me the recipe, so I could try
it.  If it’s any good,” she said, “I’ll put it on the menu.  You’re probably
not the only one who has berry picking as a summer memory.”
“Sure,” I said.  “It’s easy to make.  You want the recipe now?”
She said, “You can remember it, Will?  Right off the top of your head, right
now?”
“Yeah,” I said.  “Why couldn’t I?”
She shrugged.  “Because I loved my mother’s prawn soup, but I couldn’t even
begin to give you the recipe, not without thinking a long time about it.”
“It’s no big deal,” I said.  “Do you want to write it down?”
She glanced up at da Costa, and then she said, “Will I need to?”
“It’s pretty simple.”
“I think I can remember, then.  Go ahead and tell it to me.”
“Okay,” I said.  “Give me a minute.  All right, Rosie’s mother’s recipe called
for one cup of milk, one cup of natural yoghurt, one cup of berries, and sugar
to taste, just to take the edge off the tartness.”  I paused, and then I added,
“But – this is better, I think, how I made it.  You have the milk and yoghurt,
one cup each.  That doesn’t change.  But you can have a half cup of raspberries
and a half cup of blackberries – or whatever’s in season – and instead of sugar
to taste, you add about a teaspoon, a teaspoon and a quarter, of orange blossom
honey.  Then a quarter teaspoon of cinnamon and a quarter teaspoon of ginger,
grated, if you’ve got fresh.  Put it in the blender, but you want to be able to
drink it,” I said, “with a straw, so not too thick.  Chill and it’s ready.”
“That sounds delicious, Will,” Guinan said.  “About how many drinks is that?”
“Three, I guess,” I said.  “I don’t really remember.  Maybe more, because there
was me, and Rosie, and Pete, and sometimes George, Rosie’s older brothers.”
“So I’m going to make this,” Guinan said, “and I’m going to bring it back here
for you and Mr da Costa to taste, to see if I’ve got it right.  Is that okay
with you?”
“You’re going to an awful lot of trouble over one smoothie,” I said, “but
sure.  You’ll try it, won’t you, da Costa?”
“Yes, sir,” da Costa said.  “Sounds great.”
“I like your adding the fresh ginger, Will,” Guinan said, standing up.  “You
know, if you ever get tired of Starfleet, you can always come work for me. 
We’ll open our own restaurant.  Guinan and Will’s,” she said, grinning.  “It
has a good sound to it.”
I laughed.  “Okay, Guinan,” I said.  “I’ll hold you to that.”
“You do that, Commander,” she said.
 
It was the end of beta shift, then, and da Costa left, but not before asking me
to make sure that Guinan saved some of the smoothie for him.  I told him I
would.  He paused, and then said,
“Commander Riker?”
“Yes, Mr da Costa?”
“I know you don’t think this,” he said, “but you’re going to be okay.  I
promise you that.”
I didn’t know what to say.
He walked back over to me, and surprisingly, took my hand.  “Sir,” he said. 
“Don’t hand in your resignation.  Give Dr McBride one week.  Just one week,
sir.”
I said, “It’s going to take more than one week to fix me, Mr da Costa.”
“I know that, sir,” he said.  “You’re going to have to work very hard, even in
his intensive program.  But you can afford to give him one week – and I promise
you, sir, that you’ll realise that even in just one week, you’ll see that you
are going to get better.”
“I know, Joao,” I said quietly, “that Dr McBride was able to help Joaquim, even
after what Joaquim went through.  But – “ and I didn’t know how to finish.  How
do you say that your father took every day of your babyhood away from you by
forcing you to have sex?  How do you say that it made you so crazy that you
killed a child?  I didn’t have one trauma.  I’d had years upon years of them.
“William,” da Costa said, “this is what Dr McBride specialises in, what you
went through.  Layers and layers of trauma; abuse after abuse; but you
survived, William.  Because you chose to survive.  You thought there was still
something worthwhile, some reason to keep going.”
I didn’t say anything.  I didn’t know – again – what to say.
“You have so many reasons now, to keep going,” he said, “and I think you know
that.  I know it’s hard.  It’s going to get harder, too, before it gets
better.  But I promise you, William – it will get better.”
I said, “Thank you, Mr da Costa.”
“I know I’ve probably overstepped my bounds, sir,” da Costa said, letting go of
my hand.  “Just remember, sir, that you are still an honourable man.”
“Okay,” I said.  I didn’t deserve his faith in me, but who was I to argue with
him?  He meant well.
 
Mr Stoch came in, and took up his post.  I was feeling a little overwhelmed, I
guess, by what da Costa had said. 
“I’m going to do some stretches,” I said to Stoch.
“Do you need some help, sir?” Stoch asked.
“I don’t think so,” I said, swinging my legs off the bed.  I stood up, slowly,
making sure that I wasn’t dizzy or anything.  “No, I’m okay,” I said, after a
minute.
“Have some water,” Stoch said, “a few sips, at least, before you stretch, sir.”
“All right,” I said.  I took a few sips of the water that was in the cup by my
bed.  It was suitably disgusting.  “Maybe you could get me some new water, if
you get the chance, Mr Stoch,” I said.
“Aye, sir.”
I did some light torso stretches, and I could feel how tight my back was after
all the inactivity.  I sat in the chair and did some hamstring stretches.
“Do some abdominals, sir,” Stoch said, “and stretch your core.”
“Okay,” I agreed, and I did about thirty of those.
I rested for a bit, concentrating on my breathing, the way Deanna wanted me to.
“I understand,” I said, “that the captain had a talk with you.”
Immediately he had the blank Vulcan face.  “Sir,” he said.
“How old are you, Mr Stoch?” I asked.
“Sir,” he said.  “Twenty-two, sir.”
“How come you didn’t go to the Academy?” I asked.  Vulcan crewmen were fairly
rare.
“I wanted to go into a medical program, sir,” he said.  “My family did not.”
I tried not to act surprised.  He must have some balls, I thought, to defy his
family by becoming a medical crewman.
“The captain’s talk,” I said.  “I’ve experienced a few of those.  They’re not
easy to go through.  I hope, Mr Stoch,” I added, “that I was not the cause of
your having to listen to one.”
I knew I had surprised him, although he covered it well.
“No, sir,” he said.  “I fell asleep at my post.  I am very grateful to the
captain that he has given me a second chance.  The dishonour – “ He fell
silent.
I didn’t look at him.  “I know,” I said, “that Vulcans don’t need much sleep. 
About half as much as humans, right?”
“Yes, sir,” he answered.
“So I’m guessing,” I continued, “that, out of concern, perhaps, for your human
crewmates, that you were taking double shifts, so they could sleep?”
He was silent.  Then he said, “Aye, sir.”
“And I’m thinking that you’d gotten – what, three hours of sleep in maybe a
week?” I asked, knowing that it had been at least a week since I’d been taking
care of personnel.
He said, “Aye, sir.”
“And of course,” I said, “you wouldn’t tell this to the captain, because it
would be making excuses for your dishonourable behaviour.”
“Aye, sir.”  His voice was so low I could barely hear him.
I sighed.  “Mr Data is covering for me as first officer,” I told him.  “And,
like you, he’s very new at this.  An experienced first officer would not have
allowed the situation to arise – if I’d been well, and at my post, Mr Stoch,
you would not have been permitted to be that altruistic.  So, while you may
think that this was a personal failure on your part – look at me, Mr Stoch,” I
said, and I could still muster up my command voice, “this was actually a
failure on my part, not yours.  I had not put into place protocol for a sudden
incapacitation of myself.  I left no notes for Mr Data to follow; no personnel
instructions.  That was a serious breach of command.  I will speak to the
captain and acknowledge my role in what happened.”
“It was my choice – “ he began.
“I understand that,” I said, cutting him off, “but I know far more about this
than you do, Mr Stoch.  However, you can learn from this experience, that even
though you are a Vulcan with different physical capabilities, even you have
your limitations.  No more double shifts.  Everyone pulls his own weight on
this ship, Mr Stoch, regardless of what each person is capable of physically.”
“Aye, sir,” he said.
“What you need to know about the captain,” I said, “is that he truly will give
you this second chance.  He will not hold this mistake against you – it’s
already done.”
“Aye, sir,” he said again.  And then, “Thank you, sir.”
I stood up.  “I could use a swim,” I said.
“You have light physical exercise on your schedule for tomorrow, sir,” he
offered.
“You’ve seen my schedule?” I asked.  “It would be nice if I could see it.”
“I’m sure you’ll be given it, sir,” he said.
“Before tomorrow?  I doubt that,” I said, but I shrugged and sat back down in
the chair.
“You’re all tense in the neck and shoulders, sir,” he said.  “I could give you
a brief massage, if that would help.”
I had a quick thought about the last massage I’d had – Jean-Luc’s massage – and
I could feel my face start to colour.
“No, I don’t think so,” I said.  “Thanks, anyway.”
“Sir.”
“Have you caused any more trouble?” Guinan asked, walking into my room.  She
had a thermal bag, and she set it down on the night table.  She took out two
covered containers, and then, to my delight, two straws.  “Here we go, Will,”
she said.  “Two berry smoothies.  Where’s Mr da Costa?” she said, looking
around.
“He left at the end of beta shift,” I answered.  “He told me to tell you to
save him one.”
She laughed.  “There’s plenty more where these came from,” she said.  “Once I
was satisfied, I made a good batch.” 
“This is Mr Stoch,” I said.  “My nighttime babysitter.”
“Sir,” Stoch said in a disapproving voice.
“I’d offer you one, Mr Stoch,” Guinan said, “but there’s milk in it.”
“Thank you for the offer,” Stoch said primly.
“Here you go, Will,” she said, giving me the container and the straw.  “Tell me
what you think.”
I took a sip.  It was cold and frothy and just the right balance between tart
and sweet, with the added touch of ginger and – “You added some lemon zest to
it?” I asked.
“I knew you’d recognise it,” Guinan said.  “Mac told me you wouldn’t, but
you’re too good not to have known.”
“I like it,” I said, drinking some more.  “The lemon zest gives it an added
punch.  This is good, Guinan, thanks.”
Guinan took a few sips of hers, but I got the feeling that she was primarily
watching me, for some reason.
“You didn’t use blackberries, though,” I said.  “I don’t know what you used. 
Raspberries and something else.”
“They’re called highberries in standard,” she said.  “We got them in, and they
tasted good.  I thought, since we didn’t have blackberries, they’d work just as
well.”
“They do,” I agreed.  “A good texture.”
I hadn’t realised it, but I’d finished the drink.  She stood up, and put hers
back in the thermal bag.  “So, Will,” she said.  “Tomorrow you can have another
smoothie in the morning, if you’d like, and then we’ll sit down, you and Gwyn
and I, and go over exactly what we’re going to do to keep you eating and
drinking.”
I set the container down on the table.  I went back over in my head what she’d
said when she’d come in the first time.  She’d seen Jean-Luc with the rest of
my team in Ten Forward – and Jean-Luc had given her permission to visit me.
“You’re in charge of feeding me?” I asked.
“It’s like this, Will,” she said, and she went from her usual amiable self to a
completely different person, the person who could put Q in his place and who
had no trouble whatsoever standing up to both the captain and the Borg. 
“You’re thinking that maybe, since you didn’t succeed the first time, that you
could get away with starving yourself to death.  But you know, dying of
dehydration is not fun, Will.  It’s slow and it’s painful.  And it’s ugly for
the rest of us to watch it.  You and I – we talk about food all the time.  We
trade recipes; we’ve tried different things out.  I’m no threat to you, I
think.  And as smart as you are, William, maybe I’m just a little smarter,” and
she smiled.  “You and I, we’re just going to talk about food, just like we
talked about the smoothie.  And what sounds good to us, I’ll make, and we’ll
eat it – or drink it, whatever the case may be.  And maybe we’ll have to add a
few things that Gwyn tells us to add, just to keep your friend McBride happy. 
Okay?”
“And this was your idea or Jean-Luc’s?” I asked.
“Let’s just say that great minds think alike,” she said.
“You tricked me,” I said.
“Did I?” she answered.  “Maybe you were just ready to have something that
tasted good, and that came from a friend.”
“Am I doing this on purpose?” I asked, and I could feel the tears start to run
down my cheeks again.  “I’m not trying to kill myself, am I?”
She put the bag down and hugged me.  “Will,” she said.  “We understand it. 
Nobody’s angry with you, or disappointed in you.  We just think there’s a
better way, a way that you can remember your past and still be able to live.”
“I did terrible things,” I said.
“I have too, Will,” she answered.  “Sometimes it’s our duty to survive. 
Sometimes what we have to do in order to survive we wouldn’t ever do
otherwise.  And then we spend our lives doing good, to make up for the bad,”
she said, holding my face, “and you, my friend, have done a lot of good, in
your time.  You don’t owe anyone anything, Will.  You don’t have to punish
yourself for something you’ve already atoned for.”
She continued to hold me for another few minutes, and then she let me go. 
“Don’t cry, Will,” she said.  “We’ll have a good time, talking about food. 
Maybe we can teach Otaka a few things.”
I laughed a little, and wiped my face.
“Do you want to give it a try?” she asked.
“Yes,” I said.  “I’ll try, Guinan.”
“That’s all we’re asking, Will,” she said.  “Just to try.”
I nodded.  I could hear Jean-Luc talking to Dr Sandoval outside.
“Here’s the captain,” she said.  “You get a good sleep tonight, Will.  Your
doctor McBride has a lot planned for you tomorrow.”
“Okay,” I said, standing.  “Thanks, Guinan.”
“Anytime,” she answered.  She put my container in the thermal bag and left the
room.  I could hear her speaking with Jean-Luc, and then Lt Fisk entered.
“Time for your vitals, Commander,” he said.  “Sit down, please.”
I sat back down in the chair, and he ran the scanner over me.
“Your blood pressure’s up a bit,” he said.  “Are you feeling anxious again?”
“I was, I guess,” I said.  “I think I’m all right, now.”
“Let me just talk with Dr Sandoval,” Fisk said.  “We’ll see what we can do.”
“I don’t want to be sedated,” I said.
“I know, Commander,” Fisk replied, and left the room.
“It’s a cast of thousands,” I said to Stoch.
He didn’t smile, but as a Vulcan, I didn’t expect him to.
Dr Sandoval came in, then, with Jean-Luc.
“Lt Fisk says your blood pressure is up,” he said, “but that you don’t want to
be sedated.”
I glanced at Jean-Luc.  “If it’s not up that much, I don’t have to be, right?”
I asked.  “I just don’t like how it makes me feel.”
“Guinan says you were able to drink something,” Sandoval continued.
“Yes,” I said.  “And Mr Stoch will tell you I had some water, too.”
“That’s true, Doctor,” Stoch said.
Jean-Luc said, “I’m going to be with him, Dr Sandoval.  He should be fine.”
“If you need the sedative, Commander,” Dr Sandoval said, “I’ll expect you to
let Captain Picard know.  Can you do that?”
“Yes,” I said.  “I can do that.”
“Captain, we’re on full staff tonight,” Dr Sandoval said.  “If you need
anything, just press the call button.  Mr Stoch will be right outside the
door.”
“Of course,” Jean-Luc said, and he gave no indication whatsoever that there’d
been a breakdown of that system the night before.
“Well, Will,” he said to me, when the cast of thousands had left, “how are
you?”
He closed the door softly, and I resisted the urge to just collapse in his
arms.
“I’m okay, I think,” I said.  “I was a little upset, when Guinan talked to me,
but she talked me through it.”
“Her idea is a good one,” he said, “don’t you think?”
“I don’t really understand why I’m not eating or drinking,” I answered, “but
she used my recipe for the smoothie, and it did taste good.”
He didn’t say anything for a moment, and then he said, “Why don’t you just let
me hold you for a minute?”
“Okay,” I said. 
He wrapped his arms around me, and I rested my head on his shoulder.
I said, “Did I forget something again?”
“Nothing important,” he answered.  “Why don’t we get you a shower, and into
some clean pyjamas, and then into bed?”
“Yes,” I said, “if you’ll come with me.”
He looked at me, and I could see the delight in his eyes.  Then he said, “As
much as I would enjoy that, Will, I don’t think I’m exhibitionist enough to put
on a show for all of sickbay.”
I laughed, and he pulled me to him, and I could feel some of that anxiety
slipping away.  He opened the door, and said, “Mr Stoch, let’s get Mr Riker
into the shower, shall we?”
 
I took another sonic shower, and got myself into bed, and then waited for Jean-
Luc to finish up.  He entered the room, in his robe, and shut the door, and
lowered the lights down to ten percent, and checked – I tried not to laugh – to
see if the beds were pulled together.
“Afraid you’ll fall?” I asked.
“I’m glad,” he said, climbing into his bed, “to see you’re a little cheeky
again.”
“Mr da Costa put the beds together,” I told him, “and secured them, so they
won’t come apart.”
“I wonder why he did that,” Jean-Luc said.  “Come here, you,” and he pulled me
into his arms and kissed me.
“I wouldn’t know,” I said.
“I’m not hurting your arms, holding you this way?” he asked.
“No,” I said.  I put my head on his chest, and he kissed me along my neck.
“You’ll be able to sleep tonight?” he murmured.  “You seem a little keyed up.”
“Mmmh,” I said.  “Yes.  But I’m not paying for these, you know.”
He was quiet.  “No?” he asked, kissing me again.  “Who is, then?”
I shrugged.  “You could always bill the Fleet,” I said.
He gave a very undignified snort. 
“I’m sure Admiral Nechayev would understand,” I continued.  “Her concern being
morale.”
“And is this helping your morale?” he said.
“A bit,” I answered.
“Oh, a bit,” he said, and I could tell he was smiling.  “You had something else
in mind, Mr Riker?”  He was kissing my ear.
“I wouldn’t want you to be an exhibitionist,” I said.
“I don’t know,” he said dubiously, “I don’t think you know how to be quiet.”
I couldn’t help it; I laughed.  He pulled me tightly into him, and we kissed.
“I wouldn’t want to hurt you, Will,” he said finally.  “You’re so terribly
fragile.”
“Am I?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.  “Could you tell me, if it was too much for you, do you think?”
“I could try,” I said.  Then I said, “I just want things to be like before.  I
just want to feel normal again.”
“William,” he said.  “I want you to feel normal again.”
“Please, Jean-Luc,” I said.
He said, “Very gently, then, mon cher.  And if I think it’s too much for you,
we stop.  Agreed?” He looked directly at me.
“And you want me,” I said.
“Yes.  I want,” he answered, “to love you, Will.”
“I promise,” I said, “to let you know if I feel overwhelmed.”
“Bien, mon cœur,” he whispered, “come here to me.”
I did, and for a little while, I felt as if I were myself again.
 
***** Chapter 32 *****
Chapter Summary
     Henry Ivanov tries to help William during tai chi and a music lesson.
Chapter Notes
     Willam's protection of his father is not unusual. Because he has only
     one parent, his fears of abandonment -- especially since his father
     is often away for work -- would outweigh his fear of the abuse, even
     though the abuse, in William's case, is severe.
Chapter Thirty-Two
 
 
 
 
William was helping Henry set up for judo practise.  Because of William’s head
injury, Henry had been afraid to allow William to rejoin the group, even though
William’s paediatrician had given the all-clear.  He and William continued tai
chi, but William was now Henry’s official helper, working with the littlest
children, such as Jake and Lucy more often than not.  William didn’t seem to
mind terribly, Henry noted; he seemed to understand that falling was not
perhaps something he should be doing so soon after his injury.  And despite
having told Henry that he was thinking of giving up baseball, he’d decided to
continue, and as spring was slowing turning into summer, most of William’s time
was spent in baseball practise.  Still, he made time to help Henry with judo
twice a week, and Henry came to his house on Sunday afternoons for music
practise.  William had signed up to take trombone in the school band for the
coming year.
Still, Henry realised that there was something secretive about William now.  Of
course, he’d been a forthcoming child before the injuries and hospitalisations
– Henry was even now reluctant to call it what it was, a suicide attempt – and
it seemed logical that William’s terrible experiences in the hospital would
have changed him in some fundamental way.  But Henry never expected that
William would become withdrawn towards him.
They finished their tai chi exercises.  William’s balance was improving, and he
seemed more relaxed than he had been.  He had started to grow again, and Henry
wondered just how tall a man he would become.  Currently he seemed to be all
arms and legs and feet.
“You need new shoes, Will,” he said as they began to lay out the mats for judo.
William shrugged.  “I know,” he said.  “I need new cleats for baseball, too.”
Henry glanced at William’s hands.  “You’ll need a new glove as well,” he
remarked.
William sighed.  “I need,” he said, somewhat dramatically, “to stop growing so
fast.”
“Your grandfather was very tall,” Henry said.
“Not my dad’s father,” William answered.  “I’ve seen pictures of him.”
“No,” Henry said.  “Your mother’s father.”
William showed no interest in this information.  “Mrs Shugak said she would
tell my dad everything I need,” he answered.
Henry stopped what he was doing.  “William,” he said.
“What?”  William affected a careful nonchalance.
“Are you afraid of your father?”
William glanced at Henry.  He said, “Why should I be?”
Henry thought of all the reasons why it seemed that William had been – and
might still be – afraid of his father.  He searched the boy’s face and found it
curiously blank.
Henry backed down.  “No reason,” he said lightly.  “I just wondered why Auntie
Tasya would be giving your father that information.”
William shrugged again.  “’Cause she has the list,” he said.  He smiled, but
Henry had the feeling that it was a calculated one, one designed to deflect
him.  “It’s a pretty long list, I guess.”
Henry dropped the subject.  He watched William work with Lucy and Jake and the
new student, Paul Levesque’s daughter Josie.  William was, as he had always
been, kind and patient, and he had a real talent for making the younger ones
laugh.  He knew there was still something very wrong with William, and
something very wrong in the Riker household.  He just couldn’t put his finger
on it, and he simply didn’t know what to do next.
 
 
William’s father was usually in his study when William had music lessons on
Sunday afternoons, but on this particular Sunday, William’s father was not at
home.  Henry was upset; William wouldn’t even be eight until August; even in
the parkland there were rules about young children being left unsupervised.
William let him in, and Henry said, “Is Auntie Tasya here?”
“No,” William answered.  “When my father leaves for his job, then Mrs S stays
with me.”  William followed Henry into the living room, and watched Henry
unload his briefcase with the metronome and the sheet music.  “Why do you call
her Auntie Tasya?” William asked.  “I don’t.”
Henry sighed.  “Isn’t she your Auntie Tasya?”
“No,” William said.  “Dad says I have to call her Mrs S at least.”
“I thought – “ but William’s face was closed.  “Let’s do your exercises, Will,”
and Henry started the metronome.
William sat down at the piano and began his fingering exercises.
“Warmed up?” Henry asked when William was done.
William nodded.
“Play the étude then,” Henry said, and he listened carefully as William’s long
fingers glided over the keys.
William finished and waited for Henry to say something.  “Did I do something
wrong?” he asked.
For the first time in several weeks, he sounded anxious and unsure.
“Of course not, Will,” Henry responded.  “I can hear you’ve been practising.”
“Dad doesn’t mind me practising,” William said.  “I usually practise before
baseball.”
“Does your father drive you to practise?” Henry placed the next piece of music
on the piano.  “Let’s try this out,” he said.
“Okay.”  William glanced up at Henry, and Henry found himself wondering just
what the child was thinking.  “I ride my bike with Matt and Rosie.”
William tried the first few measures. 
“Here,” Henry said, and he played first the melody and then added the left
hand.
“Okay,” William said, and he copied Henry.
“Go ahead,” Henry said, and he listened as William picked his way through the
piece.  “Now try it again.”
William played the piece, and grinned at Henry when he’d finished, a real grin,
the first one Henry had seen in a while.
“Where is your father?” Henry asked.  “Play it again, all the way through.”
William shrugged.  “Out,” he said.  “He’s leaving next week.”
“Why did he leave you alone?” Henry asked when William had finished the piece
for the second time.
“He knew you were coming, I guess,” William answered.  “I’m not allowed to
leave the house when he’s out.”
“And you don’t?” Henry asked.
William was still, and then he said, “I don’t do stuff like that anymore.”
Henry made eye contact with William.  “Will, you don’t do stuff like what
anymore?” he asked.
“I don’t,” William said, “do stuff like disobey my father anymore.”
There it was.  Henry was certain of it.  Nothing had really changed in the
Riker household. 
“Most kids do stuff sometimes, Will,” Henry said.  “It’s part of growing up. 
Making mistakes and learning from them.  Like when you practise on the piano.”
“Making mistakes hurts,” William said.  “So I don’t make them anymore.”
Henry said, “Is your father hurting you, William?”
William looked directly at Henry but his face had an oddly mature look to it. 
Henry found it very uncomfortable, and he looked away.
“Not anymore,” William said.
Henry pulled himself together.  He was, after all, the adult in this
situation.  “Would you tell me, Will, if your father was hurting you?”
William slid off the piano bench.  “Should I get my trombone?” he asked.
“I asked you a question, Will,” Henry said.
“I don’t understand,” William said.  “Are you asking if he spanks me? 
Sometimes he does, when I deserve it.”
“I thought you said you didn’t make mistakes anymore.”  Henry reached out to
touch William’s shoulder, but William stepped back, away from his hand.
William said, “Well, sometimes I still do.  I forget chores, still, sometimes.”
“Most parents don’t spank their children anymore, Will,” Henry said.  “I’m not
even sure the Federation allows it.”
“Well, they must, since my father works for them.  I’ll get my trombone,” and
William headed up the stairs to his room.
Henry watched him, and was convinced that the child was lying.  He was
protecting his father, it seemed.  He’d read somewhere that often an abused
child would protect the abuser.  William came down the stairs, carrying the
trombone that, even though it was child-sized, still looked enormous.  William
got his music stand from the hall closet, and pulled his music from inside of
the piano bench.  He took the mouthpiece and blew into it several times and
then proceeded to warm up.
“Good embouchure, Will,” Henry said.  “Arpeggios, and then the étude.”
William took out the music and set it on the stand.  Henry listened to him
play, and the rest of the music lesson went by uneventfully.
“You’re doing very well on both instruments,” Henry said, finally.  “Good
work.”
“Thanks,” William said.  “It’s fun, like playing baseball.”
“Good,” Henry said.  “I’m glad you’re having some fun, Will.  Kids are meant to
have fun.”
“Yeah,” William agreed, and Henry was absolutely convinced that he was being
sold something.  “This’ll be a good summer.  Dad’s taking me fishing for my
birthday and I bet we win the championship again this year.”
The door opened and Kyle Riker walked in.  Again, Henry was amazed that the two
were related; there was nothing about Will that suggested his father.
“Having a good lesson, Billy?” Riker said.  He was carrying a portfolio and he
nodded to Henry as he walked through the living room to his office.  “Chief,”
he said.
“He’s doing very well,” Henry said.  “But it’s just Henry, now.”
William had become very still.  Riker didn’t seem to notice, and disappeared
into his office.
Henry bent down and looked into William’s face.  “I want you to tell me, Will,”
he said, “if he hurts you.”
“He doesn’t hurt me anymore,” William whispered.
“But you’ll tell me?” Henry persisted.  “I want to help you, Will.”
He watched as something like indecision flickered across William’s face, but
when William looked up, it was anger Henry saw.
“There’s nothing to tell,” William said.  “I told you already.  I don’t make
mistakes, so I don’t get hurt.”
Henry watched the boy put away his instrument and carry it back up the stairs. 
Riker came out of his study.
“Everything okay?” he asked, and Henry finally caught the similarity – he was
being sold something – only this time by the father, not the son.
“Fine,” Henry said, packing up.  “He’s a good boy, your son.  Very talented. 
He could be a professional one day, if that’s what he wanted.”
“If you say so,” Riker said.  “He has his heart set on Starfleet.”
Henry smiled, but it felt more like a grimace.  “Plenty of opportunities to
play on a starship,” he said.  “I always did.  Good afternoon, Mr Riker.”
Riker walked him to the door.  “Thank you again, Chief,” he said, and as he
shut the door, Henry was sure that the fun part of Will’s afternoon was over.
There didn’t seem to be a damned thing he could do about it, though.
 
 
***** Chapter 33 *****
Chapter Summary
     William is triggered into experiencing his childhood terror. Dr
     McBride begins to reintegrate Billy and William.
Chapter Notes
     Reintegration of traumatic memories is crucial to healing survivors
     of trauma.
Chapter Thirty-Three
 
 
 
 
 
When I awoke it was dark.  I was curled into Jean-Luc and he had thrown one arm
over me.  I didn’t know what had awakened me but I could feel my heart racing
and I could tell I wasn’t breathing right.  I didn’t remember any dreams and
this wasn’t a night terror – I hadn’t had any of those since Beverly had upped
the medication – nevertheless, something apparently had startled me (is that
the word I wanted?) and now I was wide awake.
I slid out from underneath Jean-Luc’s arm and he stirred but remained asleep,
and I moved away, more on my bed than next to his.  I tried to concentrate on
bringing my breathing down but I couldn’t alleviate the feeling of dread that
was threatening to overwhelm me.  I didn’t know what had awakened me but I was
alert and almost, it seemed, ready for an attack. 
Yet there was nothing that would warrant this.  Sickbay was quiet.  I could
hear the muffled voices of one of the night orderlies and Lt Fisk.  I was sure
Dr Sandoval was in his office and that Stoch was at his post.  There was
absolutely nothing that I could discern that would cause this kind of
reaction.  We were still in orbit around SB 515.  Jean-Luc had said we would be
here another forty-eight hours as part of setting up Dr McBride’s program. 
What new orders he’d received he hadn’t told me, nor was he likely to; I’d
asked, but he’d simply ignored my request.  I wasn’t privy to that information
while on sick leave and I knew it.  I also knew that I shouldn’t use our
relationship to get information from him that he wouldn’t normally give, so I’d
dropped the subject.
So there was nothing, and yet I was still breathing hard and shallow, and the
hairs were standing up on my arms and the back of my neck, and my mind felt
both sharply focused and fuzzy at the same time, as if there was something
(once again) that I was forgetting.
Maybe, I thought, I should just go to the head, and get a drink of water from
Stoch, and wash my face, and that would distract me enough from whatever it was
that was bothering me now.  It seemed like a plan of action, and I didn’t want
to stay in the bed and continue to hyperventilate.  I was sure to wake the
captain that way, and he’d been kept from sleep enough by me.  I didn’t need to
continue to make things difficult for him.
Quietly I got up and waited a moment to make sure I wasn’t dizzy before I
walked to the door and opened it.  Stoch was standing at his post, and he heard
me open the door and came to attention.
“Do you need help, sir?” he asked quietly.
“I’m just using the head,” I answered, slipping outside the door.
“Can you walk?” he asked, preparing to steady me, but I refused his hand.
“I’m good,” I said.
I realised that, of course, he would have to come with me, which was awkward,
as I wouldn’t have minded cleaning myself up a little bit more thoroughly, but
I would have to wait until morning, I guessed, when I took a shower.  I wasn’t
going to shower now.  He followed me into the head and turned his back to me so
I could have the small bit of privacy I was allowed to urinate.  I washed my
face and hands and dried them.
“Could I have some water?” I asked as we left the head.
“Of course, sir,” Stoch said, and he waved one of the orderlies over, and I was
brought a cup so I could drink.
“Is there something wrong, sir?” Stoch asked.  “Are you in pain?”
Was I in pain?  I thought for a moment.
“No,” I said.  “I’m okay.”  I glanced at my hand, noting that the swelling had
gone down.  My left arm was a little tight, probably because I’d been sleeping
on it.  “I just woke up, that’s all.”
“Do you want me to get Dr Sandoval?” he pressed.
I remembered that I’d promised I’d ask for a sedative if I needed one.  I could
still feel my heart racing, although my breathing was better.
“Yes,” I said.
Stoch walked over to Beverly’s office and knocked; Sandoval opened the door and
he and Lt Fisk came out.
“Commander Riker needs you, sir,” Stoch said.
“What’s wrong, Commander?” Sandoval asked.
“I woke up,” I said, “and I don’t think I can get back to sleep.”
Lt Fisk was already taking my vitals.  “His blood pressure is up,” he
announced, “pulse rate accelerated, breathing rapid.”
“Do you know what precipitated this, Commander?” Sandoval queried.
“No,” I answered.  This was sure to wake the captain, and I could feel my
frustration building.  “I just woke up like this. I don’t,” I said, “want to
wake the captain – “
“I’m afraid that’s already occurred, Number One.”  Jean-Luc was standing in the
doorway.
I glanced at Jean-Luc, took in how exhausted he looked, and felt as if I would
implode.  “I don’t understand,” I said, “how this one shift can be so damned
inefficient – all I did was go to the head and ask for a sedative – and it has
to be a fucking three-ring circus – “
“That is quite enough,” the captain said, “Mr Riker.”
“But they woke you –“ I protested.
He put his hand on my arm.  “Mr Stoch,” he said.  “Escort the commander to
bed.  Doctor, I trust you will actually give him the sedative?  I am going to
the head, and when I enter your room, Number One, I want you calm.  Are we all
of us clear on this?”
“Aye, sir,” Stoch and Dr Sandoval chorused.
“The sedative will lower his blood pressure, Lieutenant?” the captain asked.
“Aye, sir,” Fisk answered.
I said, before I could stop myself, “It would probably be better, sir, if you
spent tomorrow night in your quarters, seeing as how I somehow manage to
prevent you from sleeping every night.”  As soon as I’d said it I realised that
I hadn’t said what I’d wanted to say – or it hadn’t come out the way I wanted
it to  -- the look Jean-Luc gave me made me want to sink into the floor, and I
could feel myself start to shake.
“Now would be a good time,” Jean-Luc said, “to give him the sedative.  Before
he says anything else he wishes he hadn’t said.”  He turned around and
disappeared into the head.
Neither Sandoval or Fisk were anywhere near my height, so it was Stoch who gave
me the hypo spray, and it was Stoch who walked me – literally walked me, as I
didn’t think I could stand up anymore – back into my room and helped me into
the bed.
“He’s having a panic attack,” Fisk said.
“I’m preparing another dose,” I heard Sandoval say from outside.
Da Costa must have spent some time training Stoch, because he wrapped his arms
around me, the way da Costa would have, and said, “You know you don’t have to
be this upset, Commander.  You told me so yourself.  The captain’s just tired. 
He’s not angry with you.”
“I know he’s tired,” I said angrily.  “It’s my fault he’s tired.”
Dr Sandoval entered and applied another hypo spray.
“This should help ease your anxiety, Commander,” he said.  “Try to take some
deep breaths.  I know Counsellor Troi has been working with your breathing. 
Breathe in now, deep cleansing breath.”
I let him talk me through some breathing, but I honestly didn’t see how it
would make much difference.  I wasn’t so much panicking as just wishing I were
fucking dead. 
Jean-Luc came in, and he said, “He’s had what he needs?”
“The medication should be kicking in shortly,” Sandoval said.  “In about
another five minutes.”
“And he’ll sleep, then?”
“Jean-Luc –“ I began.
“Did I give you permission to speak?” he asked, glancing at me.  “Mr Stoch, you
can let him go now, unless you think he’s going to launch himself at me.”
The unfairness of that hit me in the pit of my stomach and I said, “I’m not
going to do anything, sir.”
“Good,” the captain said.  “Then I suggest Mr Riker’s three-ring circus remove
itself from our room, as I would like to go back to bed.”
“Aye, sir,” Dr Sandoval said, and he and Lt Fisk walked out.
Mr Stoch let go of me and stood up.  “Sir,” he said, and then he left too,
closing the door quietly behind him.
“Lights, ten percent,” Jean-Luc said, and he climbed into his side of the bed. 
He was quiet, and then he said, “Don’t you have enough to worry about, William,
without making it your business to worry about whether I am functioning or
not?”
I didn’t say anything, but lowered myself down onto the pillow.  It seemed he
was waiting for me to say something, so I said, “Sir.”
He sighed.  “It is Mr Data’s job to worry about whether I am functioning at
capacity, not yours.”
I turned over on my side.  “I’m sorry, sir,” I said.  “I forgot.  I won’t,
again.”
He sighed again.  “Tell me,” he said, “that you are not going to sulk.”
“No, sir,” I said, turning my face into the pillow, so that there wouldn’t be
any way for Jean-Luc to see that I was crying.
I heard him slide down under the covers.
“What was it that woke you?” he asked, then.  “Will?”
“Sir,” I said.  “I don’t know.”
“Why are you still ‘sirring’ me?” he asked.  “William?”
“Because I don’t know when you want me to and when you don’t,” I said. 
“Because I don’t want you to yell at me again.”
“I don’t believe I have ever yelled at you,” he said.  “Have I?  Raised my
voice to you?”
I didn’t say anything.  Obviously my definition of yelling and his were polar
opposites.
“Will.”
“There’s no point,” I said.  “There’s no point to anything.  Please,” I said,
and there was no way now that I could hide that I was crying.  “Just let the
sedative work.  It’ll knock me out and I won’t bother you anymore tonight.”
“Dieu du Ciel,” he said under his breath.  “Will.  Come here.  Please.”  He
paused, and then he placed his hand on my shoulder.  “William.  I understand
you’re frustrated –“
I said, “You don’t understand anything.”
“What don’t I understand?  Tell me,” and he physically pulled me to him, so
that my back was against his chest, and he slipped one arm underneath me.
“It doesn’t matter,” I said.  “Nothing does.”
“Will.  Cheri,” he said, pulling me tighter.  “You’ve had a long and difficult
day.  It was a difficult day for all of us.  For me, too.  You’re exhausted. 
I’m exhausted.  You’re frustrated and you’re frightened.  I understand, Will,
or at least, I’m trying to.”
I felt – and this is what I didn’t think anyone understood, especially not
Jean-Luc, who was always so calm, and so cool, and so fucking collected, even
in the face of someone in the same goddamned bed as he having a fucking
meltdown – was that I was simply going to erupt, to implode, that the hysteria
and the anger and the fear and all of it was just going to literally tear me
into pieces, and I was crying so goddamned hard I could barely breathe, and I’d
never done this before, ever, but I couldn’t stop, I didn’t know how to stop –
and Jean-Luc shouted, “Mr Stoch!”
and Stoch opened the door and said, “Dr Sandoval is coming, sir.”
“Get McBride,” Jean-Luc ordered.  “Get him now.”
“Aye, sir,” Stoch said;
and I could feel Jean-Luc’s arms around me, and I could hear myself saying, “I
can’t do this anymore, I can’t, I can’t take anymore of this, I just want it to
stop,” and I could feel Jean-Luc tightening his hold around me, and then my
head was pounding, and I couldn’t tell whether it was really hurting or whether
I was remembering it hurting, but it was so painful and someone was screaming,
and I heard Sandoval say, “Dr McBride and Dr Crusher are on their way.”
“Just get Stoch to help me hold him,” Jean-Luc said, and his voice sounded so
far away, “I’m afraid he’ll hurt himself.”
“I’ve got him, Captain.” Stoch was suddenly right beside me, and I could feel
him holding me too, and I realised I was the one who was screaming.
“I was afraid this would happen,” Dr McBride said in that calm voice of his. 
“Dr Crusher, you’ve got the medication now, that we can give to him?”
“We made it up this afternoon,” I heard Beverly say, and then she said, “The
two of you will have to hold him absolutely still.  Good.  This is going to
hurt, Will,” and I felt yet another hypo spray in my neck.
“William,” Dr McBride said, “I know you are so very frightened, but we are here
now, and you are safe.  No one is going to hurt you here.”
“I just want it to stop,” I said.  “I’m so tired.  I just want it to stop.”
“I know,” Dr McBride said.  “I think you can let him go now, Mr Stoch.  Can
someone please tell me what precipitated this?”
I felt Stoch release me, and Jean-Luc shifted a bit, so that I was still in his
arms but not as tightly as before. 
Stoch said, “Commander Riker woke up, and he was very anxious, but he didn’t
know what had wakened him.  I took him to the head and he asked Dr Sandoval for
a sedative.”
“The commotion woke me,” Jean-Luc said, and I could feel him sitting up, but he
still kept one arm wrapped around me.  “And that upset him even further.”
“Then he had a panic attack,” Dr Sandoval completed.  “I gave him the sedative,
and an anti-anxiety, but it didn’t help.”
“William,” Dr McBride said, “do you think you are calm enough now to listen to
me for a minute?”
“Yes,” I said. 
“Good.  Do you think you could show me how you and Jean-Luc were when you woke
up?”
“How we were sleeping?” I asked.
“Yes.  Where was Jean-Luc?”
I rolled over.  The lights were still dimmed, but I had to squint against them
anyway.  “He was in his bed,” I said, “on his side.”
“Captain, would you place yourself back in the bed?”
“Of course,” Jean-Luc said.
“You were on your right side, facing Will?”
“Yes.”
“And where were you, William?”
“Here,” I said, and I moved up so that I was next to Jean-Luc.
“And that’s the position you were in when you woke up?” McBride asked.
“Jean-Luc had one arm around me,” I said.
“Would you put your arm around him, Captain?” McBride asked.
Jean-Luc placed his arm around me.
“Is that the right position, Will?”
“No,” I said, and Jean-Luc moved his arm, and I could feel the weight of it
pressing against me, and I couldn’t breathe.
“And that,” Dr McBride said, “was the trigger.  No, don’t move your arm, Jean-
Luc, please.  It’s very important.  Just lay very still.”
I could feel myself choking and then I was crying again.
“William, I am going to talk to Billy now,” Dr McBride said.  “I don’t want you
to be frightened, all right?”
“I can’t breathe,” I said, and then, “Who’s Billy?”
“Just keep your arm still, Jean-Luc.  I know this is very difficult for you. 
We’ll talk about this later.  Try not to be too upset,” Dr McBride said. 
“You’ve been handling this very, very well.”
“I am coping,” Jean-Luc said.
“Good.  Billy,” Dr McBride said, “what are you feeling right now?”
And I heard myself say, “I’m scared.”
“I know you are,” McBride agreed.  “You are just a little boy and this
shouldn’t be happening, should it?  What else are you feeling, Billy?”
“Trapped,” I said.  “I’m trapped.”
“Of course you are,” McBride said.  “I’m so sorry, Billy, that you’re trapped. 
It’s been this way since you got home from the hospital, hasn’t it?  Every
night?”
“Yes,” Billy said.
“And you’re too afraid to go back to your room?”
“Yes.”
“He would hurt you if you did?”
“Yes.”
“And you’ve been hurt so very much, haven’t you,” McBride soothed.  “Too much
for one little boy.  I’m so sorry, Billy.  I’m so sorry that I can’t be there
to help you.”
“There’s nobody here,” Billy said, “there’s nobody here who can help me. 
Nobody can ever help me.”
“I know,” McBride repeated.  “But, Billy, do you think you would let me share
something with you?”
“Okay.”
“There won’t be anyone to help you, Billy,” McBride said softly.  “Not for a
very long time.  You are trapped, as you said.”
I could hear Billy sobbing.
“You are only seven,” McBride continued, “and it won’t be until you are fifteen
that everything stops, and that seems so very far away to a little boy who has
to go through every single day like this.  But I promise you, Billy, it does
stop.  Your father goes away, and he doesn’t come back.  And your Auntie Tasya
finally gets to take you home, and you will go to the Academy, and you won’t be
Billy anymore, you’ll be William.  And William does very well at the Academy,
and he is a very fine Starfleet officer.  Because, Billy,” McBride said, “you
are a very strong little boy.  You are tough.  You survive this.  You play your
music – and you’re good at it – and you play sports – and you’re good at that,
too, Billy – and you fly your first solo flight.  And you do this all in spite
of what he does.  And he can’t stop you from doing this, Billy.  You’re
stronger than he is.  You’re better than he is.  You grow up and you never hurt
anyone.”
“It hurts,” Billy said, but I was the one who said it.
“Yes, it hurts terribly,” McBride answered, “because it wasn’t safe for you to
feel this pain, William, when you were Billy.  Billy did what he could to be
safe, so he hid his pain, and he stopped feeling.  What you have felt tonight
is what Billy couldn’t feel.”
“Why did he do this to me?” I asked.  “What did I ever do?”
Jean-Luc moved his arm off me, and said quietly, “You did nothing.  You had a
right to a safe childhood.”
I felt McBride sit down on the bed beside me, and he reached for my hand and
took it.  “There will never be an answer to that, William,” he said, “because I
expect even your father doesn’t understand why he did what he did.  Just know
that it is what he did, and not what you did.”  He stood up, then, and said,
“Perhaps Mr Stoch can help you wash your face, William, and help you fix up
your bed for you.”
Stoch helped me out of the bed, as I could barely stand, because whatever was
in the medication that Beverly had given me was starting to kick in.  Jean-Luc
came over to me, and helped me in the chair, and then Stoch returned with a
lukewarm rag to wash my face, and one of the orderlies came in and remade both
our beds.  Stoch helped me back in the bed, and stood beside me. 
I lay back and closed my eyes, but I heard Jean-Luc say to McBride,
“Is this my fault, then?”
“Of course not, Captain,” McBride said.  “With this type of abuse, there are so
many triggers.  If your arm had laid a different way, this wouldn’t have
happened – tonight.  But it might have happened in the morning, or tomorrow
night.  He is in the acute phase.  Nearly everything is a trigger.”
“I’m not doing more harm than good, then?” he asked.  “I upset him so much,
first by the trigger, and then when I heard him talking to Dr Sandoval.”
“Captain, I promise you that I will debrief you in the morning,” McBride
answered.  “William needs you.  He does.  It is extremely difficult to be the
care giving partner of someone with this illness.  It’s traumatic for you, to
watch someone you love be destroyed by this, and to learn the terrible things
that happened to him.  But you are helping him.  I promise you that.  William
is very lucky to have you.  Some of my patients have been completely
abandoned.”
Jean-Luc said, “I wish I could feel surer of myself.  I seem to do nothing but
hurt him.”
I wanted to tell Jean-Luc that I was sorry that I’d made him feel that way, but
the medication had almost paralysed me, and while I could hear what was being
said, I didn’t think I could respond to anything.
“He’s tougher than you think,” McBride said, and he sounded as if he were
smiling.  “We’ll talk again in the morning.  Can I get you something to help
you sleep?”
“If you did that,” Jean-Luc said, “I probably would sleep all day.  I’ll be all
right.  Good night, Doctor.”
“Good night, Captain,” McBride said, and I heard the door close.
I felt Jean-Luc get into the bed, and I wanted to move closer to him, but I
couldn’t get myself to do anything.
“Are you still awake, Will?” Jean-Luc asked.
I opened my eyes and nodded.
“The medication is working now?” He brushed my hair out of my face.
“Yes,” I said.  “I don’t think I can move.”
“Do you want to be on your side, then?”
I nodded. 
He said, “If you hadn’t lost all that weight, I wouldn’t be able to do this,”
and he rearranged me so that I was on my side, and he was spooning me. 
“Better, now?” he asked.
“Yes,” I said.  I could barely keep my eyes open.
He kissed the back of my neck.  “Sleep, then,” he said, and I could feel him
relaxing.
“I’m sorry, Jean-Luc,” I said, but he was already asleep.  I closed my eyes.  I
would tell him in the morning.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Interlude: Seven *****
Chapter Summary
     Will tries to explain what Jean-Luc doesn't understand, and Guinan
     explains that Will can no longer just survive if he is to live.
Chapter Notes
     One can only look at some of the most miraculous "survivors" of
     trauma -- the great Elie Wiesel comes to mind -- and ask, "How can
     one change one's frame of mind in order to view trauma the way Wiesel
     (or anyone like him) does?" Dr Glenn Schiraldi says,"Gradually,
     perhaps imperceptibly, a victim of trauma can transition to survivor
     and then thriver. A victim is one who merely undergoes a traumatic
     event. Surviving suggests a certain fighting spirit and determination
     to keep going. Thriving implies that one is living well. From the
     perspective of experience, thrivers have learned to appreciate
     themselves, others, and life. They have learned the art of being
     happy despite adversity. They have learned optimism."
     In order for William Riker to overcome his childhood abuse, he must
     learn to stop surviving. He must learn to thrive.
Interlude:  Seven
 
 
 
 
            Exhausted or not, Picard woke at precisely the same time he always
woke, about an hour before his shift.  He lay, briefly, with his eyes closed,
listening to Will’s ragged breathing next to him and the sounds of sickbay
gearing up for the shift change, feeling the puffs of air from Will’s breath on
his neck.  He stretched, and opened his eyes, glanced at Will, who was as close
to him as he could possibly get, in what seemed to be his default position when
they shared a bed.  Still, it wasn’t an unpleasant sensation, after so many
years of sleeping alone; to have the large heat-generating furnace beside him
that was Will.  He’d forgotten to shut off the lights completely, so they were
still on at ten percent, and in the dim light he could see Will’s face, still
swollen from the emotional outburst of the night, looking much younger than his
thirty-odd years.
            He still, despite the reassurances of McBride, felt responsible for
Will’s triggered response and his swift and unexpected descent into hysteria. 
Rationally, of course, he couldn’t be blamed for the placement of his arm; he
knew that.  But he’d wanted so desperately to make Will feel better, to give
him some pleasure in what had been two weeks of unremitting pain, that he’d
gone against his own better judgment and had enjoyed it too, and, given the
nature of the horrific memories that were tormenting Will, he couldn’t help but
feel certain that the placement of his arm was incidental to Will’s reaction. 
Will was too fragile for intimacy, it was as simple as that; he’d known he was
too fragile and he’d let his own desire, newly discovered and so powerful,
overtake his common sense. 
            Instinct made him want to take Will in his arms, but he was worried
that disturbing him while he was asleep might set off yet another terrifying
memory.  And yet if he left the bed, and Will woke while he was gone, he might
see that as a further rejection – in the same way that he’d taken simple
irritation at being awakened and transposed it into “yelling”.  He hadn’t been
yelling; of course he hadn’t.  He never yelled.  He couldn’t recall exactly
what he’d said, but the result – having his indomitable first officer, the most
affable of men – weep because of it had shaken him to his core. 
            He watched Will sleep, and he felt old and overwhelmed.
 
 
 
            The noise of the shift change wakened him a second time.  This time
he was dismayed to learn that he’d overslept, something he didn’t think he’d
done since he was an ensign on the Reliant.  He turned to Will, who was
stirring beside him, and brushed Will’s hair out of his eyes, a gesture he’d
known he’d done before, and Will’s blue eyes opened and he gave his trademark
grin.  Picard was suddenly overcome; he’d hurt the man, a man who was already
suffering, and yet that same man’s first reaction upon waking was to smile.  He
sublimated the instant desire he felt into affection, and he pulled Will to him
and kissed him gently on the mouth.  Will’s response was, as always, sweet, and
Picard held him, enjoying his still sleepy warmth.
            “It’s time to get up?” Will murmured against his chest.
            “Indeed,” Picard said softly, “I seem to have overslept.”
            Will had started to shake, and, worried, Picard pulled his face up,
only to realise Will was laughing.
            “I told you you would be a bad influence on me,” Picard said. 
“Stop that, it’s not nice.”
            “I am always nice,” Will responded.
            “Are you suggesting that I am not?” Picard asked gently, and he let
Will rest his head on his chest and lightly ran his hands through Will’s hair.
            “No,” Will answered, sighing.
            “But I yelled at you last night,” Picard reminded him, and kissed
him on the top of his head.
            Will lifted his head and his eyes were troubled.  “I said, last
night,” he began tentatively, “that you didn’t understand – I could try to
explain what I meant, but I don’t want to have another day like yesterday,” he
finished.  “I don’t want to be difficult.”
            “Mon cher,” Picard said, “as I recall it, I was the one who was
difficult for most of yesterday, not you.”  He tightened his arms around Will. 
“It appears they are allowing us to sleep.  I would like you to explain, if you
can, without upsetting yourself.”
            “Okay,” Will said.  He didn’t bother looking up at Picard, just
kept his head resting on Picard’s chest.  “I’ll try to explain, but you have to
promise me you’ll be patient.”
            That smarted, justifiably so, Picard thought.  “I promise to be
patient,” Picard said, and again kissed the top of his head by way of apology.
            Will said, quietly, and Picard could feel his strain in the
trembling of his hand that was bunching Picard’s sleep shirt, “Dr McBride told
you that my brain isn’t working right?  He used the word ‘disordered’ to me.”
            “Yes,” Picard answered.
            “It made me angry at first, when he said that,” Will continued,
“but he’s right.  My brain isn’t working, not the way it used to.  I’m not sure
how I can explain it.  When I – “ he paused, and Picard felt him tremble,
briefly, as if he were trying to maintain control, “—broke the mirror, and all
the sherds of glass fell on the floor – “  He stopped, as if he were unsure how
to continue.
            “Yes?” Picard prodded gently.  “I remember.”
            Will said, “It’s like that inside my head.  As if my brain were in
pieces.  And the pieces don’t talk to each other.  They’re separated, like the
sherds of the mirror on the floor.  So some things work sometimes and then at
other times they don’t.  And nothing is connected anymore.”
            Picard said, not knowing what else to say, “I love you, Will.”
            “I know,” Will said simply, “or at least I do right now.  I’ll
probably forget, though.”
            “Then I will remind you,” Picard said, “as I promised to.”
            “Yes,” Will began, but then he added, “I was going to say
something, but you ordered me not to talk about it.”
            “I have taken today off,” Picard said, “so I can be here for you
the whole day.  So you don’t have to worry about my duty to the ship.  She is
in capable hands at the moment, and we are where we are supposed to be.”
            Will sighed.  “I think I can explain it this way,” he said.  “You
talk to me as if I were still me.  As if I were normal.  And you expect me to
answer you, and understand you, as if I were still normal.  But you don’t
understand how hard it is for me, how hard I have to work, to try to understand
what you want, and to answer you the way you want me to, the way I would have
before.  It wears me out, Jean-Luc.  And sometimes – sometimes I don’t
understand at all, and then I have to guess, and when I guess wrong, you get
mad at me, or it seems to me like you get mad at me.  Because – “ Will paused,
and Picard could feel him gathering himself up, as if he were trying not to cry
again, “I’m not me anymore.  I don’t know who I am.  Sometimes you talk to me
and it’s not me who answers.  This doesn’t make any sense,” he said, finally. 
“I don’t seem to be able to explain it at all.”
            Picard held him close, and kissed him again.  “It does make sense,”
he replied.  “Dr McBride tried to explain this to me yesterday when we were in
Ten Forward.  So what can I do, mon cher?  So that I’m not demanding from you
what you can’t give?”
            “I don’t know,” Will said miserably.  “That’s part of the problem,
I guess.”
            “Can you tell me, when you don’t think you understand?” Picard
asked. 
            “I don’t know,” Will repeated.  “Half the time I don’t even know
when I don’t understand.”
            “Oh, Will,” Picard said.  He held him tightly, and was rewarded by
Will relaxing against him just a bit.  “Dr McBride said he would speak to me
this morning, I’m assuming after the treatment meeting.  I’ll talk to him about
this then.  I’m sure he will have a suggestion,” Picard said firmly; he didn’t
really believe this, but he hoped Will did.
            “Maybe,” Will said doubtfully.  “Am I going to this treatment
meeting?  I still don’t have a schedule for today.”
            “Yes,” Picard said, grateful there was something he could answer. 
“Yes to the treatment meeting.  Yes, you will have your schedule – our schedule
– then.”
            “You’re on my schedule?” Will glanced up at him, and the anxiety
seemed to have vanished from his eyes, to be replaced by what Picard had truly
missed, his old mischief-making self.  “In your hugs-and-kisses capacity or as
the captain?” Will asked, and his mouth twitched.
            Picard felt himself start to roll his eyes, and Will grinned.  “I
am sure, William,” Picard said, mustering up some dignity simply to please
Will, “that it will be as myself, not as your captain.”
            “Hugs and kisses it is,” Will said, and Picard replied, fondly,
“You have always been a very silly man.”
            There was a knock on the door, then, and Picard resisted the urge
to untangle himself from Will – he would fight his innate desire for privacy,
which he knew was merely a convenient cover for his own damned shyness – simply
because he would not do anything which could hurt Will.  So he took a deep
breath and he said, “Come.”  He felt Will tense a bit, almost as if he’d
expected Picard to do exactly what he’d resisted doing.  He gave Will’s
shoulder a reassuring squeeze, just lightly, and he felt Will relax.
            “Sir?” It was Joao da Costa, holding the door open a bit.  “The
treatment meeting will begin in forty minutes.  And Guinan is here to meet with
Commander Riker.”
            “Thank you, Mr da Costa,” Picard replied. 
            “Sir,” da Costa acknowledged, and he closed the door.
            “Well, Number One,” Picard said.  “The day begins.”
 
 
 
            Picard showered first, while Will had his nutrition meeting with
Guinan and Gwyn Otaka, and then accompanied Will to the shower, so that he
could have the water shower that he preferred in relative privacy.  He wasn’t
wearing his uniform, having given himself the day off, and Will was wearing the
trousers and shirt da Costa had remembered to bring him.  Picard leaned against
the wall and watched Will finish dressing and combing his hair.
            “You are in need of the services of Mr Mot, Number One,” Picard
said.  “Your beard is looking Biblical.”
            “Good luck with that, sir,” Will said, grinning.  “I’m not allowed
out of sickbay, and I’ve never seen Mr Mot outside of his domain.”
            “It’s not that you’re ‘not allowed’ out of sickbay, Will,” Picard
replied.  “You really haven’t been well enough to leave.”
            “For all I know,” Will said, “the rest of the Enterprise is merely
a figment of my imagination.”
            “And thus have imagined us all?” Picard asked.  He was trying, and
only somewhat succeeding, not to laugh.
            Will turned around and said, with just a hint of his old
cheekiness, “I suppose I’m giving myself too much credit, sir.”
            “Indeed?” Picard kept his face blank and waited for the missile to
be launched.
            “I could never have imagined,” Will said, as he edged towards the
door, “that Captain Picard –“ and he put that silly emphasis of his on the
elongated “i” vowel, “—would accept the position of chief purveyor of hugs and
kisses,” and he ducked out of the head.
            Picard was glad Will had left the room, as it wouldn’t do his
recovery any good to see that the target had struck home.  He waited until his
face was its normal colour again before he left the head, and he was still
smiling when he saw Guinan.
            “I’m glad to see you smiling, Picard,” she remarked.  “I heard it
was a rough night.”
            “I’m learning,” Picard said, “to simply accept the moments when he
feels better, and to enjoy them.”
            “As McBride said,” Guinan commented, “he is remarkably resilient.”
            “I don’t know how much you know,” Picard began, “but that he
survived at all is a testament to his resiliency.”
            “And yet,” Guinan said, and her demeanor became serious, “in order
to live now, he has to learn to stop doing what he does best, which is
surviving.”
            Picard said, “I’m not sure I understand.”
            “You can only survive so long,” Guinan said.  “Some of us can
survive even for centuries.  For Will, it’s been thirty years, give or take a
few.  But surviving, Picard, is not living.  Eventually the soul shrivels, the
terror overwhelms, and you die.”  She glanced at Will’s room, where he was
apparently still meeting with Lt Otaka.  “That’s where Will is now.”
            “You speak from experience, my friend.  What must Will do, if he is
to live, but not survive?”
            Guinan made eye contact with him and she said, “William must choose
to thrive.  It is the exact opposite of surviving.”
            “How does he do that?” Picard asked.
            “Let’s hope your friend McBride knows how to teach it to him,”
Guinan said.  “He hasn’t the time I had, to learn this lesson.”
            Picard remembered that old saying, of someone walking on his
grave.  “What do you know, Guinan?”
            “I know that once the body and the brain begin to shut down, it’s
very hard to reverse the process,” she replied.  “One smoothie is not enough to
halt what’s already started.”
            Picard was silent.  He was remembering a younger Will, beardless
and full of hope and self-confidence, towering over even Worf.  He said, “Dr
McBride believes that he can help Will.  I must believe that he can, if only so
William will believe it.”
            ‘And I as well,” Guinan said.  “He has agreed to have another
smoothie this morning, and he asked for an apple.  He has requested what Dr
Crusher says is ‘comfort food’ for his lunch.”
            “And what is that?” Picard asked curiously.
            “A grilled cheese sandwich,” Guinan said, and she smiled. 
“Something children eat, apparently.”
            “Perhaps,” Picard said thoughtfully, “it was Billy who asked for
that.”
            “If it was,” Guinan answered, “then progress is truly being made. 
I won’t stay for the treatment meeting, Picard.  I’ll let Gwyn do that.  I have
a smoothie to make, an apple to find, and to figure out how to make a grilled
cheese sandwich.”
            “Make one for me too, Guinan,” Picard said.  “Billy and I can eat
it together.”
            He watched as she left sickbay, stepping aside to allow McBride,
and Deanna, and Lt Patel to enter.  Beverly came out of her office, and Picard
joined her in the medical conference room; Will arrived with Lt Otaka and took
his seat between Deanna and Picard.  Despite his earlier cheerfulness, Will’s
face showed signs of strain, and Picard noted that Will’s hands were
trembling.  He gave Will a minute to sit down, and then he took Will’s hand
into his own, and held it.  He saw Will relax, then, and he kept Will’s hand in
his. 
            He said, as Will bent his head in so that he could hear him over
the noise of the pre-conference chatter, “I am keeping my promise to you.”  He
kept his eyes focused on Will, hoping to see that Will indeed understood that
which he was referencing.
            “Every hour,” Will answered, and he shifted his chair, just a
little bit, closer to Picard’s.
            “Every hour,” Picard agreed.
            Will sighed, and Picard watched McBride get his papers in order,
and so the treatment meeting began.
 
 
           
           
 
 
           
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Interlude: Eight *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr Alasdair McBride has a quiet moment to focus on his treatment and
     understanding of William Riker.
Chapter Notes
     Dr Alasdair McBride considers himself Jewish because Judaism
     considers the matrilineal descent in conferring status. Although the
     world of Star Trek has been deeply influenced by modern Jewish
     thought, there have been very few Jewish characters -- even though
     prominent actors and writers in Star Trek have been practising Jews -
     - in the series itself. It has been a conceit of some writers that
     Spock's mother, Amanda, was Jewish, and that Worf's adopted parents,
     the Rozhenkos, were Jewish. It is possible that Geordi La Forge's
     idealised love, Leah Brahms, was Jewish.
     I cannot imagine a universe without Jews. Perhaps we remain a small
     minority. But a universe without the humour of Mel Brooks and the
     compassion of a Reuven Feuerstein is a universe in which I would not
     wish to participate. Thus, Sandy McBride is part-Betazoid and part
     Jewish. I think it makes sense.
     Tikkun olam is a spiritual concept developed from the Aleinu prayer
     and the study of the Kabbalah. It has been taken to mean, in the
     modern post-Holocaust world, the spiritual reparation of the world by
     physical acts of mitzvoth (good deeds) and tzedakah (charity) done by
     the world's Jews. It is based on the Lurianic vision of the universe,
     in which HaShem (Jews do not use the English word for
     "G-d") broke the vessels of light and these sherds of light must be
     reunited in order to remove evil from the world. This is, I'm afraid,
     a rather facile definition of the concept, which is much more serious
     than I wish to discuss here. In modern terms, Jews consider
     themselves bound to repair the damage done to the universe by
     committing acts of good deeds and loving-kindness. This is the
     concept to which Alasdair McBride refers in this chapter.
Interlude:  Eight
 
 
 
 
Alasdair McBride found himself unable to sleep after he’d been called to
sickbay to deal with the triggered hysteria of Commander Riker.  He knew that
from here on out, his days would be twelve to sixteen hours long, as they
always were when he implemented his intensive program, and that he should,
realistically, be getting as much sleep as he possibly could.  But the
complexity of Commander Riker’s illness and the urgency required were perhaps a
heavier burden than he had expected.  He’d known, of course, when he was
contacted by both Deanna Troi and the captain that Commander Riker was in
crisis.  Still, the extent of the crisis was a surprise, and he almost wished
that Joao da Costa had had the gumption to have contacted him and given him a
more realistic picture.
Well, that was so much water under the bridge, he thought, as he wandered his
way through the ship until he came across the observation lounge.  He entered,
finding it dark and completely empty at this time of night, and so perfectly
suited for his purposes.  He set the lights at about fifty percent, placed his
padd on one of the tables, and then stood and gazed at SB 515 below, where he’d
spent the last fifteen years of his working life.  He frequently used
meditation techniques to solve problems, so he stood there at the window, and
took a few cleansing breaths, and then proceeded to relax each muscle in his
body.  He scrolled through the variety of programs that he used, and decided to
use a simple grounding exercise, to relax and the focus his mind on the problem
at hand.  He did this standing up, his eyes still looking at the starbase and
the space around it down below, but his mind’s eye was back on Betazed, in his
mother’s garden, listening to the sound of water tinkling into the pond and
little stream that she’d created.  He would be spending, he thought, about
three months on this ship, and then, he decided, he would treat himself to a
trip home.  It was long past time.  Young Joao, working with Counsellor Troi,
would be perfectly set up to run his program, and he’d taken a six month leave
of absence from his practise.  Three months on this ship, he thought not a
little wryly, and he would be more than ready for a small vacation home.
He turned away from the window, then, and seated himself at the table, and
opened up the file on young Commander Riker.  The latest documents were his own
notes, taken by hand and then painfully transcribed into the padd.  He’d found
himself, once long ago, in a wartime situation in which computer setups were
impossible, and had discovered, surprisingly, that his thoughts flowed better
when he used the archaic writing paper and pen.  It connected him, in a way
that perhaps was a conceit, to the amazing doctors in his profession of
centuries ago, and projected an image of mild eccentricity that made him less
threatening to his patients and their families.  So he wrote his notes out long
hand, in perfectly formed archaic script, and then, when he didn’t have the
services of his secretary – as no doubt he wouldn’t on this ship – transcribed
them into the computer himself. 
He glanced at his notes, written earlier in the evening – yesterday, it was now
– which concerned Commander Riker’s triggers and retrieved memory concerning
mealtimes.  He’d included his notes about Captain Picard’s idea that the
proprietor of Ten Forward, Guinan, should help Lt Otaka with Riker’s mealtimes,
and he’d also included Picard’s concerns over Riker’s inability to remember his
relationship with his captain.  Now he would have to add the latest trigger,
and the information that Riker’s personality was fragmenting into his younger
self, and the concern that he’d either had, or could have, in the ensuing days,
a psychotic break.
He wasn’t ready to write those notes yet, though.  He wanted to think about
what had happened, and he wanted to think about the conversation that he needed
to have with Captain Picard about his relationship with his first officer. 
There were concerns there, surely.  Concerns on the part of the captain, and
concerns of his own.  He would schedule the meeting with Picard after the
treatment meeting, which was to start at 0830, when Commander Riker would be
working on visualisation with Deanna and then moving on into physical therapy
with Lt Patel.  It would not, he thought, be an easy meeting.  It was clear
that Picard was uncomfortable with the strength of his feelings for William
Riker; that he worried, perhaps, that those feelings were compromising his role
as captain of the ship; and that he also was anxious over the symbolic meaning
of those feelings.  After all, Riker was a young man, much younger than Picard,
whose father had sexually traumatised him.  That he should be having a sexual
relationship with a much older man was cause for concern.  That Riker was too
ill to see that this was cause for concern only made it more serious.  No, the
conversation he was to have with Captain Picard would not be an easy one.
He left his notes and scrolled through his messages.  There was a new one,
dated from yesterday evening, from Deanna Troi, and he opened it.  He read
through it quickly, his fingers drumming absently on the table, and then sat
back to digest the information.  After Joao and Picard had talked Commander
Riker through one of his triggered memories, the one which had seriously
impaired his physical health by sending his blood pressure so high that the
young man could have had a stroke, Picard had tasked Deanna and the acting
first officer, the android Data, to research the memory to find out what was
fact.  Commander Riker remembered killing a child while he was in a psychiatric
unit in his native Alaska, an incident that occurred when he was seven, almost
eight years old.  He’d read Deanna’s transcript of the incident, along with
Joao’s notes.  Riker had remembered deliberately, with premeditation, stabbing
another child.
The records of this incident had been sealed by the Federation.  Nevertheless,
Lt Commander Data had managed to hack into the Federation archives, and Deanna
had subsequently read and then forwarded on the material.  Who exactly was Kyle
Riker? McBride wondered.  He was a minor diplomat and troubleshooter for the
Federation, but that was surface only, clearly.  What did Kyle Riker know – or
what had he done – that the Federation would be complicit in the man’s abuse of
his child?  He knew that Picard wanted him to continue the conversation with
Kyle Riker that Picard had begun.  He opened up a new document, and, since he
didn’t have his paper or his pen, began jotting notes and questions that would
begin his background for his conversation with Kyle Riker.
He stopped after a few minutes.  It was a beginning, after all.  He needed to
get Commander Riker into the program and on a schedule first before he could
spend some time researching the father and preparing for his interview. 
Apparently Picard had received a request for an update on his son’s status from
the man.  He would tell Picard what to say when he talked to him after the
treatment meeting.
He opened the message and the documents from Deanna again, and this time he
read slowly and carefully.  William Riker had been admitted to Providence
Hospital in Valdez, Alaska at the age of seven, suffering from hypothermia. 
The child had apparently attempted suicide by simply walking outside into the
Alaskan winter and waiting to freeze to death.  He had been rescued when his
elementary school in the small village where he lived realised that he wasn’t
where he was supposed to be.  He had been dropped off at the school by his
uncle, Martin Shugak.  Shugak apparently hadn’t waited to see if young William
would enter the school and William had not.  Instead, he had left his backpack
by the swings and then had vanished into the snow.  He’d been found by Master
Chief (retired) Henry Ivanov and medivac’d to Providence Hospital.
When the boy had recovered from hypothermia, he had been admitted to the
Children’s Psychiatric Unit at Providence Hospital.  Because the boy had had
previous emergency treatment and hospitalisations within the past year, it was
suspected that abuse was the underlying cause of the boy’s suicide attempt. 
However, as McBride read through the doctor’s notes, this was never seriously
dealt with while William was on the unit.  Instead, there was a concentration
on stabilising William’s psychological state and diagnosing William’s illness,
with the idea that when Kyle Riker finally arrived back in Valdez from space,
he would take the boy home. 
McBride put the padd down and stood up again, turning back to the window.  He
was an intensely spiritual man, and he looked upon his practise as a mission,
of sorts, of healing.  His own family was multi-ethnic and multi-raced in
origin.  His grandfather McBride, a Scotsman who had found himself stationed on
Betazed, had married a Betazoid woman.  But his mother’s family, also from
Earth, was Scottish and Italian Jews.  Technically that made him a Jew,
something that had always amused him, as how many Betazoid Jews in the universe
could there actually be, besides himself and his siblings?  On a more serious
note, however, he took the Jewish concept of tikkun olam – repairing the
universe by bringing together the sherds of light that had been fragmented – as
his own.  The evil in the universe always surprised him.  The evil that had
been done to young William Riker was unconscionable.
William had not murdered the child he’d stabbed, a nine-year-old boy named
Christian Larsen.  Most of the cuts he’d made were superficial, but there had
been one cut to the boy’s neck that had been deep and had caused a significant
amount of bleeding, thus causing William, no doubt, to believe that he had in
fact killed the boy.  Both children had been treated at Providence Hospital for
their injuries.  Christian Larsen had received treatment for his stab wounds
and an arterial repair.  William Riker had received surgery for a broken nose,
deviated septum, and fractured skull, which had occurred when one of the
behaviour techs had literally smashed William’s face into the floor, after
seeing the damage that had been done to Christian Larsen.  Christian Larsen had
been released from the critical care unit and had been returned to the
psychiatric unit.  He was then treated by new staff, after the old staff had
been terminated, and was placed with a foster family.  Currently, Christian
Larsen was still living in Alaska, only in Anchorage instead of Valdez.  He was
an associate professor at the university there.
McBride thought, Oh, what a tangled web we weave, when first we practise to
deceive.  Who had told Commander Riker that he had killed Christian Larsen? 
And why had no one told William Riker, once he was returned home to the care of
his father, that Christian Larsen was still alive?  And what had Christian
Larsen done to have the boy William respond so violently to him, when William
Riker was clearly not a violent person, not as a child nor as an adult? 
Riker’s tendency was to direct violence against himself, as in the two suicide
attempts so many years apart.  He sighed, and returned to his seat, and closed
out his padd.  There was, he thought, an evil here, below the surface.  There
was a complicity in the abuse of William Riker which included the Federation
and, perhaps even Starfleet.  After all, the boy’s mother had been a decorated
Starfleet officer.  And yet William the adult seemed to have no knowledge of
who exactly his mother was.  He seemed to have no knowledge of his family at
all.  In fact, even Captain Picard thought that William was alone in the
universe, with only his abusive father as his sole living relative.
It did not, McBride thought, make much sense.  And yet he would have to take
all these differing strands, all these stories with their multiple points of
view, and weave them into a narrative that would save young Commander William
Riker from a premature death.  No one had ever said that the practise of tikkun
olam was easy, just that it was a spiritual duty incumbent upon all Jews.
He hoped, however, as he realised how close it was to the start of Will Riker’s
first full day of treatment, that he had not been brought to Riker’s case too
late to gather up those sherds of light and turn them into something whole.
 
           
 
           
 
***** Chapter 36 *****
Chapter Summary
     William attends the treatment meeting, but has grave doubts about his
     position as first officer and his ability to get well.
Chapter Notes
     While William does not have the diagnosis of Dissociative Identity
     Disorder, the severity of child abuse does often fragment the selves,
     in this case between William's abused child, whom I have called
     "Billy," and William's adult self. PTSD is by its very nature an
     illness that deals with the symptoms of fragmentation and
     dissociation. Alasdair McBride must teach William how to heal his
     child-self and then integrate that child self into his adult self, so
     that he becomes one whole individual. The process, while necessary,
     is often frightening for both of the fragmented selves.
Chapter Thirty-Six
 
 
 
 
 
 
“Are we ready to get started?” McBride asked, looking around the table. 
“Commander Riker, you know everyone already, including Lt Patel?  He will be
your physical therapist.”
I glanced at Jai Patel, and he nodded.  “I know Lt Patel,” I said.  Actually, I
knew him better than Lt Otaka; Jai frequently played clarinet for me in my
swing band.
“Good,” McBride said.  He opened up the folder in front of him, and glanced
down at the real paper he had there.  “I know,” he said, smiling, “that it’s a
little eccentric to be using paper, but I prefer to take my notes this way.”
It was a good tactic to make everyone think he was a nice guy, I thought; it
was one I used myself at these types of meetings, except that I usually told a
slightly risqué joke.
“The purpose of a treatment meeting, Commander,” McBride began, “is twofold. 
The primary purpose is to update the team on the status of the patient.  You
normally would not be expected to attend that sort of a treatment meeting. 
However, the purpose of this meeting is to familiarise everyone on your team
with the intensive program that I have developed, including yourself, and to
set your schedule, not only for today, but for the next two weeks.  In two
weeks we will have a reassessment meeting and at that point we will lay out the
schedule for the following four to six weeks, depending on the progress that’s
been made.  Do you have any questions so far?”
I looked down at the padd in front of me, which had several documents in a
folder under my name, including today’s schedule and a master schedule that was
in spreadsheet form and covered the next six weeks of my life.  I was used to
having new information thrown at me on the bridge; used to making spot
decisions that meant life or death for the people involved.  Yet this
particular piece of information was just sitting there, like when you have
something in your throat that you can’t swallow.
Six weeks.  I’d already been on sick leave for two weeks, so that meant being
on sick leave for two months.  There was no way that Admiral Nechayev would
approve a two-month sick leave without knowing the exact reason for it.  What
kind of reason had Jean-Luc manufactured?  He’d told me he reported a
“shipboard accident,” but two months would require more specificity than that. 
He’d have to tell her.  She’d be the one to categorise me as unfit for duty,
and, since my relationship with her was awful at best, I doubted that I’d be
considered fit for duty again.
“What is it, Will?” Deanna was sitting next to me, and of course, I was
probably drowning her in anxiety. 
Jean-Luc took my hand again, under the table, but didn’t say anything.  McBride
was patiently waiting for me, as was everyone else at the table.  Why couldn’t
I have just succeeded?  I thought.  It would have been so much easier on
everyone.
“It’s a long day,” I said, “that’s all.  I’m not used to long days, anymore.”
“Of course,” Dr McBride said, and he was using that genial tone of voice
again.  “If you’ll look more closely at the schedule, Commander, you’ll see
that we have taken that into account.  There are several breaks for snacks or
light meals, as well as a rest period, and there are ten minute pauses between
each program.  Commander Riker’s concern is well-taken, however,” he said to
the team.  “He is, as we all know, in a very fragile state, physically as well
as emotionally.  He needs the intensive form of my program, because he is in an
acute crisis; the conundrum being, of course, that the acute crisis will make
it difficult for him to be treated intensively.  So what does this mean?
Joao?”  He turned to da Costa.
Da Costa said, “We proceed slowly.  We rely on Dr Crusher, or Lt Ogawa, or
other medical personnel, to check Commander Riker’s vital signs at regular
intervals.  And we relay on Commander Riker himself, to tell us how he is
feeling, as to whether or not we continue with a particular treatment.  We
don’t,” da Costa said, “allow the Commander the ability to halt his treatment
when it’s too uncomfortable for him to continue.  However, we will not
jeopardise Commander Riker’s physical or emotional well-being during any
portion of the treatment program.”
“I hope that reassures you, Commander,” McBride said.  “I think you’re familiar
enough with Joao to know that you can trust him, and, of course, you’re already
at a level of trust with almost everyone else on your team.”
Deanna said, looking at me, “Will – “ but I saw Jean-Luc imperceptibly shake
his head.  I noticed that both Beverly and Dr McBride had seen the
communication from Jean-Luc as well; however, neither of them said anything.  I
continued to look down at my padd and tried to concentrate on just controlling
the trembling of my hands.
“Status report, Doctor,” McBride said.
“Yesterday,” Beverly said, and she was speaking in her command voice, “I
informed the team that Commander Riker had reached a critical point in terms of
his physical state.  Namely, that he continues to be dehydrated, that he has
lost twelve kilos since he was admitted to sickbay, and that he continues to
refuse to eat.  Changes needed to be made in his nutritional program, or
Commander Riker would have to be placed back in the ICU to be treated for
severe dehydration.  Guinan has been brought on board to act as a liaison to
address Mr Riker’s psychological issues with food.  Mr Otaka, do you have
anything to report in that regard?”
This time I knew better than to look up.  I could feel Deanna shifting in her
seat next to me, as if my anxiety was a physical presence that was trying to
consume her.  Perhaps, I thought, it was – a physical presence.  It was,
according to Dr Crusher, literally consuming me.  Guinan had warned me,
yesterday, when she’d met with me – and I knew now that that’s what that was, a
meeting – that I was at a point where an intervention was going to be made.  I
glanced briefly at Beverly, and knew, that despite Guinan’s assurances that she
could make a difference for me if we worked this out together, that Beverly was
about to pull rank as CMO.  I felt the tension draining out of my shoulders. 
In a way, it was a relief. 
“Commander Riker met with Guinan yesterday evening,” Lt Otaka said.  “She was
able, according to Mr Stoch, to get the commander to drink a smoothie; that is,
a drink that is made with yoghurt, milk, and fruit.  Guinan explained the new
program to him at that point.  We met again this morning,” Otaka continued,
glancing at me, “and the meeting was productive.  Commander Riker was willing
to participate.  He had another smoothie and a cup of water.  He put in a
request for a snack and for his lunch.  Guinan is not at the meeting because
she is preparing both the Commander’s meals and organising her work at Ten
Forward.  She will return at the commander’s lunch, and will speak to him about
the evening meal at that point.  In the meantime, I went over Dr McBride’s
nutritional information – some of it, anyway,” and he smiled at me, “with
Commander Riker, and he willingly took the vitamins and supplements I gave
him.”
“Nevertheless, before we begin this morning’s program,” Beverly said, “I am
going to do a complete medical scan of Commander Riker.  One smoothie – or even
two – does not begin to address my medical concerns.  If Commander Riker is
dehydrated, he will have to receive fluids.  There is no way that he can
participate in any physical therapy or anything else if he is dehydrated.”
“Absolutely,” Dr McBride agreed.  “That was my concern as well.  So we will
make that adjustment in the schedule.”
“You will note, Doctor,” the captain said quietly, “that progress has been
made.”
Beverly said, “Duly noted, sir.”
“Good,” McBride said, and I watched as he used an archaic gold pen to jot down
notes on one of his many pieces of paper.  “After the treatment meeting,
Commander Riker will undergo a complete medical scan and we will notify all of
the results when that is finished.”  He paused to take a sip of the water that
had been placed next to him, and then he continued, “If you will look at the
remainder of today’s schedule, Commander.”
I opened the document.  “Yes,” I said.
“The intensive program is divided into two basic components,” he said.  “We
will deal with the physical and holistic aspects of your treatment in the
morning.  Your first session of the day will be working with Counsellor Troi on
a variety of different visualisation techniques, to help prepare you for your
day, and to give you the training that you will need in order to participate in
other sessions.  For example, when you are in the hyperbaric chamber, as Joao
will explain to you, you may choose to sleep, or you may work on your
visualisation and relaxation techniques.  You will also be learning specific
visualisation techniques from Counsellor Troi and me to help you with your
intrusion therapy sessions.  As Counsellor Troi has worked with you on this
specifically before, I’m sure that you will find this session both pleasant and
relaxing.”
“What’s intrusion therapy?” I asked.
“It is part of your Cognitive Behaviour Therapy program,” McBride said.  “I
will be specifically teaching you how to manage your intrusive memories and
flashbacks.”
“Okay,” I said.  I shifted uncomfortably in my seat and noted that my hands
were trembling again.
“Status update, Counsellor?” McBride asked.
“Yesterday’s work with Commander Riker went quite well,” Deanna said.  “He is
not resisting either visualisation therapy or breathing exercises.  However, he
is extremely anxious now.”
“Yes,” Dr McBride said, “of course he is.  Let’s go ahead and take a brief
break, so that Commander Riker can try to process some of the information he’s
learned.”
I said to Deanna, trying not to sound too irritated, “I have an anxiety
disorder.  Of course I’m anxious.”
“Will,” Deanna said.  “I wasn’t criticising you.  The team needs to know when
you are struggling.”
“Perhaps you shouldn’t sit so close to me,” I replied.
“Commander Riker,” she said, and she was using her therapist voice, “you could
be twelve decks away from me, and I would still be obligated to let the team
know that you are extremely anxious.”
I pushed back my chair, and felt the captain place a restraining hand on my
arm.  He stood up, and placed his other hand on my shoulder.
“Come, Number One,” he said.  “Let’s take a little walk, shall we?”
He guided me out of the conference room, saying to da Costa, who had risen to
follow us, “I have this, Mr da Costa.”
He moved me into the head and shut the door.  “Why don’t you splash some water
on your face?” he suggested.  He angled himself away a bit, giving me just a
little privacy.
I urinated, and washed my face and hands.  “Do I have to go back in there?” I
complained.
He opened the door, and I followed him out and into my room.
“You don’t usually complain about anything, Will,” he remarked.  “You’re very
much like our friend Worf that way.  What is it?”
“I read the schedule,” I said.  “I don’t need it explained to me.  At least not
the morning part.”
“And?”
I shrugged.  “I’m going back into the biobed anyway, so what’s the point?” I
said.
“The point is to familiarise all of us with your treatment program,” he
answered.  “Including you.  Anyway,” he said, “I’d like to hear what Mr da
Costa has to say about the hyperbaric chamber.”
“Well, good,” I said.  “You can go hear it, and I’ll stay in here until Dr
Crusher is ready for me.  One of the orderlies can sit with me.”
“I think,” Jean-Luc said, “that maybe you should just let me hold you.”
“I don’t want you to hold me,” I said.  “I don’t want anything, except to be
left alone.  And it looks like the only way that will happen is if I finally
manage to kill myself.”
“So we’re back to that again,” he said.  “That’s your default position, isn’t
it, when something’s too difficult now?  I’m afraid I’m not that easy to
manipulate, William.”
I sat down in the chair.  He walked over to me, and stood behind me, placing
his hands on my shoulders, and he bent down and kissed my hair.
“You’re not going to tell me what the real problem is?” he asked softly.  “I
can guess, I suppose, but I’d rather you tell me.”
“I’m just overwhelmed,” I said, finally.
He squeezed my shoulders.  “Try again, Will.”
I was silent.  I was beginning to feel the pressure again, that feeling that I
would just implode.
“You can’t do this, Will,” he said.  “The only way I can help you – the only
way we can help you – is if you tell me what is happening.  Take a deep breath,
mon cher, and tell me.”
I tried to breathe.
“Would you like me to get Dr McBride? Will?” he asked.  “Would you feel safer,
telling him?”
“I don’t feel unsafe with you,” I said.
He sighed.  “It seems to me, William, that whenever you threaten suicide to me,
you’re telling me that you feel unsafe.”
There was nothing I could say to that.  The door opened, and da Costa said,
“We’re ready to begin again, sir.”
Jean-Luc replied, “Would you ask Dr McBride to come in here, please, Mr da
Costa?”
“Aye, sir.”
McBride came in and shut the door.  “Captain?” he said.  “Mr Riker doesn’t want
to return to the meeting?”
Jean-Luc said, “He is upset, and he won’t tell me what it is – although I have
a good idea of what it is.  He is refusing to return to the meeting.  And we’re
back to the whole ‘I wish I were dead” again.”  He turned to me.  “I’m going to
let you talk to Dr McBride, Will,” he said.  He started to leave.
“Jean-Luc,” I said.  I stood up.
“Yes?”
“You told me not to bring it up again,” I said.  “You ordered me not to.”
“And in this case you should follow an order that was given to you last week,
when I was angry and distressed?” he asked, returning to me.  “Is that logical,
do you think?”
“My brain doesn’t do logical anymore,” I said.  “It doesn’t do anything
anymore.”
“I assume, gentlemen,” Dr McBride interjected, “that we are talking about the
duration of William’s treatment program?”
“Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “I believe so.”
“Sit down, William,” McBride said.  “Your looming over the both of us can be
distracting.”
I looked at him, surprised – he couldn’t have been more than two inches shorter
than I was – and saw that Jean-Luc looked quickly away at the floor, as if he
were hiding a smile.
“Sir,” I said automatically, and sat down.
“It was a surprise to you, William,” McBride asked, “that we were talking about
a program that would last anywhere from six to eight weeks?”
I sucked in my breath.  “Yes,” I said.
“And this has to do with Starfleet regulations, Captain?” McBride continued.
“Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “My initial report to Starfleet indicated that Commander
Riker was in an accident, a severe one, and that he was being placed on medical
leave for treatment.  I received an acknowledgment from the Admiralty on his
change of status.  That was last week.”
“You did not tell Starfleet that he attempted suicide?” McBride said.
“You already know this,” Jean-Luc replied.  “I believe Dr Crusher told you,
with Counsellor Troi’s confirmation, the reasons why I sent this initial
report.  No, I did not tell the Admiralty what happened.”
“And you have not reported Commander Riker’s diagnosis?” McBride said.
“No,” Jean-Luc answered shortly.  “That is on what we call a ‘need-to-know’
basis.  They don’t need to know, unless they ask.  They haven’t asked.”
“Ah,” McBride said.  “And when they do?”
“Then I tell them,” Jean-Luc said simply.  “The diagnosis, and that he’s
receiving your treatment.”
“And the issue here is his career?” McBride asked.
“Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “The diagnosis is a double-edged sword, still, I’m
afraid.  It’s a treatable illness, according to you, and by definition. 
Starfleet cannot, by its own rules, dismiss someone for an illness that is
treatable, or for a disability that does not impair function.  My artificial
heart, for example, did not cause me to be dismissed from service.  And Mr
LaForge was not prevented from attending the Academy, simply because he was
born without sight.”
“But -- ?” McBride persisted.
“They can do other things,” he answered.  “Remove him from his post.  Give him
a posting that’s less stressful.  Promote him to a desk job,” and he smiled,
grimly.  “A fate worse than death, to some of us.”
“And would they do this, Captain, if they knew?”
“Admiral Nechayev would,” I said.  “She has made her opinions about me well-
known.”
“So you believe, if I am understanding this correctly,” McBride said, “that a
prolonged sick leave for Mr Riker – say the six-to-eight weeks of this
intensive treatment program – would trigger an investigation by Starfleet into
the commander’s medical status, which would adversely affect his career and
position as first officer on this ship?”
Jean-Luc shrugged.  “There’s no indication yet,” he said, “that it will come to
that.”
And I said, “Yes.  I will be relieved from my post.  And maybe I should be,” I
continued, “as I don’t believe that the flagship should be without a first
officer for this length of time.  But I have no where else to go,” I said, and
I sounded, to myself, like a little kid.
“And now we hear from Billy,” McBride said.  “Thank you, Captain, for
explaining this to me.  Let me speak with him alone, for a moment.”
“Of course,” Jean-Luc said.  He walked over to me, and took my hands in his. 
“Will,” he said.  “You are anticipating something that may not happen.  And I
am not without influence.”  He pulled me to him and held me for a minute, then
turned around and left my room.
“William.”  McBride pulled over the other chair, and sat across from me.  “As I
see it, you are struggling with two opposite feelings here.  You are afraid you
are no longer capable of doing your job, in the manner in which you are
accustomed.  You believe that your inability to perform your duty is
endangering your captain – whom you love – and your ship, which you also love,
and which you consider your home.  Am I correct in this assessment?”
“Yes,” I said.  I could feel myself start to shake.
“Breathe, William,” McBride said.  “Take a deep breath.  Talking about these
issues is not going to hurt you, nor is it going to make anything bad happen. 
That’s it, deep breath in.  Hold it, now release.  Again.  Hold it, now
release.  One more time.  That’s it; you’re doing fine, William.  You won’t
lose control, young man,” he said, “and if you do, I am right here to help you
through it.”
I could feel myself breathing again, but my hands were still trembling and I
still felt that I was on the edge of the precipice, looking down.
“But you also have some hope, I think,” he said.  “You think that I may be able
to help you.  You think that the program may work.  You know that you have your
entire treatment team, people who have worked with you everyday for years,
people who love you and who care about you, ready and willing to support you
every step of the way.  This is frightening, to have this hope, because in the
past, hope has been taking away from you too many times.  And you don’t want to
leave this ship, or your post.  You are, according to your captain, and
according to everyone else with whom I have spoken – your friends on this ship,
for example, such as Mr Worf, and Mr LaForge, and Mr Data – one of the best
first officers in all of Starfleet.  And you are afraid that Starfleet, if it
finds out that you are suffering from a serious psychiatric disorder, will take
all this away from you.”
“Yes,” I said, looking down.
“So you want them to take it away from you, because it would be so good just to
stop fighting,” he said.  “Because you’ve been fighting and struggling your
whole life, ever since you were a baby, and you are so tired.  So utterly
tired.”
“Yes.”  I wiped my eyes.
“The kind of tired where you just want to walk out into the snow, Billy, and
lay down, and go to sleep,” McBride said.  “That kind of tired.”
“Yes.”
“But William,” McBride said, “William doesn’t want to do this.  William has
spent most of his life fighting to get what he needs, to get what he wants. 
William overcame tremendous odds to be where he is, on this ship, doing this
job.  He deserves to be here.  He does good work here.  And he doesn’t want to
give it up.”
I said, “I don’t want to give it up.”
“In this program, William,” McBride said softly, and he took my hands in his,
the way Jean-Luc would, “I am going to put you back together, your two selves,
Billy and William, and then I am going to give you the tools you need to be
able to resolve this issue.  You must trust me – and I know that you have only
just met me, and the trust between us is just beginning – that I can, and will,
do this.  In the meantime,” he said, “you must trust your captain to do what he
does best.  And that is protecting his ship and his crew.  Which includes,
William, the man he loves.  You.  As he says, he is not without influence.  Nor
is your friend Deanna, without influence, nor is Dr Crusher, without
influence.  There are some very important people here on this ship, and they
are all behind you.  I am asking you, William – not Billy, because I don’t
think Billy is capable of this, and so we are just going to have to console
Billy when he becomes frightened – to let go of this issue for now.  Let it
go.  Give it over to the people who can handle it for you, for now.  You are
not able to deal with this issue now.  So let it go.”
I looked at him.  “You’ll help me let it go?” I asked.
“Yes,” he said.  “Deanna and Joao and I will give you specific techniques to
let go of these thoughts and worries, every time they intrude.  I promise you
that we can do that, and that our techniques will work.”
“And you’ll know how to – “ I didn’t really know how to say this “—keep my
other self – Billy – from scaring me, and from being too scared himself?”
“He does frighten you, doesn’t he?” McBride said.  “Yes.  We will work directly
with Billy.  That is my job, William.  That is this disease.  That is how it
functions.  That is what I do.”
I suddenly remembered to breathe.  “I can do this?”
“Of course you can,” McBride said.  “You defeated the Borg, remember?  This
will be a piece of cake to you.”  He smiled, and let go of my hands.  “Come,
Commander.  The treatment team is waiting for both of us.”
“Okay,” I said, and I stood up. 
Da Costa said, “Are we continuing the meeting, Doctor?”
“Of course we are,” McBride answered, waiting for me.  “Commander Riker and I
are on our way.”
 
 
***** Chapter 37 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will learns about the rest of his morning program, including the
     hyperbaric chamber; he continues to struggle with rapid mood swings.
Chapter Notes
     "I am not," Beverly said, and she was speaking as the CMO, "going to
     allow my patient to die right before my eyes. Not when I can prevent
     it."
     Vomiting, lethargy, confusion, low blood pressure, rapid heartbeat,
     pain, discolouration of urine, headache, difficulty breathing, chest
     pain and/or abdominal pain, and shallow breathing are all symptoms of
     moderate to severe dehydration in adults.
Chapter Thirty-Seven
 
 
 
 
 
I followed McBride out of my room, back towards the conference room, but was
stopped by da Costa before I could go in.
“Commander,” he said, “I’d like you to sip some water while we’re finishing up
the meeting.  And Lt Ogawa wanted you to know that Guinan sent over your snack,
and it will be waiting for you in your room when we’re done.”
I started to say I wasn’t hungry, but then I remembered what Guinan had told me
yesterday, and again this morning.  “Yeah,” I said.  “Okay, thanks,” and I took
the cup of water that da Costa was holding out to me.
Da Costa didn’t say anything else, just followed me into the conference room. 
I took my seat between Jean-Luc and Deanna, who’d been having a conversation;
Jean-Luc was engrossed, now, with Beverly and Lt Otaka.
“I’m sorry I snapped at you,” I said to Deanna.
She smiled.  “It’s all right, Will,” she said.  “You’re handling this a lot
better than I would ever have.”
I thought about that for a minute, and then I grinned.  “You’d be awful,” I
agreed.  “You’d be all aristocratic on everyone.  It would drive us all up the
wall.”
“Will,” she said, drawing my name out the way she sometimes did when she didn’t
like what I had to say.  “I am never aristocratic.”
I rolled my eyes.  “Of course not,” I said, “oh great future holder of the
Sacred Chalice of Rixx.”
I saw Jai choke with laughter, as he’d had a number of opportunities; I guess
you could call them, to play at functions where Deanna’s mother had been in
attendance.  I heard Deanna mutter something not very nice under her breath,
but before I could call her on it, Dr McBride cleared his throat, and then
waited for Beverly and Otaka to take their seats.
Jean-Luc said to me quietly, “I see you’re feeling a little bit better.”
I nodded.  “I don’t know how to explain it,” I said, “but there’s something
about him that seems to help me feel calmer.”
“Good,” Jean-Luc said.  He took my hand for a moment.  “If you feel anxious
again, Will, please tell me or Deanna.  Don’t wait so long.”
“Aye, sir,” I said.
He gazed at me for a minute, his eyes dark, and then he said, “I’m still
keeping my promise to you, Will.”
I looked down at the padd in front of me, trying to maintain some semblance of
control.  I’d been an asshole to him; my emotions were all over the place; and
yet he was still willing to tell me what he was saying to me now.  I bit my
lip, and felt him take my hand again.
“Will,” he said.  “Just nod your head if you understand.”
I nodded, once.  He pressed my hand lightly, and then let it go.
McBride said, “Let’s get started, shall we?  The next area of focus will be
physical therapy, in the form of breathing retraining, with Lt Patel.”
“Commander,” Jai began, “if you’ll look at your schedule, you’ll see that
you’ve got two pt sessions with me, about an hour and a half apart.”
I reopened my documents and looked at my schedule.  “Yes,” I said.
“The first session is breathing retraining,” Jai said.  “I don’t want you to
confuse this with the breathing exercises that you’ve been doing, and will be
doing, with Counsellor Troi, as part of your visualisation and relaxation
therapy.  As Dr McBride has no doubt already discussed with you, you are
damaging your brain by breathing incorrectly.  It’s a cycle that’s hard to
break, Commander, because the anxiety and the incorrect breathing feed upon
each other.  In this session, I am going to reteach you how to physically
breathe, so that you can break the anxiety cycle.  I will also be teaching you
techniques that you can use to help when certain situations arise, such as
panic attacks and the hyperventilation associated with them.”  He waited a
moment.
“Commander?” Dr McBride said.  “Do you have any questions about this?”
“No,” I said.  I took a sip of water.
“Go ahead, then, Lieutenant,” McBride said.
“Your second session with me will be working on strengthening your arms,
particularly your flexor tendons, which you damaged.  You’ve had physical
therapy before, sir, so I’m sure you are aware of what this entails.  I’ll be
working on your grip, endurance, strength recovery, and range of motion.  This
is all pretty straightforward,” Jai finished.
“How many sessions are we talking about?” I asked.  “And you’re working both
arms?”
“We’ll start with the regulation twelve sessions, sir,” Jai answered.  “Yes,
I’ll be working with both arms.  We’ll work with your right arm first, though,
sir, since you are right-handed.”
I nodded.  “Okay,” I said.  “As Lt Patel has said, I’ve been in pt before.  I
know what it’s about.”
“Good,” McBride said.  “We’ll finish the morning with the update from Mr da
Costa, on the hyperbaric chamber.”
“The hyperbaric chamber is finished and ready,” da Costa reported.  “Commander
LaForge and his team finished it two days ago.  Commander Riker,” he said, and
he looked at me, “we’ve talked before about how there are cycles of damage. 
You are breathing incorrectly, so you are not receiving adequate oxygen to the
brain.  This exacerbates your symptoms of anxiety, which, in turn, causes you
to breathe more incorrectly, and the cycle continues.  Added to this is your
recent head trauma, which occurred three weeks ago, and then the oxygen
deprivation that you suffered when you nearly bled out.  The treatment for an
oxygen-deprived brain is the hyperbaric chamber.  It’s very similar to the
biobed, in a way, and of course, to the old-fashioned magnetic resonance
imaging scan of centuries ago.  It’s more or less a room, sir, with a bed.  As
you lay in the bed – either sleeping or perhaps using visualisation techniques
– we increase the oxygen levels of the chamber, to compensate for the oxygen
that you are not receiving.  This extra oxygen helps your brain to do the work
it needs to heal itself.  We have found that daily forty minute sessions in the
chamber, over a period of six to eight weeks, not only heal damaged neural
pathways but also create new ones.  Your brain function will increase, and you
will begin to see results of the healing in about two weeks’ time.”
McBride said, “Of course this is very old technology, Commander.  For some
reason, we’ve gotten away from the old technology that worked, in our mad
scramble to just build new everything –new organs, new limbs.  The fact remains
that one cannot build a new brain, or a new mind.  So I’ve gone back to find
technology that we inadvertently threw away, and the hyperbaric chamber has
given remarkable results.”
“So I just go to sleep and it does its magic stuff?” I asked.
McBride smiled.  “Essentially,” he agreed.  “We give you the enriched oxygen. 
You rest.  Your brain does all the work itself.  Amazing.”
“And Mr da Costa is in charge of this,” I said.
“Yes.  Mr da Costa has been specifically trained in the use of the hyperbaric
chamber.”  McBride closed his folder.  “This ends the morning session for
Commander Riker.  He has a bridge built in between the two sessions, morning
and afternoon; namely, his midday meal and a rest period.  It is very important
– and I can’t stress this enough, and I believe Dr Crusher will support me in
this – that the team makes sure that Commander Riker, regardless of how he
feels on any given day, take this ninety minute period off.”
I said, without thinking, “So you’re giving me lunch and a nap?  Do I get story
time too?”
McBride gave a genial smile, and Jai Patel laughed.  I found my XO face and put
it on; I was glad for them, really, that they thought this was funny, but I was
sick of being infantilised.
Deanna said, lightly, “I’m sure Joao would read to you, Will, if you asked
him,” and when I glanced at her, I realised she was teasing both da Costa and
me, the way she’d done before, when I’d taken her stupid tests, but, beneath
that, she knew how I felt.
“I was planning,” McBride said, “that we should go over the afternoon session,
but I am cognizant of Dr Crusher’s concerns.  I think we should recess, for
now, and allow Dr Crusher to take over Commander Riker’s care.  We can always
reconvene after Mr Riker’s treatment, if Dr Crusher gives us the okay.”
“Thank you,” Beverly said.  “Mr da Costa, if you will take the commander and
get him ready for the scan, I will set things up.”
I sighed.  I felt Jean-Luc rest his hand on my arm.  “Come, Number One.  Mr da
Costa is waiting for you.”
I walked out of the conference room with Jean-Luc beside me, followed by da
Costa as we entered my room.
“Do I have to wear the hospital gown again?” I asked.
“Sir,” da Costa said.  “You can wear your robe, if you wish.  I’ll check with
Lt Ogawa, but I’m sure that will be okay.”
“Thanks,” I said.
Jean-Luc sat down in his chair, and I perched on the edge of the bed. 
“I know you feel as if we’re treating you like a child,” he said.  “I remember
feeling the exact same way, when I had my heart replaced….except,” he said
wryly, giving me that small smile of his, “I really still was a child, then. 
It’s so much more offensive to you, being treated this way, when you’re young.”
“I’m almost forty,” I said.  “Hardly young.”
“Compared to me,” he said, shrugging.
Da Costa returned and said, “Dr Crusher said the robe was fine, sir.”
“I’ll stay with him for the moment, Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said.  “I’m sure
there are things Dr Crusher needs you to do.”
“Aye, sir.”  He left.
I said, “It’s not so much that I’m being infantilised by everyone, although I
am.  I’ve been injured and here before, I know what it’s like.  It’s just that
my emotions are all over the place.  One minute I’m feeling okay and then I’m
angry, or I’m goddamned weeping – it’s not me.  I’m not like this.  I used to
be so easy-going.  Now I’m just a fucking basket case.”  I looked at Jean-Luc
and gave a half-grin, “Sorry, sir.  I can’t even seem to control my mouth
anymore.”
“It’s not as if I haven’t heard it before,” he said, “or as if I didn’t know.”
“But I’m usually professional,” I said, “especially around you – and I seem to
have lost the knack, now.”
“You must remember, Will,” he said, standing up and wrapping his arms around me
in one fluid motion, “that I’m here as Jean-Luc, not the captain.  I’m not
objecting to the substance of what you’re saying.  And I have been known, when
the occasion warrants it, to say a few choice words myself.”
I grinned, letting him rub my back, and said, “Yeah, but it sounds so much more
dignified in French, sir.”
He gave a short bark of laughter.  “Shit is still shit, Number One, in any
language,” he said.
“I’d better get undressed,” I said, “or Beverly will be in here demanding my
head.”
He let me go.  “We wouldn’t want that.  She has a terrible temper.”
The She-in-question stuck her head in the door.  “I heard that, Jean-Luc,” she
said.  “Come on, Will.  We’re waiting for you.”
“Sir,” I said, still grinning.  “It’s the red hair.”
“Indeed,” Jean-Luc agreed.
“I still control the hypo sprays, Mr Riker,” Beverly said.
“Aye, sir,” I answered, getting up.
I stripped down and wrapped my robe around me.
“Wait, Will,” Jean-Luc said.
“What?” I walked back over to him.
“Come,” he said, and he pulled my face down and kissed me.  “Just reminding
you,” he said, when he let me go.  “I’ll walk out with you.”
“What are you going to do now?” I asked.
“I believe Dr McBride wants to speak with me,” he answered.  “Otherwise, I’ll
be here, if you need me.”
I nodded, and walked into the treatment room, where Beverly, Ogawa, and da
Costa were already waiting for me.  I handed da Costa my robe, and he helped me
into the biobed.
“This will take about fifteen minutes, Will,” Beverly said.  “We’ll go ahead
and give you the fluids, depending on the results.”
Ogawa came over and gave me a hypo spray.
“What was that for?” I asked. 
Beverly grinned.  “Just to help you relax, Will,” she said.
I rolled my eyes.  “I’m not the one who said it, Jean-Luc did.”
“You,” she remarked, “agreed.”
I heard Ogawa giggle – and then I felt my eyes start to close.  I heard da
Costa say, “I’ll be right here with you, Commander.  You just rest.”
 
 
It was happening again.  I couldn’t breathe, I could feel something against my
mouth, maybe it was a blanket, and then I remembered, I’d had this dream
before.  It was a blanket, being pressed against my face, and I could smell
that moist woolly smell, and a faint scent of mothballs, and I couldn’t
breathe; the wool was in my mouth, and in my nostrils; and my chest hurt, and
then I was struggling, and someone was holding me down; then I was choking.  I
was choking on something, there was something preventing me from swallowing,
and the blanket was wrapped around my face; and then I was back in a dream, and
I was hiding, and it was small and dark and it smelled like mothballs, and
somehow the blanket was there too, being pressed against my mouth, and I kept
trying to breathe and all that I could inhale were the wet woolly fibres of the
blanket.  I couldn’t breathe.  My chest hurt, and I couldn’t breathe.
 
 
***** Interlude: Nine *****
Chapter Summary
     Jean-Luc has his first session with Alasdair McBride.
Chapter Notes
     There is an exciting new paradigm regarding the treatment and
     recovery for child abuse that has been developed by a Dr John J
     Lemoncelli. It compares the abuse -- and the abusive thoughts and
     secrets that accompanied that abuse -- with the behaviour of a
     biological parasite. In biology, a parasite enters a healthy host
     organism and infiltrates various parts of that organism. It does this
     for two reasons: (1) to consume the host and (2) to replicate itself.
     The abuse of the child, in this metaphor, can be compared to a
     disease, which can also be metaphorically compared to a parasite.
     Regardless of the type of abuse that was experienced (physical,
     emotional, or sexual), the abuser fed the child's ego what Dr
     Lemoncelli calls "contaminants" -- statements that destroyed parts,
     over time, of the child's ego. These statements can be compared to
     our model of the parasite. The "love" that the abuser feeds the
     abused child is simply the transference of the parasite from one host
     to another. For example, in this story, William Riker tells his
     father he does not want his father to "fuck" him anymore. Kyle Riker
     responds, "Not even when you want it, Billy? Because you will want
     it, William. You know that you will." In our metaphor, the father has
     told the son that he wants, that he needs, to be abused. That he
     likes it. That he's responsible for it; this is the parasite. William
     Riker's ego accepts this as reality, and the parasite will then exist
     within his ego, acting as the abuser, telling him that he is not
     worthy of good treatment, that he deserves abuse, that he deserves to
     be unloved. Left unchecked, the parasite thrives in the ego of the
     child, creating the kind of behaviour which will eventually destroy
     the child.
     This chapter is a therapeutic session between Jean-Luc Picard and Dr
     Alasdair McBride. There is frank language and a frank discussion of
     abuse and sexuality. There may be triggers in McBride's description
     of the abuser's behaviour.
Interlude:  Nine
 
 
 
 
 
Picard had had the feeling, as he’d listened to Dr McBride and the various
members of Will’s treatment team talk about the components of Will’s treatment,
that Will was struggling.  There was no basis for this feeling.  Will was
asking questions – and occasionally answering them – with a certain presence of
mind which indicated that he was listening and understanding what was being
said.  He’d been upset, of course, when he realised just how long the program
would be – and what that might mean, in terms of his career – but he’d also
indicated that he’d been calmed, somewhat, by the information that Dr McBride
had given him.  He’d heard Will apologise to Deanna and then participate in
some gentle teasing with her; he’d realised immediately when Will had taken
offense at the idea that he would be given time to have lunch and a nap, as
he’d put it.  That, too, had been easily diffused, by both Deanna and himself. 
And Will hadn’t made a fuss about going back into the biobed for a medical scan
and fluids.
So there was no real reason to feel uneasy, and yet he did.  He’d let Will go
into the treatment room, where he would be watched over by the omnipresent and
reliable Mr da Costa, and where he would be more than adequately treated by
Beverly and Alyssa Ogawa.  And yet….Picard had been a Starfleet captain for
more years than he cared to remember.  He knew his crew; he knew his ship. 
More importantly, he knew Will.  Something was amiss.  He sighed.  He would
just have to trust that Beverly would find it, whatever it was.
“Captain Picard,” Alasdair McBride said.
Picard turned away from watching Will and said, “Yes.”
“I’d like to have our meeting now, while Commander Riker is otherwise
occupied.”
“Yes,” Picard agreed.
“I have not gotten my new office space completely set up yet,” McBride
continued.  “It will likely be finished tomorrow, half-day, so Deanna has
suggested I use her office.  Would that be acceptable to you?  I’d like to move
us out of sickbay, if possible.  Less distractions.”
Picard hadn’t expected this, so he took a moment to think.  He didn’t like the
idea of leaving Will – there was something there, he didn’t know what – but
McBride was right, that this interview might be better off in a more neutral
space.  Which meant, of course, that his own ready room was out as well.
“Of course, Doctor,” he consented.  “A good idea.”
He stopped the orderly Tekka and explained that he would be in Troi’s office
for a meeting with Dr McBride.
“I’ll make sure Dr Crusher knows, sir,” Tekka said in his lilting voice.
“Mr da Costa already knows, Captain,” McBride offered, before he could add
anything to his orders to Mr Tekka.  “He’ll tell William, if he asks.”
Picard nodded, noting that McBride had dropped Will’s title.  It was uncanny
how McBride could sense the difference between his professional concern and the
personal; almost, Picard thought, as he watched him loping beside him, in the
same manner that Will walked – the walk of tall men, he guessed – almost as if
McBride were an empath, in the same way Deanna was.
It would make sense, he decided.  Even though McBride was only one-quarter
Betazoid, it was through the matrilineal line that empathy passed, and it was
his grandmother who was part of Betazed’s ruling elite, in the same capacity as
Deanna’s mother and her family.  It would explain the reason why he had such a
calming effect on Will.  Perhaps Will’s bond with Deanna made him more open to
others with the same abilities.  He would ask, he thought.  It would be good to
know.
At the turbo lift Picard stood aside, to allow McBride to enter, and then
stepped in and said, “Deck Eight.”
“You are worried, I think,” McBride commented.
Empath or psychological tells?  Picard wondered.  “I am.”  Picard felt no need
to be anything less than open.  This meeting – and whatever it entailed – was
about Will; it was not about him.
“About our meeting or about William?” McBride asked.
“Both,” Picard answered.
The turbo lift came to a stop and the doors opened.  Picard waited for McBride
to step forward, and then he followed.  They walked down the corridor to Troi’s
office and McBride keyed in the access code.  The doors opened, and Picard
followed McBride in.  Clearly Deanna had anticipated this use of her office –
the lights were on; she had set out a tray and mugs for tea, should he so
desire it.
Picard took his seat, giving McBride access to the “therapist’s” chair that
Deanna used when she was working.
“You drink tea, I assume, Captain?” McBride said, heading over to the
replicator.
Picard thought briefly that therapists, whether they were counsellors or
psychiatrists, were essentially all alike.  “You’ll find that a decent Earl
Grey is already programmed,” he said.  “It will make you a pot.”
“Lovely,” McBride responded.  “One pot of Earl Grey.”
“Hot,” Picard said.
“Cancel that,” McBride grinned.  “We’ll try again.  One pot of Earl Grey, hot.”
A rather utilitarian-looking pot of tea appeared and McBride laughed
delightedly.
“No tea cozy, I’m afraid, Doctor,” Picard said as McBride brought the pot over.
“We can’t have everything,” McBride replied.
He poured out, and Picard took his mug and inhaled it, then sipped.
“Ah, you take yours plain,” McBride said.  “A brave man.  My grandmother made
me mine, I’m afraid, so I grew up drinking it the way she drank hers, milky
with too much sugar.”  He went back to the replicator and returned with both
the milk and the sugar, then stirred it into his mug.
“We have that in common, then,” Picard replied.  “Except that my grandmother
was an austere grande dame who believed that adding milk and sugar to her tea
was a sign of weakness.  My brother thought she was dreadful, but I admired her
strength and her tenacity.”
“Tell me a little about your family, Captain,” McBride said, setting his mug
down on Deanna’s coffee table.  “I really haven’t had much of a chance to get
to know you.”
Picard sipped his tea and wondered if that meant that McBride hadn’t realised
he would need to research the captain of the Enterprise in order to help its
first officer; Will had told him that McBride had asked about their
relationship, even though he was sure that Troi would have already said
something, before that first session.
Picard shrugged.  “There’s not much to know,” he said.  “I was born in LaBarre,
France, to a rather traditional family.  My family were and are vintners.  My
father, his father, and now my brother, produce some rather good wine.  Table
reds, mostly.  We lived there on the family land.  Growing up it was my
parents, my brother, and my grandmother – my mother’s parents had their own
home.”
“Your brother?” McBride asked.
“Robert?” Picard said.  “He’s older.  Married, with a son, my nephew, René.  He
took over the business when my father died.”
“And you had no interest in the vineyards?”
“No.”  Picard set his mug down.  “My interest was always in the stars.”
“So yours was the traditional path of the Starfleet officer, then?” McBride
asked.  “My grandfather, Malcolm McBride, was a Starfleet officer.  He was
stationed on Betazed, met my grandmother, retired there.”
“In the same way Commander Riker met Counsellor Troi,” Picard said, “when he
was stationed on Betazed.”  Picard paused.  “You could say I took the
traditional path, although I’ve been part of the diplomatic corps as well.”
“Which, undoubtedly,” McBride said, “is why you were chosen to captain the
flagship.”
“Perhaps,” Picard said.
“You have a great deal invested in your career and this captaincy,” McBride
remarked.  “Where does William Riker fit in all of this?”
Picard felt himself tense, and he automatically reached for his mug and took a
sip.  This is not about me, he thought, rather sternly.  This is about Will. 
And then he thought, We don’t have much time, and he felt his control slip just
a bit.  He stiffened his shoulders and wrung it back.
“In which regard?” Picard asked.  “As the first officer of this ship?  Or
personally?”
“Why don’t you begin with when William Riker became part of your ship,” McBride
answered.
“Surely you’ve researched this,” Picard said.  “You’ve had the information on
Commander Riker for some time.”
McBride picked up his mug and sipped his tea.  “Of course I have, Captain,” he
said, in the same genial tone of voice he’d used with Will.  “I’d like to hear
it from you.”
Picard felt wrong-footed here for the first time, and he hated feeling wrong-
footed.  He said, “And the purpose of this being --?”
“Ah,” McBride said.  “You asked me, last night, if you were doing more harm
than good, in terms of William’s psychological and emotional health.  I
understand, Captain, that you are an extremely private man.  Your reputation
for reserve is rather well-known.  So I was more than a little surprised to
find out that you were in a relationship with William Riker – having been
apprised of this by Counsellor Troi before you arrived here – and then, seeing
how willing you are to forego your rather famous reserve – “McBride smiled here
“—in an effort to be present for William in the way he needs you to be.”
            “I thought,” Picard said, “that we were here to discuss Will.”
            “And we are,” McBride responded.  “Let me ask you this, then – at
the risk of sounding as if I’m from a nineteenth-century romance novel.  What
are your intentions toward William Riker?”
            “Whatever do you mean?” Picard asked, testily.
            “Captain,” McBride said.  “Jean-Luc.  I am here to treat William
Riker for a serious, life-threatening illness.  You are a very important part
of his emotional well-being.  In the two days that I have been on this ship, I
have watched him turn to you time and time again for support and solace as he
battles this disease.  I have watched you treat him with great kindness and
respect; with love and physical affection.  I have seen you handle his
confusion, his mood swings, and his hysteria with aplomb.  My assumption is, as
the treating psychiatrist for William Riker, that you are the care giving
partner in his life.”  McBride paused, and then he said, leaning somewhat
forward, “If you are the care giving partner in his life, then the therapeutic
relationship that I have with William extends to you.  You are in almost as
much pain right now as William is.  You doubt your ability to help him.  You
doubt your ability to provide him with the love and strength he needs.  You
doubt your ability to provide him what he needs and captain the flagship of
Starfleet at the same time.  You are worried that Starfleet will step in and
take away your ability to protect him.  You worry that Starfleet will send you
on assignment that will be dangerous, when you don’t have your first officer in
place.  You worry,” McBride said in a very calm voice, “that you are no better
than Kyle Riker was.”
            Picard felt the shock of that last statement right in the pit of
his stomach, and he reacted, as he always did, with great personal stillness. 
He relaxed his hands and reached for his mug.  He took a sip of tea.  He
inhaled the aroma and allowed it to find his centre.  He watched McBride
sitting there watching him.  He replayed in his mind what McBride had just
said.  This was about him – and how he affected Will.  This was about Will –
and what he needed.  And what about, Picard thought, what I need?
            The silence deepened, and Picard let it.  He would think this
through, and then he would respond.  He thought about when he’d called Will
into his office; how he’d challenged Will with the knowledge that he knew how
Will felt about him and then he’d offered, casually almost, love and affection
in return.  As if it were so simple.  Give Will the affection he craved – out
of his own magnanimous compassion – and Will would get better….The Picard cure.
            McBride seemed perfectly content to let him struggle with this, and
Picard realised what a gift the man had.  He’d already figured Picard out.  Now
he would wait and see if Picard would be able to do it for himself.
            Which was the more important question? he wondered.  What did he
need – or what did Will need?  Perhaps, he thought, it was the same thing.  He
remembered Will’s cheekiness in the mornings that they’d shared together; how
it had completely changed the tenor of his day to have awakened beside Will, to
have been able to take him in his arms, to have laughed with him over
breakfast.  To imagine that they could have that every morning, if they so
chose.  Was it really so simple?  Was that what McBride was asking him?  To
choose?  He thought about how he’d told Will that he was a royal pain in his
arse that evening on the beach, and how Will had turned that statement around
into one of fondness, and affection.  He thought about how he’d promised Will
that he would hold him every hour, if that would help him remember and give him
enough strength to go on for yet one more hour.  He thought about how he’d told
Will – his Will – that he would always want him.
            “Yes,” Picard said, and he set the mug of tea down.  “I am
William’s care giving partner.  And yes, I worry about all of those things. 
But I am not the same as Kyle Riker,” he said.  “I am thirty years older than
Will.  I am the same age as his father.  But that is where the similarity
ends.  There is no coercion, or manipulation, or violence in the intimacy
between myself and William.  If the intimacy between myself and William is
hurting William in any way, then it stops.  And you have my word on that.”
            McBride’s smile was genuinely warm.  “More tea, Captain?” he
asked.  He poured out, and then left the tea things on the table.  “So I will
be treating you both,” McBride said, “as a relationship.  I will be helping
you, Jean-Luc, as you cope with caring for Will throughout the course of his
treatment, and then in the aftercare period.  I will be working closely with
you, helping you with your doubts and your concerns, so that your own anxieties
don’t impact William’s.  And I will be helping William to learn to trust you,
and your relationship.  I will help him learn some of the skills he needs in
order to have a safe, consensual, adult relationship.”  McBride paused.  “And,
Jean-Luc, I know you are not the same as Kyle Riker.  I wanted to make sure
that you knew you were not the same as Kyle Riker.”
            Picard wanted to close his eyes in relief – had he really thought
he was abusing Will? – but, of course, he sipped his tea instead.
            “I am sure,” McBride said, “you are exhausted.  You wanted to talk
to me about speaking with Kyle Riker, but I’m wondering if perhaps we could
save that discussion for after dinner tonight?  I believe Deanna has planned –
with Guinan’s participation – that we should all meet in Ten Forward for
dinner.”
            “A good idea,” Picard said.  “You’re right, I am tired.  You must
be as well.  Neither one of us got much sleep last night.”
            “No,” McBride agreed.  “I found the observation lounge to be the
perfect place to write some notes and to decompress, after.  Were you able to
sleep at all?”
            “Starship captains – or perhaps any captains, in any time,” Picard
said, “must cultivate the ability to sleep wherever, whenever, at a moment’s
notice.  Otherwise, we would get no sleep at all.” He smiled, and he felt
genuine relief in the idea that he actually liked Alasdair McBride.  “I have
been known to fall asleep standing against a wall on the bridge in the middle
of a battle when I was not needed at that particular moment.”
            McBride grinned.  “A useful talent indeed,” he said. 
            “I did tell Will that I would ask you something for him,” Picard
said.
            “Go ahead, Captain.”
            “Will was trying to explain to me this morning, before we got up,
what it felt like inside his mind.  They way his brain is ‘disordered.’  He
said that’s the term you used.”
            “Yes.  Go on.”
            “He said it felt as if his brain were in pieces.  He compared it to
the sherds of glass from the mirror he broke when he attempted suicide.  He
said his brain is in pieces, and that the pieces don’t connect anymore, so
sometimes he can understand things, and then other times he can’t.”
            “That’s a very precise analogy to the way his brain is currently
functioning,” McBride commented.  “When we do the brain function scan, you will
be able to see that that is exactly what is happening.”
            “I asked him,” Picard continued, “if there were any way he could
let me know when he didn’t understand.  Because he told me that I still
expected him to respond to me the way he used to, and that he couldn’t respond
that way anymore, and that when he guessed what I wanted from him, he felt I
reacted badly….And I have,” Picard admitted.  “Reacted badly.  Last night was a
prime example of my reacting badly, and causing him unnecessary pain.”
            “We all make mistakes, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “You were
awakened, you were tired, and you were irritable.  You are entitled to be human
in this relationship.  William must learn to cope with all the little problems
of two people loving each other.  Not every argument is the end of the world.”
            “No,” Picard said, bemused.  “That’s a good thing.  He is overly-
sensitive – with reason, I know – and I have a sharp tongue.”
            “Surely that is something he already knows,” McBride said.
            “Indeed.  I was very hard on him, his first year on this ship.” 
Picard sighed.  “But he is so fragile now, and I don’t want to add to his
suffering.  Is there any way that you can help us – that you can help me –
recognise when he is simply not understanding what is being said, or what is
happening around him?”
            “Of course.  That’s a very simple thing, really.  We can talk about
this at dinner – it will be the perfect time for it, as it’s something that the
whole team should know.”
            “Good,” Picard said.  “I’ll look forward to that, then.”
            “I think,” McBride said, after a moment, “that you have one more
question to ask me.  An important one.”
            Picard glanced at him sharply.  He definitely was an empath. 
            “Take your time, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “I know that it’s hard
for you to work through your shyness.”
            Picard wanted to laugh.  Perhaps he would, later, in some future
time when Will was better and they were still together.  A picture grew in his
mind, of Will and he in the garden of some cottage somewhere, Will with his
coffee and he his tea, with perhaps a dog at their feet.  Then he felt that
undercurrent of worry again, and he chided himself for straying into the
mawkish.
            “I don’t discuss my sexuality with anyone,” Picard said.  “Ever,
but – “
            “I know, Jean-Luc.  You can discuss it with me.  This is what I
meant, when I said I would help you with your relationship.”
            “Last night,” Picard began.  He simply could not believe that he
was going to talk to another person about this.  Then, he thought, I have to. 
How can I tell Will to do the difficult things – to remember the terrible
crimes his father committed against him – if I can’t even discuss – sex – he
made himself think it – with the psychiatrist who is supposed to be helping
Will?  “Last night,” he began again, “Will wanted, I think, some validation
that I still wanted him, despite what his father had done.  He’d expressed to
me his feelings of shame and disgust, and that he felt as if no one would ever
want him.  He’s repeatedly said that he’s done terrible things; that he’s not
clean.”
            “Those are very common feelings for an adult survivor of sexual
abuse,” McBride said.  “The damage that was done to William by those sexual
acts his father forced him to perform was in the internalised feelings of shame
and disgust that have become permanently part of William’s identity.  A child
has sexual feelings.  When stimulated, the child’s body will physically
respond.  The abuser uses this response to justify what he does.  He tells the
child, ‘See.  You liked it.  You wanted it.’  The child blames himself for the
abuser’s actions.  So, yes, William the adult needs to know that he is still
attractive, that he still can function sexually, that he is still worthy of
your love.”
            Picard was almost overcome.  He swallowed, and he said, “I was
worried that he was too fragile for intimacy.”
            “You need to say what it is,” McBride said, and Picard heard
Deanna’s “therapist’s” voice.
            He said, “I was worried that Will was too fragile for sex.  I asked
him to tell me if he became anxious.  I made him promise that we would stop, if
he felt upset in any way.”
            “And did he?”
            “No,” Picard said.  “He went to sleep, as did I.  And then, my arm
triggered him, and he woke up.”
            “And your question?”
            “Are they connected?” Picard asked.  “I don’t want him to feel
rejected.  But I don’t want to hurt him.  And I don’t want to be the cause of
any triggers, or terrible memories.”
            “Of course you don’t,” McBride said.  “I think, however, that your
underlying question is if you should stop having sex.  My simplest answer to
that would be, No.  Sex can heal, just as it can damage.  You love William. 
I’ve only been on this ship for two days and I can say that safely, having
watched the two of you together.  He loves you.  Yes, you could trigger him by
some specific act.  He could – and he may even be doing so and you haven’t
noticed – be dissociating as he is having sex with you.  In fact, that’s quite
common among survivors.  Yes, some of what you do together his father did to
him.  Are the acts the same?  Of course not.”  McBride said, and Picard
recognised that he was using the same tone of voice to him that he’d used with
Will just last night, “It must be very difficult for you, as the captain, to
have to ask someone else for reassurance.  But I am here to give you that,
Jean-Luc.  That’s part of my treatment for you, as the care giving partner. 
Your instincts with Will are very good.  You won’t hurt him by loving him,
Jean-Luc.  I can promise you that.”
            Picard sighed.  “Thank you,” he said.
            “Sandy,” McBride said.  “You are welcome to call me Sandy.  It’s an
old Scots nickname for Alasdair.”
            “Yes,” Picard said, and he paused, briefly.  “Sandy.”  He started
to rise, when he heard Beverly’s voice come over his comm. badge. 
            “Crusher to Picard.”
            “Picard here.”  He froze, knowing that he’d been waiting for this
the entire time. 
            “I need you and Dr McBride in sickbay, Captain,” Beverly said. 
“We’ve had a medical emergency with Commander Riker.”
            “What kind of emergency, Doctor?” Picard asked.
            “His heart failed,” Beverly said.  “You need to be here.  Now,
Captain.”
            “On my way,” Picard responded.  “Picard out.”
            “Captain – “ McBride began.
            “Not now, Doctor,” Picard said.  “Follow me.”
            He strode out of Troi’s office, and hoped that McBride could keep
up with him as he made his way to the turbo lift.  McBride was on his heels,
and Picard said, “Deck twelve,” when McBride joined him. 
            McBride said, “The dehydration – “ but he saw the look on Picard’s
face and stopped.
            When the doors of the turbo lift opened, Picard had stilled
himself, and he walked into sickbay as the captain of the Enterprise, prepared
for whatever his CMO would tell him.  Beverly had pulled Will from the brink of
death once – he could only hope that she had done so again.
           
                                                                                                                                                                                               
                                                                                                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                                                                                           
                                                                                                                                                                       
 
 
***** Chapter 39 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will begins his recovery from severe dehydration and its subsequent
     heart failure, but his recovery his hampered by more intrusive
     memories.
Chapter Notes
     The programs already set in place for William Riker by Alasdair
     McBride -- the hyperbaric chamber and physical therapy, including
     breathing retraining -- will also benefit him as part of the
     rehabilitation program which will be set up. Instead of generic light
     exercise, already in place in Will's program, cardiac rehab exercises
     can easily be substituted which will complement the breathing
     retraining and the physical therapy for his damaged arms. The
     oxygenation treatment of the hyperbaric chamber will help in the
     healing of his weakened heart muscle.
Chapter Thirty-Nine
 
 
 
 
           
            Someone was speaking to me.  I could hear him, almost as if he were
very far away.  It wasn’t the scary voice, the one from my dream, the one where
I was hiding in someplace dark and close and small, the dream with the blanket
over my mouth and I couldn’t breathe, which somehow morphed into that other
dream; no, this was a safe voice.  I couldn’t understand what the voice was
saying, but I knew that I could uncurl myself, and take a breath, and I saw
myself reaching up for the doorknob – it was painted, like porcelain, in white
and blue – and I turned the knob slowly, hearing the door click open, and I saw
the sliver of light cross the wooden floor.
            I said, “I can come out now?  It’s okay?  He’s gone?”
            I felt someone take my hand, and then kiss my face.  “Yes, mon
cher,“ Jean-Luc said, “it’s safe now.  He’s gone.  I’m here.  No one will hurt
you when I’m here.”
            “You won’t leave me alone again?” I asked.  I was trying to open my
eyes, and my throat felt all scratchy and sore.  My mouth was really dry.  “He
comes back when he thinks I’m alone.”
            “Has he awakened yet?”
            It was Beverly’s voice, now.  I was beginning to remember; I was in
sickbay.  I wasn’t in the dream anymore.  No one would be coming to sickbay to
hurt me.
            “He’s trying to waken,” Jean-Luc said.  “He’s very confused.”
            Yes, I was confused.  I was confused in the dream, too; first the
part about the blanket, then the part about the closet.  Why did I think I was
still there?
            Another voice said quietly, “Let me talk to him, please.”
            “A few minutes only,” Beverly said.  “No stress, not from either
one of you.”
            “Billy,” the voice said.
 I should remember who this voice was; it was a very pleasing one, with an
accent, not like Jean-Luc’s, but somehow familiar.  Who was Billy again?  I
could feel the confusion start again, and I tried to open my eyes.
“Billy,” the voice said again.  “I’m right here with Jean-Luc, right in front
of the door.  I want you to reach up and turn the knob.  Can you do that?”
I could see the white and blue knob again, the old-fashioned keyhole underneath
it.  “Yes,” I said.  I looked down for a minute and could see that I was
barefoot, and that I was just wearing briefs – they had puppies on them – and
that my chest was bare.
“Can you turn the knob, Billy?” he asked again.
I liked his voice.  It was soft.  It wasn’t the kind of voice that would yell
at me.  “I’m bleeding,’ I said, and I saw that I was.  There was blood on my
leg, and on my chest, and it was dried on my hand.  “It hurts.”
“I know, Billy.  I’m a doctor.  You can open the door, and I’ll help you.”
“He’s not there?” I asked.
“No, cheri,” Jean-Luc said.  “I’m here.  The doctor’s here.  You can come out
now.”
“He hurt me,” I said. 
“Yes,” the doctor said.  “I know.  I’ll take care of that too.  He won’t hurt
you again.”
 “I don’t want to open the door,” I said.
Beverly said, “Gentlemen, that’s enough.  If he doesn’t want to open the door,
he doesn’t have to. Will, I’m going to give you something for the pain.”
“Beverly, please – “ Jean-Luc said.
“Shhh,” McBride said.  “You’ll frighten him. Billy, it’s over and he’s gone. 
Open the door, hen, and you can show me where it hurts.”
“No,” I said.  But then I said, “Okay, I’ll open the door.”  I watched my arm
reaching up for the doorknob, felt it twist in my hand, heard the door click
open.  I saw the light splash on the wooden floor. “You’re not tricking me?” I
said.
“No, I would never trick you,” Jean-Luc said. 
I gave the door a push.  I felt my heart stop – but when I opened my eyes, I
could see Jean-Luc sitting beside me, holding my hand, and both Dr McBride and
Dr Crusher standing next to him.
“Do you know where you are, Will?” Beverly asked.  I could hear the concern in
her voice.
“Sickbay,” I said.  “My throat hurts.”
“I know,” she replied.  “You had a breathing tube.  I’ll get Alyssa to spray
your throat for you.”
“I couldn’t breathe,” I said.  I was half-whispering, half-talking.  “I was
having that dream again, and I couldn’t breathe.”
“Yes,” Dr McBride said.  “When you’re well enough for our session, we’ll talk
about your dream.  For now, though, you just rest.  Let   Dr Crusher take care
of you.”
“I’m giving you something for the pain, Will,” Beverly said, and I felt the
familiar push of a hypo spray.  “Gentlemen, he needs to rest.  As do you, Jean-
Luc.  Out.”
“Another minute,” Jean-Luc said.  “He said he doesn’t want to be alone.”
“Captain,” Beverly said.  “He’s in sickbay.  He won’t be alone.  I have Mr
Stoch here already, and I have both Lt Fisk and Dr Sandoval coming on.”
I could feel my eyes closing.  I heard Jean-Luc say, “Will.”
“I’m okay,” I said sleepily.
“Do not,” the captain said, “leave him alone for one second, Mr Stoch.”
“Aye, sir,” Stoch said.
I heard the door close.
“I am here, Commander,” I heard Stoch say.  “You rest.”
 
 
 
 
When I woke again, it was to Lt Fisk checking my vitals.
“Yash,” I said.  My voice was still whispery.
“Commander?  Are you in pain?” He peered at me.
“Thirsty,” I said.
“I’ll sponge your mouth,” he said.
He put some sort of a wet swab in my mouth and let me suck on it for a moment,
and then took it out.
“Throat hurts,” I said.
“Sir.”  He opened my mouth and sprayed something.  “Swallow.  That’s it.”
I could feel it icing up my throat.
“Better?” he asked.
I nodded.
“Your pain number, Commander?” he asked.  “On a scale from one to ten –“
One of these days I was just going to jump the person who said that to me.  I
shook my head.
“You’re not in pain?” he asked.
I sighed.  “Hurts to talk,” I said.  I gave him five fingers.
“Five?  That’s pretty good,” he said.  “I’ll let Dr Sandoval know.”
I nodded.  “Mr Stoch?” I asked.
“Still here, Commander,” Stoch said.
I wondered if Beverly had managed to convince Jean-Luc to get some sleep. I
closed my eyes again, and heard both Beverly and Dr Sandoval come in.
“Will?” Beverly said.
I opened my eyes.
“Only a five?” she asked.  “You’re not just saying that to get us off your
back, are you?”
I sighed.  “I hate that question,” I said.  My voice was a little better,
because of the spray.
“And your real pain level?” Beverly said.  “Commander?”
“I don’t know,” I answered.  “It hurts but it’s outside of me, just floating
there.  I don’t know,” I said again.  “I feel sick.  I don’t want any more
medication.”
“I can’t have you in pain, Will,” she said.  “Your cortisol levels are so
low….”
“Rather have a glass of Jameson’s,” I said.
She looked at me for a minute, and then she laughed.  “Okay,” she said.  “Yash,
let’s just keep monitoring him for now.  Will, you tell Mr Stoch if you need
more pain meds then, will you?”
“You won’t give me the whiskey?” I tried to smile.
“Maybe tomorrow,” she promised.
I closed my eyes again.
 
 
 
 
“Good morning,” Jean-Luc said.
I was still in the biobed, but I was awake, and had managed to have a few ice
chips and a couple of sips of water through a straw.  My throat was better and
I didn’t feel as woozy.  I still felt as if one of the shuttlecraft had landed
on my chest, though.  Jean-Luc was in uniform and looked as if he’d actually
gotten some sleep, and I wondered if Beverly had just given him something to
knock him out.
“How long has it been this time?” I asked.
“This is the third day,” he said, taking his seat in his usual chair.  “How are
you feeling?”
“Like someone broke all my ribs,” I said.
“That isn’t surprising,” he said.  “Have you spoken to Dr Crusher yet?”
“She’s in a meeting,” I said.  “I’ve seen Dr McBride, briefly.”
“That’s good.” He reached for my hand.  “No more bad dreams?” he asked.
“No,” I said.  “Have I been having bad dreams?”
“For a while,” he replied.  “You look better.”
I rolled my eyes.  “I must have looked like shit before then,” I said, “begging
your pardon, sir.”
He laughed.  “Oh, Will,” he said.
“You can’t stay?”
“No.  Only for a few minutes.”
“Places to go, things to do,” I murmured.
“Nothing spectacular,” he said.  “We’re on ferryboat service, again.”
“We left SB 515, then?”
“Yes.”
“Good,” I said.  “Too close to the Neutral Zone.”
“Indeed.  But everyone is fairly good about leaving the medical centre alone,
Will.  You know that.”
I nodded.  “You slept, finally?” I asked.
“Yes,” he answered.  “I slept.  But –“
“I know,” I said.  “It’s not my worry.”
“I promised Mr da Costa only five minutes, mon cher,” he said, standing.  “Not
a good idea to get on his bad side.”  He gave me a small smile, and then leaned
over and kissed my cheek.  “If you rest today, you’ll be out of the biobed by
tomorrow.  So you cooperate with Beverly.  Will?”
“Sir,” I said.  “I wish you could stay.”
“I know.  But I’ll just be in the way, and you need your rest.  I’ll be back
here when my shift is over.”
“Okay.”  I watched him leave, and da Costa return.  “Mr da Costa,” I said.
“Commander.  Do you need anything, sir?”
I closed my eyes.  “No,” I said.  “I’m just going to sleep for a bit.”
“Aye, sir,” da Costa said.  “I’ll be right here, sir, when you wake.”
 
 
 
 
I was in the damned dream again.  This time I was just in the second half of
the dream, but I could see more of the closet, could feel more.  The smell of
mold and mothballs was overwhelming.  There were boxes, pushed to the back, and
clothes, mostly coats.  The floor was wooden, stained.  My feet were cold.  I
was shivering, and I wrapped my arms around my chest and that’s when I saw I
was bleeding.  My briefs were wet and I smelled of urine.  I could feel that I
was crying; I could hear that I was breathing in little gasps.  I could see the
doorknob up above me.  I knew better than to touch it.  If I touched it, it
would make a noise, the little snick of the latch releasing.  Better to curl
myself up against the boxes.  Better to stay in the half-darkness….
“Commander?  William?”
I could hear da Costa from very far away.
“Open the door, William,” da Costa said.  “It’s okay.  I’ve called for Dr
Crusher.”
I heard Beverly say, “He’s in the dream again?”
“Yes, sir,” da Costa said.  “Dr McBride is with Counsellor Troi, sir.”
“His blood pressure is up.  I’m sedating him.  This is going to kill him, Mr da
Costa.”
Da Costa said, “That’s what this illness does, sir.  It kills.”
I felt the pressure of the hypo spray in my neck.  I could feel myself start to
drift down into sleep, away from the closet, away from everything.
 
 
 
 
“Will?”
I opened my eyes, and blinked at Jean-Luc standing beside me.  I was still in
the biobed but I wasn’t sure what day it was anymore.  He pulled the chair over
and took my hand.
“Are you feeling any better?” he asked.
“Groggy,” I said.  “Don’t know what day it is.”
“Still the third day,” he answered.  “I said I’d be here after my shift.”
“Seems longer,” I said.  “I’m thirsty.”
“You’ve still some ice chips here.  Do you want a few?”
I nodded.  He held my head up a bit, and slid a few ice chips into my mouth so
I could let them melt on my tongue.
“Should I get Beverly?” he asked.
“No,” I said after the ice chips melted.  My voice sounded better and my throat
didn’t hurt.  “I’m okay, Jean-Luc.  Really.”
“Good,” he said.  “I’ve been more than a little worried, I must say.”
“If I could just stay awake for more than a few minutes,” I said.  “I hate
being in here.”
“You should be back in your room tomorrow, Will.  These things take time.”
“I’ll have to start everything all over again,” I said.
“It’s all right, Will.”  He placed his hand on my face.  “You have everyone in
place now.  You’ll have some rehab to do first, that’s all.”
I closed my eyes.
“You’re tired,” he said.  “I’ll let you rest.”
“Please,” I said.  “Don’t go.”
“Bien, mon chou,” he said.  “For a few minutes more, then.”
“Will you tell me what happened?” I asked.  “No one’s told me.  I guess I keep
falling asleep.”
“I should leave that for Dr Crusher,” Jean-Luc said. 
I was silent.  I could feel the dream trying to intrude.  “Can you talk to me
about the ship, Jean-Luc?” I asked.  “I promise I won’t worry or anything.  I
miss my ship.”
He smiled.  “What would you like to know, Number One?” he asked.
“Anything you can tell me…how’s Data doing?”
“He’s getting the hang of it, you could say,” he replied.  “Deanna is helping
him with the more social aspects of the job.  It’s hard to get him to not over-
compensate, though.”
I could just see that, Data’s intransigent logic against the Jean-Luc’s desire
for everything to be exactly as it had been.  I tried to laugh, but my chest
hurt too much.  “Good for Deanna,” I said.  “She needs the leadership
experience.”
“Yes,” Jean-Luc agreed.  “It will be good for her.”
I said, “You were talking to me, before.”
“When was that, Will?” he asked. 
“When I was first coming out of – whatever it was,” I said.  “Wherever I was. 
I guess I was unconscious.”
“Yes,” he said.  “You were in a medically-induced coma.”
“I guess I tried to die again,” I said lightly.
He looked away, and then he said, “There are times, William, when I would just
like to shake you.”
 “It’s a good thing I’m in here, then,” I said.
“Will,” he said.  He sounded old, and tired.
This time I looked away.  Finally, I said, “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc.  I wasn’t
trying to be flippant.”
“Weren’t you?” he asked.
“You said you wouldn’t get mad when I messed things up,” I said quietly.  “I
wasn’t trying to make light of what you felt, Jean-Luc.”
He sighed.  “I’m not ‘mad,’ Will, whatever that constitutes.  But it’s been
hard for me, too, you know.  You might want to think about that, the next time
you use humour as a defence mechanism.”
I could feel that sense of hopelessness coming back.  “You are mad at me,” I
said.  “And I don’t even understand what you just said.”
“All right,” he said, and he took my hand again.  “Just let it go, Will.  I’m
feeling frustrated, not angry, I promise you.  I’ll get over it.”  He leaned
over and kissed me lightly on my cheek.  “It’s over.  Nothing for you to be
upset about.”
“I feel so stupid,” I said.  “I hate this.  I didn’t used to be so damned
stupid.”
“William,” he said. “Look at me.”
I looked at him, even though I didn’t want to.  I didn’t need him feeling sorry
for me.
“Remember how you said things weren’t connecting?” he asked.  I nodded. 
“That’s what’s happened here, that’s all.  It doesn’t have anything to do with
being stupid.  You have never been stupid, Will.”
“Jean-Luc?”  Beverly entered the room.  “Dr McBride would like to speak with
you, if you have a minute.  And Dr Sandoval and I are going to run some tests.”
He stood.  “You’ll be all right, then?” he said.
“Yes.”  I still felt that I’d managed to upset him more than he was willing to
admit.
“I’ll be back to say goodnight to you, then,” he promised.
“Okay,” I said.  I watched him leave.  “Are you going to explain to me what
happened?” I asked Beverly.  “It would be nice to know.”
Beverly glanced at me from her scanner.  “Did you two have a fight?” she asked.
“No,” I said.
“No?  Will?”  She walked over to me.  “You seem upset.”
“I just say stupid things,” I said, “and then he gets mad.”
She smiled.  “He’s tired, Will,” she said, “and when he’s tired, he’s
impatient.  He’s been very worried.  It’s been a rough two weeks, for all of
us.”
“I’m just so tired of this,” I said. 
“I know, Will.  You’ll feel a little better when you’re out of the biobed,” she
said. 
Dr Sandoval came in, and so did Lt Fisk.  I was tired, too tired to pay much
attention to what they were doing, and I closed my eyes.
“Commander?” 
I opened my eyes to see Mr Stoch standing beside me.
“Are you thirsty?” he asked. 
I nodded, and he gave me a few sips of water. 
“Are you in pain?” he continued.
“My chest hurts,” I said.  “My head, too.”
“I’ll let Lt Fisk know,” he said.
“Okay.”  I closed my eyes again, and then I heard Jean-Luc ask, “Is he in
pain?”
“Sir,” Mr Stoch said, “can you tell me your pain level?”
“I don’t know,” I said.  I didn’t feel like opening my eyes.  Maybe everyone
would just go away if I kept them closed.  “Six, I guess.”
“You’ll just feel a push, Commander,” Fisk said, and I felt the hypo spray in
my neck.
I felt Jean-Luc take my hand.  “You go to sleep, mon cher,” he said, his voice
very close to my ear.  I felt him kiss me, and felt his hand linger on my
face.  “Don’t be upset, Will,” he said.  “I promise you I’m not angry with
you.”
“But you were,” I said. 
“For about two minutes,” he said, stroking my hair.  “You won’t let me have two
minutes to figure things out?”
I opened my eyes.  “Just two minutes,” I said.  “And I’m still not paying for
anything.”
He grinned, something I hadn’t seen him do in a long time.  “You drive a hard
bargain,” he said, kissing me again.  “And I’ve already taken care of my bill.”
“Yeah?” This would be good.  “You sent it to Nechayev?”  
“No,” he said.  “I just added it to the McBride project costs.  There’s room
for a bit extra.”
“You cooked the books?” I said, shocked.
He gave a very Gallic shrug.  “I didn’t charge very much,” he said.  “No one
will notice.”  He took my hand again.  “You’ll sleep, now?” he asked.  “You’ll
be back in your room by lunchtime tomorrow, Beverly said.  Lt Patel will start
your rehab in the afternoon.”
“Yes,” I said.  “I’ll sleep.  You should too.”
“I’ve had my marching orders from Dr Crusher, Will,” he said, smiling.  “I’ll
see you in the morning, then.”
Fisk must have given me a sedative as well as the pain medication, because it
was becoming increasingly hard to follow what Jean-Luc was saying.  I felt him
touch my face.  “Good night, Will,” he said.
For one brief moment of panic I thought I was all alone in the room, and I
could feel the start of the dream hovering around, but then I heard Stoch say,
“It’s all right, Commander.  I’m here,” and I felt the panic subside, and the
dream recede.
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 40 *****
Chapter Summary
     The aftermath of Henry Ivanov's interference.
Chapter Notes
     William Riker has learned to "split" his ego in order to deal not
     only with his father's abuse but also with his father's
     inconsistency. This ability to split enables him to maintain some
     semblance of equilibrium (so that he can function in the world
     outside of the home) as well as a needed sense of attachment to his
     father. The more dysfunctional the abusive parent is, the more
     extreme methods a child resorts to in order to maintain some type of
     attachment. The child accepts responsibility for the abuse, in order
     to maintain the idea that he is loved and that his parent is loving.
     The fear of abandonment supersedes the fear of the abuse.
Chapter Forty
 
 
 
 
 
Kyle Riker waited until the door closed, and he could hear Ivanov’s aircar pull
out of the drive.  He watched William put away the sheet music in the piano
bench and turn down the lid on the keys.
He said, “What did he ask you, Billy?”
“I should start dinner,” William said.
“I don’t think so,” Riker responded.  “You’ll do as you’re told.  I asked you a
question, and I want you to answer me.”
“We just talked about music,” William said.  “He said I was doing good.”
“It’s well,” Riker said.
“He said I was doing well,” William repeated.
“He asked you a question, William,” Riker said.  “I heard him, so don’t bother
lying to me again.”
William was silent.  Then he said, “You agreed that you wouldn’t hurt me
anymore.”
“That doesn’t mean that I won’t punish you, Billy,” Riker said, “so I suggest
you stop stalling for time and tell me what Ivanov said.”
“You already said you heard the question,” William answered.  “What’s the point
of me telling you, when you already know the answer and you’re just going to
punish me anyway?”
“Because, William,” Kyle Riker said in a low voice, “you will obey me.  If I
tell you to do something, you do it.  You don’t question me, do you
understand?  And,” he continued, beginning to unbuckle his belt, “if I make the
decision not to put you in the hospital again – not to break your bones or
smash your stupid little head – that is my decision; that is my choice, which I
make for my own personal reasons, Billy, not for whatever pathetic agreement
you think you have with me.”  Riker unlooped his belt, and he put his hand on
William’s shoulder and squeezed.  “What did Henry Ivanov ask you?”
William flinched, and his father smacked him across the face, knocking him down
with the blow.
“Get up,” Riker said.
“Sir.” William stood up, at attention.  He didn’t wipe the blood that was
trailing down his chin.  “He asked me to tell him if you were hurting me.”
“And what did you say?” Riker asked.
“I said no.”
“You said considerably more than that, Billy.”
“I said you didn’t hurt me anymore.”
“I see,” Riker said.  “Is there anything else that you said?”
“No, sir,” William answered.  “He asked me three times.  I said the same thing
each time, sir.”
“You’re lying again,” Riker said, “and I will not tolerate someone living in my
house, eating my food, taking up my time, who lies.”
“I – I said you spanked me when I was bad,” William amended.  “But I didn’t say
anything else, sir.”
Riker looked at his son carefully.  He was standing rigidly, at attention, his
hands at his sides, his legs in formation.  The blood was drying on his chin,
and a bruise was forming on his cheek.  His eyes, however, were clear.
“You said I didn’t hurt you anymore,” Riker clarified.
“Yes, sir.”
“Which, of course, Billy, implies that I have hurt you in the past,” Riker
said.  “Is that the message that you wanted to give Master Chief Ivanov?  That
I have hurt you before?”
William could feel his knees begin to buckle.  “No, sir,” William said.  “But
he—he came to see me in the hospital.  He knows stuff already.”
“He knows, Billy,” Riker said, and he breathed deeply, because he just wanted
to pick the boy up and hurl him, “that you walked out in the snow and gave
yourself hypothermia.  That is the only thing he knew, until today.”  Riker
paused.  “So I ask you again:  is that the message that you wanted to send
him?  That I had hurt you in the past?  Is that what you wanted him to go tell
Mrs Shugak, or Gareth Davies?  Are you waiting for someone to rescue you –
Billy?”
“No, sir,” William said.
“Because let me tell you something,” Riker said, and he bent down so that he
was making eye contact with his son.  “You are all alone here.  You have me. 
No one else.  You drive me away with your behaviour, Billy – and you will be
all alone.  Do you understand?  The state will come in.  They will put you back
in a facility.  And there will be no one – anywhere – who will come to your
rescue then.  So you can play games with me, Billy – if you think you’re strong
enough to – but you won’t like what happens when you lose.”
William could feel the pain welling up in his chest – he could feel the tears,
deep inside him – but he kept his knees straight, and his arms at his sides,
and he did not cry.  He said, “I’ll be good, Dad.  I don’t want you to leave
me.”
“Then what do you have to do to keep me here?” Riker asked, straightening.
“I have to obey you,” William said automatically.  “I have to be good.”
“You will not lie to me again, do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.  I won’t ever tell a lie again, sir.”
“You like playing your mother’s piano?” Riker glanced at the instrument. 
“Yes, sir.”
“If you tell a lie again, I will take an axe to it.  Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Do you think I won’t do it?”
“No, sir,” William said.  “No, sir.  I know you’ll do it.”
“And when Henry Ivanov asks you again, what are you going to say to him?”
William said, “I was mistaken.  You have never hurt me.”
“Take your jeans off,” Riker said.  “I will not tolerate lying in my house.”
“Yes, sir,” William said.
He pulled his jeans down, letting them bunch at his ankles.  He paused, and
then he dropped his briefs, too.
“I’m waiting, Billy,” his father said.
He bent over, so that he was braced against the sofa and buried his face in the
cushion.  The blows were hard and fast, but he didn’t really feel them.  He was
somewhere else.
“Get up,” Riker said.
He came back.  “Yes, sir,” he said.  He pulled his briefs and jeans back up. 
He returned to attention, his eyes fixed on the back of the sofa.  He could
hear his father breathing, and he knew what was coming next.
“Go upstairs,” Kyle Riker said, and William Riker obeyed.
 
 
***** Chapter 41 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride takes William through his first full memory retrieval
     session, and the extent of the damage done to William's ego is
     revealed. William learns that he is not responsible for his mother's
     death.
Chapter Notes
     In this chapter, Dr McBride reveals the most important reason why
     William must be guided through the memories of his abuse. The telling
     of his story, the breaking of silence, and the validation of the
     feelings and the trauma lead to healing. As Dr Lemoncelli says,
     "Validation affirming that what you suffered is indeed a very
     personal atrocity. Validation that the violation you experienced was
     horrific. Validation of how incomprehensible it is that any child
     could be exposed to that kind of pain. Validation of the fact that we
     know we cannot make it better. We can only help you heal the pain
     that you did nothing to cause."
      
     This chapter contains a graphic description of child rape. Please do
     not read it if you are triggered by any of these images or if it will
     bring back memories of your own abuse.
Chapter Forty-One
 
 
 
 
 
            There was the usual hassle of moving me from the ICU back to my old
room, involving the orderlies – who, thanks to Djani, were more amenable this
time – and by the time I was in the bed, with da Costa beside me, I was
exhausted and in pain.  Beverly had finally had the time to explain what had
happened – that the severity of the dehydration had caused a precipitous drop
in my blood pressure, and my heart had stopped.  Scans had shown very little
damage to my heart, which was good.  But because of my issues, as she put it,
with nutrition, there had been some renal damage as well.  She’d repaired it
all, but it just added to the list of things I needed to recover from.
            “It’s a good thing, Commander,” she’d said, “that you were in fine
health before all this happened.”
            Well, actually, there’d been the PTSD and the concussion, and the
broken collarbone, and the broken ribs, but I knew what she meant.  Before all
of the PTSD symptoms started happening.  So I was to have fluids every morning,
along with whatever Guinan and Otaka and I thought I could handle.  And Jai
Patel was going to start my rehab right away, as I’d been bedridden too long,
and Beverly didn’t want fluid build-up in my lungs.
            “The problem is, Will,” she’d said, “the longer you’re here, the
more problems arise.”
            That didn’t make any sense to me, but it seemed to make sense to
everyone else.  So I’d been put to bed, and told to rest, and that I would have
a meeting with Guinan, and then something to eat, and then rehab with Patel,
and then, da Costa said, my first session in the hyperbaric chamber.  It seemed
like a pretty tough schedule for someone who’d just tried to die a second – or
was it a third? – time.
            “Dr McBride is going to have a session with you, Commander,” da
Costa informed me, “after your session in the hyperbaric chamber.”
            “What kind of a session?” I asked.
            “He intends to focus on your nightmares,” da Costa said.
            “I don’t think so,” I answered.  “I don’t think I’m up to that.”
            “I understand, Commander,” da Costa replied.  “But the nightmare –
this dream flashback that you’re having – is impairing your recovery.  You need
to retrieve the memory, defuse it, and put it in its proper place.”
            “I don’t fucking understand anything you just said,” I told him.
            “Of course you don’t,” da Costa said, and I could hear him
employing the same tone of voice that McBride used. 
There was something musical about it; something tonal; almost as if they’d
taken words and placed them on a scale.  For a moment I was completely
distracted – it sounded as if it were in G major to me, and then I was calling
up some scattered bars from a symphony from somewhere – was it Mozart?  I
couldn’t remember.
“Commander?” da Costa said.
“What?” I think I would have preferred to stay with the notes that were
floating around my head.
“It’s all right, sir,” da Costa said.  “Dr McBride will make sure you’re well
enough for the session.  You don’t have to dissociate, just because you’re
worried about this.”
            “Oh, fuck you,” I said.  “I don’t need to be patronised by a
crewman.”
            Da Costa straightened.  “Sir,” he said.  “I wasn’t attempting to
patronise you.  Sir.”
            “Of course you weren’t,” I said sarcastically.  “But, regardless of
what you said earlier, I’m not having anything to do with that dream.  And I’m
not having any session with Dr McBride.  Not today.  Not until I feel I’m
strong enough.  Do you understand?  Mr da Costa?”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            “And you can tell him I said so.”
            “Sir.”
            “I have enough on my plate today,” I said.
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            It was at that point that Deanna walked in.  “What’s the matter,
Will?” she asked.
            I said, “Is this a personal meeting or a professional one?”
            “I thought,” Deanna said, “I would give you an overview of the rest
of this week, and then we’d work on some breathing exercises before you go to
rehab.”
            “Then I’d appreciate it,” I said, “if you would address me by my
rank.”
            “I see,” she said.  “Commander.”
            “I thought I was meeting with Guinan before rehab,” I said. 
“Counsellor.”
            “We have thirty minutes to work on breathing exercises and
visualisation, Commander,” she said.  “Guinan should be here then.  You have
approximately twenty minutes for a quick meal, and then you’re scheduled for Lt
Patel.”
            I looked at da Costa.  “Then you’re dismissed, Crewman,” I said.
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            I saw him glance briefly at Deanna and I said, “I wouldn’t say
anything if I were you, Mr da Costa.  You’re skating on thin ice with me at the
moment as it is.”
            “Aye, sir,” he said.
            Deanna sat down in the captain’s chair and looked at her padd.  She
handed me one and said, “Here’s your schedule, Commander.”
            I sat back down on the bed and glanced at it.  Everything was as it
had been given to me before, except that it included my first CBT session with
Dr McBride.
            “Is there something you’d like to talk about, Commander?” Deanna
asked.
            “Are you asking as my case manager?” I said, looking up from the
padd.
            “Yes,” she said.
            I got up and shut the door.  “There are a few things I’d like to
discuss with my case manager,” I said. 
            “Why don’t you sit down, then, and we’ll discuss them,” she
replied. 
            I looked at her again.  She was using her therapist’s voice, but
she was also using the same tone on me that she used with Lt Barclay.
            “I am not Lt Barclay,” I said.  “You don’t need to use that tone
with me, Counsellor.’
            “And you, Commander, will not speak to me the way you just did to
Mr da Costa,” she replied.  “I understand you are upset.  And I’m perfectly
willing to discuss whatever it is that’s upsetting you.  But not in this
manner.  So why don’t you take a few deep breaths and calm down, and we’ll
start again.  Civilly.”
            I sat down on the bed.  “Fine,” I said.
            “Now, Will,” Deanna said.  “Why don’t you tell me what’s wrong?”
            “I thought the whole point of that treatment plan meeting was to
give me input into my own treatment.”
            “To a certain extent, yes,” she answered.  “There are therapeutic
reasons as to why it’s set up the way it is.  Every single aspect of the
intensive treatment program has been deliberately planned for its therapeutic
value.  The order the sessions are in.  The length of the sessions.  They types
of sessions.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “I can understand that.  Although we never got the
chance to explain to me what the afternoon sessions were.”
            “It’s my understanding, Will,” Deanna said, slowly, “that when Dr
McBride and I meet with you this afternoon, we’ll be going over just that. 
Everyone else on your team has already been briefed.”
            “When did that happen?”
            “When you were in the ICU,” Deanna said.
            “Which comes to my second issue,” I said.  “My heart has failed –
what, twice?  Three times?  And yet da Costa tells me I’m going to have a
session today with McBride about that damned dream.”
            “Dr McBride would like to start memory retrieval today, yes,”
Deanna said.
            “I’m not going to do it,” I said.  “I have a long day today, my
first day out of the ICU.  I have rehab and I have meetings, apparently, with
you and Guinan.  And let’s not forget the hyperbaric chamber, whatever the hell
that is.  And then a meeting with you and McBride.  No.”
            “The issue is, Will – “ Deanna began.
            “I know what the issue is,” I interrupted.  “Damn it, Deanna, I’m
the one who’s had the stupid dream.  I don’t need to talk about it.  I don’t
want to talk about it.  And I’m not going back in the damned ICU when my blood
pressure goes sky high because you’re forcing me to talk about it.”
            “Then we will bring this issue up with Dr McBride,” Deanna said
reasonably.  “We can ask Beverly if she’ll come sit in on the discussion, if
that will help.”
            “And then that idiot da Costa tells me not to dissociate just
because I was distracted for a moment,” I continued, “as if I don’t know what
dissociation is – I do know what it is –who the hell does he think he is,
anyway?”  
            “Will,” Deanna said, “why don’t you take a few deep breaths again.”
            “Oh, fuck,” I said.  I got up and walked to the door.
            “Why don’t we go ahead and do some breathing, and then a grounding
exercise,” she suggested, and she was using her “let’s talk really slowly so
the patient doesn’t have a meltdown” voice.  “You’re very anxious right now,
Will.”
            “Really?” I said.  “I didn’t know.”
            “William,” she said. “Sit down.  In the chair.  Hands on your
knees, feet flat on the floor.”
            I punched the door.  “Goddamn it, Deanna, stop telling me what to
do!” I said.
            Of course, the door was pushed open, and da Costa came in, followed
by Beverly.
            “Commander,” da Costa said.
            “Just get away from me,” I said.  “I mean it, da Costa.  I’ve had
enough.”
            “What’s going on, Will?” Beverly asked.
            Deanna said, “You are not going to lose control, Will.  You don’t
have to.  You can calm yourself down.”
            “What does he need, Deanna?” Beverly asked.
            “Just let him be, Joao,” Deanna said.  “Will.  Listen to me.  Come
back over here and sit down.  I’ve already said that we’ll talk to Dr McBride. 
I’m not telling you what to do, Will, I promise.  I’m asking you to help
yourself.”
            “Commander,” Beverly said.  “You either listen to Deanna, or I will
have Mr da Costa hold you down while I sedate you.  It’s your choice.”
            I was breathing heavily, and my stupid hand was hurting – and for a
minute I just wanted to start shouting again – but Beverly and Deanna were both
right.  I could do this.  I didn’t have to give in to the chaos, the way I had
the other night. 
            “It’s okay, Will,” Deanna said.  “You have the control.  You’ve
always had the control.  Just concentrate on one thing at a time.  Walk over to
the chair.  You can do that first.”
            I said, “I think I broke my hand again,” and then walked over to
the chair and sat down.
            “Now I want you to take three deep cleansing breaths,” Deanna
said.  “Slowly.  That’s right.  You think about relaxing your diaphragm. 
That’s right.  You do that while Dr Crusher looks at your hand.”
            “I’m still doing rehab,” I said.  “You’re not going to sedate me. 
I can calm myself down.”
            “All right, Will,” Beverly said.  “Just let me see your hand.”
            She lifted it, and scanned it.  “It’s not broken,” she said,
“amazingly enough.  It’s just a little swollen, that’s all.  You’ll be okay. 
I’ll get Alyssa to bring the swelling down.  And you’re right, Will.  If you
can calm yourself down, I’d much rather you go to rehab.”
            I was breathing again.  “Who’s taking me?” I asked.
            “I am, Commander,” da Costa said, “because I’ll be taking you on to
the hyperbaric chamber right after.”
            “That’s it, Will,” Deanna said.  “Deep breaths.  Slow it down. 
That’s it.”
            “I’ll send Alyssa in,” Beverly said. 
            She left, and da Costa came back over to his post.
            “I’m sorry, Commander,” he said, “if you thought I was being
disrespectful to you, sir.  It has never been my intention to be disrespectful
to you or to patronise you in any way.”
            “Just breathe, Will,” Deanna said.
            “I’m okay, Deanna,” I said.  “Thank you, Mr da Costa.”
            “It’s my job, Will, as your case manager, to advocate for you,” she
said.  “If you have concerns, don’t let them build up like this.  Make sure you
ask to see me right away.  I will be available for you, if you need me.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            “Do you want to do a grounding exercise?” she asked.  “I don’t want
you to be so upset you won’t eat.”
            “I promised Jean-Luc,” I said, “that I would try to eat two meals a
day.”
            “So let’s do the grounding exercise, then, Will,” Deanna said. 
“You’ll feel better, I promise you.”
            “All right,” I said.
            Deanna took me through the muscle relaxing first, and then she did
a very simple grounding exercise, where I just concentrated on feeling my self
in my body and my breathing.  I’d closed my eyes, and hadn’t even realised
Ogawa had come in the room until I felt her take my hand.
            “There you go, Commander,” she said quietly.  “Guinan is here, when
you’re ready, sir.”
            I opened my eyes to see Ogawa leaving, and Deanna stood up and
hugged me.
            “That was not from your case manager,” she said, smiling.  “I’m
going to be working with Sandy, but if you need me, you ask Joao to comm. me,
okay?”
            “Sandy?” I said.
            “Dr McBride,” Deanna said. 
            “You won’t be here in sickbay?” I asked.
            “No,” she said.  “We’ve utitilised two of the rooms on Deck Eight
for Sandy’s office and the hyperbaric chamber.  I’ll be there.”
            “I forgot he told me his name was Sandy,” I said. 
            “If you don’t need me before then, Will,” she finished, “I will see
you in a couple hours.”
            “All right,” I answered.  “Thanks, Deanna.  I’m not trying to be an
asshole, I promise you.”
            “I know, Will,” she said.  “But you can feel frustrated, and you
can voice your frustration, without losing control.  Both Joao and I can work
on that with you, if you’d like.”
            I didn’t say anything, and I didn’t look at da Costa.  Deanna was
very careful not to respond in any way, as if she knew I was just waiting for
her to glance at da Costa or roll her eyes.  I did a few leg stretches, just
for something to do, and waited for Guinan to arrive.
 
 
 
           
            Guinan had brought the meal with her that I was supposed to have
before I’d collapsed in the biobed, a grilled cheese sandwich and an apple – I
have no idea where she’d found an apple, a real one, but she had – and some
mint iced tea, which she remembered that I liked.  Actually, she’d brought two
sandwiches, because apparently Jean-Luc was having lunch with me, something I
didn’t expect, but which was a nice surprise, as I hadn’t seen him since last
night.  We talked briefly about ideas for dinner – one of the components I was
supposed to be having in my “brain-healing” diet was omega-3 fatty acids and so
Guinan had suggested she could approximate a salmon salad, in keeping with her
“summer” foods theme for me.  That sounded okay, and she’d left just as the
captain arrived.  I was not unaware of the fact that sickbay had suddenly
become a much busier place, thanks to me.
            “I didn’t expect to see you so early,” I said.
            Djani and another orderly had taken a few minutes to set up a table
and two chairs for us in my room, rather that just give me a tray in my bed. 
They were probably Beverly’s from her office and I made a note to thank her on
my way out to rehab.
            “I have to eat,” Jean-Luc said mildly, sitting down.  “How are you
this morning?  You can leave us, Mr da Costa.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said, and left quietly, pulling the door.
            I shrugged.  “I guess I’ve been a little cranky,” I said, finally.
            “A little cranky?” he echoed.  He was looking at the grilled cheese
sandwich as if it would bite him instead of the other way around.  “The colour
of this cheese, Number One, is bizarre.”
            “I guess a lot cranky,” I said.  “It’s orange.  I think it’s
supposed to be cheddar of some kind.”
            “I’ve never met a cheddar that was quite this hue before,” he said.
            “It’s a kid’s meal,” I answered. 
            “Indeed,” he said, taking a bite.  He looked at me sternly.  “If
I’m eating this, so are you,” he said.
            “Okay,” I said.  “The apple slices are good.”
            He grinned, which was a little terrifying.  “The sandwich, Number
One,” he said.
            I took a bite of the sandwich.  “It tastes,” I said, “just like I
remember it.”
            “A lot cranky,” he repeated.  “And who were the recipients of your
crankiness this morning?”
            But I was looking at the sandwich and the apple slices.
            “Will?” he said.
            I could feel myself sort of drifting away, and then the cottony
feeling was back – and then I was seeing the white and blue of the doorknob,
and smelling mothballs, and I could feel the cold hardwood beneath my bare
feet.
            “Mère de Dieu,” I heard Jean-Luc say, from very far away.  “Picard
to Troi.”
            “Troi here, Captain.”
            “I need Dr McBride here now,” Jean-Luc said.  “Will?  Mr da Costa!”
            “It’s okay,” I said.  “I’m just not going to open the door.  I’m
just going to stay here.”
            He took the sandwich from my hand.  I heard him say, “He’s back in
the middle of the dream, Mr da Costa.  It was the food that triggered it, this
time.”
            “It’s always food,” da Costa said.  “Is Dr McBride on his way?”
            “I certainly hope so.  Will?  You don’t have to stay in there.  I’m
here.  You’re safe.”
            I could smell the apples intruding into the closet, and I closed my
eyes at the onslaught.  For some reason the smell of mothballs was safer.  I
could see myself back farther into the closet, bumping up against the fur of
the coats and the boxes.
            “Jean-Luc?” Beverly said.  “What’s happening?”
            “He’s in the middle of a flashback,” da Costa said.
            “Perhaps we should move him to the bed, Mr da Costa.”
            “No,” da Costa said.  “As long as he’s not hurting himself – we
should wait for Dr McBride.”
            I could still smell the apples.  I curled myself into a ball,
rested my head against one of the boxes.  I didn’t have to look down at myself
to know that I was bleeding.
            “Another food trigger?” McBride asked.  “Where is he, do you know?”
            “Back in the dream,” Jean-Luc replied. 
            “What has he said?”
            Da Costa answered, “He said he’s not going to open the door.”
            “So we have Billy’s lunch here,” McBride said.  “Jean-Luc, make
sure that you’re holding him, so he knows you’re here.  Dr Crusher, I’m going
to try to talk him through this one, but it’s best we’re prepared anyway.”
            “I agree,” Beverly said.
            “Deanna, I’d like you to monitor his anxiety levels.  Joao, shut
the door.” 
            I could hear a chair being dragged from across the room.  I felt
Jean-Luc wrap one arm around me, and then I felt McBride’s hand on my arm.
            “William?” McBride said.  “Can you hear me?”
            His voice was muffled through the door, but I nodded.
            “Good,” he said.  “I want you to open your eyes, please.”
            I did, and I could see the sandwiches and the apple slices.  I was
relieved, because I knew the apple smell didn’t belong to the dream.
            “You are looking through a viewscreen, William,” McBride said.  “Do
you remember how you watched Billy through the wall?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “We don’t have the wall here with us right now, so we’ll be using a
viewscreen instead.  Can you see the sandwiches and the apple slices on the
viewscreen?”
            I blinked my eyes.  The other place – the dream place – was trying
to keep me from seeing the sandwiches and the apples, was trying to keep me
from seeing the viewscreen.
            “It’s right in front of you, William.  Can you see it?”
            “Breathe, Will,” Deanna said.
            “Yes, I can see it now.” I breathed.
            “And you can see your lunch on the viewscreen?”
            “Yes.”
            “Good,” he said.  “Your lunch is on the kitchen table?  The wooden
one?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “The one where the chairs have the cushions with the green ivy
pattern?”
            “Yes,” I repeated.
            “Good,” he said again.  “You’re doing splendidly, William. 
Remember, this is a viewscreen.  You are seeing images that are on a screen. 
These images are not real.  They don’t belong to the present.  They are part of
the past, and the past cannot hurt you in the present.  Can you remember that,
William?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Can you see Billy on the viewscreen, William?” McBride asked
quietly.
            I felt Jean-Luc pull me to him a bit.  I nodded.
            “Can you tell me what he’s doing?”
            “Eating apple slices with cheese,” I said.
            “He’s sitting on the chair?”
            “No,” I said.  “He’s kneeling on the cushion.”
            “And he has a sandwich, too?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “It’s a grilled cheese sandwich, but it’s on a
different plate.”
            “And he has something to drink?”
            “Milk,” I said. 
            “How old is Billy here, William?”
            “He’s five,” I said.  “He’s going to start school.”
            “Ah,” McBride said.  “For the first time?”
            “Yes.”
            “Is there anyone else there, on the viewscreen?” 
            “Billy’s dad is there.  He’s taking the dishes away.”
            “Billy was done eating?”
            “No,” I said.  “It doesn’t matter.”
            “So Billy’s father cleared the dishes?” McBride confirmed.  “What
else is Billy’s father doing?”
            I said, “He’s bringing a towel from the kitchen.  He’s spread it on
the table.”  I could see the doorknob again, could feel the floor under my bare
legs.  “I don’t want to see this anymore,” I said.
            “I know,” McBride said.  “But, remember, William, this is just a
viewscreen.  What happens to Billy on the screen is not happening to you now,
in the present.  You are in sickbay.  You are safe.  I am here, and Jean-Luc is
here, and Dr Crusher is here; Deanna is here.  We are all here to help you.”
            “It’s all right, Will,” Jean-Luc said, and I could hear his voice
very close to me.  “I’ve got you.  I’m not going to let anyone hurt you.”
            “Tell me what Billy’s father is doing,” McBride said.
            “He – he told Billy to stand up,” I said.  “To stand up on the
chair.  He doesn’t want to.  He’s afraid he’ll fall.”
            “Breathe, Will,” Deanna said again.  I felt her rest her hand on my
shoulder.
            I breathed in the scent of mothballs.  “He’s taking Billy’s pants
off,” I said.  “Everything.  Shoes, socks, pants….Please,” I said.  “Oh,
don’t.”
            “What do you see, William?”
            “He’s taking Billy into his mouth,” I said.  “He’s laying him on
the towel.  He’s – “ 
            Jean-Luc said, “Does he have to tell this? We all know what the man
did.  How will it possibly benefit him to tell this, to relive this?  Beverly,
surely –“
            “He can’t eat,” I heard da Costa say softly.  “He can’t drink,
sir.  The memories are killing him, sir.  He has to voice them.  He has to feel
what he couldn’t feel, understand what happened, and then put the memories in
the past, where they belong.”
            “Jean-Luc,” Dr McBride said.  “We are the witness to Billy’s pain. 
We hear the child who was silenced.  We give him permission to speak, to tell
his story.  If he can’t tell it to us – if he can’t tell it to you, Jean-Luc,
the man he loves, who can he tell it to?  William,” he said to me, “of course
Jean-Luc doesn’t want you to hurt anymore – none of us do – but Billy needs you
to be strong.  Billy needs you to tell us what you see.”
            I said, and I could feel the tears running down my jaw, down my
neck, “He’s prepping him.  It – it hurts.  It hurts –“ I was gasping for air
“—There’s so much blood,” I said.  “He’s fucking him and there’s so much blood,
and it hurts, I feel split in two --“ and then I was in the half-darkness
again, feeling the cold wooden floor beneath my bare legs, smelling the stench
of urine and mothballs, feeling the blood running down my legs, looking at the
blue and white of the porcelain doorknob and waiting for it to turn.
            “Where are you, William?” McBride said, and I felt him take my
hands.
            “I’m hiding,” I whispered. 
            “Of course you are,” McBride said, “but, William, I want you to
look at the viewscreen and tell me what you see.  What has happened to Billy?”
            “He stopped crying,” I said.  “I don’t think he’s conscious
anymore.”
            “What is Billy’s father doing?”
            “He’s cleaning him up,” I said.  “There’s blood and semen.  He’s
putting his clothes back on.  He’s carrying Billy upstairs.  He’s putting him
to bed.”
            “Whose bed, William?”
            “His bed,” I answered, and I was sobbing.  “His father’s bed.”
            “Hold him, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “Just hold him.”
            I could feel Jean-Luc’s arms wrapped around me, and Deanna’s hands
on my shoulders.
            “I know it hurts, William,” McBride said.  “You are feeling Billy’s
pain, the pain he couldn’t feel so long ago.  You go ahead and feel it,
William.  It’s all right to cry over this pain.”
            “I’ve got you, Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “I’m here.”
            “It hurts,” I said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “There is the physical pain and the
emotional pain.  It does hurt.  But there’s more than that, isn’t there,
William?  What was Billy’s father saying?”
            “What was he saying?” I repeated.  I felt as if my head were going
to explode.
            “He was talking to Billy, wasn’t he, while he was raping him?  What
was he saying?”
            “No,” I said.  “No, I don’t want to – “
            “What was he saying, William?”
            I felt the pain well up in my chest, felt the tears start again. 
“It’s my fault,” I said.  “He said it was my fault.  He said I killed my mother
and so I had to take her place.  He said I liked it.  He said I wanted it.  He
said I needed it.  You should have let me die,” I said.  “You should have let
me die.”
            “I have you, Will,” Jean-Luc said again.  “You’re safe here, with
me.”
            “Can you shut the viewscreen off now, William?” McBride asked.
            I nodded.  “Yes.”
            “Can you be here in this room with me now?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Can you tell me what you are feeling?  Can you name the feelings?”
he asked. 
            “Pain,” I said.
            “And what else?”
            “I don’t know,” I said.
            “You’re crying,” McBride said.  “What feeling is that?”
            “Sad,” I said, and suddenly I could feel it, that heaviness in my
chest that wouldn’t let me breathe, I could feel --  “Sadness,” I said, “and
hurt, and – “  It was almost more than I could take “—and anger,” I said, “I’m
angry; he shamed me, I feel sick –“
            “So many feelings for such a small boy,” McBride said.  “And each
one of those feelings is normal, William.  You felt the physical and
psychological pain.  You felt profound sadness – a father is supposed to
protect his children, and support his children, not destroy them.  You felt
such anger – he betrayed you – a very frightening feeling for a five-year-old
boy to feel that rage, from being violated, from having your trust taken away
from you.  And he made you feel shame.  And disgust.  But William – the shame,
and the disgust – those are his feelings that he gave to you.  He projected
those feelings onto you.  He made you feel that way.”
            “He said I liked it,” I said. 
            “He made sure he could say that, William,” McBride said.  “I would
like for us to talk about this, Will, because there are some things here that I
want you to understand.  Your support team is right here with you.  It’s
important for you to see the reasons for the way you felt and acted when you
were that five-year-old boy.”
            I started to wipe my face on my sleeve, and Jean-Luc quietly dried
my face with the handkerchief he kept in his pocket. 
            “How are his vitals, Dr Crusher?” McBride asked.
            “They’re where you would expect them to be,” Beverly said.  “But –
since you’ve briefed me on this – I understand the process, now.  His blood
pressure is not where I’d like it to be – but he needs to finish the session.”
            “Joao, would you get Will some water, please?” McBride asked.  “And
Deanna, let’s make sure he’s breathing.”
            I watched da Costa leave for the water, and I felt Jean-Luc let me
go.  Deanna came around from behind me and said, “Let’s do some deep cleansing
breaths, Will.”  I let her lead me through the breathing exercises.  Da Costa
returned with a cup of water and gave it to me.
            “I commed Mr Patel and let him know what was happening,” he told
McBride.  “He was concerned when Commander Riker didn’t show up for rehab.”
            I took a few sips of water and tried to keep myself from just
closing my eyes.
            “Will,” McBride began, “let’s take a look at what this man – your
father – did.  What was the first sexual act he committed in this memory?”
            “He took Billy’s – my – clothes off,” I said.  “He fellated me.”
            “Yes.  Why did he do that, I wonder?”
            “I don’t know,” I said.  “Because he was a sick bastard?”
            “Do you believe that?” he asked.  “Or do you believe what he told
you?  That it was your fault?”
            “I’ve always been difficult,” I said, and I felt Jean-Luc stiffen
beside me.
            “So it was your fault.  You liked it.  You wanted it.  Did you have
an erection, after he fellated you?”
            I looked at the floor.  “Yes,” I said.
            “Can you prevent the genitals from reacting to stimulus, Will?” he
asked.
            “No,” I said.
            “Even a child’s genitals will respond to stimulation,” he said. 
“What your father did first was a calculated act to control you.  He stimulated
your penis, so you would have an erection, which is an automatic response –
even in an infant – to genital stimulation.  Then he told you that you liked
what he was doing.  That you wanted him to do it.  That you needed him to do
it.  That you were disgusting for liking it.  He made you feel ashamed of an
automatic response to his stimulation.  These acts,” McBride said, and I
realised he wasn’t just talking to me, he was talking to everyone in the room,
“were not the acts – as he would have us believe – of an inadequate man who had
been destroyed by the loss of his wife.  They were not the acts of a man who
could not control himself; who was drunk; who was psychotic; who was suffering
from a mental illness.  These were the acts of a man who knew exactly what he
was doing.  He knew exactly what to do and what to say to control his son, to
get his son to comply with the acts, to get his son enmeshed in his own abuse,
and to get his son to believe that he – the child – was solely responsible for
the acts of the adult.”
            “They were,” Jean-Luc said quietly, “the acts of a monster.”
            “Can you see, William, how you were manipulated and controlled?  He
took his feelings of rage and hatred and shame and disgust – and he gave them
to you.  So you incorporated those feelings into your self, into, as we say in
psychotherapy, your ego.  You just said to us what he must have told you
countless times – ‘I have always been difficult.’  So you deserved to be
raped.  You deserved to be forced to perform oral sex when you were three years
old.  You deserved to be beaten.  You deserved to have your bones broken and
your heart broken.  Because you were difficult.  Because you’d killed your
mother.”  He paused.  “Are any of those statements true, William?  Did you kill
your mother?”
            “I don’t know,” I said.  I was starting to shake.
            “Breathe, Will,” Deanna said.
            “Don’t you?  Your mother’s records were easy to find.”
            “I didn’t kill her?”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, “you were two-and-a-half years old.  How
could you have possibly done anything to anyone?”
            “Your mother died of a virus,” McBride said.  “A particularly nasty
one, one that Dr Crusher could easily explain to you.  She was a brilliant
officer – and an officer who took great pride in her work, in her ability to
lead her away team.  She always led the away team – even when she didn’t have
to.  I remember reading that, in her captain’s report.”
            Jean-Luc put his arm around my waist and said, “Does that sound
like anyone you know?”
            “Me,” I said.  “It sounds like me.”
            “It was a scientific mission, according to the report,” McBride
continued.  “The virus was in the soil samples.  She had a cut on her finger. 
You were almost a year old when she became infected.  It took her a year and a
half to die.”  He came over to me, and placed his hands on my shoulders.  “Look
at me, William,” he said.  “Everything your father said to you was a deliberate
lie.  You did not kill your mother.  You were not even present when she became
infected.  You were a baby.  You did not want what your father did to you.  You
did not like what your father did to you.  You were raped.  You were a child,
and you were raped.  You have never born any responsibility ever for your
abuse.  In this situation, you did what you could to physically survive a very
violent act.  You split yourself – what we call dissociation – so that there
would be a part of your ego that would be intact.  So while there was one part
of Billy experiencing the rape, there was another part that had gone somewhere
else.  That part of you went to a safe place where you could hide, where he
wouldn’t find you.”
            I said, “I went into the coat closet.”
            “Yes.  In your dream, you are remembering where you went to hide –
because you could not allow yourself to remember the rape.”
            “The coat closet is real.”
            “Of course it is,” McBride said.  “And you can probably now
remember where the closet is.  I’m guessing it was not even in your house.”
            “No,” I said.  “I remember now.  It was in Mrs Shugak’s house.  It
was the closet in her guest bedroom, where she kept the winter coats.”  I
thought for a minute and then I said, “I was hiding in that room for real.  We
were playing hide-and-clap.  Dmitri was the oldest so he was the one looking. 
I won the game, because he couldn’t find me.”
            “What a clever little boy you were,” McBride said.  “You created a
safe place out of a place that was positive, where you’d won a game playing
with your cousins.”
            “But in my dream –“ I began.
            “We’ll talk more specifically about your dream in our next session,
William,” McBride said.
“We have one more thing that we need to do.”
            I said, “What do you mean, my cousins?  I don’t have any cousins. 
Dmitri was Mrs Shugak’s grandson.  She was my babysitter.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, taking my hand, “Mrs Shugak is your aunt. 
Well, she was your mother’s aunt.”
            “No,” I said.  “In the tribe, all the elders are called auntie and
uncle.  It’s a title of respect.”
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said, “let’s save that discussion for another
time, shall we?  We need to close this session.”
            “Of course,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Remember I asked you to close the viewscreen, William?” McBride
asked.
            “Yes,” I said.  I was still trying to figure out what Jean-Luc had
meant.
            “Can you look at the viewscreen again for a moment?”
            “Yeah.”  It was strange, but I could see it as if it were real.
            “It’s off now, yes?”
            I nodded.
            “Can you take the disc out?”
            “Yes,” I said.  It was almost surreal.  I could see the
viewscreen.  I pushed the button and the disc slid out.
            “I want you to put the disc in a folder,” McBride said.  “Can you
do that?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “We’re going to call this folder Billy at five, all right?”
            “I guess,” I said.
            “You have the disc in the folder, William?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Good,” McBride said.  “Now I want you to picture a large cabinet,
with drawers for all kinds of different folders.  Do you see it?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Open the top drawer and put the folder in.”
            “Okay.”  I opened the top drawer and I set the folder inside.
            “Now close the drawer.”
            “Okay.”  I closed the drawer.
            “Do you see the key where you can lock the drawer?”
            “Yeah.”
            “Go ahead and lock the folder in the drawer.”
            “Okay.”  I turned the key and heard it click. 
            “Where are you going to put the key?”
            “I guess just on top of the cabinet,” I said.
            “Go ahead and do that.”
            I put the key on top of the cabinet.
            “You have watched this memory, William,” McBride said.  “You have
felt now what you couldn’t feel then and stay alive.  You have seen that you
did what you could to survive.  You understand that your father was the only
person responsible for what happened.  You know that he lied to you, that he
manipulated you, and that he controlled you.  You understand now that you
dissociated in an effort to keep your personality intact and that you were able
to create a safe place where you could go so you wouldn’t be completely
destroyed by your father’s violence.  You have finished with this memory. 
You’ve put it away – you don’t need to experience it anymore.  It’s over.  If,
in some future time, you need to look at this memory again – you can unlock the
drawer and pull it out.  But for now, it’s in a safe place, and it won’t
intrude in your life again.”
            I looked at da Costa and said, “You said this to me this morning. 
That I needed to retrieve the memory, defuse it, and put it in its proper
place.”
            “Yes, Commander,” da Costa said.  “And you’ve done that, with this
particular memory.”
            “I put it back in the past, where it belongs,” I said.  “And it
won’t bother me – intrude – anymore.  Because it’s locked away.”
            “You can access the memory yourself,” McBride said.  “You control
it.  It does not control you.  However, Will, we have done what we needed to do
here.  You’ve revisited this trauma.  You’ve told your story – Billy’s story. 
We’ve witnessed the abuse – and we’ve validated your pain.  You experienced the
feelings you couldn’t feel then.  You have recognised the evil that was done to
you – and that the evil did not belong to you.  You can now let it go.”
            “And what happened in my dream – “ I began.
            “Belongs to another session,” McBride finished.  “You are
exhausted.  Dr Crusher is anxious about your blood pressure.  You were supposed
to start rehab and hyperbaric therapy today, and I am very reluctant to push
those off to yet another day.  It’s very important to maintain your schedule as
much as we can. Deanna,” McBride said, “we should have a brief meeting with
Commander Riker as previously scheduled, just to go over the basic components
of his cognitive therapy program, don’t you agree?”
            “Yes,” Deanna said.  “Just the basics, no more than half an hour,
Will.”
            “Dr Crusher?” McBride said.
            “I agree that Commander Riker should still have these two
sessions,” she said, thoughtfully.  “However, given the physical toll of this
session, I’d like him to have a nutritional shake and some fluids – Will, if
you’ll drink some water that should be sufficient – and he needs to rest.”
            “I’ll drink the water,” I said.
            “Good.  Then let’s get you into bed.”
            Da Costa helped me over to the bed, and I slid under the sheet.  He
propped the pillows up behind me, and gave me the cup of water. 
            “I’m wondering if we shouldn’t switch the sessions,” he said to
McBride.
            “That’s an excellent idea,” McBride agreed.  “That gives you a
further opportunity to rest, William, if you have the hyperbaric therapy
first.  You’ll be relaxed and a little bit more energised, then, to work with
Lt Patel.”
            “Okay,” I said.  I took a few sips of water and then leaned back,
closing my eyes.
            I heard Beverly shoo everyone out.  There was a part of me that
wanted to analyse everything that had just happened, to make sense of all of
the information, but I could feel myself starting to drift off to sleep.  I
felt the bed sink, and I opened my eyes.
            “Sorry about your lunch,” I said.
            “I’ll grab something later,” he said.  “I’ve got several reports to
read – I can catch up then.”
            “Okay.”  I closed my eyes again, and I felt him hold my hand for a
minute.
            “You rest now,” he said.  “Do you want me to rearrange the pillows
for you?”
            “No.  I’m supposed to be drinking water.”
            “Yes, make sure you do.  I’ll send Mr da Costa back in.”
            “Jean-Luc?”
            “Yes, Will?”
            “Will I see you again today?”
            “Did you kick me out of our bed?” he asked.
            When I opened my eyes, he had that ironic smile on his face.
            “And after Mr da Costa went to all that trouble, too,” he said.
            I rolled my eyes at him, and he kissed me.  “Around eighteen
thirty,” he said.  “You don’t need me in the session with Dr McBride, if it’s
just informational.”
            I nodded.  “All right.  You’ll be having dinner with them again?”
            He shrugged.  “It’s become something of a routine,” he answered. 
“Debriefing in Ten Forward.  I think this is the most I’ve ever spent in Ten
Forward.”
            “That’s good,” I said.  “The crew doesn’t see you enough.”
            “No,” he said.  “That’s supposed to be your job, remember?”
            “If I have one,” I said.
            “Trust me, William,” he replied.  “As integral as Commander Data
has been to our mission, I will be very pleased to have you back at full
capacity.  And I believe Dr McBride told you to leave that to me.”
            “Sir,” I said.
            “Get some sleep.  You can tell me all about the hyperbaric chamber,
later.”
            I closed my eyes again.  There was something I wanted to ask him,
but I couldn’t recall what it was.  He rested his hand on my face for a moment,
and then I heard him walk away.  I heard him say something to da Costa and then
da Costa took up his post.
            “I’m right here, Commander,” da Costa said softly.
            “You speak in G major,” I said, and as I fell asleep I saw some
scattered notes from Mozart’s Symphony No 12 drift by.
           
             
           
           
 
 
           
           
           
 
                       
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Interlude: Ten *****
Chapter Summary
     The banality of evil.
Chapter Notes
     A person who is a sociopath or who has sociopathic tendencies may
     meet some or all of the following criteria: 1. Glibness and
     superficial charm; 2. Manipulative; 3. Grandiosity and/or narcissism;
     4. Pathological lying; 5. Lack of remorse, shame, or guilt;
     6. Shallow or incomplete emotions; 7. Incapacity for love or empathy;
     8. Constant need for stimulation; 9. Impulsivity; 10. Callousness;
     11. Early behaviour problems; 12. Irresponsibility or unreliability;
     13. Promiscuity; 14. Parasitic lifestyle and/or criminal or
     entrepreneurial versatility; 15. Contempt for others; 16.
     Authoritarian; 17. Secretive and paranoid; 18. Conventional
     appearance; 19. Incapable of human attachment; and 20. seeks to
     create willing victims and to exert despotic control over their
     victims; justifies their abuse of victims and yet seeks their
     victims' affirmation.
Interlude:  Ten
 
 
 
 
            There were, he thought, always rumours of war and of some strange
new entity that would, Borg-like, destroy the Federation.  He’d reached the
age, although supposedly at only the halfway mark for human life, that he was
merely tired of the subterfuge and the lies and the posturing.  He’d always
willingly played the game; more often than not he’d won the damned game, but he
was somehow in a rare mood of introspection (or what passed for introspection)
and he was tired.
            He’d kept the cottage on Risa, having rented it out for most of the
time as a small vacation retreat to clients of a certain proclivity not
dissimilar to his own.  Now, on his way back to San Francisco for yet more
briefings and more subterfuge and more posturing, he’d notified his agent that
he would be using the cottage himself for a small vacation.  He’d arrived on
the Risa Express, just another eagre tourist, and was met by his agent in
Nuvia, where he’d been told that the cottage was ready for him.  He’d checked
in with the powers-that-be, merely as a courtesy, and then was quite happy to
disappear to the coast.
            He’d received the communication request from Jean-Luc Picard while
he was still on the shuttle that would take him to the Risa starship port.  He
knew immediately what it meant:  his son William was dead.  What other reason
would there be for the captain of the Enterprise to contact him?  He hadn’t
heard from Will since the last time he’d sent a message, perhaps some ten
months before.  Will’s response had been terse, but he’d come to expect it. 
He’d at least responded.  He’d sat down at the console and done the calculation
in his head, knowing that he was right but hoping that he was wrong.  The
conclusion was inescapable.  Will was the same age Betty had been when she had
died.  He’d read somewhere that some children, having lost a parent at an early
age, would automatically assume that their lives would end then, too; Will’s
mind, as mathematical as it was, would undoubtedly have engineered something
similar.
            So he was surprised – insomuch as he allowed himself to feel
surprise – when Picard had announced the expected accident but had then said
Will was recovering.  That had been the highlight of the conversation; it had
gone downhill from there.  Will was remembering; it was impairing his recovery
from what – even though Picard had not come right out and said it – was a
suicide attempt.  Picard wanted information to decode Will’s memories, which,
apparently, were highly symbolic; no surprise there, Riker thought grimly. 
He’d asked about the hemorrhage that had taken Betty on her last trip to the
hospital – it had been to his amazement that Will had memories of that – and
then about the incident in ProvidenceHospital, when Will was seven.  Picard had
said he would keep in communication, as there was more that he needed to know.
            So he’d waited about a week, and then, when he arrived in Nuvia,
he’d sent a request for an update on Will’s status.  He’d hoped that by the
time he reached the cottage, there would be a returned message from Picard, but
there was nothing.
            He wondered what that meant.  He’d have heard from Picard
immediately, he thought, if Will’s health had taken a turn for the worse.  He
could assume that no news would be good news – Will’s recovery was slow but
stable – but he was a man who had never assumed anything.  William had been a
difficult infant; he’d been a difficult toddler; he’d been, overall, a
difficult child.  From his Starfleet records, which he’d accessed when he was
asked to brief Will on the Aries, Will’s personality as an adult hadn’t changed
all that much from when he was a child.  He’d been amazed, frankly, that Picard
had picked Will as first officer; had promoted him to commander sight unseen. 
He’d always thought Kathy Janeway would be the first officer of the flagship,
but she had chosen a different route; now she was a captain, while his son had
turned down his own ship too many times to count.  Perhaps, he thought wryly,
his son’s personal relationship with Picard was more meaningful than his
career. 
            He sent another message requesting an update to Picard as soon as
he arrived at the cottage.  He’d tossed his bag and his portfolio on the floor,
and now as he bent to pick them up he heard a noise, and he felt his hand reach
for the phaser he always kept hidden.  He was supposed to be a civilian –
that’s what his papers said – and civilians were not supposed to be armed.  It
was a good thing, he thought, he was not a civilian.
            “Don’t shoot me,” the boy said.  He was standing in the doorway,
his eyes wide with fear.
            “Who are you?  Why are you here?” Riker did not put the phaser
down.
            “Mr Behlar sent me here,” the boy said.  It was clear he was trying
not to cry.  “It was supposed to be a surprise gift for you.”
            “I hate surprises,” Riker said.  “You’re not Risian.  What’s your
name?”
            “Whatever you want it to be,” the boy said, trying to regain his
confidence.
            Riker put the phaser away, and then kicked his bag towards the
boy.  “Make yourself useful, then,” he said, “and unpack that and put
everything away.”
            The boy nodded and reached down to pick up the bag.  His wrists
were tiny, bird-like.  Briefly Riker wondered what they would sound like if he
snapped them.
            “How old are you?”
            The boy shrugged.  “I don’t know,” he answered. 
            “You’ll call me sir,” Riker said, picking up his portfolio.  He
walked into the kitchen, adjusted the light, and ordered a cup of coffee from
the replicator.  He sipped it, watching the boy still standing in the doorway.
            “I asked you a question,” he said.  “How old are you?”
            “I really don’t know, sir,” the boy said. 
            Riker put the cup down.  “Let me see you,” he said.
            The boy set the bag down and let his trousers drop around his
ankles.
            “You’re around twelve,” Riker said.  “You’re almost too old.  What
a fuck-up.”
            “Do you not want me?” the boy asked.
            “You’ll do,” Riker said shortly.  “Go put my things away.”
            “Yes, sir,” the boy said, and he dragged the bag into the bedroom.
            Riker took another sip of his coffee, and then he dumped the rest
of its contents into the sink.  He opened the drawer beside the sink, lifted
the false bottom, and placed the portfolio inside.  He walked slowly out of the
kitchen and into the hallway, where he paused in the doorway of the bedroom,
and watched the boy put his clothes away.
            “You won’t tell me your name,” he asked, “or you haven’t got one?”
            “Mr Behlar said I should let you name me,” the boy answered.
            “Really,” Riker said.  “In that case, I’ll call you Billy.”
 
 
 
 
            He hadn’t hurt the boy too much – after all, he was planning to
spend several weeks here – and when he awoke, he just decided to let the boy
sleep.  The boy had been trained well, but had still been frightened when he
realised that he wasn’t just a simple fuck.  Riker wondered if Behlar was
paying the boy, or if the boy owed him.  There’d been some money invested in
him.  He was clean, he was docile, and he was pretty when he cried.
            He stretched and took his time in the shower, washing off the
travel grime, the grit that sonic showers could never quite clean.  Then he cut
his hair and shaved off his beard, cleaned his teeth, clipped his nails.  He
had never been a tall man, but he still had muscle mass and tone, no mean feat
for someone his age.  Satisfied, he dressed in a simple tunic and trousers,
leaving his feet bare, and walked into the kitchen.  Behlar had left the
kitchen stocked with real food, and he made himself a real pot of coffee and
some toast.  He ate at the table, lingering over a second cup, wondering how
long the boy would sleep.  He could use this time to get some work done, he
thought; when the boy woke –
            He fetched his padd from the bedroom and sat down on the sofa in
the living area.  He’d filled his cup a third time but he knew he probably
wouldn’t drink it.  He set it on the coffee table and opened up the padd. 
Finally, there was a response from Picard.  It was brief, saying only that
there had been complications, but that William was in treatment and starting to
improve.  It asked that he communicate with them – Will’s doctor wanted to
speak with him.  Well, Picard had said they would ask him for more information,
but he’d assumed he’d be conversing with Picard.  Who the hell was Will’s
doctor, and why would it be necessary to speak to him?
            Riker thought back to the fraught conversation he’d had with
Picard.  Picard had given him no information at all about what Will had done,
or what Will’s diagnosis was, claiming that he didn’t need to know.  And he’d
been insulting – and presumptuous as well.  Of course Will would say that all
of his problems were his father’s fault.  He’d been singing that song since he
was old enough to talk.  But Will had had problems before his mother died –
he’d been wild, hard to manage, impossible to discipline, and Betty – and it
had been thirty-five years since she’d died and so it didn’t pain him anymore
to acknowledge it – Betty had spoiled him, had encouraged him to be as out-of-
control as he’d been.  He wondered what exactly the ‘Fleet had to say about
William’s so-called injury.  He wondered if Picard had reported what Will had
done.  Picard had acknowledged – to Riker’s amazement – his emotional
attachment to his son.  Perhaps Picard had not reported anything at all to
Starfleet.  Surely he would have heard by now from San Francisco if William had
attempted suicide.  William would have been relieved of duty and would have
been sent to a hospital somewhere; he wouldn’t still be on the flagship.
            Well.  There was information to be had, here.  He dealt in
information – it was his specialty.  He’d find out exactly what Picard had
reported, and when – and just who William’s doctor was.  Then – and only then –
would he think about the kind of information he might be willing to pass on to
Jean-Luc Picard.  Riker’s hand travelled to his crotch, and he wondered if the
boy Billy had awakened yet.
           
 
           
 
           
           
 
 
           
           
           
 
                       
 
 
 
***** Chapter 43 *****
Chapter Summary
     William begins the intensive therapy program and learns about CBT and
     its components. Jean-Luc surprises Will with an outing.
Chapter Notes
     Patients with PTSD often lose touch with their physical senses,
     retreating into dissociation, freezing, and hypervigilance. Nature
     therapy is an effective way to retrain the patient into being fully
     integrated into their own physical body again. The emphasis on using
     all the five senses in nature can alleviate the patient's anxiety,
     and the extra oxygen from the plants and trees helps to heal the
     tramatised brain.
Chapter Forty-Three
 
 
 
 
 
            I’d left sickbay for the first time in two weeks, to be walked –
very slowly – by Mr da Costa from Deck Twelve to Deck Eight, where three of the
unfinished rooms had been turned into Dr McBride’s office, the new treatment
room, and the hyperbaric chamber.  It seemed as if I hadn’t walked anywhere in
ages, and my legs were weak and shaky by the time I got to the room where the
hyperbaric chamber was.
            The chamber itself wasn’t a chamber – strangely old-fashioned word
that that was – at all, but a small room within the room, encased in glass. 
Inside the room was a decent-sized bed and nothing else.  However, the outside
room was filled with equipment, and both Dr McBride and a med tech named
Poijula were waiting for me.
            “You’ll find some pyjamas to change into in the dressing room,
Commander,” da Costa said.
            I nodded and went in and changed into some very loose-fitting
pyjamas.  There were hooks on the wall, and I hung up my trousers and my
shirt.  I took my shoes off and then returned to the main room.
            “Once you are lying in the bed, William,” Dr McBride informed me,
“we will begin to add the oxygenated air to the chamber.  The air will feel
cool to you, so I recommend you use the blanket.  All you have to do is relax. 
You can sleep, if you feel tired – and the extra oxygen may make you feel tired
– or you can practise one of your visualisation exercises.  You’ll be in the
chamber for forty minutes.”
            “And that’s all that happens?” I asked.
            “Most clients,” da Costa said, “enjoy listening to music while
they’re in the chamber.  I know you’re a musician, sir, so I programmed into
our computer a variety of musical selections which will last approximately
forty minutes.  You’ll see that there’s a sound system in the chamber.  We can
speak to you, and you can speak to us.  If you have questions, or you need
help, you have only to tell us what you need.  If you’ll take a look at the
program, sir –“ da Costa stepped away from the computer terminal he was at –
“you can scroll through the selections and choose what you want to hear.”
            “Have you programmed any Mozart?” I asked.
            “You won’t, as a musician, William, find Mozart too stimulating?”
McBride said.  “The point is to get your mind to relax, not think about music. 
I find I’m unable to think about anything except the music when I’m listening
to Mozart.”
            “Are you a musician, then?” I asked.
            “I wouldn’t call myself one, no,” McBride answered, smiling. 
“Certainly not in the capacity that you are.  Lt Patel has been telling me
about your band.”
            “I find Mozart – as long as the piece is in a major key – to be
soothing,” I said.  “I can hear the score and that always relaxes me.”
            “Take a look at these two programs, then,” da Costa said.
            The first one he showed me were fairly obvious selections – sort of
Mozart’s greatest hits – but the other selection consisted of a few string
quartets and a piano concerto, so I chose that one.  I walked into the chamber
and got into the bed, and was relieved that my feet didn’t hang off the edge.
            “Are you comfortable now, sir?” da Costa asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Is this a good volume for you?”
            “Yes.”
            I could hear the beginning of the String Quartet Number 14 in G
major, and I closed my eyes.
 
 
            It seemed as if it were only twenty seconds later that da Costa was
in the chamber and waking me, helping me up because I was a little dizzy and
disoriented, and walking me back to the dressing room.  I changed out of the
pyjamas back into my clothes, put my shoes back on, and decided that, other
than feeling tired, I didn’t feel any different at all. 
            “You won’t notice anything for two weeks, Commander,” da Costa
said.
            “Where’s Dr McBride?” I asked.
            “He just wanted to make sure you were okay going in,” da Costa
answered.  “We didn’t know if enclosed spaces would be an issue for you.”
            “I’m a shuttle pilot,” I said.  “And I can still fit in a Jefferies
tube.”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa said.  He walked over to the replicator and
came back with a drink.  “Dr Crusher wanted me to give this to you before I
walk you back up to rehab.”
            I looked at it.  “What is it?”  It looked disgusting.
            “I believe it’s some sort of protein shake,” he said.
            I sighed.  “I hate this,” I said.  “I hate everything about this. 
I keep hoping that I’ll go to sleep and wake to find it’s all been an elaborate
plot by Q.”
            “You really should drink the shake, sir,” da Costa replied.
            “I know that,” I said.  “I’m not stupid.”
            Wisely, da Costa refrained from commenting, and I took a few sips
of the shake, which had the consistency of sludge.  I think it had the
flavouring of sludge, too.
            “The whole thing?” I said.  I felt as if I were ten and being
forced to eat Brussels sprouts.
            “I’m sorry, sir.  Dr Crusher’s orders.”
            “Well, we wouldn’t want to cross her, I guess,” I said.  Somehow I
managed to get the damned thing down without gagging.  “Lead on, MacDuff.”
            “Sir?”
            I rolled my eyes.  “Forget it, Mr da Costa,” I said.  “Back to Deck
Twelve?”
            “Aye, sir.”
            He got rid of the container and I followed him out into the empty
corridor towards the turbo lift.
            “Where is everyone?” I said.
            Deck Eight was mostly crew quarters, including my own – knowing da
Costa, there was no point at all in asking if I could just go to my quarters –
as well as offices, including Deanna’s.  There should have been movement, but
the corridor seemed abandoned.
            “Captain’s orders, sir,” da Costa said.
            “He cleared the corridor so I could go to the hyperbaric chamber?” 
I wondered briefly if he had lost his mind.
            “The corridors to Decks Eight and Twelve, and the turbo lift,” da
Costa said.  “Temporarily, of course.”
            “Of course,” I said.  He had lost his mind.  Maybe it was a fucking
epidemic.  Soon the whole senior staff would be down with it.  “The explanation
being -- ?”
            Da Costa shrugged in that elegant European way, almost as if he’d
been taking lessons from Jean-Luc.  “The captain does not explain his orders to
me, sir,” he reminded me gently.
            I looked down at him, and then I grinned.  “No,” I said.  “He often
doesn’t explain them to me, either.”
            The doors to the turbo lift opened, we got on, and da Costa told it
to go to Deck Twelve.  It was reasonable, I supposed, not to see too many
people in the corridor of Deck Eight mid-shift, but it was eerie to have the
corridor empty at sickbay.  Jean-Luc had said I would see him after dinner; I
would tell him that it was disturbing to walk on an empty ship.  Maybe, reason
would return.
 
 
            Rehab was as I expected.  I’ve worked with Jai and his crew
before.  They’re good at what they do; all business, but in a relaxed and
friendly way.  I had cardio rehab and he wanted to begin work on my arms as
well.  There was nothing really strenuous, which was, obviously, the point;
upper body exercises, walking on the treadmill, the stationary bike, and
aerobic steps.  The arm therapy was merely a series of stretches, using the
bands, and then picking things up.  It was no big deal, but I had had no
exercise for two weeks; I’d had no large muscle movement, and I’d just walked
down to Deck Eight and back to Deck Twelve.  I was wrung out when he was done. 
He’d gotten me to drink some water, and then he commed Mr da Costa to escort me
back to sickbay.
            I tried not to be too annoyed; after all, what did they think I was
going to do?  Take the captain’s yacht out for a spin?
            Deanna was waiting for me when we arrived.
            “How are you, Will?” she asked.
            “Wiped out,” I said.  “I have this meeting now?”
            “Yes,” she answered.  “We’ll keep it brief.”
            “That’s good,” I said, “because I’m sure I could use a shower.”
            The meeting was being held in Beverly’s office, and I followed
Deanna in.  Beverly’s office had been slightly rearranged to allow for three
chairs to be in a semi-circle around her desk.  McBride was beside her, and
Deanna and I sat in front of her desk.  Beverly and McBride were sipping tea,
and Beverly offered Deanna hot chocolate, which she took.  She offered me
water, which I declined; I waited for her to lecture me about my fluid intake,
but she didn’t say anything.
            “How did rehab go, Will?” she asked.
            “Good,” I said.  “I’m very badly out of shape.”
            “Yes,” she agreed.  “You’ve lost weight and muscle mass.  You’ve
been in bed too long.”
            “Jai will whip me back into shape,” I said.
            “And your experience in the hyperbaric chamber, Commander?” McBride
asked.
            “It was fine,” I said.  “I was asleep, so there’s nothing really to
say about it.”
            “Good, I’m glad you chose to rest,” McBride said.
            I looked at Beverly.  “Thanks for the protein shake,” I said.  “It
was lovely.”
            “Will,” Deanna scolded.
            “Did you drink it?” Beverly said, her CMO voice firmly in place.
            “Aye, sir,” I said.  “Every glorious drop.”
            “Don’t mess with me, Commander,” she responded. 
            “I wouldn’t dream of it, sir,” I replied, and she smiled.
            McBride opened his padd and said, “We’re going to briefly describe
your afternoon CBT – Cognitive Behavioural Therapy – program.  This will be
lead by me, although you will find that Counsellor Troi and Mr da Costa will be
sitting in on many of the sessions, for training purposes.  Is that acceptable
to you, Commander?”
            “Yes,” I said.  What was I going to say?  No?  It’s not as if I had
any emotional privacy anymore.
My relationship with Jean-Luc was on display for all of sickbay, and probably
the news of it was all over the ship by now.  In fact, I’m sure the news of
everything was all over the ship by now.
            “What’s the matter, Will?” Deanna asked, placing her hand on my
arm.  “You’re anxious again.  Are you worried about Joao sitting in on your
sessions?”
            “No,” I said.  “It just occurred to me that I don’t have any
privacy anymore, that’s all.”
            “Will,” Beverly said, “everyone on your treatment team is obligated
to maintain patient confidentiality.  You know this.”
            “And the orderlies?  The med techs?  At PT?” I asked.
            “William,” Dr McBride said quietly, “we have already discussed this
issue.  You agreed to let it go, remember?  Dr Crusher is perfectly capable of
running her staff.  Captain Picard is perfectly capable of maintaining his
crew.”
            “I don’t want anyone’s pity,” I said.  “I don’t want the crew
looking at me, knowing what my father did –“  I couldn’t say anymore.
            “I know, Will,” Deanna said.  “Of course you don’t want that.  And
only your team knows the content of your memories, and then only on a need-to-
know basis.”
            “All right,” I said, leaning back into the chair. 
            “We can continue?” Dr McBride asked.  He was using the tone he
specifically used for me, the same one that da Costa employed.  Briefly I
wondered if using G major to modulate your voice was therapeutic.
            I nodded.
            “Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is nothing new, Commander,” McBride
said.  “It’s been used since the end of the twentieth century.  You are
suffering from severe anxiety and depression, you have intrusive negative
thoughts and terrifying memories and flashbacks, and your self is fragmented. 
We will take a therapeutic approach to your thoughts and feelings, with the
goal of retraining you, of giving you the skills to establish new thought
patterns and to handle not just the traumatic situations of the past, but also
whatever traumatic situations you might face in the future.  Are you with me so
far, William?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “There are number of different areas where we will work, especially
in the beginning of your treatment program,” McBride said.  “As you master one
area, we will move on to the next.  However, major areas of concern – memory
retrieval, intrusion, and re-integration of self – will be a continuing
process.  These are the areas that require the most skill on the part of the
therapist, and will require the most time on your part.”
            Deanna said, “The beginning steps of your CBT therapy will seem
very much like the worksheets I gave you last week, Will.  We’ll do a cost
benefit analysis for types of feelings – anger, for example – and we will have
sessions that will concentrate on affect management, arousal reduction, and
anger management.  You will be setting therapeutic goals for yourself within
the program, and also for the future.”
            “What the hell is all of that when it’s at home?” I asked.
            I was rewarded with Deanna’s rolling her eyes.  “Affect management
is recognizing and naming your feelings,” she answered.  “Arousal reduction
will help you with your anxiety and your constant need to be aware of your
surroundings.  We call that hypervigilance, Will, when it’s not at home.”  She
smiled.  “And certainly, Mr Riker, you know what anger management is.”
            “Learning not to punch doors?” I asked.
            “Exactly,” she answered. 
            “The program, William,” McBride said, “is designed to help you help
yourself.  It will require a great deal of introspection on your part,
something you may not be comfortable with at all.  Most men are uncomfortable
with reflection and analysing their thoughts and feelings; that’s perfectly
normal.  And you have negative associations with many feelings, so you have
spent most of your life trying to avoid feeling anything.  Still, I believe you
are a good candidate for this type of therapy.  I believe that once you
understand it, and you don’t feel threatened by it, you will find that your
journey towards healing will be a positive experience.”
            I sighed.  I knew – I knew that McBride was legitimate; I knew he
had my best interests at heart, and I knew that Jean-Luc personally believed
that he could help me.  In fact, he had helped me, several times.  But when he
said things like my “journey towards healing….”  Well.  I was trying to behave
this afternoon.
            “Okay,” I said.
            “Do you have any questions, Commander?” McBride asked.
            “No,” I said.  Then I said, “This will be my schedule every
afternoon?”
            “Yes,” Deanna answered.  “After your downtime, you start CBT.”
            “Every day?”
            “It’s called the intensive treatment program, Will,” Deanna said,
but she said it softly. 
            “No breaks,” I said, “from the treatment, then?”
            “Young man,” Dr McBride said, “you don’t have the time for breaks.”
            No.  I knew I didn’t.
 
 
 
            Deanna had given me the padd with my schedule on it, so that I’d
familiarise myself with it, and then had informed me that she’d programmed in
some “games” that I could play on it.
            “Games?” I said.  “You’re kidding, right?”
            “No, Will,” she answered patiently.  “These are short, fun games
with a therapeutic purpose to them.  They are to aid in your recovery and brain
retraining.”
            “The games are supposed to fix my brain?” I repeated.
            “Really, Will,” she said, beginning to show signs of the real
Deanna I knew and loved.  “Yes.  Everything we’re doing is to fix your brain,
as you put it.”
            “And I play them – and they do what?” I asked. 
            “Memory retention.  Pattern recognition.  Cause and effect. 
Logical reasoning.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “You don’t have to get snippy.”
            “William Thomas Riker,” she said.  “I will be snippy with you if
you warrant it, which you certainly do right now.”
            I grinned.  “Perhaps you should go to Ten Forward and have a
chocolate sundae,” I said.
            “You know, you are not the only person on this ship who throws
things,” she responded, and I laughed.
            “You can’t throw anything at me, Deanna, I’m the walking wounded.”
            “My arse,” she retorted, laughing.  “Here’s Guinan with your
supper, Will.  I will see you tomorrow for your morning session with me.”
            “Well, this is certainly a conversation I’ve heard before,” Guinan
said.  “Nice to see you two are still bickering.”
            “It’s all her fault,” I said.  “She’s the mean one.”
            “You just keep telling yourself that, Commander,” Deanna said, and
she headed out.
            “I can’t stay with you, Will, as much as I’d like to,” Guinan told
me as Mr Stoch helped set up the tray table for me.  “Your team expects me to
feed and water them every night now.”
            “We have replicators,” I said, sitting down.
            “Do you honestly think I’m going to feed Picard from the
replicator?”
            “He eats from the replicator all the time,” I said.
            “Not in my joint, he doesn’t,” she said.  “I hope you enjoy that,
Will.  It’s very light and shouldn’t bother your tummy at all.”
            I rolled my eyes at her.  “My tummy,” I said, “is just fine.”
            “That’s good, then,” she replied.  “I will see you in the morning. 
You’ve already told me what you wanted for the morning, but we still have to
discuss the rest of the week.”
            “Thanks,” I said.  “This does look good.”
            She left, and I was able – for the first time since the week
before, maybe, I thought – to actually eat a meal without anything happening. 
Clearly salmon (and I knew it wasn’t really salmon, but it tasted almost like
it) and vegetables I could eat.  She’d given me some sort of tea that tasted
like different berries, and I was able to finish everything.  Perhaps – if the
Billy-part of me didn’t sabotage anything anymore – Jean-Luc’s idea about food
for me would work.
 
            “Will.”
            I felt Jean-Luc’s hand on my shoulder.
            “You’re exhausted,” he said.  “Why don’t you give me the padd and
I’ll help you into bed.”
            I’d been sitting in the chair, playing one of Deanna’s memory games
– I guessed I could eat crow tomorrow – and I must have dozed off.
            “I don’t want to go to bed,” I said, stretching.  “I was just
waiting for you.”
            I handed him the padd.
            “You were asleep, Number One,” he said, amused.  “Surely that
suggests a need to go to bed.”
            “You won’t be ready to go to bed now,” I said.  “And I wasn’t
really asleep.  I was just pretending to be Spot.”
            He looked at me silently for a moment, and, once again I wondered
how one judged insubordination while sleeping with the captain.
            “Ah,” he said in a neutral tone of voice.  Then he said, “Cheeky
bugger, aren’t you?  I thought you were afraid of the cat.”
            “The cat is vicious, sir,” I said, trying not to laugh.  “It nearly
killed me the last time I had to deal with it.”
            “All seven pounds of it?” he asked.  How he managed to keep a
straight face I didn’t know.
            “I think it weighs more than seven pounds,” I said.  “I’m sure it
does.”
            He made a noncommittal noise.  “So you are clearly feeling
rejuvenated now,” he said.
            “Sir,” I said.
            He ignored me.  “The thing is, Number One,” he said instead, “I had
planned an outing for you – however, a certain amount of decorum is required. 
Is that something you think you can manage?  Or would you prefer to continue to
be Mr Data’s cat?”
            “I can do decorum,” I said.
            “Indeed,” he responded.  He shook his head.  “I don’t know.”
            I gave up.  “Please, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            He grinned.  “You’d better put some shoes on then, Mr Riker,” he
said.  “You’re not allowed to walk the decks of my ship in your socks.”
            I put my shoes back on, and tucked my shirt in, and followed Jean-
Luc into the head, so I could comb my hair.
            “I look as if I could star in Britten’s Noye’s Fludde,” I said.
            “As Noah or one of the animals?” he asked.  “And please don’t
mention the damned cat again.”
            “I was thinking Noah,” I answered.  “Where are we going?”
            “It is,” he said, “a surprise that was approved by both your
doctors.  Are you sure you’re up to this?”
            “I am,” I said. 
            “Mr Stoch, we will see you in two hours,” Jean-Luc said to Stoch as
we left my room.
            “Sir,” Stoch acknowledged.
 
 
 
            We left sickbay, and once again, the corridor to the turbo lift was
empty.
            “Where is everyone?” I asked.  “Da Costa told me you’d ordered the
corridors emptied earlier today as well.”
            We entered the turbo lift, and Jean-Luc said, “Deck Six.”
            “Deck Six?”  I realised there was something I wasn’t getting –
Transporter Room 3 was on Deck Six. 
            “Will,” he said.  “You are recovering from two very serious medical
emergencies.  You have been isolated in sickbay and only exposed to the same
small number of people.  What do you think would happen with your compromised
immune system if you were exposed to normal working conditions?”
            “Oh,” I said.  “I guess that makes sense.  It’s pretty creepy,
though, walking through empty corridors.”
            The turbo lift stopped, and we stepped out onto Deck Six. 
            “You’re taking me to the barber,” I said, surprised.
            “We are bringing the mountain to Mohammad,” Jean-Luc said. 
“Besides, I thought you would appreciate a little freedom.”
            “Aye, sir,” I said.  “Thank you.”
            Mr Mot was waiting for us, and had my chair ready.
            “What have you done to the commander, Captain?” Mot said.  “Look at
him.  He’s a mess.”
            “What have I done?” Jean-Luc echoed.
            I grinned; Mot had a somewhat adversarial relationship with Jean-
Luc, and it was always amusing to see the two of them interact.  “He’s been
holding me prisoner in sickbay,” I said seriously.  “However, I’ve been given a
reprieve, just for today.”
            Mot said, “That wouldn’t surprise me, Commander.  He’s always been
annoyed that my tactical knowledge is better than his.  You’ve always
understood that.”
            I glanced at Jean-Luc, whose face was studiously blank.
            “Mr Mot,” he began.  “You are not allowed to discuss tactics with
Commander Riker today.  He doesn’t need to be made anxious.”
            Mot finished washing my hair and shot a look of irritation towards
Jean-Luc.
            “I am well aware of the condition of Commander Riker,” he said,
“Captain.”
            “Good,” Jean-Luc said, sitting down.  “That’s settled, then.”
            “I am glad you are feeling well enough to be here, Commander,” Mot
continued.  “Your presence has been missed.”
            “Thank you,” I said. 
            I could tell it was a struggle for Mot to remain silent regarding
his usual topic of conversation, which currently had consisted of the extant
perfidy of the Cardassians and the idiocy of the Bajorans and the Federation as
well.  If there’s no weather shipboard, and you aren’t allowed to discuss
politics, that leaves very little for a barber to talk about.  Mot, however,
was nothing if not inventive, and he spun me a rather convoluted story about a
shipboard romance between two of the crew whom he did not name.  For one
horrifying moment I thought he was referring to me and Jean-Luc, and I had to
use whatever little willpower I have left not to glance in Jean-Luc’s
direction.  Jean-Luc, however, was simply enduring Mot’s prattle silently, and
I could tell he was both bored and mildly irritated.  It took Mot almost forty
minutes to be satisfied with my hair and beard, at which point I was not only
anxious (because I could see the rising irritation in Jean-Luc) but also
exhausted from the non-stop conversation.
            Finally, Mot pronounced that he was satisfied with my appearance
and I was able to leave his chair.  I could hear my bones creaking as I got up.
            “You look presentable again, Number One,” Jean-Luc said.  “Thank
you, as always, Mr Mot.”
            “If you took better care of him, Captain,” Mot retorted, “he would
not have been in the condition he was in.”
            I cringed, waiting for the explosion that had been threatening for
the past forty minutes, but Jean-Luc said, “He is getting the best of care, Mr
Mot.  There is no reason to worry.”
            “That’s not what I heard,” he said, but he appeared somewhat
mollified.
            I took my cue from Jean-Luc and said, “I have an excellent doctor,
as you know, Mr Mot.  I’ll be back to duty soon.”
            “See that you are, Commander,” he said.  I thought for a moment he
was going to say something about operations, but he thought better of it.
            “Well, Number One,” Jean-Luc said on the way back to the turbo
lift, “I don’t know about you, but I am exhausted from that ordeal.”
            “You shouldn’t let him get to you, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “He means
well.”
            “If you say so,” Jean-Luc said, “being as you are his fair-haired
boy.”
            I laughed.  I followed him into the turbo lift, which he then
stopped after the doors closed.
            “So, Will.”  He paused.  “I’d planned another small outing, but I’m
a little concerned that we’ve already overdone it for you.  You’ve had an
exhausting day.”
            “I’m not tired, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “I had a really good sleep in
the hyperbaric chamber, remember?  And then I rested after my meeting with
Deanna, Beverly, and Dr McBride.”
            “Will you promise to tell me as soon as you feel yourself starting
to tire?  Because I don’t want you overextended, and I don’t want you to wait
until you’re asleep on your feet.”
            “Yes,” I said.  “You aren’t going to tell me where we’re going?”
            “You’ll know in a minute,” he answered, “as soon as I tell the
computer which deck.”
            “I’ll be fine,” I said.  “Take advantage of the fact that I’m
actually feeling okay.”
            “Indeed,” he said.  “Deck Seventeen.”
            I grinned.  “You’re taking me to the Arboretum,” I said, pleased.
            He smiled back.  “Your doctors thought it was a good idea,” he
said. 
            “It’s a great idea,” I said. 
            “Good.”
            The doors opened, and we walked quietly down the corridor to the
Arboretum. 
            “You emptied the Arboretum too?” I asked.
            He nodded.  “Beverly doesn’t want you exposed to even the
possibility of something, Will.  And your Dr McBride didn’t want you to be
over-stimulated by the presence of crew who haven’t seen you in a fortnight.”
            He keyed open the doors to the Arboretum, and we walked in.
            “How would the crew over-stimulate me?”
            “Everyone is worried about you,” he said simply.  “They’d want to
find out how you are, and when you are returning to work, and it would all be
too much.  You have been very sheltered, and for good reason.”
            “At some point I’ll be allowed visitors?” I asked.
            “When your doctors decide it, yes.”  He said, “Where would you like
to go, Will?”
            “The pond.”
            “The pond it is.”
            He took my hand, and we walked along the pathway to the small
pond. 
            “Do you mind if I take off my shoes?” I asked.  “I’d like to feel
the grass.”
            “Of course I don’t mind,” he replied.
            I joined him on the bench, and took my shoes and socks off.  I
stood up and walked across the grass to the pond, sitting down beside the
flagstone wall.  Jean-Luc stayed on the bench for a moment, and then he joined
me.
            “Do you come here often?” he asked.
            “Not as often as I’d like to,” I said.  I stretched my legs. 
“Sitting in that chair for so long was painful,” I admitted.
            “Not as painful as listening to Mr Mot.”
            I shook my head.  “The two of you,” I said.  “I thought you were
going to get physical there, for a moment.”
            “I considered it.  Then I realised he was, as with everyone else,
worried about you.”
            “I just agree with everything he says,” I said, after a moment,
“regardless of whatever it is he’s saying.  Never argue with a man holding a
razor.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc protested, “he says the most outrageous things.”
            “I know,” I said.  “I usually hear a lot of outrageous things,
during the course of my day.”
            “How about,” he said, “since I am off duty and have chased everyone
away, you let me hold you?”
            “I thought,” I said, “you would never ask.”
 
 
           
 
           
           
 
 
 
           
           
           
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Interlude: Eleven *****
Chapter Summary
     Alasdair McBride takes the first step towards protecting William
     Riker from his father and his father's allies.
Chapter Notes
     There is no treatment for what the DMS-V refers to as Anti-Social
     Personality Disorder. Alasdair McBride is aware that as a doctor he
     can only contain and prevent that damage that these individuals do.
     While controversy surrounds what causes this "disorder" -- reactive
     attachment disorder or genetics or some unholy alliance of the two -
     - treatment options, even for young children displaying the symptoms
     of this (flat affect, lack of eye contact with the primary caregiver,
     lack of response to stimuli, lack of response to pain, etc), is
     woefully inadequate and not without its own controversy. Kyle Riker
     is not uncommon to our world, unfortunately -- he frequently inhabits
     the hidden-in-plain-sight world of certain government agencies, where
     he is their best asset -- nor is he uncommon in the world of
     Starfleet or the Federation.
Interlude:  Eleven
 
 
 
 
 
Alasdair McBride had been both surprised and pleased by the captain’s request
that he be allowed to take young Will Riker on an “outing,” as Picard had so
charmingly described it.  Both Picard’s ideas for the outing had been so
therapeutically perfect that McBride found himself wishing that Picard had been
destined for psychiatry rather than captaincy.  Although, given the nature of
Picard’s reputation both as a captain and a diplomat, he shouldn’t have been
surprised that Picard’s intuitive understanding of the human psyche was so on
target.  Will Riker was a good-looking young man; a man accustomed to using his
looks – that teasing smile of his, for example – and his height as a way to
charm compliance from even the most intransigent; even the dour young Vulcan
crewman Stoch had been converted into one of Riker’s followers.  That Picard –
smitten as he himself obviously was with the young man – would understand so
intrinsically that William would need every one of his weapons at the ready to
do battle with his enemy, should suggest that William be taken to the barber so
that William could be his usual dapper self – well, McBride could only shake
his head in wonder.  He’d been happy to give Picard permission, as it were, to
let William go on his outing; anything to allow the commander a chance to feel
whole, to feel normal.  The second suggestion – that the outing should be
extended so that William could go to the ship’s garden, their Arboretum – well,
he’d hand Picard his diploma in psychiatry now and get it over with.  One of
the symptoms of the commander’s illness was the disconnect between self and the
physical body the self inhabited; as the patient continued to deteriorate
towards psychosis the disconnect became more profound.  The treatment was
simple and obvious, and yet McBride had found many of his colleagues unable to
understand the concept at all.  Their reliance on medication to treat symptoms
when the illness was so much more innate was a source of ongoing frustration. 
When Deanna Troi had first contacted him about his intensive treatment program,
with the suggestion to implement it as standard medical treatment on the galaxy
and constitution class starships, he’d realised at once that this was the
opportunity he’d been waiting for, to demonstrate that his holistic approach to
treatment of this illness was the best therapeutic model available.  William
Riker’s case was perfect in that regard; here was a rising star in the ‘Fleet,
many times decorated, whose unorthodox behaviour had often been the source of
his greatest successes, and yet – the young man’s career had stalled to the
point where there was concern about his abilities – and then, with the contact
from Picard and Troi, the source of concern was revealed:  one of the severest
forms of complex PTSD he’d ever come across.
McBride, sipping his milky tea in his newly-opened office, turned his mind back
to his original train of thought; Picard’s outing in the Arboretum, giving
William the chance to reconnect with his five senses, to bring him out of his
dissociation and into his physical body by having him in a natural setting. 
He’d seen William’s holodeck programs – including the three that Picard had
been so concerned about – and was aware of the young man’s love of outdoors;
perfect physical therapy for him, indeed; to be in the extra-oxygenated air of
a real garden.  Picard’s suggestion that the decks be cleared of occupants for
William’s travel to PT and his therapies, as well as his outings, had
immediately secured the agreement of Dr Crusher – himself, as well, he noted. 
He’d been worried that they would have to transport the commander to Deck Eight
– but Picard’s elegant solution had relieved them of that necessity, a worry
given William’s frail physical health.
Well.  He stood up, stretched, adjusted the level of the music that was playing
– a sonata for the Vulcan lyre – and cleared away his tea-things.  He was
putting off, he knew, the work he must do, because he couldn’t quite see his
way clear to the approach to the situation and because he was afraid – and he
was a man who wasn’t normally afraid of much – that he and Picard had made a
fundamental mistake.  He’d learned a great deal about Picard in the days that
he had been aboard the ship, in watching the captain as he handled William and
William’s illness; in observing Picard’s interactions with his crew, and in the
meeting he’d had with Picard and in their impromptu briefings on Ten Forward. 
Picard’s grasp of the situation at hand, for someone who was enmeshed in the
situation, was extraordinary – but there’d been a few mistakes before he’d come
onboard, and he was afraid that one of those mistakes – that first interview
with Kyle Riker – was going to come back to haunt them.
He sat down on his sofa – Betazoid, as he’d insisted – and then bent over to
remove his shoes and socks.  He arranged himself in his meditation position –
feet flat on the deck, hands resting lightly on his knees – and closed his
eyes, looking inward to his centre.  He floated in free space for a minute or
so before taking himself through a simple grounding exercise, and then he found
himself once again in his mother’s water garden, the place where he felt the
most connected to nature, and his family, and his heritage, and his true self. 
He began with a simple Hebrew prayer – and then went on to mentally recite a
program of psalms that both helped free his mind and open his neshomo, his
spirit to the sparks of the Shekhina, which would allow him to accept the
sought-for solution to his problem.  He ended his meditation with the closing
prayer from the ancient Aramaic of the Amidah –May the words of my mouth and
the meditations of my heart be acceptable before you, Lord, my Rock and my
Redeemer – and took several deep cleansing breaths before opening his eyes and
contemplating the problem at hand.
Picard had received a request for an update on Will’s status from his father,
and he’d advised the captain to send a brief and formal response, indicating
that there’d been complications in Will’s health but that he was recovering and
responding to treatment, and requesting contact.  He’d agreed with Picard that
he should be the one to speak with Kyle Riker; Picard had confessed that his
prior interview with the man had ended somewhat abruptly because, as Picard had
said in that terse way of his, “I could not contain my anger.”
Given the latest in the memory retrieval, however, McBride now wondered if that
contact hadn’t been a mistake.  The type of man that Kyle Riker was had been
revealed for those who knew what they were looking for; he’d suspected evil,
and evil was certainly what he’d found.  As a psychiatrist he’d been intimately
acquainted with evil dressed up as human (or humanoid) on a number of
occasions; patients referred to him, often through legal channels, or sometimes
by families, when the patient was young.  The line of victims was usually long
by the time he saw these individuals; he could recognise and give the diagnosis
– depending on the culture, sociopath, psychopath, anti-social personality
disorder – but as for treatment….Well, the universe was littered with the
broken bodies and minds of doctors who had tried to treat patients such as
these.  Given a patient young enough – generally before puberty – reattachment
could occur – he’d done it himself – but he usually never saw these patients
before they’d begun their paths of destruction.
When he’d realised that no one had taken the time to correct William Riker’s
assumption that he’d killed nine-year-old Christian Larsen, it hadn’t been that
far of a mental leap to conclude that the information had been deliberately
withheld from the child.  After all, other information had been deliberately
withheld from the child that William Riker had been, that poor little boy named
Billy.  The boy had been repeatedly told that he’d caused the death of his
mother; he’d been deliberately allowed to see pictures of the happy family that
they had been – mother, father, baby – and then told he’d been the instrument
of its destruction.  He’d been given family stories, according to both Deanna
and Jean-Luc, to back up that picture – enough stories about his mother and her
habits that he’d been able to attend kindergarten and pretend that she’d been
still alive.  That was a story that Will Riker had used, according to his
friend Lt Commander LaForge, to illustrate one’s need to accept the reality of
death – which made the timing of the story all the more profoundly sad.  The
child had recreated his mother, out of the memories he’d been spoon-fed, as a
way to keep his ego intact – even though he’d been told that he’d been the
cause of her death – he’d still used her as a talisman to protect himself from
the physical rapes that had started the week prior to his first attending
kindergarten:  if she’d been alive, his father wouldn’t be raping him.  When
the well-meaning but completely ignorant kindergarten teacher had forced the
child to accept the reality of his mother’s death – complicit with the no-doubt
empathic understanding of the father – the child had been forced to accept the
reality of his survival:  that he must submit to the horrific physical and
sexual abuse in order to live.  Only his metaphorical closet – and the metaphor
of that closet, given the nature of Will Riker’s relationship with his captain,
was so poignant – was able to keep the part of the child’s shattered ego
intact.
And then the child had been deliberately kept isolated – information that once
again, Jean-Luc Picard had realised, with his keen intuition – from the family
that surrounded him.  Who had told the child to call his aunt and uncle Mr and
Mrs Shugak?  Who had hired his aunt and uncle – and paid them, regularly, in
credits – to act as housekeeper and caretaker of the Riker cabin?  Who had told
the boy – a boy who was growing up in a village in which just about every
member was a relative in one form or another -- that he had no one in the world
except the man who was systematically torturing him?  Why else would the clear-
eyed, eminently rational Lt Commander Elizaveta Christianssen Riker request the
boy be brought up in Alaska at all – Kyle Riker was not from Alaska – if it
weren’t because she’d assumed that her family would be there to help her
husband rear her child?
They were, as Jean-Luc Picard had so succinctly said, the actions of a
monster.  And that monster was alive and well and privy to information that
Picard had given him about his son – that his son had been in a life-
threatening accident, that his son’s memories of the abuse he’d undergone were
surfacing, that Picard wanted help – and would brook no obstruction – in
decoding the memories that were tormenting William Riker.  Picard had detailed
the conversation he’d had with Kyle Riker; McBride was aware that Riker had
figured out that it had been a suicide attempt and Picard had all but confirmed
it; and Riker had contributed information regarding two of the his son’s
flashbacks.  Picard had even revealed to Kyle Riker his relationship with
Riker’s son.         
So now Kyle Riker had all the ammunition he needed – William Riker was still
aboard the flagship; he had not been relieved of duty or hospitalised but was
being treated shipboard – and motivation for doing as much damage as possible. 
What was the level of protection that surrounded Kyle Riker in the Federation
and in Starfleet?  What was the nature of Riker’s real work for those
organisations?  Somehow McBride doubted that Riker was the civilian
troubleshooter and diplomat of far space that he claimed to be.  Evidence of
William Riker’s abuse had been covered up for years – by the same organisation
that had given the boy early admission to the Academy and fast-tracked him for
command before the young man himself had put the halt to Starfleet’s plans by
refusing the captaincy of the ship his father had wanted for him.  He had to
wonder if the fact that the second ship William Riker was offered captaincy of
– the ill-fated Melbourne – was a set-up as well.  After all, it had been one
of the first ships to be destroyed by the Borg.
It was time, McBride thought, to bring in the influence he had to bear.  He
didn’t know whether Kyle Riker had already put into action whatever damage
control he’d decided upon – but he had to act with the knowledge that he had of
the beast.  Riker would have a contingency plan for just this scenario.  He
would go about it logically and coldly and rationally.  It would destroy his
son – and anyone who advocated for him.  If that took down the celebrated Jean-
Luc Picard, well – Picard was not without his own enemies.  Picard had told
Will himself that he was not without his own influence – and McBride knew for a
fact that Deanna Troi had more influence than anyone else on the Enterprise,
even though she had never once called it in.
It wouldn’t be enough, McBride knew, to treat William Riker and help him
recover from his illness.  He would have to marshal the forces of whatever good
was left in the Federation and Starfleet to surround and protect the young man
from the evil and corruption that was his father and his father’s allies, even
as he suspected that those allies were the rotting heart and soul of both those
organisations.
***** Chapter 45 *****
Chapter Summary
     A quiet moment between Will and Jean-Luc, as they begin to define
     their relationship.
Chapter Notes
     The recognition, on the part of the patient and the caregiving
     partner, of small but significant successes is an important component
     of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy. Will's realisation that he is
     "present" in the moment is an important step in his healing -- and
     Jean-Luc's understanding of the significance of Will's first
     expression of hope -- is indicative, more than anything else, that Dr
     McBride's therapies are beginning to take root.
Chapter Forty-Five
 
 
 
 
It was extraordinary, to be lying on the grassy slope by the pond in Jean-Luc’s
arms, my head pressed against his ribs, listening to his heart beating, feeling
his fingers card through my hair.  I recalled lying in such a way on Betazed
with Deanna in my arms, in a similar position to the one I was in now, and yet
I don’t think I have ever felt as comfortable, or as right, as I did now. 
Perhaps it was the combined influence of Deanna’s forcing me to be in my
physical body, and Dr McBride’s confidence in me that I could understand my own
emotions and the reasons why I felt the way I did, but I was present – is that
the word I wanted to use? – in a way I don’t think I have ever been.  I could
feel the grass on my feet, the cool ground beneath me, could hear the water as
it trickled down the stones into the pond, could smell the freshness of the
grass and some floral scent I couldn’t identify; could feel Jean-Luc’s strength
and his calm around me.  He’d simply accepted the reality of his feelings for
me and was perfectly comfortable in expressing that reality to me – and I
realised that his doing so alleviated my need to always be in control, to
always be aggressive, to always be what I really wasn’t:  the pursuer, the
charmer, the entertainer.  I didn’t have to be any of those things anymore.  I
could just lie here in his arms and be me.
“I don’t suppose,” I said, hesitantly, “that you’d be interested in making love
to me?”
He tightened his hold on me and I could feel him smiling as he kissed my hair.
“Seeing as how there’s no one here,” I added, “and there isn’t going to be,
until you give the all-clear.  You could hardly be considered an exhibitionist
under these circumstances, Jean-Luc.”
He laughed.  “You are a terrible influence on me, Mr Riker,” he said, and he
kissed the back of my neck.  “I am not sure that you have medical clearance for
this sort of activity, Will, seeing as how you’re only one day out of the ICU.”
I sighed.  “I was afraid you’d mention that,” I said.  “It was worth a try,
though.”
“I don’t know that I’d want to be the one to tell Dr Crusher,” he said, and I
could tell he was trying not to laugh, “that I had killed my first officer in a
compromising position.”
“I could promise not to attempt to die this time,” I said, “for what it’s
worth.”
He was still.  Then he bent down, and pulled my face up to his, so I had to
look at him.  His eyes were that dark colour they got when he was very
serious.  “That promise, William,” he said, “would be worth a great deal to me,
if you are serious about making it.”
I said, “I feel as if I could live, now.  I don’t know what’s changed.”
“Oh, Will,” he said, “mon cher, mon cœur, for you to say that to me, now, you
have no idea –“
“I think,” I answered, as I came up for a breath, “I have some idea, Jean-Luc.”
“Tu es mon garçon doux,” he said, and regardless of what Beverly Crusher might
have prescribed, we made love there on the grass beside the pond.
 
 
 
I think I was drifting off to sleep when he said, “They will be sending out a
search party soon, I’m afraid.  Will?  Let’s get you dressed, and back to
sickbay.”
“It would be poor Mr Stoch,” I said, “and he would be shocked to his very
core.”
“The Vulcans are far more enlightened than you give them credit for,” Jean-Luc
said, handing me my shorts and my trousers.  He stood up, and slipped into his
own clothes.
“Oh, I know they’re generally enlightened,” I said, brushing grass off my legs
before I pulled my trousers up.  “It was Mr Stoch I was thinking of.  He’s very
young, and very sheltered.”
He handed me my shirt.  “Perhaps,” he said, “but he still knows the captain
sleeps with you most nights.”
I nodded.  “Something the whole ship knows, no doubt,” I said, buttoning my
shirt up.
He’d walked over to the bench, and was pulling on his socks, but he stopped and
said, “Does that bother you, Will?  That the crew might know of our
relationship?”
“Do they?” I asked.  I joined him at the bench, and bent down to put on my own
socks and shoes.
He shrugged.  “Does it matter?” he asked again.  “I know that in the past I
have been concerned over having a relationship with someone on board, primarily
because it has – and it will – put me in the difficult position of having to
endanger the life of someone I love.  But you’re not concerned about that, I
don’t think.”
“No,” I said.  “Despite what you’ve just said, the truth is – and I know you
well enough to know this, Jean-Luc – that you already have sent those you care
about – and love – many times into danger.  We don’t talk about it.  Maybe it’s
bad luck to talk about it.  But some years ago we became a family on this ship
– and I know how you feel every single time you send me, and Geordi, and Worf,
and any of us on an away mission.”
I’d finished putting on my shoes, and he pulled me into him for a kiss.  “My
cover is blown,” he said, and I grinned.
“It’s been gone for some time,” I said.  “We all know this.”
He shrugged.  “And your concern is what, then, Will?  That we’re men?”
“No,” I said slowly, “I don’t think so.  I didn’t know that you’d been with men
before – but it’s never seemed to matter too much to me, one way or the other. 
But then I think sex – in the past – for me has been quite different.  I don’t
know that I am that person, now.”
“That person was lost, I think,” Jean-Luc said, “and looking for something – or
someone – to anchor him.”
I said, “In that case, he has found his anchor.”
He took my hand, and we walked back down the path towards the doors of the
Arboretum.
“And your concern?” he persisted.
“Privacy, maybe,” I said.  “I’ve never really felt this way before.  I don’t
think I’ve felt much, before.”
“We have been discreet,” he said.  “As far as sickbay goes, I believe you have
been told that there is confidentiality involved.  And as for the senior staff
– I’m not sure what they know or don’t know.  No one,” and he grinned at me,
“has had the nerve to bring it up.”  We were in front of the turbo lift, and as
the doors opened, he said, waiting for me to step inside, “Deck Twelve.  Mr
Data knows that I spend the night here, as indeed he must.  Other than that….”
“Perhaps,” I said, “I just want to keep you all to myself.”
He quirked an eyebrow at me, and then he laughed.  “Indeed,” he said.  “And
here I thought I would be the possessive one in this relationship.”
The doors opened to Deck Twelve, and he continued to hold my hand as we walked
back to sickbay.  “Are you?” I asked.  “Possessive?”
We’d stopped in front of the doors to sickbay, and he took me in his arms and
pulled my face down to his.  “Yes,” he said simply.  “You,” he said, “are mine,
and while I am aware that you use your considerable charm as a technique to run
this ship, you will no longer employ it as a method to attract others to you.”
I grinned.  “Is that an order, sir?” I asked.
“An order I expect to be obeyed,” he answered.
 
 
 
Sickbay was quiet.  I reported in to Dr Sandoval, and he had Lt Fisk take my
vitals, and then asked if I needed a sedative before I retired.  Jean-Luc left
me to go fetch his things from his quarters, as he hadn’t spent the night with
me since I’d collapsed three days before.  I let Stoch accompany me in the head
so I could shower, and took the water shower I needed anyway; it didn’t bother
me as much as it had, for some reason.  There was enough privacy, I guessed,
for me to disrobe in the shower and then hand him my clothes.  I dried myself
off and put my pyjama bottoms on, and then stepped out of the shower to finish
dressing and to finish readying for bed.
“You had a good outing, sir?” Stoch asked in a companionable way as he gathered
up my clothes for me.
I was brushing my teeth, and I nodded.  I finished, and left the head, and he
followed me into my room.
“Do you have clean clothes for the morning, sir?” he asked.
It was weird, having to worry about what to wear.  Six days of the week I wear
my uniform; I have several, rotate them, and never think about it.  Having to
figure out what to wear was something I was no longer in the habit of doing.
“I don’t know,” I said.
“Since you’re going to be here for sometime,” Stoch said, “we should really
give you a dresser, and send someone to get you everything you need from your
quarters.”
“Am I supposed to spend the whole six weeks of treatment here?” I asked.  I
hadn’t thought about it before; I think I just assumed that at some point I’d
be promoted to day patient status.
“I believe that is Dr McBride’s intention, sir,” Stoch answered.  “Mr da Costa
would be better informed.”
“Mr da Costa,” I said, “seems to know everything.”
Stoch rewarded me with a rare smile.  “Yes, sir,” he said.  “He is quite
remarkable.”
I grinned.  “I suppose so,” I answered.  “Perhaps Counsellor Troi will allow me
to go to my quarters tomorrow, so I can pack up what I need.  I’ll ask her,
when I see her in the morning.  In the meantime, I’ll just wear these again,”
and I took my clothes from Stoch, folded them, and placed them on the night
table beside my bed.
“The captain will be here tonight?” Stoch asked.
“Yes,” I said.  “I’m afraid it’s chair duty for you.”
“It is not a hardship, Commander,” he replied.  “I do not want you to think
that it is.  I am very privileged to be working with you, sir.”
I didn’t know what to say to that, so I said merely, “Thank you, Mr Stoch.”
Lt Fisk came in with a handful of meds for me to take, and a cup of water.
“What’s all this?” I asked.
“Your heart medication,” he answered, “your blood pressure medication, your
pain medication, and a sedative.  You don’t really need everything in a hypo
spray, do you?”
“No,” I said, taking the pills from him and swallowing them.  “My neck thanks
you for your consideration.  I’ve a permanent bruise there.”
He glanced at my neck, and then he smiled.  “Duly noted, sir,” he said.  “What
is your pain level, as long as we’re discussing our poor treatment of you?”
I had to think.  “I haven’t been paying attention,” I said, surprised.  “I was
sore after rehab.  I guess,” and I flexed my arms, “no more than a three. 
That’s the best it’s ever been,” I said, and I smiled.
“Good,” Fisk said.  “The more time you spend in rehab, the less long-term pain
you’ll have, Commander.  Lt Patel will be pleased with this report.”
I placed the cup of water on the night table too, and then climbed into my
bed.  “I don’t know that I needed the sedative,” I said.  “I’m tired, now. 
It’s been a long day.”
“It’s to make sure you don’t wake up in the middle of the night, sir,” Fisk
explained.  “That’s been a problem for you, I know.  Now that you’re starting
your program, it’s important that you get a full night’s sleep.”
I yawned.  “I think I’ll be able to tonight,” I said.
“Good night, Commander,” Fisk answered, and he left the room.
“You’re staying with me, Mr Stoch, until the captain returns?” I asked.  I slid
down under the covers, and closed my eyes.
“Yes, sir,” Stoch replied.  “I’m right here, sir.  You don’t have to worry. 
You won’t be left alone, sir.”
“No,” I said, “I don’t want to be left alone.”
“I know, sir,” Stoch said, and it sounded as if he were right beside me. 
“You’re safe with me, sir.  You know that.”
I did know that.  I could feel myself start to drift off, and then I heard
Jean-Luc say, “I have him now, Mr Stoch.  I will see you in the morning.”
“Aye, Captain,” Stoch said, and I felt the bed sink as Jean-Luc slid in next to
me.
“Are you still awake, Will?” he asked.
“Yeah,” I said.
“Come here to me, then,” he said, and I turned to him, and he wrapped me in his
arms and kissed me on my cheek.  “Sleep well, mon cher,” he said.  “I’m right
here, now.  You can rest.”
“I love you, Jean-Luc,” I said, and I felt him kiss my hair.
“I know,” he replied.  “Just sleep now, Will.”
I slept.
***** Chapter 46 *****
Chapter Summary
     Why William Riker hates cats.
Chapter Notes
     One of the classic ways an abusive parent controls and demeans a
     child is through the abuse of animals. The symbolism -- that the
     animal is a stand-in for the child -- is apparent to even the
     youngest of children.
     There are triggers in this chapter, for those who have suffered this
     kind of psychological abuse. And for those who are tender-hearted.
Chapter Forty-Six
 
 
 
 
 
William hadn’t felt all that well when he joined Matt and Rosie on the field
for their game.  He didn’t know what was wrong, just that he felt strange and
somewhat woozy and out of sorts.  When Coach Mike told him he was pitching he
simply nodded; he’d pitched through pain before and no one had ever noticed. 
Still, the pain he felt as he warmed up on the mound was different, in a way,
and he wasn’t sure why.  He’d taken a bath before leaving the house, to try to
relax his leg muscles and soothe away some of the stiffness; his father was in
Juneau at the Federation offices and Mrs Shugak was used to him soaking his
muscles before a game.  His butt was sore from where his father had beaten him,
but the pain was inside, it seemed.  He wondered if it were possible to be
bruised inside.
Rosie watched him carefully, watched him stretch his legs and go into his
windup, rear and rock back and then let the ball go, a zippy fastball with
enough punch to it to cause terror in the bravest of eight-year-olds.  She
caught his practise pitches and then walked up to the mound when the umpire
told them to play ball.
“What’s wrong, Will?” she asked.
He looked down at her, his blue eyes vaguely anxious.  He’d been hoping that he
could cover the pain.  He shrugged.  “Nothing,” he said.  He tried smiling, and
found he still could.  “They suck, Rosie,” he said.  “No worries.”
“You hurt,” Rosie said in that stubborn way she sometimes had.  “I’m going to
tell Coach Mike.”
William felt the panic rise in his chest, although he didn’t understand why he
was so afraid.  “There’s nothing wrong with me,” he told Rosie firmly. 
The umpire, Mr Sutherland from school, walked up to them.  “Is there a
problem?” he asked.
“No,” William said.  “We’re ready.”
“Play ball, then,” Mr Sutherland told them, and William nodded.
Rosie shrugged, and waited until Mr Sutherland left the mound.  “You hurt,” she
repeated.  “I’m not gonna let you mess yourself up.”
She walked slowly off the mound, and crouched behind the plate.  William heard
Matt and Sammy behind him begin a chorus of “No batter, no batter,” and he
waited for the Bears’ centerfielder to finish fidgeting at the plate.  He
watched Rosie’s fingers, and went into his motion; the bat never left the
centerfielder’s shoulders, and Mr Sutherland said, “Strike.”
William wasn’t allowed to throw a curveball, even though he knew how; Coach
Mike was unyielding on that rule.  Almost eight was way too young to throw a
curveball; William had been in the hospital too many times for a boy his age,
the last thing he needed to have was arm surgery.  Rosie put down two fingers,
which meant William’s sinker; technically, he shouldn’t have been throwing that
either, but there was no way he was going to just throw fastballs and have them
start hitting.
“Strike two,” Mr Sutherland said, and the centerfielder stepped out of the box.
William waited until the kid stepped in again, and then he threw hard and fast
chest-high; the kid bailed, and Mr Sutherland said, “Out.”
William watched the kid kick his way into the dugout; the second baseman was up
next, and William threw four pitches – three strikes and one foul ball, into
the dirt – and there were two outs.  He watched their first baseman walk into
the box, slowly and surely; he was a year older than William and almost as big,
broad where William was lean.  The kids in the Bears’ dugout were yelling “No
pitcher, no pitcher” and William felt himself smiling.  He looked down the
mound into the eyes of the batter and shook off Rosie’s call.  Since Rosie had
only two calls – fastball and sinker – this was ridiculous and he knew it and
Rosie knew it; the batter stepped out of the box.  William waited until Mr
Sutherland told the kid to play ball, and he went into his windup, nodding at
the exact same pitch he’d called off a minute before.
It was a fastball just below the knees; the kid had thought high and hard and
he swung off balance, trying to protect the strike zone and scowled at William
for making him look stupid.  William heard Matt tell him to make the kid look
dumb again.  His next pitch was right down the middle, daring the kid to hit
it, and he took it for a called strike.  William could hear the Bears’ coach
yell in frustration.  Someone out in the stands – one of the moms, probably –
had already taken up the chant of “K, K, K, K” which people had started saying
when he pitched.  He threw his sinker and struck the first baseman – and the
side – out.
Matt and Sammy and Rosie walked him to the dugout and he expected Rosie to say
something, but she didn’t.  He sat down on the bench and draped his jacket over
his arm.  He was hitting fifth tonight, and it would be a while before it was
his turn.  The wooziness was back, now that he wasn’t concentrating on throwing
the ball, and he found it hard to follow what was happening.  Somehow Matt was
already on base – and the count was three and one to Danny, their
centerfielder.  William tried to focus on the game.  Matt had a pretty big lead
at first, and then he moved his shoulder, and the Bears’ pitcher wheeled around
and threw the ball to the first baseman, who watched it sail over his head into
foul territory.  Matt took off for second and made it to the base standing up.
Danny hit a high fly ball into short right field, and then Sammy was up, and
Rosie was in the on-deck circle, swinging her bat.  She glanced over at him,
and William shrugged at her and took his jacket off his arm.  He stood up and
found his bat.
“Is there something wrong, William?” Coach Ben asked.
“No,” William said.  “They suck, Coach.  No problem.”
“Okay,” Coach Ben said.
Sammy hit a groundball through the gap between first and second, and Matt ran
to third.  Rosie took her place in the batter’s box, and William walked to the
on-deck circle, swinging his bat.  He bent down and messed with his cleats,
watching Rosie go through her ritual – she was very superstitious – in the
box.  Finally Mr Sutherland said, “Play ball,” and Rosie leaned into her
stance.
The Bears’ pitcher smirked – it was Rosie’s cousin Jay-Jay, and she absolutely
hated Jay-Jay – and the pitch came floating to her and she simply crunched it
into left field.  She didn’t dignify Jay-Jay with a look as she ran past him,
going to first base, and she ended up on second with Matt and Sammy home and
the Lynx leading the Bears two to nothing.
William walked into the batter’s box, and tapped the bat against his cleats,
and swung it a few times, and spit a sunflower seed onto the ground.  Then he
looked up at Jay-Jay and grinned.
Jay-Jay walked him on four pitches.  He took his base, and watched Coach Mike
for the sign; Rosie wasn’t a fast runner, so it was unlikely that he would be
given the sign for a double-steal.  Still, he took a very long lead off first
base.  Maybe he could entice Jay-Jay to make another terrible throw.
The first baseman was a kid named Carl and he said to William,
“You’re not going anywhere.”
Jay-Jay looked at him, and William came back to tag the base.
“Fat Rosie couldn’t run nowhere, not even if a grizzly was chasin’ her.”
William left the base and stretched his lead a bit.  “She may not be able to
run fast,” he said, “but at least she can catch a ball.”
Coach Mike’s son was at the plate and he hit a foul ball along the third base
line.  William started for second, saw that it was foul, and trotted back to
first to tag the bag.
“She couldn’t catch my dick,” Carl said, and William knocked him into the dirt.
It took the coaches from both teams and Mr Sutherland to break apart the pile
of bodies, pulling one kid off after another, until at the bottom of the pile
William was calmly rubbing Carl’s bloody face into the dirt.
“You’re both out of the game,” Mr Sutherland said, holding the boys apart.
“He started it,” Carl complained.  “He hit me and knocked me down.  You saw
it.  I didn’t do nothin’.”
“Carl,” Mr Sutherland said.  “I know you, and I know William.  You said
something, and William reacted.  Both of you are out of the game.”
William looked at his bleeding hand, and tried to think through the cottony
feeling that had started when Carl had made the remark about Rosie.  “I’m
sorry, Mr Sutherland,” he said, and to him it sounded as if his voice was very
far away.  “I’m sorry, Coach Mike.”
“You should apologise to Carl,” Coach Mike said.  “Fighting is not allowed. 
Ever.  Regardless of what Carl said.”
William looked at Carl, and then he looked back at Coach Mike.  He was used to
obeying, whether he wanted to or not, but Carl was standing there smirking, and
he didn’t know what to do.  He said, “Am I supposed to sit in the dugout?”
“You are supposed to go home,” Mr Sutherland said.
William said, “You’re going to make me go home?” and Coach Mike placed his hand
on William’s shoulder.
“Is your father at home, William?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” William said.  “He went to Juneau yesterday.  I don’t know if
he’s coming back today.  Mrs Shugak is staying with me.”
“Are you going to apologise to Carl?” Mr Sutherland asked.
William thought about what would happen when he got home.  “I’m sorry I hit
you, Carl,” he said.
“What do you say, Carl?” Mr Sutherland turned to Carl.
“I didn’t do nothin’,” Carl said.  “William hit me for no reason.”
“You will apologise for saying what you said, first to William, and then to
Rosie, or you will not be playing for the next two weeks.”
“I’m sorry,” Carl said ungraciously, and Coach Mike said to William, “Let’s get
your gear.”
Coach Mike helped William stow his gear into his sports bag.
“Do you want me to call Mr Shugak to come pick you up?” Coach Mike asked.
“No.” William shook his head.  “I’ll walk home.”
“William, there are better ways to defend your friends than fighting,” Coach
Mike said.
“Yes, sir,” William answered.  “I’m sorry, Coach Mike.  It won’t happen again.”
“I know,” Coach Mike said.  “Will you let me know when you get home?”
“Yes, sir,” William said.
He slung his bag over his shoulder and walked out of the dugout.  He still felt
woozy, even though the cottony feeling was less, and his stomach was queasy. 
He couldn’t remember whether his father was supposed to be home today or
tomorrow.  Instead of walking through the ballpark to go home, he veered off
onto the path into the woods.  It was a longer walk this way, but it would take
him by Rosie’s house, and he could visit Bet and feed her before he went home.
He’d walked about half a kilometre into the bush when his stomach cramped and
he puked onto some ferns.  He bent over, hands resting on his knees, and heaved
most of what he’d eaten onto the ground.  He’d splashed some of it on his
cleats and on his socks, and he tore off a few fronds and wiped them off as
best he could.  This early in the summer it wasn’t hot, yet he could feel the
sweat trickling down the back of his neck.  His knuckles hurt where they’d
collided with stupid Carl’s jaw, and he sucked on them a bit.  His mouth tasted
awful, of puke and blood, and he wiped his eyes with his sleeve.  The cuts on
his butt were still scabs, the bruises still green and yellow – he straightened
and turned back onto the path.
He was almost to Rosie’s house – in fact, he could hear the dogs howling in
their kennels – when he heard a scurrying in the brush beside him, and then he
heard what he thought was a cat.  People kept cats – in fact, Matt’s mother had
a cat – but you’d be crazy to let a cat out of the house in the bush.  It
wouldn’t last an hour – not with sled dogs, and lynx, and bear, and wolves, and
even foxes, eagles – all of those would see cat and think prey.  Matt’s
mother’s cat was kind of nice, even though it was old, and didn’t really seem
to do much.  Still, it was pretty, and its fur was soft, much softer than
Bet’s, and Bet had a really soft coat for a dog.
He heard the cat again.  Maybe it was a kitten.  It sounded very young.  He put
his sports bag down on the ground, and waited.  Maybe if he were still, the cat
would come out of its hiding place.  Ten minutes went by and he didn’t hear
anything.  He figured the cat was probably gone, or maybe he was just making
the whole thing up.
He picked up his bag, and saw the cat on the trail just ahead of him.  It was
the colour of the orange marmalade he’d had once at Mrs Shugak’s house and it
wasn’t much bigger than a kitten.  It had four white paws.
“Hey, cat,” he said, and it mewed at him.
William forgot about the wooziness and the pain, and the fight that he’d had
with Carl; cats were easier to hide than dogs, and if his father wouldn’t be
home until the morning – he crouched down, and the cat trotted up to him.  He
let the cat wind its way around his legs, and then slowly he bent down and
stroked its fur.  He could hear the cat purring, and he picked it up. 
“Okay, cat,” he said, and he made a sling for it out of his jacket and carried
it back to his house.  He hadn’t forgotten about Bet – of course he hadn’t, but
he could put the cat in his room, and give it some water and food, and calm it
down a bit, and then go back to Rosie’s and take care of Bet.
Mrs Shugak was in the laundry room when he walked in the kitchen through the
mudroom – of course she hadn’t been expecting him to be home for a few more
hours – and he crept up the stairs, the cat sort of squished inside his jacket
where it was purring away, and he ducked into his room and shut the door.
He took his jacket off and set the cat down on his bed.  It was a nice-looking
cat, with orangey-red fur and a white belly and those four white paws like
snowshoes.  Or mittens.  The cat rolled around on his bed for a bit, still
purring, and then sat up and began to clean itself.
“I’ll get you some water and food,” he told the cat. 
He put his sports gear into his closet, and changed out of his uniform into his
jeans and a t-shirt.  Then he went downstairs, slowly because the ache was
still there, and into the kitchen.  He took out a small bowl for water and
tried to figure out what he could give a cat to eat.
“William?” Tasya Shugak said, as she came out of the laundry room.  “Why are
you home from the game so early?  Are you hurt?”
William glanced at the blood on his hand, which he’d meant to wash off but had
forgotten to.
“What happened?” Mrs Shugak asked.
“I got sent home,” he answered.  “I’m not hurt.  My hand’s okay, I’ll just wash
it off.”
He turned the water on and washed the blood off under the tap.  “See?” he
said.  “I’m not hurt, just a little bruised.”
“Sit down, William,” Mrs Shugak said.  “Let me fix you something.  What were
you going to do with that bowl of water?”
William looked at the bowl on the counter.  He didn’t want to tell Mrs S about
the cat, because she’d make him put it outside, where it was sure to get
eaten.  Or she’d tell his dad, and he’d make him put it outside, where it was
sure to get eaten.  Maybe he could just keep it for the night, and then Matt’s
mom could take it in the morning.
“I was walking home and I found a cat,” he said.  “It’s upstairs.  I was going
to bring it water and something to eat, but I don’t know what cats eat.  Well,
I mean I do, Mrs Jesperssen’s cat eats crunchies, but we don’t have any.”
“Oh, William,” Mrs Shugak said.  “You know your father won’t let you have a
cat.  That’s why you keep Bet at Rosie’s house.”
“Maybe he can stay at Matt’s,” William said.  “His mom has a cat.  They might
take another.”
“William,” Mrs Shugak said.  “You still haven’t told me why your home.  Go give
the cat water, and I’ll find it something to eat.  Then we’ll talk.”
“Yes, ma’am,” William said, and he grinned.
He walked up the stairs slowly, careful not to spill the water, and opened the
door to his room.  The cat jumped off his bed, and perted at him, and he placed
the water bowl down on the floor by his door.  The cat sniffed at it, and then
put the tip of its white paw into the water and if cats could look surprised,
it did, and shook the water off.  William laughed, and sat down on his bed to
watch.  The cat took an experimental lap of the water, and then proceeded to
drink.
“William!” Mrs S called.  “Come and eat.”
“Okay,” he answered.  “I’ll bring you some food, cat,” he promised.
He left his room, making sure that his door clicked shut, and walked back down
the stairs into the kitchen.  Mrs S had made him breakfast for dinner –
something he really liked – French toast with blueberries and some caribou
sausage.  There was water on the table and he asked,
“Can I have chocolate milk to drink instead?”
“You can drink the water first,” Mrs S answered, “but I’ll make you chocolate
milk.”
“Thanks,” William said. 
He ate the French toast, soaking the blueberries in the maple syrup, and
cutting up his sausages carefully.  He drank the water, surprised that he was
so thirsty.  Mrs S didn’t say anything until she’d made him his chocolate milk
and poured herself a cup of coffee.  She sat down across from him at the wooden
kitchen table.
“What happened, William?” she asked.
He took a sip of his milk, and wiped his mustache off with his napkin.  “I got
into a fight,” he said, looking down at his plate.  He suddenly wasn’t hungry
anymore.
“You got into a fight?” Mrs S repeated.
He remembered how last summer Mrs S had had to break up the fights between
Dmitri and himself.  “With Carl Magnusson,” he said.  “He plays first base for
the Bears.”
“Why did you fight him?  During the game, you got into a fight?” Mrs S sounded
almost as if she didn’t believe him.
“It was because I struck him out and made him look dumb,” William said.  “He is
dumb, anyway.  He talks like an idiot.  I hate him.”
“William,” Mrs S said.  “You need to tell me what happened.  And I don’t want
to hear you calling anyone dumb.  Not everyone is as smart as you are, and not
everyone has to be.  There’s plenty of room in this world for people who aren’t
as smart as you.”
William said, “I didn’t mean – “
“I know,” Mrs S replied.  “Just tell me what happened.”
“I struck Carl out,” William said.  “It did make him look dumb.  And Matt said
so.  I guess that made Carl pretty mad.”
“I would imagine so,” Mrs S said.
“So then Matt got on base, and then Sammy got a line drive, and then Rosie hit
a long double.  And Matt and Sammy scored, so we were winning, two to zero.  Oh
– and Matt got Jay-Jay, who was pitching, to throw a ball to first, which went
over Carl’s head, so he looked dumb again, and Matt stole second.  And then
Rosie hit the double,” William said, all in a rush.
“Breathe, William,” Mrs S said.  “Slow down.  Finish your supper.”
William looked at his food.  The French toast looked soggy, and the berries
were floating in the syrup.  “I’m not hungry anymore,” he said.  “My stomach
hurts.”
Mrs S got up and cleared his plate.  He watched her take care of the dishes and
put things away.
“Are you mad at me?” he asked.
“You haven’t finished telling me what happened,” she answered.  “But I don’t
like you calling people dumb.”
“I won’t do it anymore,” he said in a small voice.  “I promise.”
“You wouldn’t like it if I called you dumb,” Mrs S said.
“No.”  William’s stomach hurt worse.
Mrs S sat down.  “Finish your story, William.”
“Rosie hit the double, and Matt and Sammy scored.  Jay-Jay walked me on four
pitches, ‘cause he knew I’d hit the ball.  Jay-Jay can’t pitch to me or Rosie,
we always hit him.  I was on first base, next to Carl.  I took my lead,”
William explained, “even though I knew I couldn’t steal a base, ‘cause Rosie
was on second, but I thought maybe I could get Jay-Jay to throw at me and mess
him up.  And Carl said that Rosie was fat, and that she couldn’t run fast, so
there wasn’t any reason why I should be taking a lead.  Except there was,”
William said.  “It would get Jay-Jay to throw again, and maybe he’d throw wild,
and we could move up.  And then I said even if Rosie isn’t fast, she can catch
a ball.”
“Because Carl didn’t catch Jay-Jay’s throw to him?”
“Yeah.”  William hung his head.  “We always talk smack in a game, Mrs S, you’re
supposed to,” he said.  “It’s part of the game.”
“Then why did you hit Carl?”
“Because he said Rosie couldn’t catch his dick,” William said.  “I punched him
out, and he fell down, and then everyone jumped on us, and Mr Sutherland had to
break everything up.  And me and Carl got sent home.”
“Your father,” Mrs S said, “is not going to like this one bit.”
William started to cry.  “Don’t tell him,” he begged.  “Please don’t tell him. 
I won’t fight anybody again.  I’m sorry.  I apologised to Carl, even though he
wasn’t sorry for what he said.”
Mrs S said, kindly, “William, even if I don’t tell him, Coach Mike will.”
“He’ll be so mad at me,” William said.  “I don’t like it when people are mad at
me.”
“I know,” Mrs S said.  She stood up and hugged William.  “Don’t cry, William. 
Your father won’t like that you got in trouble, but I’m sure he’ll understand
that you were standing up for Rosie.”
William let Mrs S hold him, something he rarely did anymore.  “I don’t like
Carl,” he said.  “He always says stupid stuff about Rosie.”
“Some boys are like that, William,” Mrs S said.  “I’m really glad that you’re
not.”  She let him go, and said, “Let’s find something for that cat to eat, all
right?”
William tried to smile, even though the ache was worse and his stomach still
hurt.  “Okay,” he said.  “You’ll like him.  He’s really cute.”
Mrs S found a tin of herring, and she helped William cut it up and pick some of
the bones out, so that the cat could eat it.  William usually liked herring,
but the smell made his stomach feel worse.  He carried the bowl up the stairs,
with Mrs S following him, so that she could see the cat.  He opened his door,
and the cat jumped off his bed again and meowed at him.
“See?” William said, setting the bowl down next to the cat’s water dish.  “He’s
really cute.”
“He’s very cute,” Mrs S agreed.  “He’s barely more than a kitten.  I wonder
whose cat he is.  He must belong to someone.”
“Maybe one of the cheechakos at the lodge?” William suggested.
“You shouldn’t say cheechako,” Mrs S told him.  “It’s not very nice.”
“Okay,” William said.  “They probably wouldn’t bring their cat anyways.  Look,
he’s eating it.”
“Of course he is,” Mrs S said.  “I know what cats like.  Mr S and I used to
have a cat ourselves, when my kids were little.”
“You did?” William asked.  “He’s purring.  He can stay the night, right?  And
then I can find him his home in the morning.”
“Yes,” Mrs S said.  “That’s a good plan.  Why don’t you take a bath and get
into your pyjamas, and let me look at your hand before you go to bed.”
The cat had finished the herring, and wound its way around William’s legs
again.  “Do I have to take a bath?” William asked.  “I don’t want to leave him
alone.  He’s probably scared.”
“All right,” Mrs S agreed.  “You just get ready for bed, then.  I’ll take the
bowl down.  You don’t want your room to smell like fish.”
William laughed, and his stomach hurt a little bit less.  Mrs S took the dish
and left, and he undressed and put his pyjamas on.  When he went into the
bathroom to pee and brush his teeth, the cat followed him, and jumped up on the
sink and watched him.
“You’re a silly cat,” William told it.
It followed him back into his bedroom, and jumped up on his bed when he got
under the covers.  Mrs S came back in, and scratched the cat behind its ears,
and gave William a kiss on his forehead.
“Don’t stay up all night playing with the cat,” she said.  “I’ve found a box,
and I’ll put some paper in it.  Maybe the cat will be able to use that for
tonight.”
“Oh,” William said.  “I didn’t even think about that.”
The cat had settled itself down near his chest, and was cleaning itself. 
William watched it lick its paw with its pink tongue, and then wash its face. 
He rubbed the cat’s ears and then he pressed his face into the cat’s fur.
“I love you, cat,” he said.  “I don’t want to find you somewhere else to stay. 
I wish you could stay with me.”
The cat continued to clean itself, and Mrs S came back in with the makeshift
litter box she’d made.  “We can only hope for the best,” she told William.
“I’ll clean it up,” William said, “if he makes a mess.  I really like him.”
“I know,” Mrs S said, “but don’t get too attached to him, William.  I’m sure he
belongs to someone.”
“I’m going to call him Mittens,” William said, “because he’s wearing them on
his feet.”
“Go to sleep, William,” Mrs S said, turning off the light.
“Yes, ma’am,” William said, and Mrs S shut the door.
 
 
“What’s this?” his father was saying.  “Billy?  What is this?”
William opened his eyes to the grey dawn, heard the birds singing, and saw the
cat in his father’s hands.  He sat up, awake.
“I found him, Dad,” he said quickly, “last night.  Mrs S said I could keep him
until we found out who owns him.  I was going to ask around today.”
“You were, were you?” Kyle Riker said.  The cat was purring.
William hadn’t realised that cats were dumb.
“We couldn’t leave it outside last night,” he explained.  “It would have gotten
eaten.”
“Really,” Kyle Riker said.  He looked at the cat.  “It’s purring,” he said.
William nodded.  “He’s a nice cat.  He’s really friendly, Dad.”
“Why would you think, Billy,” Kyle Riker said, and he smiled at his son, “that
I couldn’t be trusted with your dog – you know the one you keep at Rosie’s
house? – but I could be trusted with a cat?”
William’s head felt all cottony and his stomach started to hurt.  He said, “I
didn’t know you’d be coming home so early.”
“You know,” Riker said, “that’s what I love about you, Billy.  You’re so
goddamned honest.”
William knew his father didn’t love him at all, even when he said he did, when
he was doing the things that hurt and made his insides ache.  Riker let the cat
jump onto the bed.
“You know, I got a message from your Coach Mike,” he said, sitting down on the
edge of William’s bed.
The cat rubbed its head against Riker, and then curled itself up next to
William.  Maybe, William thought, it was dumb because it was still a kitten. 
If he’d been the cat, he would have been under the bed by now.
“Fighting,” Riker said.  “Over a girl, was it?  Rosie?”
William said, “Carl said something mean, and I hit him.  I apologised.”
Riker grinned, and William felt the cottony feeling come back.  “And to think I
thought you were the sort of boy who only liked other boys,” Riker said, and he
squeezed William’s crotch.
“Rosie’s my friend, Dad,” William said.  He tried to sit still as his father
touched him.
“And friends are important,” Riker said.  He still had his hand on William’s
crotch.  “Important enough to get kicked out of the game for.  Important enough
to beat some kid up for.”
William didn’t say anything.  There was nothing to say.  Riker looked at the
cat.
“Which is more important, I wonder?” he said.  “Rosie, or the cat?”
“What do you mean?” William said, trembling.
“You like the cat,” Kyle Riker said, “and you like Rosie.  Right?”
“Yes.”
“So choose,” Riker said.  “You can keep one.  Rosie, or the cat.”
William felt the French toast rising from his stomach to his throat.
“I don’t understand,” he said, but he did.  He did understand.  It was the
reason Bet was at Rosie’s house.
Riker stroked William on his cheek.  “You can keep one, Billy,” he repeated. 
“Which one will it be?”
William looked at the ginger cat with the white paws, curled up next to him on
the bed.  He thought about Rosie, with her big hands, and her funny grin, and
her large black eyes that watched him so seriously sometimes, almost as if she
were the only person in the world who really knew the kind of hell that William
lived in.
“I choose Rosie,” William whispered.
“Are you sure, Billy?” Riker asked.  “The cat’s really cute.  It seems to like
you.”
William didn’t know how to explain.  How could his father think that girls and
cats were the same, even if cats were cute?
“I’m sure,” he said.  He could feel the ache deep inside him, but he didn’t
cry.
Riker pet the cat on its head, and the cat purred.  He picked the cat up, and
before William could say anything at all, he twisted the cat’s head, and
William heard its neck snap.  The cat’s bowels released, and the smell
enveloped William’s bedroom.  William felt his stomach clench, and then he was
puking French toast all over the bed.
“You’ll need to clean this up, Billy,” Riker said, laying the dead cat back
down on William’s bed.
“Yes, sir,” William said.
Riker stood up and walked out of his son’s bedroom.  William’s chest was still
heaving, and he looked at the cat’s glassy eyes, just staring.  He looked at
the cat’s little white paws, at its white tummy and orangey-red tail.
“I’m sorry, Mittens,” he said.  “I’m sorry.”
The cat had purred for his father.
Cats were dumb, and William decided he really hated them.
***** Chapter 47 *****
Chapter Summary
     A nightmare leads William, finally, to the recognition of his
     father's evil and how the consequences of his father's actions have
     affected every aspect of his life.
Chapter Notes
     Many children who have survived physical, psychological, and sexual
     abuse become either "over-achievers," adults who use personal and
     professional excellence as a way of hiding from others the self that
     they believe they are -- flawed, unclean, unwanted -- or they become
     "professional caretakers," adults who become over-responsible for
     everyone around them in an effort to keep others safe from the harm
     that had injured them. Will Riker's choices are a perfect example of
     an adult survivor of childhood abuse.
 
Chapter Forty-Seven
 
 
 
 
 
I strode out of the turbo lift on Deck Nine, into the dark and empty corridor. 
The lights for the red alert were flashing, but there was no sound at all, just
that cottony feeling around my head, stopping up my ears.  As I got closer to
the captain’s quarters I started to run, and then it seemed I was just running,
and running, and running, never reaching his quarters at all, but filled with a
relentless anxiety that I had to find him, I had to get him, I had to keep him
safe.  I looked down at my hand and saw I had my phaser out, and I wondered
briefly who or what was attacking the ship.  Then I was at the captain’s
quarters, finally, and I overrode the code and burst in, my phaser armed and
ready, but his quarters were dark and empty, and I searched through them, room
after endless room, looking for the captain, but I couldn’t find him, he was
gone and I was too late.
“Will.  Will.”
Someone had grabbed me, and I whirled around; I didn’t have time for this; I
had to find the captain but his quarters seemed to just be one series of dark,
empty rooms after another.
“Let go of me,” I said, fighting back, “let go of me, I don’t have time for
this, I have to find him –“
“Will.  Calm down.  Who do you have to find?”
“I can’t find Jean-Luc – “ I said. 
“Mon cher, I am right here,” he said to me, and I could hear his voice close to
my ear, and felt his arms wrapped around me, and I felt myself sag in relief
against him.  “Breathe, Will,” he said, “that’s it, you can calm yourself down;
that’s right, just breathe, I’m right here.”
“I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” I said, and I could feel myself weeping into his chest,
“I never seem to be able to let you sleep, I’m sorry.”
He pulled me to him and kissed my hair.  “Will,” he said.
“The sedative was supposed to make me sleep through the night,” I said, and I
was still crying, “I don’t understand why it doesn’t work, and I was looking
for you, and I couldn’t find you, I couldn’t find  you – “
“Captain?” Stoch was in the open door, and I could hear Lt Fisk right behind
him.  “What does he need?  Dr Sandoval is on his way.”
“I’m not sure,” Jean-Luc said.  “Will.  I am right here, next to you, where I
have been all night.  It was just a dream, Will.  Nothing to be upset about.”
“No,” I said, and I was struggling against his arms, “you have to let me go,
you don’t understand, I’m sorry I woke you, but you don’t understand, I had to
find you because you’re not safe –“
“I think,” Mr Stoch said, “I had better call Dr McBride.”
Dr Sandoval said, “Commander, I’m going to give you the medication that Dr
Crusher left for you –“
“No!” I said, “No, I don’t want any medication, please, you don’t understand –“
“Doctor,” Jean-Luc said, but it was the captain who was speaking, “just leave
him.  Mr Stoch, call Dr McBride.  William, if you will stop fighting me, you
won’t have to have the medication.”
“Sir,” I said.  My chest was heaving and my head was pounding.  “My head
hurts,” I said.  “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc,” I repeated, “I’m sorry.  I didn’t mean
to wake you again—oh God, my head hurts.”
“William,” he said, pulling me back into his arms, “your head is remembered
pain.  When you get upset like this, you remember the pain when you hurt your
head.  They’re not the same, the memory of your head hurting and your not being
able to find me.  Just take a deep breath, and let me hold you.  The pain will
go away, I promise you.  Just breathe.”
I breathed.  He was right, the pain was lessening.
“Captain,” Stoch said, “both Dr McBride and Counsellor Troi are on their way.”
“His blood pressure is too high, Captain,” Fisk said.  “He’s going to stroke
out.”
“No, he’s not,” Jean-Luc said, “because you’re going to calm down, Will.  You
can do this.  You know your breathing exercises.  You’re going to do them now. 
You can tell me why you think I’m not safe after Dr McBride arrives.  For now,
I just want you to breathe.”
I said, “I’m trying, Jean-Luc.”
“I know, mon cher, I know.  You’re doing fine.”
Stoch said, “Captain, if we can get him to sit up, he’ll breathe easier.”
“Yes,” Jean-Luc agreed.  “Come, Will.  Let’s get you up.”
I could feel the panic start to rise again and I clutched at him; actions that
normally would have mortified me seemed to no longer have that automatic shut-
off valve anymore, as if this illness had some sort of emotional all-or-nothing
component to it.  Instead, my response was to lose control of my breathing and
my head to start pounding, and I said,
“I don’t think that’s going to work, Jean-Luc.  Please – just let me stay like
this until Dr McBride gets here.”
“How about if I sit up, then, Will?” he said.  “I’ll be able to hold you
better.”
“Okay,” I said.  It was hard to talk through the pain in my head.
He sat up, and then pulled me to him, so that my head was resting against his
chest, and his arms were wrapped around me.
“Is that better?” he asked, and I could hear the kindness and the concern in
his voice.
I nodded.  I didn’t trust myself to speak anymore.  At least I had stopped
crying.
“Do you think you can try to breathe now?” he asked.  “Because you’re not, you
know.”
I let myself breathe, and felt my headache start to recede a bit.
“Why don’t you, Commander,” Stoch suggested, “close your eyes and see if you
can find your safe place.”
I nodded.  I found myself walking down the path behind my house, down towards
the creek, back to where the salmonberry bushes were.  I tried to concentrate
on the play of the light on the riffles in the creek, tried to listen to the
birds.
“That’s it, Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “You’re doing much better.”
I peered into the pool at the edge of the creek, the one where Dmitri had told
me once that he’d fallen in, wondering if I could still see the rainbows that
were suspended in the water.
“Lights, thirty percent,” Jean-Luc said, and I heard Dr McBride say,
“Did we have another trigger, Captain?  Where is he right now?”
Jean-Luc answered, “I’m not sure if this was triggered.  He woke up from what
seemed to be a nightmare, not a night terror, and had a very difficult time
unentangling himself from the dream.”
“Will?” Deanna’s voice was low and calm, coming from the other side of me,
where Stoch had been standing.  “Where are you right now, Will?”
“He’s in his safe place,” Stoch said.  “I thought it might help him calm down
and start him breathing again.”
“Thank you, Mr Stoch,” Deanna said, and I felt her rest her hand on my
shoulder.  “Will, Dr McBride and I are both here now.  Why don’t you come back
into the present?”
I opened my eyes, and found myself squinting at the light.
“Can you sit up now, Will?” Jean-Luc asked.
I nodded, and slipped out of his arms, so that I could sit up, but when I did,
the pain was overwhelming, and I was hit with a sudden wave of nausea.  I
closed my eyes again, fighting the nausea – I could just imagine Jean-Luc’s
reaction if I puked all over him – and then I felt Dr McBride lay his hand on
my arm.
“All right,” he said in that tone he used for me.  “You keep your eyes closed
for a minute, William.  I’m going to lower the lights first.  Lights, ten
percent,” he said, and even though my eyes were closed I could feel a lessening
of the pressure in my head.  “Keep your eyes closed, William,” he instructed
softly.  “You are completely over-stimulated, and we need to calm everything
down.  Mr Stoch, Deanna, and – it’s Lt Fisk, yes? – if you could wait outside
for a few moments.  Doctor, if you don’t mind staying to monitor his blood
pressure.  I’d like to reduce the stimulus and see if I can’t get him under
control.”
“Of course,” Deanna said, and a minute or so later I heard the door close.
“Jean-Luc,” McBride said, “I think you should continue to be physically close
to him, even though he’s sitting up.”
I could feel Jean-Luc move closer to me and I started to shake.
“Are you nauseous, William?” McBride asked me. 
I nodded. 
“Do you need Mr Stoch to take you to the – what do you call it on a ship
again?”
“The head,” Jean-Luc provided, and despite what was happening, I could hear the
familiar wry tone in his voice, and then I felt myself start breathing again.
“No,” I whispered.  “I think I can manage.”
I felt Jean-Luc slide his arm behind me and pull me to him.  He said in my ear,
“Mon cher, your being sick on me will not be the end of the world.  Don’t worry
about it.”
I could feel myself crying silently again.  I said, “I don’t want to do this
anymore.  I’m too tired for this, Jean-Luc.”
“I know,” he answered.  “But you’re tough, Will.  We’ll get through this.”
“Indeed,” McBride said, and I felt him briefly rest his hand on my shoulder. 
“You are a remarkable young man, William.  I don’t want you to forget that.”
“I couldn’t keep you safe,” I said.  “I couldn’t keep anything safe.”
I heard Dr McBride bring the chair over to the bed, and then I felt him reach
for my hand.  “I believe, William,” he said, “that you have remembered what you
couldn’t keep safe, and why you know Jean-Luc is not safe; and that this has to
do with what we discussed yesterday – and perhaps with what Jean-Luc said
during our discussion.”
I started to shake again, and I felt Jean-Luc tighten his hold on me.  “Will,”
he said.  “You have been able to keep me safe many times.  I’ve always been
able to depend on you.”
“This is different, though, isn’t, William?” McBride asked.  “Why don’t you
tell me about your dream?”
“I was trying to find Jean-Luc,” I said.  “I was on Deck Nine, and the corridor
was dark and empty; the red alert was on but it was as if the power was gone so
there was no sound….I kept running down the corridor and it was endless.  Then
I finally reached the captain’s quarters and when I overrode his door, I was
too late.  His quarters were dark and empty, and he was gone.  I kept searching
for him, through all the empty rooms, but he was gone.”
“How were you feeling, in your dream?”
“Anxious.  That cottony feeling was back, around my head, as if nothing were
real,” I said, “nothing except the anxiety and the knowledge that I was too
late.”
“And are you too late?” McBride asked, gently.
I felt the pain rise up in my chest and I was hit by yet another bout of
nausea.
“Yes,” I said.  “It’s too late.  You’re not safe, Jean-Luc, and there’s nothing
I can do.”
“And William,” Dr McBride said, taking my hand in his, “would you explain to
the captain why it’s too late and why he’s not safe?’
“I can’t,” I said.
“You must, William.  Because none of us are safe, are we?”
I shook my head, and felt the tears start down my face again.  “No.”
“I don’t understand,” Jean-Luc said quietly.
“Give him time, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “It’s taken him a very long time to
reach this point.  He has to be here, in this moment, to acknowledge his
feelings, feel this pain, and realise the truth of what he’s saying.  The truth
of what he’s always known.”  McBride said, “How is his blood pressure now, Dr
Sandoval?”
“It’s 180 over 90,” Sandoval said.  “A stroke waiting to happen.”
“Shouldn’t he have Beverly’s medication then?” Jean-Luc asked, and I could hear
the urgency in his voice.
“We are where we need to be right now, in his treatment,” Alasdair McBride
said.  “There is always the calculated risk that the treatment itself will
cause more damage.  Unfortunately, that is the nature of this disease.”
“Will,” Jean-Luc said, and he wrapped his other arm around me and let me rest
my head against his chest for a moment.  “Tell me what I need to know.  That’s
an order, Commander.  Tell me.”
“I’m afraid,” I said, but it was Billy who said it.
“I know, hen,” McBride answered, “I know you are, Billy, but you need to let
William speak.  William needs to tell us what he knows.  William needs to tell
us why he’s been alone all his life, why he’s never had another pet since
childhood, why he left Deanna on Betazed, why he’s never had a relationship
with anyone that ever lasted more than a month or two.  Why he turned down the
Aries.  Why he turned down the Melbourne.”
“I chose Rosie,” I said, and I could feel that I was soaking Jean-Luc’s
nightshirt.  “He made me choose,” and I could see myself in my bedroom, in the
weird grey light of the summer dawn, and him sitting beside me, on the edge of
the bed he rarely let me sleep in, with the little ginger tabby with the white
paws in his arms.  “He said I could only have one.  One friend.  One thing I
could love.  He made me choose – Rosie, or Mittens.  What could I do?” I said. 
“There was no choice.  There’s never been a choice.  It was all a set-up, just
like the Aries – just like the Melbourne.  How was I ever supposed to explain
it to anyone?  That I had to leave Betazed, because my father killed a cat in
front of my eyes when I chose to protect my friend instead?”  I sat up, and I
turned to Jean-Luc, and it was hard to keep the anger from my voice.  “You said
it yourself, yesterday.  The actions of a monster, you said.  As if you could
really know,” I said bitterly.  “The Borg – Locutus – that was nothing.  What
they did was evil – but it wasn’t what they were.  I lived with the monster.  I
know it.  I know what it can do.  You spoke to it, you gave it the information
it wanted – and now it will do to you what it’s always done, what it did to my
mother and to that poor little cat, and the hundreds of others that must be out
there, that have been covered up, because it was patrolling the deep space.”
“Oh, Will,” Deanna said from the doorway.
“It was never about the Potemkin,” I said, pulling away from Jean-Luc. 
“And so you have made your choice, over and over again, haven’t you, William?”
McBride said, and he was using his G major tone again.  “Choosing to be alone. 
Choosing to let others think you couldn’t make a choice, that you were stuck. 
Trying to keep everyone safe.  It’s no wonder you’re so tired, William.  The
responsibility has been overwhelming.”
Jean-Luc said, “And you believe it was a mistake, then, Doctor?  To have spoken
to Kyle Riker?”
“Yes,” Dr McBride said.  “It was a mistake.  He knows that William tried to
commit suicide, and that he’s still on the Enterprise.  He knows that William
is remembering.  Will was safe, as were you – and Deanna – as long as Will
couldn’t remember.  Riker has been waiting for this for a long time.  He knew
that when Will reached his mother’s age it might act as a catalyst for the
memories.  And,” McBride said, gently, looking directly at Jean-Luc, “you told
him how you feel about his son.”
“But he’s just one man,” Jean-Luc protested.  “I can understand, Will, how you
feel – given what you’ve remembered – the monstrous things he’s done – but –“
“And you are forgetting, Jean-Luc, that the Federation has been complicit –and
I don’t say that lightly – in covering up William’s abuse.  A man like Kyle
Riker, Captain – he doesn’t stop.  There are probably hundreds of Billy’s out
there – all of them covered up by the same Federation that employs this man,
this so-called minor diplomat.”
Jean-Luc was silent.  Then he said, “Mère de Dieu, Will.  What have I done?”
I could feel the nausea return, riding the waves of pain from my head.  “I
tried to tell you,” I said, “I heard you telling Beverly you were going to
contact him.  I tried to tell you not to.  I tried, Jean-Luc, to keep you
safe.  I’m sorry,” I said, starting to cry again.  “I didn’t want you to know
how I felt.  I knew I couldn’t have this.  It’s my fault you’re not safe.  I
just wanted,” I said, and I covered my face in my hands, “I wanted, just one
time, not to be alone anymore.”
I felt Deanna place her hand on my back.  “You’re not alone, Will,” she said. 
“You have everyone on this ship.  This time,” and I felt her kiss my cheek,
“you let us keep you safe.”
***** Interlude: Twelve *****
Chapter Summary
     In a cottage on Risa, Sir's newest boy discovers some pictures.
Chapter Notes
     For the purposes of this story, I have combined the two types of
     paedophiles -- the morally indiscriminate with the mysoped, the
     sexual sadist -- into one person. While the mysoped is not often
     involved in incest, the morally indiscriminate is almost always
     involved in incest. There are a few examples of this particular type
     of abuser in history -- the American Albert Fish, for example, who
     sexually abused his own sons but went on to kill children -
     - sometimes male, and one known female -- who were strangers to him,
     after he courted the children and their parents.
     While there are no acts of violence or sexual violence in this
     chapter, it is implied -- so please be aware that there may be
     triggers.
Interlude:  Twelve
 
 
 
 
The boy lay quietly in the bed, his face hidden by the blanket, and watched out
of one half-open eye as Sir dressed himself and readied himself for the
morning.  The boy was sore, and stiff, but he didn’t dare move.  He didn’t want
to take the chance that Sir would realise he was awake, and decide that he
wanted to play some more before he went out.  So the boy kept his breathing
regular, and he didn’t stretch his legs, nor did he try to find a more
comfortable position where he wasn’t partially laying on the newest set of
welts he’d been given.  Sir had told him the night before that he’d be up early
and out all day; he had a meeting in Nuvia, he’d said; a shuttle would be
coming to pick him up.  That was when the boy finally understood the danger he
was in.  Sir was not just one of those men that he’d learned as a little boy to
avoid when he saw one coming his way; Sir was not just a client of Behlar’s who
had a large credit account; Sir was something for the Federation – they were
sending a shuttle to him, here in the middle of nowhere – Sir had wealth, and
power, and arms.  The boy felt a tear trickle out of the corner of his eye. 
He’d known that Behlar would do just about anything for credits, but it had
never occurred to him that he might be sold to someone who would kill him when
he was done.
He waited until Sir left the room – so far he’d not been told Sir’s name, and
he doubted he ever would – and then he rubbed his eyes and tried to find a
better position in the bed, one that wouldn’t hurt quite as much.  Sir had been
very restrained, so far – the boy knew, of course, of much worse things that
had been done to boys like him – but he was unused to pain, to the constant
aching and soreness.  He hadn’t yet learned to block it out the way he’d heard
other boys could.
Sir was whistling, which meant the meeting would go well.  The boy – he refused
to call himself Billy – was relieved.  Sir would want to play when he returned
tonight, but there’d be no anger involved.  It would hurt, but it would be
safe.  He heard Sir stand in the doorway, still whistling, a melody the boy had
no way of knowing or understanding.
“I’m leaving now, Billy,” Sir said.  “The shuttle will be here in about two
minutes.  You don’t have to pretend to be asleep anymore.  I don’t have time
for you this morning.”  And he laughed, a low laugh that raised the hairs on
the boy’s arms and neck.
“Yes, Sir,” the boy said.
Sir said, “We might try something new this evening.  You can spend the day
thinking about it,” and he laughed again and left the room.
The boy heard the door to the cottage open and then shut.  Still, he didn’t get
out of bed.  Sir had a way of keeping him off-guard, and he knew Sir was fully
capable of returning to the bedroom and instigating some sort of play.  The boy
waited until he heard the shuttle arrive and then leave before he slipped out
of the bed.
At first, the boy didn’t know what to do.  He hadn’t been left alone by Sir for
more than half an hour before, and Behlar certainly had never left him alone
for an entire day.  But that had been in Nuvia, a place where the boy could
easily disappear; he was in the middle of nowhere now, on the edge of the sea
and the jungle.  He knew that Risa had no real dangers that weren’t human on it
– no wild animals, for example, that would eat you – but the jungle still
frightened him, almost as much as Sir did.  Besides, Sir had made sure he
didn’t have shoes.  He knew he wouldn’t survive long in the jungle without
shoes.
He decided he could take a shower – Sir had not forbidden him to do anything –
so he went into the bathroom and turned the water on, nice and hot.  He looked
at himself in the mirror.  There were dark circles under his eyes and a fading
bruise on his cheek.  His eyes were dark with starburst flecks in them, his
lashes long, his hair dark and somewhat curly at the nape of his neck.  His
teeth were white and even, his nose a pleasant shape.  He didn’t understand why
he’d been sold to a man like Sir – surely it would have been more profitable to
keep a boy as pretty as he was.
“My name is Jindyl,” the boy said to his reflection.  “Not Billy.  Jindyl.”
He turned away from the mirror, and stepped into the shower.  It was a
wonderful shower, just letting the warm water cascade over his aching body, not
having to worry about Sir and his flickering moods.  He dried himself in a
large, fluffy towel and then dressed in the loose trousers and tunic that Sir
provided for him.  He cleaned up the bathroom efficiently – one thing he was
good at, organising and cleaning – and wandered into the kitchen.  He was
hungry, and he approached the replicator and ordered the foods that Sir had
introduced to him – blueberry pancakes with maple syrup, orange juice,
scrambled eggs.
He enjoyed his breakfast but was careful to clean up after himself thoroughly. 
He assumed that Sir was a military man in some way, with the Federation or
maybe even Starfleet – he preferred everything “shipshape” and in its place.
“Shipshape,” Jindyl said to himself.  It was a funny word.  “Shipshape.”
He decided he could please Sir by making sure that the cottage was shipshape,
so he set about thoroughly cleaning the kitchen and organising the drawers and
cabinets.  He didn’t know how to whistle; he didn’t really understand music,
even though Sir had given him his own padd to play with, which had music on
it.  He worked quietly and diligently, making a contented hum in the back of
his throat that would have sounded curiously atonal had there been anyone there
to hear it.
Then he found the fake bottom in the drawer by the sink, and the soft leather
portfolio underneath it.  His heart stopped momentarily when he saw it.  This
was part of Sir’s power – why else would there be this special place for it? 
He touched the portfolio, enjoying the smoothness and softness of the leather,
and he brought it up to his face, smelling its pungent animal scent and running
his tongue briefly over it.  He’d never felt something like this before.  He
didn’t know that animals could be used to make things.  He opened the
portfolio, and was disappointed to find that it just held four discs in it,
secured in pockets.  He knew what discs were, of course, they held programs
that you could watch on a viewscreen, or the weird sounds that Sir listened to
that he called music, and the games that Sir had programmed onto his padd for
when he needed to be quiet so Sir could work.
Maybe, Jindyl thought, there were games on these discs too.  He left the
portfolio on the counter and took the discs out, and then carried them into the
bedroom where he’d left his padd.  He booted the padd up and slid the first
disc in and was disappointed again – there was just writing on it, writing and
some strange pictures, nothing that he could understand, since he couldn’t read
and he’d never heard of the possibility of school.  He’d been picked up off the
street when he was maybe five or six, he had no real idea how old he was, by
Behlar, who’d found him running wild – and since that time he’d been employed
pleasing men like – or almost like – Sir.  He took the disc out and put the
second one in.  Again, more writing; the same on the third.  He was sure that
the writing was important – why else would Sir hide it? – but it had no value
at all to him.  He slid the last disc in and his heart stopped.
Pictures.
It was a minute or so before he thought to breathe again.  There were boys in
the pictures, boys like him, some of them by themselves, some of them with Sir,
some of them with other men.  All of them were humanoid but many were not
human, not the way Sir was.  They were all of them doing the things that Sir
liked, or so he thought – until he realised that some of them were dead.  Very
dead.  Jindyl wanted to shut the padd down, throw the disc away, but he was
caught by the images he was seeing, caught by the eyes of the boys whose eyes
could have been his own eyes.  He scrolled through the pictures, pictures of
live boys and dead boys, boys who looked happy and boys who looked scared, boys
whose eyes were haunted and boys whose eyes were blank.  The men looked happy. 
Sir looked the way he always did, until Jindyl came to the last group of
pictures.
These pictures were different from the others.  Sir was a much younger man in
these pictures; there was a woman in them, who looked happy; and a baby, who
looked a little bit like the woman.  The place in these pictures was strange,
not like any other place he’d ever seen; it was by the ocean but the ocean was
a dark blue with white; the beach was not sandy but rocky; there were mountains
that were white on top, and tall, dark green trees.  Sometimes the white that
was in the water and on the mountains was on the ground.  There were pictures
of the baby – who’d become a boy – and Sir standing in it.  There were pictures
of the boy and other children; of the boy holding a fish.  The boy was pretty –
tall and strong-looking, with dark hair curling at his neck and ears and eyes
that were the brightest blue Jindyl had ever seen.  These pictures made Jindyl
ache; it was clear that the boy was Sir’s in a way he could never be.
Jindyl scrolled to the last set of pictures and he felt tears fill his eyes. 
These were pictures of the boy doing what Sir liked best – and the eyes of the
boy were very much like the eyes of the dead boys in the other pictures.  This
boy wasn’t dead – but his eyes were.
Jindyl took the disc out, and he shut down the padd.  He walked back into the
kitchen and carefully put the discs and the portfolio back in its hiding
place.  He finished what he’d set out to do in the kitchen, organising and
cleaning, but it was mindless now.  When he was finished he went into the
bedroom and climbed back into the bed, burying himself underneath the blanket
and then curling himself up into a ball.  He’d known, of course, when Sir had
pulled the phaser on him that first night, that Sir was a bad man.  And after
Sir had introduced him to the way he liked to play, he’d known too that his own
life might be in danger.
He wondered where the pictures of himself were, with Sir.  He wondered if he
would be added to the live boy – or the dead boy – collection.
He wondered if the real Billy – the one whose eyes were dead – was still alive.
He stuck his thumb in his mouth and waited for Sir to come home.
***** Interlude: Thirteen *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard has an impromptu therapy session with Alasdair McBride.
Chapter Notes
     Frustration, anger, guilt, resentment, exhaustion, and a profound
     sadness are all common feelings among the caregivers of a loved one
     with PTSD. Perhaps the hardest thing to cope with, as the caregiver,
     is the fact that one often experiences opposite feelings at the same
     time, and that one's feelings change, as they do with the survivor's,
     seemingly on a minute-to-minute basis. The relationship post-trauma
     or post-trauma symptoms is not the one that was begun for many
     caregivers, and the caregiver may find himself/herself mourning the
     loss of the old relationship while struggling with the new. Lastly,
     while the caregiver may feel good about providing the love and
     support the trauma survivor needs, he/she may also feel trapped,
     because the survivor depends so thoroughly on that support. The
     caregiver's needs go unmet, taking even a stronger toll on the
     relationship. Respite care -- even if it is only for a few hours -
     - is an absolute necessity for the caregiver of a trauma survivor.
 
Interlude:  Thirteen
 
 
 
 
 
It had taken almost another hour to calm Will down, and get him properly
medicated, for his nausea, and his pain, and his insomnia, and his fear – or
perhaps terror might be a more appropriate word.  In the end, there’d been half
of sickbay in their room, as Sandoval had commed Beverly, and finally, he’d
felt perhaps a little bit of what Will had been experiencing all along, just
completely over-stimulated, and McBride had taken him aside and quietly given
him permission to leave the room.
Outside, in sickbay, even the orderlies were busy, and he’d retreated into the
head, just to give himself some privacy and a chance to collect his thoughts. 
His sleep shirt was soaked with Will’s tears, and he left the head only long
enough to replicate himself a new one, and then he took a brief but very hot
water shower.  Even though McBride had told him to leave the room he’d seen the
look on Will’s face as he left, and while part of him had wanted to turn
around, to climb back in the bed and just take Will in his arms and hold him
until William understood through sheer force of his own will that he was safe,
and loved, there was another part of him that had reacted with irritation, and
with anger.
Picard left the head and walked into Beverly’s office, where he ordered a mug
of tea, and he sat at Beverly’s desk and sipped it.  He knew damned well why
he’d chosen to be alone, all of these years, and it was because he didn’t want
the responsibility, didn’t want the dependency, the clinginess of someone else
in his life.  Robert had once accused him, when he was twelve and Robert
fifteen, of being the most selfish being on the planet Earth – that he wanted
what he wanted when he wanted it, not before and not after, and with no strings
attached.  Perhaps he and Robert had constantly been at each other’s throats
because Robert knew him in a way no one else did, and that knowledge was
something he – Picard – couldn’t or wouldn’t tolerate.
He was a selfish man; he could admit that to himself.  He liked things that
were simple in line and construct, things that were beautiful in their
simplicity, that were aesthetically pleasing, and that didn’t have an emotional
life.  Archaeology, he thought bitterly, was the perfect science for him: 
things which were long dead could not control you.
And yet here he was, in a relationship with his first officer, something he’d
sworn he’d never do, and it was the exact opposite of what he preferred in a
relationship – clean, simple, beautiful for a time, and temporary.  No
clinginess, no over-involvement, no dependency – it was what had intrigued him
with Vash.  If the object of one’s love was supremely self-sufficient, the
relationship would never descend into the messy, nor would it ever disturb the
privacy of one’s own inner world.
“Jean-Luc?” McBride stood in the doorway.  “Would you mind terribly if I shared
a cup of tea with you?”
Picard took a moment to still himself.  “No, of course not, Doctor,” he said. 
“Help yourself.”
McBride stepped inside Beverly’s office, and closed the door gently.  He walked
around Beverly’s desk, where Picard sat, and ordered an herbal tea from the
replicator, then smiled apologetically at Picard.  “It’s really too late for
Earl Grey,” he said as he sat in one of the chairs in front of Beverly’s desk.
Picard wondered if McBride would be able to sleep.  He was sure he wouldn’t. 
“How is he?” he asked.
“Asleep,” McBride answered, smiling gently, acknowledging the unspoken thoughts
of their own lack of sleep, “finally.”
Picard sipped his tea.  He said, “And this is what you do for a living?”,
and McBride snorted with sudden laughter.  “No one told me about your sense of
humour, Jean-Luc,” he said, “it’s been a delightful surprise.”
Picard didn’t know whether he should be offended at that, so he sipped his tea
instead.
“You are overwhelmed,” McBride said, “and, perhaps, wishing you were somewhere
else.”
“You are an empath,” Picard responded, “like Deanna.”
McBride nodded.  “Not as developed as Deanna is, no,” he answered.  “But
there’s an ability to sense underneath sometimes.  And a knack at seeing
truths, perhaps, that others don’t want to see.”
“A day or so before all this started,” Picard said, “I told Will that I had a
strong desire to fix things, to see that everything was shipshape, and in
order.  He laughed, and asked me if I were trying to fix him.”
“And every time you think that William is on his way to being fixed,” McBride
finished, “he has another relapse, and appears to be getting worse, instead of
better.”
“Yes,” Picard said.
“Does this frighten you, Jean-Luc?  That we may not be able to fix Will?”
Picard thought about what he wanted to say, and how he wanted to say it.  This
man had offered him an outlet for his fears and his frustrations, when they had
last met; had promised that he would bring his therapeutic mind to Picard’s
part in his relationship with Will.  He thought about the last time he’d been
forced to “talk” to Deanna, how irritated it made him feel, how exposed.  He
looked inside for those feelings now, and found that they simply were not
there.  Will had said that he didn’t understand it; there was just something
about McBride that calmed him.  At least in this regard, Picard understood what
Will had meant.
“Everything about this whole process frightens and disturbs me,” he said.  “I
can’t understand a man like Kyle Riker at all.  I’ve met many dangerous – and
even evil – men before, but this….it baffles me.  And –“
“Yes?” McBride said.
Picard sighed.  “I love him,” he said, “I do – but half the time I don’t
understand what sets him off, or why he behaves and thinks the way he does now,
when he never seemed to have any issues at all before – “
“Didn’t he?” McBride asked.  “There’s more than one reprimand, in his file.  A
court martial, a trial for murder, an accusation of rape, fighting – relieved
of duty for insubordination – refusing command – which issues didn’t he have,
Jean-Luc?”
Picard said, “You are over-canvassing, Doctor.”
“Is that a nautical term, Captain?” McBride asked, and then he sighed.  “Jean-
Luc.  You are entitled to feel however it is that you feel.  You are the
captain – and so you are supposed to be a tower of strength at all times – but,
Jean-Luc, you’re not the captain in this relationship.  And William does not
need you to be the captain.”
“What does he need, then?” Picard asked.  “Because I simply do not know.”
“He needs you to be human,” McBride said.  “He needs you to be who you are,
feeling what you currently feel.  If you’re feeling trapped and irritated, or
frustrated, or angry with him – you’re entitled to those feelings, and you’re
entitled, Jean-Luc, to express them.  William doesn’t understand what’s normal
in a relationship – for him, because he is stuck, emotionally, at such a young
age, where everything is either good or it is bad – he doesn’t understand
normal, complex, adult emotions.  Where you can love someone and be furious
with them for not being well.  For not being able to see that you have needs
too – a decent night’s sleep being one of them.  Where you can desire a
relationship – and yet want to flee it, too, when it’s hard.  You have been
through an emotional wringer, Jean-Luc – acknowledging a new relationship,
beginning to explore it, physically and emotionally, and then having to deal
with an attempted suicide, heart failure, hysteria, mood swings, flashbacks,
night terrors, anorexia – you are entitled, I think, to want to run away.  It’s
all right, Jean-Luc.  I understand.”
Picard was silent, looking down at his tea.  Then he said, “In this –
therapeutic – relationship, that I have with you, Doctor –“
McBride smiled.  “Yes?”
“I vent, and you give me some sort of validation, is that how it works?”
“If you want it to work that way, yes,” McBride answered.
“There are other ways for it to work?”
“Of course,” McBride said.  “I could, for example, give you a prescription.”
Picard felt the edges of his mouth turn up, and he said, “For?  Some sort of
hypo spray, as with what you give Will?”
“I don’t think,” McBride replied, grinning, “Jean-Luc, that you’re in need of
an anti-psychotic medication at this time.”
Picard was surprised.  “Is that what you’re giving him?” he asked.  He wasn’t
terribly familiar with psychotropic medications, but, still, he’d thought Will
was receiving medication primarily for his anxiety.
“Jean-Luc,” McBride said, and there was absolutely no hint in his voice that he
might have explained this information before, “William has the most severe form
of this disorder.  He is suffering from visual, auditory, and olfactory
hallucinations.  He has had at least one break with reality that I have
witnessed.  Yes, he is taking an anti-psychotic medication, along with his
other cocktail – anti-anxiety, blood pressure, pain medication, and a
sedative.”
“Dieu du Ciel,” Picard breathed.  “But it’s not helping him.”
“It is, Jean-Luc, helping him.  He is largely coherent.  He mostly understands
what’s happening around him.  He is mostly present.  He can function in his
adult self for short periods of time.”  McBride paused, and then he said,
quietly, “He is not catatonic.  He is not dead.”
“Does he know?” Picard asked.
“That he’s taking an anti-psychotic?  Yes,” McBride answered.  “He’s been on
one before.  When he was a child, in the behavioural unit.  He and I have
discussed it.  He’s not happy about it, but he understands why he’s taking
it.”  McBride stood up, and took his cup to the replicator.  “You’re out of
tea, Jean-Luc.  Would you like another cup?”
“No,” Picard answered.  “It’s almost, isn’t it, time for breakfast.  I’ll share
a cup then, with Beverly, before I go on duty.”
McBride said, “McBride tea mix, hot,” and took his steaming cup back to where
he’d been sitting.
“What would you prescribe for me?” Picard asked curiously.
“Will you take it, if it’s offered?” McBride asked.  “I am your doctor too,
Jean-Luc.”
Picard said, surprising himself, “Yes.”
“It’s called respite care,” McBride explained.  “Necessary, indeed, for any
caregiver.  For you, twenty-four hours away from sickbay and away from Will. 
Don’t take the day off, but don’t come here for lunch, or to see how he’s
doing.  I don’t need you with him this afternoon for his therapy – we won’t do
memory retrieval today.  Don’t come after dinner in Ten-Forward.  Don’t spend
tonight with him.  Instead, Jean-Luc, when you get off shift, I want you to go
to the gym.  I understand you fence.  That’s the perfect exercise for you,
today.  Then I want you to go the Holodeck.  You ride, don’t you?”  McBride
waited a moment, and Picard nodded.  “Good.  I want you to go riding.  Some
nature trail, I expect you’ve got a few interesting programs.  Come to dinner
with us, and then, Jean-Luc, go to your own quarters, take a bath, read a book,
and go to bed.”
“But Will – “ Picard began.
“Is perfectly capable of making it through one day without you,” McBride said. 
“You are exhausted and overwhelmed.  You are at the very tip of beginning to
resent Will – his mood swings, his complications, his crying all over your
pyjamas.” 
Picard shifted in his seat, hoping that he wasn’t colouring, as McBride had
once again demonstrated his uncanny ability to hit the nail squarely on its
head.
“He’ll feel rejected,” Picard said, wishing that he’d accepted the offer of
another cup of tea.
McBride nodded.  “Yes,” he agreed, “he will.  And that’s an issue he and I can
discuss in his therapy session today.  It will be good for him to focus on
something outside of himself for once.”
Picard found himself wanting to agree with McBride, and wondered if that, too,
was part of this man’s gift.  He said, “You’re right, of course.”  He rose,
realising that he was still in his sleep shirt, and discovered that he didn’t
really care.  Another part of the McBride effect, he thought.  He said, almost
as an afterthought, “I found – “ and he hesitated, trying to figure out exactly
what it was he was trying to say, “I found that I didn’t much care for sleeping
by myself, while Will was in the ICU.”
McBride rose as well, and he said, as he rested his hand on Picard’s arm, “Of
course you didn’t, Jean-Luc.  But tonight you’ll have respite care, so you can
sleep an entire night without interruption, so that you can get up tomorrow and
not feel as tired – and as frightened – as you do right now.  I don’t know who
runs this ship at night, Jean-Luc – but I was thinking that one of Will’s
friends might sit with him tonight.  It would give him something to look
forward to, and will distract him from the fact that you won’t be there.”
An image appeared in Picard’s mind, and he did his very best not to laugh. 
Still, the picture of Will weeping all over Worf was something that he’d enjoy
for the rest of the day.
“Where to now, Doctor?” Picard asked, opening Beverly’s door.
Sickbay had quieted down, was running the noiseless way it did in the hours
just before dawn.  Dr Sandoval and Lt Fisk were apparently in the other office;
Beverly was gone; and clearly Mr Stoch was at his post next to Will.
“I’ll go change and then on to my office, Captain,” McBride said, as he
disposed of his cup and followed Picard out of Beverly’s office.  “And you?”
It was a little less than two hours towards the end of alpha shift, and Picard
had no desire to start his day quite this early.  “I’ll stay with Will,” he
said, “until shift change.  Then I will do exactly as you suggested.”
“Good,” McBride said.  “I will see you at dinner, then.  Enjoy your time off,
Jean-Luc.”
Picard nodded, still feeling mildly silly standing in the middle of sickbay in
his pyjamas, and he walked quietly to Will’s room, and pushed open the door. 
Stoch acknowledged him immediately.
“I’ll stay with him now,” he told Stoch in a low voice, and Stoch answered,
“Sir,” and left the room, pulling the door shut.
Will was mostly on his bed, or at least his head was on Picard’s pillow. 
Picard slipped into the bed and nudged Will until he moved a bit.  He lay down
and rearranged the blanket on Will, and then he simply rested, his eyes closed,
listening to Will breathe.
“I thought maybe you’d gone back to your quarters,” Will said.  “I’m sorry
about your shirt.”
“It was easily taken care of,” Picard answered.  “I thought you were supposed
to be asleep.”
“You thought I was knocked out, you mean,” Will said, and he gave a ghost of a
grin.
“That too,” Picard admitted, and he brushed Will’s hair out of his eyes.
Will exhaled, which might have been a small sigh, and Picard took him into his
arms and kissed his head.  Will wrapped his arms around Picard in a tight hug,
and then he said, “So you aren’t leaving me, then?”
“I was talking to Dr McBride,” Picard replied.
“Did he talk you out of it, or into it?” Will asked.
Picard said, “Now who is the one who is incorrigible?”
Will was silent, and then he said, “Did it help?  Talking to McBride, I mean.”
“Yes, Will,” Picard answered, “it helped.”
“So you’re staying, then?”
“Where else would I go, William?  It’s my ship,” Picard said, and when Will
looked up at him, he was grinning.
“So you have to stay,” he said, and there was that mischievous glint in his
eyes. 
He looked, Picard thought, thoroughly pleased with himself.   Picard pulled
Will to him, and he said softly, in Will’s ear, “You’ll have to do more than
this, Mr Riker, if you want to run me out of this job,” and he cupped Will’s
face, and kissed him, hard.  He pulled back and said, “Now be quiet and go back
to sleep, Number One.  That is a direct order.”
“Aye, sir,” Will said.  He was quiet for a moment, and then he added, “I didn’t
really think you would leave.”
Picard sighed, and he said, “I didn’t really think so, either.”
“I’ll sleep now,” Will said.
“Yes,” Picard answered, closing his eyes again.  “It’s all right, Will.  I’m
right here.”
***** Chapter 50 *****
Chapter Summary
     William has a breakdown, and Henry Ivanov threatens to go to the
     tribal council against the Federation.
Chapter Notes
     The initial symptoms of trauma -- hyperarousal, constriction,
     dissociation, and immobility, if not dealt with properly, will emerge
     into secondary symptoms that are often mistaken for other psychiatric
     illnesses, instead of what they actually are -- symptoms of untreated
     PTSD. In children, if the symptoms of hyperarousal are not
     therapeutically handled, the following symptoms are likely to emerge:
     panic attacks, anxiety, and phobias; flashbacks; exaggerated startle
     response; extreme sensitivity to light and sound; hyperactivity and
     restlessness; exaggerated emotional response; nightmares and night
     terrors; avoidance behaviour and clinging; attraction to dangerous
     situations; frequent crying and irritability; abrupt mood swings,
     such as rage reactions; temper tantrums; regressive behaviours, such
     as thumb-sucking and bedwetting; and increased risk-taking
     behaviours. Many of these behaviours will escalate during the
     teenaged years, and will surface again in the adult survivor whose
     unresolved childhood PTSD has been activated ("triggered") by another
     trauma.
Chapter Fifty
 
 
 
 
 
William knew he shouldn’t have gone to judo, because he still wasn’t feeling
well, and because he would find that he was crying and he didn’t know why. 
Twice Mrs Shugak had asked him what was wrong and he hadn’t been able to
answer.  The second time she’d taken his temperature and told him she would
make an appointment for him to see the doctor.  But Mrs Shugak would be leaving
early, because his father was coming home after having a short meeting in
Valdez, and he wouldn’t be able to explain to his father why he wasn’t at judo
either.
Usually he walked over to Matt’s cabin, and then he and Matt walked over to
Rosie’s, and they got the dogs and walked on to the school.  But he didn’t feel
like walking, because he still hurt inside, and he didn’t want to see Rosie at
all. 
“Are you sure you should be going to judo?” Mrs S asked, concerned.
“I promised Henry I’d help with the little ones,” William said.
“You don’t look well at all, even if you don’t have a fever,” Mrs S remarked. 
“I’ll call Marty.  He can drive you.  And I’m calling the doctor.”
William hated the doctor.  The doctor was stupid.  He asked William if his head
still hurt, and if he heard voices.  The last time the doctor had asked if he’d
heard voices, he’d said, “I’m hearing you, aren’t I?”  Mr Shugak had turned
away, as if he were laughing, but the doctor had gotten mad.  William usually
hated it when people were mad at him – but he didn’t care whether he made the
doctor mad at all.  The doctor gave him medication that made the cottony
feeling worse, even when he wasn’t hearing voices, and so William had learned
how to hide the pills in his mouth, and later he would spit them out.
“Okay,” William agreed.
Mrs S looked at William sharply.  “Now I am calling the doctor,” she said.  It
wasn’t like William to give in so quickly on being driven.  The last time she’d
told him he couldn’t walk somewhere, and would have to wait until someone could
drive him, he’d erupted into a rage that had lasted several hours, until the
threat of calling his father ended it.
William didn’t say anything, because he didn’t care.  She could call the
doctor.  He would just spit the medication out.  He sat quietly on the sofa and
waited for Mr S to come for him.  He could hear Mrs S talking to someone on the
communicator in the kitchen.  When she came into the living room, she said,
“Does your head hurt, William?” and he just rolled his eyes.
“I’m not hearing voices either,” he said, and then he paused, “except yours.”
Mrs S said, “Don’t be smart, William.”
Usually he would apologise, because he just wanted there to be no trouble, but
he didn’t feel like apologising either.  He thought about it for a moment, and
then he realised what he felt like was kicking something.  Maybe going to judo
would be a good thing.
“William,” Mrs S said.
He sighed.  “I’m sorry,” he said, but he wasn’t.  He wished everyone would just
leave him alone.  He heard the air car in the drive, and he stood up, and went
to the door.
“Have a good time, William,” Mrs S said.  She didn’t sound mad anymore.
“Yes, ma’am,” William answered.
“If you don’t feel well, have Henry call me,” she added.  “William?”
“Yes, ma’am.”  He opened the door and walked outside.
It was after supper, but the sun was still high in the sky, because it wouldn’t
really set at all, and there was a light wind blowing off the sea, which he
could almost smell.  He got into the car – Mr S let him ride in the front seat,
because William didn’t fidget anymore – and closed his eyes.
“Are you not feeling well, William?” Mr S asked as he pulled out.
William wanted to scream.  “I’m okay,” he said.
“Your head doesn’t hurt?”
William was sure he was going to start screaming.  “No, sir,” he answered.  “My
head doesn’t hurt.”
“Do you have baseball practise tonight?”
William sighed.  “I had it this afternoon,” he said.  “I always have baseball
practise in the afternoon.”
“You do, don’t you?”  Mr S was impossible to make angry.  Sometimes he would
forget really dumb things – like the fact that William had baseball practise in
between his games every other afternoon – but that didn’t seem to bother him
either.  Mrs S said that he always had his head in the clouds, but she didn’t
say it like it was a bad thing.
William wondered how he could be more like Mr S.  Right now he was feeling
angry, and like before, when he’d been crying, he had no idea why.  Maybe it
was just because Mrs S had called the doctor.
Mr S never dropped him off anywhere anymore.  William got out of the air car,
and he had to wait for Mr S to do whatever it took him so long to do before he
got out of the car, and then Mr S would walk him inside wherever they were
going.  William knew why Mr S did this – Rosie had told him that Mr S cried
when they’d found him in the snow – but it made him mad just the same.  He
wouldn’t ever do that again, because it didn’t work.  Instead of being turned
into stone he’d ended up in the hospital with a head that always hurt and a
reputation for hearing voices, even when he never had.
He sighed again, and he let Mr S take his hand – and he was almost eight –
eight! And he had to hold someone’s hand – and they walked into the gym, where
Henry was finishing setting up for judo practise.  William tugged his hand
away, before anyone saw, and mumbled a goodbye to Mr S, and walked over to help
Henry.
Mr S was right behind him.  “Can I see you for a moment, Henry?”
William said, “I’m fine.”
“Of course,” Henry answered.
“I said I’m fine!” William repeated.
Henry looked down at William.  “Why don’t you finish laying the mats then,” he
said, “if you’re fine?”
This, William thought, was not going to be a good day.  It was when he knew he
shouldn’t have gone to judo practise.
“Yes, sir,” William said.
He watched Mr S and Henry walk away, and he took the remaining mats and sort of
threw them onto the floor, and then kicked them into place.  Sammy came over –
he’d joined judo practise, too, along with Danny and Jesse – and said,
“I guess Carl better not show up.”
William finished kicking the last mat into place and said, “Why?”
Sammy grinned.  “’Cause you’ll probably beat him up again.”
William found himself grinning back.  “I did beat him up, didn’t I?” he said. 
He found that he liked that idea. 
“I heard,” Sammy said, “that he lost a tooth, because you mashed his face into
the dirt.”
“Really?” William asked. 
Sammy nodded.  “I don’t think he’ll be saying stupid shit about Rosie anymore.”
William didn’t want to think about Rosie.  He saw Henry look over towards him,
and he felt himself getting all mad again.  “Come on,” he said.  “I have to get
the little kids stretching.”
“Okay.”  Sammy was fairly used to this William being moody.  The old William
hadn’t been, but that was a long time ago.
William corralled the little kids, Jake and Lucy and Josie and Jesse, who even
though he was on William’s team again this year, still qualified in William’s
mind as a little kid, and he got them on their mats, and made sure their shoes
were stowed, and ran them through the stretching exercises that Henry had
taught him.  The other kids were now showing up, coming into the gym in dribs
and drabs, Danny and Dmitri and Dmitri’s cousins Michael and Niall and Maya and
then finally Rosie and Matt.
Henry walked over and watched William as he helped the little ones with their
stretching.  He rested his hand on William’s shoulder and felt the child go
rigid beneath him.
“Your Uncle Marty says you aren’t feeling well,” Henry said.  He kept his hand
on William’s shoulder, hoping it would reassure the boy, even if he didn’t seem
to like it.
“He’s not my Uncle Marty,” William said, shrugging out from underneath Henry’s
hand.
“I’ll have Dmitri work with the little ones tonight,” Henry said.  “Do you feel
like practising, Will, or would you just like to watch?”
“Am I doing something wrong?” William asked.  He felt as if he were going to
cry again.
“Of course not,” Henry said.  “I’m just worried, because Uncle Marty said
you’re coming down with something.”
William glanced over at his friends, all of whom had gotten themselves ready,
and were doing their stretches.  Rosie saw him look at her, and she gave him
her usual Rosie-grin, the one that was goofy and serious at the same time. 
William looked down at the floor and blinked very hard.  He was not going to
start crying here. 
“I’m not coming down with something,” he said.  “I wish everyone would just
leave me alone.”
Henry said, “Why don’t you come talk to me for a minute, Will.”
“I don’t have anything to say,” William said, sullenly.  The threat of tears
was vanishing, to be replaced by the cottony feeling and a dull sort of ache
that was settling in his stomach.
“Come on, Will,” Henry said, and he let his hand fall on William’s shoulder
again.  He placed his other hand on the boy’s shoulder as well, and began to
guide him towards the benches against the wall.  “It’s all right,” he said in a
soothing tone.  “You can still be upset about what happened yesterday.  You can
talk to me about it.”
For a moment, William was still.  How did Henry know about yesterday?  He could
see the filmy staring eyes of Mittens, lying on his bed, could smell the stench
of puke and shit, could hear his father saying, “You’ll need to clean this up,
Billy.”  It was as if it were happening all over again.  Wrapping the cat up in
the sheet.  Taking it outside.  Digging a grave, while his father watched him,
a mug of coffee in his hand.  Stripping his bed.  Changing his clothes.  What
was there to talk about?  The cat was dead, killed by his father.  Rosie was
still alive – but for how long?
 “Will?” Henry said.  “I think we should go in my office and talk about what’s
going on.”
William exploded, and it caught Henry off-guard.  He shoved himself backwards,
into Henry, so that Henry missed a step, and then he wheeled around and
launched himself at him, his arms and legs flailing and his hands balled into
fists.  Silence descended upon the gym, as the children watched in horror as
William attacked Henry, pushing him backwards, pounding against his middle and
chest.  At first William was shouting – it sounded as if he were telling Henry
not to touch him – but then it was just mindless screaming as William pummeled
Henry with his fists.  Henry reacted instinctively, from his years of training
in the ‘Fleet, and moved forward into William, checking him, and then Henry
wrapped his arms around William, spinning him around, crossing his arms against
his chest and then holding him there, letting William struggle against him, his
voice hoarse from screaming and his face wet with tears.
Henry said, “Dmitri, go get your grandfather, he’s outside. Matt and Rosie,
gather up the little ones and sit them on the bench.”
Dmitri nodded, his eyes wide, and took off running.  Rosie calmly led Matt and
together they got all the kids, even the big ones, to sit on the gym benches
against the wall.  Rosie walked towards Henry, who was still holding William.
“Rosie, stay with Matt,” Henry said.
William saw Rosie coming and screamed, “Get away from me!  Get away from me!  I
hate you!  I hate you, Rosie!” and then he collapsed into sobs, his body
shaking.
Martin Shugak ran in, followed by Dmitri, and immediately calmed himself down –
he’d dealt with William’s rages before.  He walked up to Henry and said, “I’ll
take him.  He’ll cry himself to sleep now.  I’ve got his medication in the
car.” 
“Are you sure, Marty?” Henry asked.
“Yes,” Mr Shugak replied.  “William.  Henry’s going to let you go.  Come on to
me.”
William felt Henry loosen his hold, and he sank to the floor.  “Come here,
William,” Martin Shugak said quietly, and he gathered William in his arms and
picked him up.  He turned to Rosie and said, “He didn’t mean it, Rosie.  He’ll
be all right tomorrow.”
Rosie nodded, but she didn’t say anything.  William didn’t look at her; he just
turned his face into Mr S’s shirt. 
“I didn’t want him to touch me,” William said.  “It hurts.”
“I know,” Mr S said.  “I’ll take you home.”
William started to cry again.  “No,” he whimpered.  “I don’t want to go home. 
I don’t want to.”
Mr S carried William to the air car, and Henry followed.  “It’s all right,
William,” Mr S said, setting William down on the back seat.  “Mrs S is still
there.  We’ll get you into bed.”
Henry said, “Martin, you have to do something.”
Mr S stood there, his hand resting on the car door, and he said, “What would
you like me to do?  No court is going to take the boy away from his father.”
“But the man is hurting him,” Henry protested.  “Systematically hurting him.”
“There’s no evidence,” Martin Shugak said.  “And when there is evidence, it
disappears.”  He bent down to William, who had fallen asleep, and stroked his
hair.  “He still allows us to be in William’s life.  It’s the best that we can
hope for.  We try to do what we can.  He’s leaving again in a few weeks.”
“I’m taking this to the tribal council,” Henry said.  “The boy is her son.  He
belongs to the tribe.  There are laws in place.  Someone has to do something.”
Mr S shut the door.  “The tribe can’t fight the Federation, Henry,” he said. 
“No one can.  Just leave it be.”
Henry said nothing, and Martin Shugak got into the air car and drove away. 
Neither one of them saw Rosie standing in the doorway of the gym, watching.
***** Chapter 51 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will has trouble -- still -- with food and has his first CBT session
     with Deanna.
Chapter Notes
     The main focus of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy is to remove the
     false assumptions and negative structuring that occurred after the
     traumatic events and replace these with compassion for one's self and
     mindfulness -- in other words, a "reset" of the patient's emotional
     life.
 
Chapter Fifty-One
 
 
 
 
 
            When I woke again, Jean-Luc was already gone, and da Costa was
standing beside me, saying something about my schedule and that Guinan had
already left my breakfast.  I sat up, slowly, because I remembered that my head
had been hurting, but there didn’t seem to be any vestigial pain.  My ribs were
sore a bit, and I must have been sleeping on my arm again, because it was
tight.  Even though the medication they’d given me hadn’t knocked me out
completely – I’d been mostly awake when Jean-Luc had come back to bed – I still
felt groggy and disoriented.
            “Let me get you to the shower,” da Costa was saying to me.  “You
can have your breakfast afterwards.  It’s a cold breakfast, this morning, so it
won’t matter as much.  You’ll feel better after a shower, sir.”
            “I don’t think I want to get up,” I said, lying back down.  “I’m
really tired.”
            Da Costa said, and I heard a hint of steel in his voice – almost as
if he’d been channeling Jean-Luc –“Everyone is tired, sir.  We still do what we
have to do.”
            Well.  That put me in my place.  “All right,” I said.  “I’ll get
up.  But you’re going to have to help me.  I feel a little woozy.”
            “You don’t need my help to get up, sir,” da Costa said.  “Your
clothes and linens are already in the head.”
            I looked at him.  His face was wearing the same exact neutral
expression Jean-Luc had when he was supremely pissed off.  “You’ve been taking
lessons from the Captain?” I asked.  “He’s giving tutorials to the junior
staff, now?”  I sat up, and swung my legs over the side of the bed, and took a
deep breath to control the wooziness.  “What did I do to piss you off?” I
asked.  “You weren’t even here last night.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            It was going to be a long day.
 
 
 
            I was dressed and showered, and was back in my room, looking at
what I’d said I’d eat for breakfast.  There was a cup of coffee –
decaffeinated, unfortunately – and a bowl of yoghurt, fruit, and granola, and
some sort of a muffin, I wasn’t sure what kind.  The problem, of course, with
ordering your breakfast a day or two days ahead of time, is that there’s no
guarantee that will be what you want to eat when you get it.  There was nothing
wrong with it.  But my stomach kept remembering the nausea of last night, and
so I was more or less moving the spoon around, rather than eating anything. 
I’d taken a couple sips of water, and a couple sips of the coffee, at least. 
I’d glanced at my padd, and saw I wasn’t scheduled to receive fluids this
morning, and I knew – I knew – that meant that it was important for me to
finish the water and eat some of what was there.
            “Good morning, Will,” Deanna said as she entered.  “How are you
feeling this morning?”
            I glanced up at her.  Despite her obvious attempt to be cheery, she
looked exhausted.  She had dark circles under her eyes which she had valiantly
attempted to hide, and I could see the strain around her mouth. 
            “I’m okay,” I said.  Shit.  Six weeks of this was going to do us
all in.  “Are you all right?”
            She smiled.  “Of course,” she said.
            “You’re not a very good liar, you know.” I managed, somehow, to
take another bite of the yoghurt.
            “That looks good, Will,” she said, ignoring me.  She pulled Jean-
Luc’s chair over and sat down.
            “Yeah?” I answered.  “You can have some, if you want.”
            She didn’t rise to the bait.  “I’ve had my breakfast, thanks,” she
said.  “It looks like you could use a warm-up on your coffee, though.  I’m
going to get some tea, so can I bring you a refill?”
            “Sure,” I said.  “It’s decaf, though.”
            “I’m positive, Will,” she said, “that it tastes the same.”
            “You,” I replied, “are not a coffee drinker.  It doesn’t.”
            Once again she ignored me.  “Three creams, right?” she asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            I watched her leave.  “I guess,” I said, “I’m on everyone’s bad
list this morning.”
            Da Costa said nothing, and Deanna returned with two mugs.  “Here
you go, Will,” she said, handing me the coffee.  “I thought we’d work on some
visualisation this morning.”
            I looked at the coffee, but I didn’t drink it.  “Of what?” I asked.
            “Will.”  She set her mug on the night table and sat back down.  “I
know you’re tired this morning, so let’s start with just a relaxation exercise,
okay?”
            I sighed, and pushed my breakfast away.  “Maybe, Mr da Costa,” I
said, “you can dispose of this for me?”
            “You’re not going to eat anymore, Will?” Deanna asked.
            I shrugged and forced myself to take a sip of the coffee.  “My
stomach’s still bothering me,” I said.
            Da Costa took my tray, and said, “I’ll let Dr Crusher know.”
            “Let’s work on relaxation, then.  Maybe you’ll feel a little
better,” Deanna said.
            I looked at her, trying to figure out if she was patronising me. 
“Okay,” I said.
            She took me through the series of breathing exercises, and then we
went through a basic relaxation exercise, the one she usually did, where she
was placing me in my body and having me relax each group of muscles. 
            “Good,” she said, using her “therapist’s” voice.  “You’re doing
fine, Will.  Let’s talk a little bit, about what I’d like you to do next.”
            I opened my eyes.  The door was open about halfway and I could see
da Costa speaking to Beverly.
            “Will,” Deanna said.  “I’d like you to pay attention, please.”
            I shifted uncomfortably in my seat.  “I think,” I said, “that Mr da
Costa is pissed off at me this morning.”
            “Will,” Deanna repeated.  She stood up, and closed the door.  “Now
do I have your attention?”
            “Yeah,” I said.  But he was telling Beverly I wasn’t eating.  I
sighed.  “What do you want me to do?”
            “We’ve worked on your safe space,” Deanna said, “and you’ve used it
quite effectively.  What I’d like you to do is to create a safe space for
yourself on this ship – somewhere you can go, when you’re feeling unsafe, or
when you’re feeling anxious about one of us.  I’d like you to take a few
minutes and think about places where you feel safe here, places you associate
with good things, with being happy, with being relaxed.  Can you do that for me
now?”
            “You mean, like my quarters?” I asked.
            “Do you feel safe in your quarters?” she replied.  “I want you to
think of a few places, Will.”
            “Okay,” I said.  It didn’t really make much sense to me.  The ship
was either safe – when we were doing routine missions – or unsafe, when we were
being attacked or the ones doing the attacking.  If we were in the latter,
there was no place on the ship that was particularly safe – and my place was on
the battle bridge.  When it was the former, it could be anywhere – my quarters,
the observation lounge, Ten Forward, one of the practise rooms, the Arboretum,
the holodecks….
            Oh.  Well, the holodecks were out.  And maybe my quarters were too,
because I’d tried to kill myself there.  Certainly there were times when I
didn’t feel safe here, in sickbay – last night being a prime example of that. 
Deanna was quiet, working on her padd, giving me space to think.  Maybe Jean-
Luc’s quarters – the Arboretum – the observation lounge.
            “Okay,” I said again.  “I’ve picked a couple places.”
            “Good.  Now I’d like you to choose one, and we’re going to work on
visualising it, each piece of it until it becomes whole in your mind.  Just go
over it, Will, making sure you visit every part of it.”
            I thought about the Arboretum, opening the doors and following the
different paths, the trees, the plants, the pond, settling my mind’s eye on the
benches, the different stone structures, the light, the smells.
            “Now I want you to add a layer of protection to it,” Deanna said. 
“Think about what you could wrap around it, to keep it safe, to make sure that
there’s no one there when you want to use it, to make sure that no one can come
in except you, or someone safe that you might want to let in at some time.”
            I remembered Dr McBride’s polymer wall, see-through but protective,
and I wrapped that around the Arboretum.
            “Now I want you to find a comfortable place,” Deanna instructed,
“and I want you to lie down, and just concentrate on your breathing.”
            I wandered back over to the pond, and lay down on the small grassy
slope. 
            “That’s right, Will, just breathe.  Good.  Strong, deep breaths. 
This is the place you can go to on this ship, Will.  It’s right here, whenever
you need it.  You don’t need anyone’s permission to go here.  And no one will
ever be in here without your permission.  You are completely safe and relaxed
here.  There’s nothing here to frighten you, or to worry you.  Just enjoy
feeling calm and relaxed.”  
            She talked me through relaxing my muscles again, and concentrating
on my breathing.
            “You’re doing fine, Will,” Deanna said.  “Now I want you to check
everything in your safe space, making sure that it’s exactly the way you need
it.”  She paused, giving me time to stand up and look around me, remembering
the Arboretum with its polymer wall in my mind.  “Have you got it memorised
now?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Now leave your safe space, and come back to the present with me.”
            I opened my eyes, adjusting to the light.  I yawned.
            Deanna smiled.  “I know, Will,” she said.  “You’ll be able to rest
in the hyperbaric chamber.”
            “I’ll need it after PT,” I said, standing up and stretching.
            “You aren’t going to drink your coffee?” Deanna asked.
            I took a few more sips.  There was a knock on the door, and Beverly
entered.
            “I’m sorry to interrupt you,” she said, “but I’d like to speak to
the Commander for a moment.”
            “It’s no problem, Beverly,” Deanna said, rising.  “We’re finished. 
He’s ready for Mr da Costa.”  She turned to me.  “I’ll see you this afternoon,
Will,” she reminded me.  “Fourteen hundred hours, in my office.”
            “Okay,” I said.  I glanced at my padd, and saw that I’d been
scheduled for my first CBT session with Deanna at that time.  Something about
what she’d gone over with me yesterday, affect management and goal setting. 
Whatever.
            Deanna left, pulling the door, and then I was alone with Beverly,
who also seemed to be pissed off with me.
            “I drank most of my coffee,” I said, “and half the water.”
            “Mr da Costa tells me your stomach still hurts,” Beverly said,
ignoring me, “which is why you didn’t eat.”  She glanced at the water and
coffee on my night table.  “You’re not scheduled for fluid replacement until
tomorrow.”
            “I know,” I said.  “The water makes me want to throw up.”
            “And yet,” Beverly said, “I could count on one hand the actual
number of times you have, Commander.”
            “But – “ I sat down.  There wasn’t really anything I could say. 
Beverly was determined to be angry with me, and there didn’t seem to be much I
could do about it.
            “You are,” she said, “scheduled for a protein shake after rehab. 
You need to drink it.  And you need to finish the water, or you won’t be going
to rehab, you’ll be going back into the biobed.  Do you understand me,
Commander?”
            “Sir,” I said.
            “Non-compliance, Mr Riker,” Beverly said, “will not be tolerated. 
Do you understand?”
            “Aye, sir,” I said, “but – “
            “There is nothing wrong with your stomach, Commander.  Your pain is
somatic.  Drink the water, now, or a report on your continued non-compliance
will be filed to Dr McBride and the Captain.”
            “I don’t even understand what that means,” I said.  I picked up the
cup of water.  My head was starting to hurt again.
            “Bullshit,” Beverly said.  “You know perfectly well what it
means.”  She turned to da Costa, who’d just entered the room, and said, “He’s
not going anywhere until he drinks the water.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said, and Beverly left.
            I looked at the water, which was just sitting there.  “My head
hurts,” I said, “but I suppose that’s somatic, too.”  I drank the water,
forcing myself to swallow it, feeling it land in my stomach like liquid rock. 
I tried to quell the rise of nausea.
            “Let me walk you to rehab, Commander,” da Costa said.
 
 
           
            Today rehab was slow-going and hard work.  I was tired, my head was
still hurting, and I wasn’t able to retain my focus that well on what Jai was
trying to get me to do.  It wasn’t that I couldn’t do it – I could pedal the
stationary bike and go up and down the stairs, but it was hard to remember how
many sets and how many times he wanted me to do things, and I was having issues
with my balance.
            Finally Jai cut it short, and he sat me down to cool off.  Da Costa
brought over the infamous protein shake, and I sighed as I took it.
            “Couldn’t I drink this after the hyperbaric chamber?” I asked. 
“The thought of just laying there with this in my gut….” I trailed off.
            “My orders,” da Costa said, “were to watch you drink the shake.”
            Jai wandered over.
            “What’s the matter, Will?” he asked.
            “Commander Riker,” da Costa said tersely, “is having issues with
non-compliance where food and drink are concerned.”
            “I thought,” Jai said to me, “that Guinan was working with you on
that, Will.”
            “She is,” I answered.  I took a few sips of the shake and felt my
stomach clench.  “Sometimes I’m okay.  Last night I didn’t have a problem with
dinner at all.  This morning all I have to do is look at something and my
stomach hurts.”
            “Maybe we’re going about this the wrong way,” Jai said.  “It’s pain
you’re talking about?  Or nausea?  Or both?”
            “Both,” I said.  “Pain first, then nausea.”
            “Let me do a little research into this, Mr da Costa,” Jai said.  “I
can’t believe this is an issue of non-compliance.  I know you’ve been
struggling to maintain the program because of your health issues, Will, but I
was under the impression you were onboard.”
            I said, “I’m trying to be onboard.”
            “Commander Riker is used to having his own way,” da Costa said. 
“He doesn’t much care for being told no.  The issues are complex, Lieutenant.”
            “I am your superior officer, Mr da Costa,” I said angrily.  “I
don’t know that I appreciate your speaking about me in this way.  Used to my
own way.  What the hell does that mean?  Because if it means I’m used to
running this ship, you’re damned right I am.  It’s my job, and I paid my dues
to be here to do it.”
            “And I am speaking as your therapist, Commander,” da Costa replied
steadily.  “You may be able to manipulate Lt Patel, but you’ll have to try
harder than this to manipulate me.  You still have to drink the shake.”
            “Nevertheless, Mr da Costa,” Jai said, calmly, “it won’t hurt for
me to do a little research from my end into this.  There may be something that
I can do from the physical therapy standpoint to help alleviate some of his
symptoms, whether they’re physical or somatic.  That’s all I meant.”  He looked
at me.  “And Mr da Costa is right, Will.  You need to drink the shake.  You’re
not going to get better if you continue to drop weight the way you have.  After
all,” he said, and he smiled at me, “I’ve got you on my schedule for a little
practise two nights from now, and I’d like you to be well enough to be there. 
We’re having some issues with the latest set, and you’re the only one who can
help us.”
            “I’m being allowed to rehearse again?” I asked.  I took another sip
of the shake.
            “You’ve got recreation scheduled every evening,” Jai said.  “The
night after tomorrow you’re scheduled back with us.”
            “I don’t know that I’m in shape enough to play anything,” I said.
            “We could sure use you as our bandleader, though,” Jai said.  “And
you’ve finished the drink, Will.  Redirection and distraction sometimes work,
Mr da Costa.”
 Jai smiled and put his hand on da Costa’s arm, to mitigate what he was saying,
and I looked, surprised, at the cup.  He was right, I had finished it.  I
handed the cup to Jai and stood up. 
“I’m looking forward to that,” I said.  “Come on, Mr da Costa.  You’ve still
got to walk me to the hyperbaric chamber.”
 
 
 
The session in the hyperbaric chamber was actually a welcome relief from
accompanying a seemingly surly Mr da Costa to Deck Eight.  He was too busy
programming the chamber to follow me into the head and the dressing room, so
the med tech, Joona Poijula stayed with me while I changed into the loose
pyjamas that had been left for me. 
“Do you want the same music program, Commander?” da Costa asked.
“Please,” I said.
I entered the chamber to the opening of the Piano Sonata 11 in A major and it
seemed as if it were only seconds later that da Costa was waking me.
“Back to Deck Twelve?” I asked.
“Aye, sir,” da Costa replied.  “PT for your arms, sir.”
“I can understand,” I said as we walked down the empty corridor to the turbo
lift, “why Dr McBride programmed my lunch and my nap.”
Da Costa grinned, suddenly.  “I’ll be happy to read you that story, sir,” he
said.
I guessed all was right in the universe again.
 
 
Guinan was waiting for me in my room when we returned from PT.  My arms were
sore but in a good way, and the sleep in the hyperbaric chamber seemed to have
done me some good, because I was able to focus more on what Jai was asking me
to do, even though PT for my arms and wrists was more complex than the cardio
rehab.  I was able to remember his instructions, for example, and I was able to
keep up with the sets and numbers better.  Overall, I was feeling a little bit
pleased that the day, which had promised to be long and tedious, wasn’t going
to be that bad.
“Hey, Guinan,” I said as I walked into my room.
Guinan smiled.  “Hey yourself,” she replied.  “I’ve brought your lunch.  And we
need to talk about your supper and breakfast tomorrow.”
“Okay,” I said. 
I’d forgotten (again) what I’d ordered, so it was a pleasant surprise to see
that I’d ordered a simple cheese omelet.  She’d given me mint tea to drink with
it, and a version of a biscuit that she’d told me her grandmother used to make.
“You had some trouble this morning,” Guinan said.
“I had a bad night,” I answered. 
“You seem to keep having those,” she remarked.  “I’m tempted to give you warm
milk for your bedtime.”
“Please don’t,” I said.  “I don’t think I could face milk, warm or otherwise.”
“You have it in your coffee,” Guinan said.
“That’s different.”  Her omelet was fluffy and the right temperature, and I
found I was actually enjoying it.
“So any suggestions for tonight?” she asked.
I shrugged.  “The problem is,” I said, “that because, as I’ve so recently been
reminded, my stomach symptoms are somatic –“ and I didn’t glance at da Costa,
who was standing in his usual post –“I don’t seem to have any conscious
awareness of them – and of course they don’t medically exist, so….”
Guinan didn’t say anything for a moment.  “It seems to me,” she said, “that
when we’ve had success – no triggers and you ate most of your meal, it was
small and light.  So that should be the way to go.”
“I guess,” I said.  “I seem to be able to eat vegetables okay.”
“Maybe a light vegetable soup for tonight, then?” she asked.  “That shouldn’t
bother your tummy, not if I serve it with those biscuits you seem to like.”
I rolled my eyes at her.  “Even though I have been accused of acting as if I’m
four,” I said, “I’m not.”
She grinned.  “We’ll try that, then,” she said.  “No yoghurt for breakfast
tomorrow.  Any other ideas?  Do you eat oatmeal?”
“Yeah,” I said, “if it’s got raisins and cinnamon.”
“So we’ll try that,” she said, standing.  “And I’ll continue to give you your
mint tea, Will.  Mint –particularly peppermint – is very good for upset
tummies.”
“Guinan – “ I said.
“I’m going, Will.  You don’t have to throw anything.”  She grinned at me again,
and walked out the door.
I finished most of my lunch, and da Costa escorted me to the head so I could
wash up.
“Into bed, Commander,” he said.
“I’m not really sleepy,” I said as I pulled off my shoes.
“I thought you said you were tired,” da Costa reminded me.
“I am,” I said.  “I’m just not sleepy.”  I got into the bed and slid underneath
the covers.  “Where’s the captain?” I asked.  “He usually shows up around now.”
“Perhaps he’s busy,” da Costa said.
I was not going to be irritated.  “Maybe I could play one of Deanna’s games,” I
said.  “They’re kind of mind-numbing.”
“You could practise your visualisation from this morning,” da Costa suggested. 
“Or I could read you a story.”
“Oh, shut up, da Costa,” I said.  “I’ll just close my eyes.”
I fell asleep.
 
 
 
 
I didn’t remember dreaming, when I fell asleep, but I woke on Jean-Luc’s side
of the bed, realising that I’d expected him to be there, and he wasn’t.  I sat
up and da Costa said,
“I was just about to wake you, sir.  You have your session with Counsellor Troi
in fifteen minutes.”
“The captain never came by?” I said.
“No, sir,” da Costa replied.  “You have time to take another shower if you want
to, sir.”
I realised that I was drenched with sweat.  “Do I have a change of clothes?” I
asked.  I stood up, but I’d done so too fast, and I felt the wooziness return. 
“I’ve got you, sir,” da Costa said.  He steadied me and gave me a few seconds
to orient myself and catch my breath.  “I’m worried you’re dehydrated again,
sir.  I’m going to ask Lt Ogawa to check you.”
“I’m okay now,” I said.  “I just stood up too fast.”  I realised I was
shaking.  “It’s cold,” I said.
“I’m going to walk you to the shower, sir.”  Da Costa kept his hand on my arm,
and he guided me out the door and into the head.  “Djani,” he called.  “Can you
stay with the Commander for a moment?”
Djani Tekka – who had to be one of the nicest guys on the whole ship – grinned
and came right over.  “Of course, Joao,” he said.
He had the most musical voice I’d ever heard.  I’d been trying to get him to
sing with us, but he was too shy.  “Da Costa thought I should take a shower,” I
said, “and I’d like to, but I don’t know if I have any clean clothes.”
“You do, Commander,” Djani answered.  “I’ll fetch them for you when Joao comes
back.  Mr Stoch recommended we get you a dresser and a table, sir, and that’s
on schedule for this afternoon when you’re in treatment.”
“I’d sort of hoped I could achieve day patient status,” I said.  I stepped into
the shower and handed Djani my clothes.  It felt good to just stand there under
the hot water and let it warm me up.  I could feel some of the tension leaving
my neck and shoulders.
“You’re not well enough yet, sir,” Djani said.  “Too many medical issues to
contend with.”
“I know,” I answered.  I shut the shower off and said, “Can you hand me the
towel?”
As I was drying off I heard da Costa come in.  “I’ve got your clothes,
Commander,” he said, and he handed me my shorts and trousers.
“Thanks.”  I dressed and stepped out of the shower.
“Do you feel better now?” he asked.
I nodded, and finished dressing, then quickly combed my hair and brushed my
teeth.  “I don’t,” I said, “want to keep Deanna waiting.”
Da Costa walked me back to my room, where Ogawa was waiting for me, and she
checked my vital signs.  I bent over to put my shoes on, and felt the wooziness
return; immediately both da Costa and Ogawa were beside me.
“I’m all right,” I said.  “Just a bit of dizziness.”
“What’s his blood pressure?” da Costa asked.
“It’s a little low,” Ogawa said.  “I’ll let Dr Crusher know.  Wait here.”
I finished putting my shoes on and stood up.  “We're supposed to be going to
Deck Eight now,” I said. 
“Sir,” da Costa replied.  “We need to wait for permission from Dr Crusher. 
Your dizziness, your tiredness, and low blood pressure could all indicate that
you’re dehydrated again.”
“Well, give me some of Guinan’s mint tea then,” I said.  “I’m sure it’s
programmed.  I’ll drink that.”
Beverly appeared in the doorway.  “Just take a sample, Alyssa,” she said.  “I’m
just going to check your blood, Commander,” she said to me. 
Alyssa took some blood, and she and Beverly disappeared. 
“I should contact Dr McBride,” da Costa said.  “If you’re not that dehydrated,
we shouldn’t cancel CBT.”
He called for Djani to come sit with me.  I sat back down.
“I never seem to be able to get through one day without some sort of a fucking
crisis,” I said.
“Perhaps you should try one of your visualisations, Commander,” Djani said.
“Shit,” I answered, “not you, too.”
Da Costa came back into the room, holding a cup of something.  “Here,” he said,
“Dr Crusher wants you to drink this, sir.  It should restore the electrolyte
balance.”
“It’s not orange-flavoured, right?” I asked, taking the cup.
Da Costa sighed.  “No, sir,” he answered.
It was grape, and it was disgusting, slightly sweet, with an aftertaste, but I
drank it.  “I’m cleared to go, then?” I asked.
“Sir,” da Costa replied, taking the cup and disposing of it.  “We’re not going
to walk you to Deck Eight.  We’ll transport you from here to Counsellor Troi’s
office.  She’ll be there waiting for you, and she’ll comm. me when it’s time
for you to walk to Dr McBride’s office.”
“Okay,” I said. 
I followed him out into sickbay and waited to be transported to Deanna’s
office.  It was a little strange, since I hadn’t used the transporter in maybe
three weeks.  I was dizzy again when I arrived in Deanna’s office, but she was
right there, as da Costa had said she would be, and she steadied me and led me
to her sofa.
“Joao said you’d asked for some of Guinan’s mint tea,” Deanna said.  “I
contacted Guinan, and she’s programmed it into the replicator.  I’ll get you a
cup.  Here, sit down slowly, Will.”
“This is beginning to irritate me,” I said.  “I’m just a little dizzy, that’s
all.”
“Oh, Will,” Deanna said, and walked to the replicator.  She came back with the
tea, and then sat down across from me, her own mug in front of her.  “We’re
just going to do some preliminary work today, Will,” she said.  “First off,”
and she pushed the padd towards me, “we need to set some goals for your
treatment, and then we need to set a goal for this week.”
I took the padd.  “I thought the goal was to cure me,” I said.  I was still
feeling pretty irritated.
“Heal you,” Deanna said, “not cure you.  There’s no cure for this disorder,
Will.  We can help you heal, restore your equilibrium, remove most of the
symptoms, and give you the tools you need to manage the disorder now, and in
the future, whenever other events occur.”
“Are you saying I’m permanently disabled, then?” I asked.
“No,” Deanna said, drawing out the word the way she did.  “The syndrome – and
it’s really a syndrome, not a disorder – can be managed and controlled to the
point where it will no longer intrude in your life.  However – it’s the same
thing as if you’d done some injury to your back, or your leg.  In the future,
something may happen to aggravate the old injury – another traumatic event.  A
firefight, for example, with the Cardassians; an away mission that goes wrong;
you lose a team member.  You will be susceptible to symptoms – but you’ll have
the skills and the tools to recognise the patterns of illness and to
reintegrate healing.”
“There will still be triggers, then,” I said.  “And I’ll have to be aware of
them?  Like the fucking orange juice?”
“Language, Will,” Deanna said.  “We will help you deactivate these triggers,
Will.  You may never like orange juice, but it won’t cause you to dissociate. 
Stressful experiences may cause new triggers, however.  There’s still so much
that Dr McBride is working on.  For example, he receives journals from a select
group of former patients in one study he’s doing – Joao’s brother is one of
them – to follow instances of stress and how the illness manifests itself in
other ways.”
“So I’m permanently disabled,” I repeated.  “I’ll always be a question mark, a
loose cannon.  Will Riker be able to cope with this mission, or will it send
him back to sickbay?  I can’t function as first officer if there are going to
be those questions about my ability, Deanna.”
“Neither Dr McBride nor I believe that to be the case, Will.  No one has
suggested that the captain give up his captaincy because he has a mechanical
heart.”  She paused for a moment, and then said, “Why don’t you let me guide
you through a relaxation exercise.  Then we can begin our work.”
“I don’t want to go through another relaxation exercise,” I said.  “Just show
me what it is you want me to do.”
“Will,” Deanna said.  “Listen to me.  You’re feeling angry and upset.  These
feelings need to be dealt with now, before we go on.  I’ll put on some quiet
music.  You drink your tea.  You can tell me how rehab went.  We’ll come back
to this.”
“I just don’t understand,” I said, “why I should put myself – and everyone
around me, clearly – through six weeks of hell if I’m not going to be cured. 
If I’m not going to be able to function as first officer, I should be invalided
out, and sent back to San Francisco.”
Deanna put on one of her tracks I’d heard her use before, with other “clients,”
and returned to her chair with a refill of her tea.  She took my hands and
said, “William.  You are catastrophising.  Dr McBride has told you he has a
high success rate, and he does.  The process works – but it’s a process, Will,
not a hypo spray.  There’s no vaccine, no magic meds, no magic wand.  You may
always be susceptible, Will – but some people are susceptible to developing
allergies.”
“There is,” I said, “some difference between a runny nose and attempting
suicide as a response to trauma.”
“Your suicide attempt was a response to a cascade of untreated symptoms.  It
was a response to old trauma – not new.  Did you attempt suicide after the
Borg?  No, of course you didn’t.”
I sighed.  It was clear that I wasn’t going to get anywhere with this
conversation – and I didn’t quite know whether it was because I wasn’t
understanding something or because Deanna wasn’t understanding me.  If I drank
the tea and calmed myself down, we could move forward – otherwise, the
afternoon would just drag on.
“Okay,” I said.  I took a couple sips of the tea.  My head was starting to hurt
again.
“Let’s try to calm you down a bit,” Deanna said, and she took me through the
basic breathing and muscle relaxing exercise.  “If you’ll look at your padd,
Will, you’ll see I’ve got a questionnaire for you to fill out.  Just answer it
as honestly as you can and then send it to me.”
I resisted rolling my eyes and looked down at the questionnaire.  There were
only ten questions, but they were obnoxious and simplistic, and went the gamut
from “I am angry about the event(s) which caused my PTSD” to “I am always
wondering why this happened to me.”  I closed my eyes briefly, because what I
felt like doing was hurling the padd across the room.
“You are finding the questions intrusive, I know, Will,” Deanna said softly,
“but there is a therapeutic purpose to answering them.  Just keep breathing and
answer as best you can.”
Yes, I am happy about the events that caused my PTSD.  I answered the
questions, trying not to think about them at all, just circling whatever came
first. 
“We’re going to restructure your emotions, Will – reset them, if you like. 
When you take this questionnaire again, at the end of the program, you should
be able to see some real progress.  In the meantime, let’s talk about one small
goal that we can set for this week.  If you could work on one problem that
you’re experiencing now, what would it be?”
I put the padd down.  “Such as?” I asked.
“What’s bothering you the most right now?”
I thought about it.  My head hurt, my stomach made it impossible for me to eat,
everyone was on my case all the time….I was tired but I couldn’t sleep.
“I keep waking up in the middle of the night,” I said.  “I don’t think I’ve
slept through the night more than once or twice since everything started.”
“You mean, going back to your original holodeck injury?”
“Yeah.” I nodded.  “Last week, the first night I spent outside of the ICU, I
slept through.  And the second night I spent with Jean-Luc I slept.  I can’t
remember when I slept through the night before that.  I had the night terrors
almost every night.”
“So your goal would be to sleep through the night at least once this week?”
Deanna asked.
“Yes,” I said.  “The medication Beverly and Dr Sandoval keep giving me is
supposed to knock me out, but it doesn’t.”
“We’ll set that as your goal for this week, then,” Deanna agreed.  “I’ll be
reviewing this with Dr McBride and Beverly.  When I see you tomorrow for your
session with me, I should be able to offer some suggestions that you can try.” 
She took my hand again.  “I know you feel as if you’re getting nowhere, Will,”
she said.  “But you are on schedule.  You’re doing fine.”  She let go of me,
and commed da Costa.  “Troi to da Costa.  Commander Riker is ready for his
session with Dr McBride.”
She stood up, and took my empty cup and her mug, and disposed of them.  “Joao
will be here in a few minutes, Will,” she said.  “Why don’t you just rest until
then?”
“Sure,” I said.  I didn’t have the energy to argue with her anymore.  I closed
my eyes, and waited for da Costa.
***** Chapter 52 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's first therapy session with Alasdair McBride.
Chapter Notes
     It bears repeating: Callousness; Incapable of human attachment; Seeks
     to create willing victims and to exert despotic control over them,
     and then justifies the abuse of the victims.
     Do not read this chapter if you are susceptible to triggers, or if
     you have been emotionally or psychologically abused.
Chapter Fifty-Two
 
 
 
 
Da Costa showed up about almost ten minutes later, and walked me down the
corridor to Dr McBride’s offices. 
“I don’t understand,” I said, hesitantly, because I was really done with
pissing people off for today, “why Deanna had to call you to escort me.  I
mean, da Costa, it’s just down the corridor.  She could have walked me
herself.”  Da Costa looked up at me, and I added, “I understand why I have to
be escorted.  I just don’t understand why you had to be brought down here, when
Deanna was right here.”
Our footsteps were echoing in the empty corridor, a sound that I was beginning
to hate.
“The captain’s orders were for me to escort you, Commander,” da Costa said.
“He doesn’t trust me with Deanna?” I asked.  I glanced at him and then I said,
“I know, he doesn’t explain his orders to you.”  I sighed.  “It just seems a
waste of time and personnel, that’s all.  I’m sure you have things you need to
be doing.  He could assign security to me, instead of you.”
“Security would not be trained in protocol in handling you, sir,” da Costa
said, “and it would take time and personnel to train them.  It’s far simpler
this way.”
“Handling me?” I repeated.  “You handle me, then?”
“Would you prefer manage, then, sir?” da Costa asked.
I glanced down at him and saw that he was smiling.
“Oh, fuck you, da Costa,” I said.
“Your default position,” da Costa replied.  “No offence taken, sir.”
“None given,” I said, grinning.
We were at Dr McBride’s office, and da Costa keyed the door open and we walked
in.  This was the first time I’d been in his office and he’d done it up nicely,
lots of plants and a fountain somewhere, the Betazoid couches arranged around a
coffee table, and two closed offices to the side.  He came out of one of them –
his own personal office, no doubt – showing absolutely no ill effects from my
having kept him from sleeping more often than not.  I wondered if he’d gone to
bed at all – I knew that Jean-Luc hadn’t slept, even though he’d been beside
me.
“William,” he said, extending his arm and then guiding me to one of the
couches.  “Joao.  We’re going to be working out here today, Will, just you and
I.  Joao will be in his office if we need him, and I expect Deanna may join us,
if she gets the chance to, later on.”
Of course da Costa had neglected to tell me he had his own office here.  I sat
down and felt the heat from the fabric begin to radiate the backs of my legs.
“What would you like to drink, Will?” McBride asked.  “I can offer you a cup of
coffee, if you’d like – although Dr Crusher insists it must be decaffeinated.”
“Water, I guess,” I said.  “I’m not really thirsty.”
“Water it is,” he replied.
“I’ll get it, Doctor,” da Costa said.  “Are you having tea?”
“Yes, Joao, my usual,” McBride answered.  He sat down across from me.
Da Costa returned almost immediately with Dr McBride’s tea and my water, and
then he disappeared into the other office.
“So you had your first session with Deanna,” McBride said.  “And you worked
this morning on creating a safe space onboard with her, yes?”
I nodded.
“And your PT sessions went well?” he asked.
“They were okay,” I said.  “Cardio was tough because I was tired.”
“But your time in the hyperbaric chamber made it easier for your second session
of PT?”
“Yes.”
“Good.  And you set a goal for this week with Deanna,” he continued.  “I expect
she’ll send me her notes as soon as she’s finished.”
“Or you could just ask me,” I said.
“I could,” he replied.  “But I think I’ll wait for Deanna’s notes.”
I didn’t respond.  I tried to remember what my schedule had listed for these
two hours with Dr McBride, whether it was memory retrieval or one of the other
therapies he’d mentioned when he went over this stuff with me – reintegration
of self or I don’t know.  I couldn’t remember the schedule saying anything
about what I was supposed to be doing.
He didn’t say anything at all, just sat there and sipped his tea.
Finally I said, “Where’s Jean-Luc?”
“We won’t be doing memory retrieval today, Will,” McBride answered.
“Okay,” I said, “but he’s on my schedule at this time, isn’t he?”
“Usually,” McBride answered.  He set his mug down.  “However, not today.  I’ve
given him the day off.”
“You’ve given him the day off?” I repeated.  “What does that mean?”
“It means, Will,” McBride said, “that you will see Jean-Luc tomorrow.”
I was still.  “You mean, you’ve given him the day off from me,” I said.
“That’s right,” McBride agreed.  “You may see him tomorrow for lunch, if he has
the time.  More likely you’ll see him after dinner tomorrow night.”
“He needed time off from me,” I said.
“Yes, he did.”
“I won’t be seeing him tonight at all,” I said.  “He won’t be spending the
night with me.”
“No, he’ll be getting a good night’s sleep in his quarters,” McBride said.
“He didn’t say anything to me about this, this morning,” I said.
“No, I asked him not to.”
I didn’t say anything, because the conversation we’d had this morning was
spinning around in my head.  He’d said he’d talked to McBride, that it had made
him feel better.  So getting the day off from me had made him feel better.
“How are you feeling right now, Will?” McBride asked. 
“Are you trying to wind me up?” I asked.
“What does that mean, Will?” McBride responded.
I shifted in my seat, realising for the first time that the couch I was seated
on was lower than the one across from me, putting me at eye level with McBride.
“You’re supposed to be my therapist,” I said, “so why are you playing games
with me?”
“How am I playing games with you, Will?” He was using that special tone of
voice again.
“The dynamic of the couch size, for example,” I said.  “If I’m supposed to
trust you, why would you be using tactics that one might use with the
Cardassians?”
McBride smiled in that genial way of his.  “You use your height and size to
control the environment around you,” he said.  “I’ve just leveled the playing
field.”
“I’m not even that big,” I protested.
“Yes, you’ve been pretty effective in reducing your body mass,” McBride
replied.  “Nevertheless, I prefer to be looking across at you, as opposed to
looking up.”
“So the couch was lowered for me,” I said.
“Yes, that’s right.”  He sipped his tea again.
“You asked Jean-Luc to withhold information from me, when you know that he
promised me that we’d be honest with each other.”  I was having a hard time
maintaining control.
“You have hardly been honest with him, Will,” McBride replied.
“What do you mean?”  I asked. 
“You have been withholding information from him, haven’t you?”
I didn’t know what to say.  “What kind of information?”
“You’ve remembered much more than you are willing to say,” McBride said. 
“That’s not true,” I said.  “I don’t remember anything.”  My head was beginning
to hurt again.
“You remember Rosie,” Dr McBride said.
It felt as if an iron bar were crashing against my head.  I closed my eyes
against it; I could feel myself start to shake and then I felt my stomach
clench and I was puking all over the floor and his damned Betazoid couch.
He put his hand on my back and just left it there as I heaved up the little I’d
taken in.  I heard da Costa come out, and McBride said,
“Everything is under control, Joao.  I have this.”
“I’ll just get a towel,” da Costa said quietly, and I heard him go to the
head.  McBride took the towel from him but didn’t move.
“You are expelling food, William,” McBride said, “not the memories.  You could
throw up every last bit of nourishment in your body, but the memories will
remain.”
I was choking and crying, and he wiped my face with the towel.
“I didn’t remember about Rosie,” I said.  “I didn’t.”
“You were running, looking for Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “You were running down
the corridor of Deck Nine.  You were looking for him in his quarters, but his
quarters kept expanding, and you couldn’t find him.  You were too late.”
Somehow I was on the floor, and I said, “I tried to find him.  I tried.  I did
try.”
“You were looking for Rosie,” McBride said, “but you couldn’t find her.  She
wasn’t home.  She wasn’t at school.  She wasn’t at practise.  She wasn’t in the
woods, or by the creek.  She hadn’t taken Patch.  You looked and looked for
her, but you couldn’t find her.”
“No,” I said, “I didn’t look hard enough, I could have found her, I didn’t try
hard enough, I should have – “
“You should have what, hen?” Alasdair McBride asked, and he had his arms
wrapped around me.
“I should have known,” I whispered, “I should have known.”
“Go ahead and cry, William,” McBride said.  “This is something you need to cry
about.”
“Why didn’t he just leave me? I didn’t deserve for him to save me.  I don’t
deserve to be here.  I don’t deserve to be alive.”
“The Federation doesn’t put juveniles to death,” McBride said.  “No one has,
not in a very long time.  You can’t give yourself a death sentence, William. 
You were only a little boy.”
I said, “But it was my fault.  He did it because of me.”
“What did he do because of you, William?”
“Please,” I said, and I was holding my head in my hands, trying to stop it from
just bursting with the pain.
“What did he do, William, because of you?”
“He took her away.”
“What did he do, William?”
“I couldn’t find her.  I tried to find her.”
“What did he do?”
I said, “He killed her.”
I felt the pressure of the hypo spray in my neck. 
***** Chapter 53 *****
Chapter Summary
     William finishes his first therapy session with McBride, and learns
     that he didn't deserve the abuse he suffered at the hands of his
     father, and that he didn't kill the boy Christian Larsen.
Chapter Notes
     The "hunt for the evil" game is a real term in psychoanalysis. As
     John Lemoncelli explains, "The paradox in the hunt for the evil game
     actually needs to be played out for you to be convinced that there is
     no evil in you. At some point in the therapeutic process, there needs
     to be a halt to this hunt for the evil. After a considerable amount
     of time, I directly ask my patients whether they are convinced that
     no evil lies within them. Many times I simply present this concept:
     You are a bright, articulate, and insightful person who has lived in
     your body for all these years and despite all your efforts you have
     found no evil. And do you know why this is? The response from my
     patients always is, 'Because there is not any evil there.' That is
     exactly the point."
 
Chapter Fifty-Three
 
 
 
 
 
If I had thought that my latest bout of hysteria would relieve me of McBride’s
therapy, or would return to my room in sickbay, I was mistaken.  Instead, he
had da Costa lift me off the floor and take me to the head, clean me up – the
fact that he had a shower in his office told me more about him – and more about
me – than I wanted to know – and deposit me right back on that Betazoid couch. 
The hypo spray he’d given me – and I’d forgotten that he was a doctor, first –
hadn’t knocked me out.  What it had done was replace my feelings of hysteria
and terror with a feeling that everything was distant from me, as if I were
watching it outside of myself.  As with everything, it seemed, this feeling
brought back the smell of disinfectant, and did nothing to ease the pain in my
head. 
Of course, he’d told me earlier in the week, when I’d come out of the ICU, that
he was going to give me an anti-psychotic.  He told me what it was, and that
I’d been on one before, and when.  He explained very matter-of-factly why I
needed to be on one, that I was having breaks with reality, that I was having
hallucinations.  That I was splitting, he said, into my two damaged selves –
me, and Billy.
Which left me, sitting here in his office, trying to cope with the memories of
what had happened to my friend Rosie and with the memories of what had happened
to me on the unit. 
They are connected, I thought.  I’m not sure why I thought that – except that
they both involved the terrible things that I had done, that I’d never been
punished for and that had been left unresolved.  The boy that I’d killed, whose
name I still couldn’t remember.  And that no one had ever found Rosie.
Then I thought, they are both connected by my own self-loathing.
I missed Jean-Luc.
“Can you tell me,” McBride asked, “how you are feeling right now?”
“My head hurts,” I said.  The warmth that was being reflected back to me by the
couch was uncomfortable, and I tried to find a better position to sit in.
“Show me,” McBride said.
“Right here,” I said, pointing to above my left eye.  “Then it radiates out.”
“Joao, can you bring up his file for me?” McBride stood up, and gave his padd
to da Costa, who’d gone back to his office after he’d gotten me settled.  He
walked over to me, and placed his hand on my head.  “Here?” he asked.
“Yes.”
“Joao, this is where the fracture was, isn’t it?” McBride kept his hand on my
head.  “It radiates out which way?  This way, or this way?” He was moving his
hand now, first up and over my forehead, then around my left side.
“To the left,” I said.
“And you’re feeling this pain, right now?  You’re not feeling it outside of
yourself?  Because your other feelings – maybe the fear you’re still
experiencing? The sadness? – you’re feeling them as if they were in front of
you, or to the side, maybe?”
It was hard to concentrate with his hands on my head.  I tried to think through
what he was asking me.  The medication was supposed to make me feel distanced
from what I was experiencing – which was just the way I was feeling, as he’d
said, my fear and the feeling that the hysteria would come surging up again
with the littlest bit of provocation, were outside of myself, as if those
feelings were floating in front of me somehow.  But the pain in my head – the
pain that da Costa said was remembered pain, from when I’d had my head smashed
into the hospital floor – that was still right there, above my eye, where it
always was.  I could still think, as best I could think these days, and I could
still see – it wasn’t yet the kind of pain that left me screaming – but it sure
as hell wasn’t floating outside of me either.
“What do you want to look up, sir?” da Costa asked.
“Show me the visual of his concussion, the one he had four weeks ago,” McBride
said.  “Do we have pictures from Providence Hospital for the skull fracture?”
“I don’t know if Commander Data was able to retrieve those files, sir,” da
Costa said.  “I’ll check.”
“Will?  Your other feelings?  Besides your head pain?” McBride took his hands
away from my head, and returned to his seat.
“They’re outside of me,” I said.  “Like you said.”
“And can you name them?” he asked.  Then he said, and he smiled, “Let me amend
that.  Can you name them and breathe at the same time?  Or do we need to do
some more breathing first?”
Of course I wasn’t breathing.  I took a breath and said, “I feel like I’m going
to lose control.”
“What’s underneath that feeling, Will?”
“I don’t know what you mean.”
“Sure you do,” he said.  “Thank you, Joao.  Ah, here it is.”
I waited for him to finish looking at his padd.
“Is it the same area?” da Costa asked.
“It is,” McBride said.  “When is he scheduled for the brain scans?”
“In two days, sir,” da Costa said, taking the padd back.
“Contact Dr Crusher and ask if we can’t move that up to tomorrow,” he said.
“Aye, sir,” da Costa replied.  He returned to his office.
“Will?” McBride returned his focus to me.  “What is the feeling that makes you
think you are going to lose control?”
“I don’t know,” I said.
“William.  I know this is hard.  I know you don’t want to talk about any of
this.  It’s almost easier, isn’t it, to just have a flashback and get it all
over with.” He paused, but I just looked at the floor.  “You will never get rid
of the symptoms, William, if we don’t go to the very beginning, to the heart of
these issues, and discuss them.  From the ages of five to fifteen, Will, you
were frozen, an automaton, living in one world of intermittent, terrifying
abuse while trying to function in the other, every day world.  But that
numbness is gone now, Will.  Everything you are feeling now, you felt then –
but you suppressed those feelings, hid them away from your conscious self
because you had to, in order to survive.  You are in the same life or death
struggle now that you were in then – only this time the way to live, Will, is
to open the door, to look at what happened, to shed healing light on it, to
discover what happened, how you responded, and why you responded in that way. 
To do this work, Will, you’ve got to talk about things you’ve never talked
about before.  To me.  To Deanna.  To Joao.  To Jean-Luc.”
I said – or maybe it was Billy who said it, “I don’t want to talk about it.”
“I know,” McBride said, and he was using the G major tone again.  “Keep
breathing, Will.  Tell me why you think you’re going to lose control.”
“My head hurts,’ I said.  “When the pain gets worse, I can’t function. 
Something always happens.  I have a flashback, or a meltdown, or something.”
“Is the pain getting worse?”
I thought for a moment.  “No,” I said.  “It’s just hovering there.”
“So it could get worse, and you could lose control.”
“Yes.”
“And the feeling underneath that, underneath the fear of losing control? Can
you name that feeling for me?”
“I still don’t understand,” I said.
“What feeling are you controlling, Will?  What feeling is so frightening to you
that you have to maintain control?  You are,” he said, “perfectly safe here.  I
am here, and Joao is here.  What’s the most terrible thing that could happen,
if you lost control again?”
I looked at him.  He was sitting there, completely at ease with himself, using
that voice that somehow seemed to be able to manipulate me into saying or doing
whatever it was that he wanted me to say or do.  When, I wondered, was the last
time I had felt good in my own damned skin, the way he was so comfortable in
his?  He didn’t have to prove anything, to compete for anything, to constantly
look over his shoulder to make sure there wasn’t some kid coming up behind him
to take his job. 
“You’re feeling it now, aren’t you, Will?” he said, and he smiled at me.
“Why don’t you just shut up?” I said.  “Why don’t you stop manipulating me? 
First you tried to make me upset over Jean-Luc, and now you’re trying to get me
to say something I don’t even understand.  Why don’t you just leave me the fuck
alone?”
“And can you name this feeling, Will?” he asked.
“Fuck you,” I said, and I stood up, trying not to sway from the sudden
dizziness.
“I can name the feeling for you, Will,” McBride said, “but I would rather you
name it yourself.”
“I said, shut up!” I could feel my fists clenching.  I heard, rather than saw,
da Costa come out of his office.
“What would you like to do, Will?  What is so frightening about this feeling
that you have to control it?  What will happen if you don’t control it, if you
just let go?”
It was anger – I was angry with McBride, because nothing bad had ever happened
to him.  Because he’d told Jean-Luc to leave me – and then had told Jean-Luc
not to tell me.  Because he was making me go through this – this stupid process
that wasn’t helping, that wasn’t working, that was only making things worse. 
Because he’d told me I could get well and I wasn’t.  Because I was going to
lose Jean-Luc if I didn’t get better, because it was my fault he was so
overworked and tired.  Because Jean-Luc was in danger and that was my fault
too.
“What’s the feeling, William?” McBride asked softly.
“Can’t you just shut the fuck up?” I said.  “It’s anger, okay?  I’m angry.”
“Are you sure this is only anger, Will?” he asked.  “Anger is a fairly
commonplace emotion, isn’t it?  A useful one, too, because it tells us that’s
something’s wrong, or isn’t working.  Are you sure you’re feeling only anger?”
I tried to focus on him, still sitting across from me, as if I hadn’t stood up
and didn’t have my fists clenched, but it was as if there were a viewscreen
that kept flickering in and out, and I kept seeing myself drifting down the
hospital corridor, clutching the sharpened stylus between my fingers.
“Is your anger so terrible that you have to keep it under control, all the
time?  It would make it pretty hard to do your job as first officer; it seems
to me, Will, if you were spending all that emotional energy not to get angry
about the smallest things.  And you’ve been a perfect first officer, haven’t
you? Are you sure it’s only anger you’re feeling?”
I could see myself, standing by the wall in the unit common room, just sort of
casually standing there, scraping the stylus into a knife right in front of
everyone.  No one had seen me, because there was nothing to see.  I was in
complete control.  What I felt had been put in the same place I put all my
other feelings.  In a box somewhere, way back where I wouldn’t have to feel it,
wouldn’t have to deal with it, wouldn’t have to let others see.
Have you ever,” McBride said, and he stood up, and came round to me, and simply
guided me back down onto the couch, “seen a baby scream in frustration when
it’s hungry?  Or when it needs something and the need isn’t being fulfilled
fast enough?”
“I guess,” I said.  “I’ve been watching Molly grow up.”  I was trying to
breathe.  “She’s the daughter of Master Chief O’Brien.”
“It’s not very pretty, is it?” he asked.  “Their faces contort, and the sound
they emit is piercing, enough to destroy anyone’s equilibrium – which is, of
course, exactly what it’s designed to do.  An infant can’t do anything for
itself, so it copes by reacting in rage, Will, to whenever its needs are
unfulfilled.  A child’s rage, Will – that’s a powerful feeling.”  He paused. 
“That’s a feeling – that primal rage – which you would have to control.  It
wouldn’t be very productive, would it, for an adult to react to frustration
with rage?”
“You’re saying the feeling underneath my fear of losing control is rage,” I
said.
“Rage is dangerous, isn’t it?  Wouldn’t you need to control it?  After all,
think of what could happen when rage surfaces, without control.”
I saw myself drifting down the corridor again, not even focusing, just
wandering into my room, opening the door to see –
“Why don’t you tell me what happened, Will, when you lost control of your
rage,” McBride said.
I said, “I killed him.  He wouldn’t leave me alone, so I killed him.”
“And how did you do that?”
“I found a stylus in the nurse’s office.  I stood in the common room and
sharpened it against the wall, right there in front of everyone and nobody
saw.  I told him I’d let him fuck me after lunch.  He was waiting for me in the
bathroom, in our room.  I kept it hidden, in my pocket.  I went into the
bathroom and he was standing there with his shorts down and I stabbed him, over
and over again, and the blood was spurting out, and it was all over me and the
floor, and he was screaming.”  I could feel myself shaking, and I could feel
the pain in my head like some thing just above my eye, but I wasn’t crying.  I
was stone.  “Then the orderly came in and pulled me off him and smashed my head
into the floor.”
“And how old were you, Will, when you killed this little boy?  Because that’s
what he was, right, a little boy?”
“He was fucking me,” I said and I felt nothing as I said it, not even the
pain.  “I wanted him to stop.”
“How old were you, Will?” McBride repeated.
“Seven,” I answered.  “I was seven.”
“And the boy?”
“I don’t know.  He was older.  Nine or ten, maybe.”
“And he was penetrating you, anally?  At night, after you’d gone to bed?”
I could feel – rage – in my stomach, coiling around.  “Yes.”
“And you let him,” McBride suggested.  “You didn’t want him to, but you let
him.”
“He threatened me,” I said.  “He said he would kill me if I told.  He said
nobody would believe me.  He said that they all knew that’s what I liked,
anyway.  That the orderly would fuck me too, if I told.”
“How did it go, then, William?  He came up to you when you were in bed, and
told you what he wanted, and threatened you?  Is that what happened?”
“He made me suck him first,” I said, and I could feel the disgust joining the
anger – the rage – in my gut.  My head was starting to pound, and I closed my
eyes against it.  “Then he wanted more.”
“He escalated the behaviour,” McBride said.  “Indeed, exactly as your father
had, didn’t he?  First by having you fellate him, and then by raping you. 
Perhaps Christian’s father had done the exact same thing as yours to him. 
After all, how else would he know the right pattern of abuse, to get compliance
from you?”
I didn’t say anything.  The boy’s name was Christian – I’d remembered as soon
as McBride said it.  I remembered what he looked like, what he sounded like. 
That he whispered, “You are so hot, baby,” to me when he fucked me.
“And it was too much, wasn’t it, William?” McBride said.  “Too much for Billy. 
He couldn’t kill his father, could he, although he must have wanted to with
every fibre of his being.  So he killed nine-year-old Christian Larsen  -- a
little boy who’d been just as badly abused as he had been – instead.  Is this
why you are so afraid of losing control, William?  Because you’re a killer,
when you lose control?  Because, William, you are just like your father when
you lose control?”
“No,” I said. 
“No, you’re not a killer?  Or no, you’re not just like your father?”
“He came after me,” I said.  “He hurt me.  He wasn’t going to stop hurting me. 
He threatened to give me to Brec, to the orderly that wanted me.  I was
defending myself.  It’s not the same.  I didn’t know,” and now I was weeping
again, “I didn’t understand.  I didn’t understand it would be like that.  I
didn’t know – it played out in my head, like in a film, but – there was so much
blood – and it’s hot, it’s hot when it comes out, and it smells – and he was
screaming, Why, why, why, like he didn’t understand….”
“And he didn’t understand,” McBride said.  “How could he?  He was just a
damaged little boy, wasn’t he?  Just like you were just a damaged little boy.”
“I never raped anyone,” I said.
“No.  You stabbed to death a nine-year-old child,” he answered.
“And I let Mittens die, and I let Rosie die,” I said.
“And you killed your mother, don’t forget,” McBride answered.
I looked up at him.  “You said my mother died from a virus.  You said I had
nothing to do with it, that she caught the virus on an away team mission.”
“That’s right,” McBride agreed.  “I did say that.”
“I don’t understand,” I said. 
“Of course you don’t,” McBride said, and he was using that gentle tone with me
again.  “Look at me, Will.  Here, give me your hands,” and he took both my
hands and held them.  “We’ve been playing a little game, Will.  It’s a game all
of my patients play with me, when they start the therapeutic process.  It’s a
game that’s part of the fabric of having been abused.  It’s such a common game,
in fact, that it’s been written about and discussed for centuries in
psychoanalytic thought.  It even has a name, Will – it’s called the Let’s hunt
for the evil game.”
I could see my hands trembling in his, could feel my shoulders shaking – and
then I felt da Costa rest his hands on my shoulders, behind me.  “I don’t
understand,” I said.
“You were told, from the time your mother died, that you deserved the treatment
you received,” McBride told me.  “If you are told something, from babyhood on
through adolescence, whether it is true or not, it becomes a permanent
statement of belief.  You are bad.  You killed your mother.  You liked being
fellated, being raped.  You deserved the beatings, the broken bones.  And then
you come to me – as with all of my patients who have been victims of such abuse
– and you tell me that if I understood how truly terrible you are – all the
horrifying things that you have done – all the evil that you have done – then I
would understand why your father treated you the way he did, and maybe – just
maybe – I could then explain it to you.  Because even though you know – in the
way that you know your eyes are blue – that you are evil, and you have done
evil, you still don’t understand why you had to be beaten, and raped, and
manipulated, and abused.  Because there is a very small part of you, William,
that says you weren’t evil, and you didn’t deserve to be treated that way.  And
no matter how hard you try to silence that voice, you can still hear it.  Do
you know why you can still hear it?”
“No,” I whispered.
“Because that is the only voice that is telling you the truth, William,”
McBride said.  “What does a two-year-old know from evil?  Two-year-olds just
are.  You never did anything in your whole childhood that caused you to deserve
the abuse that you suffered.  You were not responsible for any of it.  And yet
you play the game – the hunt for evil game – every day of your life, because
you keep hoping that you’ll find the one reason why you deserved to be raped
when you were five years old.”
“I killed a child,” I said.  “I killed that boy.  Christian Larsen.  I did
that.”
“Even if that were true, William – and it is not – your stabbing Christian
Larsen occurred when you were seven years old and on the crisis stabilisation
unit at Providence Hospital in Valdez.  You were three – or perhaps even
younger – when your father first sexually assaulted you.  You were two-and-a-
half when you witnessed the hemorrhaging of your mother that led to her death. 
You were five years old when your father raped you for the first time.  All of
that happened before you stabbed Christian Larsen, not after.  What did you do
to deserve those acts of violence, William?  By the time you were seven,
William, your father had been consistently raping you for two years.  Two
years.”
“I didn’t do anything before,” I said numbly.
“No,” McBride answered.  "You didn't do anything before.  Not when you were an
infant.  Not when you were a toddler.  Not when you were a child.  Not when you
were an adolescent.  You underwent twelve years of physical, emotional, and
sexual abuse and you never did one thing to deserve it.  You were there, in the
control of your father, who was and is an evil man, and so these things were
done to you.  It’s time, Will, to stop playing let’s hunt the evil.”
“I did evil,” I said.  “I killed Christian Larsen.  Deliberately, with
premeditation.  I brought the cat into the house when I knew what would
happen.  And I led my father right to Rosie – first by getting into a fight
over her, and then by choosing her over the cat.”
“William.  Look at me.”
I wiped my eyes and looked across at him.  What I saw there – it was like what
I saw on Jean-Luc’s face, or Deanna’s, or even Beverly’s, even though I
irritated the hell out of her.  Kindness, concern – did McBride care about me? 
I was his patient, so he had to care for me in a professional way – but there
was more than that on his face.  I felt pressure from da Costa’s hands, then,
on my shoulders, as he squeezed them, and it was almost too much for me to
take.
“Will you listen to me, now?  Can you focus on what I am going to tell you?”
McBride asked.  “I believe you are ready to hear this, now.”
I nodded, feeling the continued pressure from da Costa’s hands.
“William – Billy – “ McBride began.  “Christian Larsen is still alive.  He is
an associate professor of literature at the University of Alaska in Anchorage. 
He has written two novels, quite well-received.  You did not kill him.  It’s
true, you stabbed him, three times, but he was rushed into emergency surgery,
as you were, and he recovered.  The evil that happened on the unit was
uncovered.  The doctor and the orderlies were terminated, the program
revamped.  That Christian was sexually abusing you was discovered – Christian
admitted it himself.  He was treated for his trauma by a competent doctor,
released into therapeutic foster care, and was eventually placed with a loving
family.”
“But – “ I couldn’t think how to explain what I wanted to say.  I remembered
his blood, spurting everywhere.  The bathroom was covered in it.  I was covered
in it.  I remembered him screaming why, and then I remembered that awful
gurgling sound as he drowned in his own blood.  I remembered – I remembered
telling my father that I could grow up and kill him, because I’d already killed
someone else, and everyone would think I’d forgotten it.  I remembered my
father telling me that the boy was dead.
“I didn’t kill him?” 
“No, William,” McBride said.  “You didn’t kill him.  You assaulted him – you
hurt him – that’s true.  You did some damage, but it was repaired.  And your
attack revealed what was happening on that unit.  Christian’s life changed for
the good, as did the other children’s who were there.  Only yours didn’t change
– because your father took you home, and he refused to comply with the
treatment plan for you.  He didn’t take you to the child psychiatrist you were
supposed to be seeing, or to the specialised paediatrician.  What did he do
instead?”
“He told me that I’d killed him,” I said.  “Or he let me believe that I killed
him.  He let me think that I was bad.  That I deserved – oh, God.”  I put my
face in my hands.
“Just let the tears come, William,” McBride said.  “It’s all right for you to
cry over this.”
“All my life I thought I killed him,” I said.  “All my life.”
“There was no police report,” McBride said.  “No investigation.  No charges. 
No trial.  Because everyone understood why you attacked Christian Larsen.  The
unit was reorganised, so that it would function correctly.  The corruption and
the neglect were eliminated.  Positive outcomes.  You were just a little boy,
only seven years old.  The irony is, Will, that if you had killed Christian
Larsen, you would have been removed from your father’s care and sent to a
therapeutic facility, where you would have received the treatment you needed.”
“Everything he ever said to me was a lie,” I said.
“Yes,” McBride confirmed.  “Tell me what his lies were.”
“I didn’t kill my mother.”
“No, William.  You didn’t kill your mother.”
“She was infected by a virus that she caught on an away mission, and she died
from that illness.”
“Yes.”
“I didn’t deserve to be –“ I was about to say fucked, but that wasn’t what it
was, was it?  “I didn’t deserve to be raped.  I didn’t deserve to be forced
into sex by him.”
“No.  No child ever deserves to be sexually abused.”
“I didn’t kill Christian Larsen.  Christian Larsen is still alive.”  I couldn’t
wrap my head around it.
“Yes.  Christian Larsen is alive and successful, living in Anchorage.”  He
paused, and then said, “What are you feeling now, William?”
“I don’t know,” I said.  “I’m so confused.”
“How is the pain in your head?”
I thought for a moment.  “It’s still there,” I answered.  “But it’s not as bad
as it was.”
“Our time is up for today.” McBride stood up.  “Before Joao takes you back to
your room, Will, can you agree to do one thing for me?”
Da Costa had released my shoulders, and I stood up as well.  “What?” I asked. 
I was still feeling dizzy when I stood.
“Will you agree to stop playing hunt the evil in our sessions?” he asked me. 
“I don’t know that you’re ready to agree to stop playing the game altogether –
but will you agree to stop playing it here, with me?”
“Because I wasn’t evil?” I asked.
“Because, Will,” he answered, “you have never been evil.”
Somehow – and I didn’t understand how this could be so – it was easier for me
to breathe.  “I’ve never been evil,” I repeated, “so I don’t have to play the
game anymore.”
“No, you don’t.”
“Yes,” I said.  “I agree.”
“Good.” McBride smiled at me.  “So Joao – would you check his vitals again for
me?  We need to know whether he’s strong enough to go back to sickbay.  And,
Will – you know you’re scheduled for recreation after your dinner, don’t you?”
“Jai told me,” I said, watching da Costa go back to his office to get the
tricorder.
“How would you like a little company tonight?” McBride asked.
“You told me I wouldn’t see Jean-Luc until tomorrow,” I said.
“That’s true,” McBride answered.  He said to da Costa, “What’s his blood
pressure like?”
“It’s still on the low side,” da Costa answered, “although it’s not as low as
it was this morning.”
“And his oxygen levels?”
“Ninety-four percent.”
“Isn’t he scheduled for relaxation, before his meal?” McBride asked, looking at
the results himself.
“Aye, sir,” da Costa said. 
“See that he has that, then,” McBride ordered. 
“Aye, sir.”
“He should be transported to sickbay,” McBride said.  “I don’t want him using
anymore energy, not with his breathing the way it is.  Will you arrange that,
Joao?”
“Aye, sir,” da Costa said again, and he went into his office.
McBride returned to me.  “I’m sorry, Will,” he said.  “I didn’t mean to
interrupt our conversation.”
“You said I wouldn’t see Jean-Luc today,” I repeated, and I was so exhausted I
didn’t even feel anger at this anymore.
“Yes,” McBride said.  “I gave Jean-Luc what we call respite care.  He needed a
break, that’s all.  He was exhausted, and feeling overwhelmed.  And he was
worried that his anxiety over how you were doing was only feeding your own
anxiety.”
“He could have told me,” I said, and then I felt stupid, because I sounded like
a sullen child.
“And you would have responded to him the way you responded to me,” McBride
answered, “and that wouldn’t have done either one of you any good.”
I sighed.  “He needs to get some sleep,” I agreed, finally, “and I keep waking
him up.”
“Yes.”
I was not going to cry.  “Okay,” I said.  “I understand.”
“I knew you would, eventually,” McBride said.  “Ah, here’s Joao.  Is it all set
up?”
“Yes,” da Costa answered.  “We’ll go together.”
“Good.  So, Will,” McBride said, and he put his hand on my arm.  “You have a
friend who’s been requesting to see you for some time.  Jean-Luc and I thought
it would be a good time to let you have a visitor.  Give you a chance to take
your mind off of yourself for a while.”
That stung, a bit.  “Who?” I asked.
“This fellow Worf,” McBride answered, laughing.  “He’s been haunting sickbay,
according to Dr Crusher, every day since you were brought in.  It seemed easier
to just let him see you, so that he’ll leave Dr Crusher alone.”
I couldn’t imagine anyone “haunting” sickbay, let alone Worf.  “Am I allowed to
talk ship’s business, then?” I asked.  “Jean-Luc has been strict with me about
that.”
“I’m sure your captain has briefed Mr Worf,” McBride said.  “I will see you
tomorrow, Will.  We have a new medication for you to try, tonight.  Let’s hope
it works.”
“Okay,” I said.
“And, Will?”
“Yes?”
“If you do wake up tonight, don’t worry about sending for me.  I’m available to
you, always, if you need me.  I believe, Joao, that both Mr Stoch and Dr
Sandoval know this.”
“Yes, sir, they do,” da Costa said.
“Okay,” I said.  I wondered if he were an empath, like Deanna, because he
always seemed to know how I was feeling before I did.  I was worried about
waking up, without Jean-Luc to help me.
“Two to transport,” da Costa said into his comm. badge.
He reached out to steady me, and then I was back in sickbay, back to the
routine of shift change and the normal, everyday busy-ness of what had become
my home.
“I’ll ask Mr Stoch to work with you on your breathing, Commander,” da Costa
said.  “Do you want me to walk you to the head before I go off?”
“Please,” I said, realising that I hadn’t been in several hours.
“I’ll tell Lt Fisk about your latest vitals before I go,” da Costa continued. 
He turned away, so I could have a bit of privacy.
“Can’t I just go to bed?” I said, washing my hands.  “I’m so tired.  And I
don’t want to be this tired when Worf comes.”
“Sir,” da Costa began.  “You should be receiving your meal now.  You need to
eat.”
“I’m cross-eyed,” I complained.  I sat down in Jean-Luc’s chair and pulled my
shoes off.  “You can tell Stoch to wake me up in thirty minutes.  I’ll be okay,
then.  Please, Joao,” I said.
It was the first time I’d used his name.
Da Costa sighed.  “You win, Commander,” he said, resigned.  “You really do need
to learn to accept no for an answer.”
“You can practise no on me all day tomorrow,” I promised, getting into bed. 
“You can tell me no about all kinds of things.”  I slid under the covers, and
closed my eyes.  “You can refuse to help me out of bed, and to help me in the
shower, and to walk me to PT.”
“Sir,” da Costa said.
“You can even refuse to read me a story,” I said. 
“Mr Riker?” da Costa was right beside me.
“Yes?” I said.
“Just shut up and go to sleep,” da Costa said, and I could hear him laughing as
he shut the door.
***** Chapter 54 *****
Chapter Summary
     A day in the life of Vera Kalugin.
Chapter Notes
     This was perhaps the hardest chapter for me personally to write, as I
     know Vera Kalugin more intimately than I could ever have wanted to
     know anyone.
Chapter Fifty-Four
 
 
 
Vera Kalugin listened to the good-natured teasing occurring between her two
sons, Georgie and Pete, as she finished putting the kitchen to rights and
fixing the coffee for herself and Greg.  Greg was down to the kennels, feeding
the dogs, talking to them, scratching ears and backs, checking their paws and
noses to make sure they were all okay.  Georgie and Pete had come into the
cabin, laughing and joking over the things that boys laugh and joke about,
having given their help to Greg with the feeding.  Or such help as it was, Vera
thought wryly; her boys were good boys, kind and generous to a fault, sweet-
natured and friendly, but neither one of them would set the world on fire.  She
hoped that when they began to look around seriously for a girl to wed they
found one who valued love above comfort, or one who had drive enough for two. 
Rosie, on the other hand – even in this enlightened age, old tribal memories
die hard – Rosie should have been a boy.  Vera had hopes for Rosie that she
didn’t even acknowledge to herself, sometimes, let alone to anyone else.  All
the grit and determination that her sons lacked had been given completely to
Rosie, and it was coupled with a keen intelligence that sometimes took her
breath away.  Vera didn’t know where Rosie’s brain came from – neither she nor
Greg was stupid, but they were, on the whole, ordinary people – but Rosie’s
brain was different.  She saw the world differently.  She felt things
differently.  She understood things that went well beyond her years.
She heard the cabin door open and Greg say, “Did you ask your mother if she
needed help?”
There was the silence from the boys, and Vera smiled.  Of course they hadn’t. 
If their mother had needed help, she would have told them – they didn’t need to
ask.
“No, Dad,” Georgie said.
“I didn’t need any help,” Vera said, coming into the large space that was their
living and dining room.  “You boys go do your work.  There’ll be cake, later.”
The school had two sessions in the summer; Vera had enrolled both boys in the
first one.  This year the boys would be going to salmon camp with Greg and his
brothers, leaving Vera and Rosie to take care of the dogs.  Vera had worried
about that – Rosie was still little – but Rosie had told her that William had
offered to help.  Despite William’s frequent poor health, he was a reliable
child, and a good companion for Rosie.  He would be an asset with the dogs – he
seemed to innately understand them, and the dogs, especially his own Bet,
responded well to him.
“Okay, Ma,” Georgie answered, and Pete mumbled, “Yeah, thanks.”
They disappeared up the stairs, and Greg went into the kitchen to wash his
hands.
“Coffee’s ready,” he said.  “I’ll bring you your mug.  Sit down, Vee.”
Vera sat, listening to Greg pouring the coffee and gathering the creamer and
the sugar.  He brought it out on a tray and set it down on the old wooden table
they’d inherited from Greg’s grandfather.
“Rosie should be home soon,” Greg said. 
“Yes.” Vera stirred sugar in her coffee, then took a sip.  “She walked with
Matt tonight.  William was driven.”
“By Marty?” Greg asked.  “What’s wrong with William?  He hates being driven.” 
They’d once witnessed one of William’s infamous meltdowns when Tasya Shugak had
insisted, because his head had been hurting, that he been driven to practise. 
Vera remembered having seen one once before, when William had been a baby, back
when Bette was still alive.  She and Bette had gone out, and had left William
in the care of his father.  They’d heard him screaming as they pulled up to the
cabin.  Of course Bette had been terrified, thinking that Billy – she’d called
him her Silly Billy – was hurt.  Instead they found Kyle at the kitchen table,
working, and Billy, prostrate on the floor, shrieking.  Vera would never forget
the look that had passed between Bette and Kyle – Bette, outraged that Kyle had
done nothing, had just let the child scream for who knows how long, and Kyle
with that curiously flat expression, as if he couldn’t even hear the child’s
screams.  When Bette had asked why he hadn’t done anything to help Billy, why
he hadn’t picked him up, or held him, or even asked him what was wrong, Kyle
had responded that there was nothing wrong – he was in a temper and he could
stay that way.  The only way, Kyle had said, to cure the child of this was to
let him scream.  Bette had taken Billy in her arms and gone to put him to bed,
leaving Vera to go home, wondering just what was going on between the two of
them.  Bette had always insisted she was happy, but how could she have been
happy?  Vera didn’t know.  She hadn’t known, then, that Bette was dying; she
only knew Bette had left her career in Starfleet because of an illness.  Surely
that alone would have made anyone unhappy.
She said now, “You know he still has headaches.  That’s probably all it is.”
“Why not keep him home, then?” Greg asked, but it was a rhetorical question. 
He liked William – most people did – but it was simply easier to allow William
to do what he wanted to do.  Getting William to do something else was simply
not worth the effort.
“Here’s Rosie,” Vera said, smiling, as her youngest came in the door.  “Would
you like some cake, Rosie?  Georgie!  Pete!  Dessert.”
“What’s wrong, malenkaya?” Greg asked, holding his arms open to Rosie.
“Nothing,” Rosie answered, but she climbed into her father’s lap anyway. 
The boys came thundering down the stairs and Vera disappeared into the kitchen
to cut the pieces of the cake and give the children a little bit of milky
coffee to drink.  She heard Rosie come in behind her.
“Wash your hands,” she said to Rosie, as she set the cake tray on the table.
“Yes, Mama,” Rosie said.  She climbed up onto the stool and washed her hands in
the sink.
“Where’s William?” Vera asked, cutting the cake into sizeable portions.  “Did
he already feed Bet?”
“I fed Bet,” Rosie said, drying her hands on the towel and shoving the stool
back into its corner.
“What was wrong with William?” Vera took the children’s mugs – she’d bought
three from her cousin Nikki, who had a kiln and sold pottery in Valdez – and
poured in warm milk first and then the coffee.
“Uncle Marty told Henry he wasn’t feeling well,” Rosie said.  “William said he
was okay.  But then Henry tried to get William to talk to him.”
“Here, help me,” Vera said.  “You take the forks and the napkins.”
“Yes, Mama,” Rosie said.  “William had one of his fits.”
“Oh?” Vera said.  “Which kind of fit?”  She hadn’t remembered William having
seizures.
“You know what I mean,” Rosie said.  “Like yesterday, at baseball, when he beat
up Carl Magnusson.  Only this time he tried to beat up Henry.”
“I’m sure,” Vera said, “he didn’t get very far.”
“No,” Rosie answered.  “Henry just held him until Uncle Marty came.  Uncle
Marty took him home.  So I fed Bet.”
Vera took the cake tray and the coffees into the living room, and Rosie
followed her.  She set the food down and then sat down herself, sipping her
coffee and watching her family eat, the boys teasing each other and Rosie now. 
Greg said,
“Is everything all right?” and Vera shook her head slightly.
Rosie seemed to rally a bit, giving the boys back what they were giving her,
and Vera felt herself relax slightly.  Rosie felt entirely too much, for
someone her age – and Vera suspected that that might be partly William’s
problem as well.  She laughed as Pete started describing something that one of
the dogs had done, and she and Greg sent the children upstairs to bed and
cleaned up the kitchen together. 
“You stay down here, Vee,” Greg said.  “I’ll see the boys get into bed.”
She poured herself another cup of coffee, and sat down in the kitchen.  She
wasn’t surprised when Rosie came in and sat down across from her.
“William upset you tonight,” Vera said.
“He shouted at Henry,” Rosie said.  “He kept telling Henry not to touch him. 
It was because,” Rosie explained, “Henry put his hands on William’s shoulders. 
William doesn’t let anyone touch him, except me, sometimes.”
“I’m sure that William was having one of his headaches,” Vera answered
carefully.  “You know he hurt his head pretty bad.  It still bothers him.”
“He shouted at me, too,” Rosie said.  “He told me to go away.  He said," and
Rosie looked down at the floor, “that he hated me.”
Vera said quickly, “Rosie, baby, you know that’s not true.  You and William are
best friends.  His head was hurting.  You know he loses control sometimes. 
Auntie Tasya tried to explain it to us once, remember?  He couldn’t have hurt
Henry, Henry’s too big.  And he would never do anything to hurt you.”
“Henry says that William’s dad is hurting him,” Rosie said.
Vera drew in a breath.  “Henry said that to you?” she asked.
“No.  I followed them out to the air car.  Uncle Marty carried William to the
car.  I heard Henry say it to Uncle Marty.  Uncle Marty says there’s no
evidence.”
“Rosie, I’m not even sure you know what that means,” Vera said.
Rosie sat up and glared at her mother.  “Of course I know what it means.  I’m
not stupid, Mama.  It means that no one has any proof that Mr Riker is hurting
William.”
“This is not our business,” Vera said.  She was remembering the look on Kyle
Riker’s face six years ago when Bette had confronted him.  “It’s Uncle
Marty’s.  It may even be tribal business.  But it’s not our business.”
“How could it be tribal business?” Rosie asked.  “William’s not a member of the
tribe.  He’s a sourdough.”
Vera was silent.  She didn’t understand why Kyle Riker wanted the memory of
Bette and who Bette was so thoroughly erased from his son’s life, but she had
no desire to make things any more difficult for Marty and Tasya.  So instead
she said, “Because they live on tribal land.”
“Oh,” Rosie said.  She picked at a crumb on the table.  “Anyway, Uncle Marty’s
wrong,” she said.  “There is proof that William’s dad is hurting him.”
“What proof, Rosie?” Vera wasn’t sure she wanted to hear the answer.
“You know where the shallows are?” Rosie asked.  “We all went down to swim. 
The boys took their clothes off.”  She saw her mother’s face and rolled her
eyes.  “They did.  I didn’t.  It’s no big deal.”
“It is,” Vera said, “a very big deal.”
“Mama, listen to me,” Rosie said seriously. “Please.”
“I’m listening, angel,” Vera said automatically, and Rosie rolled her eyes
again.
“William is bruised and cut on his butt,” Rosie said.  “It’s not the first
time.  Lots of times he’s too sore to move.  And yesterday he was in so much
pain he almost couldn’t pitch.  And, Mama, he bleeds, sometimes.  I’ve seen
blood on the back of his pants.  And sometimes when I go to his house to see if
he can play, he’s sitting in the back and crying.”
“Have you told this to anyone?” Vera asked.  She was listening now.
“No,” Rosie said.  “You, now.  Mama, when I asked William where he hurt, he
said he hurt inside.  He wasn’t talking about his head at all.”
“Don’t tell anyone else,” Vera said.  “William’s father is an important man. 
And you could be mistaken, Rosie –“
Rosie said, “Mr Riker hurts William.  All the time.  It’s why William gets so
mad, and why he beat up Carl.”
Vera thought that that was probably true, and once again she was amazed at who
her daughter was.
“Rosie,” Vera said quietly, and Rosie stopped fidgeting and listened.  “You are
probably right, but you still might not know everything.  Don’t tell your
father, please.  You know Daddy.  He’ll get mad and go over there, and then
there will be trouble.  Let me talk to Uncle Marty tomorrow, all right? 
“Yes, Mama,” Rosie said, and she sounded relieved. 
Vera stood up, and hugged Rosie to her, scratching her back and then tickling
her sides until Rosie giggled.  “Go on, then, silly,” she said to Rosie. 
“Don’t worry about William.  I’ll take care of it.  Go on to bed, now.  I’ll be
up in a minute.”
“Okay,” Rosie said, and, her good nature restored, she bounced out of the
kitchen.
Vera washed her coffee cup and put it on the counter to dry.  She couldn’t get
the image of Kyle Riker’s face from that time long ago out of her mind.
 
 
 
 
That next day would play in Vera’s mind forever.  Waking in the morning beside
Greg, Greg took her in his arms and they made love, in the same gentle and
comfortable way they’d had for sixteen years, and when Vera slept for a few
minutes longer, after, Greg got up and woke the boys and told them to get ready
for school.  By the time Vera was awake enough to function, Greg was already
showered and downstairs making coffee and breakfast for all of them, and Vera
took a long bath instead, feeling warm and loved in the way one sometimes did,
in a marriage of two people who’d loved each other since the first time they’d
seen each other, in seventh grade.  She smiled at the thought of Greg in
seventh grade, with his round face and braces and a voice that hadn’t yet
changed, and yet there’d been the sudden clenching of her heart, as he’d sat
next to her in old Mrs Janklow’s class, as if her heart had recognised him even
if her eyes hadn’t.
Downstairs they all sat down at the table, all five of them, and Greg had made
hotcakes with huckleberries and honey and smoked caribou sausage, and she drank
her coffee and listened to the same conversations around the table from her
three children that she always heard, the gentle teasing of Rosie, the banter
between Georgie and Pete, the talk of dogs, of school, of salmon camp.
The boys, good-natured as always, went off to school without complaint, and
Rosie went down with Greg to the kennels.  Vera stayed behind and cleaned up
the kitchen, and then took her padd out and made her daily lists of things that
needed to be done.  Vet check for the new litter; shopping; lunch with Auntie
Raisa….talk to Marty Shugak.  When Greg came back in, it was without Rosie;
William had been there to apologise and to feed Bet, and the two of them had
decided to go over to Matt’s to play, taking Patch and Bet with them.  Greg was
down to the harbour to meet with his brothers and work on the boat; she had the
vet to go to, with the pups; the children were taken care of; all was right in
the world….
And then Rosie – beautiful, brilliant Rosie – never came home.
***** Chapter 55 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's mood deteriorates as he experiences the aftershocks from
     his therapy session with McBride.
Chapter Notes
     Curiously enough, even though it seems counter-intuitive, the patient
     undergoing intensive therapy is most at risk for suicidal ideation
     when a psychological breakthrough has occurred. The patient is faced
     with the recognition that the old methods of survival are faulty,
     flawed, or false, and yet the hope offered by the breakthrough is
     often not enough to convince the patient that a positive outcome to
     therapy could be possible. The patient's psychological state during
     this period is fragile, and great care must be taken by the therapist
     in assessing that the patient is "safe to go home" -- in other words,
     if the patient is safe enough to leave the therapist's immediate
     care.
Chapter Fifty-Five
 
 
 
Despite da Costa’s telling me that Stoch would wake me in thirty minutes, Stoch
had chosen to let me sleep, and I awoke suddenly, with the feeling that I’d
forgotten something important, like a staff meeting or something, only to
realise that I was still in sickbay – that I wasn’t anyone important anymore –
I could sleep for an extra hour, in the early evening, and no one would
particularly know or care.
Stoch was at the same post da Costa took, and I said, “You were supposed to
wake me after thirty minutes, Mr Stoch.”
“Sir,” Stoch said, as if he were channeling da Costa, even, “I consulted with
Lt Fisk, who consulted with Dr Sandoval, and it was decided to let you sleep.”
“Dr McBride wanted me to do breathing exercises, and I was supposed to eat,” I
said, sitting up.  I was dizzy again, and I reached out for the night table to
steady myself.
“Guinan sent your dinner, sir,” Stoch said.  “It can be warmed up.  And Mr da
Costa told me to help you with your breathing, although I think Lt Fisk wanted
to check your vitals first.”
“Mr Worf is supposed to be here,” I said, “and I’m not ready.  I haven’t eaten,
and I need a shower.”
“You have thirty minutes before Lt Worf will arrive,” Stoch said in the tone of
voice that Vulcans usually reserved for humans who were being illogical.
“Have I been relieved of duty, Mr Stoch?” I asked, as I got out of the bed. 
“Am I no longer the first officer of this ship?”
“Mr Data is Acting First Officer while you are on sick leave,” Stoch said.
“Ah,” I said.  “So my orders are to be ignored, is that it?”
“Sir,” Stoch said, coming around to me, as if I needed help standing.  “I
wasn’t aware that you had given orders, sir.”
“I don’t need your help to stand,” I said.  “Where’s the meal Guinan left me?”
“In the replicator, waiting to be warmed up, sir,” Stoch said.
“Then you can accompany me to the shower – “ I’d noticed that, true to his
word, Djani had placed a dresser against the wall, and I walked over to it and
grabbed the clean clothes I needed, “—and you can ask one of the orderlies to
warm up my meal for me.” I opened the door, and walked towards the head, not
caring whether Stoch was trailing behind me.  I waited for him in the doorway,
while he told one of the orderlies what I needed, and I said, as he squeezed
into the head with me, “I gave an order to Mr da Costa, that you should wake me
after half an hour.  I don’t believe that there is anything in regulations that
says that the orders of an officer on sick leave should be ignored.  I don’t
particularly care,” I continued, as I stepped into the shower and turned the
water on, knowing full well that Vulcans hate to get wet, “what Dr Sandoval and
Yash Fisk decided.  My orders were to wake me after thirty minutes.”  I
finished washing, and stuck my hand out for the towel.  “Are we clear on this,
Mr Stoch?”
“Aye, sir,” Stoch said.
I put my trousers back on, and stepped out of the shower to finish dressing.  I
ran a comb through my hair, and then piled my laundry into Stoch’s arms. 
“Here,” I said.  “Make yourself useful and dispose of this.”
I left the head, and returned to my room.  The captain’s standing orders were
to not leave me alone even for thirty seconds, and as I sat down at the table
that Djani had also brought in for me, I counted the seconds that Stoch was
leaving me alone while he dealt with my laundry and my meal.
The door opened, and Lt Fisk entered.
“What’s the problem, Commander?” he asked.  He had the tricorder in his hand,
and he proceeded to take my vitals.
“It’s been corrected,” I said.  “My oxygen levels?”
“Is that information you need, sir?” Yash asked, glancing up at me as he read
the results.
“I’m supposed to eat and have breathing exercises, Lieutenant,” I said, “before
Mr Worf arrives.  If my oxygen levels are okay, then I could conceivably forego
the breathing exercises.”
Stoch entered the room with my meal and set it on the table.
I said, “I thought you weren’t supposed to leave me alone, Mr Stoch.”
“Lt Fisk was here, sir,” Stoch said.
“I was alone for one point two minutes,” I said.  “I could have done some
damage in that time, Mr Stoch.”
“Will,” Yash said.
“Yes?”  I opened the container that Guinan had left me, revealing the vegetable
soup she’d promised, as well as the biscuits.
“Why don’t you tell me what’s going on?” Yash asked.
“I am just trying to establish parameters for myself,” I said.  “If I’m so
crazy that my orders are to be ignored, then clearly I’m too crazy to be left
alone.  And I believe the Captain made it quite clear to all of you that I was
not to be left alone, even for one second.  I believe those were his exact
words.”
“Commander Riker is upset,” Stoch said to Yash, “because he left word with Mr
da Costa that I was supposed to wake him after thirty minutes.  He woke
himself, sir, after an hour.  I tried – “ and Stoch avoided looking at me, “—to
explain to the Commander that I’d consulted with you and Dr Sandoval, and you’d
decided to allow him to sleep as long as he needed to.”
“I’d left orders, Mr Stoch, with da Costa,” I corrected.  “Surely you remember
what those are.  Even medical crewmen follow orders on this ship, Mr Stoch.”
“It was Dr Sandoval’s decision to allow you to sleep, Commander,” Yash said. 
“That’s an issue to discuss with him, then, not Mr Stoch.  Shall I ask him to
come in here, sir?”
“No,” I said, drinking some of the mint tea that Guinan had left for my
“tummy.”  “Just tell me what my oxygen levels are, so I can know whether I’m
doing breathing exercises after I eat.”
“That’s a medical decision, Mr Riker,” Yash said, and he was speaking as Lt
Fisk now, not as my friend Yash.  “I will report your vitals to Dr Sandoval,
and he will make the decision about your breathing.”
“Not me?” I said.  “I don’t get to make the decision about my breathing.  And I
don’t get to make the decision about when I want to be wakened.  So then I
don’t get to be alone for one point two minutes either, right?”
I watched Stoch visibly straighten, and he said, “Aye, sir.  It will not happen
again, sir.”
“Your logic, Mr Riker,” Lt Fisk said, “is somewhat faulty here.  I will let you
know Dr Sandoval’s decision.”
The soup was good, but I didn’t feel like eating.  I took a few desultory sips.
Stoch said, “You have upset yourself, sir, and now you don’t want to eat.”
“You are a master of the obvious, Mr Stoch,” I answered.  I put the spoon down,
and then recovered the container.
“Perhaps,” Stoch ventured, “I could teach you a brief meditation, and that
would have the advantage of helping your breathing and calming you down.”
“That would be a welcome idea, Mr Stoch,” I said, pushing away from the table,
“except that I don’t have the time for that now, do I?”
“Sir,” Stoch said. 
The door was pushed open again, only this time it was Fisk and Dr Sandoval.
“Sit down, Commander,” Sandoval said.
“I don’t believe that you outrank me, Doctor,” I said, but I sat anyway.
“I’ve spoken to Dr McBride, as he requested, to let him know what your oxygen
levels were.”  It was clear that Sandoval was going to ignore me.  “They have
improved slightly, from what they were in Dr McBride’s office, but not enough
for either of us to feel comfortable with them.  The fact that you are
currently agitated is not helping your breathing, Commander.”
“I wouldn’t be agitated,” I said, “if I’d been wakened when I’d asked to be.”
“And it was my medical decision to give you the extra sleep you needed,”
Sandoval responded, “which, of course, helped to improve your oxygen levels. 
We can either work together, Mr Riker, or we can be at odds – but I must remind
you, sir, that you do not make the decisions regarding your medical treatment
in this facility.  I am working very closely with both Drs Crusher and McBride
– and every decision I make regarding your care and treatment is in
consultation with both of them.  Do you understand, sir?”
I was outnumbered, three to one, each one of them having decided, clearly, that
I was some sort of troublesome child who needed to be publicly scolded in order
to be brought into line.
“What I understand, Lt Sandoval,” I said, “is that I am tired of being treated
as if I do not matter.  As if my concerns do not matter.  I may be a patient in
this facility,” I said, “but on this ship I am outranked by only one officer,
and that is the captain.  I should not have my concerns ignored.  I should not
have my orders – as infrequent as they have been, gentlemen – ignored.  I
should be treated with the respect I am due as First Officer of this ship.  And
I should not,” I said, “have to remind any one of you of this.”
Stoch said quietly, “Sir.  Mr Worf will not mind waiting a few minutes longer
while you finish your breathing program.  Lt Fisk will explain the situation to
him.  Mr da Costa has explained Counsellor Troi’s basic session to me, and I
will talk you through it.  And I can ask that your meal be heated up again, and
you can eat while Mr Worf is sitting with you.  I doubt that Mr Worf will take
offense, sir.”
And that was the issue, wasn’t it?  Of all the people for McBride to choose to
come to sit with me, he would have to choose Worf, who’d been, as he’d said,
“haunting” sickbay, asking to see me, determined, as Jean-Luc had told me,
once, that he had to protect me from the someone or something that had caused
me to be ill.  Worf was my friend – perhaps one of the closest friends I had on
the ship, outside of Deanna -- and yet our friendship was based on our shared
belief in a code of behaviour; Worf in the way of the warrior, myself in duty,
and in honour.
I understood Worf, now.  When he’d hurt himself, when he’d been paralysed, he’d
wanted me to participate in the ceremony that would end his life, as a warrior
who can no longer fight is useless – less than useless – a burden on his
family, and on society.  I didn’t understand and so I’d been adamantly opposed
to helping him, even concocting the idea that it would be his young son who
would have to participate, just because I was so convinced that living was the
point.
Except it wasn’t, was it?  Worf knew that.  I knew it, now.  I’d tried to do
the right thing – I’d tried to die with honour, the way Worf had wanted to –
like Brutus, in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, one of the few plays of Jean-Luc’s
that I truly understood.  Because what was I now?  I was useless, a burden; a
burden to Jean-Luc, who needed to be given a day off from me – a burden to the
staff in sickbay, who had other patients – patients they could heal – to deal
with – and a burden to Starfleet, when someone finally leaked word that I was
permanently unfit for duty.  Deanna had tried to convince me that this illness
could be managed, that I could learn to function again, but she didn’t
understand any more than I had when Worf had asked me to bring him his
ceremonial dagger.  I would be the officer who couldn’t ever be fully trusted,
because who could foretell which future event would be the one to send me back
into this hell of flashbacks and night terrors and nightmares?  It was like
taking Reg Barclay and making him a command officer.  How could you trust a
command officer who was afraid of his own fucking shadow?  How could you trust
a command officer who was hearing things, and seeing things, and smelling
things, for fuck’s sake, that weren’t even there?
Worf would see me in this condition.  He would be polite, of course.  He might
even maintain enough control to be friendly, for the hour or so that he was
here.  But I would disgust him.  I was a broken warrior, who was a disgrace to
the ship because I was clinging to a useless life.  Maybe, I thought, I could
convince Worf to bring me a ceremonial dagger.
***** Interlude: Fourteen *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard debriefs Worf, before Worf's visit with Will.
Chapter Notes
     I've been aware all along of the resonance between some of the issues
     in this story and the episode "Ethics." Whether I write the character
     of Worf well enough to have the role reversal make sense within the
     context of this story....
Interlude: Fourteen
 
 
Picard was grateful to be distracted by the business of the ship, and so for
the first half of his shift, he was on and off the bridge, working in his ready
room, and preparing to have lunch with the small group of diplomats they were
ferrying. After lunch, however, was another story; there was the ever-present
deluge of paperwork and there was a briefing with Mr Data. It was the perfect
time for him to do what McBride had suggested, which was to go to the gym and
then to the holodeck. Still, his mind was on Will, who would be on his way to
his first CBT session with Troi. He’d glanced at the schedule and seen that
Deanna had intended for Will to do goal-setting – that ought to go over well,
he thought wryly. Although it wasn’t anything Troi couldn’t handle; she’d had,
he reflected, Mr Riker’s number for years.
He perused his messages, still wondering when he would get an update request on
Will’s status from Nechayev, and then he remembered that there was, in fact,
one meeting he should have first, before he could freely go to the gym and the
holodeck, as McBride had planned.
“Lt Worf,” Picard said. “My ready room.”
“Sir,” Worf responded.
Picard stood up from the chair and fetched a mug of Earl Grey from the
replicator, thinking about how he wanted to approach the subject of Will – and
Will’s illness – to Worf. He knew that Klingons approached illness as a
spiritual matter, rather than a physical one – and while he understood the
concept that Will’s brain had physically been changed by his injuries and his
illness, it was the spiritual illness – Will’s depression, his suicidal
ideation, his feelings of shame and inadequacy – that were concepts which Worf
would intrinsically understand. After all, Worf had dealt with this aspect of
Will’s illness in himself, on more than one occasion.
The door chimed, and Picard said, “Come.”
Worf entered the room, his face set, as if he expected a reprimand or an
unpleasant task. Inwardly, Picard shook his head. He’d known Worf longer than
most of the others on the Enterprise (except, of course, for Beverly), as he’d
met Worf when he was a very young man at the Academy. Still, after all these
years, Worf always approached a meeting with the captain as if there were some
failing which needed to be addressed.
“Sir,” Worf said, now.
“At ease, Mr Worf,” Picard said mildly, trying to keep the amusement out of his
voice. “Would you like something to drink? I’ve a favour to ask of you.”
Immediately Worf relaxed. “No, sir,” he said. Then he asked, somewhat
suspiciously, “What kind of favour, sir?”
Picard resisted smiling. Favours, he knew, were a serious business; Worf would
need to know whether this favour the captain was requesting would be adding to
the captain’s honour, or to his own.
“Sit down, Mr Worf,” Picard said, sipping his tea.
“Sir,” Worf said. He sat.
“How much, Mr Worf,” Picard said, slowly, “do you know about Commander Riker’s
illness?”
Worf blinked, and then he tried to compose himself. “I thought Commander Riker
had suffered an injury,” he replied, finally.
“Yes,” Picard said. He waited.
Worf was silent for a moment and then he said, “I have heard different rumours,
sir, regarding the commander’s accident in his quarters. And I have heard that
Commander Riker has nearly died, twice. Sir.”
“And what might you have heard about Commander Riker’s accident?” Picard asked.
“Captain,” Worf said, uncomfortably. He shifted a bit in his seat, and then
stilled himself. “I must advise you that these are only rumours.”
“Yes, Mr Worf,” Picard said patiently. “I do understand that. I’d like to know
what you have heard.”
Worf sighed and then covered it with a cough. “One rumour is that Commander
Riker was attacked, sir, by some unknown entity.”
Picard kept his face neutral. “You are my Chief of Security, Mr Worf,” he said
in a reasonable voice. “How likely is that to have happened?”
“There is some small precedence for it,” Worf said. “We were kidnapped and
injured by aliens, once.”
“Yes,” Picard agreed. “Once in seven years.” He took another sip. “And the
other rumour?”
“Commander Riker tried to take his own life,” Worf said.
“Does the rumour say how Mr Riker tried to do this?” Picard asked.
“One version says he used a phaser,” Worf answered. “However, there has been no
phaser activity on the ship.”
“And?”
“He used a dagger of some sort,” Worf said. “There was a rumour that his
quarters had to be cleaned of a copious amount of blood.”
“What are your thoughts, Mr Worf?” Picard asked. “You have been requesting to
see him, have you not?”
“Sir,” Worf said. “I would like to think Commander Riker is my friend.”
“And indeed he is, Worf,” Picard said, setting down his mug. “Your thoughts,
then, on whether your friend would try to take his own life?”
“Sir,” Worf said, and then he was silent.
Picard waited, his hands steepled in front of him.
“In the last month or so,” Worf began, “or perhaps even longer, Commander Riker
has suffered a series of holodeck injuries. Some of those injuries were
serious. When I questioned him about them, he laughed them off, saying he was
just running a vigourous program. That was the word he used, Captain.”
“Go on,” Picard encouraged.
“I thought that the injuries, and his account of them, were out of character,”
Worf said. “I mentioned this to both Counsellor Troi and Dr Crusher.”
“Yes, you did,” Picard agreed. “And I am glad that you did. Your mentioning
this to Dr Crusher is one of the reasons Dr Crusher brought the matter to me.”
“Ah,” Worf said.
“And your analysis, Mr Worf?” Picard asked.
“It seemed to me that there was a possibility that Commander Riker was injuring
himself deliberately, even if he might have been unaware of it,” Worf answered.
“He was not himself. He was anxious. He was irritable. He even, sir, yelled at
me. I don’t believe Commander Riker has ever yelled at me before.” Worf paused,
and then he said, “He didn’t seem to be sleeping. I did mention this to Dr
Crusher.”
Picard remained silent, giving Worf the space he needed to say what he didn’t
want to say.
“Captain,” Worf said, finally. “It fits the pattern of a man who is depressed
and suicidal.”
“Indeed it did,” Picard confirmed. “Dr Crusher brought the matter to me, and I
confronted Mr Riker about it. He denied it, of course, but it was quite clear
that he was in trouble. Dr Crusher began to investigate the matter, with the
help of Counsellor Troi, when the incident in Ten Forward occurred.”
“Yes, sir,” Worf said. “Commander LaForge said that Mr Riker seemed fine, and
then he got up and ran out of Ten Forward, as if he had seen something. I do
not understand this.”
Picard said gently, “Commander Riker had seen something – or, perhaps more
accurately, he’d heard and smelled something. He had a flashback.”
“You are saying that Commander Riker attempted suicide,” Worf said.
“Yes,” Picard answered. He stood up and walked over to the window.
“Commander Riker in the past has been adamantly opposed to suicide,” Worf said
in a neutral tone.
“Perhaps because he knows that it rarely works,” Picard said. “This is not the
first time, you see.”
“How could -- ?”
“It’s a long and complicated story, Mr Worf,” Picard answered, turning around.
“Because I’d like you to do something for me – and for William – I will attempt
to give you the shortened version. It has to do with one subject you’re very
familiar with, Mr Worf. It has to do with fathers, and the way a father’s
behaviour can destroy his son.”
“Captain,” Worf said, “I would do anything for you, or for Commander Riker. I
think, sir, that you know this.”
“I do,” Picard answered, and then he said, “You remember Will’s father?”
Worf grimaced, slightly. “I do,” he said. “An old man who challenged his son to
combat. It was,” Worf said, “embarrassing.”
“Yes, well,” Picard said, trying not to let the phrase “old man” sting, “it was
an interesting cover for his real agenda.” He sighed. “Guinan called me from
Ten Forward, after Commander Riker ran out. She was convinced that he was in
danger. I left immediately for his quarters, and commed Dr Crusher for a
medical team. I got there first, and found him on the floor of the head,
bleeding out. He’d used a sherd from the mirror to open up his arms and his
neck.”
“He wanted to die, then,” Worf said.
“Yes. He wanted to die. It’s only because Guinan is who she is that we were
able to save him. His heart stopped once, that night.” Picard paused,
remembering the chill of the room, and Q’s offer, and the kindness of both
Beverly and Deanna. “This illness he has, which caused him to attempt suicide,
it’s called Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. At Starbase 515 we picked up the
doctor who specialises in treating this illness, Dr McBride. As it happens,
Counsellor Troi had already proposed a project involving the treatment of this
disorder to me and Starfleet before we realised how severely Commander Riker
was suffering from this illness.”
“You have been eating with the doctor and Commander Riker’s team in Ten
Forward,” Worf said.
“Yes. The treatment is involved – and William’s illness is severe. It’s
necessary, for all of us, to debrief.”
“What do you need me to do, Captain?” Worf asked.
“You know that Commander Riker’s mother died when he was two,” Picard said,
sitting back down. His tea was cold, but he sipped it anyway. When Worf nodded,
he continued, “Kyle Riker’s version of this story is that he was devastated by
the loss of his wife, and that he didn’t know how to take care of a child –
particularly a child like Will. He was often gone, leaving William by himself,
and he finally abandoned Will when he was fifteen.”
“Yes,” Worf said. “He has told me this.”
“Commander Riker’s mother was a Starfleet officer,” Picard said. “She became
ill on an away team mission, and she went home to her family in Alaska to die.
When she died, William was two, almost three years old. He witnessed her final
hemorrhage, the one that led to her death. Dr McBride believes that witnessing
that event was the onset of this disorder.”
“I witnessed the deaths of my parents when I was that age,” Worf said.
“And there is a reason why you and he are good friends,” Picard answered. “You
share many of the same characteristics – many of the same tendencies. You have
been suicidal as well, more than once.”
“It is the way of the warrior,” Worf began, and Picard said,
“Indeed.”
Worf was silent.
“I’m sorry, Mr Worf,” Picard said, eventually. “I am finding this difficult to
discuss.”
“I understand, sir,” Worf said, although Picard was sure he didn’t.
“From the time William was about three years old, until the time his father
abandoned him, when he was fifteen, William’s father terrorised him. He
severely abused him. William’s life, as a child, was one of pain and torment.
He was repeatedly hospitalised with severe injuries and broken bones. When he
was seven, he attempted suicide. He was hosptialised, but he was subject to
abuse in the hospital as well. His father continued to do unimaginable things
to control and demean him. For most of his life, Commander Riker suppressed
these memories. He remembered very little of his childhood. Something happened,
two months ago, to trigger the memories. The disorder, which was dormant,
became active. He has been suffering from flashbacks, night terrors, panic
attacks, nightmares….” Picard trailed off. Then he said, “His suffering is
acute.”
“You are treating him here,” Worf said quietly.
“Yes.” Picard did not elaborate.
“He still wants to die.”
“Yes,” Picard said. “He still wants to die.”
“The actions of the father dishonour the son,” Worf said.
“What does a son do, when his father is a monster?” Picard asked.
“They said that my father was a monster,” Worf answered. “Although I know now
that he was not.”
“Commander Riker’s father is not the same,” Picard said. “His father is a
destroyer of children. And he is still out there, working for the Federation.”
“What would you like me to do, Captain?” Worf asked. “I would gladly hunt down
this man and rid Commander Riker of him.”
Picard smiled. “As much as I would want to give you a shuttle and a phaser, Mr
Worf, and set you to him, I’m afraid it wouldn’t help your friend at all. The
damage has already been done.” He stood up, and walked back to the replicator,
ordering another mug of tea. “Dr McBride believes that Commander Riker is well
enough now to have contact – limited contact – with some of his friends. You
have been asking to see him, so would you be available this evening, if that is
something that you would still want to do?”
“Yes,” Worf said. “I will be available.”
“Mr Riker has been scheduled for a recreation period between 1900 and 2100
hours,” Picard said. “Anytime during then, Mr Worf.”
“Sir. I can hardly see how that would be construed as a favour,” Worf replied.
Picard said, “Nevertheless, Mr Worf, it is. A personal favour, to me.”
Worf rose. “Aye, sir,” he said.
Picard said, as Worf turned to leave, “Mr Worf.”
“Sir?” Worf turned around.
“If he asks you to help him, what will you say?”
Worf hesitated.
“He will say that he is broken,” Picard said. “He could make a very convincing
argument that he is a burden to this ship. That he is without honour.”
“I could, sir,” Worf said, “say to him what he said to me.”
Picard sighed. “Would he believe you?” he asked.
“I do not think he would, Captain,” Worf replied. He thought for a moment and
then he said, “I will be prepared, sir. Do not worry.”
“Good. Thank you, Mr Worf.”
“Aye, sir,” Worf said.
Worf left. Picard remained at his desk, staring at the mug of now-cold tea. He
wondered if Will had already left Deanna’s office for McBride’s, and if McBride
had explained to Will that he would not be available today. He knew what Will’s
reaction was likely to be. McBride had said he would handle the information,
and Will’s reaction to it, therapeutically – and he’d agreed – but he’d also
promised Will that they would be open with each other….Well. There was nothing
to be done for it now. He would have to trust that McBride knew what he was
doing, and that Will would somehow be made to understand. It was ironic, he
thought, that he would find himself having to trust McBride in the same way as
Will. He’d never thought that trust was an issue for himself -- yet apparently
it was.
He disposed of his mug and headed for the gym.
***** Interlude: Fifteen *****
Chapter Summary
     William has a visit from Worf.
Chapter Notes
     For the purposes of this story, I have made an assumption that there
     would be, in a warrior-driven society such as the Klingons', an
     understanding of the illness that we call Post-Traumatic Stress
     Disorder. Even in human history, there is mention of this illness
     going back to Alexander of Macedonia and Homer; it would make sense,
     then, that the Klingons would have a name for the illness and a
     healing ritual associated with it. My Klingon, however, is
     rudimentary at best; tIq (heart) and tay (ceremony; rite; ritual) -
     - thus, tIqtay, ritual of the heart -- is the closest that I could
     come up with using the Klingon dictionary and grammar book I found.
     If there is an actual speaker of Klingon reading this story who would
     like to improve my understanding of Klingon, that would be greatly
     appreciated. The commonality, I think, between Native and Aboriginal
     peoples and certain aspects of Klingon culture is something that has
     already been acknowledged. In this story, Will Riker's father has
     isolated him from his mother's heritage and people, but his growing
     up surrounded by tribal people is one of the reasons why he is so
     close to Worf. Worf's solution to Will's illness is one that would
     make sense to someone with a tribal background. In fact, some of the
     cutting edge treatments for PTSD today use vision quest ceremonies to
     reset the trauma survivor's understanding of himself and the world
     around him.
 
Interlude:  Fifteen
 
 
 
 
            Worf had had years of training, both as a Klingon and a Starfleet
officer, and yet it took all of his years of training not to react to the
appearance of his friend Commander Riker.  The commander was sitting at a small
table in one of the few private rooms in sickbay, which had clearly been turned
into his residence – there was a dresser, the table and two chairs, a chair by
the bed, and two beds placed together –and even though the hour was late, it
was apparent that the commander was still having his meal.  Or pretending to
have his meal, Worf thought, watching the commander move a spoon around in what
looked like a bowl of soup.  As the commander rose to greet him, Worf noticed
that the clothes he was wearing -- the dark blue shirt he usually wore off-duty
and a pair of grey trousers – were hanging off him.  His face was gaunt, his
fair skin paler than usual, and there were dark circles underneath his eyes, as
if he hadn’t slept in weeks.  He looked, Worf thought in sudden panic, as if he
were dying.        
            He could see immediately that the commander was anxious, and so he
made sure his features were set and then he smiled in a way he hoped the
commander would believe was normal.
            “Am I disturbing your meal, Commander?” he asked.
            “No,” Will said quickly, “no, I’m done.  Mr Stoch?”
            The Vulcan crewman, who’d been standing against the wall by a night
table, said, “I’ll take it, sir,” and moved to take the tray.
            “Do you know Lt Worf, Mr Stoch?” Will asked.  “This,” he said to
Worf, “is my nighttime minder, Mr Stoch.”
            “Crewman,” Worf said, not knowing how to respond.  What was a
nighttime minder? 
            “Lieutenant,” the Vulcan said.  “Commander Riker has been looking
forward to seeing you, sir.  Would you like something to drink?”
            This, Worf thought, is surreal.  “No,” Worf said, “thank you.”
            The Vulcan left, pulling the door closed behind him, and Will sat
back down at the table.  Worf noticed that Stoch had left a half-drunk cup of
tea on the table.
            “Sit, Worf,” Will said, indicating the larger chair by the bed.
            “Sir,” Worf said automatically, and sat.
            Will turned his chair to face Worf at an angle, and he fiddled with
his cup.  “I’d rather,” he said, “you didn’t call me ‘sir.’  I’m on sick leave,
after all.”
            “How are you feeling?” Worf didn’t know what he could – or should –
say.  He’d listened, at first politely, and then with concern, to the captain,
as the captain had explained Will’s condition.  He’d noted what the captain
wasn’t saying, and that the captain was calling him “William,” for example,
something Worf had only heard him use on rare occasions.  He’d wondered at the
emotion the captain was clearly suppressing in discussing Commander Riker’s
illness, and had been startled when the captain had confessed that he was
finding it difficult to discuss.  He’d thought he understood the favour Captain
Picard had asked of him; that the commander was suicidal, and would ask him for
help, which he should somehow find a reason to deny.  But in his mind he’d
pictured the Will Riker he knew, a man as large as he was, full of mischief and
laughter on the surface, but a man who took no prisoners when the occasion
warranted it.
            He could see, now, why the captain had called it an illness. 
William Riker was clearly ill.  He looked as if he were starving, slowly, to
death.  Worf was sure that every rib was showing on his chest, every knob of
his backbone.  Even his arms seemed smaller somehow, underneath the too wide
and too long sleeves of his shirt.  He wondered, briefly, why the commander
bothered to be suicidal.  He was obviously already dying.  What would be the
need to hasten the process?  He should be, Worf thought, finalising his affairs
and saying his goodbyes.
            And then he looked into the commander’s eyes, as he waited for
Will’s response to his question, and he saw what Captain Picard had tried to
tell him.  Will Riker was in pain, terrible pain; the kind of pain for which
death was a welcome relief.  And then he knew the cost of the favour Captain
Picard had requested.
            “I’m okay,” Will answered quietly.  “Some days are better than
others.  Today hasn’t been one of those days.”
            What in the name of Kahless could Worf say to this man?  He
remembered what Will had said to him, how embittered he’d felt at Will’s
seeming rejection of their friendship, but how he’d realised that his duty as a
father was more important than his duty as a warrior.  William Riker was in as
much pain as he had been – more, perhaps – and yet he had bound himself to the
captain’s demand that he turn Will down.
            “You have,” Worf said grimly, “lost weight.”  There was no point,
Worf thought, in pretending otherwise.
            Will looked down at himself in surprise.  “I guess,” he said. 
“People keep telling me that.”
            “Perhaps,” Worf suggested ironically, “it might be better to find
clothes that fit.”
            He watched Will’s eyes widen, and then the familiar grin appeared. 
“I look that bad?” he asked. “Don’t beat about the bush, Mr Worf.”
            “Commander,” Worf said, “you look that bad.”
            Will laughed.  “I’ve a reputation for throwing things,” he said,
‘so they’ve probably been too afraid to tell me.”
            “I had heard that,” Worf admitted.  “I didn’t believe it was true,
though.  I couldn’t see how Chief O’Brien could have come across that
particular tale, seeing as how he has no connection at all to sickbay.”
            Will shrugged.  “It’s true,” he said.  “Guinan told me it was all
over Ten Forward.  I doubt it was Miles who started the story, though.”
            Worf said incredulously, “You threw something at Captain Picard?”
            Again, Will grinned.  “I’ve felt like it, a couple of times,” he
answered, “but no, he was just there.  He watched me trash Beverly’s office –
and told Mr da Costa to stand down when he came charging in to stop me.  Then
he made da Costa clean it up.”
            “You trashed Dr Crusher’s office,” Worf repeated.
            “I did,” Will answered, and it seemed to Worf that he was curiously
pleased with this, as if he were Alexander’s age.
            “You are a braver man than I have ever given you credit for,” Worf
said.  “When I was in here, she was quite imposing.”
            “Oh, she’s gotten me back,” Will said.  “She’s in charge of the
hypo sprays, after all.”
            Worf watched Will fidget with the cup.  “You are in pain,” he said,
finally.
            Will’s demeanor completely changed.  His eyes went blank, and his
face shut down.  He looked down at the floor, and Worf saw for the first time
the tremor in his hands.     
            “Yes,” he said.  “Sometimes…”  His voice trailed off.
            Worf thought about what the captain had told him.  Then he said,
“Would you show me what you did?”
            Will glanced up, surprised.  “You want to see my arms?” he asked. 
“The scar’s pretty well faded on my neck because I was already bleeding heavily
when I cut myself there.  It wasn’t very deep.”  He rolled up his sleeves and
showed the still livid vertical scars running down both arms.  “I sliced the
tendons,” he said.  “I have PT, in the mornings with Jai Patel, to try to
repair the damage.”
            Worf said, “Why didn’t you just use your phaser?”
            “No one’s ever asked me that before,” Will said.  “No one talks
about it.”
            “I would like to talk about it,” Worf said, “if I have your
permission, Commander.”
            “Why are you still calling me ‘Commander’?” Will asked.  “Just call
me Will, Worf.  Please.”
            Worf had the feeling he knew why Will didn’t want his rank
acknowledged.  “Will,” he agreed.
            “Why didn’t I use my phaser?” Will repeated.  He shrugged.  “I
don’t know.  I was in the middle of a flashback.  I don’t remember much.  I had
lunch with Geordi, and Geordi had hurt his hand.  He banged it, accidentally,
on the table and it started to bleed.  I saw the blood, and then I was in my
quarters, in the head, smelling blood, and cinnamon, and silver polish.  I just
wanted,” Will said, “to make everything stop.  I don’t remember breaking the
mirror.  I do remember thinking how easy it was, to make those cuts.  I’d done
it before, you see.  Cut someone.”
            Worf had the feeling that Will was receding, somehow.  “What,” he
asked, “is a flashback?”
            Will seemed to come back.  “You’ve had them,” he said.  “About
Khitomer.  You think you’re there, back to wherever it was.  You see things as
they were, hear things.  With me, I smell things first, I think.  They’re not
memories, but they are.  Like waking dreams.  It’s hard, Worf, to come out of
one once you’re in.  The therapy I’m in – it’s to help me stop having the
flashbacks.”
            Worf was silent.  “Is it helping?” he asked.
            “There’s just so many,” Will said, and Worf remembered that the
captain had said Will would say he was broken.  That was the way he sounded: 
broken.
            “I am still your friend,” Worf said.  He knew what Will was
feeling.  Shame.  Defeat.  Humiliation.  How could you help a man who hated
himself so much that he was willing himself to die?
            “Then help me,” Will said, just as the captain had said he would.
            “You are not Klingon,” Worf said.  “You cannot perform the
Hegh’bat.”
            “No,” Will said.  “I know that.”  He was silent, looking at the
floor.  When he looked up again, his eyes were filled with pain.  “There must
be something you can do.  I’m never alone.”  He shrugged.  “Jean-Luc doesn’t
want to let me go.”
            Worf saw the two beds pushed together out of the corner of his eye,
and heard the captain’s apology, and his confession that it was difficult for
him “to discuss.”  He understood the favour, now.
            “You told me,” Worf said, “that I should think about how my death
would affect my friends, and the people who loved me.  You told me that my work
was not finished.  I could say the same to you. Will.”
            Will put his face in his hands.  “They would be better off without
me,” he said.  “He would, be better off without me.”
            “He,” Worf said, “doesn’t think so.”
            “Please,” Will said.  “I’ve never asked you for anything, Worf.”
            “You once said to me that your village, where you grew up, was
Russian and Aleut,” Worf said.  “That the Aleut are tribal people.”
            “Yes,” Will said, confused.  
            “But you are not,” Worf continued.
            Will said, “No. Riker is Dutch.”
            “And your mother?” Worf asked. 
            “I don’t know,” Will said, and he seemed suddenly exhausted.
            “I looked her up,” Worf said.  “Captain Picard told me she was a
Starfleet officer.  She was a lieutenant commander, when she died.”
            “I don’t understand,” Will said.  “What does this have to do with
anything?”
            “Commander,” Worf said, “Will.  You asked me to help you.  That is
what I am trying to do.”
            “Okay, Worf,” Will answered, slumping in the chair.
            Worf could see that the tremor had now extended itself so that his
whole body was shaking slightly.  “Her name was Elizaveta Irina Christianssen
Riker.  She was Russian,” Worf said, “and Aleut.  Tribal.”  He paused, and then
he said, “As are you.  Tribal.  Perhaps it is why, Commander, you understand my
people.  We have much in common.”
            “But not enough to help me with the Hegh’bat,” Will said.
            “No,” Worf answered.  “But I can help you with the tIqtay.”
            Will looked up.  “The heart ceremony?  You’re making that up.”
            Worf glared at him.  “I do not,” he said, “make things up.”
            “I’m tired, Worf,” Will said.  “I’m tired, and I’m in pain.  Every
waking moment I’m in pain.  I see things and hear things and smell things that
aren’t there.  I can’t sleep.  I can’t eat.  I can’t drink.  There is nothing
for me anymore.  I just want it all to stop.”
            Worf stood up, and he walked over to where Will was sitting.  He
placed his hands on his friend’s shoulders, and, for a moment, Will’s shaking
stopped.
            “You have the heart sickness,” Worf said.  “I do not know how else
to translate it.  It is old.  The cure for it is old.  It is nearly forgotten,
because wars are not often fought the way they used to be.  A starship
explodes, and there are no survivors.  The warriors die with honour.  But on
the field of battle the victors would go home to live to fight again.  Some of
them would have this sickness.  It was seen,” Worf said, “as the mark of a
great warrior, a man who defeated his enemies yet suffered because of their
pain and loss and dishonour.  A cleansing would be performed.  A vision would
be sought.  The warrior gave over the pain and was healed.  The tIqtay.”
            Will said, “McBride – the doctor we picked up at SB 515 – he
promised to heal me.  I’m supposed to have eight weeks of treatment.  And then
I’ll be healed.” 
            “You do not believe that to be the case?”
            “That’s not the point,” Will said, shrugging out from underneath
Worf’s hands.  “Who could ever trust me again?  All it would take is another –
trauma – “ and he said this with such bitterness that Worf was shocked, “—and
I’ll be right back here again.”
            “You do not know that to be true,” Worf said.
            “Don’t I?” Will asked.  “Would you be willing to trust to that, in
a battlefield situation?”  When Worf did not respond, he said, “Help me.”
            “I will ask your doctor if we can perform the tIqtay,” Worf
responded.
            Will stood up, and he walked away from Worf.  “Jean-Luc told you to
refuse to help me,” he said.  “I wondered if he would.”
            “Commander, I am trying to help you,” Worf replied.
            “No, Worf,” Will answered.  “You’re keeping your word to your
captain.  I understand.”
            “Will – “ Worf remembered how he felt, when Will had turned him
down.  He could see the defeat etched into Will’s face.  “I am sorry, sir,” he
said.
            “Yeah. What the hell.”   Will turned around.  “I’m tired, Worf. 
Thanks for coming.”
            It was a dismissal, and Worf knew it.  He had kept his word to the
captain, but at what cost?
            “Good night, Commander,” he said as he left the room.
***** Chapter 58 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's last day with Rosie.
 
Chapter Fifty-Eight
 
 
 
           
            William had expected at least a spanking from his father when he
got home, if not something worse; instead, his father listened with half an ear
as Mr S explained what had happened at judo practise and then said in a
disinterested voice,
            “Perhaps you should just concentrate on anbo-jyutsu for now,
Billy.”
            William didn’t know what his father meant, so he nodded and
whispered his agreement, and then he allowed Mrs S to take him upstairs and put
him to bed.  Mrs S didn’t say anything, even though she must have seen that the
bed linens had been changed in the middle of the week, and William even
consented to her sitting beside him and rubbing his back.  She’d given him his
medication, which always made him sleepy and, despite what it was supposed to
do, vaguely anxious.  She sat with him for about twenty minutes and then kissed
him on the top of his head and left.
            He waited until he heard her go down the stairs and then he slipped
out of his bed.  He grabbed his pillow and padded down the hall to his father’s
room.  He never wanted to sleep in his own bed again.
 
 
 
            William sat at the kitchen table, moving the spoon around in his
bowl of oatmeal.  Mrs S had made it just the way he liked it, using the special
oatmeal that her daughter Lena had brought back from Ireland, adding honey and
brown sugar and raisins to it and a little bit of heavy cream, but William felt
fuzzy and disoriented from the medication, and he still felt sore inside. 
            “What’s the matter, William?” Mrs S asked, and if she’d ever felt
impatient with the child, with his mood swings and his rages and his refusal to
eat, she never let him know.
            “My stomach hurts,” William said, and he put the spoon down.
            Mrs Shugak sat down beside him, and cupped his face so he had to
look at her.  “What is it, William?” she asked.  “What happened, to upset you
so?”
            William closed his eyes for a moment, and allowed Mrs S to pull him
to her and hold him.  Then he shrugged out of her arms and said, “I guess you
were right.  I don’t feel well.  I must be coming down with something.”
            Mrs S sighed when he wriggled away, and she stood up and took his
bowl of oatmeal.  “Are you still upset about the cat, William?” she asked.
            It took William a moment to remember the story he’d told her about
the cat; that his father had taken the cat to a shelter in Valdez on his way to
his meeting.
            “No,” he said.  “My stomach just hurts.”
            “Your stomach always hurts,” Mrs S said, but it was just an
observation.  “You have an appointment with the doctor at three today.  Mr S
and I will take you.  Your father’s already left for his meeting.”
            “Okay.”  William got down from the table, and headed to the door.
            “Where,” Mrs S asked, “do you think you’re going, William, if you
don’t feel well?”
            William paused by the door, fighting the urge just to run.  “I have
to go feed Bet,” he said.  “I didn’t last night.  Rosie will be mad.”
            “And then you come home, William,” Mrs S said.  “If you’re not
feeling well, you should be in bed.  And,” she continued, “that Rosie is never
mad at you, William.”  She smiled, remembering when both Rosie and William had
been toddlers, playing on Elizaveta’s kitchen floor.
            “Yes, ma’am,” William said, and darted out the door.
 
 
 
            Rosie wasn’t mad at him; of course she wasn’t mad at him; by the
time Rosie and her dad showed up, William had fed half the dogs and had let
Patch and Bet out to romp.  She gave him her Rosie-grin when she saw him and if
Greg Kalugin was surprised when he saw William give his daughter a quick hug
before darting into the kennel to handle the new pups, he didn’t let it show. 
            Rosie’s father shooed them away, so he and Rosie took the dogs and
ran down the path to Matt’s house.  The sun was bright and would remain so for
another fifteen hours or so; plenty to do on a warm summer’s day, three kids
and three dogs in the bush.  They ended up at the shallows, just William and
Rosie, as Matt’s mother had called him home.
            “D’you wanna swim?” Rosie asked, dangling one foot in the cold
water.
            William shook his head.  “No,” he said.  He didn’t want to take his
shorts off in front of Rosie and he knew Mrs S would be mad at him if he got
his clothes wet.  He sat down beside Rosie and trailed a stick in the water.
            Rosie said, “I told my mom.”
            William didn’t say anything, just watched the fingerlings drift by
on the current.  The dogs were tussling behind him; a raven was calling
overhead.
            “Henry wants to go before the council,” Rosie added. 
            “I’m not tribal,” William said.
            “Mom says you live on tribal land,” Rosie answered.  “Maybe your
mom was tribal.  She was from here, right?”
            William nodded.  “Yes,” he said.  “The cabin was hers, I think.”
            “There you go,” Rosie said.  She threw a rock in the water.  “Mom’s
going to talk to Uncle Marty.  He’ll talk to Auntie Raisa.  They’ll know what
to do.”
            William started to shake.  “You don’t know anything,” he said. 
            Rosie took William’s hand, and he let her.  “I do, Will,” she
said.  “I know he hurts you.”
            “Only when I’m bad,” William said.  He liked the feeling of Rosie’s
hand in his.
            Rosie said, and she sounded like a grownup, “William, you are never
bad.”
            “Yes, I am,” William whispered.  “You don’t know what I’ve done.”
            Rosie was silent.  She couldn’t imagine anything that William could
have done, except to forget to feed Bet at night for two nights in a row.  She
shrugged, and William let go of her hand.  “I don’t believe you,” she said
stubbornly, and William sighed.
            “Mrs S wanted me home after I fed Bet,” he said.  “She’s taking me
to the doctor, ‘cause of yesterday.”
            “Henry shouldn’t have touched you,” Rosie said loyally.  “You told
him not to.”
            “My father didn’t care,” William said, wonderingly.  “He just said
maybe I shouldn’t take judo anymore.”
            “My mom’s worried about you.” 
            Rosie didn’t say that she was worried; William already knew.  He
wasn’t sure why his father didn’t care that he’d tried to beat up Henry.  He
thought perhaps the fact that his father didn’t care was scarier than his
father taking the belt to him again.
            “Will you be in trouble for not going home right away?” Rosie
asked.
            “No,” William replied.  “He’s in Valdez again today.”
            “Maybe we should go back anyway,” Rosie said.
            “Okay,” William said.  “Mrs S will just make me go to bed until
it’s time to go to the doctor.  You could stay, you know.”
            “I’ll walk you home,” Rosie offered.  “Then I’ll take Bet back with
me.  Will you be at practise today?”
            “I don’t know,” William said.  “I guess it depends on what the
doctor says.”
            “You don’t seem sick to me.”  Rosie threw a stick to Patch, who
just looked at her and wagged his tail.
            “Sled dogs don’t fetch, silly,” William said.
            “I know,” Rosie answered.  “I’d like to see him do it once.”
            They walked back slowly.  “It’s hard to explain,” William said. 
“It hurts, I just can’t tell where.”
            “On your butt?” Rosie asked bluntly.  She didn’t look at William.
            William said, “My butt doesn’t hurt anymore.  The bruises are
almost gone.”
            “Then where?”
            William shrugged.  “Inside somewhere,” he answered.  “Sometimes I
feel hot, like maybe I have a fever.  And sometimes I’m just so tired I can’t
stand.”
            “Like the ‘flu?” Rosie asked.
            They were almost at William’s cabin.  “No,” William said.  “Not
like the ‘flu at all.”  The ‘flu had happened suddenly, when William was in
kindergarten.  Lots of people had gotten sick, before the Federation had
arrived with vaccines.  William just remembered feeling hot and achy.
            William stopped at the kitchen door and knelt down to hug Bet. 
When he stood up, he saw out of the corner of his eye the pile of rocks marking
where he’d buried Mittens.  He looked at Rosie, who was watching him silently
with her serious black eyes.
            “Rosie,” he said.  He stopped, because he was only seven, almost
eight, and there didn’t seem to be any words for what he wanted to say.
            “I’ll see you at practise, Will,” Rosie said, grinning suddenly. 
“C’mon, Patch; Bet-girl.”
            William watched Rosie take off down the path, the dogs trotting
after her.  He turned around and opened the kitchen door.
***** Chapter 59 *****
Chapter Summary
     The crisis, after Worf's visit. McBride helps William with his
     suicidal ideation and explains why he is in so much pain.
Chapter Notes
     The medical analogy McBride gives William is a true one. Whether you
     think of the toxins from abuse as an infection, or, as Dr Lemoncelli
     suggests, a parasite, the toxins will resist the treatment that is
     designed to eradicate them. The patient, in responding to the
     treatment, finds that the symptoms will increase, that the pain will
     intensify, that the desire for suicide as a relief to pain will be at
     its strongest as the treatment -- the antibiotic, if you wish -
     - begins to work.
Chapter Fifty-Nine
 
 
 
           
            After Worf left there didn’t seem to be any purpose to doing
anything, so I took my pyjamas from the dresser and changed into them and put
myself to bed.  It probably wasn’t even twenty-one hundred yet, but with Jean-
Luc not coming and my day officially done, there wasn’t much else to do, except
hope that at some point I could fall asleep.   Stoch didn’t say anything when
he came back in, just wordlessly gave me the grape-flavoured fluid replacement,
and then he took up da Costa’s post on the other side of the night table.  I
could hear him breathing and I wondered if he planned on simply standing there
all night.  It’s one thing to give up privacy because you’re sharing a bed with
someone, but I was, I suppose, well enough now to regard the necessity of Stoch
as an intrusion.  I was angry and upset, there was nowhere to go and nothing to
do; I was tired and yet too keyed up, I guess, to sleep.  The solution to this
was to simply reach down and jack off, but that was not going to happen with
Stoch in the room.   Consequently I just lay there, wondering how the hell I
was ever going to sleep this night, the argument with Worf replaying in my
mind, but not so thoroughly that it had eradicated the session I’d had with
McBride.
            I wasn’t foolish or desperate enough to think that Worf could have
offered me a solution to my situation in my first meeting with him, but I’d
hoped he’d have understood, seeing me, seeing the condition I was in, seeing
how useless I was now.  I’d seen the shock in his eyes when he’d walked in, so
much like the first time Jean-Luc had seen my arms.  Instead he’d offered me
that made-up bullshit about some ceremony that was supposed to connect with my
tribal genes from my mother – whatever. 
            I wished that there was just some stupid hypo spray that someone –
anyone – could give me that would just knock me the fuck out.
            “Commander,” Stoch said quietly.  “I could teach you that
meditation now.  It would help you, sir.”       
            I didn’t dignify that with an answer.  I heard the door open, and
Yash Fisk say, “Is he asleep already?”
            Maybe if I just lay here they’d all leave me the fuck alone, but
then I realised how stupid and childish that was.
            “I’m trying to sleep,” I said.
            “I’ve got your medication for you, sir,” Yash said, “and Dr
Sandoval wanted me to check your vitals again.”
            Fuck Sandoval, I thought, but I sat up.  I’d left the lights on at
ten percent, and Yash said now, “Lights, thirty percent,” and I blinked against
the brightness.   “Here you go, sir,” Yash said, handing me the medication and
a cup of water.
            I swallowed the meds and placed the water on the night table.  I
waited while Yash took my vitals, and then I started to get back into bed when
I thought I heard Dr McBride’s voice out in sickbay.
            “What’s he here for?” I asked.
            “I don’t know,” Yash said.  He was recording the data.  “I’ll find
out for you.” He turned to leave and then he turned back around and said,
“Will?”
            “Yeah?” I said.  I was picking apart a piece of the blanket.
            “I’m sorry, if you felt I shut you down, before.  As your nurse, my
responsibility is to carry out your doctors’ orders – but I’m also supposed to
be your advocate, your go-between, between you and your doctor.  I don’t want
you to think I don’t take that seriously – and I don’t want you to feel as if I
won’t listen to your concerns.”
            “It’s all right,” I said.
            “Will,” Yash said, and I was surprised at the intensity in his
voice, “no, it’s not all right.  You had real concerns, legitimate concerns. 
If you think I’m shutting you down, I want you to tell me – and if you feel
your treatment team is not listening to you, I need you to tell me that as
well.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            “You’re sure?” Yash persisted.
            “Yeah.” I shrugged my shoulders.  “It’s fine.”
            “I’ll find out why Dr McBride is here,” Yash said.  I could tell he
wasn’t completely convinced that I didn’t care, but the truth was, I really
didn’t.
            I’d been anxious about Worf’s visit because I didn’t want to shame
him and embarrass myself, but he hadn’t acted as if he’d been ashamed of me. 
No, he’d struggled between what he knew was right – what I’d asked him to do –
and what he’d promised the captain, and he’d cloaked whatever he really thought
in the same diffidence he used with everyone who didn’t know him.
            “Lieutenant,” Stoch said, as Yash turned, once again, to go.
            “Yes, Mr Stoch?” Yash turned back.
            Stoch avoided looking at me, keeping his face completely composed
in that Vulcan way, and I knew immediately what he was going to say.
            “Goddamn it, Stoch,” I said, feeling my frustration – never too far
below the surface, it seemed – start to rise.  “This isn’t your business – “
            Stoch glanced at me.  “It is precisely, Commander, my business,” he
said.  “I am not, as you say, your nighttime minder.  I function in the same
capacity as Mr da Costa – even as I am still being trained by Dr McBride and
Counsellor Troi.  Commander Riker,” Stoch said, and he turned back to Yash, “is
no longer concerned, Lieutenant, because he has made the decision to end his
life.  It is,” and he glanced at me, “what he was discussing with Mr Worf.  I
have spoken already to Dr McBride about this, Commander, and that is why he is
here.”
            Yash said, “Will.  Is this true?”
            “What difference does it make?” I asked.  “Do you see any sharps in
here?  It would,” I said, not looking at the piece of blanket I was slowly
picking apart, “take more than one point two minutes, for example, to use this
blanket in any meaningful way.  So I’m not sure it matters what decision I’ve
made, or not made, as the case may be.”
            “I see,” Yash said.  “I will get Dr McBride.”
            “Better you should ask Dr Sandoval if there’s anything in his magic
bag of tricks just to knock me out,” I said.  “Something that will last for
twelve hours or so.  It would be the simplest of solutions.  Then you could all
have a break from me.”
            Yash looked at me for a moment, and I waited for him to say
something, anything, that would end what little control I still had.  I saw
Stoch take a step towards me, out of the corner of my eye, as if he were
anticipating my exploding, and then Yash said,
            “Will.  I’m on your side.  I’ll speak to Dr Sandoval, all right?”
            “Whatever,” I said, and I saw Stoch relax.  I went back to pulling
apart the blanket.
            It was maybe two minutes later when McBride finally decided to make
an appearance; surprisingly, he came in by himself.
            “Gentlemen,” he said, closing the door.  “I thought I’d sit with
you for a little bit, Will, if you don’t mind.”
            “I already know why you’re here,” I said, “so there’s no point in
pretending you’ve just come for a chat.  The only time you ever show up is when
someone’s decided I’m in trouble.”
            “It does seem that way, doesn’t it?” he replied in a completely
unconcerned tone.  “However, I had actually decided I would stop in to see you,
before I got the message from Stoch.  So I’m not completely prevaricating.”
            I didn’t say anything.
            “You don’t mind if I sit down, Will?” he asked.
            “Do I have a choice in the matter?” I returned.
            “Not particularly, no,” he replied, smiling.  He sat down in Jean-
Luc’s chair.  “You know, Stoch, I wouldn’t mind a cup of tea.  If you would ask
the replicator for the McBride mix, hot, please.  Will?  Would you like a cup
of tea?”
            “I’m not Jean-Luc,” I said, “so, no.  I have a cup of water.”
            “Thank you, Mr Stoch,” McBride said.
            Stoch left the room.
            “You had a good visit with your friend Lt Worf?” McBride asked.
            I shrugged.  “I guess,” I said.  “I really don’t want to talk about
it.”
            “I’m not surprised,” McBride said.  “Ah, thank you, Stoch.”  He
took the mug Stoch handed him, and took a sip.
            “Do you want me to stay, Doctor?” Stoch asked.
            “No, I don’t think I need you,” McBride said.  “I’m fairly sure
Commander Riker’s not going to be violent.  I will call you, however, if that
changes.”
            “Oh, fuck you,” I said.  “I haven’t been violent with anyone.”
            “You’ve come close to it, though, haven’t you?  Today in
particular,” he answered.  “And, of course, you’ve been violent with yourself.”
            “What the hell did I do today?” I asked.  “Besides puke all over
your office?”
            “I could hear your conversation, just a few minutes ago, with Lt
Fisk.  You were gearing yourself up, before Lt Fisk was able to defuse the
situation.  And you did behave in a threatening manner in my office, although,
again, it was easily handled,” McBride said.  “I am quite aware of your
propensity for violence, Will.  You channel it through martial arts and Klingon
war games, but it’s there.”
            “My propensity for violence,” I repeated.  “I’ve never done one
violent thing on this ship.”
            “Your record says otherwise, Commander,” McBride said, “but that’s
not why I thought I’d sit with you.”
            I said, “I don’t really care why you thought you’d sit with me.  I
don’t have anything to say, not to you or to Mr Stoch.”
            “That’s fine,” McBride said.  “I’m not here to give you yet another
therapy session.  I just wanted to check in on you, find out how your visit
went, see how you were handling the aftermath of our session.”
            I resisted the urge to roll my eyes.  “I don’t want to talk about
Worf, and I’m handling the aftermath of our session as well as can be
expected.”
            “Good, good,” McBride said.  “So you’re not expecting to use the
blanket, then?”
            I looked down at the strand of blanket I was creating.
            “William,” he said.  “We have allowed you bed linens.  Is that
something we need to remove from you?”
            I grinned.  “So I finally get the locked ward?”
            “If it’s what you need, Commander,” McBride said, “then, yes.”
            “Will you take my clothes, too?”
            “Again – do I need to?”
            I shrugged.  “I don’t see why,” I said.  “The longest I’ve been
left alone, since my futile attempt at resigning my post, is one point two
minutes, and that was today.  I could hardly hang myself in one point two
minutes.”
            “True,” McBride agreed.  “But you are intelligent, and you have
shown the ability to cause harm to yourself – and to others – with improvised
materials.”
            “So I’m held accountable, now, for something I did when I was seven
and strung out on whatever they were giving me?”
            “It was the medication that made you do it?” McBride said.  “Is
that what you’ll use as an excuse this time, then?”
            “There is no this time,” I said angrily.  “No one is abusing me. 
No one is raping me.  The only person I’m likely to harm is myself, and I
hardly have had the opportunity to do that.”
            “So is it anger, William – or displaced rage that you’re feeling
right now?”
            “I don’t even understand what you mean,” I said.
            “You were feeling frustration, weren’t you, before Mr Worf’s
visit?  Because you’d asked to be awakened after thirty minutes and you hadn’t
been?  You’ve had difficulty in managing frustration, Will, since I’ve been on
the ship.”  I didn’t say anything, and McBride finished his tea, and put the
mug on the floor beside him.  “And then Mr Worf turned you down, when you asked
him to help you commit suicide.  And then you find out from Mr Stoch that he
has reported your present suicidal ideation to me, which is why we’re having
this conversation.”
            “So?” I said.  “I still can’t do anything about it.”
            “And we hear from Billy,” McBride said.  “He’s becoming
increasingly harder for you to manage as well, hasn’t he?  And Billy, if you
don’t mind my saying so, is the dangerous one, out of the pair of you.”
            “Whatever,” I said.  “I’m not Billy.”
            “Right now?  Or a minute ago?” McBride asked.
            I said, “What do you want from me?”
            The switch happened so quickly it stunned me.  He stood up, and he
came over to me, and took my hands, and said, looking directly at me, “What was
the last thing I said to you, before you left my office with Joao?”
            “I don’t remember,” I said.
            “Think, Will,” he said.  “We were talking about Jean-Luc and why he
was taking respite care for tonight.  What did I tell you, about tonight?  What
did you agree to?”
            He was using that voice again.  I tried to think, which was hard
because I was so angry, and because I wasn’t breathing – of course I wasn’t
breathing--
            “You said I was to call you if I needed you,” I answered, finally.
            “And you don’t think, William,” he said kindly, “that your feeling
so overwhelmed, and so unhappy, and so full of hopelessness and despair, that
you’re turning your blanket into a rope with which to hang yourself, is an
indication that you should call me for help?”
            I looked at the blanket and said, “No.  How can you help me?  How
can anyone help me?”
            “But I can help you,” McBride said, pulling the chair closer to my
bed and sitting back down.  “That’s why I’m here, Will.  Because I can help
you.”
            “Then why do I feel so bad?  Why is it worse now, than it was
before?”
            “Because we have begun to dismantle your old ways of thinking, and
feeling, and seeing yourself,” he said, “and so you have nothing to fall back
on, now.  Your old ways of coping – by forgetting, by suppressing, by numbing
yourself – they’re gone.  Instead, you’re experiencing all the emotions and
pain you never allowed yourself to feel before.  And you have no new methods of
coping to deal with them.”
            “You make it sound as if I’m supposed to feel this way,” I said.  I
found that I was rubbing my head, where it was hurting again.
            He smiled.  “You are supposed to feel this way, Will.  You are
exactly where you are supposed to be, in your treatment.  I never said this
process would be easy, Will.  I never said it wouldn’t hurt, or that it
wouldn’t be frightening, or difficult.  You are in the worst of it now.  The
memories are flooding back, and they are overwhelming you.  As you begin to
realise exactly what was done to you, the pain, and the fear, and the rage, is
overpowering.  I know this, Will.  It’s why I told you I would be here for
you.  It’s why I told Jean-Luc to take the night off.  Seeing you in this much
pain would only distress him – especially since there’s nothing that he can do
to ease this for you, even as much as he would like to.”
            I said, “I have to feel this way.”
            “As awful as it sounds, yes.”
            I could feel tears running down my face.  “I don’t want to,” I
said.  “It hurts too much.”
            “I know it hurts, Will.”
            “I can’t do this.”
            “You can, do this,” he said.  “I’m not going to leave you alone,
tonight, to face this by yourself.  You have your team here, Will. We will be
right here, beside you.  Dr Sandoval is going to give you the new medication,
and I’m going to sit right here, by your side, all night.  No one expects you
to do this alone.”
            “You’re going to sit here all night?”
            “Yes.  We can talk – I know some very funny stories about Deanna’s
mother – or you can listen to some of your music – Joao programmed the computer
for you, using your play list – or Mr Stoch can work on your visualisation with
you.  We can give you a massage.  You can take another hot shower.  Lt Fisk
told me you’re the ship’s champion at poker.  There are enough of us here, for
a game.  We will get you through tonight, and tomorrow, as my grandmother used
to say, is another day.”
            “My head hurts,” I said.
            “I know,” he answered.  “You’ll have the scan, in the morning.  We
will figure it out.”
            “You can’t make it stop?” I asked.  “Or you won’t make it stop?”
            “Think of it like a fever, Will,” he said.  “You’ve had a fever at
some time in the past?”
            I nodded.
            “You feel hot, and then you’re cold; you may have tremors; your
head aches; you feel terrible.  You can have seizures and hallucinations, if
your fever goes to high.  You want it to stop – and there’s medication to make
it stop – there has been for centuries.  But is it a good idea, Will, to
suppress a fever?”
            “I don’t know,” I said, confused.
            “Try to follow my analogy – you feel terrible, so you want it to
stop.  You take medication, to bring your fever down.  But a fever is your
body’s way of fighting an infection.  If you suppress your fever, you’re
prolonging the infection, and in a way, hurting yourself.”
            “You’re saying that my memories are like an infection?”
            “That’s close to what I’m saying, although we can talk about the
actual medical model I use when you’re more able to understand.  You are
currently feeling terrible – you’re in pain, you can’t sleep, you’re slowly
starving yourself to death.  You want something to make it stop, so you won’t
feel this way anymore.  But the toxins have to work their way out of your
system, Will.  If I numb you – if I give you the dosage you require to simply
shut you down so you don’t feel this anymore – it will just prolong the
illness. You have to remember and to experience what you remember, in order to
let it go.”
            “I have to do what we did before,” I said.  “I have to retrieve the
memories, defuse them, and put them in their proper place.”
            “Yes.  It’s just that what you’re experiencing right now – this
crisis, which is what it is – is a very common reaction to the breakthrough you
had in therapy today.  The part of you that is infected is fighting against any
progress you make.  You are trying to eradicate the toxin that is your father –
and he’s not going to go without a fight.”
            My head was pounding, and I closed my eyes.  I heard someone come
in, and then I felt McBride wipe my face with a warm rag.
            “I’m right here, William,” he said.  “Dr Sandoval is going to give
you the medication now.  Just keep your eyes closed; keep yourself still.”
            I felt the pinch of the hypo spray in my neck.
            “There,” McBride said.  “Thank you, Doctor.  Stoch, if you’ll help
the commander lay back down.  Be gentle; his head is hurting again.”
            Stoch was beside me, and I let him lay me back down in the bed and
adjust the pillows behind me. 
            “Let’s find Mr Riker a new blanket,” McBride said and I heard the
humour in his voice.
            “Of course, sir,” Stoch said, and I felt him lift the blanket from
the bed.
            “You aren’t going to let me keep it?” I asked, my eyes still
closed.
            “I don’t think so,” he answered.  “You don’t really need it, even
if you may think you want it.”
            “I can still keep my pyjamas?” I said.
            “Your pyjamas, Mr Riker,” he replied, “have a velseam, not a
drawstring.”
            “And you’re going to be here all night,” I said.  I was falling
asleep, the pain in my head receding.
            “Yes, Will.  I’ll be sitting right here, in Jean-Luc’s chair.”
            I wanted to ask him how he knew I called it that, but I didn’t have
the energy.  “Okay,” I said.
            “You rest, now.  Stoch and I are right here.”
            “The pain’s going away,” I said.
            “That’s right.  Some of the pain is going away.”
            “I miss Jean-Luc,” I whispered.
            “I know, hen,” McBride said.  “He misses you, too.”
            My head had stopped hurting, and I slept.
           
           
           
           
           
           
             
 
           
           
 
 
 
 
           
 
 
***** Chapter 60 *****
Chapter Summary
     William learns that Rosie is missing.
Chapter Notes
     Physical symptoms of child sexual abuse -- of both boys and girls -
     - include frequent infections of the urinary tract, bladder, kidneys,
     and, surprisingly, peptic ulcers. Psycho-somatic symptoms are also
     common -- particular headaches, nausea, and stomach pain. Frequently
     a child who is being sexually abused will complain of their body not
     feeling right, or their "insides" hurting, even if penetration is not
     occurring. One of the major fears of a sexually abused child is that
     the sexual abuse is doing permanent damage to their bodies, and that
     other people can "see" the damage that has been done. A child who
     consistently complains -- repeatedly complains -- of vague stomach
     pains, nausea, headaches, and not feeling "right," with no other
     obvious causes for the complaints or symptoms -- should be evaluated
     for the possibility of abuse.
Chapter Sixty
 
 
 
 
            The doctor was not William’s usual one, but a locum named Dr Lang. 
William was seated in her examining room on the table, his legs dangling off
and swinging; both Mr and Mrs Shugak were in the room, squeezed into the
corner, and the nurse was trying to keep William still long enough to take his
vitals.
            Finally, Mrs Shugak said, “William.  That’s enough.”
            He sighed and stopped swinging his legs.  “I hate the doctor,” he
said.
            The nurse said, “He has a low-grade fever.  Dr Lou will be in, in a
moment.”
            “Don’t be rude, William,” Mrs S said.
            He said, “You won’t let them take me to the hospital again?”
            Mr S said, “Come here, William,” and William slipped down from the
table and stood beside Mr S, who wrapped one arm around his too-thin
shoulders.  “No one’s taking you anywhere.  It will be all right.”
            William let Mr S hold him for a minute and then he scooted away. 
The door opened and the doctor, a large, heavy-set woman, entered.
            “Are you a giant?” William asked.  He was remembering Mr S’s
stories of frost giants.
            “You’re pretty tall yourself,” the doctor responded.  “How old are
you?  Fifteen?”
            William grinned.  “No,” he said.  “I’m gonna be eight in August.”
            “Then I could say the same to you,” the doctor replied, smiling. 
“You could very well be a giant yourself.  I’m Doctor Lou,” she said, extending
her hand to William, who shook it solemnly.  “Why don’t you sit up here on the
table and tell me what’s going on?”
            William scrambled back up onto the table.  “If I were frost giant,”
he said, “I wouldn’t have to see any doctors anymore.”
            “And why is that?” Doctor Lou asked, looking at William’s read-out.
            William said, “Because then I’d be made out of snow, or stone, or
something, and nothing would hurt anymore.”
            “I see,” Doctor Lou said steadily.  “And can you tell me what
hurts, William?”
            “I don’t know what it is,” William answered.  “It just hurts inside
somewhere.”
            “Would you mind taking your shirt off, and maybe pulling your jeans
down just a little bit, so I can check your tummy?”
            “Since William left the hospital, he often complains that his
stomach hurts,” Mrs Shugak offered.  “He has a hard time eating, sometimes,
because of it.”
            “Why were you in the hospital, William?” Doctor Lou asked, waiting
for him to pull his shirt up and over his head.
            William dropped his shirt on the table, and then pulled apart the
velseam of his jeans and shoved them down a bit.  “Some guy broke my head,” he
said.  “It hurts sometimes, but not as much as people say it does.”
            “He had a skull fracture?” Doctor Lou placed her hand on William’s
stomach, first tapping his stomach and abdomen lightly, then pressing down. 
“Does it hurt when I press here?” she asked.  “Or here?  Or here?”
            “There,” William said.  She was pressing on his lower abdomen.
            “We are going to take some pictures of your lovely skinny body,”
Doctor Lou said, smiling at William.  “I’ll call my friend Danny to take you to
the picture room, okay?  He’ll bring you right back here after he takes the
pictures.”
            “I have a friend named Danny,” William said, closing his jeans and
reaching for his shirt.  “We play baseball together.”  He glanced at Doctor
Lou.  “I’ve been in the biobed before, you know.  I know what it is.  I’m not
stupid.”
            “I bet,” Doctor Lou said, “you’re good at baseball.  You look like
a baseball player.  And I don’t believe anyone thinks you’re stupid, William.” 
She opened the door and then said to Mr and Mrs S, “If you don’t mind staying
here for a minute, I’d like to talk to you.  Janessa? Would you ask Danny to
bring William to the imaging room?  Thanks.”
            William followed Danny to the imaging room, and Danny helped him
into the biobed.
            “You cold, buddy?” Danny asked.
            He’d put a gown on William, after stripping him down to his briefs.
            “Yes, sir,” William said.  The sterile sheet beneath him was cold,
and he shivered.
            “You don’t have to call me sir, little man,” Danny said.  “This
ain’t Starfleet.”
            “I’m going to the Academy,” William told him.  “I’m going to fly a
starship.  I’ll be a captain, someday.”
            “Good for you,” Danny said.  “All right, there we go.  Just a few
more minutes, bud.”
            “It’s Will,” William said, “not Bud.”
            “And we’re done,” Danny said.  “I’m just going to send these to
Doctor Lou.  Okay, Will, let’s get you down from there.”
            “I can do it myself, if you’ll let me out.”
            “Of course you can,” Danny replied.  “Your clothes are in the
changing room.  Just put the gown in the laundry chute, okay?”
            “Sir,” William said, and then he grinned.
            William changed back into his clothes and followed Danny back to
the examining room.
            “Back up on the table, William,” Doctor Lou said.
            “Can I go home now?  I’ve got baseball practise.”
            “Not today, William,” Doctor Lou said.  “You’ve got an infection,
which is why you have a fever and why you hurt.  I’m going to give you some
medicine that will make you feel better, but you have to promise me that you’ll
take it, three times a day, every day, until it’s all gone.  Otherwise, your
infection could not go away completely, and that’s something we don’t want. 
All right?”
            “If I promise to take the medicine and not spit it out, I can go
home?”  William asked.
            “Yes,” Doctor Lou said.  She bent down and looked William in the
eyes.  “You are not a frost giant, William, and you are not made out of stone. 
Your body sometimes needs help to stay healthy, and this is one of those
times.  Your stomach pain and your fever will go away when the infection does,
and that will happen pretty quickly.  If you take the medicine.”
            William said, looking down, “I know I’m not made of stone.  I only
wish I were.”
            Doctor Lou put her hand on William’s shoulder and felt him go rigid
beneath her; quietly, she removed it.  “I’m going to try to help you, William,”
she said.
            William looked up at her and his eyes were blank.  “It’s okay,” he
said.  “I’ll take the medicine.”
He slid off the examining table, and stood beside Mr S.  “Can we go now? I have
to tell Rosie I won’t be at practise.  She’ll be worried.”
            Mr S said, “Of course.”  He turned to his wife and said, “I’ll take
him out.  We’ll wait for you outside.”
            “I’ll see you in a week, William,” Doctor Lou said.  “I’m sure
you’ll be feeling better by then.”
            “Uh-uh.”  William didn’t look back.
 
 
            William fell asleep in the car, and the Shugaks drove back to the
village in silence.  Doctor Lou seemed to know what she was doing and saying;
there was Henry’s insistence that Auntie Raisa and the tribal council should be
involved; and Vera Kalugin had called, wanting to speak to Marty.  The Shugaks
knew they were walking a very fine line – Kyle Riker was, even though he
pretended not to be, a very wealthy man, and he could simply pick William up
and take him to San Francisco or Paris or wherever else there were Federation
offices – off-world, for example.  The only reason Riker kept William in the
village was convenience, and, perhaps, they thought, though they didn’t have to
say it (when you’ve been married for over thirty years there’s a great deal you
don’t need to say), it was to rub in their faces that Bette was dead and he
could do what he wanted with William and no one could stop him.  Tasya Shugak
glanced back at William, sleeping peacefully, for once, in the backseat, and
wondered if Dr Louisa Lang and Master Chief Henry Ivanov were two people Kyle
Riker hadn’t counted on.
 
            William’s father was home when they drove in, and he woke up, sore,
in the backseat.  He was groggy and feverish; Mr S simply picked him up and
carried him into the house, and William let him.  Kyle Riker was in his study
and came out as the Shugaks entered, William half-asleep in Marty Shugak’s
arms.
            “What did the doctor say?” Riker asked.
            “He has a kidney infection,” Mrs S answered.  “Marty, if you’ll put
him to bed, I’ll get him something to drink and his medication.”
            “A kidney infection,” Riker repeated. 
            William said, “I have to call Rosie and tell her I’m not going to
baseball practise.”
            “I’ll call her,” Mr S said, and he carried William up the stairs.
            He helped William undress and put his pyjamas on, and then tucked
him into the bed.  There was an old-fashioned book on William’s night table,
and Mr S picked it up.
            “Are you enjoying this?” he asked William.  It was one of Bette’s;
she’d written her name in it.
            William nodded.  “My stomach hurts,” he said.
            “I know, Will.”  Mr S didn’t say it was Elizaveta’s book; William
had enough to deal with.  “Doesn’t he regret what he does, in the end?”
            William shrugged.  “I’m not there yet,” he answered sleepily.  “But
I wouldn’t regret it, if he gets them back.  I would’ve just killed them all.”
            “Here, William,” Mrs S said as she came into the room.  “Sit up and
take your meds.”
            Mr S helped him sit up, and he opened his mouth and swallowed the
meds with a cup of water.
            “You just sleep,” Mr S said to him, tucking him back in and wiping
a dribble of water from his mouth.  “Edmond Dantes will still be here when you
wake up.  And I’ll call that Rosie-girl for you.”
            “Okay,” William said, closing his eyes.  “Thanks.”
 
            It was late, very late, when William was wakened by voices
downstairs.  The first thing he realised was that he was still in his own bed,
which meant his father hadn’t been to bed yet; then he saw that it was truly
dark outside, and he knew it must be after midnight.  His father usually came
up way before then; sometimes he would wake him, sometimes not; now William was
wide awake, and he slipped out of bed and found his robe.  He thought he heard
Rosie’s father; something was wrong.
            He put his robe on and found his moccasins and then he crept out of
his room and to the top of the stairway.  The lights were off and it was dark;
no one would see him crouched by the banister.  Both of Rosie’s parents were
here; and Matt’s father, and the Shugaks.  Rosie’s mother was crying, softly. 
He could hear his father’s voice, low, as if they were trying not to wake him
up, and then he heard Mrs S go into the kitchen and he heard the cupboard
opening – was she making coffee?
            He slid down two stairs so he could hear better.
            “You’re sure she didn’t come here, looking for William?” It sounded
as if Mr Kalugin had already asked this question a million times.
            His father’s voice was still low, but it wasn’t impatient – and
that made the hair stand up on the back of William’s neck.  His father was
always impatient when people asked him the same questions again.
            “We knew William wasn’t going to practise,” his father was saying,
“Marty said he would call Rosie for William to let her know.  William’s too
sick right now to play baseball.”
            Why was his father calling him William?  He slid down one more
step.
            “I don’t understand,” Rosie’s mother said.  “She would never do
this.  It’s not like her.  She knows how dangerous it is in the bush.  She’d
never have gone anywhere without Patch.”
            William felt his stomach clench.  Rosie was gone somewhere.
            His father said, “There’s nothing we can do now.  At first light
we’ll call Master Chief Ivanov and we’ll organise a search party.  I’m sure
she’s safe.  She’s a smart girl.  We’ll find her.”
            William was absolutely still.  When your life depends on the mood
of someone bigger and stronger and scarier than you, you know every tone of
voice, every movement, every gesture, every look.  You become the master of
reading little things, and William was an encyclopedia on his father.
            Rosie was gone, lost somewhere in the bush.
            He backed up first one step, then another, until he was back on the
landing.
            No.  Rosie was missing, and his father was lying.
            He crept back into his bedroom and dressed quickly.  He hadn’t
exactly lied to that social worker lady who’d come last year to look at the
cabin roof, when he’d told her he’d fallen from it; he’d been on the roof lots
of times – he’d just never fallen from it.  He put his trainers on and opened
the window.  The night air was chill, and he grabbed his jacket from the closet
and put that on.  Then he squeezed himself out the window, and pulled it almost
all the way down again, once he was crouching down on the eave.  He crawled
over to the porch, and climbed down the pillar; then he was off and running
behind the house.  There was a low gibbous moon and the back was in a silver
light; he veered over towards the barn, on his way to the path into the woods,
down to the creek where he and Rosie had talked about his father and what Rosie
knew, when he stopped, suddenly. 
            He’d put rocks over the place where he’d buried Mittens, and they
were gone.  In fact, the place where he’d buried Mittens was gone, flattened
over, and swept, as if nothing had ever been disturbed.  He stood, still, not
knowing what to do, or where to go.  He saw himself and Rosie, sitting on the
bank of the creek, Rosie with her hand in his, and heard her say, “I know he
hurts you.”  He remembered what his father had said, after he’d spoken to
Henry.  Rosie had known he was going to the doctor; she wouldn’t have come here
to pick him up for practise; she wouldn’t have come here at all, unless….Choose
one, his father had said.
            He had chosen Rosie.  He looked at the ground, where he’d buried
Mittens, and then he turned around and climbed back inside.
            In the morning, he went out with Bet and Patch and everyone else,
including his father.  The search had gone on for days, for weeks even.
            It didn’t matter.
            Rosie was gone; and it was his fault.
            William turned into stone.
***** Chapter 61 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will has the brain scans McBride ordered, and the cause of his head
     pain is found; Will makes another breakthrough towards healing.
Chapter Notes
     Using MRI and PET scan technology is extremely important in the
     treatment of PTSD. PTSD causes injury to the brain in a way similar
     to a TBI; often there is damage done to the hippocampus and the
     frontal lobe. Using this technology can show the healing that occurs
     during the treatment of PTSD which uses the combination of the
     hyperbaric chamber, breathing retraining, nutrition, and CBT.
     Small brain bleeds are not an uncommon side effect to a concussion,
     and can happen any time after such an injury.
Chapter Sixty-One
 
 
 
 
            When I awoke it was seemingly very early in the morning, well
before the beginning of alpha shift.  McBride was still sitting beside me,
writing with his archaic pen; Mr Stoch was also at his post, although he’d
taken one of the other chairs and was working on a padd.  Sickbay was quiet,
the way it always is in the late hours.  I blinked a few times and then
stretched; I’d automatically turned to Jean-Luc, but, of course, he wasn’t
there.  I sighed.  My head was a dull ache and I was thirsty.
            “Do you need something, Will?” McBride asked quietly.
            “I’m thirsty,” I said, sitting up.  “My head still hurts.”
            “I will get you some fresh water, Commander,” Stoch offered, and he
left, taking the old cup of water with him.
            McBride put his papers on the night table.  “Still in the same
place?” he asked, looking at me.
            I nodded.  “Is it close to alpha shift?” I asked.
            “In two hours or so,” McBride answered.  “What kind of pain?”
            “Just aching,” I said.
            “A number?”
            I sighed again.  “I’ve never understood that question,” I said. 
“Four, maybe.  I don’t know.”
            “Do you want something for the pain?” he asked.
            “No,” I said.  Stoch returned and I took the cup of water from him
and drank.  “Can you take me to the head?” I asked.
            “Sir,” Stoch answered.
            McBride helped me out of the bed, and I followed Stoch to the
head.  I urinated and then washed my hands and splashed some water on my face.
            “Will you be getting up now, sir?” Stoch asked as he returned me to
my room.
            I got back into the bed.  “No,” I answered.  “There’s no point to
it.  Why make my day longer than it already is?”
            “Will you be able to sleep some more, then, William?” McBride
asked.  He’d sat back down in Jean-Luc’s chair, but he hadn’t picked up his
work.
            I shrugged.  “I don’t know,” I said.  “Am I having my visualisation
with Deanna first thing, or am I having the brain scan?”
            “You are scheduled for the brain scans at 0700,” McBride answered.
            “Why am I having this again?  Did you tell me and I’ve forgotten?”
            “They were originally scheduled because I always do brain scans of
my patients with PTSD,” McBride said.  “The disorder affects several areas in
the brain, particularly the hippocampus.  I’d like to see what’s happened,
compare it to scans you’ve had before, and then I will continue to take images
of your brain throughout your treatment.  It will give me an accurate measure
of the healing done by the hyperbaric chamber, for example, and a good idea of
what neural pathways are regenerating with your therapy.”  He smiled.  “I will
show you the pictures, Will, and you’ll have a better idea of what I mean.” He
paused and then he said, “However, I am very concerned about the continued pain
where your concussion was, and the referred pain from your earlier injury. 
I’ve asked Mr Data to see if he can’t retrieve the images from Providence
Hospital of your original injury.  I know that Mr da Costa told you that the
pain you’re experiencing is remembered pain – and there was enough evidence,
early on, for that to be an accurate assessment.  Still, I’d like to be
positive that there isn’t an injury that we’re not aware of.”
            “Like what?” I asked, sleepily. 
            “My biggest concern is a small bleed,” McBride said.  “Your blood
pressure has been very high, high enough to cause a bleed.  I’d simply prefer
to rule that out.”
            “I’m going back to sleep,” I said, and I rolled over on my side, to
where Jean-Luc would be sleeping, if he were with me.  I could smell his
cologne on the pillow, and I closed my eyes.
 
 
            It was da Costa who woke me, an hour or so later.  I sat up and
waited for the dizziness to go away before I swung my legs around and stood
up. 
            “Are you walking me to the shower?” I asked, heading towards the
dresser to pick up my clothes.
            Da Costa looked up at me, from where he was standing, and grinned. 
“No, Commander,” he replied.  “You don’t have time for a shower, and you don’t
need your clothes.  You’ll be going into the biobed, sir.  I think Djani is
bringing a gown for you.”
            I looked at him.  He was still grinning at me like an idiot.  I
said, “What do you mean, I don’t have time to take a shower?  It takes me five
minutes to shower.”
            “No, sir,” he answered.  “No shower.”
            Clearly there was something I wasn’t understanding.  “That doesn’t
make any sense,” I said.  “And if I’m having a brain scan, why the hell do you
have to take my clothes?”
            “Orders,” he replied succinctly.  “Into the biobed, into a gown.”
            I looked at him suspiciously.  He was still grinning.  Djani came
in with the gown, and I sighed.  “What are you so goddamned happy about?” I
said.  “I had a shitty day yesterday and a shitty night, and you’re standing
there grinning like the village idiot.”
            “Actually, sir, you slept all night,” da Costa said mildly, once
again as if he were channeling Jean-Luc.  “So even though you required Dr
McBride in the early evening, it could be said that you had a better night than
you usually do.”
            “Oh, good,” I said, stripping out of my pyjamas and putting the
damned gown on.  “You can tell the captain not to bother with me anymore,
because I do just fine without him.”
            “I’m not sure that I want to hear this conversation,” Beverly said
as she came in. 
            Fortunately, I’d put the gown on at that time, even though I guess
there was no point – almost three weeks into fucking living in sickbay – to
being modest with anyone anymore.  The whole world had seen my dick.
            “Good morning, Will,” she continued.  “You had a good night,
apparently.  Are you ready to go?”
            “I don’t even get my cup of coffee?” I asked.
            “No,” Beverly replied.  “Just on the off chance, Will, that we find
something causing your pain.  No food, no water, no meds.  Just you, looking
beautiful in your gown.”
            I heard da Costa snort.  “Is there a village idiot competition this
morning?” I asked.
            “I still control the hypo sprays, Mr Riker,” Beverly said.  “I’d
keep that acid tongue of mine firmly in my mouth, if I were you.”
            I opened my mouth to say something, and she grinned at me; she was
terrifying.  I said, “I’ll keep my mouth shut,” and I heard da Costa laugh.
            “That’s a good boy,” Beverly said.  “Come on, Dr McBride is waiting
for you.”
            “Doesn’t he ever sleep?” I asked as I followed her out of my room. 
“It’s freezing out here.”
            “We’ll get you warmed up in a minute,” Beverly said.
            Dr McBride was waiting for me in the isolation room.  “There you
are,” he said.  “I think that you’ll find the images of your brain interesting,
Will.”
            “Whatever,” I muttered, climbing into the biobed.
            I closed my eyes while everyone worked around me, starting an IV
and starting the machines, and finally, warming up the bed underneath me so I
didn’t freeze to death.
            “I’ve given you a small sedative, Will,” McBride said to me.  “Just
so you won’t feel claustrophobic about having the machine around your head for
such a long period of time.”
            “I don’t get claustrophobic,” I answered.  I could feel something
warm flowing into me from the IV.
            “Just relax, Will,” Beverly said.  “There’s no pain involved in
this scan.  We’re just taking images of your brain.  You shouldn’t feel any
discomfort at all.  If you do, I want you to tell me right away.”
            “I’m relaxed as I ever get, Beverly,” I said irritably, and I heard
McBride laugh.
            “You’re doing fine, Will,” she responded.  “I know.  Just breathe,
okay?”
            I breathed. 
            “Will,” McBride said, close to me.  “You remember the safe space
you created with Deanna on the ship?”
            “Yeah,” I said.
            “Why don’t you go ahead and visualise yourself there?  Follow the
instructions that Deanna gave you.  Go inside wherever it is, walk around, and
find yourself a comfortable spot to be.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            I closed my eyes again and pictured myself taking the turbo lift to
Deck 17, opening the doors to the Arboretum, which had been cleared of people
just for me.  I privacy locked the doors and stood at the beginning of the
path, breathing in the sweet-smelling air of the garden.  Then I repeated what
I’d done with Deanna; I walked the perimeter of the Arboretum, making sure
everything was okay, and then I went back to where Jean-Luc and I had made
love, and I sat down, leaning against the stones surrounding the pond, and I
closed my eyes and slept.
 
 
            When I woke, Jean-Luc was sitting beside me, holding my hand.
            “We have to stop meeting like this,” I said.
            “Indeed,” he answered. 
            “I thought I wasn’t going to see you until tonight.”  I was still
trying to orient myself.
            “That was the original plan,” Jean-Luc said.  “You tend to give us
these little surprises, though.”
            “My head still hurts,” I said.
            “I’m not surprised at that, Will,” he answered, and he squeezed my
hand.  “Your Dr McBride had a feeling there was something else going on, and it
turns out he was right.”
            “He’s always right,” I said.  “I don’t think I like him very much.”
            Jean-Luc smiled.  “The two of you are somewhat alike, I think,” he
said.  “It’s not terribly surprising to me that you’re not liking, as you say,
him at the moment.”
            “You’re always right, too,” I said.  “And I don’t have a problem
liking you.”
            He laughed.  “It seems to me, Number One, that you are
misremembering somewhat,” he said.  “You didn’t much care for me your first
year on this ship.”
            I rolled my eyes.  “You put me through my paces,” I said.  “You had
to.  I understood that, Jean-Luc.”
            “How long has he been awake, Captain?” Beverly came in, tricorder
and Ogawa in hand.
            “Only a few minutes, Beverly,” Jean-Luc answered.
            “I had asked you, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said, “to call me when he
waked.  How are you feeling, Will?”
            I waited a moment, for Jean-Luc to reply, and when he didn’t, I
said, “My head is a little sore.”
            “Define ‘sore,’” she said. 
            “It’s not the same kind of pain as it’s been,” I said.  “It’s just
sore, like I banged it or something.”
            “Good,” Beverly said.  “Your vitals look good.  I’m going ahead and
giving you fluids this morning.  You’ll be here another hour or so, Will, and
then we can move you back to your room.”
            “What happened?” I asked.  “Where’s McBride?”
            “Dr McBride,” Beverly said, “has returned to his quarters for some
much needed rest.  I expect you will see him this afternoon, and he’ll go over
the brain scans at that time.  As for what happened, as he suspected, you had a
small bleed in the area where you’d been concussed, which was also where you’d
sustained your original skull fracture.  There was scarring and some tissue
damage.  It’s been repaired, and as long as we can keep your blood pressure
from skyrocketing, you should no longer have the kind of head pain you’ve been
experiencing.  You need, Will, to work on staying calm.”
            “I had a stroke?” I asked.
            “In the way that any bleed is considered a stroke,” Beverly
answered.  “It’s not an uncommon side effect to the type of concussion you had,
and your walls were weakened already by the untreated damage that had been
done.  You will be tired, and you might feel disoriented, and you will
definitely not be doing anything today except resting in bed.  Are we clear on
that?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “No schedule for today, then?”
            “No,” Beverly said.  “You’ll be under light sedation today. 
Alyssa, if you’ll give him the sedative.  I’ll check in on you in an hour,
after your fluids are done.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            After Lt Ogawa left the room, Jean-Luc said in a low voice,
“Beverly.”
            “Yes?” She was reading something on her padd, not paying too much
attention to him, and he said again, “Beverly.”
            There was a tone in his voice that made me want to close my eyes
and just pretend I wasn’t there.
            It was obvious that Beverly had heard it too; she said, “Captain,”
and turned to look at him.
            “Would you have said something to Chief O’Brien, for example, if it
were Keiko who was in Commander Riker’s situation?”
            “Regarding?” Beverly replied in an even tone, and I could feel my
hand start to shake, and then I felt Jean-Luc still it.
            “Regarding the three minutes that I spent alone with William after
he awoke from surgery.”  Jean-Luc’s tone was likewise even, but I could hear
the undercurrent of anger in it, and I’m sure Beverly did as well.
            “Perhaps this conversation would be more appropriate in my office,”
Beverly said, “Captain.”
            “I don’t think so,” Jean-Luc replied.  “I want William to hear
this, primarily because I was not with him yesterday and last night, when he
had such a difficult time.”  I felt him tighten his hold on my hand, and he
said, in his normal tone of voice to me, “I understand, Will, that you’re
feeling anxious right now, and I know the last thing either Dr Crusher or I
want is to make you anxious or upset.  And I know that every time someone is
even mildly upset about something – especially when that someone happens to be
me – you take it on yourself, as something you did – and you’ve done that for
all the years you’ve been on this ship.  I am a little angry right now, and you
need to hear, Will, that it has nothing at all to do with anything that you
have done.  Can you open your eyes and let me know that you understand that?”
            I opened my eyes and said, “Yes, sir.”
            “Will,” he said patiently, “can you tell me – not the captain –
that you understand that you’re not responsible for the way I am feeling right
now?”
            “I know you’re not angry with me, Jean-Luc,” I said, and he sighed.
            “I wish I could believe that you understood that,” he said. 
“Beverly, perhaps my current relationship with William has been difficult for
you – I don’t know.  We’ve both been so overwhelmed with everything that’s
happened that you and I – not the treatment team – haven’t had any time at all
to talk.”
            “Jean-Luc – “ Beverly said.
            “Please don’t interrupt me,” Jean-Luc returned, and I wanted to
close my eyes again.  “I needed time alone with William when he woke up.  What
I didn’t need – and what Will didn’t need – was what you said when you came
in.  It upset him unnecessarily, and it placed me in a very awkward position, a
position that I should not have to defend.  Do not place me – or Will – in that
position again.”
            “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said quietly.  “You’re right, of
course.  And maybe this has been difficult for me and I’ve just overlooked it,
because, as you’ve said, we’ve both been overwhelmed.  Point taken, Captain.”
            “Thank you,” Jean-Luc said.  “And there was nothing for you to be
anxious or upset about, Will.  Beverly and I are still close friends, and no
one is angry with you, mon cher.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            He rose, and then he leaned down and kissed me, lightly, on the
face.  “You need to rest,” he said, smiling, “and I need to get back to work. 
I will see you this afternoon.”
            I nodded.  I heard both Beverly and Jean-Luc leave the room; I
heard Jean-Luc say something in a low voice that I couldn’t quite make out, and
then I heard Beverly laugh.  They’d been friends for a very long time; I didn’t
want to be the cause of the end of their friendship.  And then I realised that
I’d done exactly what he’d said I’d do – I’d taken it on myself.  I thought
about what McBride had said about my father and his lies.  It seemed to me,
even as I could feel the sedative working and that I was drifting back into
sleep, that my father had trained me well.  Even when I was specifically told
something was not my fault, I still blamed myself. 
***** Interlude: Sixteen *****
Chapter Summary
     A meeting on Risa.
Chapter Notes
     Kyle Riker's interest in "history" is an allusion to the way Edward
     II of England was murdered.
Interlude:  Sixteen
 
 
 
 
            His last meeting of the day was with that idiot Behlar, the Risian
agent who was responsible for sending him the boy who was really too old for
his current taste.  Behlar had agreed to meet him at a small café just outside
of the marketplace in Nuvia, and he was deliberately late, making sure no one
was following him and that no one else was in the café.  Behlar, of course, was
oblivious, and not for the first time he wondered about the wisdom in allowing
the agent to live.  He supposed he should deal with him sooner, rather than
later; the situation in deep space was deteriorating; he would be busy in San  
Francisco for some time, and then there was the business of his son’s illness
and Picard.  Perhaps, he thought, after he got the information from him about
the boy, he would simply terminate the man before he returned to the cottage. 
            He walked into the café, a smile on his face, noting with irony the
genuine pleasure with which Behlar greeted him, even as his death warrant had
already been signed.
 
 
            He realised he was being followed well before he reached the
shuttle terminal.  He thought about taking evasive manoeuvres, but then it
occurred to him that either the man wanted to be spotted or he was simply
incompetent; either way, he was no threat.  He veered into the park, across
from the Federation offices where the shuttle terminal was, and wandered over
to a small pond surrounded by the lush vegetation that was a trademark of
Risa.  He sat down on a stone bench and watched what would have been called
ducks floating on the pond.
            “Riker,” the man said, sitting down next to him.
            Riker said, “This must be an all-out emergency, for you to be so
obvious.”
            “You might think it so, when you hear what I have to say,” the man
said.  He was half human and half something, Riker didn’t know what – so he
took a deep breath, and he stilled himself, and he looked the man in the face
briefly, before turning his gaze back to the pond.  Betazoid. 
            “You won’t get anything from me,” Riker said, smiling thinly.  “So
don’t even bother.”
            “Yes,” the other man confirmed.  “I’d been warned I wouldn’t.”  He
paused, and then he said, “Did you have to kill the agent that way?”  He made a
moue of distaste.
            Riker grinned, and then he shrugged.  “I am a student of history,”
he answered.  “It seemed an appropriate death, given his tastes.”
            “One might say the same of your son,” the other man said.
            “Why?” Riker asked.  “Are you planning on killing him?  It seems a
waste of time, considering he’s determined to do so himself.”
            “You wanted information,” the man said, after a moment.  “I have it
for you – the information you requested – but – “ here the man paused, “– I
have information you need, as well.”
            “Must you be so dramatic?” Riker said.  “I find it tedious.  Which
do you intend to give me first?  The information on my son, or the information
they think I need?”
            “Let’s take a walk,” the man suggested.
            Riker turned his blue eyes on the man’s dark ones.  “Do you really
think it’s wise to take a walk with me?” he asked, and he smiled again.
            The man shrugged.  “Our mutual friend wouldn’t be happy if you
dispatched me,” he replied.  “And I prefer to be moving.”
            “Do you think I care,” Riker asked, rising, “what our mutual friend
wants or doesn’t want?”
            The man stood as well.  “Of course you don’t,” he acknowledged. 
“However, the information I have you need – and you’ll need me to return with
instructions.  I expect, as with most of your kind, you are ultimately
pragmatic.  It would be a complete waste of resources to kill me at this
point.”
            “Well,” Riker conceded, “you may be right, at that.  And it’s a
lovely day, the flowers are blooming, and I am on vacation, after all.”
            He began to walk, and he heard the man behind him exhale sharply;
he had to restrain himself from chuckling.  The man caught up to him, and they
walked quietly down the path around the pond.
            “Look at the size of that turtle,” Riker said.  “You would think
ducks wouldn’t inhabit a pond with a turtle of that size in it.  Stupid
creatures, ducks.”
            The man said, “Turtles are not known for their brain size either.”
            Riker glanced at his companion, and then returned to the turtle. 
“They don’t need brains,” he said.  “They are superbly crafted for their
needs.  You could give a duck a brain, but it still wouldn’t elude a predator
of that size and capability.”
            “I am not a duck,” the man said, “and I have no desire whatsoever
to inhabit your particular pond.”
            Riker laughed.  “What am I supposed to call you?” he asked.  “I
suppose you have one of those typical Betazoid names.  Tam or Mal or Lon or
something.”
            “Renan,” the man replied.  “It’s as good a name as any.”
            “Perhaps,” Riker said, “you should begin, then.  While it’s true I
am on vacation, I’m not a particularly patient man.”
            “Of course,” Renan agreed.
            Riker left the trail around the pond, and headed into the densely
wooded area.  Renan followed, easily able to catch up to him.
            “You wanted to know about your son,” Renan said in a quiet voice. 
“Captain Picard reported to Admiral Nechayev twenty days ago that Commander
William Riker was severely injured in a ‘shipboard accident,’ and medical leave
was requested and automatically granted.  The nature of the injury was not
reported.  However, it has been reported from Nechayev’s staff that William
Riker suffered a near fatal heart attack almost a week after the initial injury
was reported.  At that point extended medical leave was requested and granted. 
Projected return to duty for Commander Riker is in six to eight weeks.”
            “Go on,” Kyle Riker said.  He continued his easy pace along the
path, not looking at his companion, but simply taking in the small animals
skittering out of his way and the artfully-designed groupings of plants.
            “The Enterprise left its mission of charting two days after Riker
was injured, and arrived at Starbase 515 on the Neutral Zone, where it picked
up a Betazoid doctor named Alasdair McBride,” Renan continued.
            “That sounds more Scots than Betazoid,” Riker commented wryly.
            “McBride is one-quarter Betazoid.  His great-aunt is the head of
the Sixth House and is quite close to Ambassador Lwaxana Troi.  Troi’s daughter
Deanna is a lieutenant commander on the ship and is the ship’s counsellor.”
            “I know all about Deanna Troi,” Riker said.  “My son had a
relationship with her on Betazed when he was a lieutenant, and I’d thought he
was still close to her, until Picard indicated otherwise.”
            “McBride is one of the most preeminent psychiatrists from Betazed,”
Renan said, choosing not to comment on Riker’s mention of Jean-Luc Picard. 
“His specialty is in treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.  Staff in
Nechayev’s office reported that Deanna Troi had already requested training from
McBride in his intensive treatment program, backed by Picard, and this had been
approved by the Admiralty, which is looking to use it on galaxy and
constitution class ships.  However, they weren’t due to pick up McBride and
start the program for another month.”
            “So that’s Will’s diagnosis,” Riker said, almost to himself.  “It
confirms that he attempted suicide, as his original ‘shipboard injury.’  And
yet the Admiralty doesn’t have this information – he’s still on the Enterprise,
being treated by this McBride.”
            “Yes.”
            Riker stopped on a small wooden bridge, overlooking a rapidly
flowing creek.  He stood silently, leaning against the bridge, gazing into the
water.  He could see fish, suspended in the rapids.
            “Interesting,” Riker said noncommittally.   Then he said, “Does the
Admiralty know that he’s in a relationship with Picard?”
            “Our mutual friend does,” Renan answered.  “The Admiralty does
not.  Why would it care?”
            “Because Picard has lied to them about my son’s suicide attempt and
his diagnosis, clearly in an effort to keep Will both on the ship and in the
service,” Riker answered.  “He should have been medically-discharged and sent
to the psychiatric facility in San Francisco.”
            “TheEnterprise is currently very far from San Francisco,” Renan
said.  “I’m sure that was a factor.”
            “Then why not leave him on Starbase 515?” Riker asked.  “You said
you had other information.”
            “Yes.”  This time Renan eyed him anxiously.
            “Oh, I won’t kill you,” Riker said airily.  “Lately my limit has
been reduced to one a day.”
            “McBride has resources,” Renan told him.  “Serious resources.  He
is looking for you – and he has found information on your family.  Not much,
but the person who is looking on his behalf is quite powerful in his own
right.  Our mutual friend is concerned.”
            “Picard indicated to me that my son has ‘remembered’ certain
events,” Riker said.  “He implied that these events are of great wrongdoing on
my part.”  Riker shrugged.  “My son has always been unstable.  Even when he was
a little boy, he was unstable.  He was committed as a child.  He can remember,”
Riker said, “whatever he chooses.”
            Renan said cautiously, “Our mutual friend knows you very well,
Captain.  Whatever your son has remembered is likely to be true.”
            Riker smiled slowly at the other man, showing just a glimpse of his
teeth, and then bent him over the railing of the bridge, his hands casually
around the other man’s throat.
            “Just who,” Riker said calmly, “are you calling ‘Captain’?”
            Renan couldn’t speak.
            “Please remember,” Riker said, “that just because my limit has
dropped to one a day, it doesn’t mean that I can’t up it if I choose to,” and
he let Renan go.
            Renan coughed.  “Alasdair McBride is an important man,” he said,
his voice temporarily scratchy.  “He is the great-nephew of the ruler of the
Sixth House.  Your son is ‘imzadi’ to the daughter of the heir to the Fifth
House.  And while Nechayev may hate Picard and wish to see him removed – and
your son as well – Picard is supported by many other people,including the heir
to Betazed’s Fifth House.  Our mutual friend would like you to be careful.  You
may want to curb your –“ he faltered, and then said, “your tendencies.  Perhaps
it was a good thing that poor Mr Behlar met his unfortunate accident.”
            “Does our mutual friend,” and Riker said this in what seemed to be
a gentle sneer, “know who it is who is doing the looking?”
            “If he did,” Renan replied honestly, “he certainly wouldn’t tell
me.”
            Riker began to walk again, this time back the way they came, and
Renan hurried to catch up.
            “You may tell our mutual friend,” and Renan was sure he was
sneering now, “that the message has been received.”
            “Sir,” Renan answered.
            “If you say that in a populated area,” Riker said companionably, “I
shall be forced to kill you.”
            Renan said nothing, and the two of them walked out of the wooded
garden and back to the pond.  Riker nodded briefly to Renan, who returned to
sitting on the bench, and walked quietly but purposefully away from the
garden.  He crossed the street to the shuttle terminal, where his shuttle and
its pilot were waiting for him, and made himself comfortable.
            The shuttle took off for the coast, and Riker leaned back in his
seat, wondering what the boy Billy had been up to, and he smiled, remembering
that he’d promised the boy something new when he returned.
           
***** Interlude: Seventeen *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard waits for the results of Will's surgery, and is shown the
     images of Will's brain.
Chapter Notes
     As many of you have undoubtedly realised, I have done a significant
     amount of research on this particular topic -- Post-Traumatic Stress
     Disorder as it results from chronic child abuse -- and the amount of
     new research that is available is growing exponentially everyday, so
     much so that it is almost impossible to keep up with it. One of the
     most fascinating aspects of PTSD research is in the relationship
     between neuro-chemistry and the actual parts of the brain itself.
     Chemicals that are the result of significant trauma and stress, such
     as adrenalin and dopamine, have a significant effect on the shrinking
     and atrophying of certain areas of the brain, such as the
     hippocampus. I find this all fascinating, but I have a lay person's
     understanding (or perhaps I should say a writer's understanding) of
     the research -- I am neither a doctor nor a psychiatrist in the real
     world, although my understanding of this topic is deeply personal.
     This having been said, any mistakes in my description of Will's brain
     are my own and not the mistakes of those whose information given
     freely for this novel is gratefully appreciated.
Interlude:  Seventeen
 
 
 
           
            Picard stirred, and, half asleep, found himself turning to Will,
who, of course, wasn’t there.  He swore quietly and sat up.  He was in his
quarters, not sickbay; and while it was true that he’d actually slept all
night, he was surprised to find himself feeling irritable and out of sorts.  It
came as a shock to him what the problem was – he was sixty-seven years old, for
heaven’s sake.  Ironically he wondered if this meant if maybe his hair might
grow back too, and he solved the problem of his irritability the way he had
when he was younger, with a very long, very hot shower.
            He was just finishing using the depilatory when he heard Beverly’s
voice come over his comm. badge,
            “Crusher to Picard.”
            “Picard here,” he said, trying to keep his voice level.
            “Captain,” Beverly said, “I just wanted to remind you that
Commander Riker will be undergoing the brain scans at 0700 this morning.”
            “Acknowledged,” he replied, putting things away and leaving the
head.  “Keep me informed, Doctor.  Picard out.”
            He was due on the bridge, and he had a quick breakfast, a couple of
sips of tea and half a croissant, and then left his quarters.  At dinner in Ten
Forward, McBride and Beverly had explained the purpose of the brain scans, and
then they had both expressed their concerns that there was the possibility of a
small bleed that was the primary cause for Will’s intense pain.  Although
Beverly had done her best, for him, to mitigate the seriousness of their
concern by explaining that it was, in fact, a common symptom to the type of
concussion that Will had suffered in the holodeck, Picard was well aware of the
dangers of brain bleeds – it was what his father had died from, after all.  And
Will’s blood pressure was very high, more often than not.       
            He strode onto the bridge, and received the ship from Mr Data, who
had continued his night shift duties, despite his being promoted to Acting
First.  He listened to Data’s report – they would be arriving at the Starbase
on Lya III in five hours – and then he relieved him.
            “Oh, and Mr Data,” Picard said, as he took his seat.
            “Yes, sir?” Data asked.
            “Your plans for this morning?” Picard asked, reading the various
reports which had been submitted.
            “I am meeting Commander LaForge in engineering,” Data said.  “Then
there is a meeting with Counsellor Troi to go over a personnel issue, and then
there is Commander Riker’s navigational class, which I am teaching –“
            “Mr Data,” Picard said, and Data stopped.
            “Yes, sir?”
            “There is the distinct possibility that Commander Riker will be
undergoing a surgical procedure this morning,” Picard said levelly.  He knew
that the curiosity regarding Will’s condition had reached epidemic proportions
and while he didn’t want to add to it, he needed his point made.  He heard Worf
make a slight sound behind him.
            “Yes, sir,” Data said.  “Captain, may I enquire as to the nature –
“
            “No, you may not,” Picard said shortly.  “My concern, Mr Data, is
the mission we have on hand.  I will need you to escort the ambassadors, as I
may be unavailable.  To that end, Mr Data, I suggest you use the next few hours
to rest.  You can reschedule your meeting with Commander LaForge and Counsellor
Troi, and I am sure the navigational class will appreciate your giving them the
day off.”
            “May I remind you, sir,” Data said, “that I have no real need of
rest?”
            Picard sighed.  “No, Mr Data,” he replied, “you may not.”
            “Aye, sir,” Data said.  “In that case, I will reschedule the
meetings.”
            Data left, and Picard was acutely aware of the presence of Worf
behind him.  Well, he thought, Worf would have to wait.  Once he heard from
Beverly and McBride, he would have a brief discussion with Worf on his visit
with Will.  He continued to peruse the reports that had been tendered, allowing
himself to relax into the routine of being on the bridge.  It had been a long
journey, first from Starbase 515 and then to Starbase 514 and now on to Lya
III; perhaps some shore leave might be in order.  Will’s absence had made
itself felt throughout the ship.  Shore leave might be just the way to slow
things down and eliminate the gossip.  Distraction was always a useful tool.
            It was now 0720, and Picard had hoped for news from Beverly before
now, as unreasonable as that probably was.  He needed to spend at least an hour
on the bridge, and he forced himself to focus.  He sat for another quarter
hour, his fingers drumming on his arm rest, the conspicuous absence on his port
side looming large in his mind.  Finally, he could stand it no longer, and he
said tersely,
            “You have the bridge, Mr Worf,” and fled to his ready room.
            He ordered the tea he’d forgotten to drink earlier, and he wished
that he could have met with Beverly for breakfast this morning.  Of course,
that was impossible, and he wondered if this need of his, to have everything as
it had always been, was yet one more sign of aging.  If so, perhaps it was well
past time that he shook things up.  Then he grinned, suddenly; he could
certainly count on his Number One for that.           
            He checked his communications, and saw that there was a report from
McBride that he had missed, from earlier; it had been written at about 0530. 
He read it quickly, with growing concern, and then he stood up, and ordered
another mug of tea from the replicator, and then found himself gazing out at
the stars as they warped by. 
            He’d been correct, then, that Will would ask Worf to help him take
his own life, and he was glad, regardless of the position it left Worf in, that
he’d briefed Worf beforehand and had had the foresight to ask him to turn Will
down.  But Will’s reaction to his breakthrough in therapy, even though McBride
had warned them, last night in Ten Forward, that it was likely, shocked him
nonetheless.  He would give his thanks, then, to young Stoch, who’d realised
what was happening and had called McBride.  And McBride – well, McBride
deserved the reputation he had. 
            Will had been working on the blanket for quite a while.
            He hadn’t seen it at all.
            He wondered if Will had other contingency plans.  Perhaps a search
of Will’s room, the next time he was at PT, might be in order.
            And then he thought, just what was he doing?  Didn’t he believe
that each individual had the right to self-determination, even in death? 
Hadn’t he told that to Beverly, when it had been Worf who was contemplating
controlling his own death?  Hadn’t that been something he’d learned, from his
heart operations, that it was an intrinsic right of all peoples?  Not to be
forced by one’s society into that decision, but to be able to decide for
oneself, in the face of great loss and even greater pain, that letting go was
an appropriate choice?
            Who was he, Jean-Luc Picard, to forbid Will to choose his own time
of death?  He knew that Will was afraid that he would no longer have a career;
that he would no longer be able to function as first officer of the ship.  He
knew that Will believed he had few options; that he had no family, other than
the father who had tortured him; that he had no home, other than the Enterprise
herself.  Was he wrong in believing that his love for Will should be enough? 
Could Will remain on the ship as his companion and not as First Officer?
            McBride was convinced that he could heal Will, even in the face of
Will’s continued suicidal ideation and his poor physical health.  But healing
was not a cure, Picard knew – would it be enough?
            He thought, briefly, that if he didn’t hear from Beverly soon he
would swallow his damnable pride and go to sickbay.
            The voice, when it came, over his comm. badge was McBride’s,
however, not Beverly’s, and he wondered who had outfitted McBride with a comm.
badge – and then he wondered why it hadn’t been done sooner.
            “Picard,” he responded.
            “The surgery was successful, Captain,” McBride said.  “Perhaps you
should come to sickbay, and Dr Crusher and I will fill you in.”
            Picard was silent, and then he said, “You found a bleed, then?”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “A small one.”
            “Commander Riker is in recovery, then?” Picard stood up, and placed
his mug in the receptacle.
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “He should be waking in half an hour or so.”
            “On my way,” Picard said.  “Picard out.”
            He stopped for a moment and took a deep breath.  Then he tugged his
tunic down and returned to the bridge.
            “Mr Worf,” he said.  “The surgery on Mr Riker was successful, and I
am on my way to sickbay for a briefing.  You have the conn.”
            “Aye, sir,” Worf said.
            “I will inform Mr Data,” Picard added, and he headed to the turbo
lift.
 
 
           
            He met McBride and Beverly in the conference room, where the
holographic images of Will’s brain scans were placed carefully across the
table.  Da Costa, normally with Will, was present, along with most of Will’s
team – Lt Patel, Lt Otaka, and Deanna.
            “Captain,” McBride said.  “I know you are anxious to see William,
so we’ll keep this brief and to the point for you.”
            “Thank you, Doctor,” he replied, taking his seat next to Deanna and
da Costa.
            Beverly said, “Will had, as we feared, a small bleed in the same
area of the brain where he’d had his concussion four weeks ago.  It was also
very close to the area where he’d had the original skull fracture, when he was
a child.  We found some damage at that site, in terms of scar tissue and some
atrophying, and we were able to repair both the bleed and the old damage.  His
recovery should only take a day or so, all things considered.  He will remain
under light sedation today, and he may be able to return to a light schedule
tomorrow.  I anticipate his returning to his normal schedule in forty-eight
hours.”
            “Dr Crusher,” McBride said enthusiastically, “is a wonderful
surgeon, and you are very lucky to have her.”
            “Indeed,” Picard said.  “Will Commander Riker remain in the
isolation unit today then?”
            “He should be fine to return to his room, once he wakes,” Beverly
answered.  “Again, depending on his medical status.”
            “Good,” Picard said.  “You have the images from the brain scans
here?”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “I wanted to show these to you and the team,
before I show them to Will.”  McBride picked up one of the holographic images. 
“This is the brain of an average male, around Commander Riker’s age.  It’s
necessary for you to be able to judge the difference between a typical brain
and one with PTSD.  The areas I want you to pay attention to are the
hippocampus, here, the prefrontal cortex here and the amygdala.  Notice the
size and the structure of each area.”
            “Yes,” Picard said.
            “This is Commander Riker’s brain,” McBride said.  “The hippocampus
here, the prefrontal cortex, and the amygdala.”
            “You can see, Captain,” da Costa said, “that there is major
shrinkage of the hippocampus, and cell atrophying and cell loss in all three
areas.”
            The picture, to Picard, was quite terrifying.  It was one thing, he
thought, to see how Will couldn’t function – to witness the over-emotionalism,
the hysteria, the flashbacks, the night terrors, the inability to comprehend. 
It was quite another to see that his brain was so damaged, so completely
different, from what it was supposed to look like.  It wasn’t, Picard thought,
because he hadn’t believed that this was, indeed, a real illness; but he hadn’t
really understood – at least not emotionally – that the psychiatric was
physical.  He remembered what McBride had said, the first day he’d arrived. 
The brain is an organ, he’d said, just as the heart, the lungs, the liver are. 
And then he remembered what Will had told him, the one morning after his first
bout with hysteria.  I’m not me, he’d said.  My brain doesn’t work anymore. 
Nothing connects anymore.
            “Captain?” Deanna was beside him, her hand on his arm.  “Are you
all right?”
            “I’m just – “ Picard stopped, because he wasn’t sure what he could
say.  Shocked?  Frightened?  “How can this be healed?”
            “Of course you are worried and concerned,” McBride said, and Picard
could hear that he was using the same calming tone of voice he used to Will
with him.  “I have a holographic image – a before and after image, if you will
– of another patient of mine.  Here is this patient’s brain, before treatment. 
This patient suffered from a similar diagnosis as William’s – severe complex
PTSD.  The trauma, as it is with Will, was the same – chronic sexual abuse as a
child.  This too is a male patient – the difference in female patients is too
significant to use for comparison purposes.  You can see, Captain, the
similarity in damage done to those three areas of the brain.”
            “Yes,” Picard agreed.
            “This patient likewise underwent my eight-week intensive treatment
program, on Starbase 515, as an inpatient, the same again as with Commander
Riker.  Here is the holographic image of the patient’s brain, post treatment –
eight weeks later.”
            “How is that possible?” Picard asked.
            “It’s possible, Captain,” McBride said, “because the human brain is
hardwired to heal itself, given the opportunity to do so.”
            “After treatment, will his brain continue to heal in this fashion?”
            “Commander Riker will graduate from the intensive treatment program
to a more normal, outpatient program,” McBride explained.  “It’s part of the
training that I’m completing on this ship.  He will continue to receive certain
therapies – CBT, the hyperbaric chamber – on an ongoing, outpatient basis, as
other aspects of his illness are dealt with.  Ideally he will have the tools to
continue to heal himself long after his outpatient therapy ends.”
            “And you’re going to show him this?” Picard asked.  He paused, and
then he said, “Will he understand what you’re showing him?”
            “He will find it a relief, Captain,” Deanna said.  “Many patients
fear the labels that are associated with this disorder – and Will has
frequently referred to himself, especially in the last few days, as ‘crazy.’ He
can now see that it’s brain function that is the cause of many of his
symptoms.”
            “Can you give me an example?” Picard asked.  He was still staring
at the two holographic images, the one of Will’s brain, and the one that was
post-treatment.
            “The hippocampus,” McBride said, “is the area of the brain that
controls emotions, and our ability to identify and articulate what we are
feeling.  This area has atrophied, because of the constant neuro-chemical
washes of adrenaline and dopamine that are associated with stress and trauma. 
Will has a pronounced inability – a disconnect, if you like – to understand and
name what he is feeling.  Thus affect management is a major component of the
cognitive behaviour therapy he’ll be receiving.”
            “He says he’s calm, when he’s anxious,” Picard said.
            “Or, yesterday, in therapy, he was feeling rage, which he confused
with anger,” McBride said.  “We have literally hundreds of words in our
languages to cover every nuance of feeling.  Will’s emotional vocabulary
probably only includes ten.”
            “I’d like to see him now,” Picard said.  He didn’t want Will to
wake up alone.  And he needed time to digest this information – and time to
handle his own fears. 
            “Of course, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said. 
            “Thank you, Doctor,” Picard said to McBride, before he remembered
he was supposed to be calling the man “Sandy.”  He sighed.  He didn’t know that
he could call any adult “Sandy.”
            “Will you have time, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, “to talk with me for
a little bit this afternoon, do you think?  Fourteen hundred hours or so?  I’d
like to discuss what happened in Will’s therapy yesterday, as it pertains to
you.”
            Picard stopped, and looked up.  It was hard to make the adjustments
McBride required of him – one minute he was the captain, discussing the
prognosis of his first officer; now he was Will’s – how did McBride put it? –
caregiving partner.
            He was glad he’d given Mr Data time off.
            “Of course,” he said.
            “In my office, then,” McBride added.
            Picard nodded, and walked with Beverly into the isolation unit. 
Beverly took Will’s vitals and said, “He should be waking soon, Jean-Luc.  Call
me as soon as he does.”
            “Yes,” Picard answered. 
            He sat down in his usual chair and took Will’s hand, covering it
with his own.  Will stirred, and he opened his eyes.
            “We have to stop meeting like this,” Will said,
            and Picard resisted the urge just to take him into his arms.  This,
he knew, was why he would not let Will go.
            “Indeed,” Picard replied.
***** Chapter 64 *****
Chapter Summary
     William, as stone.
Chapter Notes
     Chronic child abuse changes the structure and the neuro-chemistry of
     a child's brain. The numbing, the lack of affect, the de-
     sensitization, the wall-building, the shutting down -- these are
     emotional responses to the physical reality of the changes in the
     brain. When the pain becomes too acute, the child shuts down.
     In this story, the loss of Rosie -- and William's interpretation of
     the loss of Rosie -- triggers William's last defence, the only
     defence a child in his position has. He splits off from his emotional
     self, closes it off, and shuts it down. During the 1990's the idea
     that children repress their memories of abuse got a very bad rap from
     certain people with agendas. It is true that a well-meaning but
     untrained adult can help a child or adult create a memory that is not
     completely real -- humans rewrite their memories -- their narratives,
     if you will -- all the time. But it is likewise true that many adult
     survivors of the worst kinds of childhood abuse lose whole years of
     their lives.
     In this story, William Riker loses primarily the years before he is
     twelve, when the sexual abuse by his father stopped.
 
 
 
 
 
           
            William found – as he’d expected, as he’d confided to Dr Lou – that
life was so much easier when you were made of stone.
            Nothing had really changed, in his life.  Not physically, anyway.
            Rosie was gone, but he was stone – and stones forget.
            His father still took the belt to him – and, every once in a while
– still hurt him.  Anbo-jyutsu – the way his father practised it – was violent,
and intense.  A broken arm.  A few fractured ribs.  A torn Achilles tendon. 
What did it matter?  Stones had no feelings.  They felt no pain.
            He slept in his father’s bed, whenever his father was home.  The
things his father did – the pictures he took – the toys he sometimes used – it
was okay.  Stones didn’t need to hide in Mrs Shugak’s closet, cold and wet and
bleeding.  Stones didn’t bleed.  Stones didn’t care.
            If there had been an attempt, to go before the tribal council and
advocate on William’s behalf, William didn’t know about it.  Perhaps it never
occurred, because of what had happened to Rosie.
            William still had the Shugaks, who took care of him when his father
was away.  He still played, sometimes, with Matt.  He still had music lessons
with Henry Ivanov.  He still played baseball, but not competitively.  He still
had his special lessons with Mr Demetrioff and Mr Levesque.
            He flew his first solo flight, at eleven.
            He played the trombone in the school marching band, and in the
regional orchestra.
            He performed in the annual school musical.
            Sometimes, fissures in the stone appeared.  Bet died.  It was his
first loss of a pet, and that fissure went deep.  The Kalugins offered him
another puppy; he refused. 
            His father told him he was too old, when he was twelve.  
            William woke up one morning, when he was fifteen, and his father
was gone. 
            The fissure became a canyon, but the stone held.
            It was tough, that stone. 
            It had no feelings, no memories, no pain.
            It was glacial.
            It was granite.
            It was ice.
           
           
           
           
***** Chapter 65 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride explains the brain scan results to Will -- and Will begins to
     understand, finally, why he feels and acts the way he does. And da
     Costa continues to teach Will the meaning of the word "no."
Chapter Notes
     The symptom of hypervigilance in a patient with PTSD simply means
     that almost everything is perceived by the patient to be a threat to
     their safety and well-being. Because Will has begun to associate Dr
     McBride's therapy sessions with pain, he reacts to certain statements
     by Dr McBride -- and even to the presence of Dr McBride -- with fear.
     One part of Cognitive Behaviour Therapy is desensitisation therapy,
     in which the patient is exposed in very small increments to those
     things that trigger his "fight or flight" response.
 
Chapter Sixty-Five
 
 
 
 
It was close to 1300 hours when McBride walked into my room.  Da Costa was
sitting quietly beside me, working on his padd.  This was supposed to be my
downtime – my lunch and my nap – but I was on fluids and a nutritional
supplement, and because of the sedative I’d been given, I was drifting in and
out of a light sleep.
            “William,” he said, “Joao.”
            Da Costa put his padd down, and I tried to sit up, but was
immediately dizzy.
            “Will, you don’t have to sit up,” McBride said, “if it’s too hard.”
            “I want to,” I said.
            “Let me help you, sir,” da Costa said, and he propped my pillows
behind me and then sat me up.
            McBride took Jean-Luc’s chair again.  “How are you feeling?” he
asked me.
            “Tired,” I said.  “A little dizzy.”
            “Any nausea?” he asked.
            “No,” I said.
            “Good.  We’ll have on a soft diet for your meal tonight.  Some
broth, maybe.  I believe Guinan will be in here, later, to check with Dr
Crusher and Lt Otaka.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “I thought you were supposed to be sleeping.”
            He laughed.  “I don’t sleep much, Will,” he said, “when I’m running
the intensive treatment program.  And I’ve trained myself to only need six
hours of sleep anyway.”
            “I guess that training comes in handy,” I said.  “We could use you
on the battle bridge.”
            “Yes, Captain Picard told me that he’ll catnap on the battle
bridge, in moments that he’s not needed.  That seemed quite remarkable to me.”
            I shrugged.  “If the battle lasts longer than twelve hours,” I
said.  “I saw him do that, once.  I don’t think I could manage it, though.”
            “And how is your head pain?” he asked, redirecting the
conversation, as always.
            “Please don’t ask me for a number,” I said.
            “Yes, you have difficulty with that, don’t you?” he said.
            “I don’t understand why it’s necessary,” I answered.  “The question
is subjective.  My number three, for example, could be someone else’s number
seven.  So what’s the point, then?”
            “That is certainly true,” he replied, “that the experience of the
pain – and its quantification – is subjective.  But I don’t think that’s the
difficulty you’re having with the system, Will.”
            “Well, you seem to always know best,” I said.  “Why don’t you tell
me what my difficulty is?”
            He smiled and said, “And what are you feeling right now, Will?”
            “Dr Crusher said I was supposed to be kept quiet and calm,” I
said.  “So why don’t you just leave me alone?”
            “Commander,” da Costa said.
            “It’s all right, Joao,” McBride said.   “William.  You don’t like
me very much right now, and that’s okay.  In fact, it’s to be expected.  It’s
one thing, when I’m the guy who’s calming you down and bringing you out of a
flashback.  It’s another when it appears to you that I’m the guy who’s pushing
you in.”  He paused for a moment, as if he expected me to say something, but I
just looked away.  “I’m not here right now to make you feel anxious or
agitated.  I am here right now because I can help you understand why you can’t
give Lt Ogawa a number for your pain.  And why – when I asked you what you were
feeling just now – you couldn’t tell me.  You reacted defensively instead.”
            “What if I don’t care?” I said.  “What difference does it make, if
I know why or not?  How will it change anything at all for me?”
            “Can you tell, Will, how your mood has now changed?  That you are
feeling differently right now, from the way you were feeling just a minute or
two ago?” McBride took my hand.  “Look at me,” he said.
“If you could name the feeling, Will, you could deal with it.  Your inability
to name the feeling – to number the pain – is part of the problem.”
            “Do you want me to get the images, Doctor?” da Costa asked,
standing.
            McBride nodded.  “Does your head hurt right now, Will?” he asked.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “A little bit, or a lot?”  Then he said, “Take a breath, Will. 
That’s it, just breathe.  Good.  A small pain or a big pain?”
            “Small,” I said.
            “Good,” he repeated.  “Show me where it hurts, with your hand.”
            I pointed to above my left eye.
            “So the pain you are feeling is from the surgery itself, Will,” he
said.  “You should still be feeling a little pain from that.  It’s okay, to be
feeling that pain.  If the pain becomes bigger than what it feels like right
now, I want you to tell Joao.  Can you do that?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            Da Costa walked in, and pulled the table over to the bed.  He set
up some holographic images of brains, including mine, I assumed.
            “I wanted to show you, Will,” McBride said, “where the physical
problem is.  I want you to understand that the disconnect you have – between
what you feel and your recognition of that feeling – is an organic problem.”
            “I’m too tired for this,” I said.
            “I know you’re tired, Will,” McBride said, “and I promise you, that
after I show you this, I will leave you alone.  I’ve a meeting with your
captain, and then I’ve cancelled your therapy session for today.  Jean-Luc can
spend that time with you, if he is able to, or you can spend it quietly
resting.  Tomorrow, all things considered, we’ll move back into your schedule. 
Can you let me know that you understand what I’ve just said?”
            “Goddamn it,” I said, “of course I understand what you’ve just said
– “
            Da Costa came over to me and he said, “Commander, it’s all right. 
Take a deep breath.  What you’re experiencing right now is a symptom of your
illness, in that you’re perceiving Dr McBride as a threat to you.  He’s not a
threat, Commander, and neither am I.  We’re going to show you the holographic
images of your brain scans, that’s all.  You can stand down, sir.  There’s no
threat.”
            “Will,” McBride said softly.  “Just breathe. Deep breath in, now
exhale.  I will show you exactly where this particular problem lies on the
scan.  It’s all right.  I’m not going to make you feel any pain, I promise you
that.  Your experience in therapy yesterday was terrifying, I know.  You’re
still trying to recover from it.  But you won’t have a session today.  I
confused you, when I asked you how you were feeling.  That was my mistake.”
            I was trying to breathe and take in what he was saying to me at the
same time, and then suddenly, and I had no idea why, I could feel tears
streaming down my face, and it was all I could do to keep from just breaking
down.
            “I know, Will,” McBride said.  “I know.  Just let the tears come
for a minute.  You’ll feel better in a bit, I promise.”
            “When you asked me what I was feeling, it was like yesterday,” I
said, wiping my eyes, “and I didn’t know what I was feeling, except yesterday I
just wanted to die….”
            “I know, Will,” McBride said.
            “I don’t want to feel this way anymore,” I said.  “I don’t want to
feel like dying all the time.”
            “Of course you don’t,” McBride said.  “You were frightened just
now, that’s all.  It’s all right.  You have to remember that everything
frightened Billy, and for good reason, too.”
            “Yes,” I said, and I was starting to calm down.  “Billy was right
to be frightened.”
            “But you are no longer Billy,” McBride said, “and you can control
when it’s time to be frightened.  Joao and I are part of your treatment team,
Will.  There is not one person on your team who wants to hurt you.  And I think
I can speak for your entire team when I say that there isn’t one person who
would want you to be frightened, either.”
            “We’re just going to look at some pictures, Commander,” da Costa
said.  “They won’t bite, I promise you, and neither will I.”
            He was smiling, and I could feel myself relaxing again.  “I’m okay
now,” I said. 
            “Let’s get William a little bit of water to drink,” McBride said to
da Costa, “and then maybe a washcloth, to clean his face?”
            “Of course, Doctor,” da Costa said, and he left the room.
            “This first picture here, Will,” McBride said, “is the brain of a
typical human male about your age.  The three areas I want you to recognise are
the hippocampus, the prefrontal cortex, and the amygdala.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            Da Costa returned and gave me a warm rag, and I washed my face, and
then I took a couple sips of water.
            “Here is your brain, Will, from this morning,” McBride said. 
“First, here is the bleed that we found, and you can see the scar tissue from
your earlier injury.  All of that damage has now been repaired by your
remarkable Dr Crusher.”
            “All of it?” I asked.
            “Yes,” McBride replied.  “I want you to look at your hippocampus,
here.  Look at the size and shape difference between yours and the typical
brain, over here.”
            “Mine’s smaller,” I said.  “A lot smaller.  Has it always been that
way?”
            “The human brain doesn’t stop growing until around the age of
twenty-five,” McBride explained.  “Your hippocampus didn’t grow the way it
should have, because of the constant neuro-chemical damage that was done to it
by your having to spend your childhood living in constant pain and fear.  When
things changed for you, after you were fifteen, your brain started to regrow,
but there’s been damage done since then, with the added trauma of your repeated
deployments and whatever other dangers you may have faced during your career. 
When your illness became acute again, your hippocampus sustained further
damage.”
            “And it does what?  This part of my brain?” I asked.
            “It controls your affect,” McBride said.  “Your feelings.  Most
importantly, your ability to name, describe, and understand your feelings.”
            I was silent.  I’d thought that the pain number question was
stupid.  That it didn’t make any sense.  That it was an inherently flawed
question to ask.
            “I can’t give Lieutenant Ogawa a pain number because I don’t know
how,” I said.  “Because this part of my brain is too small.  Because it’s not
working.”
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “You supplied other reasons to yourself
for it, to try to make sense of what was simply nonsensical to you.  The simple
truth is that you can’t tell me what your pain number is.  You don’t understand
the question.  You can’t articulate a response.  You can’t name the pain.  It’s
why I’ve been asking you to show me, rather than to tell me.”
            “Because I can’t tell you,” I said.
            “Indeed,” McBride confirmed.  “Because you can’t tell me.”
            “Breathe, Commander,” da Costa reminded me.
            I breathed.  “The question about what I’m feeling,” I began.  “It
scares me because I don’t understand it.  Because I can’t answer it.  Because I
don’t know.”
            “You don’t have the words to name it, Will,” McBride said.  “You
have an emotional vocabulary of about ten words.  You use those ten words to
encompass everything you are feeling, regardless of what it is that you are
feeling.”
            “But there are more feelings and more words,” I said, “than what I
understand or can say.”
            “That’s right.”  McBride paused.  “Drink a little bit more water,
Will.  There.  Now breathe.  I promised you, Will, remember, that this wouldn’t
be scary.  It’s not scary.  It’s just information to help you realise that the
problems that you are having, the symptoms you’re experiencing – they are
because of the repeated trauma to your brain.  You’re not crazy.  You are
simply doing the best that you can, with what you have.”
            “You said you can heal this,” I said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “I did say that.”
            “How?”  I could feel myself tearing up again.
            “The therapy that you’ll be having with Deanna and Joao,” McBride
said, “is called affect management.  Do you remember that from when we talked
about your CBT program?”
            “Yes,” I answered.
            “Deanna and Joao will be reteaching you words that describe
feelings.  And they will be retraining you to connect those words to what you
feel.  Your brain will begin to generate new neural pathways in response.  In
the meantime, the time you spend in the hyperbaric chamber, the time you spend
learning how to breathe properly, and how to sleep properly, and how to eat
properly will all help create new brain cells.  As we reduce the amount of
certain negative neuro-chemicals in your brain – by giving you extra oxygen, by
giving you intrusion therapy to manage your flashbacks, and by retrieving and
defusing your memories – we will increase the healing neuro-chemicals, which
will encourage cell growth.”
            “I don’t know that I understood everything you just said.”  I wiped
my eyes again, and da Costa handed me the rag so I could wipe my face.
            “That’s all right,” McBride said.  “Tomorrow, in therapy, when
you’re feeling a little better, I’ll show you the pictures of pre and post
treatment.  You’ll see what I mean.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “My head hurts a little more, but I wanted to ask
one more question.”
            “I will get Lt Ogawa,” da Costa said.  “I will tell her that your
pain level is around a five, and she’ll give you something to help you.  Is
that all right with you, sir?”
            “Am I feeling a five?” I asked.
            “That’s about where you ask for help,” da Costa said.
            “Okay.  Thanks,” I replied.  “I don’t want my head to hurt
anymore.”
            “One last question, Will,” McBride said.  “Then we’ll give you
something for the pain, and something to help you sleep a little bit.”
            “But I wanted to see Jean-Luc,” I said, feeling like a little kid.
            “Of course you do,” McBride said.  “When I see him in our meeting,
I will tell him that you want to see him.”
            “You will?”
            “Sure,” McBride said, smiling.  “You’re forgetting, William, that
Jean-Luc is part of your prescription for healing.”
            I didn’t say anything for a moment, and then I started to laugh. 
“You mean in his hugs and kisses capacity?” I said.
            “That’s exactly what I mean,” he answered.  “And your question?”
            “You said I only had an emotional vocabulary of about ten words,” I
said.  “I don’t really know what that means.”
            “You want an example?”
            I nodded.
            “You often accuse Jean-Luc of being ‘mad’ at you,” McBride said. 
“’Mad’ is one of your words.  However, the way you use it, it stands in for any
number of feelings that Jean-Luc could be experiencing, such as frustration,
anxiety, sadness, irritation, hunger, sleeplessness, impatience, or genuine
anger.  He finds your use of the word confusing – and the result is both of you
are unhappy.”
            I was stunned.  He was right.  I said it all the time.  I didn’t
want Jean-Luc to be mad at me – I didn’t want anyone to be mad at me.  But it
was a generic word that I used to cover everything.
            “Remember, Will, that this is part of your illness.  It is a
symptom, related to the shrinkage of your hippocampus in your brain.  It’s not
a character flaw.”  He smiled.  “And it can be healed.”
            Da Costa returned with both Lt Ogawa and Beverly, and Ogawa took my
vitals.
            “You made my patient cry?” Beverly said.  “I thought we agreed he
was to stay calm?  I don’t particularly want to fix another bleed, Dr McBride.”
            “I know, Dr Crusher,” McBride said, and I nearly smiled, because he
was using his G major tone on her.  “He was merely getting rid of excessive
adrenaline.  He’s doing fine.”
            “His blood pressure is up a little, Doctor,” Ogawa said, and she
showed Beverly the tricorder.
            “He said his pain level was around a five,” da Costa offered.  “He
asked for something to help with the pain.”
            “And he needs a little more sedation,” McBride suggested.  “I’d
like him to sleep, now.”
            “Yes,” Beverly said, “Alyssa, if you’ll prepare that for him.” 
Ogawa left, and Beverly turned to me.  “Show me where it hurts, Will,” she
said. “Nowhere else?”
            I’d pointed to the same place that I’d showed McBride, and I shook
my head.  “No,” I said.  “And I’m really tired.  I want to go to sleep now.  I
just don’t want to be knocked out, so I miss seeing Jean-Luc.”
            “Commander,” Beverly said, “I could give you a dose that would
knock out a Klingon targ, and it wouldn’t knock you out.  You’ll be fine.”
            “I’ll be in my office, Will,” McBride said, taking up the images
he’d showed me, “but Joao will remain here with you.  However, you know, if you
need me, you only have to send for me.”
            I nodded.  I watched him leave, and then Beverly said, “Joao, if
you don’t mind, I wanted to say something to Will privately.”
            “Of course, Doctor,” da Costa said.
            “You aren’t going to yell at me again, are you?” I asked.
            Beverly sighed, and she took my hand.  “Do I yell at you, Will?”
she asked.
            “Yes,” I said.  “You didn’t used to, but since I’ve been sick, you
do.”
            “You poor boy,” she said, and surprisingly, she kissed my cheek. 
“You don’t know what mothers are like, Will, and I keep forgetting that.”
            “You’re too young to be my mother,” I said, confused.
            “Perhaps,” she answered, “but you have a lot in common with
Wesley.  If I’m ‘yelling’ at you, Will, it’s because I’m so very worried about
you.  It’s just the way I react to being so worried, all the time.  It’s
definitely not because I don’t care about you.  I do, very much.  You have
scared me, repeatedly, Will.  You keep me up at nights.  I’m not trying to hurt
your feelings, believe me.”
            I looked away, embarrassed. 
            “Will,” Beverly said.  “I want you to know that I’m glad you have
Jean-Luc, and that he has you.  I didn’t want you to think, even for a moment,
that that wasn’t true.  I’ve talked about this with you before, but I wanted to
remind you, because of this morning.  You are good for Jean-Luc.  Even though
he’s dreadfully worried about you – we all are – he’s happier than I’ve seen
him in a very long time.”
            “It’s okay,” I said.  “I wasn’t upset by what you said this
morning.  I was just upset because he was.”
            “I know,” she said, and she smiled.  “He can be a cranky old man at
times.”
            Ogawa returned, along with da Costa, and she gave me the hypo
spray, and then Beverly said, “You rest now, Will.”
            After they left, I said to da Costa, “Will you help me lie back
down?”
            Da Costa grinned.  “No, Commander,” he said.  “I think you can
manage yourself.”
            I looked at him for a moment, and then I said, “You’re an asshole,
da Costa.”
            “Maybe so, sir,” da Costa answered, “but you did give me
permission, sir.”
            “So you aren’t going to help me,” I said.
            “No, sir,” da Costa replied, and he sat down and took up his padd.
            “Fine,” I said.  I rearranged the pillows myself and lay down. 
“I’m going to sleep,” I told him.
            “I’m not tucking you in,” he said.
            “Oh, fuck you, da Costa,” I said.  I closed my eyes and heard him
laughing.
            “No offense taken, sir,” he answered.
            “None given,” I said.
***** Chapter 66 *****
Chapter Summary
     Alasdair McBride receives a communication from his cousin Valentine
     on Betazed.
Chapter Notes
     Starfleet Charter, Article 14, Section 31 states that extraordinary
     measures may be taken in times of extreme threat.
Chapter Sixty-Six
 
 
 
 
After he’d gone over the brain scans with Will, he checked in with Lt Patel to
see what Will’s PT schedule would look like in the morning.  Then he returned
to his office, had a light meal and poured himself a cup of tea, and opened up
his desk computer as well as his handwritten notes.  He spent some quiet time
writing the notes for Will’s reactions to the brain scans, made some notes
about Will’s scheduled therapy sessions with Deanna and himself, and then
switched gears and wrote his notes on Jean-Luc’s reaction to the scans.  He
highlighted a few areas that needed to be discussed when he met with Jean-Luc
at 1400 hours, and then he took a deep breath and stretched his legs and
considered the idea of power napping for thirty minutes.
            He sighed.  He really had too much to do – he’d scheduled a meeting
after the one with the captain to train Deanna on intrusion therapy, something
he’d already trained da Costa on, and then he’d scheduled a training session
with the young Vulcan Stoch, who was showing such promise.  Then there was the
now traditional dinner and drinks post-treatment session in Ten Forward, which
had become essential for all of them:  a way to debrief from the often fraught
challenges of treating Commander Riker, a way to examine new ideas and
suggestions, a way to hear what everyone was thinking, particularly Captain
Picard, and a way, oddly enough, to celebrate the young commander himself by
the telling of stories of his exploits both on and off the ship.
            So, he thought, no power nap, and he glanced at his messages on the
computer and realised that there was a subspace communication waiting for him. 
He’d left two very competent colleagues running the program on Starbase 515, so
he was fairly sure it wouldn’t be from one of them – and then he saw that it
was from Betazed, and he knew exactly who it was from.
            “Val,” he said.  “What have you got for me?”
            His cousin Valentine was in the conservatory of his mother’s home.
            “Sandy,” Val said, grinning.  “How are you liking shipboard life? 
Where are you, anyway?”
            “Lya III, at Starbase Lya Alpha,” he said, “circling round and
round.  The Enterprise is a magnificent ship.  And the people here are
amazing.”
            “And your patient?” Val said.
           “It’s a very difficult case,” McBride answered, seriously.  “He’s a
very damaged young man.”
            “He’s got quite the reputation in Starfleet, though,” Val said. 
“Almost all of it good.  The only criticism I’ve heard from anyone is that he’s
refused his own ship, several times.”
            “He has his reasons,” McBride responded.  “They happen to be very
good ones.”
            “Is he responding to treatment?” Val asked.
            “It’s too early to tell,” McBride said.  “He’s had a number of
physical complications.  He has a solid support team and he’s trying very hard
to comply with the treatment.  He’d done quite a bit of damage to himself,
before I arrived.”
            “How is Deanna?” Val had a cup of tea in front of him, and he
sipped it.
            “Wonderful,” McBride said, smiling.  “Working hard.  Brilliant, as
always.  Our young Mr Riker is a very lucky man to have her on his team.”
            “Her mother says hello,” Val said, and he grinned.
            “I’m sure she said a great deal more than that,” McBride replied,
wryly.  “I’ve a meeting with the captain soon.  You must have something, or you
wouldn’t have messaged me.”
            “I am sending an encrypted message,” Val said.  “You remember when
we all went camping, the whole family?  And one of us nearly drowned?”
            “Yes,” McBride said. 
            “It concerns him, as well as your target.”  Val was silent, and
then he said, quietly, “Alasdair.  I need you to listen to me.  If you look at
the Starfleet charter, you will find a certain Article with a section that
talks about using extreme measures in extreme times.  You should read that
section.  Your target – you were right to be concerned.  The information I am
sending will confirm that.  This is a very dangerous man.  I will have more
information for you in the next few days.  Please, Alasdair.  Be very careful. 
There’s more than just that young man’s life at stake here.”
            “We are not without our own support,” McBride said.  “Our team
includes Deanna, after all, as well as Beverly Crusher and Jean-Luc Picard.”
            “I don’t think you or Picard understands what’s really going on,”
Val said.  “After you receive my first message, you should take it to Picard.”
            “I intend to,” McBride agreed.  “Val, Picard is involved with young
Riker.”
            “Does our target know this?”
            “He does,” McBride confirmed.
            “That is not good,” Val said.  “Not good at all.  Look, Sandy, I’m
expecting to hear from our young family member who almost drowned….He’s in a
very precarious position.  When’s the next time that you’ll be home?”
            “I can’t leave the commander,” McBride said.  “He’s too fragile.”
            “Will you give me permission to talk to our great-aunt?”
            McBride said, “Yes.  Do you want to speak to Deanna?”
            “Just tell her to be prepared,” Val replied.  “And tell Picard it
might be a good idea if he renews his acquaintance with Woody Nakamura.”
            “Yes, I will,” McBride said.  “Please, Val.  You be careful
yourself.”
            “I have my own resources,” Val said, and he smiled.  “Take it easy,
coz.  Don’t work too hard.”  He laughed.  “Talk to you soon.”
            “Me, work hard?” McBride said.  “You know me better than that,
Val.”
            McBride stood up, when the communication ended, and walked over to
the replicator in his office.  “Tea, McBride mix, hot,” he said.  He took the
mug and brought it back to his desk, where he added sugar and milk.  He sat for
a moment, sipping the tea, and then opened his padd.  It took him a few
minutes, but he found it, Starfleet’s charter, Article 14.
            He began reading Section 31.
***** Chapter 67 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will and Jean-Luc have a moment to reconcile.
Chapter Notes
     Will's plea -- that he be allowed to have respite from himself -- is
     a very common feeling among trauma survivors, who, while they can
     remember their seemingly normal pre-trauma selves, can no longer
     access the person they once were.
Chapter Sixty-Seven
 
 
 
 
I heard da Costa say, “Captain,” and I opened my eyes.  “I thought you weren’t
coming,” I said.  I didn’t sit up.
            “Mr da Costa,” he said.  “Why did you think that, Will?” he asked,
walking over to the bed.
            “I don’t know,” I said.  “Because it’s late.  Because there were
ambassadors onboard, and we’re at Lya III.”
            He gave a small sigh.  “What did I tell you this morning?” he
asked, in that mild tone of voice he sometimes used with me.  “Do you
remember?  Will?”
            “Yes, I remember,” I said irritably.  “You said you would see me
this afternoon.”
            “Ah,” he said, and he gave me a small smile.  “And here it is,
William, afternoon.  And here I am, just as I said I would be.”  I didn’t say
anything, and he said, “Move over a bit, so I can sit down.”
            “Your chair is right there,” I said, “and it’s empty.”
            I heard da Costa make a noise, but I didn’t look at him.
            “Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said.  “Why don’t you leave us for a bit?”
            “Sir,” da Costa responded.  He stood up, and then he said, “Captain
– “
            “Yes, Mr da Costa?” He was still using that mild tone of voice.
            “May I speak with you for a moment, sir?” da Costa asked.
            “Of course,” Jean-Luc said, sounding a little surprised. 
            “I’ll find someone to sit with Commander Riker,” da Costa said.
            “Don’t stress yourself out, da Costa,” I said.
            Da Costa said, matching Jean-Luc’s mild tone, “It’s time for Lt
Ogawa to check your vitals, sir.  I’ll ask her to sit with you for a moment.”
            I closed my eyes, and heard them leave, and then I heard Lt Ogawa
enter.
            “Don’t ask me what my pain number is,” I told her, “because I can’t
answer that question.  And,” I said, just getting warmed up, “since I now know
why I can’t answer that question, I don’t think I should even bother to try.”
            “I’m sure you’re feeling fine, Commander,” Ogawa said.  “You really
shouldn’t be feeling much pain at all, now.”
            “So you’re not going to shoot me up with anything?”
            “Honestly, Commander Riker,” Ogawa said.  “The things you say.  No
one’s going to shoot you up.”
            “I’m just a barrel of laughs,” I said sourly.
“Someone,” Alyssa Ogawa said, as I heard the door open, “woke up on the wrong
side of the bed.”
            “Indeed,” Jean-Luc replied.  “Thank you, Lieutenant.”
            I heard Ogawa leave, but I still didn’t open my eyes.
            “Is that what the problem is, mon cher?” Jean-Luc asked.  “You’ve
wakened on the wrong side of the bed?  Move over,” he said, and he sat down on
the bed next to me.  “I don’t want to sit in my chair,” he said, and he placed
his hand, lightly, on my face.  “I know you’re awake, so please don’t pretend
you’ve gone back to sleep.”
            “I’m not pretending,” I said.
            “No,” he said, “I know you’re not.”  He was quiet, and then he
said, “I would like to hold you, Will.  Would that be all right with you, or
are you still too angry with me?”
            “I don’t want you to hold me,” I said, and then I said, “I’m not
angry with you.”
            “No?” he asked.  “Mr da Costa thought perhaps you were.”
            “Mr da Costa is an asshole,” I said.
            Jean-Luc laughed.  “You’ve never much cared for being told no,
Will,” he said, “whether it’s by Mr da Costa, or it’s by me.”
            I opened my eyes again.  “How did you know about that?” I asked. 
“I thought I was entitled to some privacy.”
            “You were in a better mood this morning,” he said.  “Are you sure
you’re not still angry with me?”
            “I was doped up this morning,” I answered, “and I just said I
wasn’t angry with you.”
            He was stroking my arm, lightly.  “Then why don’t you sit up and
tell me what’s the matter,” he said.  “I won’t tell you no, I promise.”  He
smiled.
            “Neither of you are funny,” I said, but I sat up.  He helped me
with my pillows, and then he brushed my hair off my forehead.  “There isn’t
anything the matter.”
            “Well,” he said, “you’re irritable.  There are any number of
reasons, Mr Riker, why you might be irritable this afternoon.”
            “Are you going to list them for me, so I get to choose which one I
want it to be?”
            “Certainly,” he said.  He held up his hand.  “One,” he said.  “You
are still in pain.”
            “No.  No pain.”
            “Your head doesn’t hurt?” he asked.
            “No,” I said.
            “It seems to me you should be jumping for joy, then,” he said, but
I could see he was amused.  “No chest pain?”  I shook my head.  “No arm pain?”
            “No, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “And yet you’re very, very grouchy,” he continued.  “Bien.  Two. 
You are hungry, and it’s been so long since you’ve actually felt hunger that
you don’t realise what it is.”
            I just looked at him.  “If I don’t realise what it is,” I said,
“then how could I know to choose it?”
            “You are being terribly unhelpful, William,” he said.  “Three.  You
are dehydrated.”
            “I was on fluids all morning,” I said, “and I had that awful
electrolyte balance drink too.”
            He sighed.  “Four.  You’ve been so sleep deprived, from having not
slept properly in two months, that you are exhausted, and your body is telling
you to sleep.”
            “You’re the one who woke me up,” I said.
            “Five.  You’re angry with me because I wasn’t with you yesterday,
because McBride prescribed me respite care, and you had a very difficult day –
“
            “I said I wasn’t – “ I began.
            “Silence,” he said.  “--In which you needed me, and I wasn’t
there.  I wasn’t there for your therapy with Dr McBride and I wasn’t there when
you spoke with Worf, and I didn’t spend the night with you.”
            I said, “McBride explained it to me.  He said you needed a break.”
            “Yes,” he agreed.  “I did, in fact, need a break.”
            I was silent.  He reached for my hand, and held it.  I looked away,
and then I said, “When do I get a break from me?” and, stupidly, I started to
cry.
            “Oh, Will,” he said, and I let him hold me.  “I know,” he said,
kissing me, “I know.”
            “I’m sorry,” I said into his shoulder, “I’m sorry.”
            “You have nothing to be sorry for, mon cher,” he said.  “It’s all
right.”
            “Yes, I do,” I said, “I broke my word to you.”
            “This is about the blanket, then,” he asked, “and your conversation
with Mr Worf?”
            I nodded.
            “Have you anything else in this room that you’re intending to use?”
He held my face, so I had to look at him.  “William?”
            “No,” I said.
            “And should I trust that answer?  Will?”
            I didn’t know what to say.  “I don’t have anything else right now,”
I said, finally.  Then I said, miserably, “I’m sorry.  I’ve never broken my
word to you before.”
            “I know,” he said.  He pulled me into him again.  “If I told you
that last night was a symptom of your illness – and not a moral failure on your
part – would you believe me?” he asked.
            “I don’t know,” I answered.  Then I said, “No.”           
            He sighed.  “How did an amoral man have a son who is a moral
absolutist?” he said.  “I know, you don’t understand what I just said.”  He
kissed my face. 
            “I’ve ruined your shirt again,” I said.  Then I said, “Does that
mean you get another break?”
            He laughed.  “No,” he said.  “That was my one break, for a bit. 
Besides,” he murmured, “I missed you, last night.  And this morning.”
            I said, and it was as if a weight had been lifted off my shoulders,
“I missed you too.”
            “I know,” he answered. 
            “Who took care of the ambassadors, then?” I asked.  I wiped my face
on my sleeve.
            “I shall bring you a stack of pressed handkerchiefs,” he said
seriously.
            “Only if they’re monogrammed, Jean-Luc,” I said, trying not to
laugh.
            “Oh, they’re monogrammed,” he replied.  “And you’re not supposed to
be worrying about ambassadors.”
            “No,” I said.  “I know.  Will you be staying with me, tonight?”
            “Yes, if you will have me,” he said.  “Am I forgiven, then?”
            “Will you be having respite care every week?” I asked.
            “Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “Doctor’s orders.  For both of us.”
            “How do I need respite from you?” I asked.  “The only person I need
respite from is me.”
            “Because,” he said, “as Beverly has said, I can be a cranky old man
– “
            I said, laughing, “That makes us quite a pair, then,” and for a
little space in time, everything was all right in my universe.
***** Chapter 68 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard has his meeting with Dr McBride.
Chapter Notes
     The negative effects of PTSD on partners and families has led to
     increased research in the family dynamics of trauma survivors. It has
     become abundantly clear that the partners of trauma survivors play an
     important role in the survivor's ability to adapt to the trauma -
     - and that it is imperative to treat both the trauma survivor and the
     survivor's partner. Caregiver burden -- particularly in instances
     where the trauma survivor is completely dependent on the partner for
     physical and emotional needs -- is only one of the many critical
     issues which affect the partner of a trauma survivor.
Chapter Sixty-Eight
 
 
 
 
            The ambassadors had graciously allowed themselves to be escorted to
the Starbase by Commander Data, although Picard would be required to join
Admiral Haden at the reception on the base at 1700 hours.  It meant he would
miss the “treatment meeting” on Ten Forward, as would Counsellor Troi; however,
it left him able to make his afternoon appointment with Dr McBride and then see
Will, as he had promised.
            It was the first time that he’d met with McBride in his office, and
he was impressed with its set-up.  It was spacious, without being sparse, and
comfortable, with the greenery of the plants everywhere and a water feature
burbling in the background.
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said in his usual genial fashion as Picard
entered.  “How do you like the set-up?”
            “Impressive,” Picard replied.  He went to sit on one of the two
Betazoid couches that were in place in the centre of the room, and was
surprised to hear McBride say,
            “I don’t think you’ll be very comfortable there, Jean-Luc.  I’ve a
couple of chairs in my office that we can use.”
            Picard followed McBride into his more private office, where,
besides McBride’s desk and computer setup, there were two rather comfortable
armchairs set around a low glass table. 
            “Would you like tea?” McBride asked, and when Picard responded, he
went about fixing the tea the old-fashioned way, and, finally, when it was
ready, pouring it out for Picard.  “Black, yes, Jean-Luc?” he said as he handed
Picard the mug.
            “Please,” Picard said.  He waited until McBride had finally settled
himself down and then he asked, “Why are we in here?”
            McBride grinned.  “One of the couches was made for your Commander
Riker,” he said.  “It’s been lowered about three inches.  I’m afraid, Jean-Luc,
that you would feel as if you were sitting on the floor.”
            Picard was quiet, and then he said wryly, “I am sure that that went
over well.”
            McBride laughed.  “You do know him well, don’t you?” he
acknowledged.  “He noticed it in about three minutes, I think.  He was not very
happy.  In fact,” he confided, “he compared me to the Cardassians.”
            Picard almost choked on his tea.  “He is,” Picard said, “an eminent
tactician.”
            “Yes, the Riker manoeuvre,” McBride agreed.  “I’ve heard about it,
although it doesn’t make much sense to me.”
            “I think,” Picard said, “you are selling yourself a little short. 
I doubt that there is much you miss, Doctor, if anything.”
            “Therapy is not about comfort, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “Will is a
tactician, as you’ve said.  He uses his height and mass to his advantage, an
advantage he can’t be allowed to have in therapy, if I am going to get him to
work.”
            “And it is work,” Picard said.  “I don’t think I understood that,
before.  Talking to Deanna – when I’ve been ordered to – has been unpleasant
but it’s been of short duration and so I’ve endured it.  But what Will is doing
with you is not like that at all.”
            “There is a difference, between what you call ‘counselling’ and the
type of therapy that Will must undergo,” McBride agreed.  “Yours, as you’ve
said, has been short term.  Will’s therapy must save his life.”
            “You said you wanted to explain to me about yesterday,” Picard
said.  “You sent a report to me this morning.  Was there something you left out
of the report?”
            “No,” McBride replied.  “I don’t believe so.  But I’d like to make
sure you understand what happened, and where he is, right now, and why he
reacted the way he did last night.  Also, I have information which I need to
show you, another reason why we are in here.”
            Picard finished his tea, and set the mug down on the table.  “Go
ahead, then, Doctor,” he said.  “Although you did explain to us last night how
his breakthrough in therapy might cause him to regress.”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “Will’s memories, as they return, are not in
any particular order, and he is remembering them as Billy experienced them,
without any benefit of his adult persona filtering the experience through his
adult eyes, as it were.  So while he is remembering the terrible things that
were done to him – and I’m not suggesting that these things weren’t done to him
– his understanding of what happened, of how he reacted and why he reacted the
way he did, his interpretation of the events, is that of a child’s.”
            “Because he didn’t experience these things properly,” Picard said,
slowly.  “Because he shut himself off from what was happening, and so he never
retained the memories through his maturing.  Is that what you’re saying?” 
Picard waited a moment, and when McBride nodded, he said, “For example, I can
remember something that happened in my childhood, but I’m looking at it through
my adult understanding of that memory.  So I can say to myself, well, as a
child, I thought my father was being hard and unfair, but I have an
understanding of his point of view now that I didn’t have then.”
            “Absolutely,” McBride said.  “Will doesn’t have that, because he is
only accessing these memories now.  He didn’t grow up with these memories, so
he only knows what Billy knew.  And Billy, Jean-Luc, was manipulated and lied
to.  So we have to look at each thread, each skein of memory, and decipher what
is true and what is manipulation.”
            “The story of the boy Christian Larsen,” Picard offered.  “I knew,
when Joao first helped me talk Will through that memory, that it simply wasn’t
possible for the Will I knew to have killed, as a child.  But Will was told the
boy was dead, and Will’s memory seemed to confirm that, because he was injured
himself and thus had no way to know what had really happened.”
            McBride smiled.  “Well, you have seen William as an exemplary
officer, and as a friend, and as your lover.  And William has many admirable
traits, as an adult.  But don’t be fooled, Jean-Luc.  Billy did his very best
to try to kill Christian Larsen, and the Billy-part of your Will is quite
dangerous.  One of the goals of therapy, for Will, is to try to defuse Billy.” 
McBride paused, and then he said, ironically, “But not by too much.  He
wouldn’t be the officer he is without Billy.”
            Picard was silent, because he was remembering the look on Will’s
face when he’d changed the setting on his phaser from stun to kill, and had
killed the woman Jutta before she’d murdered her last victim.  Was that Billy,
he wondered, who had killed her – is that what McBride was telling him? 
Because, as he remembered it, Will hadn’t needed to kill her – he’d had other
options, he thought, or at least he remembered that there might have been other
options.  Then he thought, certainly having Will by his side in a firefight
washis preferred option.  He sighed.
            “More tea, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.
            “No, thank you,” Picard replied.  “What don’t I know about his
therapy yesterday?” he queried.
            “Firstly,” McBride said, and Picard watched as he slipped out of
the genial man he affected and into his professional mode, “you need to
understand, Jean-Luc – and I am talking to you, Jean-Luc, and not the captain –
that he is very angry with you.  He has been very afraid, in the past, as you
now know, to allow himself to become attached to anyone, or even anything. 
While you have a fish, for example, in your ready room, Jean-Luc, and your
Commander Data has a cat, Will’s quarters – I’ve been in them, with Deanna –
are remarkably sterile.  With the exception of the only thing he’s kept from
his childhood – his trombone – and one picture, his quarters could easily be
some room in a hotel, somewhere.  I don’t believe he meant to become this
attached to you – I think your responding to him, to the need that you
perceived in him – somehow managed to get through his defences in a way that he
finds terrifying.  And yet, at the same time, Jean-Luc, he has become extremely
dependent on you.”
            “One of the reasons you realised that I harboured feelings,” Picard
responded dryly, “of wanting to run away.  I had, you see, shut that part of
myself off as well.”
            “Yes,” McBride concurred.  “I’m aware of that.  It makes your
response to his need all that more surprising.  His dependence on you right now
is necessary – you are the only person with whom he feels safe – but it’s a
child’s attachment, Jean-Luc.  He’s reenacting what he must from his childhood
in order to become his complete adult self.  The incomplete attachment that he
formed with his father, with his great-aunt and uncle – he’s taken what little
he’s had and applied it to you.”
            “I’m not sure I quite understand this,” Picard said.  In fact, he
was genuinely confused.  “I thought his attachment to his father was severed,
as his mother’s was.”
            “No,” McBride said.  “If it had been, it might seem that it would
be easier to treat him.  The exact opposite is true.  His partial attachment to
his father – you might find it analogous to what used to be called the
Stockholm Syndrome, in old psychology textbooks – is what prevented Billy from
developing into another Kyle Riker.  A child desperately needs to remain
attached to someone.  Kyle Riker deliberately isolated Billy from the entire
world, in an effort to keep him docile and compliant.  In his isolation, Billy
did whatever he could to maintain some form of attachment to his father, even
though the man was hurting him.  It meant, of course, that he had to live in
separate realities – the reality where he cooked meals for his single father,
for example.  And the reality where he became his father’s wife.”
            Picard was silent, and wished he’d accepted the offer of another
cup of tea.
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said gently, “you are still not Kyle Riker.”
            “No?” he asked, and he couldn’t contain the emotion in his voice.
            “No,” McBride answered, firmly.  “Take a deep breath, Jean-Luc. 
There is nothing that you have done that has hurt Will in any way.  I promise
you that.  Believe me – I would not allow you to hurt Will.”
            Picard swallowed.  “I – I just – “  He couldn’t begin to articulate
the shock he’d felt.
            “I know,” McBride said.  “Let’s just take a moment, shall we?”
            Picard nodded, and he took that moment to slow his breathing down
and still the trembling of his hands.  He said, and he felt his lips turn
upward, just a bit, as he said it, “When you said, Doctor, that you would be
treating me, as part of this relationship – I don’t think that I truly
understood what you meant.”
            “I know,” McBride answered.  “You had your idea of counselling.  A
little therapy,” and he smiled as he said this, “won’t hurt you, Jean-Luc – and
I’m fairly certain it will help.”
            Picard could only nod.  He thought of Will – his Will – enduring
McBride’s therapy all by himself, having his defences dismantled, one brick at
a time, until he was facing absolutely whatever terror McBride had to show
him.  No wonder, he thought grimly, Will had reached back to the comfort of
suicide.  It made sense, now.
            “Are you ready, now?” McBride asked, kindly.
            “Yes,” Picard replied.  “But I think I shall need that second cup
of tea.”
            McBride grinned.  “I do enjoy your sense of humour, Jean-Luc,” he
remarked, as he poured the tea for the both of them. 
            Picard sipped his slowly, enjoying the slight burn on his tongue. 
“So Will has transferred Billy’s attachment to me,” he repeated.  “A terrifying
thought.  You said he was angry.  Which one?  Will, or Billy?”
            “They both are,” McBride said.  “Will, because he loves you, and
his feelings were hurt – are hurt – over the idea that you needed a break from
him.  Even though he understands it, Jean-Luc.  But Billy is angry because he’s
afraid you’ve rejected him, and, as he sees it, he’s been rejected so many
times.”
            “What do I do, then?” Picard asked.  “I knew he would feel this
way.  You did say you would help him through it, Doctor.”
            McBride smiled.  “Oh, I have,” he said, in an almost unconcerned
tone of voice that Picard felt somewhat disconcerting.  “I’ve explained it to
him, the basic concept of respite care.  He was able to extrapolate why you
would need it.  He said he understood, even though he was dealing with feelings
of hurt and fear – all of which are new to him, Jean-Luc.  Remember, Will has
spent most of his life living in an emotionally numb world.”
            “But?” Picard set his mug on the table.
            “But,” McBride answered, “it’s up to you, Jean-Luc, to show him how
you feel, so that he understands that adults can experience emotions such as
frustration, and anxiety, and even anger, in a relationship, and yet have that
relationship still exist in a positive way.  That the relationship can become
stronger, for the allowance of the expression of these emotions.”
            “How on earth do I do that?” Picard demanded.
            “Did you miss him, Jean-Luc, last night?”  McBride asked.  “When
you woke this morning, did you turn to him, before you realised he wasn’t
there?”
            “Are you psychic,” Picard said, “as well as an empath?”
            “No, of course not,” McBride said.  “I’m familiar with love, Jean-
Luc, that’s all.  And I believe you love Will – and that Will loves you.”
            Picard found himself breathing more easily, as if he were no longer
carrying some weight he hadn’t known he had.  “Yes,” he said.  “Yes, to it
all.”
            “Then all you need do,” McBride said, “is let him know.”  McBride
was busy with his mug for a moment, allowing Picard that time to regain some
control.  He said, “You’re seeing him, after?”
            “Yes.”
            “And you’re spending tonight with him?”
            “Yes,” Picard said.
            “I would,” McBride said, gently, “show him as well as tell him.”
            Picard was silent, and then he said, “On Earth, in another time,
Doctor, you would have been burned for a witch.”
            McBride laughed.  “I don’t doubt that there was a McBride in
Edinburgh, or Inverness, or Stirling,” he replied, “who met that fate. 
Scotland was a centre for such practises, once.”
            “You said,” Picard said, allowing the captain to take charge, “that
you had information for me.”
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  He set his mug down, and rose, walking
over to his desk.  He booted up his computer.  “As you know, my grandmother,
Morwenna Lal, was the head of the Sixth House.  My great-aunt, her sister
Elanna Lal is currently the head of that house.”
            “Go on,” Picard said, moving his chair so that he was facing both
McBride and the computer.
            “My family tree, of course, is quite complicated,” McBride said. 
“However, you may be familiar with my cousin, Vice Admiral Thomas Laidlaw.”
            “Thomas Laidlaw is your cousin?” Picard repeated.  “He was in
several of my classes at the Academy.”
            McBride smiled.  “I know,” he answered.  “Val told me, when I spoke
with him earlier.”  He noticed Picard’s confusion and he said, “He’s Thomas
Valentine Laidlaw.  We’ve always called him Val.  He refused to call himself
Valentine at the Academy.”
            “I can understand why,” Picard said, amused.
            “I have been afraid, as you know, Jean-Luc,” McBride explained,
“that your contacting Kyle Riker was a mistake.  It concerned me, as I learned
more about William’s case, that the Federation covered up what was done to
William.  That someone like Kyle Riker – who is clearly a sadistic sociopath –
would be working for the Federation.  Men like him, Jean-Luc, are rarely able
to hold together a long career, such as the kind Kyle Riker has.  Unless, of
course, he’s in a career in which his talents can be uniquely untilised.”
            “What kind of a career would that be?” Picard wondered.
            “I asked Val to find out whatever he could on Riker, before I
contacted him,” McBride answered.  “He returned my call via subspace, from
Betazed, where he’s currently working.  He spoke to me briefly about Kyle
Riker, and then he sent me an encrypted message.  Which he asked me, Jean-Luc,
to turn over to you.”
            “Officially,” Picard asked, “or unofficially?”
            “The subspace communication was from my cousin Val,” McBride said. 
“The encrypted message is from Admiral Laidlaw.”
            “I see.”
            “I’m to destroy it, after you read it,” McBride continued.  “And
I’m to tell you, Jean-Luc, to read Article 14, Section 31.”
            Picard said, “Extraordinary measures may be taken in times of
extreme threat.”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “Kyle Riker is an operative for Section 31.”
***** Chapter 69 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard learns of the existence of Section 31 and has a tense
     discussion with Dr McBride regarding the dangerousness of Billy.
Chapter Notes
     The idea that one can create a killing machine out of a child through
     torture, abuse, neglect, and deprivation is not a new one; armies
     have been doing this throughout human history. William Riker's
     character is often dismissed in the TNG fandom as being over-the-top,
     too jovial, too flirty, too sexed, too weak, even. I am merely
     suggesting that one should look again -- there are many episodes in
     which Riker's persona is troubled, violent, and reactive. It's this
     duality in the character that is dealt with here.
Chapter Sixty-Nine
 
 
 
 
            Picard said, “What is Section 31?”
            McBride rose, and motioned for Picard to take his place.  Picard
sat and read the encrypted message from Vice Admiral Thomas Laidlaw – McBride’s
cousin Val – quietly.  When he was finished, he said, in a low voice, “You
should destroy it, now.”
            “Yes, Captain,” McBride answered.  Once again, they switched
places, and Picard stood over McBride’s shoulder and watched McBride sweep the
message out of existence. 
            Picard returned to his seat and picked up his mug, and then set it
back down on the table.  “I find myself in need of something stronger,” he
said, finally.
            “We could,” McBride suggested, “go to Ten Forward early….”
            “No,” Picard said shortly.  “I am not ready to face my crew.”  He
sighed.  “Does Commander Riker have this information?”
            “I don’t know, Captain,” McBride said.
            “Is it likely, do you think, that he would know what his father
does, and that he would know of its existence, and keep this from me, all these
years?”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “He was schooled in secrets, Captain.  He was
groomed to be who he is.  It’s entirely possible that his father thought he
would need to use Will, one day.”
            “Are you saying to me, Doctor,” and Picard could barely contain the
anger in his voice, “that Commander Riker could well be a weapon for Section
31?”
            “I have tried, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, after a moment, “to warn
you about Billy, several times.”
            “And I am to go in there, and face him,” Picard said, “knowing this
– knowing this – and reassure the man that I love him, and that I won’t reject
him, and that I will make love to him tonight?”  Picard stood up, but, as this
was not his ready room, there was no where for him to pace.
            McBride said, and Picard could hear that he was using his calming
voice, the same voice he used on Will to bring him back from wherever Will
went, “Jean-Luc.  Think, for a minute.  Why am I on your ship?”
            Picard took a breath and said, “You are here to treat Commander
Riker for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder.”
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “What are William Riker’s symptoms?”
            “He has the severest form of this illness,” Picard said.  “You’ve
told me this.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “His is one of the most complex cases I
have ever treated.”
            “You said his symptoms?” Picard repeated, and McBride said, “Yes.” 
Picard responded, “He has night terrors.  He has nightmares.  He has panic
attacks.  He has flashbacks.  He is suicidal.  He is not eating or drinking. 
His heart has failed, twice.  He has had a brain bleed.  He cannot control his
emotions.  He has severe mood swings….”  Picard paused and then said, “He is
two people.  I can’t think of any more.”
            “You’ve listed quite enough,” McBride said, with just a hint of
irony in his voice.  “I am not going to minimise the danger of Billy, Jean-Luc
– but is William in any condition, right now, to be an effective weapon?”
            “He can’t function for an hour or two,” Picard acknowledged,
“before he breaks down.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “Now, think back to your conversation with
Kyle Riker.  The information you gave him – what must it have suggested to him,
concerning Will?”
            “That currently it would not be possible to assume that Will could
be used effectively, for whatever purpose Riker might have intended, either
now, or in the future,” Picard answered.
            “Breathe, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “We are in a very precarious
situation.  I am not one for looking through rose-coloured glasses.  I have
known too many colleagues who have been damaged in dealing with people like
Kyle Riker – and in treating cases like Will’s, where one component of the
patient’s personality can be dangerous.  But – “ McBride paused, to make sure
that Picard was still with him – “I am treating Will.  William is exactly where
he should be, in his treatment.  He is responding, to treatment.  His healing,
Jean-Luc, will not only stabilise his personality and so negate the threat of
Billy, but it will also terminate whatever Kyle Riker might have thought he’d
programmed his son to do.”
            Picard sat back down.  He steepled his hands in front of him.  Once
again he recognised the genius of McBride, in allowing him this quiet time to
think through the information that he’d read, to go over in his head their
conversation up to now, to follow McBride’s conclusions to their logical end.
            “This is what I know,” Picard said, at last.  “That there exists –
and has existed – a rogue branch of Starfleet called Section 31.  This branch
has no oversight and no real existence.  Nevertheless, it employs people like
Kyle Riker to further the ends of Starfleet and the Federation, whatever they
deem those ends to be, using whatever methods they feel are appropriate.  I can
only imagine what methods Kyle Riker uses.”  He tried and was only partially
able to control the expression of disgust that appeared across his face. 
“Riker knows that Will has remembered the terrible things that were done to
him, and that he is receiving treatment for PTSD.  He must therefore believe
that Will is now a possible threat to him, and he may also believe that you and
I – and perhaps my team, including Deanna and Beverly – are threats to him. 
And a man like Kyle Riker – a sociopath, as you say – will strike preemptively,
before we can take action ourselves.”
            “I think, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, “that you have summed things up
fairly well.”
            “Your cousin, Admiral Laidlaw, has an operative – “ Picard said
this with obvious distaste “—who is also a member of your family, who is
working for Section 31 and Betazed at the same time.  So Betazed – and by
deduction, the Federation – must have knowledge of this group at some level and
must be working to contain them.  This member of your family – “
            “My cousin Renan,” McBride supplied.
            “Your cousin Renan – has made contact with Riker on Risa.  Is that
correct?”
            “Yes.  He is Riker’s go-between, the agent who links Riker to his
control.”
            “And this control – the agent who runs Riker – knows that you are
conducting an investigation into Riker, and that Will attempted suicide, and
that Will is suffering from PTSD.”
            “And that, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, gently, “you are in a
relationship with Will Riker.”
            “Mère de Dieu,” Picard said.
            “Indeed,” McBride agreed, and then he smiled, because he was
echoing Picard.
            “We are too close to Risa,” Picard said.
            “Yes.  I have thought that, as well.”
            “Do we know who Riker’s control is?”
            “Not yet,” McBride answered.  “Val is attempting to find out that
information.  He did say to me, however, that you should renew your
acquaintance with Woody Nakamura.”
            “Really?” Picard said.  “That is interesting.”  Then he said,
smiling, “As Mr Data would undoubtedly say, the game is afoot.”  Then he
explained, because he’d seen McBride’s momentary look of confusion, “Mr Data,
my Acting First, is enamoured of Sherlock Holmes.”
            “Ah,” McBride said.  “How appropriate.  We even have our Professor
Moriarty.”
            “In his message, Admiral Laidlaw says he has other information on
Kyle Riker,” Picard said, after a moment.
            “Yes, I’m expecting it,” McBride confirmed.  “I will make sure you
receive it, Captain, as soon as I do.”
            “Thank you, Doctor.”  Picard closed his eyes, briefly.  “I am
overdue my visit to Will,” he said, finally.  “I did promise I would see him
this afternoon.  And then I must join Admiral Haden and the ambassadors on the
station.”
            “I understand Deanna will be with you?”
            “Yes,” Picard said.  “Her function, of course.  She excels at these
diplomatic venues.”
            “So do you,” McBride mentioned, “from what I understand.”
            Picard sighed.  “Training,” he said, ironically, “in the European
way to behave.  I don’t particularly care for them, Doctor.  They are
simultaneously boring and exhausting.”
            “Then I don’t envy your missing our supper in Ten Forward,” McBride
rejoined, grinning.  He paused and said, “Have you regained your equanimity
regarding Will?  Because I won’t allow you to see him, Jean-Luc, if you are too
upset to.”
            “Yes,” Picard replied slowly, exhaling.  “Whatever his father may
think he has done, I have never seen any evidence that Will is anything other
than what I have always believed him to be, and that is one of the finest
officers I have ever had the pleasure to serve with.  There is an intrinsic
kindness in Will.  I’ve seen it, time and again, in the way he deals with
children, and crew members, and his friends.  I think I understand what you
mean, Doctor, when you say that Billy is dangerous; I have seen ample evidence
of that –on more than one occasion.  Sometimes – as when we fought the Borg –
I’ve been very grateful that Mr Worf is not the only warrior on this ship. 
Other times, it has gotten Will in trouble – with me, and with others.  But I
can’t believe – and I hope you have not been suggesting this – that Billy could
be dangerous to me.  He is only a danger to himself, I think.”
            “Oh,” McBride said, “Billy is very much a danger to Kyle Riker,
and, perhaps, to others.  Do not ever forget, Jean-Luc, that while you were
constructing toy ships in glass bottles, Billy Riker was turning a stylus into
a knife to slit another child’s throat.”
            There wasn’t much, Picard thought, that he could say in response to
that, seeing as how it was true; he stood up and said, “We are all, Doctor, in
Starfleet, trained to be double-edged swords. Myself included.”
            “And no doubt it’s necessary, Jean-Luc,” McBride answered.  “As for
me, I took an oath to do no harm – and so I ask you again – are you safe, Jean-
Luc, to visit Will?”
            Picard turned, and, even though McBride almost towered over him,
being nearly the same height as Will, he simply stared at him, the way he would
an incompetent ensign.  “I am going, Doctor,” he said, in the neutral tone of
voice he used which could make even Worf cringe, “to do exactly as you
suggested.  I am going to tell William how much I missed him last night – and
then I am going to show him just how much I missed him.”
            McBride said, grinning, “If I could clone you, Jean-Luc, so I could
use you as a model for other caregiving partners, I would.”
            Picard said, “Indeed,” and walked out.
***** Chapter 70 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will's recuperation from his surgery is hampered by his inability to
     control his emotional responses.
Chapter Notes
     Rage is a common symptom of PTSD, especially for survivors with
     military backgrounds and survivors of childhood sexual abuse. Rage is
     simply an extension of what is called the Reflexive Fighting Response
     (RFR) -- in other words, it is triggered by fear and is used as
     defence. In a trauma survivor, rage is often an irrational attempt to
     alleviate fear by outwardly attacking someone else. Boredom and a
     lack of structure can lead to a heightening of hypervigilance, which
     in turn leads to fear, and then, to rage.
Chapter Seventy
 
 
 
 
            After Jean-Luc left, I was sort of at odds with myself, because I
didn’t really have anything to do, for the hours that he was on the station,
and I really wasn’t all that energetic enough to do anything anyway.  Da Costa
had come back in to sit with me, and he found my padd for me, and suggested
that I mess around with a few of Deanna’s games.  It turned out that Deanna –
she was sly, that one – had gone to Barclay, and so it was Barclay who’d done
the programming, to her specs.  I half-expected to meet the Goddess of Empathy
in an RPG but even Barclay didn’t have the guts for that.  Still, there were a
few regular games, like chess and backgammon, and then there were a variety of
strategic and memory games that were kind of interesting.
            It was depressing, though, because twenty minutes of that was about
all I could handle.  I put the padd down on the night table.
            “What’s the matter, sir?” da Costa asked.
            “What are you doing?” I asked him.  He’d been using his padd for
most of the day.
            “I’m in school, sir,” he said.  “Dr McBride has me taking classes. 
I’ve been responding to exercises, and looking at research, and formulating
opinions based on the research.”
            “About PTSD?” I asked.
            “Some of it,” he answered.  “Much of it is work in what Dr McBride
calls medical psychology.”
            “Doesn’t sound like fun,” I remarked.
            “I don’t know if fun is the right word,” da Costa replied.  “It’s
interesting, though.”
            “Oh, come on, da Costa,” I said.  “Interesting?  Really?”
            “Well, some of it’s boring,” he admitted, “but not all of it.  And
I would rather, begging your pardon, sir, be doing this, than taking your
navigational class.”
            “What’s wrong with my class?” I asked.  “I have lists of people
waiting to get in.”
            “I’m sure you do, Commander,” da Costa said, and I thought for a
moment he was pulling my leg.  “Mathematics, sir.  I’d rather do just about
anything else.”
            “Well,” I said, “I guess there are some people in the world who
struggle with it.  I’ve never been one of them.”
            “No, sir,” da Costa agreed. 
            I said, morosely, “I suppose that part of my brain doesn’t work
anymore, either.”
            “I would be very surprised, sir, if that were true,” da Costa
said.  “Memory is affected, yes.  You may be finding it easier to remember
something that happened, say, three years ago, than you are remembering
something that happened five minutes ago, or yesterday.  But the mathematical
and musical part of your brain should be working just fine.  It’s why you’ll be
having music therapy, with Lt Patel.”
            “I thought I was just rehearsing with my band,” I said.
            “That’s right,” da Costa said, and he gave me one of his rare
grins.  “Music therapy.”
            I laughed.  “I’ll have to remember that, the next time the captain
wants me to cancel band practise,” I said.  “He would be reluctant to cancel
any therapy.”  Then I realised what I’d said – I’d just assumed that “therapy”
was now my permanent reality.
            “It won’t be, sir,” da Costa said.
            “What won’t be?”
            “Forever,” he replied.  “You’ll graduate from the program, sir, and
then you’ll finish the outpatient program, and then you may find yourself
keeping some aspects of your therapy, or not, whatever you decide.  Some
patients find they enjoy art therapy, for example, and will maintain that for a
year or two after treatment.  As a way,” da Costa finished, “of reminding
oneself where one has been, and where one is.”
            I rolled my eyes.  “And you think my nav class is boring,” I said. 
“My life is currently boring.  And when it’s not boring, I’m wishing I were
dead.”
            “I know, sir,” da Costa said, putting down his padd.  “I’m sorry.”
            “Goddamn it, da Costa,” I said, “don’t you dare feel sorry for me.”
            “No, sir,” da Costa said.  “Wouldn’t dream of it, sir.”
            I looked at him, but he’d somehow managed to keep his face set.  I
sighed.  “Oh, fuck you, da Costa,” I said.  “I thought Guinan was going to be
here.  At least she’s not an asshole.”
            “Are you hungry, sir?” da Costa asked.  It was pathetic that he’d
sounded hopeful when he asked this.
            I said, truthfully, “I don’t know that I feel hunger, anymore.  Or,
if I do, I don’t recognise it.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said, and he sighed.  “You often complain of your
stomach hurting.  Is it hurting right now?”
            “No,” I said.  “I don’t have any pain.”
            “Sometimes,” da Costa mentioned, “pain can be confused with
hunger.  That’s why I asked.”
            “Not this time,” I said.
            I stood up from Jean-Luc’s chair, where I’d been sitting, and
stretched.  I said, “I feel like an animal in a zoo.  I’ve got this little room
here, where I live, and that’s it.  We could open the door, and then I could
pace around for the amusement of the rest of sickbay.”
            “There’s a simple remedy for that, sir,” da Costa began, and I
said, grinning,
            “Are you willing to stop being an asshole and help me break out?”
            Da Costa said, with some dignity, “I wish you hadn’t fixated on the
word ‘asshole,’ sir.”
            “Oh, fuck you,” I said, “and don’t tell me I’ve fixated on that as
well.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            I did a few stretches.  “You know what your problem is, da Costa?”
I asked.
            “No, sir,” he answered, “and I’m not sure I need to know.”
            “How old are you, twenty?  Twenty-two?”
            “I will be twenty-two in a few months, Commander.”
            “Yeah, see, that’s your problem,” I said.  “You’re much too young
to be this uptight.  You,” I said, and I somehow managed to find the old Riker
grin, “need to get laid in a big way.  I, at least, have some hope of getting
laid tonight – but you – you need help, da Costa.”  I waited, and had to stop
myself from laughing as he flushed.  “I’d be more than willing to help you in
that process, da Costa,” I said.  “I may be old, compared to you, but I still
know what to do.”
            “Commander – “ he began in an outraged voice, and I just about fell
over, laughing.
            “I wasn’t offering my services, da Costa,” I said, calming down. 
“I just meant that I could help you find someone who would offer you the
possibility of solving your issues.”
            Guinan said, walking in, “I take it you’re tormenting the young man
again, Will?”
            “I’m not tormenting him,” I said.  “I was just trying to give him
some friendly advice on finding someone to help him relax.  He,” I said, and I
started to laugh again, “thought I was offering up myself in that capacity.”
            “I did not, sir,” da Costa protested. 
            “It’s all right, Joao,” I said, “you don’t have to be embarrassed. 
I could understand the mistake – but I make it a policy not to fraternise with
either non-coms or junior officers.”
            “Will,” Guinan said, “leave the young man alone.  You’re only
making it worse.”  She said to da Costa, “Joao, why don’t you let me handle
this miscreant for a bit?  I’m just here to talk about his meals, such as they
are.”
            Da Costa said, “Thank you,” and he walked out with about as much
dignity as he could muster.
            “William Riker,” Guinan said.  “You should know better.”
            “I just offered to help him get laid,” I said.  “I was trying to be
helpful.”
            “You were being obnoxious,” she returned, but she was smiling. 
“And you were probably paying him back for telling you ‘no’ all day.  Don’t
think I’m not aware of that, Commander.”
            “Now you’re hurting my feelings, Guinan,” I said.  “I would never
pick on a kid.”
            Guinan just looked at me.  Then she said, “No.  You’d rather pick
on Reg Barclay.”
            “Now you are hurting my feelings,” I answered.  “I haven’t picked
on Reg in a long time.”
            “Only,” Guinan retorted, “because Picard expressly told you not
to.”
            I grinned.  “It never got that far, Guinan,” I said.  “It only made
it up the chain to Deanna.  She threatened me with her mother, so I stopped.”
            Guinan laughed.  “You are no longer in pain,” she said. 
            “No,” I answered.  “No pain, this afternoon.”
            “So,” Guinan said.  “I’m glad you’re feeling more like yourself,
Will.  But I’m sorry to tell you that your doctor has you down for liquids
only, for tonight.”
            “Soup it is, then,” I said, lightly.
            “I could make you another smoothie,” she offered.  “Or you could a
soft dessert, if you wanted something sweet.”
            I shrugged.  “I’m not a big sweets fan, as you know,” I answered.
            “Is there anything that might taste good to you?”
            “Honestly?” I asked, and then I added, “It just doesn’t seem right,
Guinan.  You’re going through all of this effort for me – and I appreciate it,
I really do, I mean, I don’t understand why you’re doing this, but I appreciate
it – but ….”  I trailed off.  “I’m sorry,” I said, finally.
            “We’ll find something,” she said.  “I haven’t given up yet.” 
            I nodded.
            “And you’re going to stop picking on Mr da Costa?” she asked,
smiling.
            “He started it,” I said.
            She stood up, laughing.  “I find that difficult to believe,
Commander.  I will see you in the morning, then.  Maybe – now that your head is
no longer hurting – you’ll find you have an appetite again.”
            I stood as well.  “Sure, Guinan,” I agreed, watching her leave and
da Costa return.
            “Mr Stoch will be here in twenty minutes, Commander,” he announced,
eyeing me warily, as if I were going to bite him or something.  “I’ve arranged
for him to take you to the pool for a swim.  Nothing strenuous, but it should
ease your boredom.”
            I rolled my eyes.  “I can’t think of anything more boring than
swimming with Mr Stoch,” I said, “and I thought Vulcans hated the water.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said, “that’s like saying all Klingons are
violent.”
            I laughed.  “They are,” I said.  “I’ve served with them, remember? 
Or maybe you weren’t on the Enterprise then.”
            “Stereotypical thinking is a shortcut for genuine thought,” he
said, as if he were reciting some maxim he’d learned.  “It’s all arranged.”
            “What if I don’t want it to be arranged?” I said, and I felt as if
a switch had just been flipped, somewhere.  “I mean, really, da Costa.  Who the
hell do you think you are?  I’m sorry your nose got out of joint, before, but
shouldn’t I be asked if I’d like to do something?  Instead of programming for
me, as if I were in kindergarten?  How is that your job?”
            “Perhaps, Commander, we should do a visualisation until Mr Stoch
arrives,” da Costa replied.
            “Perhaps, Mr da Costa, you should fuck off."
            “Why don’t you sit down, sir,” da Costa said, and I could hear him
using McBride’s tone, “and take a breath.  I think maybe I should call Dr
McBride.”
            I said, and I could feel my hands start to clench, “McBride
promised he’d leave me alone this afternoon.  And I don’t wantto sit down.  I
don’t need to take a breath.  I don’t want to do a visualisation.  I don’t
wantto go swimming with Mr Stoch.  What I want, Mr da Costa, is for you to shut
the fuck up.”
            “Commander –“
            I exploded.
           
 
                       
 
 
 
***** Chapter 71 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride defuses the situation in sickbay.
Chapter Notes
     Although McBride assures Will that Jean-Luc will be safe from him,
     the truth is that -- sadly -- trauma survivors are often violent
     against their caregivers and/or spouses. Ironically this is because
     they feel the safest with that person -- and so that person becomes
     the only one with whom they can express their frustration, anxiety,
     and rage. Maintaining the personal safety of a trauma survivor's
     caregiver is an important aspect of therapy.
 
Chapter Seventy-One
 
 
 
 
            He’d had an enjoyable hour working with Deanna on intrusion
therapy, showing her the audio device used for his acoustic reduction therapy,
and was pleased with her intrinsic understanding of the concept.  He’d had a
few minutes to regroup, and then spent the next forty minutes with the young
crewman Stoch, teaching him how to speak, training him in body language,
helping him to learn to walk that fine line between strength and sensitivity
that was needed when dealing with the emotionally fragile.  It was tough –
because all of a Vulcan’s training was the antithesis of the training Stoch was
now undergoing – but genetic memory was an important tool – and Vulcans had
been great warriors and great poets, once.  
            It had been a long, and difficult, day.  He’d had maybe four hours
of sleep, less than what he needed.  He’d been given information that had
distressed him, and then had watched it devastate one of the men he was here to
treat.  He was tired, almost too tired to attend the drinks and dinner at Ten
Forward, especially since neither the captain nor Deanna would be there.  He
supposed he should take himself in hand, meditate perhaps, but his mind kept
returning to the unease that he felt, to the notion that there was something
he’d left undone, something he’d left unsaid.  He went over again the surgery
and its results, the discussion of the brain scans, first with the team, and
then with young Riker; the communication from Val; the discussion with Picard.
            Well. Best to let it go, for now; it would return to him, when the
time came.  He cleared his mind and went into a light trance; for some reason,
one of the psalms of David came into his mind, and he recited in Hebrew softly,
“Be gracious to me, O God, be gracious to me, for my soul trusts in you; and in
the shadow of your wings I will take refuge….”  When he came to the text, “My
soul is among lions…” he knew why this particular psalm had come to him, and he
could feel his anxiety melting away as he finished out the prayer:  “For your
loving kindness is great to the heavens, and your truth to the clouds/Be
exalted, O God, above the heavens; let your glory be above all the earth.”  He
remained with the psalm, letting its essence wash over him; he could feel his
strength returning, even as he knew the information he was waiting for –
whether it was coming from Val – or Renan – would be just as disturbing as the
previous communication had been.
            The message, encrypted and from Val, was terse and contained
information that surprised him, although he wasn’t sure why.  He read it over
quickly, wondering why Val had felt the need to encrypt it.  He’d asked for
background on Kyle and William Riker; and this is what he’d sent, family and
educational background for Kyle Riker and Lt Cmdr Elizaveta Christianssen
Riker.  The background on William Riker’s mother he and the captain already
knew; that half the village young Riker grew up in he was related to, in some
way; that the Shugaks were his relatives; Anastassia Shugak was his mother’s
aunt, his grandmother’s sister.  The background on Kyle Riker was interesting
but not surprising; he’d grown up in a wealthy, educated family, his father,
much older, a cultural attaché in the Federation; his mother a socialite. 
Riker had been educated in London and Paris.  There was nothing there at all
that indicated anything other than extreme privilege.  Certainly extreme
privilege was a breeding ground for psychopathy; the youngest of four, perhaps
he’d been pampered yet ignored, which could lead to attachment issues; but in
perusing the information he saw nothing which would cause Riker to develop into
the monster that he was.  He had to be missing something; why else would Val
have encrypted it – unless, McBride thought, suddenly, he suspected an
operative for Section 31 on this ship?  Would Riker have kept this close an eye
on his son?  He doubted it very much indeed.  By all accounts Will Riker had
been truly abandoned at fifteen, left to finish school on his own, sent to the
Academy at seventeen in an early admission and then virtually abandoned there
as well, learning to navigate the social and political situations there
completely by himself.  As far as he could tell, the young Will Riker had had
no specific mentor to help him; he’d graduated eighth in a distinguished class
and he’d done it completely on his own.
No, McBride thought, there had to be another reason why Val was so worried, and
there had to be something in this message that he simply wasn’t seeing.  He
would have to make sure that he got enough sleep tonight, even if it meant
cutting short the meeting in Ten Forward and going to bed early, an idea which
had its merits.
            He closed down his padd, and left his office.  Da Costa was still
with Will, so that office was empty; his room was quiet, save for the fountain
trickling away.  He walked into the bathroom – the head, he corrected himself –
and splashed some water on his face and washed his hands.
            “Crusher to McBride.”
            He jumped – and then realised he still had on the comm. badge that
Dr Crusher had given him in the morning.  He tapped it in response and said,
“McBride.”
            “We have an emergency situation with Commander Riker,” Dr Crusher
said.  “We need you stat.”
            “On my way,” he answered and then he wondered if that were the
correct response.
            “Acknowledged,” Crusher said.
            He strode out of his office to the turbo lift.  “Can you brief me,
Doctor?” he asked.  “Deck Twelve,” he told the computer.
            “Commander Riker has a weapon and is holding da Costa,” Dr Crusher
said.  “Security – Lt Worf – is on the way.”
            “Do not do anything until I get there,” McBride said.  “Please.  I
can defuse this situation without the help of security.”
            “I’m sorry,” Dr Crusher said, “but standard procedure applies.”
            “I understand,” McBride answered.
            And there it was, McBride thought – what had been bothering him for
most of the afternoon.  He’d warned Picard about Billy, but had ignored his own
warning – and had left Will Riker in sickbay with hours of downtime and no
structure, per Dr Crusher’s orders that he be allowed to recuperate from the
surgery.
            Apparently, McBride thought, Billy had recuperated just fine.
 
 
            The situation in sickbay was quiet and organised, McBride noted
immediately as he walked through the doors.  Lt Worf  and Dr Crusher met him,
Worf armed and with a security team of two behind him, and Beverly Crusher
looking as one does when one has just finished a complicated surgery and had
one’s patient go into cardiac arrest anyway.
            He could hear Commander Riker shouting at someone to stay away.
            “What kind of a weapon does he have, Doctor?” he queried.  He
understood that this was a shipboard sickbay, not a psychiatric unit; he
doubted very much if anyone had been trained – other than the cursory in med
school – to deal with this kind of situation.  On the other hand – this was SOP
for him, especially when dealing with patients with complex PTSD.
            “He started throwing furniture,” Crusher responded, “mostly at da
Costa.  When one of the chairs shattered, he had an instant weapon – a jagged
piece of a chair leg.  That’s when he grabbed da Costa.”
            “And he still has Mr da Costa?” McBride said, quietly.
            “Not for long, Doctor,” Lt Worf said.
            McBride glanced up at Worf – who was maybe an inch or two taller
than he but huge in comparison – and said in a low voice, “Lieutenant, I
understand that you are a close friend of Commander Riker’s.  Is that true?”
            “Sir,” Worf said.  “In a hostage situation –“
            “Worf,” Dr Crusher said.  “Please listen to Dr McBride.”
            “You were with Commander Riker the other night?  You saw the
condition he was in?” McBride persisted.
            “Aye, sir,” Worf said.
            “Good,” McBride said.  “If you would agree to follow my lead,
Lieutenant, we will be able to get out of this situation with both Commander
Riker and Mr da Costa’s safety intact.”
            “That would be the appropriate outcome,” Worf said.
            “Dr Crusher, I’ll need you to have Commander Riker’s medication
ready.  Otherwise, I’d like sickbay cleared of everyone except for myself, and
you, and Lieutenant Worf.”
            “Of course,” Crusher agreed.
            He waited until she had gotten rid of Lt Ogawa and the two
orderlies – any patients having long been sent somewhere else – and then he
approached Will Riker’s room, with Worf and Dr Crusher following closely behind
him.
            “We need to make sure, Mr Worf,” he said in a conversational tone,
“that there is an opening in the doorway between us.  We both need to see what
is happening, but Mr Riker needs to see that he is not boxed in.”
            “Understood, sir,” Worf said.  His voice was low, and McBride
marveled at how it seemed to rumble out of his chest.
            “Good,” he repeated.
            Will had successfully boxed himself in, and was holding Joao by the
upper chest in the farthest corner of the room.  Joao had followed his
training, McBride was pleased to note – he had a neutral expression on his face
and was keeping his body relaxed within the confines of Will’s much larger
hands and arms.  The weapon, a particularly nasty-looking piece of chair leg,
was held in Will’s right hand, with his left hand wrapped tightly around Joao’s
body. 
            “Stay away from me,” Will said to him now, his voice hoarse from
shouting.
            “That’s fine,” McBride answered.  “May I ask if Joao is all right?”
            Will did not respond, and da Costa said, “I am okay, Doctor.  A
little bruised.”
            “Good,” McBride said.  He took a breath, and then he said, his
voice taking on the calming tone he used with patients who were frightened and
under stress, “Billy, I know that you are very frightened right now.  I want to
assure you that nothing bad is going to happen.  I am Will’s doctor – and you
are among Will’s friends.”  He waited for a moment.
            “So?” Billy asked.
            “We’ve met before, Billy,” he continued, maintaining his quiet,
even tone.  “Do you remember when you were in Mrs Shugak’s coat closet, and you
were cold, and hurt, and you were so very frightened, as frightened, perhaps,
as you are now?”
            He waited, watching for any shift in Will’s body movement or facial
expression.  Finally, there was a relaxing of Will’s facial muscles, and Billy
said, “Yes.  I remember.”  His voice had taken on a much-younger timbre than
Will’s normal baritone.
            “Good,” McBride said.  “You remember, then, that you were afraid to
open the door?”
            Will hesitated, for just a fraction of a second, and then nodded. 
“Yes,” Billy said.
            “And do you remember,” McBride continued, “Billy, that I was just
outside the door, with Jean-Luc?  And that I told you – because you’d told me
you were hurt, and bleeding, remember? – that it was safe for you to open the
door, because I was there, and that I was a doctor, and that I would help you? 
And because Jean-Luc was there, with me, and that he would make sure that you –
and Will – were safe?”
            He waited, watching Will’s face, for the moment when Billy might
give way to Will – and watching Worf, as he took in the situation.  He was glad
that Will had Worf here, and that Worf was so clearly Will’s friend.
            Billy said, “You were with Jean-Luc.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “I was with Jean-Luc.”
            Billy sighed. 
            “I know,” McBride said.  “It’s been hard, Billy.  And you’re
frightened, and you’re tired.  But I won’t hurt you, Billy.  No one here wants
to hurt you.  You are safe, here.”
            “You told me it was safe to open the door,” Billy said,
remembering.  “You said he wasn’t there.”
            “That’s right.  And that’s true, Billy.  It was true then, and it’s
true now.  He is not here.  I will not let him come here.  Jean-Luc will not
let him come here.  Will’s friend Worf will not let him come here. You and Will
are both safe.”
            Billy said, and McBride watched him collapse into himself, “I
couldn’t keep anyone safe.”  He began to weep, and McBride could see that it
was both of them weeping.
            “I know, hen,” he comforted.  “You were just a little boy.  You
were a brave little boy, but you were still only a little boy.  You did what
you could.”
            Worf said, glancing at McBride for permission, “You have kept Mr da
Costa safe so far, Billy.”
            Will looked down at da Costa, still held tightly in his arms. 
McBride said, softly, “It’s all right, Billy.  You can keep Joao safe.”
            Will was silent, and then, “I don’t want to do this anymore,” he
wept, and he let da Costa go, and slid down to the floor, the weapon still in
his hand.
            “I know, Billy,” McBride said.  “I know.”  He said quietly, “Joao,
walk quickly away.”
            Da Costa nodded, and walked steadily towards the door, and was met
halfway by Worf, who led him quietly into the care of Dr Crusher.  Worf stepped
back out of the room, once again positioning himself so he could see Will and
yet maintain that gap between himself and McBride.
            McBride heard the doors to sickbay open, and saw Worf turn around. 
He reached out his hand and placed it on Worf’s arm, to draw his attention back
to Will, who was holding the weapon still in his right hand but now pointed
towards himself.
            “Billy,” McBride said, “Jean-Luc is here.”
            McBride waited, his arm still on Worf’s.  He felt the captain come
up behind him, and he moved slightly, so that Jean-Luc could see where Will
was, and what was happening.  He said, softly, “Can you tell me what happened,
Billy, to frighten you so?”
            “I couldn’t keep her safe,” Billy answered.  “She was so scared. 
She didn’t know what it was like.”
            McBride felt the understanding wash over him.  “You found her,
didn’t you?” and he heard Jean-Luc say beside him, “Oh, dear God.”
            “It should have been me,” Billy said, and he pressed the piece of
wood, tentatively, against the bare skin of his arm, tracing it down the scar
that was there.  “I didn’t want to go back there,” he said.  “He was going to
make me go.”
            “Who was going to make you go, Billy?  Go back where?” McBride
asked.  If he could get Billy to tell him what the trigger was –
            Da Costa said, “He didn’t want to go swimming with Mr Stoch.”
-- And the pieces of the puzzle fell together.  McBride said, “You found
Rosie’s body in the water.”
            Billy began to weep again.  “She didn’t know what it was like,” he
repeated.  “She was so scared,” and then Will said, “I don’t deserve to be
alive.  I don’t deserve to be here.  She died because of me.  And I never
told.  I never told anyone.”  Then he said, “If I’d told, he would have been
stopped.  But I never told.”
            McBride watched as Will drew a line of blood down his arm.  “You
are telling me now,” he said, “and I will help you tell her family.  She was
already gone, when you found her.  If you had told then, Will, he would have
killed you too.”
            “He should have killed me,” Will said.  “I wanted him to kill me.”
            McBride felt Worf move, and he shook his head.  “Your death would
not have saved Rosie,” he said.  “Nor,” and he said this gently, “would it have
prevented other children from being harmed.”
            Will was looking at the piece of wood in his hand.  “I’m so tired,”
he said, and then he said, in Billy’s voice, “I’m tired of everything,”
 Jean-Luc said urgently, “Mr Worf, now;”
            McBride let go of Worf’s arm, and watched Worf as he entered the
room and crouched down to Will’s level.  “You should get some rest, sir,” he
said quietly, with a level of respect in his voice that caused Will to respond
in his adult self.  “I’ll take that, Commander.  The captain is here, sir. 
He’ll help you, sir.”
            “He was supposed to be on the station,” Will said, and he handed
Worf the piece of wood.
            “He was, sir,” Worf replied.  “The function is over, now.  I’m sure
he’s just as tired as you are, sir.  You should both go to bed.”
            Worf stood up, the piece of wood in his hand, and McBride said,
turning to the captain, “Why don’t you go in there with him, Jean-Luc?  Thank
you, Mr Worf,” and he took the piece of wood from Worf’s hands.  He examined
it, briefly, and shook his head.  “He improvises well, Mr Worf,” he said. 
“When Billy was little, he turned a stylus into a knife.”  He gave the weapon
back to Worf.  “Best to dispose of this.”
            “Aye, sir,” Worf said.  He hesitated, and then he said, “Sir.  I
would like to speak to you, about my conversation with Commander Riker.  And
about this.”
            “Of course, Mr Worf,” McBride said, and he smiled.  “I’ve been
meaning to speak to you as well.  Ask Mr da Costa to set it up, will you?” 
Turning to Dr Crusher he said, “Do you have Will’s medication?  Ah –thank you.
 No, I’ll give it to him.  It’s important, Doctor, that I do it.”
            Jean-Luc helped Will up, talking to him softly, and sat him down on
the edge of the bed, and then held him.
            “Will,” McBride said quietly, “do you remember the medication I
gave you yesterday in my office?”
            Will said, his face still pressed into Jean-Luc’s chest, “Yes.”
            “I think now would be a good time for you to take it, don’t you?”
            “The one where it made everything feel like it was outside of me?”
Will asked.
            “Yes, that’s it,” McBride said.  “And then perhaps Jean-Luc will
help you with a shower, so that Joao and I can clean up your room.  Would that
be all right with you?”
            Will was silent and then he said, “Did I hurt him?  Da Costa?”  He
started to shake, and he said, “Tell me I didn’t hurt him.”
            “You didn’t hurt him, mon cher,” Jean-Luc said, pulling Will into
him.  “Mr da Costa had a little excitement, that’s all.  No harm done.”
            “I’m sorry,” Will said, miserably.
            “Will, let me give you the medication,” McBride said.
            “I need it?” Will asked.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “You do.”
            “Okay,” Will said.
            McBride said, “Just hold still for a minute, there’s a good lad. 
You’ll feel a pinch, that’s all,” and he applied the hypo spray.  “Do you want
me to help you walk to the shower?”
            “I’ve got him,” Jean-Luc said.  “Maybe Mr Stoch can bring him his
pyjamas.”
            “Of course,” McBride agreed.
            He stood aside, and allowed Jean-Luc to help Will towards the
head.  He nodded to Stoch, who was standing in the doorway, and Stoch entered
the room to get Mr Riker’s clothes.  He sighed and rubbed his eyes, and then
smiled ruefully at Beverly Crusher.
            “There is never a dull moment, Doctor,” he said, “when you treat a
patient with this illness.”
            Dr Crusher took the hypo spray from him, and said, “Do you still
want Dr Sandoval to give him the new medication tonight?”
            McBride nodded.  “Absolutely,” he said.  “We need to maintain what
we have him currently on.  What I’ve given him will just take the edge off of
his emotional pain, for a while, long enough for him to be able to recover his
adult self and calm down.”
            “I have never seen that before,” Beverly said, as they walked out
of Will’s room and into her office. 
            “You mean Billy?” McBride said.  He sat down, and accepted
Beverly’s offer of a cup of tea.  “What about Will’s room?”
            “The orderlies will help Mr Stoch with it,” Beverly answered,
sitting beside him, rather than at her desk.
            “And Joao?”
            “I think he’s gone with Worf to debrief,” she said.  “Iñaki and
Yash are here now, so they’ll take over.”
            “Yes, we’ve missed our dinner tonight, I’m afraid,” he remarked. 
“It’s just as well.  I’d as soon go to bed.”
            “He was really his younger self then, wasn’t he?  Did he know he
was?” Beverly asked.
            “He has quite a complicated relationship with Billy,” he replied. 
“There are times when he is aware of Billy.  There are times when he’s able to
control him, somewhat.  This, however, wasn’t one of those times.  As his
personality continues to fracture, it becomes more difficult for him to manage
Billy.”
            “It was very frightening,” Beverly said, finally.  “I thought that
he would kill Joao.”
            “Joao has been trained to deal with this kind of situation,” he
explained.  “Billy didn’t want to kill Joao.  If he’d wanted to, Doctor,
believe me, Joao would now be dead.”
            “Will Riker has always been a kind and decent man,” Beverly said. 
“He’s the best first officer I’ve ever worked with.  He’s funny, and sweet – “
            “And a killer,” McBride said quietly.  “Please don’t ever forget
that, Dr Crusher.  He was raised to be a killer – and then trained to be a
soldier.”
            “You will have to train my staff to deal with this type of
violence, Doctor, if we are to begin this program,” she said thoughtfully. 
“You – all of you, Worf and Jean-Luc included – were impressive.”
            McBride smiled tiredly.  “Of course you’ll be trained,” he said. 
“It’s a common occurrence, this level of violence, when treating this illness. 
Most of it is in your voice, and your body language, more than anything else. 
The patient’s level of fear is so high – which is what precipitates the rage,
and then the violence.  I should never have allowed Commander Riker to have
that much downtime.  His day needs to have every minute structured, even when
recuperating from surgery.  That was my mistake – and poor Joao nearly paid for
it with his life.”
            “Why do you think,” Beverly asked, “that Will – I mean, Billy –
didn’t really want to hurt Joao?”
            “Other than the fact that he didn’t hurt him?  That he just
threatened to?”
            “Yes.”
            “Will likes Joao,” McBride said.  “He treats him almost as if he
were a younger sibling.  Of course I’ll have to debrief Joao as well, to find
out what the triggers were.”  He was quiet, and then he said, “Will’s violence
is – and has always been, in this illness – directed inwards.  He has just
enough control of his own persona to still deflect his rage against himself,
rather than direct it towards the person responsible for his pain.”
            “His father,” Beverly said.
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “His father.”
            He finished his tea.  “I should check in with Will one last time,
before I leave,” he said, “and make sure that he and the captain will be safe
for tonight.”
            “And I’ll let Dr Sandoval know about the medication.” Beverly stood
up as well.  “Thank you, Sandy, for the work that you are doing with Will. 
Seeing him in this much pain – it’s hard, for all of us.”
            “William is a very special young man,” he answered.  “Most of the
patients I treat with this illness have no one to support them.  Your Mr Riker
has this entire ship.”
            He left her office, and walked back towards Will’s room.  He’d only
been talking to Dr Crusher for a few minutes, he’d thought, and yet Jean-Luc
had already managed to have Will showered and in bed.
            “Dr Sandoval will be in with your medication, and Lt Fisk will
check your vitals, Will,” he said.
            “All right,” Will answered.
            “Where’s Jean-Luc?”
            “He’s gone to get his things,” Will said.  “Doctor –“
            “Would you like me to stay with you, until he gets back?” McBride
asked. 
            “No,” Will answered.  “Mr Stoch is here.  I – I think I’m okay,
now.  The medication you gave me – it’s working.”
            “You are feeling distanced from your emotions?”
            “Yes.”  He sighed, and then he said, anxiously, “Billy won’t hurt
Jean-Luc, will he?”
            “No, Will,” McBride said.  “Billy won’t hurt Jean-Luc.  I’ll sit
with you, for a bit,” and he took Jean-Luc’s chair and brought it closer to the
bed.  “Mr Stoch won’t mind.”
            “No, sir,” Stoch said.
            “I don’t want Jean-Luc to be in danger,” Will said worriedly.  “I
don’t know that I can trust myself in anything, anymore.”
            “I know,” he consoled.  “You were frightened – and then you
frightened yourself.  But, Will – do you remember how you felt, when you were
little, about Martin and Anastassia Shugak?”
            “Yes,” he said.
            “Billy loved them, didn’t he?  Even though he didn’t know that they
were family, he still responded to them as if they were, didn’t he?”
            “Yes,” Will said slowly.  “Mrs Shugak used to hold me, sometimes. 
And she used to rub my back, when I had trouble sleeping.  And Mr Shugak told
me stories, to make me laugh.”
            “Yes,” McBride said, and he held Will’s hand, briefly.  “Billy
knows that Jean-Luc is family, Will.  He doesn’t understand who Jean-Luc is,
really, because of course you were an adult when you met him – but Billy knows
you love him – and he knows that Jean-Luc loves you.  What happened today
wasn’t about Joao, Will.  Billy’s rage is against your father and what he did. 
As more memories of what happened come to you, Billy’s rage is growing.  But
you don’t have to worry about Jean-Luc’s safety, Will.  I promise you.”
            “You’ll keep Jean-Luc safe?” Will asked.
            “I will keep you all safe,” he said.  “Even Billy.”
            “Because you said,” Will replied sleepily, “I could open the door.”
            “That’s right, Billy,” he answered.  “Because I will take care of
you.  Here’s Lieutenant Fisk, Will, to take your vitals.”
            “Okay,” Will said, opening his eyes.
            “I have him now,” Jean-Luc said, following Yash Fisk into the
room.  “We’ll be fine, Doctor.  You need to rest, yourself.”
            “You’re all right now, Will?” McBride asked.  “You won’t worry
about this anymore?”
            “Yeah,” Will said.  “I understand.”
            “Good,” McBride said.  “Good night, then.”
            He left the room, hearing Jean-Luc talking to both Will and Lt
Fisk, taking control, settling Will down, doing exactly what he’d said he would
do.  Tomorrow, he thought, would be an important day in Will’s treatment –
despite Will’s fragility, it was necessary to push the treatment forward, to
get Will to deal with Rosie’s death and Billy’s rage, before his father took
the action the captain feared he would.  He found himself wondering again about
Val’s second message and what he was missing, there.  Well, he thought,
stepping out of the turbo lift onto Deck Eight, where his quarters were, the
best thing to do was to sleep on it.  He was sure that whatever it was would
come to him by morning.
***** Chapter 72 *****
Chapter Summary
     Kyle Riker connects a few dots.
Chapter Seventy-Two
 
 
 
 
            He was dozing, the low hum of the shuttle’s thrusters a comforting
sound, when he realised he had information that perhaps the grandiose moron he
worked for didn’t.  What had the Betazoid messenger called himself again? 
Renan – that was it.  Surely the man hadn’t been fool enough to give his real
name – he went over in his mind the conversation that they’d had while sitting
on the bench by the duck pond.  He’d recognised him as Betazoid and informed
him that as empath or telepath – and since it was clear the man was only part-
Betazoid it was doubtful he was a telepath – he would get nothing from him, and
then he’d asked what he should call him – some Betazoid name – they were all
alike – that was it – Tam or Mal or whatever.  And the agent had said Renan –
that it was as good as any other –
            He was awake, now.  He took his padd out of his carry-all and
booted it up.  Renan was not a Betazoid name – surely the agent hadn’t given
him his real name – and yet….There were, he thought, entirely too many
connections to Betazed, and all of them had to do with his son.  Renan had
brought him information about his son, that he was being treated by an eminent
psychiatrist from Betazed.  The doctor with the Scottish name – McBride, that
was it – with ties to the Sixth House.  And his son, with ties to the Fifth
House.  It was possible, he thought, that there was a connection between the
doctor’s searching for him – and this particular agent from Betazed showing up
with information.  What was it Renan had said?  That the man doing the looking
– on behalf of McBride – was powerful in his own right.
            Powerful enough to make their mutual friend uneasy?  He felt a
prickle of something, and glanced up to see that the shuttle pilot had been
watching him.  Uneasy enough to have hired a babysitter – or a clean-up man? 
He smiled.  Shuttle crashes were not that infrequent – and his cottage lay
between the ocean and the jungle. 
            He closed his padd and then his eyes.  It seemed his limit would be
upped by one.
           
            He woke as the shuttle was making its descent, and put everything
away and prepared for landing.  As was always the case with Federation shuttle
pilots, the landing was perfect, right along the strip in front of the
cottage.  He hadn’t expected the boy to come out and greet him, so he wasn’t
surprised that the cottage looked empty.  He was sure, knowing children, that
the boy had also been hoping for a shuttle crash.  Well, he thought, there
would be one, but it wouldn’t be his body that would be lost to the jungle.
           
“There you go, Captain,” the pilot said, and if Riker had been hesitant about
adding to his kill before, he no longer was now.  A message indeed needed to be
sent – loud and clear, he thought.  First his rank as a Starfleet officer had
been used by the Betazoid agent – and he was not completely convinced that the
agent had been working for his employer – and now by the shuttle pilot.  He
knew what message was being sent to him – take care or I will expose you. 
Well, he thought, that message can be delivered both ways.
            “It’s hot,” Riker commented, and he turned on his full-wattage
smile.  “Why don’t you come in and have a cool drink, wash up, use the head,
before you go?  I’ve appreciated your coming out of the way down here for a
fellow who’s on vacation.”
            The pilot shrugged, but smiled in return.  “It’s the nature of the
job,” he said.  “But, sure, I’d like that.”
            He was probably one of the kind who’d been desperate to fly but too
unruly for the Academy.  Riker followed the man in and pointed him in the
direction of the guest head.  He walked into his bedroom, where the boy was
curled up in the bed, asleep.  He gave the boy’s shoulder a shake.
            “Wake up,” he said in a low voice, “and go fix a drink for me and
my guest.”
            “Sir,” the boy said sleepily, but then he sat straight up.  “Yes,
Sir,” he repeated, and this time he was awake.  “What kind of a drink, Sir?”
            “Something tall and cool,” Riker said.  “You’ve lived on Risa long
enough.  You know what to fix.”
            “Yes, Sir,” the boy said.  He got out of the bed, straightening
himself as he went, and ducked into the head to wash his hands and face and
comb his hair.
            “Talk to him for a minute,” Riker said.  “You’re my nephew Billy,
if he asks.”
            “Yes, Sir,” the boy said, and didn’t ask how a human was supposed
to have a nephew who was Jarillian.
            Riker opened the closet door, and slipped back outside.  It was
easy enough to take care of the shuttle – he could do it in his sleep – and he
was back inside the bedroom and changing in less than five minutes.  He walked
into the kitchen, where the boy was chatting mindlessly with the pilot, who was
drinking something red and frozen.
            “Your nephew is quite talented at this,” the pilot said.
            He shrugged.  “My sister-in-law is Jarillian,” he answered.  “The
boy takes after her, more than he does my surly brother.”
            The pilot laughed.  “Perhaps she’s trying to redeem him,” he said.
            “It’s been twelve years,” Riker answered, “and nothing’s changed.” 
He took the glass from the boy and said, “Thank you, Billy.”
            The pilot finished his drink.  “And thank you, sir,” he said to
Riker.  “I hope you enjoy the rest of your vacation.”
            “Oh, I will,” Riker agreed.
            He walked the pilot out, and watched him take off.  The old man was
slowing down, he thought, if that was the level of babysitter available.  He
turned around and went inside, and watched, standing in the doorway of the
kitchen, the boy tidy up.
            “You’re good at that,” he said, “Billy.  The kitchen looks
spotless.  Did you shape things up, while I was gone?”
            The boy said, “I made everything shipshape for you, Sir.”
            Riker watched the boy steadily, and then he said, “You did a good
job.”
            The boy couldn’t help himself; he smiled, and Riker felt his
interest rise.  “I promised you something new, Billy,” he said softly.
            The boy’s smile vanished, to be replaced by fear – which he then
tried to hide.  Riker saw him glance at the drawer, and he sighed inwardly. 
He’d hoped that the boy would have lasted just a little bit longer, but perhaps
– given the news about his son’s doctor – it was for the best.
            He said, “Why don’t you bring my drink into the bedroom?”
            The boy nodded, and grabbed the drink.  Riker stood aside, to let
the boy pass by him, and then he reached out and held the boy still by the
shoulders.  He grinned, looking down at the boy’s violet eyes with their
starburst flecks, and said, “One.  Two.  Now,” and the explosion shook the
cottage.
            “Some pilots forget that they should always check their engine
before take-off,” he said.  He watched as a stream of urine puddled on the
floor.  “What’s the matter, Billy?” he asked, his voice affecting a tone of
genuine concern.  “I thought everyone wanted to be in pictures.”
***** Chapter 73 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will continues to struggle with his memories of Rosie and with his
     guilt over the incident with da Costa.
Chapter Notes
     One of the major causes of sleep disturbances in a patient with PTSD
     is the inability to control or "shut off" the disordered and/or
     distressed mind. One of the chief components of CBT is the reordering
     or simplifying of the mind in order to prepare it for sleep.
Chapter Seventy-Three
 
 
 
           
            I was walking down the path to the creek, the same path we walked
down all the time, down to the pool where I’d caught my first fish and Dmitri
and I had fallen in.  I’d walked down it so many times – there was no reason
for this time to be different.  Summer was almost over, my birthday had come
and gone, even though it didn’t seem to matter to anyone, anymore, that I was
eight, least of all to me.  I’d brought Bet, and she was running on ahead of
me.  There was a cool wind coming from over the mountains and the promise of
winter was in the air.  The leaves were falling off the salmonberry bushes and
a weak sunlight was dappled on the path.  I heard Bet barking on up ahead of
me, and I remember hoping that it wasn’t a bear she was barking at – I remember
sniffing the air, for the distinctive stench of bear, but there was nothing,
just the interplay of sun and leaves and wind and –
            Rosie, weighted down in the water, her hair floating around her,
her eyes wide open, her clothes gone, and Bet barking, and barking, and
barking, and somehow, even though she was long gone, and it must have been my
imagination, I could see the bruises and the wounds on her body, knew what he
had done to her, could see her dark eyes filled with fear and pain; and I stood
there, I stood there, knowing that I could tell and someone would finally
believe me; that I could grab Bet and walk back up the path to the Kalugin
house and tell Georgie or Pete or Mr or Mrs Kalugin that Rosie was in the
water, and that she’d needed them – she’d needed me – but I didn’t.  I didn’t. 
I stood on the bank and I watched her, hoping somehow that she would look at me
and tell me that it was okay, that he hadn’t done this, that she’d just fallen
in, the same way Dmitri had, except that I wasn’t there to rescue her.  I knew
it wasn’t true but I still hoped it could be true.  I still was a child enough,
I guess, to think that dead didn’t really mean dead; that Rosie could come back
somehow, the way she’d once told me that Jesus had; the way that I’d thought
wishing my mom in my life could somehow have made it so.
            I stood there and tried to tell myself that, tried not to see that
she was without her clothes, tried not to see that she’d been weighted and
wedged, but of course it was right there.  And I sat down on the bank and I
took my jeans off, and my jacket, and my shirt, and my briefs, and my socks,
and my boots, and I waded into the water, and I moved the rock that she’d been
caught on, and then I swam back to the bank, and I stood there, naked and
freezing, and watched her drift away, down the creek, towards the rapids and
the river.  And I put my clothes back on, and I went home, and I never told….I
never told, I never told….
            “But you’ve told now, Will,” Jean-Luc was saying to me, right next
to my ear, “you’ve told now, and I promise you I will help you tell her family
---it’s all right now, I’m here, mon cher, you’re safe.”
            He’d wrapped his arms around me, and had pulled me to him, and I
was awake then, and realised that I must have been crying in my sleep – and,
oh, when would this ever end?  Surely I was on enough medication to kill an
average person and yet it wouldn’t stop, not even for one fucking night.
            “I don’t want to remember anymore,” I said, “Jean-Luc, please, I
don’t want to remember anymore.”
            “I know,” he said quietly.  “I would take it from you, if I
could.”  He held me tightly. 
            “Nobody had ever hurt her before,” I said.  “She was loved, Jean-
Luc – she wasn’t some throw-away that he could just use and forget, she wasn’t
me – I could have taken it but she didn’t know….”
            “William,” he said, and his voice had suddenly become the
captain’s, “you are torturing yourself and there is simply no point at all to
this.  No more.  I’m ordering you to stop this.  You are not helping her – and
you are not helping yourself.”
            “But I don’t know how to shut it off,” I whispered.  “Just tell me
how to shut it off….”
            He kissed me, and I turned into him, my head against his side, and
let him stroke my hair.  I could feel myself shaking, and I thought, if I could
only calm down just for a little bit, I could do what Deanna had told me to do,
I could find my safe place on the ship and go to it, but I couldn’t even
remember where it was –
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, and his voice was still low but the tone was
different, somehow, almost conversational, “have you ever seen a starfish?”
            “What?” I said, surprised.  What the hell had a starfish to do with
anything?
            “You know, a starfish,” he repeated, “a sea star.”  He smiled, and
said, “Un étoile de mer.”
            “Yeah,” I said, and I looked up at him. He pushed aside a strand of
hair from my face.
            “Do you remember when you first saw one?” he asked.
            “I guess,” I said.
            “Can you tell me about it?”
            “Jean-Luc – “ I began, and he said, “Shhh – just tell me, Will.”
            I sighed.  “We went to Vancouver,” I said, “I guess I was fourteen
or so, me and Dmitri and the Shugaks – I don’t remember why – but we went to
this beach along Burrard Inlet, and there was a pier, and you could see the sea
stars on the pilings….They were huge.”
            “What colour were they?” he asked.
            “Orange,” I said, “bright orange…like the colour of life vests. 
All along the pilings.”
            “Did you get to touch one?” he asked, and he was kissing me again,
and rubbing my back.
            “The water wasn’t that cold,” I said, “and we went swimming, out to
the pilings.  So, yeah, I touched one.  The texture was so strange….”
            “Did it curl up on you?” he asked, and I looked up at him again;
his eyes were warm and dark and then I knew what he was doing.
            “No,” I said, and I was able to sort of smile back at him, “they
pretty much ignored us.  But I remember we saw a harbour seal, and then a
couple of river otters.  And Dmitri kept lifting up the rocks to look for
crabs, little tiny crabs.”
            “Not like the beach in Valdez,” he murmured, “where there were only
sea lions?”  He was still holding me tightly, still kissing me softly on my
forehead.
            “No,” I said, yawning, “not at all like the beach in Valdez.”
            “You sleep now, Will,” he said.  “Bright orange sea stars…I would
have liked to see that.”
            “I’m sure they’re still there, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “You can show them to me the next time we go home,” he told me, and
I said, closing my eyes, “All right, I will…”
 
 
            He was kissing me again, and I said, “I don’t want to get up.  You
always wake up too early.”
            “I’ve been waking at this time for almost fifty years,” he said,
and I could tell he was smiling, “much longer than you have been alive, mon
cher.  I am not going to stop now.”
            I pulled the blanket over me, and moved closer to him.  “Just let
me sleep for a little more,” I said.
            “I thought,” he said in my ear, “that we might do something a
little more interesting, since we have the time.”
            “Oh, yeah?”  I peered out from under the blanket.  “What might that
be, Jean-Luc?”
            “We could, I suppose,” he said, deadpan, “discuss the merits of the
metaphasic shields.  Or we could talk about the rock structures on Tarsus III
–“  I groaned, and pulled the blanket back up.  “Or,” he said into the blanket,
“I could begin by kissing you on your neck, and I could work my way down to a
much more interesting place –“ I could feel his breath on me through the
blanket –“Or I could get up and take a shower, which is what I usually do at
this time, and you could stay under the blanket and sleep.  It’s your choice,
William,” he said, and he placed his hand, under the blanket, on my cheek. 
“What would you like to do?”
            I kissed his hand and said, “Are you offering to make love to me,
sir?” and I could almost hear him roll his eyes as I said “sir.”
            He said, “How did you so charmingly put it?  I’m offering you the
chance to get laid.”
            I started to laugh and he said, “Shhh…surely if they know we’re
awake, someone will come in here with something I need to do.”
            “Is there anything you don’t know, Jean-Luc?” I asked, and he said,
“I don’t know what will make you happy, Will.  What can I do to make you feel
good for a little while?”
            I sat up and said, reaching for him so that he could see that I
wasn’t playing anymore, “I know it must seem to you that I’m the unhappiest
person in the world, Jean-Luc.  And it’s true – I can’t begin to describe what
it’s been like for me, to lose myself like this, and to drown – that’s what it
feels like – in what I remember, how terrifying it’s been to remember this
stuff as if it’s happening right now and I don’t know how to stop it, or
control it, or manage it….”  I tried to think about what I wanted to say to
him, me with my limited emotional vocabulary and my brain that didn’t work
properly.  “But – within what’s happening, Jean-Luc – when you hold me, when I
wake up and you’re right here, when you make love to me – I do feel happy – if
that’s the word – “  I could feel myself beginning to be frustrated, and he
pulled me to him and said,  “It is precisely the word, mon cœur….” And there
was a curious sort of feeling of triumph for me, when he made love to me, that
I could say to myself that what I was feeling, his gentleness and his strength
and his ability to bring the two of us to a place that was so right, was, in
fact, happiness.
 
 
 
            The knock on the door made me jump, and Jean-Luc said, “It’s all
right, Will.  It’s just the door,” and he pulled me closer to him and said,
“Come.”
            The door opened a bit and da Costa said, “Sir.  Mr Data wanted me
to remind you that there is a briefing meeting on the station at ten hundred
hours with Admiral Haden.  Lt Ogawa needs to check Commander Riker’s vitals. 
And Dr McBride is here, sir, to see you both.”
            “Thank you, Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said. 
            “Sir,” da Costa responded, and he pulled the door again.
            “Is there a problem with the ambassadors?” I asked, sitting up.
            “William,” he answered, and I sighed.
            “I know, I know,” I said.  “It’s not my business.”
            “My poor boy,” he said.  “I can tell you that there are no problems
anywhere that I am currently aware of.  Does that help?”
            “I guess,” I replied.  “I hate this.  I hate everything about it.”
            “I know.  As indeed I would, were I in your position,” he said.  “I
can ask you this, though – and perhaps make you feel a little better -- Will?”
            “What?” I said, and then I grinned and added, “I mean, what, sir?”
            “We will be here for another two to three days,” he said.  “We’ve
just been to deep space.  There’s been a major change in our command structure,
because an important member of our team has been seriously ill.  Most of the
crew hasn’t seen this team member for a few weeks, and they’re anxious and
upset, especially as he has been very hands-on and is very well-liked. 
Suggestions?”
            “Shore leave,” I said automatically.  “Staggered, so as not to
overwhelm the base.  And encouraged among senior staff, especially those who
don’t normally take shore leave.”  I paused, and then I added, “That would
include you, sir.  And other members of my treatment team.  Which is why it
should be staggered.”
            “Thank you, Number One,” he said, smiling.  “My thoughts exactly. 
Glad to have them confirmed.  But as I had my respite care the other day – and
I’m going to be on and off the base this morning, I shan’t be taking any. 
However, I shall make sure that Mr Data and Mr Worf do – as well as Dr Crusher
and Counsellor Troi.”
            “Respite care – “ I began, and Jean-Luc interrupted, “Will.  I went
to the gym.  I fenced for ninety minutes with Martin.  I went to the holodeck
and used my riding in the Pyrenées program.  I’m fine.”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.
            He said, glancing at me, “Perhaps you should let me take you to the
shower.”
            “That might be a good idea,” I answered, standing.  “After all, you
are the cause of this.”
            “I seem to recall,” he said, handing me my robe, “that you were an
active participant.  Come, let’s not keep your Dr McBride waiting.”
            “He’s not my Dr McBride,” I said, following him into the shower.  I
could see McBride was in Beverly’s office with da Costa.
            “He will be ready for you in five minutes,” Jean-Luc said to
Ogawa. 
            “Aye, sir,” Ogawa answered.
            The shower was not really big enough for the two of us, even if
either of us had been inclined to fool around, so I showered first, and then
switched with Jean-Luc, waiting for him to finish. 
            “Here,” he said, “sit down and let me trim your beard.”
            “But – “ I began.
            “Surely you don’t think you will overcome me the way you did Mr da
Costa?” he said. 
            “No, sir,” I said.  I hadn’t wanted to think about yesterday or da
Costa.  I sat still and let him neaten my beard.  “You said you weren’t angry
with me, yesterday,” I said, watching him use the depilatory.
            “And I’m not angry with you,” he replied.  “I wasn’t yesterday, nor
am I today.”
            “Do you think da Costa is?” I asked, standing. 
            “Do I think he is what?” Jean-Luc asked.
            “I don’t know the word,” I said, sighing.  Then I said, “You
sounded angry, to me.  Just now.”
            “Did I?”  He’d finished his toiletries, put them in his kit bag,
and left it on the counter.  “Are you sure you didn’t want me to be?  Angry
with you?  It made it easier for you to let me use the trimmer, didn’t it, if I
was angry and thus stronger than you?”
            I didn’t say anything, because I wasn’t sure that I understood what
he was saying – or maybe it was because I did understand what he was saying.
            “Are you so afraid, William, that you could harm me?” he asked. 
“Do you think that I would let you harm me?”
            I said, “I don’t want to harm you.  I don’t want to harm anyone.”
            “That,” he said, taking my arm, “is not what I asked you.”
            I said, “I’m afraid of everything, Jean-Luc.  I’m afraid that I
will hurt you – or that Billy will.  And I’m afraid of Billy.  He’s like my
father.  All he wants to do is kill.”
            He opened the door, and I walked with him back into my room.  He
waited for a moment while Djani and Sirikit finished taking the sheets from our
bed, and then he shut the door and took me into his arms.
            “Did you hurt Mr da Costa in any way, William?” he asked.
            “No,” I said.  “I don’t think I did.”
            “Did Billy?”
            “No,” I said.
            “Because he had no intention of hurting Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc
said, “just as he has no intention of hurting me. Remember, Will, before you
hurt yourself, when I took you to Sitges?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “I asked you if you trusted me,” he continued.  “And I will ask you
again.  Do you trust me, William?”
            “Yes.”
            “As I trust you, Will,” he said.  “You are still a good man.  You
are still one of the finest officers I have ever served with.  Your fears must
seem overwhelming to you, but I assure you, I am in no danger.  Not from you,
and not from Billy.”
            “Then why do I feel as if you aren’t safe?” I asked.
            “Your experience has been that no one around your father has ever
been safe,” he answered.  “You weren’t safe.  Rosie wasn’t safe.  The cat
wasn’t safe.  And even though your father had absolutely nothing to do with the
death of your mother, I’m willing to wager that Billy must have decided she
hadn’t been safe either.”
            I sat down on the bed and watched him finish dressing.  “Am I to
have a normal schedule today?” I asked.
            “I’m sure that’s why Dr McBride is here,” he replied, pulling on
his boots.  “William.  We can assume that your morning schedule will be the
same as it has been.”
            I was quiet and then I said, “You can tell me to shut up if I’m
annoying you, Jean-Luc.  I won’t fucking break.”
            He gave a surprised bark of laughter and said, “You are entirely
too much, Mr Riker.  The last time I told you that you were irritating me you
wept.  I have absolutely no desire to repeat that experience.”
            I opened my mouth and he said, “Oh, no.  We could be together for
the next forty years, William, but you won’t say that to me.”  I grinned, and
he said, “Come here, you,” and I rested my head on his shoulder, feeling the
useless anxiety drift away.
            He opened the door and said, “Lieutenant, Commander Riker is ready
for you.”  He walked out, and I sat back down to slip my feet into my shoes.
            “I won’t ask you how you’re feeling, Commander,” Ogawa said as she
walked in.  “I will tell you good morning and check your vitals.”
            “I have the worst reputation around this place,” I said.  “I’m
feeling okay.  I don’t have any pain.”
            “I am sure that Dr Crusher will be very pleased to hear that,
Commander,” Ogawa said.  “Guinan sent your breakfast.  Shall I have Mr da Costa
bring it in?”
            “He’s not afraid of me?” I asked.
            “Sir, I’m not afraid of you,” Ogawa said, smiling, “so I rather
doubt that Joao da Costa is.”
            I said, lightly, “I don’t know whether I should be insulted or
not.”
            “When you make up your mind, sir,” Ogawa replied, laughing, “you
let me know.”
            Jean-Luc entered as Ogawa left, accompanied by McBride and Beverly.
            “I’m only here for a minute,” Beverly told me.  “You’ve your
breakfast to eat, and Dr McBride wants to speak to you and the captain.  Your
blood pressure is good, Will, and all vital signs are normal.  You told Lt
Ogawa that you have no pain this morning?”
            “No pain in my head,” I answered.  “No pain anywhere.”
            “Well, that’s the best news I’ve heard in three weeks,” Beverly
said.  “As long as Dr McBride concurs, a normal schedule for you today.  You
still need to continue PT, both for your cardiovascular system and your arms. 
And a session in the hyperbaric chamber should be on your schedule as well. 
You’re off your liquid diet, Will – but I want you to try to eat today.  Do you
think you could manage that?”
            I nodded.  “I can’t tell you if I’m hungry, Beverly,” I answered. 
“But I can tell you that my stomach doesn’t hurt, and that I’m not feeling
nauseous.”
            “A red letter day,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Wonderful,” Beverly said.  “Doctor?  He’s on a normal schedule for
this morning, then?”
            “Of course,” McBride agreed.  “Counsellor Troi should be here
shortly for his visualisation, before he goes to PT.”
            “Will,” Beverly said, “I would like you to have a good day.”  She
grinned at me, which wasn’t at all terrifying, and left my room.
            “You wanted to see us together, Doctor?” Jean-Luc asked, pulling
the door.
            “I did,” McBride answered.  “Why don’t you take a seat, Jean-Luc?”
            I said, “I’m in his chair – and it’s the only one left in the
room.”  I stood up, and sat down on the edge of the bed.
            “We have already ordered you furniture you can’t break, Commander,”
McBride said, but he was smiling.
            Jean-Luc sat in his chair, and then da Costa showed up with a chair
for McBride.  “Thank you, Joao,” McBride said as he sat.  “So.  I wanted to
check in with the both of you before you started your day, and I wanted to let
you know, Jean-Luc, that if it’s at all possible, I would like you to be with
Will in his therapy with me this afternoon.”
            “I have a function this morning with Admiral Haden,” Jean-Luc
said.  “And I have deliberately kept that time slot – Will’s therapy with you –
open, so, yes, of course.”
            “Good,” McBride said, and he was back to using his genial tone of
voice.  “Will, were you able to sleep last night?”
            “I woke up once,” I said.
            “What happened?” McBride asked.
            I shrugged.  Jean-Luc said, “He had –“ but McBride interrupted him
with, “Let William tell me, Jean-Luc.”
            I didn’t look at Jean-Luc, because I knew that he’d be annoyed by
McBride interrupting him.  “I had a bad dream,” I said.  “I guess it was a
dream.  I don’t really know.  It might have been a memory and a dream.”
            “About?”
            “I thought I was having therapy this afternoon,” I said.  “I don’t
want to talk about this now.  I haven’t even had a cup of coffee.”
            “At least, Doctor,” Jean-Luc said, “his wanting a cup of coffee is
a good sign.”
            McBride smiled.  “Indeed it is,” he said.  “But this is a check-in,
Will.  To see where you are and how you are feeling, for both Jean-Luc and for
me.  And for you to see how Jean-Luc is feeling.  So your dream or your memory
was about?”
            “It was about finding Rosie,” I said.  “I dreamt – or I remembered
– finding Rosie.”
            “And he woke you, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.
            “Yes.  He was weeping – and he kept repeating that he hadn’t told.”
            “You’re very good at keeping secrets, Will, aren’t you?” McBride
commented.  “Another one of your survival skills.  So how did you help him,
Jean-Luc?  I’m assuming that you did help him, since I wasn’t called.”
            Jean-Luc gave one of his famous shrugs.  “I promised that I would
help him tell Rosie’s family,” he replied.  “And then I distracted him.”
            “With starfish,” I said, laughing.  “He kept asking me stupid
questions about starfish.”
            Jean-Luc shrugged again.  “It was the first thing I thought of,” he
said.  “I have no idea why, but it worked.”
            “Splendid,” McBride said.  “And you were able to return to sleep,
Will?  Without any more memories or dreams?”
            I nodded.  “Yeah.”
            “And I heard from Dr Crusher that you have no physical pain this
morning,” McBride continued, and when I nodded, he said, “And your anxiety
about Jean-Luc’s safety, Will?  How are you feeling this morning in regards to
that?”
            “This is beginning to sound more and more like therapy to me,” I
said.  “We discussed it.  It still bothers me.  What I did yesterday bothers
me.”
            “We discussed it,” Jean-Luc said, “this morning.  He is worried.  I
have explained to him, as I explained to you yesterday, Doctor, that I do not
believe that Billy will do me any harm.”
            “And the two of you are reconciled on the issue of respite care
now?” McBride asked.  “Will, you’ve been able to let go of your hurt and anger
over this?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “And Jean-Luc, you’ve been able to reassure yourself that your
feelings for William haven’t changed, despite your needing some time away?” 
McBride said this quietly, and for a moment I thought he’d asked if Jean-Luc
had reassured me, but then I realised what he’d asked.  I could feel the
anxiety start to pool in my gut.
            Jean-Luc was silent for a moment, and then he said, “My comment to
you yesterday stands as well, Doctor,” and I was surprised when McBride
laughed.  “You are quite right,” he replied thoughtfully, and then he said,
looking at me, “Perhaps I was just as anxious as Will was over this.  I am no
longer, however.  We had a reasonably good night, and we’ve been fine this
morning.”
            “Then I will see you both at fifteen hundred hours,” McBride said,
standing.  “Starfish.  I’m sure, Jean-Luc, that there’s something Jungian in
that.”  He walked out, laughing quietly.
            “I feel as if I’ve been poked at with a stick,” I complained.
            Jean-Luc stood, and he came over to me.  “That is a perfect
analogy,” he said, pulling me to him.  “However, we have both survived it.”
            “I’m not playing this tomorrow morning,” I said.  “What a stupid
way to start the day.”
            “Let it go, Will,” he said.  “Deanna will be here, and then you’ll
go to PT.  You’ll be fine.”
            I sighed.  “I still have to apologise to da Costa,” I said.  “I
don’t suppose you can stay here with me?”
            “Will,” he said.  “Look at me.”
            Reluctantly I looked up at him.
            “Mr da Costa has been trained to deal with this illness,” he said,
gently.  “Your outburst yesterday was typical of your illness.  You were
frightened and you reacted in anger.  Mr da Costa was not hurt, and, from where
I was standing, it was quite apparent to me that neither you nor Billy had any
intention of hurting him.  My only concern was that you would hurt yourself –
which you did.”  He ran his hand along the welt on my arm.  “We discussed this
already, Will.  As I said to you last night, I don’t think your dwelling on
these issues is helping you at all.”  He kissed me, and then said, “I’ve got a
staff meeting, and then the briefing with Admiral Haden.  You’ve a busy day,
and you should eat your breakfast.”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.  He let me go, and I stood up.  “You’re right,”
I said, finally.  “It won’t do me any good to keep thinking about it.”
            “Bien,” he said, smiling.  “I will see you at fifteen hundred
hours, mon cher.”  He opened the door, allowing da Costa, with my breakfast, to
enter as he left. 
            “I’ve got your coffee, sir,” da Costa said.  He set the tray down
on the night table, something I clearly hadn’t been able to throw.  “Guinan
said she would see you after the hyperbaric chamber, to talk about your lunch
and dinner.”
            I said, “Are you okay, Joao?  I didn’t hurt you?”
            Da Costa stopped adding the cream to my coffee and stood to face
me.  I’d expected him to stand at attention or something, but instead he
remained relaxed, and then he smiled.  “I am a little bruised around the ribs,
Commander,” he said, “and – perhaps – around the ego.  Otherwise, I’m fine.  I
don’t believe you ever really meant to hurt me.  And I should have recognised
that you’d been triggered.  It’s a learning curve for both of us, sir.”
            I said, “You’re a decent guy, da Costa.  I’m sorry.”
            Da Costa said, “Why don’t you sit in the captain’s chair and have
your breakfast, sir.  Counsellor Troi is meeting with Dr Crusher now, but she
should be here in about fifteen minutes.”
            “Okay, Joao,” I said. 
            I sat down and ate my breakfast.
***** Chapter 74 *****
Chapter Summary
     Vera Kalugin receives a subspace communication.
Chapter Notes
     One of the worst aspects of suffering from PTSD is feeling that one
     is eternally victimised; that one is acted upon and has relinquished
     all control to the abuser. Therapists often refer to this as
     "stagnant victimisation." One goal of CBT is to demonstrate to the
     trauma survivor that victimisation can be abandoned for a more pro-
     active role in healing.
 
Chapter Seventy-Four
           
           
 
 
            If someone had told her thirty years ago that she would have found
her life’s fulfillment as an “Auntie” on the tribal council, she would have
wept.  Because thirty years ago she’d gone from being an ordinary wife and
mother, part-owner of a successful sled dog kennel, to a living shell whose
life was essentially over.  When she looked back at that period, when she was
tired or ill or there’d been a tragedy in the village, she often wondered why
she’d gone on waking in the morning and fixing breakfast and feeding dogs and
helping with homework and making love to Greg.  The part of her that had
infused those actions with joy was just as missing as Rosie.  And yet she had
done all those things, gotten her boys through high school, and, surprisingly,
college for Georgie and university for Pete; gone to their weddings and the
births of their children; attended birthday parties and Christmas dinners and
Easter masses and all the other functions of an ordinary life.  She’d thought
she’d never be happy again, or never feel again, but of course that wasn’t true
– humans weren’t made that way.  She couldn’t pinpoint when she’d started to
feel again, couldn’t pinpoint when she’d discovered she’d had a real reason to
get out of bed other than because someone else expected her to, but it had
happened all the same; somewhere it had happened, a grandchild being born, a
villager needing help, Greg’s final illness; Pete’s grief at his father’s death
and her own.
            Now, she thought with amusement – and it no longer shocked her,
that she could still feel amusement – she had become Auntie Raisa.  And Auntie
Raisa would have said that village life was a never-ending circle and that it
was simply the way of their people that the young woman of yesterday became the
auntie of today.  Maybe, she thought, I do my work a little better than Auntie
Raisa had, because no one in the village, or in Valdez, or, even, sometimes,
from Anchorage or Juneau, was afraid to come to her, the way people had once
been to Auntie Raisa with her waspish tongue.  Vera had never had those sharp
edges to her personality.  She’d been a sunny, if contemplative, child, and
she’d been a mother whose arms had been soft but strong and loving, until her
motherhood had been wrenched from her in that one horrific loss.  (She’d known
she’d still been Georgie and Pete’s mother.  But somehow Rosie’s loss had
diminished her claim to motherhood – she didn’t know why.)  But the loss hadn’t
added sharpness or bitterness to her; it had given her an ineffable sadness
instead; the kind of sadness, she sometimes thought, that the Holy Mother must
have felt in those years of her life that lingered after the loss of her only
child. 
            At first, the people who’d come to her had come with pity in their
eyes, despite even their own horrors, but that had gradually given way to just
the mute plea for help and the recognition that her soul, having experienced
such pain and yet had continued on, was a symbol of hope in a world which,
although it tried to be perfect, still wasn’t.  Boats still sank, and cabins
burned; people could still become ill, or unhappy, or desperate; sometimes it
was as simple as the elusiveness of joy.  As an auntie, Vera didn’t have any
answers to anything.  But her presence said:  I survived my Golgotha and so can
you. And so she’d found a fulfillment, of sorts, in being a presence of hope on
the tribal council, in being a person who could listen to another person’s pain
without telling them that it was “God’s will” or that “God didn’t hand you a
burden you couldn’t bear” or any of the other soul-killing platitudes she’d
heard in her own life.
            Now, as she helped set out refreshments and started the kettle
boiling for the after-council gossip, she took a sort of simple pleasure in
doing the tasks that kept the people coming, and the village going, and their
small world – as old as time itself, it seemed – working in the face of
competition from all those other more exciting places, in the cities and on the
mainland and off-world.  She’d just finished placing the last of Tasya Shugak’s
perfectly-made blueberry and huckleberry tarts on a platter when Dmitri Gorin
walked up to her and rested his hand, lightly, on her shoulder.
            “Auntie Vera,” he said, with such tenderness in his voice that she
felt the familiar clenching of her stomach and thought perhaps that Georgie, or
Pete, had died, “can you come with me for a minute?”
            “Dmitri?” she asked, and her voice quavered.
            “It’s all right, Auntie Vee,” Dmitri said and she was momentarily
distracted at how kind this man was beside her; Dmitri, who had been a holy
terror when he had been a child.  “Everyone is fine – but,” and he stumbled for
a minute, as if he couldn’t believe what he was about to tell her, “but,
Auntie, there is a subspace communication for you.  We have it, in the office –
if you would come with me.  Auntie Katya will take care of the refreshments for
you.”
            “A subspace communication?” Vera repeated.  She wasn’t sure she’d
heard Dmitri correctly.  “But I don’t know anyone in space.”
            Dmitri said, “George has gone to get Auntie Tasya and Uncle Marty. 
They should be here in a few minutes.”
            Vera didn’t say anything; it had been maybe five years or more that
Auntie Tasya and Uncle Marty had relinquished their seats on the tribal council
for another generation, but she could certainly understand that something as
momentous as a subspace communication would bring them back.  She followed
Dmitri down the corridor in a sort of a daze, and entered the office, where
Pete was standing, waiting for her, with his wife Lena, along with Dmitri’s
cousins Tom and Niall and Mike.
            “Here, sit down, Auntie Vee,” Dmitri said, and Pete pulled out a
chair for her in front of the viewscreen.  “We’ll need chairs for Nan and
Granddad,” Dmitri said, and Tom nodded and left to go find more chairs.
            Vera sat.  She looked at Dmitri and his cousins; at Pete and his
wife.  “I don’t understand, Peter,” she said.  “Why would I get a subspace
communication?  We’re just a small village.  We don’t know anyone off-world.”
            “Mama,” Pete said, and he hadn’t called her “Mama” in years.  He
knelt down, so that he was making eye contact with her, and she wondered when
he’d gotten the strands of grey that were showing in his hair.  “The
communication is from Starfleet, Mama.”
            “But – “ Vera began, and then she looked at the faces watching her,
and she felt her lips begin to tremble and her hands to shake.  “Pete?” she
said.  “Your father should be here.”
            “I know, Mama,” Pete answered, rubbing her hand.  “I know.”
            She heard Marty talking to Georgie as he came down the hall, and
the door opened, and Georgie brought Tasya and Marty Shugak in, carefully, as
if they would break.  And she thought, I am the one who will break.  Georgie
put his arm around her protectively, and she saw Dmitri take his grandparents’
hands.
            Auntie Tasya said, “Why would we get a subspace communication?”,
the same question that she had asked, and Marty said, “Because it’s William,
Tasya.  It’s William who has something to say to us.”
            “William?” Auntie Tasya repeated.  “Our William?”
            And Vera said, “Is he so very far away?”
            “Are we ready?” Dmitri asked, and Vera nodded.
            He opened up the communication, and there was an older man in a red
captain’s uniform who appeared on the screen.  The man said, “I am Captain
Jean-Luc Picard of the USS Enterprise.  I would like to speak with Mr and Mrs
Kalugin, if I may.”
            “Mama,” Pete said, “just speak normally, and the captain will hear
you.”
            Vera moved her chair a little closer and she said, “I am Vera
Kalugin.  My husband Gregory has been gone these past ten years.”
            “I am pleased to meet you, Mrs Kalugin,” the captain said, and it
was almost as if he were speaking some language other than English, with his
accent and his clipped tones.  “Although I would have preferred it to be under
happier circumstances.  Perhaps at some future date, when the Enterprise
returns next to Earth, we could meet in person.  I have heard many good things
about you and your family.”
            There was silence, and Vera said, “Where are you?”
            The captain gave a small but kind-looking smile and replied, “We
are currently in orbit around a small starbase near Lya III.  I am sure someone
will be able to show you on a Federation map, later.”  He paused, and then he
said, “My first officer is Commander William Riker, Mrs Kalugin, and he is
really the one who will speak to you.  However, I promised him that I would
give you a little background information on his behalf, so that you will
understand what he has to say to you and why he is saying it now.  You have
family around you, I see,” he said.  “Are the Shugaks – Anastassia and Martin –
there with you, too?  Because I think William might like to speak to them as
well.”
            “We are both here, Captain,” Marty Shugak said, and his voice was
surprisingly strong.
            “What does William want to say, Captain?” Vera asked, although she
knew.  She felt Pete tighten his hold on her hand.
            “Commander Riker became seriously ill nearly eight weeks ago, Mrs
Kalugin,” the captain said, “although I did not become aware of how ill he was
until several weeks after that, when he attempted suicide in his quarters.  He
has since been diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, and he is
currently undergoing treatment for his illness shipboard.”  The captain paused
again, as if he were expecting someone – anyone – to say something.  He
continued, “William had been experiencing flashbacks to his childhood and the
abuse he suffered at the hands of his father.  He has subsequently begun to
remember the years of his childhood that he lost.  Much of his memory concerns
his friendship with your daughter, Rosie.”
            And there it was.  “He remembers Rosie?” Vera asked.
            “Yes, Mrs Kalugin,” the captain said.  “William is here, with me,
and he would like to tell you about Rosie.”
            “Is he well enough to do this, Captain?” Tasya Shugak had been
quiet, but her voice now was the voice of the woman who had tried to keep a
little boy safe so many years ago.
            “I believe, Mrs Shugak,” the captain responded, “that William must
do this, if he is to heal.  And William’s doctor – who is here with me as well
– agrees.”
            “I would like to speak to William,” Vera said.  She watched as the
captain turned away and said something, and then he replied, “Here he is, Mrs
Kalugin.”
            “Hello, Mrs Kalugin,” William said.
            Vera looked at William – how tall he was, his dark hair and bright
blue eyes, his beard, his red Starfleet uniform with the commander’s pips
across the shoulder – and she remembered her friend Bette, so many years ago. 
How proud she would have been to see her son in command red.
            “I’m sorry,” he said, and now Vera could see the dark circles under
his eyes, and the gauntness of his face, and the shaking of his hands.  She
remembered a dark-haired little boy playing with his puppy in her yard, a puppy
he refused to take to his own home.
            “William,” she said, “can you tell me where my Rosie is?”
            She watched as the captain walked back into the picture, and she
saw him take William’s hand.
            William said, “I didn’t remember what happened until two days ago. 
I’m sorry that I never told you then, you and Mr Kalugin.  And I’m sorry that
he’s gone, so that I can’t make it right – as right as it can ever be.  I don’t
know who is with you – I see so many people there but I’m not sure I recognise
them, except for Mr and Mrs S…”  His voice trailed off, and Vera saw the
captain place his hand on William’s shoulder, and she heard another man say, in
an accented voice, “You can do this, William.  You need to do this.”
            “It was because of me,” he said, and for one horrifying moment Vera
thought he would break down.  But then he seemed to collect himself, and he
said, “Rosie heard Henry tell Mr Shugak – I mean, Uncle Marty – that he was
going to go before the tribal council and tell them that my father was hurting
me.  He’d tried – Henry had – to get me to tell him what my father was doing,
but I couldn’t.  My father,” William said, “had told me that if I told anyone
he would leave me, and then I wouldn’t have anyone, and I would go back to the
facility.”  He stopped, and then he said, “I didn’t want to go there, because I
didn’t want the orderly to rape me.”  He stopped again, and he said, “Jean-Luc,
none of this is going to make any sense to anyone –“
            “William,” Tasya Shugak said, “we all know what your father was. 
You do not have to explain why you were afraid.”
            “Will,” the captain said, “they are your family.  It will be all
right.  Just tell them.  They need to know – and you need to tell.”
            “I wasn’t feeling well,” William said.  “Rosie was worried about
me.  She knew that my father had beaten me, because she’d seen me bleeding. 
She’d wanted to tell the coach – I don’t remember his name – at the baseball
game that I was in too much pain to pitch, but I didn’t let her.  And then I
beat up Carl Magnussen, and got sent home.  And on the way home I found a
little ginger cat, and I brought it home, because I thought it would be okay,
just once, since he wasn’t there and you could hide a cat better than a dog….I
know this isn’t making any sense,” he said.
            “I remember, William,” Auntie Tasya said.  “You brought the kitten
home and we put it in your room.  What happened?  You told me your father took
the cat to Valdez.”
            “He was in my room that morning, early,” William said, and his
voice was shaking.  “He was holding the cat.  He said that I could have one
thing.  I could have the cat, or I could have Rosie – because Rosie was why I’d
gotten into the fight.  I had to choose,” William said, “so I chose Rosie, and
he killed the cat in front of me.  He broke its neck, and then he left me to
clean everything up and bury it.  And so he told me he knew about Bet, and why
Bet was at Rosie’s, and then he knew about Rosie….”
            “He knew what about Rosie?” Vera asked.
            “That I loved her,” William said, and he began to weep, “she was my
friend, and she was the only one who knew what it was like for me.  I didn’t
have to pretend for her, she knew.  She told me that she knew what my father
was doing, and that Henry was going to go to the tribal council, and she said
she’d told you, and that you were going to talk to Mr Shugak.  And then I went
to the doctor in Valdez, because I was sick, and Rosie must have thought that
she could find the evidence, because Uncle Marty had said there wasn’t any….” 
He wiped his face and said, “When I woke up it was dark, and you were at my
house, and I could hear you were crying, and that Rosie was gone.  I was
sitting on the stairs, listening – I could hear that he was lying to you.  He
knew where she was, but he’d told you he would help you look for her.  And I
thought I could find her myself, so I went out on the roof, and I was going to
look in the woods.  But when I got outside I saw that where I’d buried the cat,
he’d moved the rocks and the cat was gone.  I knew.  I knew he’d killed her,
just like he killed the cat.”
            “How?” Vera asked.  “How did you know?  William, tell me.”
            “I can’t,” he said, and the captain insisted, quietly but in a
voice that even she could hear would brook no opposition, “William, you must.”
            “My father,” William said, “started raping and torturing me when I
was a baby.  He raped me almost every day he was home until I was twelve years
old and he told me I was too old.  He did things to me….It wasn’t just that he
beat me.  I knew what he was.  He was a monster.  No matter what I did to try
to get away, I never could.  Rosie – she was so brave and smart, but she didn’t
know, how could she have known that there were people like him in the world? 
She just thought he was beating me, she didn’t have any way of knowing what it
was really like.”  He stopped again, and then he said, “I didn’t think anyone
would ever find her.  I didn’t really know what he’d done, because I hadn’t
seen anything, even though he made sure that I believed he’d done something. 
And then – it was after my birthday – I found her.  She was in the deep pool of
the creek where Dmitri and I had fallen in, and she was weighted down, but
something must have come loose, I guess.  I could see what he’d done, that he’d
hurt her.  I kept hoping it wasn’t true but she was held down.  I wanted to
believe that she’d just fallen in, the way Dmitri had, but I wasn’t there to
help her.  I knew that wasn’t true, but I wanted to believe it….”
            “You found her, then, in the creek?” Vera wanted to make sure that
in his justifications she was understanding the truth.
            “Yes,” he said.  “I found her.  She was naked, and she was dead. 
He’d killed her, and hurt her, and I just stood there on the bank.  I just
stood there and I didn’t do anything.  I didn’t try to help her.  I didn’t try
to save her or bring her out of the water.  I didn’t run and tell anyone.  I
just stood there.”
            “Are you saying that my daughter is still in that creek?” Vera
couldn’t help that her voice sounded so cold.  She could see that he was
suffering, that he was ill.  But there was a need in her to finally know, after
all these years, what had really happened.  There was a need to bring her child
home.
            He was openly weeping.  “I don’t know,” he said, and she could hear
the anguish in his voice.  “My memories aren’t perfect, and the flashbacks come
so fast, and I dreamt that I’d gone into the creek and let her go, but I don’t
know if that’s a memory or a dream or maybe just something I’d wished I’d
done....I kept hoping he’d kill me  too, but what he did was worse, he kept me
alive….”
            “William,” Vera said, and she hated the hardness in her voice, she
hated that she could still see the little boy playing with his puppy when she
wanted so much to just let go and hate him and his father for destroying her
beautiful child.  “William,” she repeated.
            He’d turned his face into the captain’s chest and had allowed the
captain to hold him, and when she said his name the second time, he turned to
face her.  She watched him swallow, and then gather himself up and pull himself
back together.
            “Yes,” he said.
            “You said your memory is faulty,” she said.  “Are you certain that
the last place you saw my daughter’s body was the pool where you and Dmitri
fell in?”
            “Yes,” he said, and she could hear the commander that he’d been in
his voice.  “I am certain.  What I’m not certain about is what happened after.
 I remembered in the form of a dream, and in my dream I went into the water and
moved the rocks and let her go.  I can’t be certain that that’s real.  I do
remember standing there and hoping that she wasn’t really dead.  And I remember
going home, and what happened after I went home.”
            “What happened after you went home?” she asked, and Pete said,
“Mama, please.”
            “What always happened,” William answered, and it was as if he were
deadening himself right in front of her.  “Only he told me that nothing and no
one was more important than what he did with me.  He knew I’d find her.  He
wanted me to find her.  He wanted me to know that I could never be rescued,
that my life was always his to use and control.  And so,” he said, “I did what
I’d always wanted to do.  I turned myself into stone, so it wouldn’t hurt
anymore, and I forgot everything until the flashbacks started happening four
weeks ago.”
            She said, “Thank you for telling me, William.”  She stood up, to
walk away, and Pete said again, “Mama.”
            She looked at her boys, Pete and Georgie, and at Dmitri, and at
Tasya and Marty, sitting there devastated, their faces streaked with tears.
 Who was to blame for all of this? she wondered.  It certainly couldn’t have
been William, poor little William who had been Rosie’s friend and who had
suffered so much.  Perhaps they were all to blame, she and Greg and the Shugaks
and even Bette, who’d died so many years ago, for bringing evil into their
village when before there was none, and then for allowing that evil to do as it
wished for so many years.
            She looked back at William, and saw how the captain was holding
him, and something in her broke, and she thought at least he has found the love
he’d wanted and had never had.  Her poor Rosie had had nothing but fear and
death in the end – but she’d been loved for all that time before she’d met the
evil that had taken her away.  He had taken her life, but he hadn’t taken her –
what had William said?  I loved her, he’d said, she was my friend.
            “William,” she said, and somehow she’d managed to find her own
voice again, the voice of Auntie Vera, of the woman who led the council and
who’d offered hope to those who’d had none, “you were Rosie’s best friend, and
you loved her, and she loved you.  Thank you, for bringing her home to me.” 
She turned to Georgie and Pete and said, “Would you take me to her, please?”
            And she let her boys lead her from the room, leaving Tasya and
Marty to reunite with the little boy they’d lost, while she walked down to the
creek with her village to find her Rosie and bring her home.
***** Chapter 75 *****
Chapter Summary
     Kyle Riker remembers his brother Wharton, and tidies up a few loose
     ends.
Chapter Notes
     It seemed to me that since Jeremiah was the name of Connaught Rossa's
     grandson, perhaps her husband, who was likewise involved with Section
     31, might be named Jeremy. The others named were all members of -- or
     allied with -- Section 31 either in canon or in the novels.
Chapter Seventy-Five
 
 
 
 
            Once upon a time, Riker thought, as he gently cleaned the boy’s
body, there was a wealthy family of six, a mother and a father and four
children, two girls and two boys.  They lived in a series of very large flats
and even larger houses, from New York to London to Paris to Mars and back
again.  He washed the blood from the rag in the sink, and brought a towel over
to the bed, and very slowly dried the boy off, carefully so as not to start the
wounds bleeding again nor to bruise the pale skin, just softly blotting the
water left from the rag.  The mother was beautiful, he told the boy, who took a
sobbing half-breath in response, and then fell back into sleep, so beautiful in
fact it was hard to imagine that there could be anyone else in the universe who
could rival her beauty.  She had long honey-blonde hair which she kept in a
coil at the nape of her neck, and if the younger of the boys had been good, she
would allow him into the inner sanctum of her bedroom and hand him her ebony
hairbrush, inlaid with tiny white pearls – “That brush is an heirloom, Kyle,”
she told him once, when he was very small, “it belonged to your many-times
great-grandmother Kyle, for whom you are named, who brought it back with her
from Japan, where she had been an ambassador’s wife;” – and he would take the
hairpins out of her hair, and watch as the thick honey-coloured strands
cascaded down her back, and he would brush her hair lovingly, one hundred
times, breathing in her rich scent of lily-of-the-valley.  The younger of the
two boys loved these brief moments, he told the boy as he finished drying him,
but they were too often interrupted by the boy’s father, who was an old man but
who wore his power the way some men wore a good suit.  The boy’s father was
impatient, and he would chase the boy out, saying to the boy’s mother,
“Claudia, we must be at the embassy in an hour,” or, “Claudia, the President is
waiting for us,” or sometimes, harshly, “Claudia, you have two beautiful
daughters.  Must you make the boy do that?” and he would tell the boy, “Kyle,
go to your room,” or, “Kyle, you have homework still to do,” or “Kyle, why
don’t you go find something useful to do, as Wharton has?”  And the boy’s
mother would say in her soft, low voice, “Bill, he’s still a baby, don’t make
him grow up so fast, the way you did with Wharton.”  And she would take the boy
in her arms, which were soft and warm and smelled of flowers, and he would gaze
up at the powerful old man that was his father with his clear blue eyes – his
mother’s eyes – and smile.
            “Wharton,” Riker told the boy, as he dressed him in a pair of soft
blue pyjamas, “William Wharton – he was the old man’s favourite.  Oh, the old
man enjoyed the girls, with their ridiculous names, Susanne-Adèle and Sophie-
Claude, but it was Wharton who was the one who was to be the next president of
the Federation.  Wharton – much too important to be called something as
childish as Billy – was tall and handsome and intelligent, every bit the
picture of whom he was supposed to be.”  He picked up the towel, and walked
back into the bathroom, and placed it and the rag into the laundry receptacle. 
He stripped off his bloody clothes, tossed them in with the towel and rag, and
stepped into the shower, turning the water on to as hot as he could stand it.
            He took his time washing, enjoying the sting of the hot water
against his skin, not really following the memory any further, just
concentrating, in his single-minded way, on the task at hand.  When he was
finished he shut the shower off, and dried himself off.  He dressed in a simple
tunic and trousers, leaving his feet bare, and finished his toiletries, combing
his hair and brushing his teeth; applying lotion to his skin and using the
depilatory.  He walked by the boy, sleeping, still occasionally taking a
sobbing breath in his sleep, and he tucked the quilt around him and then left
the bedroom.
            In the kitchen he made himself a pot of real coffee, and poured it
into a mug, and took a piece of fruit out of the refrigerated unit.  He opened
the drawer and took his portfolio out, and then settled himself onto the sofa
in the living room, where he’d already booted up his padd.  He didn’t even
glance at the pictures as he transferred them to the disc; playtime was over,
and he had work to do.  He became engrossed in his work, preparing for the
meetings he would have with various and assorted section heads and cultural
attachés and then the bloated moron who had decided that he had better mind his
p’s and q’s.  Well, he’d never been a good boy, despite what his beautiful
mother might have thought (if she thought about it at all), and he wasn’t going
to start playing nicely now.  It was ironic, he thought, how quickly they had
figured out, when he was a cadet at the Academy, just what kind of a bad boy he
was, and yet they still had the capacity to be surprised by what he did.  Why,
he wondered, go to all the trouble of procuring a leopard for a pet, if what
you really wanted was a housecat?  The leopard would purr, and it would enjoy
having its head scratched, and it might chase a toy, if it were so inclined,
but in the end it would eat you, and it would all be so terribly tragic.  Poor
Jeremy Rossa, he thought, and he smiled.
            He worked quietly for another hour or so, and then he stood up and
stretched.  He’d let his coffee go cold, and he was a little hungry, and he was
fairly sure he only had another hour – two at the most – before a different
shuttle would show up, one piloted by someone who would remember to check his
engine, and he would have to participate in some long tedious discussion in
which someone would have to cover up what had happened to Behlar, and someone
would have to cover up what had happened to the first shuttle and its pilot,
and then he would be on his way to San Francisco to have yet another tedious
discussion about the Betazoid doctor and his son.
            He walked into the kitchen and ordered some toast and eggs from the
replicator, and poured himself a new cup of coffee.  He sat at the table and
ate.  It had been Connaught Rossa who’d told him that Picard had picked his son
for first officer of the Enterprise, he remembered.  He’d been surprised,
because Picard was such a routine, boring little man, and his logical choice
would have been Kathy Janeway, but perhaps, he thought, smiling, Picard had
liked the way his son looked even then.  Then he’d decided it was the perfect
place for William and he’d bided his time until the Aries turned up; the Aries,
which would have been the perfect vehicle for William, sending him out into the
Gamma Quadrant where he would have had the chance to solve some of his issues
at the expense of what was out there.  That had been the plan, anyway, but
William at thirty was no goddamned different from William at seven, and he’d
refused to play.  Well, he would play now.  They would all play.
            He finished his meal and recycled the dishes, tidying up the
kitchen, and then he returned to the sofa, but didn’t sit.  He was curiously
restless – he’d been idle far too long, it seemed, and the little bit of action
today had whetted his appetite to be doing something.  He wondered who they’d
send, if it would be that interminable bore Luther Sloan, or it might even be
Cortan Zweller, if he were nearby.  Maybe, he thought, they’d send Elim Garak. 
That would, at least, be enjoyable.
            He walked back into the bedroom, and sat at the edge of the bed. 
The boy was sleeping deeply now, his body trying to heal its many wounds.  He
traced his thumb along the boy’s ear and the boy stirred in response, but
didn’t waken.  Children were amazing, he thought, especially little boys,
because even though you demonstrated repeatedly that you were a person who
could not be trusted – not with anything – they still continued to sleep in
your presence, or bring kittens home, or try to please you in such a way that
maybe you wouldn’t be interested in hurting them for a time.  He shook his
head, thinking of his Billy, who’d known damned well that he couldn’t trust his
father – it was why he’d kept his stupid mutt at the Kalugin’s – and yet the
child had still brought the kitten home; had still offered up his little friend
– what was her name again?  Ah, yes, Rosie.  She hadn’t trusted him at all. 
She hadn’t been surprised by what he’d done to her.  Girls were very different,
that way.  He trailed his thumb down the boy’s chest, circling the boy’s
nipple.
            “Wharton,” he told the boy, “believed everything our father told
him.  He believed that the Federation was a force for good in the universe.  He
believed that he would have a long and renowned career in Starfleet, and that
he would end up as the Ambassador to Vulcan and then as the President of the
Federation.”  He let his hand continue to travel down the boy’s torso, and he
smiled when the boy moaned in his sleep.  Even their mother had ultimately been
bored by Wharton.  They’d been living in the flat in London, and Wharton had
come down from school for the holidays, and he’d heard their mother complaining
over breakfast.  “The girls,” she’d said, “while they may be vapid, are at
least pretty, Bill, and it will be fun to dress them up for their début.  But
why did you have to turn Wharton into a caricature of yourself?  It’s bad
enough that there is one William Riker in the world – do we really need two?”
            He’d been just about to enter the doorway as she said that, and
he’d thought that that was a fairly reasonable assessment.  His mother
pretended to be as vapid as her daughters – but she was not.  His father, while
he was old and often boring, could sometimes be counted upon to do something
with audacity and brilliance from time to time.  It was part of who he was. 
But William Wharton Riker – he was worse than vapid.  He’d never had an
original thought in his pretty little head.  He had the look of someone who
could be brilliant and audacious.  But that was all it was, a look.  Wharton
was a failure before he’d even begun, and how terribly disappointing, Kyle had
thought, it would be for his mother, to have three useless children.
            “Wharton – for all his good grades,” he told the boy, “didn’t have
a brain cell that functioned.  So when I told him that I needed his help,
because there was a boy down the street who was bullying me, it was all Wharton
to the rescue.”  He was quiet for a moment, remembering the look on Wharton’s
face, as he’d realised, much too late, of course, that there was no boy who’d
been bullying his younger brother and that he was alone with his younger
brother for the first time in several years.  “What is wrong with you?” Wharton
had asked, and Kyle had shrugged.  “I don’t know,” he’d answered, and it was
the truth – he didn’t know why he was the way he was.  It didn’t really seem to
matter, though.  One might as well ask why Earth had only one moon, instead of
three.  Wharton had been his first to play with, and it had been a revelation;
not just in the way perfect Wharton had crumpled into a perfect mess of snot
and tears and blood and broken body parts, but in the way his powerful father
had been diminished as well.  His beautiful mother had taken him in her arms,
and had whispered to him that she was grateful that it hadn’t been him, and
that he must be the strong one and succeed for both Wharton and himself, and so
he had gone on to the expensive schools and the Academy….where he’d found that
the real seat of power had nothing whatsoever to do with being President of the
fucking Federation.
            The boy was looking at him, his violet eyes with those starburst
flecks huge with pain and fear, and he smiled, because it was so like Wharton
to look at him that way; and when Cortan Zweller appeared in his shuttle, Riker
was waiting for him, the cottage empty and his one suitcase packed.
           
           
 
***** Chapter 76 *****
Chapter Summary
     William's struggle to piece together what really happened to Rosie
     produces auditory and visual hallucinations.
Chapter Notes
     Flashbacks -- when the trauma survivor re-experiences the trauma as
     if it were happening again -- are one of the major diagnostic
     criteria for PTSD. However, an increase in anxiety levels can produce
     chemical reactions in an already damaged brain, which can lead to the
     trauma survivor experiencing psychotic episodes, such as auditory and
     visual hallucinations. Depending on the amount of cortisol being
     produced in the brain, these hallucinations can range from the simple
     -- ringing or clapping -- to the complex, in which the patient can
     hear actual voices or see people that are not there. One of the major
     reasons why SSRI's are contra-indicated for people with PTSD is that
     they can encourage psychosis and hallucinations.
Chapter Seventy-Six
 
 
            I tried not to let it bother me, what I’d done – or Billy had done
– yesterday.  I went over my breathing with Deanna, and we went back to my safe
place on the ship, because I’d told her I’d forgotten how to get there when I
was so upset.  And then da Costa walked me to PT, first for my cardio, and then
he walked me to the hyperbaric chamber, and then he walked me back to PT for my
arms, and it was supposed to be as if everything were back to normal (or at
least my new normal, anyway), but it wasn’t.  I was tense and nervous around da
Costa, and I didn’t fall asleep in the hyperbaric chamber, but instead I just
had everything that happened in my dream keep playing in my mind like a
feedback loop.  And I couldn’t tell whether what I dreamed was a memory or just
a nightmare, the way my being cold and bleeding in Mrs Shugak’s coat closet
never really happened; it was a safe space I’d created for myself when I really
was cold and bleeding.  Maybe I’d only thought I’d seen Rosie in the water. 
When you looked at in the daytime, it didn’t really make much sense.  The time
in my dream was after my birthday, so it must have been around the beginning of
September or so, yet Rosie had gone missing in July, so why wouldn’t anyone
have found her body in the creek?  I’m sure they must have combed the creek and
the river, looking for her.  The fact that I couldn’t tell what was real and
what wasn’t bothered me, and even though I knew Jean-Luc and McBride had both
said I didn’t have to worry about Billy hurting people, I did.  There were two
Billy’s in my memories; there was Billy, who tried to live a normal life and
who was repeatedly victimised by my father; and then there was the Billy who
tried to kill Christian Larsen and who was deadly serious when he played war
games and learned judo and anbo-jyutsu and who’d beaten up more kids than just
Carl Magnussen.  I knew that Billy; he was part of me when I fought with Worf,
and when I’d fought the Borg; he pulled the trigger on every person I’d ever
killed.  I pretended to myself that I hadn’t killed many people and that I
didn’t like killing, but I knew that wasn’t true.  There was always the
presence of the Billy-part of me who did it and who didn’t care.
            I’d met with Guinan after the hyperbaric chamber, and I tried to be
interested in what she was saying about what she could offer me.  I could see
she was frustrated, even though she was kind enough to try to hide it, but I
couldn’t bring myself to care much about eating.  I’d forgotten how to be
hungry, and when I did eat something it had no taste and no texture.  I could
have been eating ashes, and there wouldn’t have been any difference.  I took a
few bites of the omelet she’d sent me for my lunch, and then I crawled into the
bed and rolled over on my side, so that I was facing away from da Costa.  I
didn’t want to think about him sitting there, working on his padd; I didn’t
want to have a conversation with him, or with anyone else.  Jean-Luc was off
the ship, down on the starbase, attending some function with Admiral Haden and
the ambassadors; shore leave had started.  Deanna had left after she’d worked
on the visualisations with me, so that she could be back in time to work with
me on my therapy at fourteen hundred.  I knew Beverly was leaving soon, as I
could hear her discussing it with Ogawa, who would leave a little later.  It
seemed to me that da Costa should have been scheduled for shore leave too, but
maybe he was trading off with Stoch.
            I sighed.  I didn’t really want to sleep, but I was supposed to be
resting now, and Jean-Luc had made it quite clear to me and to da Costa and to
anyone else who might have asked that “resting” meant in the bed.  I thought
perhaps it might be a good time to use my safe space, but instead of going to
the Arboretum I found myself wandering down the path to the creek, the place
that had been safe for me, but was no longer, because of my dream.  I climbed
over the rocks and went down to the shallows; Rosie was sitting there, dangling
her feet in the water, and I sat down next to her.
            “I know what he does to you,” she said. 
            She gave me her hand, and it was bruised and swollen.  “I’m sorry,
Rosie,” I whispered, and when she turned to look at me, her face was black and
her eyes were empty.  I woke up suddenly, to da Costa telling me that I was in
sickbay.
            “Do you need Dr McBride, Commander?” he asked.
            “No,” I said, sitting up.  “Isn’t it time to go to Deanna yet?  I
need to get out of here.”
            “You were only asleep for fifteen minutes, sir,” da Costa said. 
“You won’t have your therapy with Counsellor Troi for almost an hour.”
            “I need to get out of here,” I said again, and I stood up.
            Da Costa said, “Tell me what’s happening, sir.  Are you hearing
something?  I’m going to press the call button, for Dr Crusher.  Try to
breathe, sir.”
            “I don’t want to be in here with you,” I said, and I could feel
myself start to shake and my breath was coming in short gasps.
            The door opened and Ogawa walked in.  “We need Dr Crusher,” da
Costa said, “he’s having a panic attack – or a flashback is coming – and we
need Dr McBride.  Stat.”
            Ogawa backed out, and da Costa moved around and away from me. 
“What is happening, William?” he asked.  “Tell me how your body feels right
now.”
            “I can’t breathe,” I said, and I couldn’t breathe – my heart was
pounding and my chest was hurting, and I could feel myself backing up into the
bed.
            “The bed is behind your knees, sir,” da Costa said.  “You could sit
back down on the edge.  Tell me what you see.”
            Rosie was watching me, only instead of seeing her dark eyes there
were empty holes, and there was water all around, I could hear it running, and
I could see that she was laid open; and I said, “Please, Joao, help me;” and
Rosie said, “I told him I knew what he did to you.”
            “You never said that to me,” I said, and then I said, “I wasn’t
there, I didn’t know, I was at the doctor’s….”
            “William,” I heard da Costa say over the sound of the water, “what
you are seeing is not real.  You can feel the bed behind you.  The night table
is next to you.  If you come forward towards my voice, you won’t feel so closed
in.”
            Rosie said, “I told him that Henry was going to the tribal
council.  That he was living in your cabin on tribal land.”
            “You couldn’t possibly know that,” I protested.  “You were only
eight years old.  Nobody would have told you that.”
            “Uncle Marty was going to support Henry,” Rosie said, and I could
see the flaps of skin from her chest and abdomen floating in the water.
            “What’s happening?” Beverly’s voice was so far away.
            “Please,” I said, “none of this is real.  It can’t be real.”
            “Walk towards me, William,” da Costa said.  “Dr Crusher is here –
she’ll give you something to help make it go away.”
            “Is this a flashback?” Beverly asked. 
            “No – I don’t think so,” da Costa said.  “I don’t know what’s
happening.”
            I could see that I was standing on the bank of the creek now, and
overhead I heard an eagle cry, and Rosie’s body was back in the water; I could
see her hair floating around her.  Bet was barking, and barking, and then I
heard my father say, “She said she knew what I did to you,” and I felt his hand
on my shoulder, “so I showed her,” and I looked up and he was smiling at me,
and I slipped and started to fall; I could hear someone screaming –
            “Give me the hypo spray,” McBride said, and then I heard him say,
“Have you got him now?  All right, William, you’re going to feel a pinch,
that’s all, there’s a good lad.”
            “You’re drowning me,” I said, and I could feel the water filling my
mouth and I was choking on it.
            “Get a blanket,” McBride said.  “William, we have you out of the
water now.  I’m going to put a blanket around you,” and I felt myself being
wrapped in a blanket.  “Just breathe, William.  You’re out of the water and
you’re safe.”
            “I’m cold,” I said.  I could feel myself shaking under the blanket.
            “The blanket will warm you,” McBride said.  “Close your eyes. 
We’re going to carry you inside now.”
            I could feel the panic start to rise again.  “Please,” I said,
“don’t take me back there, I don’t want to go back –“
            “William, no one is going to take you back,” McBride said.  “Joao,
if you and Djani could help me with him.  You remember me -- I’m the doctor. 
I’m not going to hurt you.  And I’m not going to take you back.”
            I was struggling again, because I was sure they were going to drop
me back into the water, and I was so cold I could feel my teeth slamming
against each other; then I was on the bed and I could feel someone pressing
down on me, and I began to scream, because I knew what was going to happen next
–
            “Let him go,” McBride said, “give him a chance to calm down. 
William – Billy – no one is going to hurt you.  Remember, I promised you that. 
He’s not here.  You’re in sickbay.  Just breathe.”
            Rosie said, “He wants you to find me, William.  He wants you to
know what he can do.”
            “Why are you telling me this?  You never said this to me.  This
isn’t real; it’s not real –“
            “You’re right, William, it’s not real.  Of course it’s not real.”
            I could feel that I could move again, and the sound of the water
running was fading away.
            “I never meant to hurt her,” I said, “I didn’t want to hurt you,
Rosie; I thought if he took the cat he’d leave you alone.”
            “You are in sickbay, William,” McBride said.  “Rosie is not here. 
You can feel that you’re in the bed, in sickbay.  Dr Crusher, let’s see if we
can’t help him with his anxiety, too.”
            “I didn’t want to be here,” I said.  “I don’t want to hurt anyone. 
I didn’t want to hurt da Costa.”
            “We know you didn’t,” McBride said.  “Thank you, Doctor.  Here,
William, this should help.”
            “I don’t want anymore medication,” I said.  “It’s not helping. 
Nothing’s helping.”
            “I know you’re frustrated,” McBride said.  “Can you tell me where
you are?”
            “I’m in fucking sickbay,” I said. “You should just dump me out an
airlock.”
            “Somehow, Will,” Beverly said, “I don’t think we’ll get Jean-Luc’s
approval for that.”
            “You didn’t hurt me, Commander, remember?” da Costa said.  “We’ve
already talked about that.  You don’t have to worry about it anymore.”
            “You’re going to be very tired in about a minute or two, William,”
McBride said.  “I’m going to sit here with you, so that Dr Crusher can take her
leave.  Joao will be with me.  You won’t experience anymore flashbacks now, I
promise you.”
            “It wasn’t a flashback,” I said, and he was right, I could feel my
eyes closing.  “It wasn’t real.”
            “I think he was hallucinating,” I heard da Costa say, “or at least
part of it was a hallucination.”
            “He is trying to piece together what really happened,” McBride
said.  I felt him take my hand.  “Don’t worry about it now, William.  For now
you just sleep.”
            “I’m afraid to sleep,” I said, even as I could feel myself drifting
off.
            “I know,” McBride told me.  “That’s why I’m here.  You won’t dream,
now, while I’m here.  You’re safe.”
            “I’ve never been safe,” I said, but it didn’t really matter,
because the medication was working, and McBride was beside me, still holding my
hand.
           
           
***** Chapter 77 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride asks Will to face some uncomfortable truths about his
     illness and treatment.
Chapter Notes
     Will has been referring to many of his hallucinations as "dreams."
Chapter Seventy-Seven
 
 
 
            I could hear Jean-Luc speaking, and I felt his hand rest lightly on
my face.  I opened my eyes and tried to sit up, but the medication – they must
have given me enough to knock me out this time – was still in my system, and I
felt dizzy and the cottony feeling – that harbinger of flashbacks – was back.
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, “easy, now.  Take it slowly.”
            “Did I miss my appointment with Deanna?” I asked.  The light was
bright, and I blinked several times against it, and finally turned my face
away.
            “Lights, thirty percent,” Jean-Luc said.  “Of course not.  You can
still have your appointment with Deanna, if that’s what you want, Will.”
            “I don’t want it,” I said irritably.  “I don’t want any of this.”
            He sat on the bed next to me, and kept his hand resting on my
shoulder.  “I know,” he said.
            I was silent.  I’d probably been asleep for hours, which meant that
I had missed my appointment with Deanna, and half of my appointment with
McBride, too.  And wasn’t I supposed to be doing something tonight during my
so-called recreation hours?  I couldn’t remember, but I knew there was
something.
            “Where’s Dr McBride?” I asked, finally.
            “He’s in a meeting,” Jean-Luc answered, “with Beverly and Dr
Sandoval.”
            “He said he would stay with me,” I said, and once again I felt like
a stupid little kid.
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “He’s been with you the whole time.  He
needed to discuss what happened with your other doctors, and I told him I’d
stay with you.”
            “Where’s da Costa?” I asked.
            “In the meeting, I presume,” Jean-Luc replied.  “Do you need him?”
            “No,” I said.  “I didn’t dream.  Whatever they knocked me out with,
worked.”
            “I am glad to hear that.”  Jean-Luc took my hand in his.  “Would
you like to try to sit up now?”
            “I can sit up on my own,” I said, and then of course the world
started to spin again.
            “Slowly, Will,” Jean-Luc said, steadying me.  He propped me up and
then said, “You don’t look well.  Do you want me to get Beverly?”
            “I’m okay, I think,” I said, although I was dizzy and nauseous. 
“My stomach hurts,” I said, and it was true, the old familiar combination of
pain and nausea was back.
            His look told me he thought otherwise, but he didn’t say anything
else about it, and within a minute or so McBride came into my room and shut the
door.
            “Gentlemen,” he said, and he pulled over one of the new modular
chairs.  “If you don’t mind, Jean-Luc, I’d like to speak with William alone for
a moment.  Then we’ll make a decision as to his therapy this afternoon.”
            “I don’t mind,” Jean-Luc said.  “Will?  Do you want me to stay?”
            I could see there was something – concern?  Protectiveness? – I
didn’t know – flicker across his face and I said, “No, it’s okay, Jean-Luc.”
            He left and McBride said, “I thought perhaps, Will, that it might
be easier for you to be honest with me about how you are feeling if Jean-Luc
were not here.  You sometimes cover what you are feeling or experiencing in
front of him.”
            “No, I don’t,” I argued, thinking about the mess that I’d been over
the past week.
            “Have you discussed your hallucinations with him?” McBride asked.
            “No,” I said.
            “Have your hallucinations increased in the past twenty-four hours?”
            “I don’t want any more medication,” I said.
            McBride responded, firmly, “That is not what I asked you, Will.”
            “I don’t know,” I said.  “Yes.”
            “They were olfactory and sometimes auditory, before,” McBride
continued.  “When did the visual component begin?”
            “I wasn’t dreaming, last night,” I said, trying to piece it all
together.  “Jean-Luc thought I was asleep, but I wasn’t, was I?”
            “No, Will,” McBride answered, and he’d softened his tone a little.
            “I can’t remember if I smelled anything,” I said, finally.  “It
felt so real…”
            “So the combination of the visual and auditory began last night?”
            “I guess,” I said.
            “And this all has to do with Rosie,” he stated, and I nodded.  “You
are not going to like what I’m going to ask you – “ he began, and I interrupted
him, feeling my frustration rising, “I’m not hearing any voices right now – “
and then I heard Billy say, “Except yours.”  I looked away, but of course he
wasn’t there.  It was all in my head, and I felt a sense of futility about
everything.
            “How long has Billy been speaking to you?” McBride asked. 
“William?”
            “I don’t know.  I thought it was just my voice, remembering,” I
said, and now I was feeling more miserable than I was frustrated.  “My stomach
hurts,” I said.
            “Of course it does,” McBride replied.  “Are you nauseous?”
            “Yes.”
            “Did you eat anything this morning, or for lunch?”
            I shrugged.  “A little bit of omelet for lunch,” I said.  “I had
some cereal and fruit for breakfast.”
            “You have been receiving the minimum dose of the anti-psychotic,
Will,” McBride said, “and it clearly isn’t doing its job.”         
            I blinked away tears.  “What’s the point of any of this if nothing
works?”
            “And are you convinced that nothing is helping you?” McBride
asked.  “What is the goal of your treatment?”
            “To make me better,” I said, “or at least I thought it was, but I’m
worse than I was.”
            “You remember more, that’s true,” he agreed, and he was us his G-
major tone again.  He was silent, waiting for me, but I didn’t know what it was
that he wanted me to say.
            “I didn’t have hallucinations before,” I said.
            “Yes, you did, Will,” he replied.  “You know you did.”
            Finally I said, “I have to retrieve the memories, and understand
what happened, and why I reacted the way I did, and then I have to put them
where they belong, in the past.”
            “That’s right.  One of the goals of your treatment is to do exactly
that.”
            “And then the flashbacks and the hallucinations and Billy will all
go away,” I said.  My stomach was cramping.
            “Billy will not go away,” McBride said, and I felt tears on my
cheeks again.
            “I don’t want to deal with Billy anymore,” I said.  “He scares
me.”  And then I said, “I scare me.”
            “I know, Will,” McBride said quietly.
            “I’ve killed a lot of people,” I said, “and a part of me was glad. 
A part of me didn’t care.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “And yet you have saved many people as
well.  Including Jean-Luc, on numerous occasions.  Billy was never an evil boy,
Will.  You agreed not to play ‘let’s hunt the evil with me’ again, remember?”
            “You want to raise the dosage of the anti-psychotic,” I said, after
a minute.
            “Yes.”
            “Isn’t that just masking the illness, like you said before?”
            “If you broke your leg, and Dr Crusher refused to give you a
painkiller because it would hide that your leg was broken, would you think it
fair?”
            “Fine,” I said.  “I hate everything about this.”
            “I will do it in small increments, Will,” McBride promised.  “I’m
fine-tuning your medication.  That’s all I’m doing.”
            “Billy doesn’t believe you,” I said, and I wiped my eyes.
            “He’s struggling with it, yes.  He’d like to trust me, I think.” 
McBride stood up.  “I would like for you and Jean-Luc to have your session in
my office, and I will get Joao to have you transported there.  We need to
confront your memories of what happened to Rosie.”
            “I don’t know what happened to Rosie,” I said.
            “And you need to tell Rosie’s parents what happened to her,” he
finished.  “I believe that Jean-Luc will be able to help you set that up.”
            I was quiet and then I said, “They’ll hate me.”
            “Will,” McBride said, turning around, “the only person who hates
you is you.”
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***** Chapter 78 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard has an opportunity to unburden himself to an old friend.
Chapter Notes
     There's very little information given on Vice Admiral Vance Haden, so
     I have created a backstory and a personality -- derived from the two
     episodes he was in -- for him. Boothby, of course, is the Academy
     gardener with whom Picard credited his graduation. Totten, as with
     Wharton, are old, old New York society names, dating back to New
     Amsterdam and the early English settlers.
Chapter Seventy-Eight
 
 
 
 
            On the starbase, there was a break of forty minutes in the
negotiations with the various trade delegations, and Picard found himself
beside Admiral Haden.
            “Jean-Luc,” Haden said, “why don’t you come see our new arboretum?”
            Picard glanced at Deanna, who was discussing something with one of
the ambassadors, and he said, “Of course, Admiral.”
            “Vance,” Haden said.  “We’ve known each other long enough for that,
Jean-Luc.”
            Picard nodded.  “Indeed we have,” he answered.
            He followed the admiral quietly, wondering why Haden should feel a
sudden need to show him their garden when Lya III was itself a fairly typical
class M planet with the usual complement of vegetation.  In fact, he thought,
he couldn’t remember one unique thing about Lya III at all, except its
convenience, of course, being near Betazed and Risa and Vulcan and fairly close
to Sol.  The doors opened to Haden’s arboretum and he was surprised to see what
looked like the perfect replication of Monet’s garden in Giverny in miniature. 
Haden saw the look on his face and laughed delightedly.
            “I grew up in Paris,” he said, by way of explanation.  “I thought,
Jean-Luc, since it’s probably been some time since you were home, you might
appreciate it.”
            Picard could only gape.  “You have done this yourself?” he asked.
            Haden nodded.  “With a great deal of help, of course,” he replied
modestly.  “But my grandfather was a gardener, and I loved following him around
as a young child.  I’ve only chosen my favourite parts, as we haven’t the room,
obviously.”
            Picard was quiet and then he said, “Even though I was so eagre to
leave it all behind, there is nothing quite like the smell of earth.”
            “Yes,” Haden agreed.  “It is what I missed most, I think, on a
starship.  Come, walk with me.”
            Picard followed Haden down one of the pathways leading to a small
stand of young willows and Monet’s Japanese bridge in miniature.  Haden sat
down on the bench and Picard, after a moment of just gazing at the water
feature, sat down beside him.
            “We’ve known each other since the Academy, Jean-Luc,” Haden began,
“even though you were a year younger, I always felt we got along, that we had
much in common.”
            “We did, get along,” Picard answered.  “You were close to Boothby,
and his recommendation was always good enough for me.”
            “I’ve sent him pictures, from time to time,” Haden said.  “As the
garden progressed.  I invited him to come see it, when we opened it, but he
would never leave the Academy.”
            “No,” Picard agreed.  “I couldn’t imagine him doing so.”  Then
Picard said, “Am I hearing birds?”
            “It’s an aviary as well,” Haden said, smiling.  “So yes, you are
hearing real birds.”
            “It’s remarkable,” Picard replied. 
            “Thank you, Jean-Luc.”
            Haden seemed pensive, however, and Picard wondered if there were
some other purpose to this visit other than pleasing an old acquaintance.
            “You haven’t said much, Jean-Luc,” Haden began, “about what has
really happened to Commander Riker.  And you seem more distant than you usually
are on these diplomatic functions.  As if you were deeply troubled by something
that had nothing to do with this particular mission.  We haven’t shared
confidences in over forty years, but I am going to ask you to share now, Jean-
Luc, if you will.”
            Picard was silent.  He’d guessed another motive, but this was not
what he’d been expecting.
            “You told me when you arrived that Will Riker was sick, which is
why he couldn’t make it,” Haden said thoughtfully.  “I would guess that it is
much more than that.”
            “You always were perceptive,” Picard acknowledged.
            “You will, of course, be leaving in another day or two,” Haden
said.  “It will be some time, no doubt, before we will cross paths again.”
            “I’m not very good at confidences,” Picard said quietly.  “I think
you know this, Vance.”
            “Yes,” Haden answered simply.  “The generosity of Boothby was that
he was busy weeding, and so he just listened.”
            Picard was quiet, and then he laughed.  “How true,” he mused.  “I
remember how I fussed about helping my father in the fields, and yet, there was
a certain pleasure in the repetitiveness of tying vines.”
            “Well,” Haden said, “I’m not Boothby, but I’m here.”
            “You are right, in discerning that I am troubled,” Picard said. 
“And right again that Will Riker is at the heart of it.  However, Will’s
illness is only part of what is currently troubling me.  The other part – which
still has to do with Will and his illness – is much more troubling – and I am
not sure that I have any right to burden you with it.”
            “Tell what you can,” Haden said, “and leave the rest to God.”
            Picard was startled; he’d forgotten that Haden was a religious
man.  He’d given up his childhood faith, his grandmother’s faith, when he’d
arrived at the Academy.  He wondered at the strength of someone who could
retain it.
            “I met William Riker once,” Haden said, “when he was a very young
man, just out of the Academy.  I remember he was a striking young fellow, tall
and thin.  He was serving on the Pegasus with Erik Pressman – now, he was a
cold one.”  Haden paused, watching Picard, who was still, as if lost in
thought.  “I was aboard as a passenger, you know, in one of those dreadful
‘we’re carrying another captain to a starbase’ trips.  You’re a guest on
someone else’s ship and it can be so awkward.  Riker was the helmsman, I think
– and we ran into some trouble with a rather large field of floating débris. 
Pressman’s first officer offered to take the ship through, and Pressman said,
Riker can do it – and the boy did, using nothing but his eyes and the seat of
his pants.  I can’t say I was surprised when I’d heard you’d taken him on as
your First, Jean-Luc.”
            “He is a fine pilot,” Picard said.  He smiled, remembering.  “I’d
never met him.  I’d heard of his mother, of course, and what a good officer she
was.  And I’d met his father, once, at a briefing – although I wasn’t terribly
impressed.  I chose him sight unseen – we picked him up at Farpoint Station.”
            “So I heard,” Haden remarked.
            “I asked him to manually dock the saucer section,” Picard
remembered.  “He looked at me as if I had lost my mind – and I thought he would
refuse.  Then he said ‘aye, sir,’ and proceeded to do exactly that.”  Picard
shook his head.  “It was a brilliant performance.  He is a rather flamboyant
character at times,” he continued, “but never about the job itself.  He quite
simply does what needs to be done, regardless of how difficult it may be.”
            “His illness is life-threatening, then,” Haden said.
            Picard was silent, and then he stood and walked to the water.  He
watched the interplay of light and ripple, and saw the shadow of a fish glide
by.  He thought about their own arboretum, and how much Will would enjoy the
experience of this one.  Maybe, he thought, if – and he forced himself to carry
the thought through – Will survived, and they were somehow able to share a
future together, he would bring Will to the real Giverny, perhaps, he thought,
even though he was rarely given to sentimentality, on their way to a certain
villa on the Costa Dorada.  He sighed, and returned to the bench, where Vance
Haden had been quietly waiting.
            “You blame yourself for his illness,” Haden said.
            Picard suppressed a sigh.  “Not in the way that I was the cause of
his illness,” he replied, slowly.  “There is only the one cause, although it
was aided and abetted, you might say, by a number of factors.  No, my guilt
lies in my inattention.  I knew that Will had a troubled background.  I knew,
after one or two incidents shipboard, that I should investigate his background
more thoroughly.  But he covers well, you see, and so, except for the odd
remark or a problem here and there, there never seemed to be any great urgency
about it.”
            “Until there was,” Haden remarked.
            “Yes,” Picard said.  “Until there was.  A great urgency.  But the
damage of my inattention had already been done.”
            “Leader and guider,” Haden said, “psychiatrist and father
confessor.  We must play every role, it seems, when we captain a ship.”  He
paused and then said, “Will you tell me what he has?”
            Picard considered it.  He worried about Will’s privacy – who knew
what future role Vance Haden might have?  What might he do, with this
knowledge?  But then he thought of what Thomas Laidlaw had written in his last
message.  Gather your friends, he’d said.  You will need them.
            “Do you know Thomas Laidlaw?” he asked now.
            “Valentine, you mean?” Haden asked, and he smirked. 
            Picard gave a brief smile.  “If you know that much about him,” he
commented, “then you do.”
            “We were roommates for a semester,” Haden said, smiling.  “Smart as
a whip – head and shoulders smarter than me – but great fun.  We never stopped
teasing him about being called Valentine, though.”
            It was time, Picard thought, to take the first step.  “Will Riker
has Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder,” he began.  “In its severest form.  My CMO
noticed the first symptoms, when he started injuring himself on the holodeck. 
By the time I’d gotten involved, and I’d realised just how ill he was, it was
already too late. He attempted suicide in his quarters, and would have
succeeded, too, if not for the intervention of a friend.  He’s receiving
intensive treatment shipboard, by a Betazoid psychiatrist who specialises in
the disorder.  We’d been given approval by the Admiralty, to develop a
prototype of McBride’s intensive program for galaxy and constitution class
ships, as Deanna Troi had been concerned after the Borg attack.  McBride is
related to the head of the Sixth House of Betazed, and a friend of the
counsellor’s mother.”
            “I can’t imagine Will Riker attempting suicide,” Haden said.
            “We have nearly lost him several times,” Picard continued.  “His
heart has failed, twice.  He’s had a brain bleed, from a severe concussion, one
of his many injuries from the holodeck.  He is very ill, and there are no
guarantees that he will be able to recover.”
            “Is this from the Borg attack?” Haden asked.  “I knew he’d saved
your life, Jean-Luc.”
            “He saved us all,” Picard answered simply.  “Wolf 359 weighs
heavily upon him, as it does me.  But the Borg attack only exacerbated the
illness, Vance.  It was not the origins of it.”
            “Will you unburden yourself, Jean-Luc?” Haden asked.
            “Am I in need of a father confessor?” Picard asked bitterly,
thinking that he already had a psychiatrist.
            “I don’t believe so, no,” Haden answered kindly.  “Perhaps you are
in need of a friend.”
            Gather your friends about you, Thomas Laidlaw had advised.  “Will’s
mother died when he was two,” Picard said.  “He witnessed his mother’s final
hemorrhage, and Dr McBride believes that incident was the onset of his
illness.  Subsequently, Will was raised by his father in a small village in
Alaska….”
            “Kyle Riker,” Haden said.  “He has quite the reputation in some
circles.  Of course you know that he too was raised in Paris, and in London, in
the diplomatic circles.  His father was Ambassador William Totten Riker.  I saw
his mother once, when I was a schoolboy.  She was a great beauty.”
            “From the age of around three, until the age of fifteen, when Kyle
Riker abandoned him,” Picard said, and try as he might, he couldn’t keep the
anger out of his voice, “Will Riker was systematically tortured by his father. 
In ways that are unimaginable, that defy human understanding.  Will’s illness
was triggered by something – we don’t know what – and the memories of what was
done to him have come flooding back.  He – “  Picard stopped, as he did not
want to make a fool out of himself.
            Haden was quiet, allowing Picard the space to recover.  “Will he
survive this?” Haden asked.
            Picard shrugged.  “He is getting the best care available,” he
answered.  “It seems woefully inadequate.”
            “How could Kyle Riker have gotten away with such treatment?  There
are laws to protect children, aren’t there, otherwise, what would be the point
of anything?”
            “The Federation,” Picard said, “in general – and Starfleet, in
particular, have protected Kyle Riker, and have covered up what he has done, to
his own son, and countless other children, no doubt.”
            “Good God,” Haden said.
            “I will not talk about it here,” Picard said.  “But Thomas Laidlaw
has given me permission, in a secure setting, to discuss who and what Kyle
Riker is, and the threat he poses.”
            “I see,” Haden said.  “Thus your reluctance to discuss this.”
            “Yes.  The knowledge is a burden, Vance.  Do not mistake that.”
            “Would I be remiss in contacting an old friend, I wonder?” Haden
asked.
            “I would be very careful, if I were considering that,” Picard
responded.  “My sources have placed Kyle Riker on Risa.”
            “No wonder you are worried, Jean-Luc,” Haden said.  He rose.  “We
should be returning.”
            “Yes.”  Picard stood as well.
            “If there is anything that I can do to help Will Riker,” Haden
offered, “please let me know.  Would he object to my prayers for his return to
health, do you think?”
            Picard wondered how such a simple, good-hearted man as Vance Haden
could survive in the world he now knew existed.  “Will’s doctor is very
spiritual,” he answered, “and there is a spiritual component to Will’s
treatment.  As for Will himself, he believes he was abandoned by any merciful
version of God long ago.”
            “It has always been hard to reconcile,” Haden said, “the evil that
exists with a merciful and just God.”
            “If you have managed to reconcile them, Vance,” Picard said, “then
you are a much greater man than I.”
            Haden shrugged.  “Perhaps that is why they call it a leap of
faith,” he said.  “I will let you know, if and when I hear from my old school
friend.”
            Picard nodded, and they walked quietly together back to the
negotiating table.
***** Chapter 79 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride explains his medical model of abuse to William, and helps
     William realise the extent of the damage that's been done by his
     negative self-statements; McBride decides to use hypnotherapy to help
     unblock the memories of what really happened to Rosie.
Chapter Notes
     The use of hypnotherapy to treat Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder is
     somewhat controversial. Very little rigourous research has been done
     on the effects of hypnotherapy in treatment, as is true of almost all
     the alternative therapies presented for the treatment of this
     disorder. Hypnotherapy has been successful in individual treatment,
     in reducing triggers, in reducing anxiety, and in helping to turn
     around negative statements -- but it has not been proven to be any
     more or any less successful than CBT or mindfulness or medication
     therapy. The problem with PTSD is that it is an individual illness -
     - each individual person's response to trauma is different from
     another's. The damaged areas of the brain may be the same, but the
     experience of the trauma is based on the individual's perceptions. It
     makes the illness extraordinarily difficult to treat, and it makes
     scientific research into what works and what doesn't work that much
     harder.
     In the case of a patient whose memories of a trauma are partially
     blocked, taking the patient into a "trance," that is a state of
     heightened awareness, where external stimuli are blocked, and the
     focus is on the locked memory in the subconscious, hypnotherapy can
     help reduce the anxiety and the hypervigilance so that the patient
     can access the memory of the trauma, understand it, and resolve it.
Chapter Seventy-Nine
 
 
 
           
            “Will,” McBride said to me, turning round, “the only person who
hates you is you.”
            I’d started to get out of the bed and I sat back down, watching him
leave my room. I wondered why I should be surprised at what he’d said; it
wasn’t as if it weren’t true. I did hate myself – how could I not? My memories
– before I’d become ill – had begun when I was a sullen eleven or twelve, angry
and hating my father and yet completely dependent on him, living in fear of his
every mood and yet desperate to please him, until the morning I woke up and he
was gone for good. He’d left me a letter, which is how I’d known he wasn’t
coming back, and Mrs Shugak had found me weeping in the kitchen in equal parts
rage and despair. I was difficult and moody – I got into too many fights – it
was clear I would never make it to the Academy – his list of my faults as
reasons for his abandonment of me had changed me in a profound way. I don’t
remember ever crying after that – until the onset of this illness. I looked
back at my memories of myself and felt only hate and humiliation.
            “Will.” Jean-Luc was standing in front of me and I wondered when
he’d walked back in, and whether he’d heard what McBride had said to me.
            “Sir,” I said automatically.
            He sighed, and pulled me to him. “William,” he said quietly, “I am
not now, nor have I ever been, your father. And when I am here with you,” he
continued, “in sickbay, holding you –“ he lifted my chin so I had to look at
him “—I am only Jean-Luc, who loves you, and who wants you to be well. Please
try to understand that.”
            “I can say I’ll try,” I answered, “but I would be lying. I don’t
understand how you could love me, Jean-Luc, when I’m not worth it. I’m not
worth any of this. I wish –“
            “Shhh,” he said, wrapping his arms around me again. “I know, I
know. You don’t have to say it.”
            “I’ve been lying to you all along,” I said, my face muffled in his
dress jacket.
            “Have you?” he asked. He didn’t sound terribly concerned.
            “I’ve been having hallucinations,” I said, “and they’re getting
worse – and I can hear Billy, he talks to me –“ I wanted to cry, I wanted to
beat my fists against his chest and throw myself on the floor like some stupid
little kid but I did nothing. There was nothing. My eyes were dry and there was
only the unremitting pain in my stomach that told me that I was still here. It
was as if I couldn’t feel anything anymore, not my arms or my legs, not even my
face against Jean-Luc’s jacket. It was as if I were already dead.
            “Yes, I know,” he answered. “You’ve been having the hallucinations
all along, Will. It’s a symptom of the illness. And as for Billy – I’ve spoken
to him – he’s answered me. Why shouldn’t he be speaking to you? William,” he
said patiently, “you are ill. The symptoms of your illness are frightening –
they frighten you, they frighten me. It seems the only person they don’t
frighten is your Doctor McBride. But we’ve been frightened before, Will, and we
managed. Tasha’s death. The Borg. The Cardassians. Mrs Troi.”
            I looked up at him and he was smiling at me, and I could feel my
hands and my feet again. “You’re saying Billy isn’t as scary as Mrs Troi, Jean-
Luc?” I asked.
            “That, mon cher, is exactly what I am saying,” he replied. “Now put
your shoes on, so I can walk you to the head and then to Mr da Costa. The two
of you will transport to Dr McBride’s office, and Deanna is waiting for you
there. Dr McBride and I will take the turbo lift down.”
            “I don’t want to go with da Costa,” I said, breaking away from him.
“Why can’t I go with you?”
            “Because I said so,” he answered. “Now put your shoes on.”
            “Oh,” I said. “All right.” My shoes were beside the bed, and I
slipped them on, and then stood up. “Jean-Luc,” I said, walking with him out of
my room and into the head.
            “Yes?” He shut the door, and washed his face and hands while he
waited for me to finish.
            “Will you still boss me around when I’m better?” I asked. I washed
myself and then ran the comb through my hair.
            He grinned. “As your captain,” he said, “or in this relationship?”
            “You’ve never really bossed me around as my captain,” I said,
following him out the door. “Captain DeSoto was bossier than you.”
            “Bobby DeSoto was bossy? Is that why you were insubordinate with
him?”
            “I wasn’t,” I said, “terribly insubordinate with him. Only a little
bit insubordinate.”
            “Ah,” he said. “The fine gradations of insubordination.”
            “You have changed the subject,” I said.
            “And you are ready to be transported with Mr da Costa,” he replied.
“Transporter Room, two, to beam up.”
           
           
            I said after we arrived in McBride’s office, “I’m not sitting on
that couch.”
            “Which couch is that, Will?” Deanna asked.
            “The one McBride lowered just for me,” I answered. “So I guess you
can move it or something, da Costa.”
            “You can discuss that with Dr McBride, Commander,” da Costa said.
            “It’s stupid,” I replied. “And if the captain is going to be here
for my session, it’ll be as if he were sitting on the floor.”
            “Why don’t we let Dr McBride worry about that, Will,” Deanna
suggested. She sat down on the couch where McBride normally sat, and said, “Can
I get you something to drink?”
            “No,” I said, still standing. “Don’t you have work in your office,
da Costa? It’s not as if I’m going to attack Counsellor Troi.”
            “Sir,” da Costa said.
            “Will, sit down,” Deanna told me. “Dr McBride and the captain will
be here in a few minutes. We can resolve the issue of the couch then.”
            “Fine.” I sat and looked at the floor.
            As Deanna had said, the doors opened after an uncomfortable minute
or two, and Jean-Luc and McBride walked in.
            “Do you want tea, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked, walking over to the
replicator.
            “I’ll get it, Doctor,” da Costa said.
            “That’s fine, Joao, it’s no problem. Why don’t you bring out one of
the chairs from my office for yourself? Jean-Luc, if you’ll sit beside Will.”
He glanced at me. “Would you like something to drink, Will? Some of Guinan’s
mint tea, perhaps?”
            “No,” I said.
            Jean-Luc sat beside me. “What’s the matter?” he asked.
            “Where would you like me to start?” I replied.
            “Ah,” he said. McBride brought the tea over, a mug for Jean-Luc and
a mug of what was probably chocolate for Deanna. “Thank you, Doctor,” Jean-Luc
said, taking the mug carefully.
            “Will,” Deanna explained, “doesn’t feel that you should be sitting
on that particular couch, and he doesn’t want to sit there himself.”
            To my surprise, Jean-Luc laughed.
            “What’s so funny?” I asked. My mood, which had been depressed, and
then okay, was now rapidly swinging the other way – I could feel myself
becoming more and more irritable, and yet it was like sitting on the bridge and
watching a photon torpedo come your way. There didn’t seem to be anything I
could do to stop it.
            “I mentioned to Jean-Luc,” McBride explained, sitting down beside
Deanna, “how unhappy you were that I had lowered this couch in our last
session.”
            “It is rather like sitting on the floor,” Jean-Luc said, “which is
exactly, Doctor, how you said it would be.”
            “Well,” Deanna said brightly, “we could take the cushions off,
Will, and we could all sit on the floor.”
            “You’re all just a barrel of laughs,” I said.
            “I don’t mind, Will,” Jean-Luc said, and he took my hand. “I know
you don’t want to be here. I know you’re frightened. But, Will,” he said,
looking straight at me, “you need to do this. You need to let go of Rosie.”
            I heard Billy say, “But it’s my fault she died.” I didn’t bother to
look for him; I knew he wasn’t there, that he was only in my head, and that,
despite what Jean-Luc had said, I was the only one who could hear him. “This
isn’t going to work,” I said.
            McBride set his mug on the table. “You’re right,” he replied. “The
last session we had was a very traditional therapy session, wasn’t it? You
brought up things that needed to be discussed, and we discussed them. We will
not be able to talk about your memories of Rosie that way, because you are
still having trouble accessing those memories.”
            “That does indeed make sense,” Jean-Luc said. “It would seem to me
that watching Will’s memories of what happened to Rosie would be difficult as
well, since he doesn’t seem to really know.”
            “Oh, he knows,” McBride said. “But it is part of the core of his
trauma, and so very hard to access.”
            Billy said, “You can’t tell. He’ll kill you. He’ll kill them all.”
            I heard Dr McBride say, “Lights, thirty percent,” and then, “Joao,
let’s move the table out of the way.” McBride stood up and he walked over to
me, bending down so that he was making eye contact with me. “What is Billy
telling you, William?” he asked.
            Billy said, “Don’t tell. It’s not safe.”
            “I can’t do this,” I said. “I can’t listen to you and him at the
same time.” I could feel my initial irritation giving way to despair, and I
covered my face in my hands. Jean-Luc pulled me to him, and at first I wanted
to push him away – and then I just gave in and let him hold me.
            “I’m going to talk to Billy,” McBride said. “I don’t use this very
often, Will, because it’s not always reliable in terms of healing the injuries
done by this illness. But in your particular case, the only way we are going to
be able to access your memories is if we talk to Billy directly.”
            “He doesn’t want to talk to you,” I said, pulling away from Jean-
Luc. “He doesn’t want to talk to anyone.” Then I added, “Except me. I wish he
didn’t want to talk to me either.”
            “Will,” Deanna said, “Billy is just a little boy. You’ve turned him
into a monster in your head, but he’s a child, Will. A sad, hurt child who
needs our help. We have to help Billy – you have to help him, because in
helping him, you’ll be helping yourself.”
            I was silent; watching as da Costa moved the table and McBride
brought his couch closer to where Jean-Luc and I were sitting.
            “Will,” McBride said, and he was using his G major voice. “I want
you to look at me.” He waited, until I was looking at him instead of the floor.
Jean-Luc took my hand, and pressed it, once. “I am going to use hypnosis to get
past the block you have on your memories of Rosie. While you are under
hypnosis, I will be able to talk directly to Billy. In this manner, both you
and Billy will be completely safe. Jean-Luc is here to support you, just as he
did when you were viewing your memories. Deanna is here to monitor how deeply
you will be under and your anxiety levels. Joao will be taking the notes of our
session, because I will be guiding you.”
            Billy said, “He’s lying to you. They’re all lying to you. Everyone
has always lied to you.”
            “Jean-Luc has never lied to me,” I said.
            “He didn’t tell you he’d talked to him,” Billy said. “He hasn’t
told you what he knows.”
            “But that’s not lying,” I argued. “Oh, God,” I said. “Why won’t the
medication make him stop?”
            “Will,” McBride said, “do you remember the other night, after you’d
had your visit with your friend Worf? Do you remember how unhappy you were, so
unhappy you were planning to attempt suicide again?”
            “Yes,” I said. “I remember.”
            “Do you remember what I told you about the medical model I use for
the abuse you suffered?”
            I tried to think. “You said it was like an infection and that my
body was trying to fight it. But that the infection was fighting back, because
–“ I had to concentrate. “Because as a bacteria, it would want to continue to
exist, and my getting well would eradicate it.”
            “Yes, that’s fairly close to what I was saying,” he agreed. “The
medical model I actually use is more like a parasite, however. A parasite
inhabits the host body and creates a symbiotic relationship with it. You
understand that.”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Sometimes the parasite and the host body can work out a
relationship which is beneficial for them both,” McBride said. “But other times
the parasite has its own agenda, and often that ends with the destruction of
the host. Certain types of wasps, for example, will find a host body to lay
their eggs in, and then the larvae, when they hatch, devour the host.”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Your father’s abuse of you is like that parasite, Will,” McBride
said. “When it began, it changed your brain and your perceptions of yourself
and the world in profound ways. It has left toxins throughout your entire
system, both in the form of the neurochemical and physiological changes to your
brain, and in the statements that you tell yourself all the time.”
            “What do you mean?” I asked.
            “I’ve always been difficult,” McBride said. “I killed my mother.
I’m disgusting. My father didn’t love me, therefore I am not worthy of love.
I’m useless. I have to be perfect, or I will be abandoned again. I’m not safe.
No one is safe. Everyone has always lied to me. I hate myself. I would be
better off dead.” He paused, and then he said, “Are there any statements I
forgot?”
            And Billy said, “You’re a whore.”
            “What did Billy say, William?”
            “I’m a whore,” I repeated, and I could feel the tears start down my
face again.
            “How many of these statements are self-fulfilling prophecies?
Will?” McBride asked. “How long have you been promiscuous? Did you start when
you were eleven or twelve, Will? Having sex? Did you have sex for food, Will?
When you ran away to Valdez, after your father left you?”
            I put my face in my hands and wept.
            McBride said, gently, “You were made to feel disgusting. That’s the
toxin; the parasite. The self-hate and the disgust led you to do things that
only fed the disgust and the self-hate. The risk-taking behaviours. The sex
with strangers. The fighting. It’s all part of the same thing, Will. It’s that
parasite, making sure that the host remains congenial to it. After all, if you
were healthy, and happy, if you were in a committed relationship and you had a
home you loved, what would happen to that parasite? It wouldnot survive, Will.
It would not survive.”
            I felt Jean-Luc reach for me, and pull me to him; he wrapped his
arms around me. “None of those statements is true,” he said.
            “Who is Billy?” McBride asked.
            I looked up at him and then sat back up. “Me, I guess,” I said. “My
younger self.”
            “Did you ever call yourself Billy?”
            “No,” I said slowly.
            “What did you call yourself?” McBride asked.
            “William,” I said. “It was Henry Ivanov who started calling me
Will. Everyone else picked it up after that.”
            “Who called you Billy?”
            “My father,” I said. My stomach clenched.
            “What has Billy been telling you, while you’ve been here?” McBride
persisted.
            I said, “That you’re all lying to me. That I’m not safe. That if I
tell about Rosie, my father will kill me. That my father will kill all of you.”
            “Who is Billy?” McBride asked again.
            “The part of me that was damaged by my father,” I said. “The part
of me that had a dog. That played baseball. That had a friend named Rosie.” I
could feel that I was crying again.
            “Are you sure? Wasn’t it William, who had a friend named Rosie?
William, who named his puppy after his mother? William, whose father beat him
and raped him?”
            “I am not our father!” Billy screamed at me, and I put my hands
over my ears. “No,” I said, “but you’re speaking to me in his voice.”
            “In the voice of the parasite,” McBride said. “There are two
Billy’s in your memories, aren’t there?”
            “The Billy – William,” I said, “who was a victim and who pretended
he wasn’t.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.
            “And Billy who tried to kill Christian Larsen,” I said. “The part
of me that hates everything. Including me.” I wiped my face on my sleeve.
“Which Billy are you going to speak to?” I asked, after a moment.
            “Both, Will,” McBride said. “I need to speak to both.” He stood up,
and said, “Let’s take a break for a few minutes, shall we? How is your stomach
holding up, Will?”
            I was no longer surprised that he knew everything. “It hurts,” I
said.
            “Are you badly nauseous?” McBride asked.
            “I don’t know,” I said.
            “Joao, why don’t you take William to the head?” McBride said. “I’m
going to have some more tea. Can I get you another cup, Jean-Luc?”
            “I will take William,” Jean-Luc said, standing. “Yes, I’d like
that, Doctor. Come, Will.”
            He took my arm, and walked with me to the head, shutting the door
once we were inside and then wrapping me in his arms. “You are not disgusting,”
he said in a low voice. “You are not a whore. I hate it, Will, that you feel
this way about yourself. The William that I know – that this ship knows – I
wish you could know that William.”
            “I’ve lost him,” I said into Jean-Luc’s shoulder. “If he was ever
real.”
            “He was real,” Jean-Luc said. “I wouldn’t be standing here, if he
hadn’t been real. That William – my William – he saved my life.” He kissed me.
“Let me wash your face,” he said, and he wet the cloth rag that was hanging
near the sink and pressed it against my face. “Do you still feel nauseous?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Will,” he said, “if you need to vomit, I will stay right here with
you and hold you.”
            “I don’t want to,” I said.
            “If I told you,” he said to me, “how many times I held Cortan
Zweller’s head while he puked in some filthy washroom somewhere, you would not
believe me. And I didn’t love him.”
            “Did he know that, Jean-Luc?” I asked, and I was smiling, just a
little. “That you didn’t love him?”
            He shrugged. “Feeling a bit better now?” he asked, and I nodded. He
took my hand. “Then let’s give this a chance, Will. Your Doctor McBride knows
what he’s doing. And he knows you. If he thinks this will help you, I’d run
with it.”
            “Okay, Jean-Luc,” I said. I waited for Billy to say something, but
he was quiet, and we walked out of the head together and then sat back down on
that stupid Betazoid couch.
            McBride handed Jean-Luc his mug of tea. “How is your stomach now?”
he asked me.
            “It still hurts,” I answered, “but I guess I’m okay.”
            “If it gets worse, Will, I want you to tell me. I can give you some
medication to counteract the nausea,” he said.
            “I don’t want any more medication,” I said.
            “I understand that. But will you tell me if it gets worse?”
            I sighed. “Yes,” I said, “I’ll tell you.”
            “So all we’re going to do now, Will, is Deanna is going to help you
relax, and take you through one of your visualisations,” McBride said.
            “Okay.”
            “Will,” Deanna said, “if you could place your feet flat against the
deck. Good. Now rest your hands on your knees. Unclench your fists, that’s it.
Now close your eyes. Breathe in through your nose, out through your mouth.
That’s right. You’re doing fine, Will.”
            She took me through a basic relaxation exercise, getting me to
relax each muscle group, getting me to feel my body again, and getting me to
breathe.
            “Just keep your eyes closed, Will,” Deanna said. “That’s it, keep
breathing. Good.”
            “Imagine that you are now entering your safe space on this ship,”
McBride said. “You have just walked through the doors. Now you are walking the
perimeter, to make sure that everything is as it should be. Are you there,
Will?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “And everything is as it should be?”
            “Yes.”
            “Good,” McBride said. “Keep breathing, that’s it, nice even
breaths. Walk to the place you like best, and find somewhere to sit down.
That’s it. Make yourself comfortable. Good. Are you comfortable now?”
            “Yes.” I’d walked back to the pond, and I sat down on the slope
there, and I could feel the coolness of the grass, and I could hear the water
running.
            “I am going to count backwards from one hundred,” McBride said,
“and I would like you to count with me, Will. Can you do that and keep
breathing at the same time?”
            “Yes,” I said, “I can do that.”
            “Good, you’re doing fine, Will. One hundred. Ninety-nine. Ninety-
eight. Ninety-seven.”
            I was counting with him. Ninety-six. Ninety-five. Ninety-four.
Ninety-three.
            “Do you like playing baseball, William?” McBride asked me.
            “Yes,” I said, a little surprised.
            “Can you tell me what position you play?”
            “I’m a pitcher,” I said, “ and I play first base….”
            “I want you to see yourself on the mound, William,” McBride said,
“it’s a summer day in July, and you’re pitching for your team. You have a
friend on the team – “
            “Rosie,” I said, “she’s our catcher. And Matt’s the shortstop, and
Sammy plays second base.”
            “But this game you don’t feel well, do you?”
            “No,” I answered. “It hurts.”
            “Where does it hurt, William?”
            “It hurts inside,” I said. “He hurt me inside.”
            “Maybe Rosie didn’t want you to pitch…”
            “No, I’m okay. No worries, Rosie. They suck. No, there’s no
problem. We’re ready.”
            Play ball….
***** Chapter 80 *****
Chapter Summary
     As McBride guides Will through his memory of the days preceding
     Rosie's death, he is met with resistance from Jean-Luc.
Chapter Eighty
 
 
 
 
            McBride said quietly, “Tell me about the cat, William,” and then
wondered who would respond, William or Billy; it had been Billy who described
the fight with the other boy; William who’d described the pain that he felt
“inside.” McBride was worried that Picard would not be able to withstand this;
he’d done so well, focusing on Will and Will’s horror at what he was seeing and
experiencing in the viewed memories, but this was different; Will was there,
experiencing the trauma as he had so many years ago.
            “He’s cute,” William said, and McBride marvelled at the change in
timbre of the two boys, William’s voice and Billy’s.
            “Can you describe him?”
            “He’s still a kitten, I think,” William said. “He’s ginger and he
has four white paws and a stripy tail.”
            “What are you going to do about him, William?”
            “Take him home,” William said. “He’ll get eaten out here.”
            “What about your father? Can you bring a cat home?” McBride asked
this softly, because he knew that the enormous guilt over Rosie’s death was
built right here, with the normal childhood desire to have something warm and
furry as a friend, particularly in a child whose loneliness was palpable.
            Billy said, “He’s in Valdez. He won’t be back until tomorrow. I can
find his home in the morning, before he gets back.”
            “It’s true,” McBride confirmed, “that you can’t leave him in the
woods to be eaten.”
            “A wolf would get him,” William said, “or an eagle.”
            “What did Mrs Shugak say?” McBride kept his eye on the captain,
noting the strain in his eyes, the shaking of the hand that wasn’t holding
Will’s tightly.
            “She helped me feed him,” William said. “I like sardines too.”
            “So you can keep him in your room?” McBride asked.
            “Uh-uh,” William said. “He can sleep with me. Mrs S made a box for
him. He’s purring, ‘cause he likes me.”
            “And in the morning?”
            “Mr and Mrs S will help me find his home,” William said. “She
promised,” and Billy added, “She always keeps her promises to me.”
            “And your dog?” McBride asked.
            “Rosie will feed her for me,” William said, sounding sleepy. “She
can help me find a home for Mittens too.”
            “Go to sleep now, William,” McBride said. “I will let you know when
it’s time to get up.”
            “Okay,” William said, and Will closed his eyes, resting his head
against Picard’s shoulder.
            McBride said, “We could take a break now, Jean-Luc, if you would
like.” He didn’t necessarily want to telegraph his concern, but he made eye
contact with Picard just the same.
            “We know what happened to the cat,” Picard said. “Must we make him
go through this again and again?”
            “Walk with me into my office, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, standing. He
headed towards his office; not looking back, in the expectation that Picard
would simply accept that he should follow him. Or at least he hoped Picard
would accept it. It wasn’t as if Captain Jean-Luc Picard had ever been known
for his ability to follow anyone.
            “What about Will?” Picard protested, still maintaining his mild
tone of voice.
            “I’ll take him, Captain,” da Costa said calmly.
            “He doesn’t even want to be in the same room with you, Mr da
Costa,” Picard said, and this time was there was an undercurrent of steel
running through the captain’s voice.
            “He shall just have to get over that, sir,” da Costa said matter-
of-factly.
            McBride was standing in the doorway of his office, and he saw the
look of surprise and then the hint of mirth in Deanna’s eyes.
            “It appears,” Picard said, rising, “that I have been outflanked.”
            Da Costa took Picard’s place next to Will, and allowed the
apparently sleeping man to lean on him, and Picard walked, a somewhat bemused
look on his face, into McBride’s office and sat down.
            McBride waited silently, just long enough that the captain was
uncomfortable. Then he said, “Do you want William to recover? Or do you prefer
him this way, completely dependent upon you?”
            Picard said icily, “You are out of order, sir.”
            “Am I?” McBride asked. “I don’t think I am.”
            “I beg to differ,” Picard replied, and it was the first time – the
first time, McBride thought, that he heard real anger in the man’s voice.
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said, patiently, and he didn’t know whether his
tone of voice would anger the captain further or would calm him down. “This is
not about you and your pain. This is about Will’s pain – and the deep-seated
guilt that he has over the death of his eight-year-old friend Rosa Kalugin,
which begins right here, right now, with his father’s murdering a kitten in
front of him.”
            “I have never – “ Picard began, but McBride said, “I cannot be
distracted by your suffering as you hear this. I know you love Will, perhaps
more than you are even currently aware; I know this is painful; what Kyle Riker
did was monstrous; it was primal and it causes all of us – all of us, Jean-Luc
– pain to hear Will tell us what happened. But you will survive hearing this.
William Riker will not survive – and I am not saying this lightly, Jean-Luc –
he will not survive unless he can tell us what happened.”
            Again he waited. Picard held his gaze for a minute and then two;
then he seemed to shut himself down, and McBride said quietly, “He is dying. If
we cannot do this now, I can guarantee that he will not live to see next week.
Do you understand? Are you willing to let him die, because you couldn’t stomach
to hear what he lived through?”
            He saw Deanna standing in the doorway – he’d known she’d be ready,
for this.
            Picard put his face in his hands and wept.
            “Let it out, Jean-Luc,” Deanna said, resting her hand on Picard’s
shoulder. “You have to let go of all the other losses, Jean-Luc, because none
of them mean anything right now. We don’t have to lose Will – you don’t have to
lose him. But you have to let the grief go. You can mourn for that little boy
later. Will doesn’t have the time for you to mourn for him now.”
            McBride allowed Picard the comfort of just staying with him, not
saying anything, not making any more demands on the man. Picard had Deanna
beside him, her hands resting on his back. He allowed Picard to cry, for
himself and for Will, for the little boy and the ginger cat with the four white
paws, for Rosie. It was over almost as soon as it had begun; great wracking
sobs gave way to silence; McBride said,
            “What do you intend to do, Jean-Luc?”
            He watched Picard wipe his face with his sleeve, a motion he
managed to make look dignified, and he straightened himself in his chair. His
hazel eyes were calm when he met McBride’s.
            “I will do what I have said I will do,” Picard answered, his voice
low but firm. “I will sit beside Will as his partner and support him in
whatever way he needs.”
            “Good,” McBride said. “It’s time to hear what happened to his cat.”
***** Chapter 81 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride guides Will through the memory of what happened to his
     cat.
Chapter Notes
     Once again, there are triggers here, for those who have been abused.
Chapter Eighty-One
 
 
 
            McBride waited until Joao allowed Picard to slip into his place,
and then he pulled da Costa’s chair over until it was placed in front of Will,
and nodded his head at Joao, so that he would take his place next to Deanna.
Picard slipped his arm around Will’s middle – what middle was left – and when
McBride sat, he absently brushed Will’s hair out of his face.
            McBride said, “William, it’s time to wake now.”
            Will stirred and stretched, sitting up, moving away from Picard,
and then he became still.
            “Billy?” McBride said. He could see the tension in Will’s body, and
the fear in Will’s eyes. He watched Picard reach out for Will’s hand, and he
watched Will move away. He’d been afraid that there would be too many blocks in
place to access this memory. He shook his head, briefly, at Picard. He hated to
do this – he knew it was dangerous. “What do you have, Billy?” he said.
            It was William who answered. “I found him, Dad,” William said.
“Last night. Mrs S said I could keep him until we found his owner. I was going
to ask around today.”
            “Were you?” McBride said.
            “I couldn’t leave it outside,” William explained. “It would have
gotten eaten, Dad.”
            “Who has the cat, William?” McBride asked.
            “He does,” Billy said, and his voice was a mix of fear and scorn.
“The cat’s stupid. It’s purring.”
            “The cat shouldn’t purr for your father? What would you do, Billy,
if you were the cat?”
            “Rip his eyes out,” Billy said, and William answered, “Go under the
bed.”
            “Wouldn’t he catch you, William, under the bed?” McBride asked.
            “That’s why I’d fucking tear him apart,” Billy said.
            “He’s just a kitten,” William pointed out. “He doesn’t know.”
            And this was it, right here. McBride said softly, “How is he,
Deanna?”
            “Terrified,” Deanna answered. “Too frightened to move.”
            “Don’t touch him, Jean-Luc,” McBride said. “At this point, it will
only make things worse.”
            Picard said, “I understand.”
            “The kitten is too young to know your father is dangerous,
William?” McBride asked. He watched as a tear trailed down Will’s face.
            “That’s why the kitten’s purring? Because it thinks people are
safe?” McBride persisted.
            Will nodded.
            “Answer me, William,” McBride said. “Does the kitten think your
father is safe? Because it’s too young to understand that some people can be
dangerous?”
            “Yes,” William whispered.
            “But you know your father is dangerous,” McBride continued.
            “Yes.” It came out as a sob.
            “How do you know your father is dangerous?”
            “He hurts me,” William said, weeping. “He does bad things to me.”
            “Why do you keep your dog at Rosie’s house?” McBride asked.
            William didn’t answer.
            “William? Why do you keep Bet at Rosie’s house?” He hated to push
him; out of the corner of his eye, he saw Joao walk around the couch and place
his hands on Picard’s shoulders.
            “I’m sorry,” William said. “I’m sorry. It’s my fault, it’s all my
fault. I kept Bet safe but I couldn’t keep Mittens safe, I can’t keep anyone
safe, I knew he would do it, I knew he would, but I brought Mittens home
anyway….”
            “How old are you, William?” McBride asked, his voice gentle.
            “Almost eight,” the child sobbed.
            “Are you allowed to drive an air car?”
            “No.”
            “Are you allowed to vote?”
            “No.”
            McBride could hear the bewilderment in William’s voice, but he
persisted. “Can you live by yourself?”
            “No,” William said, “I’m too little to do those things….”
            McBride waited for a moment, giving William time to think about
what he’d said. “You took the cat home because you wanted it to be safe,”
McBride said. “Because it was little and there are wild animals in the woods
that would eat it. Is that true?”
            “Yes,” William answered.
            “You knew your father was in Valdez, and you thought he would be
home late the next day. That’s what Mrs Shugak thought too, right? That you
would have time in the morning to find the kitten a home? Isn’t that why she
said you could keep it for the night?”
            “Yes,” William said.
            “And you just wanted something you could hold, didn’t you?” McBride
asked. He took Will’s hand. “Aren’t you lonely, William? It was nice, wasn’t
it, having the kitten sleep with you?”
            “I thought – “
            “What did you think, William?”
            “I thought maybe, just this once….” He stopped, shuddering. “Mrs
Kalugin said I could keep Bet at her house, but I miss her and the cat’s so
little, I didn’t think it would be too much.” He paused, and then he said,
sadly, “But it was. It was too much. I can’t have anything.”
            “Except him,” Billy added, and the loathing in the child’s voice
was palpable. “I can have him.”
            “Tell me what he said, Billy,” McBride said.
            “He said why did I think I could trust him with a cat,” Billy
answered. “When I didn’t trust him with Bet.”
            “And did you trust him with the cat?” McBride asked.
            “No,” William said, beginning to cry again. “I didn’t think he’d be
home so early.”
            “What did he say, when you told him that?”
            And Billy answered, in the voice of his father, “You know, that’s
what I love about you, Billy. You’re so goddamned honest.”
            William said, “But he doesn’t love me at all. He hates me. I wish I
were dead. I wish he would break my neck too.”
            “Why did he break the cat’s neck, William?” McBride asked. They
were all exhausted; he knew he was reaching the end of what Picard could
handle, even with da Costa helping him; he could see the fatigue in Deanna’s
eyes and knew that it was mirroring his own.
            “Coach told him I beat up Carl,” Billy said. “Because of what he
said about Rosie. And then he said friends were important, but that wasn’t what
he meant. And he touched me.” There was an odd maturation about Billy’s voice
and the expression of his face when he said this, so matter-of-fact. “He said
he thought I only liked boys. I don’t like Rosie like that.”
            “Like what, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “I don’t want to fuck Rosie,” Billy said. “Rosie’s my friend.”
            McBride didn’t take his eyes off of Will, but he knew, without
looking, that Billy’s flat affect and his hyper-maturity was having an effect
on both Deanna and Picard. It would be so easy, he thought, to be distracted by
this child, by the need to correct the child’s fallacious line of thought, but
the goal was to discover what happened to Rosie. He would deal with Billy’s
understanding of his abuse at another time.
            “What did he mean, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “That I shouldn’t have any friends,” William said. “That I
shouldn’t have anyone, ever.”
            “Is that what he told you, William?”
            “He said I could have one. One friend. He said I could have Mittens
or I could have Rosie. I had to choose.”
            “Who did you choose, William?”
            William said, “I chose Rosie.”
            “What did your father do?”
            “He picked Mittens up and twisted his head,” William said. “I heard
it. It went crack.”
            “The cat shat all over the bed,” Billy said. “I hate cats. They’re
stupid.”
            “What did you do, William?”
            “I threw up,” William said. “And then I had to clean everything up
and I had to dig a hole for Mittens and put him in it, and I put rocks on top
so the animals wouldn’t dig him out again.”
            “What did you father do while you were doing all of this?” McBride
asked.
            “Drank his coffee and worked in his study,” Billy said.
            McBride took a breath. And life went on in the Riker household, he
thought. But he knew why, at least, Rosie had become a target. She represented
something Kyle Riker could never have; had never, in fact, had. She was life,
and William had chosen her.
***** Chapter 82 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride considers whether to continue or to stop the treatment of
     William Riker.
Chapter Notes
     The ancient prayer of the Sh'ma (Hear, O Israel, the Lord our G-d is
     One) is often used in mystical and Chasidic Judaism as a pathway into
     a meditative or ecstatic state.
     The Mourner's Kaddish, the prayer one recites in memory of those who
     have died, is not a prayer of mourning at all, but a prayer of praise
     and for peace. The last verse of the prayer, Oseh shalom, is
     typically sung.
 
Chapter Eighty-Two
 
 
 
 
            “William,” McBride said, “when was the next time you saw Rosie?”
            “I went to judo practise,” Billy said, and William added, “I felt
sick. I shouldn’t have gone.”
            Concerned, McBride asked, “Where is he now, Deanna?”
            “He’s starting to shut down,” Deanna said. “The sadness….” She
stopped for a moment, to bring herself back into control. “The sadness is so
profound.”
            “We have to push through this,” McBride said firmly, although his
tone was gentle. “We can’t give him time to shut down or to put up more
blocks.”
            “I know,” Deanna answered. “I can do this….I’m not so sure about
the captain.”
            Picard said, sharply, “I said I would do this and I will.”
            “I can get drinks,” da Costa said, “and fruit. It will help.”
            “Yes, thank you, Joao,” McBride said. He turned his focus back to
Will. Most subjects, in a trance, even a light one, would have a relaxed
position; Will was rigid, his hands white with tension, his face pale. “Joao,”
McBride called, as da Costa was already at the replicator.
            “Sir?” da Costa said.
            “Go into my office and contact Dr Crusher,” he said. “I want Will’s
blood pressure monitored, from here on.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa replied. He left the replicator, and
disappeared into his office.
            “We’re going to take a break,” he said, “until Dr Crusher gets
here. William,” he said, softly, “I know you’re not feeling very well. It hurts
still, inside?”
            “Yes.”
            “Do you feel warm? Do you think you have a fever?”
            “Mrs S took my temperature,” William said, “even though I didn’t
want her to. She said I didn’t have a fever.”
            “Do you think you could rest for a few minutes, before you go to
judo practise?” McBride asked.
            “If I have to,” William said.
            “I think you should,” McBride told him.
            “I have to wait for Mr S to get me anyway,” William answered. “I’m
not going to sleep. You can’t make me go to sleep.”
            “No, of course I can’t,” he said, smiling a little. It was the
first time, he thought, that William had sounded like a normal eight-year-old
boy. “But, you know, William, you could close your eyes. And when you do, you
won’t hurt as much.”
            “That’s bullshit,” Billy said.
            McBride sighed. “When you close your eyes, Billy, you relax your
muscles. And when you relax your muscles, your pain will decrease. Maybe not a
lot, but some.” He waited, while apparently Billy, or William, or maybe it was
the pair of them, thought this over.
            “Okay,” William said.
            Will’s posture relaxed, just a bit, and Picard took that
opportunity to pull Will towards him, just wrapping his arms loosely around
him.
            McBride rose, and said, “Deanna, you should probably take a walk,
outside. You need to get away, just for a few minutes. Jean-Luc, if you don’t
mind holding him?”
            “Of course I don’t mind,” Picard said. “You should follow your own
advice. Mr da Costa and I will be fine, for a few minutes.”
            McBride smiled tiredly. “No, thank you,” he answered. “I’ll just be
in my office.” Da Costa stepped out, and he asked, “Is Dr Crusher coming?”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa answered. “Do you want a tea, sir?”
            “Just water, please, Joao,” he said. “In a few minutes, please.”
            He walked into his office and shut the door, leaning against it
briefly. Then he took a deep breath, and stretched his back and his arms. Not
for the first time, he wished that his office had a port to the space outside,
but he understood that those coveted portholes were in the quarters of the
executive staff. He opened a drawer to his desk, and removed the cloth bag
which held his kippah and tallis inside, along with his tefillin. He opened the
Velcro seam and took out first his kippah, securing it on his head with a small
clip, and then he pulled out his tallis, luxuriously multi-coloured in deep
blues and purples and roses, depicting the ancient walled city of Jerusalem. He
kissed it reverently and then wrapped himself in it. Covering his eyes, he
recited softly to himself the ancient prayer, Sh’ma Adonai, Adonai echad,
allowing it to pull him deeper and deeper into himself and his meditation. He
felt himself sinking, his muscles relaxing, his breathing evening out, and the
words of David appeared in his heart, and he recited softly, The Lord is my
strength and my shield; my heart trusted in him, and I am helped; therefore my
heart greatly rejoices; and with my song I will praise him; the Lord is their
strength, he recited, seeing in his mind’s eye Will and Jean-Luc, Deanna and
Joao; and he is the saving strength of his anointed; Save your people, he
prayed, and bless your inheritance; be our shepherd, and carry us forever;
v’imru amein. He could feel his heart lightening, just a little, and he
finished his meditation with the ending prayer for peace of the Mourner’s
Kaddish, not knowing why this would come to him now but accepting it for the
gift it was, Oseh shalom bim’romav, hu ya-seh shalom aleinu, v’yakol Yisroel,
v’imru amein. May He who makes peace in the heavens, make peace for us and for
allIsrael, and let us say, amen.
            He stood still, for a moment, simply breathing, allowing himself to
come out of his meditation, and then he kissed and folded his tallis, removed
his kippah from his head, and placed it back into the same small decorated bag
he’d been using since his grandmother had given it to him for his bar mitzvah.
He could hear Joao talking to Jean-Luc. He heard Deanna return from her walk.
He thought about how long this might take; how many hours, how many layers of
blocks and trauma they would need to peel back. How long did Will have, he
wondered? How long before he would collapse, from starvation and dehydration?
From apathy – the soul-killing apathy that sent aboriginal peoples to their
deaths, and he smiled grimly at that thought, and how appropriate it was. He’d
learned about it, both in his anthropology classes and his xenobiology classes.
That there were primitive – aboriginal was the word anthropology used, and it
was so much more appropriate, he thought, than primitive – peoples who could be
“thought” to death. A curse was laid; a prophesy foretold; a sin committed, and
the soul withered, and the body died. Will had the blood of the aboriginal
tribes running through his veins – oh, he looked as if he were from Northern
European stock, McBride thought, with his Norwegian and Russian and Dutch
blood, but his soul was more native than it was Federation. He had given
himself a death sentence for his crimes, and now he was dying. It was no more
complex than that.
            The question was, could they get Will to physically withstand the
next four hours? On no food and little liquid, all that medication coursing
through his veins? Or would it be kinder, perhaps, to allow the man simply to
return to sickbay and spend the night in his lover’s arms, and just let nature
take its course? There was a time, McBride thought, when the doctor had to put
the technology and the knowledge away, and call the time of death.
            He sat down and rubbed his eyes. He wished, desperately, that he
could speak with his grandmother, she who had led the Sixth House, Morwenna
Lal. She had not just been a leader of their people; she had been his
grandmother, a wise woman who had loved him unconditionally; who had recognised
his unique talents and who had set him on his path, with all her love and
support behind him. There was a physical longing in him, for her hand on his
shoulder, her voice in his ear, the clatter of her china teacups on a tray. If
he tried, he could almost smell the scent of her perfume; hear the cascade of
the waterfalls behind him….
            He stood up, then. In a little village, there were two elderly
people still alive who had tried their best to keep a little boy safe from the
monster he lived with; who had followed his rules in order to remain in that
child’s life; who had tucked that child in at night, and held him, and driven
him to school, and taught him right from wrong in such a way that it was their
teaching that dominated his thoughts – not his father’s.
            He walked out of his office, and said, “Ah, Dr Crusher. He is in a
very fragile state, medically, yet I fear we must push forward. Can you monitor
his blood pressure for me? I understand he is dehydrated, but we cannot go
forward any more without resolving the issue of the murder of Rosie Kalugin.”
***** Chapter 83 *****
Chapter Summary
     The hypnotherapy with Dr McBride continues; McBride suggests that the
     guilt Will feels over Rosie's death indicates a level of involvement
     in what happened to Rosie, an idea that is met with resistance from
     Will's team.
Chapter Notes
     Standard child development, still based relatively upon the model of
     Jean Piaget, suggests that once a child crosses into the latency
     period of development (referring to the fact that the child is pre-
     pubescent), the magical thinking of early childhood loosens its grip,
     and a child is capable of limited analytical thinking. However, each
     child develops differently, and children who are severely abused
     have, in a way, been programmed by their abusers to maintain a level
     of magical thinking that is linked to the abuse -- for example, in
     thinking that they are the cause of the abuse, or that they deserve
     the abuse, or that if only they could be good, the abuse would stop.
     The combination of intelligence, imagination, and a brain damaged by
     abuse would extend the fallacy of magical thinking beyond when it
     normally disappears.
Chapter Eighty-Three
 
 
 
 
            “How is his blood pressure?” McBride asked, settling himself in the
chair across from Picard, who was still holding Will, and sipping his water.
            “It’s a little high,” Beverly answered, looking at the tricorder.
Da Costa had brought yet another chair from out of his office for her to sit
in, but she’d chosen to place her mug of tea next to Deanna. “Too high for the
trance he’s in.”
            “We haven’t even gotten to where we need to be,” McBride said. “But
I’m convinced that we have to do this, now more than ever.”
            Beverly sat down next to Deanna. “How are you holding up?” she
asked.
            “I’m okay,” Deanna answered. “It’s hard. The real Will is still
there, and he’s so frightened. And then there’s William, whose sadness – I
struggle with it. He was a baby.”
            “And then there’s Billy,” Picard said, wryly. “Who makes the hair
stand up on the back of my neck, as old as I am.”
            “But, Captain,” Deanna said, “Billy is William. He wasn’t even
eight years old. In second grade.” She sighed. “I’m trying to maintain a
professional distance – I think this is the hardest thing I’ve ever had to do.”
            “Billy,” McBride said, “is one aspect of William, the dissociated
part. All of the fear and rage and hatred was poured into Billy, so that
William could function as a little boy who played baseball and went to school.
William was the stronger – I checked. There is no evidence of animal deaths –
other than Riker’s killing the kitten – or fire-setting, two symptoms that I
would expect from Billy, if Billy had been stronger. I think, because William
had Rosie, and he had the Shugaks, and he had Henry Ivanov –he was able to
control Billy, whereas another child in the same situation might not have been
able to. Billy appeared regularly – we just heard how he fought that other
child at the baseball game – but William was able to limit the damage he did.”
            “Perhaps,” Picard said, and he absently stroked Will’s face as he
slept against him, “Billy is more of the cause of the enormous guilt Will feels
than we know.”
            McBride released his breath, and made eye contact with Picard. “I
am almost certain of it,” he said quietly. “I am relieved to hear you say this,
Jean-Luc. I was worried that it would be too much of a shock.”
            “I’ve been expecting it,” Picard replied. “Why else would he
condemn himself to death? Witnessing the death of someone else is not a capital
crime, Doctor. Participating in someone else’s death – to a moralist like Will
– is.”
            “Captain,” Deanna began, and then she stopped, to pull herself back
together. “Surely you are not suggesting that Will Riker helped kill his friend
Rosie. I can’t believe that – I don’t believe it.”
            Beverly said quietly, “You know, not one of you has had children –
although I’m sure you treat children, Sandy. But children are very funny, in
what they accept as their fault. William was seven, going on eight – in what
psychologists call the latency stage. But he was very immature for that age,
because of the abuse he suffered, and perhaps, because of the damage that had
been done to his brain. Children often believe they are responsible for things
that have absolutely no connection to reality – magical thinking – and while
it’s more common under five years of age, it wouldn’t be beyond the possibility
here. It could be as simple as something he said, to Rosie. What if he blamed
her, for the death of the cat?”
            McBride was smiling, grimly. “He almost certainly blamed her for
the death of the cat,” he agreed. “After all, he had to choose her over the
cat, didn’t he? He completely believed that his father would have killed Rosie,
if he’d chosen the cat instead.”
            “His father killed Rosie anyway,” Picard said. “Because he chose
her.”
            “Yes, that’s true. But William chose Rosie because she was a symbol
of everything he wanted and didn’t have. Rosie had two parents, and siblings; a
normal life. In choosing Rosie, William chose what his father could never give
him. But Billy saw the impossibility of the choice – and there was probably a
strong desire to punish Rosie, for putting him in that position. After all, the
fight at the baseball field had been over Rosie.”
            “I think,” Picard said, grimly, “that it’s more complicated than
that.”
            “You fear that, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said kindly. “But it doesn’t
have to be so. Wesley had a bunny, once. They’re cute but they’re difficult for
a child to care for. I had to nag him to take care of it, because cleaning the
cage was hard, and messy. It wasn’t a big thing – you know how responsible Wes
is, Jean-Luc – it was just typical childlike avoidance behaviour. We had a row
about it – and Wes yelled at me that he wished the rabbit had never been born.
When the rabbit got sick and died, some weeks later, Wesley assumed it was all
his fault. It took a long time for him to realise that it wasn’t – and there is
a reason why he is so overly responsible, now.”
            “You think it is more,” Deanna said to McBride.
            McBride said nothing. He turned away from Deanna and Beverly to
face Will, who appeared to be sleeping, his head still resting against Picard’s
shoulder. He knew, in a way that no one else in this room did, in a way,
perhaps that no one else outside of his cousins Renan and Val and the still-as-
yet unnamed admiral who ran Section 31, knew, exactly what William had been up
against. He’d received the last communication from Val an hour or so before
he’d wakened, and when he’d read it, sipping his tea and eating a bit of kasha,
the last piece of the puzzle fell into place. He knew the pathology, now.
            “Let’s get started, shall we?” he said quietly. He wouldn’t brief
them on what he knew of Kyle Riker, not now; he didn’t need Deanna’s anxiety
anymore than he’d needed Picard’s. Will was in a trance but he wasn’t
unconscious; McBride was fairly certain that the personality which was Billy
was always aware. He wasn’t at all surprised when Picard’s eyes met his, giving
him permission to proceed but at the same time acknowledging that Picard knew
information was being kept from him. He was glad, in a way; Picard would keep
him sharp. “William,” McBride said, “Mr Shugak has brought you to judo
practise.”
            “I wasn’t asleep.” Will sat up and once again moved away from
Picard.
            “I know,” McBride agreed gently. “William, can you tell me what
happened at judo practise?”
            “Mr S told Henry I wasn’t feeling well,” William said, and McBride
could hear the frustration in the child’s voice. “I just want everyone to leave
me alone.”
            “Didn’t Henry leave you alone, William?” McBride asked. He waited
for the child – for either child to respond. When the silence continued, he
wondered at what the block was, but he wouldn’t push and lose the tenuous
contact he had. “William, how do you help Henry, at practise?”
            “I lay the mats down,” William said. “I run the little kids through
their stretches. And a few moves. Henry has time to work with the other kids,
then.”
            “He has time to work with your friends?” McBride asked. “Like
Rosie?”
            “Rosie’s not my only friend,” William said, his voice taking on a
sullen tone. “There’s Matt and Sammy and Dmitri….”
            “You have many friends,” McBride agreed. “That’s good, William.
When does Henry work with you?”
            “What?” William said, irritably.
            Another block, McBride thought. “Did Henry tell you to go home,
William?”
            “No,” William said.
            “What did he tell you?”
            “I could talk to him.”
            “You could talk to him about what?” McBride asked.
            “He said I should go in his office and talk to him about
yesterday,” William said. He was quiet, and then he said, “How did he know what
happened yesterday?”
            “What did you do when he said that, William?”
            Billy said, “I tried to beat the shit out of him, but he was too
big.”
            William was crying again, and Picard gently took Will’s hand.
            “Why did you do that, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “He touched me,” Billy said.
            McBride heard Deanna’s intake of breath, behind him. “You don’t
like that, do you, Billy?” McBride said. “You don’t like to be touched.”
            “I hate it,” Billy said, and, for a moment, rage was a living being
in the room.
            “What happened after you attacked Henry?” McBride asked, finally.
            “Mr S came and got me, and gave me my medication,” William
answered, sniffling. “It puts me to sleep.” He paused and then he added, “But
then I get nightmares.”
            “And Rosie?” McBride asked.
            “She wanted to help me, I guess,” William said. “I’m sorry. I
didn’t mean it.”
            “What didn’t you mean, William?”
            “I told her to go away,” William said in a voice that was barely
audible. “I said, I hate you, Rosie. But I didn’t mean it,” he whispered. “I
didn’t really mean it.”
            “Of course you didn’t,” McBride said in a matter-of-fact voice.
“You were frightened and upset, because you thought Henry knew what your father
had done. Rosie knew you didn’t mean it, because you saw her again, didn’t you,
after judo practise?”
            William nodded. “I saw her before I had to go to the doctor,” he
said. “Because I wasn’t feeling good. We went down to the creek with Patch and
Bet.”
            “And Rosie wasn’t upset with you, was she?” McBride asked gently.
“You took the dogs and you went down to the creek. Just like every other summer
day, right, William?”
            “No,” William said. “It wasn’t like every day.”
            “Why, William?” McBride asked. “Why wasn’t it like every other
day?”
            And Billy said, “Because Rosie told.”
***** Chapter 84 *****
Chapter Summary
     The hypnotherapy continues, even as the team begins to fall apart.
Chapter Notes
     Between roughly the ages of two and seven years old, children
     strongly believe that their personal thoughts have a direct effect on
     the physical world that they inhabit. When they experience something
     tragic, because they cannot comprehend abstract ideas or thoughts,
     their minds create a reason for them to be responsible in some way.
     Piaget described children this age as "egocentric," because they
     believe that what they feel and experience is exactly the same as
     what everyone else feels and experiences. This is a normal stage of
     development; most children outgrow it. The traumatised child,
     however, becomes stuck in the fallacy of magical thinking, if the
     traumatic event is not dealt with; this idea of egotistic
     responsibility is often the driving force behind the symptoms of
     hypervigilance and exaggerated caretaking that one sees in an adult
     survivor of abuse. The misinterpretation of the event through magical
     thinking becomes a lifelong, fallacious belief which in turn leads to
     behaviors that are damaging and destructive in the trauma survivor's
     adult life.
Chapter Eighty-Four
 
 
 
 
            McBride heard Beverly draw in her breath, and he held up his hand
for silence. Picard had frozen his face into the mask of neutrality he wore
when he was upset; McBride could feel the anxiety and tension rising in Deanna.
Only da Costa was calm, and he motioned with his head for da Costa to come
round and support Picard once again.
            “Who did she tell, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “She told her mom,” William answered. Then he said, desperately,
“She doesn’t know anything. She couldn’t know anything.”
            “What did Rosie tell her mother, William?” McBride asked,
modulating his voice into the tone he used for Will.
            “She said, I know he hurts you,” Billy answered in an eerie mimicry
of Data’s emotionless tone. Then he said, “She doesn’t know shit.”
            “William,” McBride said, making sure his voice was as even and as
devoid of emotion as Billy’s had been, “how does your father hurt you?”
            There was silence. Finally, a tear tracked from Will’s eye down his
cheek.
            “It’s time to tell, William. You need to tell.”
            “I can’t,” William said, his voice breaking.
            “You must tell. Just like Rosie. You have to tell.”
            “Good,” Billy said. “He’ll kill me too, and it’ll all be over.”
            “Is that what you want, Billy?” McBride asked. “Do you think you
deserve to die, for what you did? Is that why Will is dying, now?”
            “It’s whatyou think,” Billy said, and for the first time – the
first time, McBride thought – there was genuine emotion in the child’s voice.
“You think I’m just like him.”
            “And are you?” McBride asked gently.
            “No,” William wailed, and Billy answered, “Yes.”
            McBride watched da Costa place his hands back on Picard’s
shoulders; heard Deanna’s even breathing as she calmed herself down and
Beverly’s tears behind him. He took Will’s hand and stroked it, gently.
            “It’s time to tell,” McBride said. “How does your father hurt you?”
            William breathed in a sob. “He spanks me when I’m bad,” he
answered.
            “That sounds like something he told you to say,” McBride replied.
“Did he tell you to say that, William?”
            “Yes. He told me to say it to Henry. He said he’d leave me if I
didn’t.”
            “But he does more than spank you,” McBride persisted. “What does he
do?”
            “He –he beats me,” William said, “with his belt. It hurts.” He
shuddered.
            “Does he make you bleed, when he beats you?”
            “Yes.”
            “Has Rosie seen that you’ve been beaten? Has she seen the bruises?
Or the blood?”
            William nodded.
            “Answer me, please, William.”
            “Yes.”
            “Does he beat you with anything else besides his belt?” McBride
asked.
            Billy recited, “He punches me. He throws me. He kicks me. He chokes
me. He fucks me.”
            Again McBride refused to be drawn into Billy’s narrative. He
waited, stilling himself, for William to reply.
            “Sometimes,” William said, “he just hits me with whatever he has in
his hand.”
            “Does he hurt you every day?” McBride continued. “William?”
            Again, silence. McBride took Will’s other hand from Picard and
said, “Look at me. I know it hurts you to tell. I know it frightens you. But
you must tell me. Will. You must tell me.”
            “Yes,” William whispered.
            “Yes, what?” McBride was firm.
            “He hurts me every day,” William answered, and Will pulled his
hands away.
            “How is he?” McBride asked, without turning around.
            “He’s ready to run,” Deanna said.
            “His blood pressure is up, again,” Beverly added, disapproval
lacing her voice.
            “Beverly,” Picard said in a low voice, and that was all that was
needed.
            “Rosie told you that she’d told her mother,” McBride said,
redirecting the conversation. “When you were sitting at the creek.”
            William nodded.
            “Did she tell you why?” McBride asked.
            “She heard Henry tell Mr S that he was gonna go to the tribal
council about me,” William answered. “At judo practise, when Mr Shugak took me
to the car. She heard Henry say my father was hurting me.”
            “Yet you told Henry what your father wanted to tell him, didn’t
you?” McBride said.
            “I told Henry he didn’t hurt me any more,” William said. “I
shouldn’t have said that. My dad was really mad at me for that.” Will was
trembling, his hands clutching at the fabric of the couch.
            “Did he beat you for saying that?”
            Silence. Again.
            “William?”
            “I’m tired,” William said.
            “I know, William,” McBride answered. “I know, hen. I know I’m
asking a lot from you. I know it’s hard. But you’re a brave boy, William. You
know that, don’t you? You’ve always been a brave boy.”
            “I’m a bad boy,” William whispered, and he was crying again.
            McBride heard Beverly shift behind him, and he saw Picard’s rigid
jaw out of the corner of his eye. His team was falling apart.
            “Why would Henry go to the tribal council, William?” McBride pushed
forward. “Are you tribal, William?”
            William shook his head. “No,” he answered. “I’m a sourdough. But –
but Rosie said my cabin was on tribal land.”
            “Okay, William,” McBride said. “Was there anything else that Rosie
told you, before you went to the doctor?”
            “She held my hand,” William said. “She said I wasn’t bad. I told
her I was and she said I wasn’t. But I am. I’ve done bad things. She just
didn’t know.”
            McBride waited.
            “Mr S told Henry there was no evidence,” William answered, finally.
            “No evidence that your father was hurting you?” McBride asked.
            William shrugged. “I guess,” he said. “We walked home. She asked
about practise. I told her I didn’t know if I could go to practise.”
            “And then you went to the doctor,” McBride said.
            “Yes.”
            McBride suppressed a sigh. It was time, he thought, sensing the
weariness and the frustration building around him. Time to lance the wound and
let the sepsis run out.
            “What happened to Rosie, William?” he asked.
            “I don’t know,” William said. “I woke up and I heard Mrs Kalugin
crying and she was gone.”
            “What happened to Rosie, William?” he repeated.
            “I went outside to go find her,” William said. “They were
downstairs and so I went on the roof and climbed down and I was gonna go into
the woods to look for her –“ he was sobbing “—cause Mrs Kalugin said she
must’ve gone in the woods but when I got down it was gone. It was gone, the
rocks were gone, and I thought – I thought –“
            “What happened to Rosie?” McBride asked again.
            “I killed her,” Billy said. “Just like I killed Christian Larsen.”
***** Chapter 85 *****
Chapter Summary
     A certain Betazoid lieutenant meets Commander Cortan Zweller.
Chapter Notes
     In non-canon, Jean-Luc Picard's Academy friend, Cortan Zweller, is an
     agent for Section 31 before it destroys his career.
Chapter Eighty-Five
 
 
 
 
 
            He was still seated on the park bench watching the turtle eat a
duck when the familiar lanky figure of Corey Zweller sat down beside him.
            “You could probably ungrip the bench now,” Zweller said
laconically. “What are you watching?”
            “A superbly-crafted predator,” Renan Balum replied, wiping his
sweating palms on his trousers, “in a very small pond.”
            Zweller directed his eyes towards the pond. “And are you
sympathising with the predator, or the prey?” he queried.
            “I am grateful to be not inhabiting the pond,” Balum answered.
            Zweller was silent. “You will miss your shuttle to Rixx,” he said,
finally.
            “I have ten minutes,” Balum said. He still had not looked at
Zweller.
            “You have a bruise on your neck,” Zweller remarked. “Did you relay
the message?”
            “I’m still alive,” Balum said.
            “His reply?”
            “I believe it was a rather genial fuck off,” Balum said. “To you
and our mutual friend.”
            “Genial?”
            “I am alive,” Balum repeated. “He said he was on vacation.”
            “Ah.”
            “He is crazy,” Balum said flatly.
            “No,” Zweller answered. “He’s many things, but crazy is not one of
them. You will miss your shuttle, and Admiral Rossa will not be pleased.”
            “Has he left the shuttle terminal? I’m not going in there until
he’s in the air.”
            Zweller looked at Balum in surprise. “I see,” he said. “I didn’t
think it was possible for anything to frighten you.”
            “I fell down the Jenaran Falls when I was five,” Balum answered. “I
survived.”
            Zweller grinned. “And you met our Captain Riker,” he answered, “and
survived that as well. Congratulations.”
            Balum rose, and began walking towards the street. “Except now he
has my name,” he said. “He knows I’m from Betazed. He knows McBride is from
Betazed. He knows someone is looking for him. He knows his son is talking.” He
reached the street, and paused, waiting for a break in the traffic. “And he
knows his son is under your friend’s protection.”
            “That’s a unique way of presenting it,” Zweller remarked. “Johnny
always did go both ways.”
            They crossed the street and entered the shuttle terminal. It was
crowded, Starfleet personnel on leave, coming on or going off; official welcome
personnel from Risa’s hospitality services; service personnel of all types and
configurations. Zweller veered to a food kiosk and bought himself a drink.
            “You want something?” he asked.
            Balum shook his head. “I should go,” he replied. “Am I taking
something back to Admiral García?”
            “Just that the message was received, I should think,” Zweller
answered.
            Balum led the way towards the shuttle bay for Rixx, and Zweller
ambled along side him, sipping his drink. It was apparent immediately that
something was wrong; Zweller in uniform and brandishing his commander’s pips
like a sword, fought his way into the shuttle offices. Balum waited a minute or
so, and when Zweller didn’t appear, showed his orders to the shuttle pilot and
climbed onboard. He was seated beside two ensigns returning from leave when
Zweller boarded the shuttle.
            Zweller nodded at the ensigns, and they both moved.
            “Change in plans, Commander?” Balum asked.
            “There was an explosion on the coast,” Zweller said. “Seems one of
the shuttles from here disintegrated over the jungle.”
            Balum felt his hands start to shake and he hid them.
            “I knew the pilot,” Zweller said. “He was a good guy.”
            Balum said, “He doesn’t like to be controlled.”
            “No.”
            Balum glanced out the window and watched the news of the shuttle
explosion pass through the crowds.
            “Was he one of us, the pilot?” Balum asked. He felt his breath
catch. “You were planning to take him out,” he said.
            “No one,” Zweller answered, “ever retires from our command.”
            Balum said, “He said he’d lowered his kill rate to one a day, but
that he could up it, any time he chose.”
            “There’s a boy at his cottage,” Zweller said, and Balum felt
physically sick. “William Riker has a reputation for honesty, regardless of how
ill he may currently be.”
            “He disemboweled the Nuvian agent,” Balum said quietly. “He laughed
about it. Said he was a student of history.”
            “Edward II,” Zweller replied. “It’s been taken care of.” He rose,
and then said, “You’ll receive your orders in due course, Lieutenant. Admiral
García is expecting you.”
            “Aye, sir,” Balum answered. “And you?”
            “I have a shuttle to fly,” Zweller said flatly, “to the coast.” He
took a step and then he said, “And, Lieutenant?”
            “Sir?” Balum looked up.
            “We all inhabit the turtle’s pond,” Commander Zweller said. “It’s
why we have wings.”
            “Sir,” Balum said.
            Zweller walked off, and Lieutenant Renan Balum looked back to his
window.
            Regardless of what his new orders were, or when he was supposed to
report in to Admiral García, his first stop in Rixx was to a very small café
where Admiral Thomas Valentine Laidlaw would be waiting.
***** Chapter 86 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride leads Billy into revealing what happened to Rosie.
Chapter Notes
     This chapter contains a graphic depiction of the death of a child,
     through guided hypnosis. It also contains graphic depictions of
     violence and sexual abuse towards children, again through guided
     hypnosis.
     This chapter contains major triggers for those who have been
     psychologically traumatised or sexually abused. Please do not read
     this chapter if you are likely to be triggered by what you are
     reading.
Chapter Eighty-Six
 
 
 
 
            McBride said, blocking out the sound of Deanna’s quiet weeping,
“You went to the doctor in the afternoon. William went to the doctor in the
afternoon.”
            “Yes,” Billy said.
            “What was wrong with William?” McBride asked.
            “He had a kidney infection,” Billy answered. “He always gets
infections. It’s because of what he does,” Billy said, and there was a knowing
about the child’s voice that made the hairs stand up on his arms. “What he puts
up there. You know.”
            McBride sighed. He did, in fact, know – or he could guess. “The
doctor gave William medicine to help him fight the infection?”
            “Yeah. It made William sleepy.”
            “Mr and Mrs Shugak drove William home? And put him to bed?” McBride
heard da Costa leave the room with Deanna; heard the office door shut softly.
“Was your father home, after William saw the doctor?”
            “He was there,” Billy said. The rage was back. “Of course he was
there.”
            “And William went to bed? He went to sleep?” McBride asked.
            “Yes. Mrs S rubbed his back.” Billy was quiet. Then he said,
wistfully, “She loves William.”
            He didn’t want to be drawn into Billy’s world; they didn’t have the
time. “She loves both of you,” McBride said.
            “Only,” Billy said, “because she doesn’t know that there’s two of
us.”
            Just this once, McBride thought. “Does anyone know that there are
two of you, Billy?”
            “He does,” Billy said. The sadness was gone, replaced by anger.
Again.
            “Billy,” McBride said. “Billy, listen to me. Did William wake up
when he heard Mrs Kalugin crying? What time was that?”
            “It was late,” Billy answered. “Like after midnight or something.
Really late.”
            “And William woke up then?”
            “Uh-uh.”
            “And he heard Mrs Kalugin crying, and your father talking?”
            “Mr and Mrs Kalugin were there,” Billy said. “And Mr and Mrs S. Mrs
S was in the kitchen, making tea or something, I guess. He heard them talking.
William did. Mr Kalugin was talking to him. Mrs Kalugin was crying.”
            “William heard this from his bedroom?”
            “No. He got up and went and sat on the stairs. No one can you see
you there, ‘cause of the shadows, but you can hear everything.”
            “And he heard Rosie was missing.”
            “He heard him lie about Rosie. He said he was sure we would find
Rosie in the morning. William knew he was lying.”
            “How did William know that?”
            “Because he said, William. He didn’t say Billy. He said William was
too sick to go to baseball practise.”
            “And then William went on the roof and climbed down to look for
Rosie? And he saw that the grave he’d made for Mittens was gone?” McBride heard
da Costa and Deanna walk back out of his office; heard Deanna sit down next to
Beverly; saw da Costa appear around the couch to stand behind Picard, resting
one hand on Picard’s shoulder.
            “Yes,” Billy said.
            “And where were you, Billy, while William was asleep?” McBride kept
his voice steady and even.
            Silence.
            Another block. Who was blocking? McBride wondered. Was it William?
Or was it Will, exercising control from where he was watching?
            “Billy?” McBride asked. “Where were you, when William was asleep?”
            The sobbing, when it came, was violent.
            Picard said, suddenly, quietly, “Billy. Do you remember me?”
            “Yes,” Billy said. “You said I could open the door. You said I was
safe.”
            “I did say that,” Picard replied. “And I said that, Billy, because
I love you both – you and William. I think, Billy,” Picard said, moving slowly
towards Will, “that there must be some part of you that knows what Will knows.
That knows that that’s true.”
            McBride waited, watching Picard wait for Billy to answer.
            “I guess,” Billy said, the rage – and the bravado – and the sense
of unreality – gone.
            “I am going to take Will in my arms, Billy,” Picard said. “He feels
safe, in my arms. I know this, because he’s told me he does. I’m going to hold
him –“ Picard pulled Will to him, wrapping his arms around Will’s chest, and
then allowing Will’s head to rest against his shoulder – “tightly, like this,
so that you can feel that I’m holding all of you.” Picard waited a beat, and
then he said, quietly, “Can you feel that I’m holding you?”
            “Yes,” Billy said.
            “You’re comfortable? I’m not hurting you?” Picard asked. “Because I
don’t want to hurt you, Billy.”
            “You won’t hurt me,” Billy said. It was not a question.
            “No,” Picard answered. “I will never hurt you.”
            “Even when you know?” the child asked. “You won’t hurt me, even
when you know?”
            “No,” Picard said gently. “I won’t hurt you, even when I know.”
            There was silence. McBride let it happen. He gave Picard the time
to adjust his hold on Will, so that Will’s head was supported; so that Will was
still facing frontwards. He gave Picard the time to allow Billy to feel safe,
in Picard’s arms. He’d heard that Picard’s parents had been ordinary people;
his father had owned a moderately successful vineyard; his mother had raised
two sons. Watching Picard he knew that regardless of how Picard felt towards
his father – and he’d mentioned, several times, the idea that his father had
been hard to please – his parents must have been extraordinary people, to have
raised this son, Jean-Luc Picard.
            “Where were you, Billy, when William was sleeping?” McBride asked.
He was using the tone he used for Will.
            “I went to the barn,” Billy whispered.
            “Was Rosie in the barn?” McBride asked.
            Silence.
            “Billy? Was Rosie in the barn?”
            “Yes.”
            “Didn’t anyone look in the barn?” McBride asked.
            “They did, after,” Billy said.
            “When Rosie’s body was already gone?” McBride asked.
            “Yes.”
            He had to strain to hear the child.
            “Was Rosie already dead, when you went to the barn?” McBride asked.
            “She – she – “
            He would try another tactic. “Where was your father, when you were
in the barn?”
            “In his office.”
            “So he didn’t know you went to the barn?”
            Again the child was silent. Then he said, “I came down the stairs.
He was in his office. He heard me. He said, Billy, you’re supposed to be
asleep. I said I’m not tired anymore. He smiled at me. He said come here.”
            “What did that mean, Come here?” McBride asked.
            “It meant he wanted to fuck me,” Billy said.
            “In his office?” McBride asked.
            Billy said, disgusted, “Yes, in his office. He fucked me
everywhere.”
            “And did he fuck you, Billy? There, in his office?” He heard
Beverly’s intake of breath behind him, saw Picard stroke Will’s arm.
            “Yes. He made me sit on him,” Billy said. “I hate him.”
            “I know, Billy,” McBride said. “I know you do.”
            “He said I have something for you, Billy. He was smiling. He didn’t
even clean me up.” There was anger – and hurt. “In the barn. Your friend
Rosie’s in the barn, Billy, and she’s waiting for you. He said – he said –“
            “It’s all right, Billy,” McBride said. “You’re safe, in Jean-Luc’s
arms. You can tell us. He can’t come here.”
            “He said, Do you know what she said to me, Billy? She said, I know
what you do to him. He laughed. I said to her, Do you? And then I showed her,
Billy. I showed her what I do to you. So why don’t you go see her now, Billy?
I’m sure she’ll still want to be your friend now, Billy.”
            “Dieu du Ciel,” Picard murmured. “Mon pauvre enfant.”
            “And then you went to the barn, Billy?” McBride asked. “You went to
the barn and you saw Rosie.”
            Billy was sobbing; genuine sobbing. No anger; no rage. Just the
pain of a child betrayed.
            “I saw her,” Billy said, “and she was all tied up, and there was
blood everywhere, and she was looking at me – she was looking at me – and she
was bleeding from where he’d hurt her, she was bleeding –and there was so much
blood, there was so much blood –“
            “All right, Billy,” McBride said, “it’s all right, hen. It’s a
terrible sight, I know. We know, how frightened you were, how much it hurt, to
see Rosie like that. We’re right here, Billy. We’re right here.”
            Picard was rocking Will, just a bit, and da Costa had both his
hands on Picard’s shoulders. McBride knew that if he turned around, Deanna and
Beverly were likely to be together, comforting each other. He took a deep
breath. He was likely to be hated, now, he knew, for what he was going to ask,
but he had the broadest of shoulders, and the wound had to be lanced.
            “Tell me what you saw, Billy,” he said.
            “Captain,” Beverly protested, and Picard shook his head.
            “Where was Rosie bleeding? Billy?” McBride asked. “You need to tell
me, Billy,” he said, softly, continuing to use the G major tone he used with
Will. “I know it hurts, and I know you don’t want to, but you need to tell me,
hen. I promise you that.”
            McBride watched Will become rigid in Picard’s arms. “Beverly?” he
said. “His blood pressure?”
            “It’s 160 over 85,” Beverly said.
            “Deanna?”
            “Horror,” Deanna said, “and fear. He thinks she’s alive. He thinks
she’s looking at him.”
            “Yes,” McBride said, “of course he does. Billy, you need to tell
me. What do you see?”
            “Blood,” Billy said. “All the blood. On the ground, in the dirt,
it’s purple. I didn’t know blood was purple. Her – I don’t know what you call
it,” he said, miserably, “her – her girl-parts – they’re bleeding and torn up
and – her – tummy is open and there’s white things – her face is beat up and
there’s blood – it’s in her hair – I didn’t know what to do,” he said, “I
didn’t know what to do, but I didn’t want to wake William – “
            “Would William know what to do?” McBride asked.
            Billy said, “William always knows what to do….”
            “Where is your father?” McBride asked.
            “He’s coming,” Billy said, and McBride could hear the hysteria in
the child’s voice. “He’s coming and he’ll hurt you, Rosie, he’ll hurt you more,
I know he will, like he does with me…”
            “What did you do, Billy?” McBride asked gently. “What did you do,
so he wouldn’t hurt her more?”
            “I’m sorry,” Billy said, “I’m sorry, but I didn’t know what to
do….”
            “What did you do, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “I didn’t want him to hurt her anymore,” Billy said. “Rosie said
once that William’s mother was in Heaven with Jesus, and she wasn’t sick
anymore, there. Rosie said no one was ever hurt or sick when they were in
Heaven with Jesus.”
            “What did you do, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “I thought Rosie could play with Mittens in Heaven,” Billy said,
and his voice was flat again. “William’s mother would be nice to her. She
wouldn’t be by herself.”
            “What did you do, Billy?”
            “I said, I’m sorry, Rosie. He won’t hurt you anymore,” Billy said,
almost to himself. “Tell Mittens I love him. Then I picked up the hammer that
was there and hit her on the head. Her head went crack. Like an egg when you
make an omelet. And her eyes were closed and she was dead.”
            “Was your father there, Billy?” McBride asked.
            “He came up behind me. He said, You’ll have to help me clean up
this mess, Billy.”
            “And did you? Help him clean up the mess?”
            “Yes,” Billy said. “I dug up Mittens and we put Mittens and Rosie
in a bag. And we put the rocks in the bag. And then he took the bag away.”
            “And what did you do, when he took the bag away?”
            “He told me to go to bed. So I went to bed.”
            “And when William woke up?”
            “He heard Mr and Mrs Kalugin. He climbed on the roof and went
outside. He saw the rocks and Mittens were gone.”
            McBride said, and he reached for Will’s hand and held it, lightly,
“What did you see, William? When you went outside?”
            “I told you,” William said. “The rocks were gone and I thought – “
            “What did you see, William?” McBride repeated. “It was light,
wasn’t it? What did you see?”
            “I saw blood,” William said, “there was blood – and it smells – it
smells like, like metal or something – there was so much – “
            “Where was the blood, William?” McBride asked. “Where was it, hen?”
            “It was on me,” William said. “Rosie’s blood was on me.”
***** Chapter 87 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride brings the session to a close, with the final truth about
     Rosie's death.
Chapter Notes
     Again, there is a graphic description of the violent death of a
     child, as well as graphic descriptions of sexual and pyschological
     abuse. Do not read this chapter if you are susceptible to these
     triggers.
 
Chapter Eighty-Seven
 
 
 
            McBride paused, to digest the information. Despite Billy’s claim
that William had been “sleeping,” William was aware that the blood belonged to
Rosie. Was William aware of what his father had done with Rosie’s body? Or was
that part of the story similar to the fractured one that Will had “remembered”
in his hallucinations?
            “So you are outside, William.” McBride wanted to make sure he
recounted the story correctly. “You have seen that Mittens’s grave has been
removed. You have seen that you have blood on you. How do you know that it’s
Rosie’s blood, William?”
            Silence. Will was trembling so hard now that he was shaking both
himself and Picard, who was trying to keep him calm.
            “William?” McBride asked. “How did you know it was Rosie’s blood? I
thought you were asleep, and the Kalugins woke you up.”
            “I – I thought –“ William said.
            “Where were you, William, before the Kalugins came?” He was picking
up some hostility now, as he’d suspected he would. Most medical practitioners,
even in this day and age, viewed hypnotherapy with a jaded eye, and, in some
cases, he supposed they were right to do so. But he had exhausted all other
options in Will’s treatment – and he had to bring the two personalities
together.
            “I was in bed,” William said.
            “Were you?” McBride asked.
            “Yes,” William answered, defencively.
            “His blood pressure is at 170 over 85,” Beverly said.
            “I understand,” McBride responded. “Were you in bed, William? Or
did you go downstairs and then to your father’s office?”
            “No,” William cried. “I was asleep!”
            “Did your father force you to have sex with him, in his office,
William?” McBride persisted. “Can you feel that you’ve had sex recently?”
            “I was asleep,” William repeated, but it was more of a question
than a statement.
            “Where did you go, after you were in your father’s office?” McBride
asked.
            “I don’t know,” William answered, crying. “I don’t know.”
            “Isn’t it more, William, that you don’t want to know? That you
don’t want to remember?” McBride said gently. “We understand that you don’t
want to remember, William. We understand that you let Billy do what you
couldn’t – and wouldn’t—do. But, William, hen, listen to me. You are Billy.”
            The only sound was that of William, sobbing. Picard continued to
hold Will in his arms, even as Will was bent over, his face in his hands, his
body shaking.
            “One seventy-five,” Beverly said. “When the diastolic pressure
reaches ninety, I’m shutting this down.”
            “You will not shut this down,” Picard said. “And that, Dr Crusher,
is an order.”
            “He is going to stroke out,” Beverly said, “and then you will lose
him.”
            “I am going to lose him regardless,” Picard said, and his voice
caught, for a moment. “This is his only chance.”
            “There has always been the possibility that he would die, Dr
Crusher,” McBride said calmly.
            “But not from the treatment,” Beverly objected, her voice low so as
not to disturb Will further.
            “Yes,” McBride said. “From the treatment. From the illness. From
the patient’s belief that he deserves to die. From this patient’s belief that
he deserves to die.”
            Deanna said, “We are so close. We are. He doesn’t want to
acknowledge this. His pain is so profound – but he will acknowledge it. He’s
ready to. Please, Beverly. We need to continue.”
            McBride looked to Picard, who nodded.
            “William,” McBride said. “You woke up. You went down the stairs.
Your father was in his office. He told you to come into his office. He put you
on his lap and raped you. You remember this, William. It might have been Billy
who was awake, but you were right there, with him, watching. I know you were,
William. I know.”
            William continued to sob.
            “He told you that Rosie was in the barn. He told you to go find
her. He told you that he’d done to her what he’d done to you. What did he mean
by that, William?” He waited, and then he thought he heard something. “What did
you say, William?”
            “I don’t want to,” William said so quietly it was hard to hear him.
“I don’t want to. Don’t make me. I don’t want to.”
            “What is it, William?” McBride asked. “What is it that you don’t
want to do?”
            “Tell,” William whispered. “Don’t make me tell.”
            McBride was silent. William continued to sob, but it was slowing
down, coming in short gasps. He was getting to the end of what Billy would
tolerate. Billy had been designed to protect William, so William could live as
normal a life as any child could under those circumstances. However, even Billy
had needed protection from the reality of what his father was and what he’d
done; he’d called on William, to go outside to find Rosie, to see the blood, to
do what? How had William protected Billy? “I didn’t know what to do,” Billy had
said. Clearly Billy was the younger of the two selves, the one who’d fragmented
with the very first rape; that would put Billy at five to William’s eight. “I
didn’t know what to do,” he’d wept, and then he’d said that he hadn’t wanted to
wake William, but that William always knew what to do. Because William had kept
the intellect, McBride thought. The child’s intellect hadn’t been damaged,
despite the head injury and the repeated trauma; he was a child on a specially
designed course that would take him straight to the Academy. Billy had kept the
emotions – the rage, the hate, the anger, the betrayal. William had kept the
intellect and the ability of figure things out, but he’d also kept the fear.
            “What did your father mean, when he said he’d done to Rosie what he
did to you?” McBride repeated. He knew the answer – he’d known it since the
morning, when he’d wakened and read Val’s last report. Maybe Kyle Riker had
killed – almost certainly he had – before the age of twelve, but at twelve he’d
raped and tortured his fifteen-year-old brother Wharton, and had left his
disemboweled and dismembered body in an alley by a take-away.
            “He does things to me,” William said, his voice barely audible.
“Bad things. He hurts me.”
            “The same things he did to Rosie?” McBride asked gently, and
William nodded. “Your father did these things to you when he raped you?
William?”
            “It’s 180 over 90, Doctor,” Beverly said. “He will have a stroke.”
            “What did he call these things, that he did to you, that he did to
Rosie?” McBride asked, ignoring her.
            “Play,” William said. “He called it play.”
            “And you knew, when you saw Rosie, that he would continue to hurt
her,” McBride said, “because he’d hurt you, and you didn’t want Rosie to hurt
anymore.”
            “No.”
            Finally, McBride thought. William had admitted that he was there,
with Billy.
            “And you heard him coming,” McBride continued the narrative, “and
you knew he would hurt Rosie more, so you thought you could save Rosie if you
ended it. If you killed her. Like you killed Christian Larsen.”
            “No.” His voice was barely above a whisper.
            “Rosie had talked to you about your mother being in Heaven.” He
pushed on. “You thought Rosie would have no more pain in Heaven. He couldn’t
hurt her, anymore, in Heaven. She could play with Mittens in Heaven.”
            “No.”
            “So you picked up the hammer and you hit her on the head,” McBride
said. “You killed her, to save her from your father. To send her to Heaven. To
protect her. To keep her from your pain.”
            William said, “I just want to die.”
            “I know, hen,” McBride answered. “I know.” He waited, thinking
about his approach to the final piece. “But your father didn’t want to kill
you, William. He had plans for you. If he’d wanted to kill you, he would have
done it long before he killed Rosie. He wouldn’t have had to kill Rosie, if
he’d been planning to kill you.”
            “I tried to die,” William said. “I tried to make him kill me.”
            “I know you did,” McBride confirmed. “So when you couldn’t die, and
you couldn’t live with what happened to Rosie – what did you do, William? What
did you do, to protect Billy from what he’d done?”
            And William said, “I turned us into stone.”
            “Yes, of course you did,” McBride said. “Because stones don’t feel,
do they, William? And they don’t have pain. And they don’t remember. And they
can’t hurt anyone, can they?”
            “I wanted to be a frost giant,” William said, “but they aren’t
real….”
            “A frost giant could have killed your father and stopped him,”
McBride said. “But you were just a little boy, not a frost giant. You couldn’t
stop your father. You could only stop yourself.”
            McBride sat up and stretched his back. He looked at Will, still in
Picard’s arms, his face swollen and streaked with tears, his eyes blank, as if
he had once again turned himself into stone. Picard’s face was still in its
frozen masque, but there were tears on his cheeks and his hands, around Will,
were shaking.
He could hear Deanna in his mind, calming herself down, and da Costa, talking
quietly to Beverly.
            “We are almost done, William,” McBride said. “You’ve been a very
brave boy. I need you to be brave one more time.”
            “The medication is ready,” da Costa said softly. “For his blood
pressure.”
            McBride nodded.
            “William?” he asked. “Can you hear me?”
            “Yes.”
            “Just a little bit more, and then we’re done,” he promised. “Are
you ready?”
            “No,” William begged, but Billy said, “Yes.”
            “You went into the barn,” McBride began. “You found Rosie. You said
she was tied up. You said there was blood. Where was the blood, William?”
            “I don’t want to,” William protested. “It was all over Rosie,”
Billy said. “It was in the dirt.”
            “It was all around Rosie?” McBride asked. “Billy, you said there
was a lot of blood. In the dirt, around her? Underneath her? Between her legs?”
            “Too much blood,” William answered. “So much. It was purple. In the
dirt.”
            “And Rosie was looking at you,” McBride continued. “You said Rosie
was looking at you. Her eyes were open?”
            “Yes.” William began to cry, again. “She was staring at me.”
            “She wanted me to help her,” Billy said. “She didn’t want to hurt
anymore.”
            “Did she talk to you, William? Did she ask you to help her?”
            “No,” William said.
            “She didn’t talk to you?”
            “No. She didn’t say anything.”
            “Did she move, while you were there? William? Did she move her
hands? Did she blink her eyes?” He could feel the change in the room, now. The
team knew. It was time for William – and Billy – to know as well.
            “No,” William said, hesitant. “She was just looking at me.”
            “Was she breathing, William? Could you see her chest moving?” he
asked.
            Silence. Then, “Her chest was cut. There was blood.”
            “But was she breathing, William?” he repeated. “When you saw Rosie
in the barn, was she breathing?”
            Again, silence. He looked at Will and saw a flicker in his eyes, as
the knowledge was put together.
            “She wasn’t breathing, hen,” McBride said, and once again he used
his G major tone. For the boys. For Will. “When you saw her in the barn, she
wasn’t moving. She was staring at you, but she couldn’t see. She wasn’t
breathing. The blood was purple – it was dark – because it was over, William.
When he raped her, she hemorrhaged. She bled out. You didn’t want him to hurt
her anymore, so you took the hammer and you fractured her skull. But she was
already dead, William. Your father killed her, and then he sent you to find
her. He hoped that you would do something, to end her pain. He hoped that you
would feel that you had done it. But, William – when you hit her, she didn’t
bleed. And she didn’t close her eyes, hen. You closed her eyes for her.
Remember?”
            “Her head sounded like an egg,” Billy said. “But her eyes were
still open and she didn’t cry. And I didn’t know what to do.”
            “Of course you didn’t,” McBride agreed. “Because you were only a
little boy. How could you know what to do? So you asked William, didn’t you,
Billy? You asked William what to do. And William knew that she was dead. So he
closed her eyes, and then he waited for his father. And he hoped that his
father would kill him, too.”
            “But he didn’t,” William said. “He told me to help him clean up the
mess.”
            “And you’re a good boy,” McBride said. “You’ve always been a good
boy. So you did what your father told you. You helped him clean up the mess.
And when he told you to go to bed, you did.”
            “Yes.”
            “And then you turned yourself into stone, so he could never hurt
you again.”
            “So I could never hurt anyone again,” William said.
            “You didn’t hurt Rosie, William,” McBride said. “I want you to say
what you know is true. You didn’t hurt Rosie, because she was already dead.
Your father killed Rosie.” He waited, and then he said, “Billy told me that
he’d killed Rosie. Just like Christian Larsen.” He leaned towards Will, and he
took Will’s face in his hands and forced Will to look at him. “But William –
you didn’t kill Christian Larsen. Billy didn’t kill Christian Larsen. Will
knows you didn’t kill Christian Larsen.”
            “I didn’t kill Rosie,” William said.
            “Who killed Rosie?” McBride asked, still holding Will’s face. “Who
killed her, Billy?”
            And Billy said, “He did. Our father killed Rosie.”
***** Chapter 88 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride brings Will out of his trance, but Will has difficulty
     adjusting to the aftereffects, even as McBride insists on going ahead
     with therapeutic closure to the hypnotherapy.
Chapter Notes
     A patient's reaction to having been in a hypnotic or self-induced
     trance is likely to vary from patient to patient and depend on the
     reasons for the hypnotherapy and the post-hypnotic suggestions given
     by the therapist. Feeling that one was never in a trance, feeling
     that only a few minutes have passed and then discovering that one has
     "lost" time, remembering talking and responding to the therapist
     during the trance but not quite being able to access the memory of
     it, the feeling of sleepwalking, tingling in the extremities -- these
     are all common enough symptoms. Sometimes the aftereffects of the
     trance are brief and the post-hypnotic suggestions (in the case of
     mild anxiety, for example) take effect immediately without any
     conscious awareness on the part of the patient. While McBride's
     suggestions were very reasonable and mild, there are still blocks and
     trauma surrounding Will's memories, and Will must deal with these in
     a conscious state. Thus, the need for closure to the therapeutic
     session.
Chapter Eighty-Eight
 
 
 
 
            “Will,” McBride was saying to me, “Will. I am going to count to
three, and when I say the number three, I want you to be present with me in
this room. Answer yes if you understand.”
            “Yes,” I said. His voice sounded low and pleasant and very far
away. I hadn’t been sleeping – I was pretty sure I hadn’t been sleeping – but
I’d been laying for so long on the grass by the pond that my feet had fallen
asleep, and my hands were tingling.
            “When you wake,” he was saying, and he was using his G major tone
to me again, “you will feel calm and refreshed. You will feel as if a great
burden had been lifted off your shoulders. You will be aware of everything you
have told us in this session, but you will feel no pain. Answer yes if you
understand.”
            “Yes,” I said, even though I didn’t really understand what he was
talking about or why he was saying what he was saying.
            “Good,” McBride said. “One.”
            I stretched and stood up slowly, trying to get the feeling back in
my legs and arms.
            “Two,” McBride said. His voice was not quite as far away as it had
been.
            I took a deep breath and then I yawned. I began walking down the
path back towards the doors of the Arboretum, and as the doors opened, I heard
McBride say,
            “Three.”
            Instead of being in the corridor outside the doors of the
Arboretum, I was in McBride’s office.
            “Take a moment, Will,” McBride said, “to orient yourself to where
you are.”
            My face was wet and swollen, as if I’d been crying. I felt as if I
should have had a headache, but I didn’t. The nausea and the stomach pain that
I’d had were gone, to be replaced by just a little dizziness and
lightheadedness.
            “Easy now, Will,” Jean-Luc said beside me. “Just take your time.”
            “Here, Commander,” da Costa said. He was handing me a glass of
water. “Take a few sips, sir.”
            I took the glass, but my hand was shaking so hard I spilled water
on my trousers and the floor.
            “I have it, Mr da Costa,” Jean-Luc said, and he took the glass from
me, and then he held it for me so I could drink, his other hand holding the
back of my head. I could see that he too had been weeping. I took a few sips,
trying not to dribble it because it’s so awkward when someone’s holding the
glass for you. He took the cuff of his sleeve and wiped my mouth – it was such
an intimate gesture in a room full of people – for someone like him, so afraid
to show any intimacy to anyone at all.
            I knew that something had happened, here in this room; I could
remember hearing Dr McBride’s voice, and Beverly’s, and Deanna’s. I could
remember hearing Billy, and the other part of me – the William part – speaking.
I remembered Jean-Luc speaking to Billy, and I remembered Jean-Luc holding me
at some point. But it seemed all so far away, almost as if it didn’t matter. It
was as if I expected the cottony feeling to be there, the one that told me a
flashback was on the way, that signaled that my emotions were out of control,
but there was no cottony feeling. Just this vague impression that things had
happened – important things – things I should know about and I did know about
them but they just were beyond me.
            “Will,” Beverly said, and she was using that maternal tone she uses
sometimes, the one that made me roll my eyes and irritated Jean-Luc greatly,
especially when she used it in a staff meeting, “your blood pressure has been
very high, so I’m going to give you a hypo spray for it.”
            “It should be decreasing now, Doctor,” McBride said.
            “It is, but I’m concerned about the prolonged effects,” Beverly
answered.
            There was something between them, but it didn’t really seem
important. I shrugged, and Beverly gave me the hypo spray.
            “Can you tell me where you are, Will?” McBride asked.
            “I’m in your office,” I said.
            “And how are you feeling?”
            “Tired,” I said, “but I don’t know why I’m tired. I thought I was
resting….My hands and feet were tingling at first, but that’s over now.”
            “Yes,” McBride said, “that’s a common enough response to a
prolonged trance. And emotionally, how are you feeling?”
            “I don’t know,” I said. “I feel as if I should be upset, but I’m
not. I guess – everything just seems very far away.”
            “Yes,” McBride repeated. “I’d expect you to feel that way, Will. We
will go over what’s happened here – but not now. We’re going to take a break,
give you a chance to eat something, although I think Dr Crusher might want to
give you fluids – is that right, Doctor?”
            It was strange that he kept calling her “doctor” instead of
Beverly, as he’d been calling her earlier.
            “Yes,” she replied. “I think it’s a good idea to get Will back to
sickbay. He is dehydrated, and I’d like to monitor him as his blood pressure
decreases.”
            I felt Jean-Luc take my hand. “We’ll transport you to sickbay with
Mr da Costa and Dr Crusher,” he said. “Deanna and I will meet you there. Is he
going into the biobed, Beverly?”
            “Yes,” Beverly replied, “he is most definitely going into the
biobed.”
            “I’m right here,” I said. “You don’t have to talk over me.” I
thought perhaps I should be irritated, but it wasn’t how I felt.
            “We’re not, Will,” Beverly said, soothingly.
            “Let me help you up, Commander,” da Costa said, extending his hand.
            Jean-Luc stood, and even though I hadn’t thought I would need help
to get up and off the couch, it was so low to the ground, and I was still
lightheaded. I took da Costa’s hand, and Jean-Luc wrapped one arm around my
waist, and between the two of them, they got me up and then supported me until
everything stopped spinning. It was then that I realised that I hadn’t been
somewhere else for just a few minutes. Usually, when Deanna sent me to my safe
space, it was for five or so minutes, ten at the most. I felt – I felt as if
I’d walked through a wormhole, and come out somewhere entirely different from
where I’d expected to be.
            “Just breathe, Will,” Jean-Luc said. “You’ll be all right.”
            “Doctor – “ I began, looking towards McBride, who was half-turned
from me and speaking with Deanna.
            “Yes, Will?” He came over to me, and then he smiled. “It’s a very
different feeling, Will,” he said, “to have been in a trance, especially for as
long as you have been. It’s compared to meditation, but a deep trance is not
like meditation at all.”
            “I don’t understand,” I said. “How long --?”
            “We’ve been here almost four hours,” McBride said. “Past mealtime,
for all of us. We’re all of us feeling a little lightheaded, Will.”
            “But – “ I stopped. “I remember you telling me to go to my safe
space,” I said. “Then I remember you counting back from one hundred. And then I
thought I remembered that you were talking to Billy – or Jean-Luc was. And then
you were counting to three….”
            “It’s very common to feel confused after being in a deep trance,
Will,” McBride said. “And you haven’t lost this memory – the hours that you
spent in the trance. It’s right there, near the surface. However, you’re tired,
and you’re dehydrated – and we are all emotionally exhausted. It will be better
to allow Dr Crusher to monitor you and give you fluids, I promise you.” He
turned to the team – my team – and he went from being my McBride to the
professional side that I rarely saw, when I was with him. This was Betazed’s
leading psychiatrist, a man who was renowned throughout the Federation for
treating the disorder I had, the head of my treatment team. “Dr Crusher, you
are going to monitor Will’s blood pressure and give him fluids. I’d like to see
him eat something other than a nutritional supplement, if we can get him to
agree. Even if it’s something small and liquid-based, such as soup. I’d also
like you to do the blood work for his medication levels, and I will give you
those parameters. Mr da Costa, make sure that after Commander Riker is released
from the biobed that he gets that opportunity to eat, and take a shower, and
have at least an hour’s rest in bed. I know, Will, that you were supposed to
meet with Lt Patel and your band tonight, but I think you’ll agree that we
should save that for another time. Make sure, Joao, that you bring Mr Stoch
completely up to speed.” He paused. “Captain, if you and Counsellor Troi will
remain with me, I’d like to debrief you, and then we will prepare for our next
session.”
            “Next session?” Beverly said. “What next session?”
            “Doctor,” McBride said, “we cannot leave Commander Riker in the
condition he is in now. We have to finish what we’ve started – and we have to
do it now. We need to allow him time to recover, that’s true. We all need time
to recover, I know. But William needs a resolution to his pain – and he doesn’t
have any more time to waste. I would hope that the members of his team will
agree on that point.”
            I said, “I’m having another session? Jean-Luc, I don’t want another
session.” I felt completely at sea. First he was telling me I’d lost four hours
– four hours! – and that I was in such bad shape that I needed to go back into
the biobed, and then he was telling me I had to do another therapy session? I
didn’t even remember this one.
            “Would it be possible, Doctor,” Jean-Luc said, and he was using the
captain’s voice, “that we could have this session in Will’s room in sickbay? It
might alleviate some of Dr Crusher’s concerns.”
            “I have no objection,” McBride said. “We are not doing another
hypnotherapy session. We are simply going to give Will closure to what he’s
experienced today.”
            “I have no objection either,” Beverly said. “I think you are right,
Doctor, that we must provide closure to the session. Having it in sickbay is
the best solution.”
            I looked from McBride to Beverly and then to Jean-Luc. Jean-Luc
wasn’t wearing his neutral expression, so whatever had happened couldn’t have
been too terribly serious. Yet there was still tension where there hadn’t been.
            “What about Deanna?” I said.
            “I’m fine, Will,” Deanna said.
            I looked at her. “No, you’re not,” I said.
            To my surprise, Jean-Luc smiled. “I’ve seen that mulish expression
on Mr Riker’s face before,” he said. “Please, Doctor, reassure him that you
will take adequate care of Counsellor Troi. Otherwise, we will never get him to
sickbay.”
            “Will,” McBride said. “By debriefing Deanna and Jean-Luc, they will
be getting the adequate care they need to process the information in the
session. I will make sure that Deanna is fully rested before I start my final
session with you. I promise you, Will – I would never put either Deanna or
Jean-Luc in jeopardy.”
            Da Costa said, in his mild tone of voice, “You may stand down, sir.
It’s under control.”
            Deanna took my hand for a moment and said, “I’m hungry and thirsty,
Will, and I’m tired, just as you are. I will be fine.”
            “Let’s go, Commander,” Beverly said. “You’ve an appointment with
the biobed.”
            I hesitated for a moment and Jean-Luc said, “I will order you to
go, Mr Riker, if I have to.”
            “Sir,” I answered. I sighed.
            “I’m fine, Will,” Deanna repeated. “Or I will be, after I have some
chocolate.”
            She smiled at me and I gave in. I knew she wasn’t fine; I knew
Jean-Luc – to make him weep – I knew he wasn’t fine either. But I was outmanned
and outgunned, so I backed down.
            “Three to beam to sickbay, Chief,” Jean-Luc said, and I found
myself quickly and efficiently hustled into the biobed almost as soon as we’d
arrived.
 
 
 
            I wasn’t feeling agitated or overcome with fear this time when I
went back into the biobed, but Ogawa gave me a hypo spray to calm me down
anyway, and I must have fallen asleep for a bit. When I awoke it was to Stoch
telling me he was going to help me back to my room, and he and Yash got me up
and into the head for a shower and then into my quarters for whatever meal I
was supposed to have.
            McBride had mentioned soup, and soup was what was waiting for me.
My stomach no longer hurt and I was no longer experiencing nausea, yet I still
had no desire whatsoever to eat anything. In a way I felt as if I were
sleepwalking. I was aware of my surroundings but I wasn’t really present in
them. I couldn’t hear Billy anymore, and I knew I wasn’t hallucinating; there
was no cottony feeling. I sighed and moved the spoon around, wondering when
Jean-Luc would show up.
            “Sir,” Stoch said. He’d been sitting behind me, working on his
padd.
            “What?” I didn’t feel like talking. I didn’t feel like eating,
either. I didn’t know what I was feeling, except that I didn’t want to be here,
in this room, in sickbay, on this ship.
            “Would you rather have something else?” he asked. He walked over to
me.
            “No,” I said. “I’m not hungry.”
            “Dr McBride said that you should eat,” Stoch said.
            I sighed. “What can I give you, Stoch, so that you’ll leave me
alone?” I asked.
            “Sir, you know I am not permitted to leave you alone,” he answered,
“even for one point two minutes.”
            Okay. I supposed I deserved that. “That’s not what I meant,” I
said. “I meant, just leave me alone about the eating. I’m not hungry.”
            “Commander,” Stoch said patiently, and if he was attempting to
modulate McBride’s voice it wasn’t working. “You are never hungry. You don’t
identify the feeling of hunger anymore. Your digestive system is shutting
down.”
            “So?” I said. I stood up and stretched. “You’re supposed to be
keeping me calm, right? So just leave it, Stoch. I’m going to bed.”
            “Commander, there is a difference between helping you with your
anxiety and allowing you to hurt yourself.”
            “I’m not going to argue with you, Stoch,” I said, “and since you
don’t outrank me, I’m going to bed.”
            “Dr McBride said the soup has medicinal qualities, and that you
should eat as much as you could,” Stoch replied. “Sir.”
            “It’s chicken soup,” I said, “for fuck’s sake. Just leave me
alone.”
            I got into bed.
            “Did you even try it, Commander?”
            “No,” I said. The distanced feeling was leaving, and was becoming
rapidly replaced by agitation.
            “Three sips,” he said,
And I could feel the wood of the kitchen table, and the fact that the cushion
underneath me was slightly askew, and it was chilly inside – I was wearing a
sweater – who had made it for me, I wondered? – because it was my favourite
colour, a deep blue – and I heard the kitchen door open and Mr S walked in –I
could feel his hand on my shoulder – Mrs S said, “Three sips, William, and you
can go.” I was looking at the spoon and moving it around in the bowl and I
could see Mr S crouch beside me, so that he was at my level, and he said,
“William. Listen to me. It won’t bring Rosie back, your not eating. You have to
eat, son. Just three sips, just like Mrs S says. Then you can go outside.” I
remember thinking that Rosie had said you could pray for things from God, and
so I’d prayed that I could find her, and I think somehow I thought if I offered
something maybe it would work faster or better or something, and perhaps I
thought if I stopped eating maybe it would be a good trade….I remember trying
to put the spoon in my mouth and I remember thinking that if I did I wouldn’t
find Rosie and then Mrs Kalugin would die too, because I’d heard Dmitri’s mom
say that Rosie being gone was killing her….
            “I can’t,” I said, “I can’t,” and I was shouting at Mr S, and I
pushed him away, and the chair tipped over and I heard the door slam, and then
I was running as fast as I could, running down the path into the woods behind
my house, stumbling over rocks and brambles and ferns, and I think I was
crying, or maybe I only felt like crying; I could hear an eagle calling over
head, and the ravens scolding, and I could feel my feet pounding on the dirt
and the moss and I saw a rabbit dart away and then I could hear the creek, I
could hear the water running into the pool where Dmitri and I had fallen in,
and I knew if I turned round the bend I would see her, I would see her floating
in the water, her hair spread out behind her and her eyes open.         
            “Another food trigger?” McBride said, and I heard Beverly say, “He
needs to be back in the biobed. You are asking too much of him.”
            “Where are you, Will?” McBride asked.
            “I don’t know,” I said, “I don’t know what’s happening….” Then I
said, “I was in the kitchen. I was in the kitchen and I was supposed to be
eating…then I was in the woods….”
            “Yes, of course you were,” McBride said. “You are in sickbay, now,
Will. I’m going to assemble the team together. Then we’re going to close out
the session you had. Once we do that, you will find that the incidence of your
flashbacks and hallucinations will begin to decrease.”
            I could feel that I was in my bed, and that Stoch and McBride were
beside me.
            “Breathe, sir,” Stoch reminded me.
            “I was remembering something,” I said to McBride. “I was
remembering something important.”
            “I’m not surprised,” McBride answered. “We have opened up several
blocks for you today. It’s why it’s so very important that we bring closure to
this session.” He paused for a moment, and when I didn’t say anything, he said,
“Let’s get the room set up, Mr Stoch. Dr Crusher, we will need to continue to
monitor his blood pressure. The others should be here momentarily.”
            Stoch helped me back up out of the bed, and then sat me in Jean-
Luc’s chair. I watched him set about moving the table and bringing in chairs,
with Djani to help him, and I could feel myself drifting away again, and I
could feel that my hands were trembling from the cold –
            “What is it, Will?” Beverly asked.
            It took me a moment to realise she was speaking to me. “I’m cold,”
I said.
            “He has his robe in the head,” Jean-Luc said as he entered. “I will
fetch it for him, Beverly.”
            “It’s too crowded in here,” I said as Deanna and da Costa came in.
“I don’t want to do this. I don’t want to be here.”
            “Where would you like to be, Will?” Deanna asked, coming over to
me. She still seemed exhausted around the eyes, but she didn’t appear as
fragile as she had in McBride’s office. “Where can you be, for this?”
            I didn’t understand what she was asking. I was tired, and cold, and
still feeling as if I were sleepwalking, except that I could feel too that I
was showing all my usual symptoms of acute anxiety – my hands were shaking, my
extremities were cold, I could feel I wasn’t breathing, and finally, the
cottony feeling was back. All I needed now was for my stomach to start hurting.
            “I’d like to be dead,” I said. My stomach gave a vicious clench,
and I threw up all over my feet and the floor.
***** Chapter 89 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will and Jean-Luc come to a decision regarding Will's treatment.
Chapter Notes
     In the episode "Ethics," where a container falls on Worf and leaves
     him paralysed, so that he believes his life is over, we have Will
     Riker and Jean-Luc Picard lay out the two positions for us, when Worf
     asks Will to help him perform the Hegh'bat. Will is adamantly opposed
     to suicide -- and I deal with reconciling my Will's attempts at
     suicide with what he told Worf in this novel. But in "Ethics" Picard
     says to Will, "If you were dying...terminally ill from a disease for
     which there was no cure...and the few remaining days of your life
     would be spent in pain. Don't you think that might come to see death
     as...a release?" Here is my answer, to Picard's implied belief in
     "Ethics," and his response to Will's pain, in this novel.
Chapter Eighty-Nine
 
 
 
 
            “He’s over stimulated,” McBride said, and Jean-Luc answered
abruptly, as if he were trying not to be angry, “Indeed.”
            I was choking up bile; there really was nothing in me, except the
few sips of water I’d had, to expel.
            “Out,” the captain said, “all of you.  Stoch, get me a warm
washcloth and a towel; I will clean him up.”
            “Captain,” Deanna began, but she saw the look on Jean-Luc’s face.
            McBride said, “Take ten or fifteen minutes, Jean-Luc, no more than
twenty.  We have to close out the session.”
            “I understand,” Jean-Luc answered.  He was standing beside me, his
hand resting on my shoulder.  “That’s enough, Will,” he said.  “There’s nothing
in your stomach at all.”
            I watched as everyone left and then I said, “It’s not as if I want
to do this.”
            “Isn’t it?” he asked.
            I felt my eyes fill.  “No,” I answered. 
            He looked down at me.  “Oh, Will,” he said.
            Stoch came back in, and wordlessly handed Jean-Luc the washcloth
and the towel.  “You’re dismissed, Mr Stoch,” Jean-Luc said, and he waited
until Stoch left, pulling the door behind him.  “Here, Will,” he said.  “Let me
clean you up.”
            “I can do it,” I said, reaching for the rag.
            “I know you can,” he replied, “but you are going to allow me.”
            He undressed me, and then washed my face and hands, slowly and
gently, as if I were a little kid or something, and when he knelt to wash my
feet I could feel myself start to shake and then I was weeping.  He didn’t say
anything; he dried me with the towel, and then he went to my dresser for
another pair of pyjamas, and he helped me into them.  Finally, he placed
everything on the table, and then he pulled me to him, and wrapped his arms
around me, and he kissed my hair.
            “Come here, Will,” he said.  “I’m just going to hold you.  It will
be all right, now.  You will be all right, now.”
            “I’m sorry,” I said into his shirt.  “I feel so strange, and then
Stoch said something about the soup McBride wanted me to eat, and it triggered
a flashback –“
            “As food always does,” he answered.  “Shhh.  You have nothing to be
sorry about.”
            “I don’t understand anything that’s happened,” I said.  “You were
crying – and Deanna –“
            “I know,” he said.  “Dr McBride will close out the session.  But
you’re not to worry, Will.  I am fine, and Deanna is, too.  Don’t say anything,
mon cher.  Just let me hold you.”
            I was silent.  My face was pressed against his chest; I could smell
his cologne, faded now; I could hear his heart beating.  I didn’t know how to
say what I wanted to say – and a part of me didn’t want to say it, because I
just wanted to stay the way I was now, in his arms, feeling safe, maybe.  Maybe
safe was what I’d always felt around Jean-Luc.
            “What is it, Will?” he asked.
            He knew me.  No one had ever really bothered to know me, before
him.  I said, “Did McBride tell you?”
            He kissed my hair again.  “Did Dr McBride tell me what, mon cher?”
            “That I’m dying.”
            He was still.  Then he said, “Yes.”
            “Do I have to go through all of this?”  I asked.
            “Do you have to go through all of what?” he returned, but I could
tell by the way his hands tightened around me that he knew what I meant.
            “The treatment, the medications, everything,” I said. 
            He looked down at me.  “What is it you are asking me, Will?” he
said.
            “I want – “ I began.  I didn’t know how to say it.
            “What is it you want, mon cher?” he asked.
            “I just want to be with you,” I said, finally.  “I know I don’t
have much time.  I don’t want to spend the time I have like this.  Couldn’t you
just tell them I want them to stop?  You’re almost finished with the mission,
aren’t you?  Jean-Luc?”
            “Are you asking me to stop your treatment?  Will?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “I have days, maybe a week.  And I’m tired.  I can
say no, can’t I?  And just spend the rest of the time with you?”
            “Oh, Will,” he said.  “Are you sure this is what you want?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “And what about what I want?” he asked.  “Do I have some say in
this decision?”
            I looked up at him.  It was stupid, but I hadn’t thought of what he
wanted at all.  “What do you want?” I said.
            He bent down, so that he was eye level with me.  “I want you to
consider,” he said in a low voice, “the possibility of a future with me.”
            “As your first officer?” I asked.  There was, I thought, the
distinct possibility that all the medication and my lack of sleep had just made
me stupid.
            “No, Will,” he said.  “As my partner.  I want you to consider what
it could be like.  If you were to share the Enterprise with me.  If you were to
share beyond the Enterprise with me.”
            “But I’m dying, Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “You are very ill,” he said.  “I will concede that if this
continues – your inability to eat, or sleep, your failure to thrive – “ He
stopped and looked away.  Then he said, “Your doctor told me that if we were
not able to have success with your therapy today, you might have a week….But,
Will, today was a success.  We know what happened to Rosie.  You know what
happened to Rosie.  You don’t have to condemn yourself to this death,
anymore.”  I tried to look away, and he cupped my face in his hand.  “You don’t
have to, Will,” he repeated.  “You can join me in our future, Will, if you want
to.  I do believe that, that we can have a future, together.”
            “I don’t know how,” I said.
            “I know you don’t,” he answered.  “But I think your Dr McBride
does, if you’ll let him.”
            “I’m so tired,” I said.
            “You’ll be able to rest tonight, I think,” he replied.  He pulled
me to him again.  “Will you promise me that you’ll think about it, William? 
Will you think about it, and let me know tomorrow?”
            I nodded.
            “If you tell me tomorrow that you still want everything to stop,”
he said.  “If you tell me that you’ve thought about it, and you still don’t
want to continue, then I will tell the team what you’ve decided.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            “But, in the meantime, William,” he said, “I want you to agree to
finishing your therapy session with your doctor.”
            “Can you stay with me in the morning?” I said.  “Do you have to go
down to the base again?”
            “I can put off tomorrow’s meeting, until the afternoon.  Admiral
Haden will understand.”
            “Then I agree,” I said.
            “I will tell Dr McBride we’re ready,” he said.  “I’m proud of you,
Will.  I want you to know that.”
            “Why?” I asked.
            “Because,” he said, “I have asked you to do something that is
extremely difficult.  And you have agreed to do it – just as you always have,
Will.  No matter what I’ve asked you to do, no matter how hard it’s been,
you’ve always done what needed to be done.  I think,” he said, kissing my face,
“you are the bravest man I have ever known.”  He brushed my hair out of my
face, and then walked to the door, pulling it open.  “Dr McBride,” he said. 
“We’re ready to begin.”
***** Chapter 90 *****
Chapter Summary
     Commander Cortan Zweller arrives at the small cottage on the coast of
     Risa to pick up the waiting Captain Kyle Riker.
Chapter Notes
     Readers may want to remember that Ensign Cortan "Corey" Zweller was
     Jean-Luc "Johnny" Picard's closest Academy friend, along with Ensign
     Marta Batanides, as seen in the episode "Tapestry." Non-canon has
     Zweller join Section 31 and his career is destroyed because of it;
     canon has him remaining a friend of Picard's.
     Dr Alasdair McBride's cousin is Admiral Thomas Valentine Laidlaw, a
     friend of Admiral Vance Haden, two classes up from Picard at the
     Academy. Lt Renan Balum is the young cousin who "nearly drowned" in
     the conversation McBride and Laidlaw had, earlier in the novel, when
     McBride learns of Section 31 and Kyle Riker's role in it. The name
     "Renan" (from Raanan) is Hebrew.
Chapter Ninety
 
 
 
           
            It was almost ninety minutes in when he heard the shuttle
approaching, and he wandered into the doorway of the cottage, a drink in his
hand, to watch it approach.  The landing was perfect, with just a little bit of
flair, and he was amused to see that it was the lanky figure of Corey Zweller
disembarking.  He watched Zweller walk up the beach to his door and he said,
            “Have a good flight?  Want a drink?”
            “Riker,” Zweller responded.  Then he said, sourly, “Depends on what
you put in it.”
            He laughed.  “Make it yourself, then, Commander,” he said, seeing
as how Zweller was in full regalia.
            “Sir,” Zweller answered.
            He stepped aside, and allowed Zweller to enter the cottage. 
            “Kitchen’s that way,” Riker said.
            “Thanks.” Zweller walked into the kitchen and returned a few
minutes later with a drink.
            “To the Fleet,” Riker said, raising his glass in Zweller’s
direction.
            “What’s left of it,” Zweller replied, and took a sip.  He looked
around and said, “I see you’re packed.”
            Riker shrugged.  “It seemed like the sensible thing to do,” he
replied.  “After all, I’ve meetings to attend, and my leave is over.”
            “And you have always been sensible,” Zweller said.
            “Now, don’t be ugly,” Riker replied.  “Accidents happen.”
            “Particularly around you,” Zweller agreed.  “Where’s the boy?”
            Riker’s eyes were grey and flat.  “What boy?”
            “The Jarillian boy that Behlar sent you,” Zweller said.  “Where is
he?”
            “Ah,” Riker said.  “He wanted to return to Nuvia, so I sent him on
with the shuttle.”
            “Bastard,” Zweller said.
            “Over a boy you didn’t know?  I was sure your proclivities were
elsewhere.”  He took a sip of his drink and smiled, although it never reached
his eyes.  “Although it’s always been common knowledge that your friend Johnny
Picard swings both ways.”
            “I don’t fuck children,” Zweller said, allowing his anger to get
the best of him.  “And from now on, neither will you.”
            “May I remind you, Mr Zweller,” Riker said evenly, “that I outrank
you, even within this organisation?”
            “The orders come from the top,” Zweller replied.  “You. Are. To.
Desist.”
            “Because some Betazoid shrink is treating my crazy son?” He
finished his drink and set it down.  “Or because the shuttle pilot had been
sent on your orders to rendition me?” This time his smile exposed his teeth,
and Zweller backed a few steps away.
            “Because,” he answered, “it is Admiral Thomas Laidlaw who is
looking for you.  It is the Sixth House who is investigating you.  And if they
investigate you, you can be sure that they will begin to investigate us.”
            “Valentine Laidlaw,” Riker mused.  “Of course he would be in the
middle of this.  Did you not think that it might be personal, with him?  Or are
you really as brainless as I’ve always thought you were?  Commander?”
            “You have something on Laidlaw?” Zweller asked.
            This time Riker’s grin was broad and genuine.  “My dear Commander
Zweller,” he said pleasantly, “I have something on everyone.  Even you.”
            Zweller was silent.  “You’re not even bothered by the fact that I
tried to kill you,” he said, finally.
            Riker shrugged.  “If you’d been a smarter or braver man, I would
already be dead, and the whole situation would be defused.”  He walked by
Zweller into the kitchen, making sure that he brushed Zweller physically as he
went by and then smiling when Zweller flinched.  “I see that your little
Betazoid friend’s fear is contagious.  What did he say his name was?  Renan? 
Very strange name for a Betazoid.”
            Zweller moved back into the living room and positioned himself
closer to the door.  When Riker returned with another drink, he burst into
laughter.
            “My how the mighty have fallen,” he said.  “That bloated buffoon in
San Francisco deserves to be exposed, it seems to me.  Even Luther Sloan, that
moron, would have handled things better than you, my friend.”
            “Is that what you’re planning to do, Riker?” Zweller asked
quietly.  “Expose us all and go out with a bang?”
            “Perhaps you have a brain after all,” he answered, easily.  “I
believe it used to be known as the last hurrah.”
            “Why not simply retire?” Zweller asked.  “After all, you’re correct
in your assessment about the amount of actual damage your son can do.  Perhaps
it could be proven – what you did to him.  But after all these years, who
cares?  They should promote him to captain and send him far away.”
            “Ah, Will,” Riker said.  “He has been nothing but trouble since the
day he was born.  I’d thought she was joking, you see, when she’d mentioned she
wanted children.  I was quite taken by surprise when she told me she was
pregnant.  And I don’t like surprises.”
            Zweller looked around and saw that he was no longer by the door. 
“Look,” he said, trying to keep the desperation out of his voice, “I will take
you to Nuvia.  There’s transport waiting for you to take you back to
Starfleet.”
            “The thing is,” Riker said, “Will won’t accept a promotion, even if
he were well enough to be offered one.  He will never leave your friend Picard
– and it’s Picard who contacted this doctor McBride, whose cousin is Valentine
Laidlaw.”
            “Admiral Rossa is expecting you,” Zweller said.
            “Yes,” Riker said agreeably.  “So he is.”  He picked up his
suitcase and said, “Shall we go?”
            Zweller nodded, and he allowed Riker to precede him through the
door.  They walked quietly to the shuttle and then Riker said, as he placed his
one suitcase in the back,
            “Did you know that your little frightened friend is related to both
the Betazoid psychiatrist and Admiral Laidlaw?”
            Zweller didn’t answer.  He climbed into the pilot’s seat and waited
until Riker had settled himself in next to him.  Zweller ran through the
checklist and started the shuttle.
            “Your pilot didn’t check his engine, either,” Riker remarked.
            “You’re planning to take down Rossa,” Zweller answered.  “Thus, I
don’t think you’re quite ready to take yourself out of this equation yet.”
            “You’ve known that Balum was a double agent,” Riker said equably. 
“But does Rossa?  Just what game are you playing, Corey?”
            Zweller waited until they were aloft and then he said, “You’re
correct when you’ve assessed the Admiral as bloated, Riker.  My loyalty is to
the command, not to Rossa.”
            “Ah, but which command, I wonder?”
            “Ours, of course,” Zweller retorted.
            “And if it means sacrificing your friend Johnny?” Riker asked. 
“Hypothetically, of course.”
            Zweller said, “It seems to me that Johnny has already picked his
side, when he chose your son over his duty.”
            “And if my son were to be put down, as one would with any ailing
creature?” Riker said casually.  “Where would your loyalty lay then,
Commander?  To Picard?  To the Fleet?”  He paused.  “Or to us?”
            “Just what did your son ever do to you, Captain?” Zweller asked,
half-laughing as he said it.
            “He was born,” Riker replied flatly.
            They flew the rest of the way to Nuvia in silence.
 
 
            Riker waited until Zweller disappeared along the food kiosks,
ostensibly to get himself a drink, and then he booked passage on a shuttle
flying to Rixx.  It was time, he thought, to find out just exactly what the
Betazoid cousins knew, before he set a fire to their little nest.  As the
shuttle circled over the lovely city that was Rixx, home to the Fifth House of
Betazed, he wondered how long Jean-Luc Picard would remain on Alpha Station Lya
with that religious fanatic Admiral Vance Haden.
***** Chapter 91 *****
Chapter Summary
     Dr McBride begins the closing session, and Will remembers what
     happened to Rosie.
Chapter Notes
     Why are you wallowing in your pain? Do you want to spend the rest of
     your life like this? Do you groove on it? Questions such as these are
     often thrown at the trauma survivor in the guise of trying to get
     them to "realise" or to "motivate" them to "let go" of the trauma.
     The answer should be obvious -- no human being wants to suffer; no
     one chooses to become the victim of trauma; no one wants to suffer
     from the symptoms of PTSD his/her entire life. But resistance is a
     very powerful mechanism, because to the trauma survivor, resistance
     is safety. Change is scary. What if it doesn't work? What if it makes
     you more vulnerable? What if it hurts more than the pain you already
     feel? Beneath resistance is fear, the fear that the trauma survivor
     has lived with since the traumatic event. In Will's case, fear
     allowed him to survive, to read every nuance of his father's moods,
     so that when an attack came he could do his best to live through it.
     It is the therapist's job to help the trauma survivor understand what
     resistance is, and why it exists, and then how to approach change
     with that understanding, so the change can be less frightening and
     more doable.
Chapter Ninety-One
 
 
 
 
            McBride came in first, talking to da Costa, and then he said, “Give
me a moment, Joao.  I’d like to speak to Will and the captain.”
            “Of course, Doctor,” da Costa said, stepping back and pulling the
door.
            “What is it, Will?” McBride asked, walking up to me.  “Jean-Luc? I
have the feeling there’s been some sort of a change.”
            Jean-Luc glanced at me.  Of course I’d known he had empathic
abilities; how could he not, given his heritage?  Once, long ago, Deanna had
shown me how to construct walls, but in my current state of exhaustion and
sleep deprivation, I was probably broadcasting my every thought to the known
universe.
            “It is up to you, Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “Whatever you wish to tell
Dr McBride is completely up to you.  Would you like me to step out?”
            “No,” I said.
            “Anything you say to me is strictly confidential, as you know,”
McBride said quietly.  “If you need to tell me something that should not go to
the team, I will do as you request.”
            “I don’t care if it goes to the team or not,” I said.  “I promised
Jean-Luc I would think about it, and that I would go ahead with closing the
session.”
            I heard McBride sigh, and he looked at Jean-Luc and then at me. 
“We’re so close, Will,” he said.  “I know you’re tired, and I know you’re
suffering.  I know you feel as if the pain will never end.”  He paused, and
then he said, “And I also know that we have almost reached – medically – the
point of no return.  The repeated damage to your system, the loss of body mass,
the dehydration – we have almost come to the point where a return to health may
no longer be possible.  Almost, Will – we are not at that point yet.”
            “We should finish the session, Doctor,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Yes, of course,” McBride answered.  “You have asked for the
treatment to stop, Will?”
            “I promised Jean-Luc that I would finish the session,” I repeated.
            “And he promised you he would think about this overnight?” McBride
turned to Jean-Luc.
            “Yes,” Jean-Luc said.
            “And you will abide by what he decides?”
            “Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “It is his right.”
            “Indeed,” McBride agreed.  “I will not try to influence your
decision, Will.  I shall only give you my thoughts if you ask for them.  I
will, as your physician, agree to whatever you decide.  If you should decide to
terminate your treatment, I will recommend that Dr Crusher begin the hospice
program.  Will that be acceptable to you?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “You understand what hospice is?” McBride asked.
            “Yes,” I repeated.
            “Will has asked that I spend the morning with him,” Jean-Luc said. 
“We have had so little privacy, Doctor, since everything began.  I’d like the
team to respect his wishes in that regard.”
            “Of course.  That’s an excellent idea.”  He turned to me.  “Shall
we start, then, Will?
            I nodded, and McBride opened the door.  “We are ready now,” he
said.
            Jean-Luc bent down and said quietly, “Remember, Will, that I am
proud of you.  I always have been.”
            Da Costa came in first, followed by Beverly and surprisingly Stoch,
who hadn’t been part of the earlier session but was clearly going to be part of
this one.  Deanna was the last person to come into my room, and when she looked
at me, I could see that she already knew what I’d decided, and I could feel the
weight of her sadness pressing down on me.
            “I’m sorry, imzadi,” I said.  I felt Jean-Luc take my hand, as he’d
pushed his chair next to mine, and I looked down at the floor.
            “It’s all right, Will,” she said, and I was surprised that I could
still hear her.  “I understand.”
            When everyone was seated, almost in a circle around me, McBride
said, “Will, I placed you into a deep hypnotic trance in an effort to
circumvent the blocks that were preventing you from accessing your memories of
what happened during the summer you lost your friend Rosie.  We were
successful, in the session, in removing almost all of the blocks, and you were
able to tell us – as both Billy and William – what happened to you, and what
happened to Rosie.  When I closed out that part of the session, I gave you the
instruction that you would be able to access these memories when you needed to,
and that they would no longer be a burden for you.”  He paused.  “Do you have
any questions for me or for your team?”
            “I don’t feel as if I know what happened,” I said.  “I still don’t
remember anything.” 
            “Perhaps you don’t want to remember,” Jean-Luc said.  “You have
been afraid of remembering this your whole life, Will.  You have spent all of
your emotional energy dedicated to not remembering.”
            “I understand how frightened you must be feeling,” McBride said. 
“I promise you, Will.  There is nothing to be afraid of.”
            “So what is it that you want from me?” I asked.  “I still don’t
understand.”  Despite the fact that I’d just gotten rid of the sum total of
everything I’d had in my stomach, the nausea and the pain were back.
            “Remember the model of the parasite that we discussed,” McBride
said.  “Is your stomach hurting again?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Can you feel that your stomach pain is resistance to your therapy,
Will?” McBride asked.  “Can you remember how we said that the parasite needed
the host in order to exist?  You are about to make a great shift in your
thinking, Will, a shift that will free you from your pain.  The parasite – the
model that I use to describe your abuse – is resistant to your change, because
it will be less likely to thrive when you stop blaming yourself for all the
things your father did.”
            “My stomach pain is resistance to change?” I repeated.  I felt so
lost, so stupid.
            “Both William and Billy told us about your father’s physical abuse
of you,” McBride said.  “William told us that your father beat you with his
belt, or with whatever he happened to have in his hand, and that he hurt you
every day.  But Billy said that he punched you, that he kicked you, and that he
threw you, and choked you.  Where did he punch you, Will?  Where did he kick
you?  It couldn’t have been in your face or your arms, could it?  It had to be
a place where no one would see the bruising.”
            I could feel that I was shaking, and Jean-Luc reached over and took
my hand again.
            “Where did he punch you?” McBride repeated.
            I could feel them, the punches, to my stomach, to my kidneys, to my
chest.  I could feel myself on the floor of the cabin, in the living room, in
the kitchen…in his bedroom, curled in a ball, my hands covering my head.  I
could remember the smell of the locker room in the gym, and the look on my
teacher’s face when I told him I wouldn’t dress out; and then my father saying,
after the school had called him, “You think they care if you’re bruised,
Billy?  You think anyone cares what I do to you?” and knowing that surely, if
someone, somewhere, had ever cared, they would have stopped him.  But no one
ever did.
            “My stomach always hurt,” I said.  “It always hurt.”
            “Yes,” McBride said, “because he hurt you, every day, when he was
home.  Your stomach pain is now resistance, Will.  It’s telling you to be
careful, to protect yourself; that if you continue, you’re likely to be hurt. 
It is your body’s way of keeping you safe.  You learned to recognise the
warning signs, when your father was likely to be violent, what was likely to
set him off.  And you internalised these lessons, Will, until they became a
part of you.”  He paused.  “Think of what you’ve been like, as an adult.  You
use humour to manage your position and to deflect harm.  You are a peacemaker,
a person who, for the most part, does what he can to mitigate conflict and
avoid strife.  Your bravado hides a timidity of spirit, does it not?  And why
shouldn’t you feel timid?  You learned early that any resistance to your
father’s agenda, that any time you tried to assert your right to your own
humanity, you were hurt.  And hurt badly.”
            I’d forgotten to breathe until I saw Deanna mouth the word
“breathe” to me.  I took a breath and tried to figure out what he was telling
me.  Wasn’t my job as First one that necessitated the careful handling of
personnel?  Didn’t people respond better to a bit of humour, when being asked
to do something that was inherently difficult and dangerous?  Didn’t you want a
First who was a peacemaker, so that your ship would run smoothly?  Was I
timid?  I was afraid all the time now– but had I always been afraid?  Was I a
coward, then?
            “Will,” Deanna said, “Dr McBride is not criticising you.  The
coping skills that you learned to survive have served you well, in your
postings.  No one will deny that.  But – where you’ve been stuck, Will, in
forming adult relationships, in moving on to your own ship – you’ve reached the
point where your coping skills are no longer helping you as they once did.  To
understand why you have them – to realise how they saved your life countless
times – is important.  Once you understand and accept – the way you’ve used
your stomach pain, the way you’ve used your fear – as caution – then you can
make the changes that you need to make.  So that your damaged self doesn’t
continue to rule your life.”
            “Take a moment, Will, to figure out how you are feeling right now,”
McBride said.
            “What difference does it make,” I said, “how I feel?  I said I
would do this.  Let’s just do it, then, and get it over with.”
            “Will,” Deanna said.  “Look at me.  Part of closing the session is
examining the feelings the session has aroused in you, and understanding them,
and then dealing with them.  One of the reasons why your sleep is constantly
disturbed is because your brain is trying to handle the emotions you’ve felt in
the past, which you were unable to process then; you need to examine what you
felt, and why you felt it, and then let it go.  You are safe to do this here,
Will.  We are your friends.  There’s no one in this room who wants to hurt
you.”
            They were all looking at me, as if they were waiting for me to tell
them something important, only I didn’t know what it was; and then I realised
that in a way I was waiting for something too – I was waiting to hear Billy,
but he wasn’t there.  He was gone.  I felt as if some great abyss had just
opened up and I was teetering on the edge, about to fall in.
            “Jean-Luc,” I said, grabbing at him, “I don’t want to do this. 
There’s too many people here; I know I promised you but I can’t, I can’t –
don’t make me –“
            “He’s panicking,” Deanna said, and I heard Beverly say, “I’m seeing
another spike in his blood pressure, Doctor.”
            “What is the fear about, William?” Dr McBride asked me, and he was
using his G major tone to me again.  “What has frightened you, just now?”
            “I don’t know,” I said, but I did, I did know, because the hole had
opened up and I could see everything, I could see it all – Rosie holding my
hand at the creek, and Henry putting his hand on my shoulder, and Mrs Kalugin
crying, and Rosie asking me to help her and then Billy – Billy picked up the
hammer and he killed her – and I could feel the hole opening me up and
swallowing me inside.
***** Chapter 92 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride and the team close out the session, and Will has a
     breakthrough.
Chapter Notes
     Will has spent his entire life playing "Let's hunt the evil," and it
     has coloured every decision he has ever made. When the final
     realisation comes -- that one can really stop playing this pernicious
     game -- it is the first step on the road to a permanent recovery.
Chapter Ninety-Two
 
 
 
 
            “I don’t want him unconscious,” I heard McBride say, and I felt the
familiar pinch of the hypo spray in my neck.
            I was being held by someone much stronger than me, and when I
opened my eyes, I could see it was Stoch.  “You are in your room in sickbay,”
Stoch said.  “You have not fallen.  I am right here, Commander.  Mr da Costa
and I would not let you fall.”
            I could see da Costa was beside him, and then I saw Jean-Luc.  I
said, “You will have to arrest me, sir, for the murder of Rosie Kalugin.”
            “Oh, Will,” he said.  “Doctor, you said he would remember.”
            “And he has,” McBride said.  “He’s remembered Billy’s memories.  He
is still blocking some of William’s.”
            “But Billy acknowledged that his father had killed Rosie,” Jean-Luc
said.
            “Captain,” Deanna said, “Billy is a little boy.  He’s understood
the best that he could.”
            “Thank you, Beverly,” McBride said, ignoring both Jean-Luc and
Deanna.  “How is his blood pressure now?”
            “Holding steady at 170 over 75,” Beverly said. 
            “Good,” McBride replied.  “Will.  You have remembered most of what
happened during the days before Rosie’s death, and you’ve remembered how she
died.”
            “I remember everything,” I said.  “I killed Rosie.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, and I could hear the frustration rising in
his voice.
            “Let’s slow this down to where it needs to be,” McBride said. 
“Deanna, if you could take Will through a breathing session now, I think that
would be helpful.”
            “I don’t want a breathing session,” I said.  “You’ve given me the
hypo spray.  It’s supposed to calm me down.  Fine, I’m calm.  What more is
there to say?  My father raped and tortured my best friend, and I killed her. 
I don’t know if there’s a statute of limitations on murder for children.  The
only thing I don’t remember fully is where Rosie’s body is.  That’s what I need
help with, so we can contact the Kalugins and let them know.”
            I felt stronger than I had in a while.  It didn’t really matter,
anymore, that I was dying.  In fact, it was good that I was.  I could give the
Kalugins part of what I’d taken from them, and my death would shield Jean-Luc
from the repercussions of lying about my injury and treatment.  I’d learned
about hospice when we’d lost one of our engineers to a genetic illness that
Beverly couldn’t treat; he’d been allowed to remain with his wife, and Beverly
and Dr Selar had treated him there.  I’d gone to visit him a couple of times,
not just because I was First and it was my duty, but because I’d genuinely
liked the guy.  He’d been in a lot of pain, at the end, and yet Beverly had
arranged it so he didn’t suffer.  The pain that I was beginning to experience –
which was part of the dehydration and the anorexia – wasn’t so bad; Beverly and
Dr Sandoval were keeping it under control.  But Yash had told me that dying of
dehydration was painful, and I was okay with the idea that hospice would take
care of that.
            Jean-Luc said in a low voice, “If you will excuse me,” and I
watched in surprise as he stood up and started to walk out.
            I said, “Jean-Luc,” and tried to stand myself, but I was dizzy and
I felt my legs go out from under me.  Stoch caught me, and I sat down heavily
into Jean-Luc’s chair.
            He turned and looked at me, and his eyes were dark and full of
pain.  “Five minutes,” he said, and I couldn’t tell whether he was talking to
me or to the team.  “I just need five minutes.”  He turned and left.
            “Joao,” McBride said, “would you go with him, please?  Deanna, I’d
like you to stay here with me.”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa said, and he left, to follow Jean-Luc.
            “Will,” McBride said.  “As your physician, I would like you to take
five minutes to do a breathing exercise with Deanna – “
            “No,” I said.  “I’m done.”
            “Then we will talk a little bit more about resistance, what it is,
and why you’re experiencing it now,” he continued, as if I hadn’t said
anything, “and then – no, I will ask you not to interrupt me again – close out
the session by examining the individual memories that you experienced while you
were in the trance.  Notice, William, that I said this is what we are going to
be doing.  Your team is here.  This is the work we agreed to do. You promised
Jean-Luc that you would close out the session.  You told me you would close out
the session.”
            He was angry.  I tried to remember if I’d ever seen McBride angry
before and I couldn’t think of anything.  And it wasn’t as if he were trying
particularly hard to hide it, the way Jean-Luc usually did when he was angry. 
I was beginning to lose that feeling I’d had, the one where I felt finally as
if I were in control of something; now, I was still lightheaded, from standing
up too fast, and I was feeling as if I were fading, somehow, just drifting
away….
            “We’re losing him,” Deanna said.  “Will, place your hands on your
knees.  Relax them.  That’s an order, Commander.”
            “You can’t order me around, Deanna,” I said, but I put my hands on
my knees.
            “I certainly can under these circumstances, Will Riker,” she said. 
“Close your eyes.  Good, now take a slow, deep breath.  That’s it.  You know
how to do this, Will.  You know how to keep yourself centered and in the
present.  Breathe.  Good.”
            Deanna always could boss me around, I thought, and I let her guide
me through the breathing session simply because I could tell that it made her
feel better.  My eyes were still closed when I felt Jean-Luc take my hand, and
I heard McBride say,
            “You were the pitcher on your baseball team, Will, when your memory
in the trance started.  The baseball game was important to you in this memory,
because if we are going to look at causation, at understanding what happened,
and why, then this is where we start.  For you, the most crucial thing to take
from this is to understand how you experienced what was happening.  How you
interpreted the events around you, and why you acted the way you did.  Are you
ready to do this now?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “You told us that you didn’t feel well, and that you were in pain. 
Do you remember that?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “I hurt inside, and it hurt when I peed.  I wasn’t
sore anymore from where I’d been beaten, but I was still stiff.  I took a bath,
to try to loosen up a bit, but Rosie knew that I was hurting because I was
still stiff on the mound.”
            “What position did she play again?”
            “Catcher,” I said.  “Rosie was our catcher because she was big, and
strong.  Bigger than half the kids on our team.”
            “Was she as big as you?”
            “No,” I said.  “I was taller, but she was stocky, and I wasn’t. 
She was pretty strong, stronger than me.  She could always beat me, arm
wrestling.”
            “At the game, the other team wasn’t playing as well as yours.  You
had runners on base, and Rosie got a hit.  Then you got on base.”
            “I walked,” I said, “because Jay Jay was too scared to pitch to
me.  He knew I could hit a homerun off of him, and then Rosie and I both would
have scored.  Then I took my lead off first, ‘cause I was fast, the fastest at
running.  That’s when Carl Magnussen said that crap about Rosie.”
            “And you beat him up,” McBride said, “or perhaps Billy did.”
            I was silent.  I wondered if Rosie knew that I’d been two boys,
Billy and William – and then I wondered if I was still two.  Had the William
part of me become me, Will?  And was there still Billy, a grown up separated
part of me?  When Billy talked to me, he sounded like a little kid, the way I
had, when I was little.  But when the Billy-part of me spoke did he just sound
like Will Riker to everyone else?
            “It was Billy,” I said.  “Billy did all the fighting for me – or
for the William-part of me.”
            “And you know this now because?”
            “I liked it,” I said, and I knew it was true.  I – the Billy-me –
liked a good fight.  I liked getting my hands dirty.  I enjoyed the simulated
battles and training of the holodeck, but not as much as I enjoyed feeling
someone’s nose crunch under my fist.  “I pounded him into the ground, and
rubbed his face in the dirt.  At judo practise Sammy told me I’d broken Carl’s
tooth, and that made me happy.”
            “And you beat Carl up because?”
            “He was talking crap about Rosie, and Rosie was my friend,” I
said. 
            “Rosie couldn’t have defended herself?”
            “She was on second base,” I said.  “She didn’t hear what Carl
said.  I did.”
            “So you broke the rules to defend your friend,” McBride said.  “And
you hurt another child.  Would you have continued to hurt him, if they hadn’t
pulled the two of you apart?”
            “I don’t know,” I said.  “He was still trying to punch me.  I don’t
know.”
            “What happened after they pulled you apart?”
            “I got sent home,” I said, “and I knew I was in trouble.”  I could
feel a sense of bewilderment rising in me, as if I were there, listening to
Coach Mike tell me I was out of the game.
            “Tell me what you are feeling,” McBride said.
            “I didn’t understand,” I said.  “Billy was gone and then it was me,
and I didn’t understand what had happened.  I thought – I knew – I’d get
benched, but I didn’t know I’d be sent home.  And then – then I realised that I
was in so much trouble, and that I’d get punished again, and I – I didn’t want
to hurt anymore.”
            “Can you name the feeling?”
            “Bewilderment, maybe?” I said.  “And then I felt the way I do, like
I was floating away…I could hear Coach Mike and Mr Sutherland talking to me,
but I wasn’t in myself anymore.”
            “Good,” McBride said.  “Let’s take a moment to examine this.  It’s
important, Will, that you understand each step of the way what happened, why it
happened, why you reacted the way you did.”
            I didn’t say anything, because I was still caught up in feeling out
of myself, as if I were no longer me. 
            “He’s dissociating still,” Deanna said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered, “yet I think he will find that Billy is
not there.”
            He wasn’t.  I kept expecting him to say something but he was
silent. 
            “Where has he gone?” I asked.
            “You used the Billy-part of you,” McBride said, “to keep you safe. 
Billy absorbed the beatings, the rapes, the torture.  Billy took over your
feelings of rage, and hatred, and betrayal, and impotence.  And I think you’ve
continued to use the Billy-part of you, in your career, whenever you felt
similar feelings to those you experienced in childhood.  I’m sure that your
crew could attest to that.”
            “Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “I think the bridge crew has experienced the
duality of Mr Riker’s nature.  It’s been remarked upon, from time to time.”
            “It has?” I asked. 
            Deanna said, “Let’s not get distracted, Will.  You have absorbed
the memories that Billy held, so you don’t need his persona anymore.  You know
what happened.  You can’t understand the motivation of your father – and even
if we were to ask him why he did the things he did, he would not be able to
give you a satisfactory answer, because there is none.  Your father did what he
did because he could.  However, you still need to understand why you reacted
the way you did.  You need to understand Billy’s memories, and Billy’s pain. 
That’s why it’s so important to close out this session.”
            “I don’t understand any of this,” I said.  “I’m too tired to
understand anything.”
            “Do you remember when we talked you through the memory of when
Billy was created?” McBride asked.  “Remember, you’d had the flashback over the
grilled cheese sandwich, to the first time your father raped you, when you were
five.  Do you remember that?”
            I thought for a moment, because it had seemed so long ago.  Was it
only last week?  “Yeah,” I said.  “That was when I went into the coat closet.”
            “That’s right,” McBride said, and once again he was using his G
major tone.  “William – the part of you that you called William – went into the
coat closet to hide, because he simply couldn’t tolerate the pain and the
betrayal of what was being done.  He left behind the boy your father called
Billy, to take on the pain and the rage.  It’s called dissociation, and it has
been one of your chief tools of survival.  Even now, you still use dissociation
to reach the Billy-part of you, to do things William wouldn’t or couldn’t do.”
            “The things I can’t remember doing,” I said.  It was if everything
were suddenly clear.  The time I’d been accused of forcing myself on Dr Apgar’s
wife.  My surprise when Jean-Luc had told me that he’d thought I shouldn’t have
killed Jutta.  The fight I’d gotten into at the Academy, when I’d almost been
expelled.
            “You were a little boy,” Deanna said, “and yet you were forced to
be in situations and to make decisions that would damage most adults.  You did
the best you could with what you had, Will.”
            “And yet that’s no excuse,” I said.  “I doubt very much that Worf
killed anyone as a child, and yet his early experiences – seeing his parents
massacred – have been troubling.”
            “Oh, Will,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Let’s get back to what we did, when I talked you through that
memory,” McBride said.  “You were viewing it, as if it were on a viewscreen, do
you remember?  And then I told you to take the disc out and to file it away, to
visualise a cabinet where you could put this disc and this memory, and lock it
up, so that it would no longer interfere with your life.  Do you remember
that?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “Do you have the flashback or the nightmare to your aunt’s coat
closet now?  Have you had it recently?”
            Again I was surprised.  “No,” I said.
            “Do you understand why you haven’t had it?”
            “I guess I do,” I said.  And then I said, more sure now, “Yes, I
understand.”
            “We are going to do the same work here, Will, with your memories of
what happened to Rosie,” McBride said.  “I am going to help you understand
them.  Then we will put them away, in that cabinet, and you will lock them up. 
They will no longer intrude on your life.  That’s why closure to this session
is so very important.  These memories are killing you, Will.  You’ve decided
that you have committed crimes for which you deserve to die.  You decided this,
Will.  No one else has.  And so, when your first attempts at suicide failed –
the injuries on the holodeck, the slicing of your arms – you chose to passively
kill yourself, by simply refusing to eat or drink.  It’s slow, and it’s
painful, but it’s particularly effective in patients who suffer your form of
this illness.  Then we have your aboriginal background, Will – that this form
of suicide is culturally acceptable – and we have a man who has sentenced
himself to death for things he did not do.”
            It was too hard to do this, too hard to follow what he was saying
to me, when all I wanted to do was to lie down on the bed and hope that Jean-
Luc wasn’t too mad at me to hold me in his arms.  I knew what dissociation was
– of course I did – I even knew that I could recognise it and attach the word
to the cottony feeling I felt just before a flashback was coming.  But this was
too hard, too hard to understand, and I was so tired.  I didn’t even know how I
could say what I wanted to say, how I could say that I wanted it to stop any
clearer or any louder than I already had. 
            “I think,” Beverly said, “that my patient has had enough.”
            “Please,” Jean-Luc said, and I’d never heard him say that word
before in that tone of voice.  I’d never heard him desperate before, not even
when he was Locutus, not even when he was recovering from what those bastard
Cardassians had done to him.  “Beverly.  Please.”
            “We will take a break in ten minutes, Beverly,” McBride said, “and
we can give Will his medication, since it’s time for that, and a nutritional
supplement, which I’m sure is what he needs.  But he also needs to end this
session – and I don’t believe that we can wait until the morning.”
            “You said I didn’t have to do anything in the morning,” and I felt
like a stupid little kid again.
            “I know, Will,” he replied.  “You can be with Jean-Luc in the
morning, I promise.”
            I looked at Jean-Luc.  His face was drawn, and grey, and he looked
so very old – and he was thirty years older than me, and surely he was just as
exhausted as I was.  And I could still feel the weight of Deanna’s sadness
pressing down on me, and there was Beverly, with her face masquing her fear –
and Stoch, who still was resting his hand on my shoulder; and da Costa – and
when had he taken Deanna’s hand?
            “Tell me what I need to do,” I said to McBride, and I almost felt
as if I had some control again.  “Just tell me, and I’ll do it.”
            “You said you didn’t understand, when your coach told you that you
had to go home,” McBride said.  “Why do you think that is?  You knew there was
a rule against fighting in a game, didn’t you?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “We all knew that.  You would get benched.”
            “Benched or thrown out?”
            “I guess I thought it was the same thing,” I said.  “That you had
to sit out the rest of the game.  I didn’t know that it meant that the umpire
would send me home.”
            “Can you see how that was easy for you to misunderstand?  That when
you are a child, even if you know what the consequence to something is, it’s
hard for you to understand the reality of that consequence?  That as a child
you don’t possess the ability to rationalise, or to analyse, or to critically
think?  That at eight years old you were too young to possess those faculties,
regardless of how intellectually gifted you were?”
            I could feel my sense of disbelief, and then I remembered feeling
as if I would cry, because I didn’t want to be sent home – because of what I
would be sent home to.
            “Don’t you think, Will, if you had understood what the penalty for
fighting Carl was, that you wouldn’t have done it?  Because your home was the
last place you wanted to be sent to?  Because you knew what would happen to you
when your father found out?”
            “Yes,” I said.
            “You made a mistake,” McBride said.  “You did something you
shouldn’t have done.  And for you – not for Carl, your partner in this – the
consequences were terrifying, weren’t they?  Your father would find out.  And
he would beat you.  Or worse.  And you’d only just started to recover from the
last beating – and you were hurting inside.  So what did you do, when you’d
realised this was the real consequence for fighting Carl?  Whose fault was it,
Will, that you’d had to fight Carl?”
            “Rosie’s,” I said, and I was weeping again.  “I blamed Rosie.  At
judo practise I said ‘I hate you, Rosie!’ and I told her to go away.  Because
I’d jumped Carl because of what he said about her.  And so I got sent home –
and I took the path in the woods, because I had to feed Bet on the way home,
and Bet was at Rosie’s house, and that’s where I found Mittens, and then he
made me choose….he made me choose between Rosie and Mittens….”
            “Let’s not get too far ahead of ourselves here, Will.  You were
angry with Rosie.  It didn’t make any sense, to be angry with Rosie – it wasn’t
her fault Carl was not nice – but when we’re little, we often displace our
anger onto other things.  You were preparing yourself for what lay ahead –
another beating – and so you displaced your anger at yourself onto Rosie, the
one person you were trying to protect.  And you know, Will, that was a
perfectly normal thing for you to do.”
            “What do you mean?”
            “You’re looking at this through what you already know happened,”
McBride said.  “You know what the outcome to all of this was.  But look at it
from where you were right then, when you were sent home.  Everything you’d done
was perfectly normal for an eight-year-old boy.  You had a friend, your best
friend.  Another kid said some mean and stupid things about your friend.  You
got into a fight over it.  You were told to leave the game, which made you
angry and upset, and so you blamed your friend.  That’s all very typical eight-
year-old behaviour, Will.  Nothing out of the ordinary in any of it.”
            I looked at him and saw that he was telling me the truth.  Was it
possible for me to have been an ordinary kid?  To have acted like a kid, like
any kid would have done?  I didn’t know.
            “What are you feeling right now, Will?”
            I looked at Deanna.  “I don’t know,” I said.  “It’s hard to
explain….”
            “Try.”
            “I was feeling like I did then,” I said.  “Confused.  Scared.”
            “And now?”
            “I’m trying to believe you,” I said.
            “You told us you felt bewildered.  You felt confused and scared. 
You were angry, angry at Carl, and angry with Rosie,” McBride said.  “Can you
see yourself at the ball park, feeling all of these feelings, so many feelings
for such a small boy?”
            I could see Coach Mike, how he kept looking at Mr Sutherland and
then at me.  I could see Carl, smirking, even though his eye was blacked and
there was blood all over his mouth.  I could see Rosie and my teammates,
standing around.  I heard Mr Sutherland tell me to apologise to Carl.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “I want you to take this memory, and those feelings that you felt
then, and I want you to put them on a disc.  Can you do that?”
            “Yes,” I said.  I could do that.  I’d done it before.
            “Can you see where your file cabinet is?”
            “Yes.”  There was a large room, painted white.  The cabinet was
standing in a corner.
            “Walk over to it.  Do you see where you left the key?”
            “On top,” I said.  “I left the key on top.”
            “Open the drawer and place the disc inside, where you’ve put the
other memories.”
            “Okay.”
            “Close the drawer and lock it,” McBride said.  “Put your key back
where you had it.  Have you done this, Will?”
            “Yeah.” I placed the key back on top.
            “This memory, and these feelings, will no longer intrude on your
life,” McBride said.  “You do not have to work through this memory anymore. 
You’ve done the work that you needed to do, and it’s over.  Look at the file
cabinet and tell me what you see.”
            “I just see a file cabinet,” I said, “with a key on top of it.”
            “And that’s all it is,” McBride confirmed.  “Just a file cabinet,
where you’ve put things you don’t need anymore.”  He paused, and asked, “How is
his blood pressure now, Beverly?”
            “Still holding steady,” Beverly answered.
            “Good.  Let’s go ahead and take that small break now, so that you
can have something to drink.  Is that all right with you, Will?”
            I was seeing the path to the woods.
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, “we’re going to take a small break now.”
            “I just want to get this over with and go to bed,” I said.
            “I know.  I think that’s what we all want.  Come, let me take you
to the head.”
            “No,” I said, “I don’t need to.”
            “Let’s just stretch your legs a bit, then,” he suggested.
            “No,” I repeated.  “Doctor – “
            “Yes, Will?”  He’d been talking to Deanna and he turned to face me.
            “I have your drink, Commander,” da Costa said, coming towards me.
            “Stop,” I ordered, and da Costa froze.  In fact, I must have used
my command voice (and how long had it been since I’d done that?) because
everyone froze, even Jean-Luc.
            “What is it, Will?” Dr McBride was beside me, his hand on my
shoulder.
            “I’m – I’m trying to figure this out,” I said slowly, and then I
could feel my frustration start to build.  “I’m so tired – it shouldn’t be this
hard –“
            “You are in a very weakened state,” McBride said.  “Your body has
begun to devour itself, and you are shutting down.  That’s why it’s hard,
Will.  It’s why we’ve had to move so slowly, and why you need a break now.”
            I rubbed my head and came away with a handful of hair.  “I’m losing
my hair,” I said, distracted.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.
            “You – you said I had to remember what I felt, and I had to look at
the choices I’d made.”  I was determined to work it through.  “That I had to
understand what I did and why I did it.”
            “Yes.”
            “Then I could put the memory away, and it wouldn’t intrude in my
life anymore,” I said.  “I could control it, instead of it controlling me.”
            “Yes.”
            “You said that the decisions I made at the ball park were normal,
for someone my age,” I said.  “Explain that to me again.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc began, “you need to drink the supplement – “
            “I need to figure this out!” I snapped.  “Please.  Explain it to me
again.”
            “It’s all right, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “Let him do this.”  He
made eye contact with me.  “When the human infant is born, Will, the brain and
the neurological system are still developing, and keep developing for another
nine months or so.  Then the human brain begins to grow, to develop neural
pathways for everything it needs – language, education, emotion, memory.  Your
brain does not stop growing until around the age of twenty-five.  Every time
the brain is damaged in some way, whether through physical damage, such as a
concussion or a skull fracture, or neurochemical damage, due to trauma, the
brain compensates for the injury and creates different neural pathways.  A
normal eight-year- old child can only be expected to understand so much,
because their growing brain is limited – physically and neurochemically limited
– by its own rate of growth.  You can’t expect an eight-year-old to understand
the concepts that a sixteen-year-old does.  You can’t expect a sixteen-year-old
to understand the concepts that a twenty-year-old does and so forth.  Eight-
year-olds cannot be expected to analyse, or synthesise, or do higher-level
thinking.  They are limited by the extent of the growth of their brains.”
            “So you could tell a child not to do something,” I said.  “You
could tell him, and he thinks he understands.  But sometimes he doesn’t
understand the consequences – or the – the motivation of other people – or the
subtext of what is happening.”
            “There is no subtext for an eight-year-old, Will,” McBride said. 
“It just doesn’t exist.”
            I was silent.  It was right there in front of me – I could feel it
was.  If I could get the fog to clear long enough I was sure that I could
understand it.  If I understood it, I could apply it….
            “I’m so tired,” I said.
            “I know,” McBride said quietly.
            “You’re asking too much of me,” I said.
            “I am,” he agreed, “asking a great deal of you, Will.  You simply
don’t have the time for me to slow this down.  You were already so badly
damaged by the time I was called in.”
            “I’m trying to figure this out,” I said.
            For some reason I hadn’t noticed that Jean-Luc was beside me, and
he wrapped me in his arms.  “You are my brave boy,” he said.  “I know you can
do this, Will.  I know you can.”
            “Please,” I said.  “I need to think it through.”
            He let me go, but remained beside me.
            “I took the path in the woods home because – because I was
embarrassed,” I said.  “And I was mad – angry.  I was supposed to be the leader
of the team, and I’d let everyone down.  I didn’t want anyone to see me.”
            “That makes sense,” McBride said.  “Your pride was hurt.”
            “But I had to go by Rosie’s house so I could feed my dog,” I
continued.  “The only way to do that was to take the path in the woods.  Nobody
would bother me and I would walk right by the Kalugins’.”  I stopped, because I
was seeing the path again.  “But my stomach hurt – or maybe it was my stomach
and where I was hurting inside – so much.  And I was angry and I was scared,
because I was pretty sure that my father wasn’t going to be back until the next
day, but he didn’t always do what he said he would.  You could never predict –
I could never predict – what he was going to do.”
            “So what happened, Will?” McBride asked.
            “I threw up,” I said.  “I remember I threw up, and I was using the
ferns to try to clean myself up when I heard Mittens crying.  At first I
couldn’t see him, but then he was on the path, and he was so cute…”  I took a
breath, because I didn’t have time to cry.  “And I thought I had to take him
home, because I knew he would get eaten in the woods.  In fact, I wasn’t even
supposed to be in the woods by myself without a dog.  It was dangerous.  So I
made the decision to bring him home and I tried to hide him in my room.”  I
stopped.  “I couldn’t see any other choices.  There weren’t any other choices. 
It didn’t even occur to me to ask Mrs Kalugin for help.”
            “Why didn’t you see any other choices, Will?”
            “Because I was a kid,” I said.  “Because I didn’t have the ability
to analyse for multiple choices the way I do now.  Because I could barely
function anyway, because I was hurt, and sick, and always so scared.  Because I
was always being manipulated, and lied to, and tricked into believing whatever
he wanted me to believe.”
            “And what do you now know, Will, about the decisions you made? 
About the choices you made when you were a frightened eight-year-old boy?”
McBride asked.
            “That I did the best that I could do,” I said, and then I was
crying again.  “That I made the only choices I could have made, because I was a
child.  That I’ve spent my whole life hating myself and wishing that I could
just die and it wasn’t my fault.  It wasn’t my fault.”
            “No,” McBride said, “it wasn’t your fault at all.”
            “It wasn’t my fault that Mittens died,” I said.  “I was only trying
to protect him.”
            “That’s right.”
            It was right in front of me.  I said, “It wasn’t my fault that he
killed Rosie.  He’d asked me to choose, and I thought – I thought I was
protecting her by choosing her.”
            “Yes,” McBride said, and I heard Jean-Luc say, “Dieu merci.”
            Then I said, and I could feel all of the pain, and all the torment,
and all of the fear, rising up out of me just like the food I was always
throwing up.  “He was going to kill her anyway,” I said.  “It didn’t matter
what I thought or did.  He planned to kill her.  I was the target, and she was
just collateral damage.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, pulling me in to him, “oh, Will.”
            “I’m not there yet,” I said to McBride.  “I’m not – not at the
place where I can put this in the cabinet.”
            “No,” McBride said, “not yet.  There’s still work to do.”
            “But I will be able to, at some point?” I asked.  “I’ll be able to
put it on a disc and lock it away?”
            “Yes.  The goal of your treatment is to place your memories in the
past, where they belong.”
            “And you’ll help me remember where she is?  So I can tell them? 
You’ll help me tell them?” 
            “Of course we will,” McBride said.  “That’s why you have your
team.  We will be right beside you, every step of the way, just as we have
been.”
            “I think,” I said, wiping my face with my sleeve, “that I will take
the drink and my medication now, Mr da Costa.”  I looked at da Costa.  “And
you’d better not tell me no.”
            “I wouldn’t dream of it, sir,” da Costa said.
***** Chapter 93 *****
Chapter Summary
     Lieutenant Renan Balum reports in to his cousin, Admiral Thomas
     Valentine Laidlaw.
Chapter Notes
     The genealogy of the Balum/McBride/Laidlaw family is quite
     complicated; Alasdair McBride's grandfather married Morwenna Lal,
     ruler of the Sixth House of Betazed. Thus the current ruler of the
     Sixth House is Morwenna Lal's sister, Elanna -- the great-aunt of
     Alasdair McBride, Thomas Laidlaw, and Renan Balum.
Chapter Ninety-Three
 
 
 
            The capital city was huge, with well over six million residents at
any given time, and the café that had been suggested was one that was on the
first floor of a non-descript office building which housed several hundred
civil service types from all the communities of the Federation.  It was on the
wrong side of the street and so never saw the sun; just a small café where one
could get the type of meal that most cultures would consider only vaguely
nutritious and a dishwater-tasting drink, regardless of the culture of origin.
            The café opened at six and was filled with office workers
throughout the morning, until around ten or so, when most had either gone to
work or their tea-breaks were over.  He’d dressed the part, as a generic
Betazoid policy wonk, and was seated in the back of the café by the kitchen
doors, nursing a cup of tepid tea and picking at the crumbs of what was
supposed to have been a scone.
            The Jarillian server came over to his booth again, this time, he
realised, simply because she was bored.
            “C’n I get you anything else?” she asked, her violet eyes searching
him, for what he didn’t know.
            “My friend should be here soon,” he answered, giving her a small
smile so she’d be satisfied and drift away.
            The boss was a Tellarite, and he heard him call, “Tola.  These
dishes ain’t gonna do theyselves.”
            “Kay,” she said, and she smiled at him.  “Be back when he comes,”
she offered.
            “Sure,” he said, because he knew Jarillians lived to please, and it
cost him nothing to be nice to her.  Still, it was hard not to tap his fork
against the cheap replicated plate in the anxiety of waiting for Val to show
up.
            She vanished into the kitchen, and he heard the banging of pots and
pans and the irritable undercurrent of her boss as they fussed at each other. 
He took another sip of the tea and resisted the urge to do anything else, as if
any movement on his part at all would attract the unwanted attention of the
monster he knew was lurking out there, somewhere.
            He knew it was Val before the figure entered the doorway of the
café; tall and thin, Admiral Thomas Laidlaw looked more Betazoid than he did
human, with his long slender limbs and his dark hair and dark eyes.  He was
wearing clothes more appropriate for a day at the office instead of his
admiral’s uniform, and, as he slid into the booth, they could have been any of
the office workers from the building, having a late tea break.
            “Val,” Balum said quietly.
            “Hello, Renan,” Laidlaw replied, smiling.  “Will you be able to see
the family over the holiday?”
            Balum shrugged. “I have yet to check in with García, so I don’t
know.”
            “I see,” Laidlaw said.  “Is that wise?”
            “Nothing is wise,” Balum said, bitterly.
            The Jarillian girl came out, her plain face smiling, her only
striking feature her starburst-flecked violet eyes.  Balum thought about the
Jarillian boy and hoped that he was dead, although he didn’t feel as if he
believed in the concept of a merciful universe anymore.  Then he thought that
he was being stupid and childish, and his bitterness increased.
            “Can you make us a new pot of tea, please?” Laidlaw asked, smiling
benignly at the girl, who pinked in response.  “I don’t suppose you have a
jasmine or a green tea?  And a plate of biscuits.  Breakfast was such a long
time ago.”
            “I can make you a fresh pot of jasmine tea,” the Jarillian girl
said.  “Anything else?”
            “No, that’s fine for now,” Laidlaw replied.  He waited until she
disappeared and then he said, “What happened to your neck?”
            “He happened to my neck,” Balum said.  Finally, he could feel
anger.  Yes.  Anger was good.  So much better than the shock and bitterness and
betrayal that he had been feeling.
            Laidlaw was silent.  The girl brought out their tea, complete with
a pot and new cups this time, along with a plate of ginger biscuits and some
napkins, a far different service than Balum had received when he was just a
young nobody in a suit waiting for his friend.  Even when Val wasn’t in
uniform, he still radiated that aristocratic Betazoid gravitas which commanded
respect.
            “Is everything good with you now?” the girl asked.
            “Of course it is,” Laidlaw said.  “Thank you, my dear.”
            Once again they waited until the waitress returned to the back, and
they could hear the irritable undercurrent of conversation from her irascible
Tellarite boss.
            “Tell me,” Laidlaw said, and it was the Admiral who was asking, not
Balum’s older cousin Val.
            “I followed Kyle Riker into the park across from the terminal in
Nuvia as instructed,” Balum said in a low voice.  He poured the tea into his
cup and took a sip, and then he cursed when he burned his tongue.  This time
the waitress had brought them glasses of water too, and he took a sip.
            “Whose instructions?”
            “Rossa’s, through Corey Zweller,” Balum said.
            “Which Rossa?” Laidlaw inhaled his tea, then took a sip.  Of
course, Balum thought, he wouldn’t burn his mouth.
            “Jeremy,” he answered.  “Connaught Rossa is not involved in this
particular mission.”
            “Which is again?”
            “Gathering the information from Riker that he brings back from the
Gamma Quadrant,” Balum answered.  “Reacting to the requests for information
from Sandy and from you.  Dealing with the requests for information from
Picard.  The illness of the younger Riker.”
            “You followed Captain Riker,” Laidlaw repeated.
            “Yes,” Balum said.  Unconsciously he touched his neck.  “Riker was
on a bench and I sat next to him.  He – “ Balum felt the hairs rise on his
arms.  “I cannot describe to you what it is like to speak to him.”
            Laidlaw sighed and drank his tea.  “You have always been the most
difficult of all our grandmother’s children,” he said.  “When we sent you to
Starfleet we hoped that you would find some balance there.  But you are still
the same little boy who thought he could defeat the Jenaran Falls.”
            Balum felt the sting of his cousin’s unjustified criticism.  He
said, “You simply do not understand.  Kyle Riker is a monster.  While I was on
Risa he murdered – brutally murdered – three people.  And he laughed about it. 
He did this to me –“  Balum pointed to his neck “—as he was smiling and he
wasn’t even trying, Val.  He didn’t care one way or the other whether he killed
me.”
            “You have been dealing with evil since you left the Academy,”
Laidlaw pointed out.  “You’ve played the game – our game – and you’ve enjoyed
it, the same way you enjoyed climbing Jenaran Falls.  Now you’ve fallen and
you’ve hurt yourself.  Really, Renan – just what did you expect?”
            “You asked me to tell you what happened.”  Balum finished his tea.
            “Yes.”
            “He murdered the agent Behlar, the one who rented him his cottage,”
Balum said, “and who pimped him children, including the boy that he had at the
cottage while I was there.  He disemboweled him and then told me he was a
“student of history.”  I gave him the information from Rossa about his son, and
about Sandy, and said that there was a powerful person looking into him, but
that Rossa didn’t know who it was yet.  It was like fencing – when you don’t
have any protection or an epée.  He didn’t care that Rossa wanted him to stop
using children, or that Rossa wanted him to be careful.  And he tried to kill
me when I accidentally called him “captain.”  He knows my name.”
            “Is there anything else?” Laidlaw asked, as he poured himself
another half a cup.
            Balum crumbled one of the biscuits.  “I met Zweller, after.  He’d
sent an operative to take Riker out, the shuttle pilot, who was one of our
guys.  He was the one who told me that Riker had a boy with him….When we
reached the shuttle terminal, we learned that Riker’s shuttle had exploded over
the jungle on its way back from delivering Riker.  Zweller sent me here, and he
took a shuttle to Riker.”
            “They have tolerated Riker all these years,” Laidlaw said.  “They
covered up his abuse of his son, and all his other abuses.  His record goes
back all the way to when he was a child himself.  He was twelve when he killed
his fifteen-year-old brother, although he was never officially blamed.  They
sought him out as someone they thought they could use.  I think, however, that
in the end, he has been using them.”
            “He knows my name,” Balum said.
            “Of course he does.  You are supposed to be on the same team.”
            “He doesn’t have a team.  He has only what he wants, when he wants
it.”
            Laidlaw sighed.  “Is he still going to San Francisco to report in
to Rossa?”
            Balum was silent.  He’d crumbled another biscuit.
            “Lieutenant Balum,” Laidlaw said.  It was the Admiral speaking.  “I
would like your full report.”
            “To the Federation or to the Council?” Balum asked.
            “To both.”
            “He has something planned,” Balum said.  “And because he is
completely unpredictable, I would wager that he has never had any intention at
all of going to San Francisco.  He will deal with Captain Picard and his son. 
He will find you.  He will end any threat against himself, and he cares very
little for anyone of any importance.  He has no respect at all for either
Admiral Rossa or Commander Zweller.  He has nothing but disgust for Captain
Picard.  And he would like nothing better than to destroy his son.”
            “The Enterprise is on Alpha Station Lya,” Thomas Valentine Laidlaw
said.
            “Exactly.  And Kyle Riker is an excellent pilot.”
            “You don’t think Cortan Zweller can control him?” Laidlaw asked,
wiping his mouth.
            “I think,” Balum answered, “that our team lost control of Captain
Riker a very long time ago.”
            Admiral Laidlaw stood, and placed a chit on the table.  “Have them
send the bill to your sister’s office,” he said.  “Wait ten minutes, and then
leave.”
            Balum nodded.  As Laidlaw turned to leave the café, he said
quietly, “Val.”
            Laidlaw turned back.  “Yes?”
            “I want out,” Balum said.  “Tell our aunt that I want to come
home.”  Laidlaw said nothing, and Balum said desperately, feeling as if he were
five years old again, “Please.  I’m terrified, Val.  He’s coming for me.  I can
feel it.”  He didn’t want to – he hadn’t wept since he’d gone over the Falls –
but his eyes filled anyway.  “Help me.”
            “I will see what I can do, Lieutenant,” Laidlaw said, and he walked
away.
            Balum sat at the table for another ten minutes, leaving the chit on
the table for the Jarillian girl.  He picked up the napkin and wiped his eyes. 
He stood up slowly and walked out of the café.  He would not be late for his
meeting with Admiral García.
***** Chapter 94 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard and Will finally get a chance to spend a moment alone, and
     Will makes his decision.
Chapter Notes
     In First Contact, Will Riker sustained serious damage to his "renal
     organs." I've simply carried this thought through, from the repeated
     kidney infections that often plague children who are sexually abused,
     to the very real and serious results of constant dehydration; in a
     healthy individual, not urinating for six or so hours, while not
     optimal, is also quite common and not dangerous. In a patient in
     Will's condition, and with his history, it is completely different.
Chapter Ninety-Four
 
 
 
            In the flurry of activity to get Will his nutritional supplement,
and check his vitals yet again, and give him his medication, even Picard felt
overwhelmed.  He could tell, by the way Will was beginning to slump in his
chair, that Will had gone beyond over stimulation and was simply ready to drop
where he was.  Standing out of the way, he considered who his best ally was,
and decided almost immediately that it was Beverly; exhausted as she was, she
still was not willing to turn Will over to Iñaki Sandoval and go to bed.
            She was staring at the tricorder readings, and he said, touching
her arm, “What is it?”
            “Where would you like me to start?” she answered irritably, and
then she sighed.  “This has been so far beyond what I would call medicine –“ 
She hesitated, watching da Costa coax Will into taking small sips of the
drink.  “He needs to be in the biobed.  His kidneys are shutting down.  There’s
fluid building up, around his lungs.  He’ll be in congestive heart failure by
the morning if we don’t turn this around.”
            “And if he doesn’t want extreme measures taken?” Picard asked.
            Beverly looked up at him.  “Define extreme measures,” she said
carefully.
            Picard sighed.  “He’s asked me to stop his treatment,” he said.
            “When did he ask for this?”
            “Before we closed out the session,” Picard answered.  “When I was
alone with him.”
            “You think he’ll refuse to go into the biobed?”
            “He wants to spend time with me, Beverly,” Picard said, slowly. 
“He asked me to stay with him in the morning, instead of going to my
meetings.”  He paused, and then he said, “I told him I would.  Stay with him.” 
He looked at the floor momentarily, and then met Beverly’s eyes.  “He has it in
his head that he is saying goodbye.”
            “Well, he’s right,” Beverly said angrily.  “It’s been hours since
he urinated.  He’s dehydrated.  He could well be into sepsis by the morning.”
            Picard’s eyes were on Will, who was being helped into his bed by
Stoch and da Costa.
            “Jean-Luc,” Beverly said.
            “Yes.”
            “What did you tell him?”
            “I told him what I would tell any member of my crew,” Picard
answered.  “What I told Worf.  It is his right to determine his own time of
death.”  Picard would not allow himself the privilege of choking up, not here,
not when Will was so attuned to him.  “I asked him to close out the session and
to consider it overnight.”
            “McBride knows?”
            “Yes.  He mentioned hospice.”
            Beverly turned away.  “I can save him, Jean-Luc,” she said.  “He
does not have to die.”
            “And if it’s what he wants?” Picard watched Lt Fisk give Will his
medication, and then McBride gave him the hypo spray.
            “How can that be any guideline?” Beverly demanded in a low voice. 
“It’s what he’s wanted since he fell off that damned mountain in the holodeck.”
            Picard was silent, waiting until McBride walked over to them.
            “Have his kidneys shut down?” McBride asked.
            “I could put in a catheter,” Beverly said, “or he could go into the
biobed.”
            “Beverly,” Picard said. “He will not tolerate a catheter.”
            “Can we reassess him in the morning?” McBride asked, glancing at
Picard.  “How many hours has it been since he urinated?”
            Beverly glanced at the tricorder.  “Almost six,” she said.
            “He could easily go twelve and the situation would still be
salvageable,” McBride said.
            “You are playing with his life,” Beverly replied.
            “No, Beverly,” McBride said softly.  “I am trying – as I have been
throughout his treatment today – to balance his psychological needs with his
physical ones.  They have been at cross purposes, I know – and I know you and
Jean-Luc perhaps have felt that I have been at cross purposes.  But Will’s
psychological needs are determining his physical ones.”
            “He’s still committing suicide,” Picard said.
            “It’s as if there were a genetic trigger,” McBride said.  “With his
background – it’s as if his psychological need to condemn himself to death for
his crimes turned on a genetic switch, which has begun to shut his body down. 
I was hoping –“  McBride stopped and rubbed his eyes.  “I was hoping that if he
could make the breakthrough – if he could finally see the connection – that it
might turn off that switch.”
            Beverly was quiet.  Then she said, “And are you saying you think he
has?  Turned off the switch?”
            McBride glanced at Will.  “I can’t say for sure,” he answered. 
“The shift in his thinking occurred.  He took control of the situation and did
what he needed to do.  But the last time he made a major shift in his thinking
his resistance to change was so strong that he became actively suicidal again.”
            “Doctor Crusher,” Lt Fisk said.  “I’m sorry to interrupt, but Mr
Stoch wanted me to tell you that Commander Riker is in pain.”
            “Beverly,” Picard said.  “Can you talk to him?  Can you give him a
choice?”
            “There are no choices,” Beverly said.  “No good ones, anyway.  What
do you think, Sandy?”
            “The best psychological choice would be to allow him to be with
Jean-Luc,” McBride said, “as he’s requested.  It’s counter-intuitive, I know –
but my gut tells me to trust Will, here.”  He shrugged.  “I know – trust the
man who’s killing himself.  But I think – if he’s given the opportunity to have
all of us out of his way, if he’s given the opportunity to rest, and to be
comforted – “
            Beverly said, “What level of pain does Mr Stoch think he’s at?”
            “He usually asks for something when it’s between five and six,” Lt
Fisk answered.  “Stoch thinks it’s closer to seven, now.”
            “Where is his pain?  Never mind, I’ll ask him.” Beverly left with
Lt Fisk.
            “What do you want, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.
            “I want the room cleared,” Picard said, “so that we can go to bed. 
If I think he’s in danger, I will call for help.  He’s exhausted – I’m
exhausted.  Hell, we’re all exhausted.  A little bit of sleep would shed some
clarity on this situation.”
            McBride nodded, and Picard waited for Beverly to return.
            “I’ve told Yash to give him another dose of the pain medication,”
she said.  “He’s experiencing some renal pain.  His chest hurts.  He’s asking
for you, Jean-Luc.”
            “Will you give us tonight?” Picard asked.  “I will call for
Sandoval, if I’m concerned.”
            “Everything I’ve ever learned in medical school,” Beverly said, “is
telling me that this is crazy.  That I’m unnecessarily endangering my patient’s
life.”
            Picard waited.
            “But you were right about the hypnotherapy,” she continued, “and he
has finally understood – to the best of his current cognitive abilities – what
happened and why.  I’m going to send Yash in on the hour to check his vitals –
we can do this without disturbing either one of you –“
            “Thank you,” Picard said simply. 
            Beverly met his eyes.  “You’ll only thank me, Jean-Luc,” she said,
“if this works.”
            He watched her walk away.  He didn’t contradict her, because he
knew – oh, how he knew, remembering Jack – that she was absolutely right.  He
was surprised, then, because for a few seconds his mind was elsewhere, when
McBride placed both hands on his shoulders.
            “Jean-Luc,” he said, and Picard had seen that expressive face in so
many guises but never in this one, as if he were the face of one of El Greco’s
martyrs, “The only constant in this universe is love.  You have demonstrated to
Will repeatedly the strength of your love for him.  Perhaps it is time to allow
him that same opportunity.”
            Picard nodded, and McBride dropped his hands away.  He turned to da
Costa and said, “We need to find Deanna.”
            Stoch was busily setting their room to rights, and Picard walked
over to Will, who was propped up in the bed, his eyes half-closed.
            “Are you finished discussing me and all of my problems?” Will
asked.  He didn’t open his eyes.
            “Yes,” Picard said, and he tried to lighten his tone, although he
didn’t know if he’d succeeded.  He placed his hand on Will’s cheek, and Will
looked up at him.  “I am going to the head to change,” he said.  “Mr Stoch will
sit with you.  I will only be a few minutes.”
            “Mr Stoch,” Picard said.
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch answered.  “I’m right here, Commander.”
            Picard said, “Here, Will.  Let me do this.”  He waited until Will
opened his eyes again, and then he straightened the pillows out, and slid Will
down so that he was prone, and then gently he covered Will with the blanket. 
“Are you cold?  I can get the quilt.”  Will nodded, and wordlessly Stoch
retrieved the quilt from the top of the dresser, where Picard had folded it in
the morning.  Picard took it from Stoch and laid it across Will, and then he
brushed Will’s hair out of his eyes.
            “Stoch,” Will said.
            “Sir?”
            “Don’t ever let anyone tell you that the galaxy class ship isn’t
the best.”  Picard could see the familiar glint in Will’s eyes, and he took
Will’s hand.
            “Elucidate for us, Number One,” he said.
            Will said, “Where else would the First Officer get personal tuck-in
service from the Captain?”
            For the first time in what felt like years, Picard smiled.  “That’s
a perk for you and you alone,” he said.  “From this captain to this first
officer.”  He turned to Stoch.  “Stay with him, Mr Stoch.”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch repeated.
            Picard left the room, leaving the door partially closed.  Sickbay
was quiet and seemingly empty, although the lights were still on in Beverly’s
office.  He wondered if McBride and da Costa were working with Deanna somewhere
– she’d been so strong, during the session, but her realisation that Will had
decided to stop his treatment had blindsided her.  It was one thing, Picard
mused, to become “comfortable” with the idea that someone you loved was
suicidal; it was a completely different level when end of treatment was
requested and the doctors spoke of hospice.  It was curious, he thought as he
entered the head and stripped down, how rationally he’d responded to Will’s
request.  It made him question the depth of his feelings for Will.  He’d
responded the way he was trained to, he thought; and yet Deanna, a trained,
working psychologist, had responded in a more traditional way, with sadness and
anger and grief.  He examined his feelings the way he examined his face in the
mornings, looking for more wrinkles, for the sagging of his neck, for the
cracks and crevices of old age, and he found them wanting.  Where, he wondered,
were the grief and the rage?  Hadn’t he held out a future to Will, a promise,
that they could be life partners?  Yet he felt nothing.  He brushed his teeth
and placed his clothes in the receptacle, slid his sandals on his feet, and
opened the door.  He’d promised that he’d spend the night and the morning with
Will, comforting Will, and so he would, but it felt as if it were just one more
task to do, one more job.  What did that say about him?  It said, he thought,
that there was a reason he’d spent his life alone.  Perhaps he had simply shut
Will out, because it was all too messy, and the part of him that hated mess was
so intrinsic that it precluded love.
            Picard opened the door and walked in, taking in Will’s quiet form
in the shadows and Stoch sitting attentively beside him.  He heard footsteps
behind him and turned to see Lt Fisk, tricorder in hand, arriving for the first
of his hourly check-ups.  He went about his work quietly and was finished
within a few minutes; nodding his head at Picard, he left as quietly as he’d
come.
            “I have him now, Mr Stoch,” Picard said softly, and the young
Vulcan replied, “Aye, sir,” and stood up, taking his padd with him off of
Will’s night table.
            “There’s water here, sir,” Stoch said, “for Mr Riker if he wakes. 
Dr Crusher wanted him to drink, to see if we couldn’t get his kidneys to
function a little better.”
            “Of course,” Picard said.  “Good night, Mr Stoch.”
            “Good night, sir,” Stoch said.  He left quietly, shutting the door
behind him.
            Picard sighed, and climbed into his side of the bed.  He laid
there, his hands beneath his pillow, and stared at the ceiling.  He was
exhausted and yet wide awake.  What he needed, he thought, was to finish off a
bottle of his brother’s red.
            “What’s the matter?” Will asked.
            “You are supposed to be asleep,” Picard said.  Somehow he’d known
that Will would be merely dozing, waiting for him.
            “So are you,” Will said, and there was the hint of his old
cheekiness in his voice.
            Picard didn’t answer, and then he said, “I could use a drink.”
            Will laughed, a sound Picard hadn’t heard in such a long time he’d
forgotten it.  “I can give you some of my meds,” he offered.  “I’m sure they’d
have the same effect.”
            “No, thank you,” Picard replied.
            “I don’t want them either,” Will said, “but you’ve made me take
them anyway.”
            “I am neither your doctor nor your psychiatrist,” Picard said, a
hint of irritation in his voice.
            “Are you mad at me?” Will asked.  He was still lying on his back,
and he didn’t look at Picard.
            “If I knew what constitutes ‘mad,’” Picard said, “perhaps I could
answer that question.”
            “You are mad at me,” Will replied. 
             “Will.”
            “What?”
            “I am beyond exhausted,” Picard said.  “I suppose it has made me
irritable.”
            “Oh,” Will said.  “That’s what it is, then?  Irritable?”
            Picard concentrated on his breathing.  Finally he said, “Are you
taking the piss?”
            “It’s really stupid,” Will said.  “I know I am probably beyond
exhausted too.  But – I feel –“  He stopped and then he said, “I don’t have the
words.  My brain just doesn’t work.”
            Picard sighed.  “Will,” he repeated.
            There was a pause, and then, “I guess I was,” Will said, suddenly.
            Picard was confused and he felt another wave of irritation wash
over him.  “You guess you were what?”
            “Taking the piss,” Will said, and Picard felt the dam break, and he
started to laugh. 
“What?”  Will asked, and the fact that Will was now confused made Picard laugh
harder, until he thought that in another minute he would be on his side and
bawling, the way he had when he was a small child.
            Picard felt the bed shift, and then Will – and there was nothing
left of Will, his arms were thin and Picard could feel every rib and his bones
felt hollow, like a bird’s bones, as if Picard put any pressure at all on him
they would just snap in two – wrapped his too-thin arms around Picard, and
Picard felt Will pull him up against his chest, and Picard put his hands on top
of Will’s, and then Will kissed him, lightly, on his head.
            “I feel better,” Will said, and Picard rested his head on Will’s
chest, listening to Will’s heart beat, and he thought about what McBride had
said, that perhaps it was time to allow Will to love him. 
            He closed his eyes, and felt Will’s hands tighten around him.
            “Jean-Luc,” he said.
            “Mmmh?” Picard hadn’t felt this – he searched for the word – this
safe in weeks.
            “Did you mean what you said?”
            “About what?” Picard murmured.
            “About sharing your future with me,” Will said.
            “Yes,” Picard answered.
            “Okay,” Will said.
            Picard opened his eyes.  “Okay,” he repeated.  “Okay what?”
            “You asked me to consider the possibility of sharing a future with
you,” Will said.  “Okay.”
            Picard knew he was exhausted because he wasn’t quite sure – still –
what Will was saying.  It would be so easy to misinterpret this and then in the
morning – He could feel that Will was waiting for him to respond.  He said,
“That’s all you’re going to say, then?  Okay?”
            “Well, if you want to do the flowers, and the dancing, and the
evening out, it will probably have to wait,” Will replied.  “I don’t think I’m
quite up to that yet.”
            Picard was silent, because he didn’t know whether he was going to
laugh or cry.  He took a deep breath and said, calmly, “Just go to sleep,
Will.”
            Will must have been holding his breath, because Picard felt him
exhale.  “Sir,” he answered.  “I would – but –“
            “But what?” Picard asked, cautiously.
            “I know you’re going to tell me I’m a pain in your arse,” Will
said, and Picard could hear that he was grinning, “but I really need to pee.”
***** Chapter 95 *****
Chapter Summary
     An engineer named Bill Wharton lands in Rixx.
Chapter Notes
     The sociopath is a mirror who reflects yourself.
Chapter Ninety-Five
 
 
 
 
            As the shuttle descended, he placed his padd away methodically and
waited for the landing, his fingers drumming on the seat.  He’d seen, through
the reflecting glass of the window that the woman next to him was watching him
surreptitiously, and so he was not surprised when she spoke.
            “Is this your first trip to Rixx?” 
            She had a lovely timbre to her voice, low and melodic, and he
immediately recognised her as El Aurian.  He turned to smile at her.
            “Is it that obvious?” he asked.
            “Not that obvious,” she replied.  “It’s just, you seem a little
anxious, that’s all.”
            He sighed.  “It’s my first presentation,” he confessed, “on a topic
that’s very important to me.  So, I guess I am a little anxious.”
            “Engineer?” she asked sympathetically.
            “I said the key words?” he responded.
            She smiled.  “Where are you staying?” she asked, turning off her
padd.
            He made a show of trying to remember.  “The Chalice,” he said,
finally.  Her smile broadened and he said, “What?”
            “An engineer’s paradise,” she replied.  “Agam Taron.  I’m with the
cultural attaché’s office.”
            “Bill Wharton,” he said.  “Engineer.  Alpha Centauri.”
            She extended her hand and said, as the shuttle landed in the main
Federation terminal on Rixx, “Pleased to meet you, Mr Wharton.”
            He allowed her hand to linger, just a bit.  He did like women with
large expressive eyes.  “I don’t suppose,” he said, shyly, “you’d like to have
a drink sometime?”
            “I thought you’d never ask,” she said.  “I will meet you in the
lobby of the Chalice at six-thirty, if you don’t have any other plans.”
            “I was just going to work on my presentation,” he said, “and then
have a meal at the hotel.”
            “Then allow me to show you Rixx,” she said.
            The shuttle stopped in the bay, and the passengers began to stand.
            “Thank you,” he said.  “I’ll see you then, Ms Taron.”
            “Agam,” she corrected, standing.
            “Bill,” he said.
 
 
            He figured that she would either go for something small and
intimate, and out of the way, or something loud and crowded which would show
off the setting – the revolving restaurant, for example, that gave the view of
the gardens and the falls.  There was always, of course, the danger that
someone might recognise him – he had a certain cachet, after all, in rarified
circles – but he’d spent his entire life in disguise, and it wasn’t much of a
challenge to appear as Bill Wharton, the engineer.  He was good with languages
and his standard was laced with the colony dialect; his only striking feature,
really, aside from his arrogance – he was aware, after all, of his flaws – was
the chiseled features of his face, which could easily be changed with the small
application of a make-up pencil.  The engineer persona was mostly about
behaviour, after all.
            She chose a small Betazoid café just outside of the tourist section
of Rixx.  Instead of taking an air tram they walked, and she talked about her
job and how she’d travelled around before settling down in Rixx, which she
thought was just one of the loveliest cities to live in.  The weather was still
warm, so they chose to sit on the enclosed patio which was decorated by fairy
lights, and he rather clumsily tried to compare the fairy lights and the stars
to her eyes.
            “I’ve lost the knack,” he confessed as they finished their meal, a
warm and spicy mixture of grilled fruits and vegetables.
            “You were a Lothario, before?” she teased, and then she laughed
delightedly when he blushed.
            “No,” he said, and then he grew quiet; pensive.  He picked at his
food.
            She took his hand.  “What happened to her?” she asked.
            “I’m sorry,” he said.  “It’s just…it’s just that it’s been so
long.”  He straightened his spine, just a bit, and squeezed her hand.  “Please
accept my apology,” he said.  “You shouldn’t been burdened with my issues.”  He
waited a beat.
            “I’m a good listener,” she said, completely without irony.
            He shrugged, a small one.  “We were married young,” he said.  “She
was – I don’t know – the complete opposite of me.  Bold.  Decisive. 
Starfleet.”  He smiled, remembering.  “She thought engineers were sweet.”  He
shook his head.
            “What happened to her?”
            “She went on an away mission,” he replied.  “She loved those.  She
was an explorer, in her heart.  For whatever reason, when she transported back,
the bio filter didn’t detect the virus.  Perhaps there was only one cell, or
two.”  He paused.  “It took her a year to die.”
            “And you’ve been alone all this time?”
            Really, he thought, her eyes were lovely.  “No,” he said.  “I
raised our son, alone.  He’s an adult now, doing what grown children do, living
his own life.  I sometimes hear from him, but not often.  He went to space,
like his mother.”
            “It’s funny how we do that,” she said, “to our parents, after all
they gave us.”  It was clear she was thinking of herself.
            “I expect,” he said, “that at some point, since he’s still young,
he’ll find a girl and settle down, and then maybe I’ll see more of him.”
            “I’m sure of that,” she agreed.  “Would you like a coffee?”
            “Perhaps as we walk?” he asked.
            She melted.  He paid the tab – even though she insisted – and
bought her a coffee from one of the kiosks as they wandered through the tourist
section.
            “I’ve had a wonderful time,” he told her.
            She had a bit of the froth from the cappuccino on her lip, and he
brushed it off.  Her body was warm and soft and pliant.
            “We don’t have to say good-bye,” she said.  “I don’t live too far
from here.”
            “Is it too soon to be falling in love?” he asked.
            They walked hand-in-hand to her flat, which was in an obviously
expensive building.  For a moment he panicked – he had to look at her closely,
as they kissed, just to be absolutely certain that she wasn’t the cultural
attaché – but of course, she was just a brilliant member of her staff.  The
cultural attaché was Betazoid, and a second or third cousin to Ambassador Troi.
            She made another pot of coffee, boiling the milk herself, a luxury
he found enticing.  There was something about those eyes, he thought, as he
undressed her, and it wasn’t until he entered her that he realised why they
were so appealing.  What was the child’s name again?  Billy’s friend?  Rosie,
that was it.  Thrusting into her, bending over her to kiss her, trailing his
fingers down her lightly-mocha’d skin, he thought she might have been Billy’s
friend, all grown up.  It lent a certain frisson of pleasure over what had
become merely necessary.
            Besides, the flat was nice.
***** Chapter 96 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will's kidneys begin to function again.
Chapter Notes
     Enurises occurs in children as a constellation of symptoms of child
     sexual abuse, usually in a child in a state of traumatic hyper-
     arousal. The onset of bedwetting in a child who has previously been
     dry at night, occurring with other symptopms such as repeated urinary
     tract or kidney infections, extreme fearfulness, refusal to sleep,
     night terrors, unspecified stomach, digestive, or head pain, are all
     strong indicators of sexual abuse.
     Will began wetting the bed after his father's violent assault of him
     when he was six; in all likelihood, he would have continued to wet
     the bed until the end of the sexual abuse, when he was twelve. While
     accidental bedwetting is quite common in patients who are ill,
     especially with dehydration and kidney function issues, trauma
     recovery sometimes brings with it a recurrence of childhood symptoms.
     In this case, Will's body is experiencing the process of remembering
     as well as his emotions. Cutting edge treatment for trauma now
     includes work with body memory, a process that can help relieve
     symptoms of physical distress in survivors.
Chapter Ninety-Six
 
 
 
 
            I’d fallen asleep, after I’d made Jean-Luc get up and take me to
the head, – and I was so tired I could barely stand so he had to ask Stoch to
help me too – spooning Jean-Luc, instead of him spooning me.  It had felt good
to have my arms around him, and I remembered thinking as I drifted off that
maybe things would change now.  That maybe I could be safe, when I slept.
            Instead, I was back in that surreal landscape of the dream woods
behind our cabin, running down the paths, unable to breathe, unable to see for
the tears in my eyes, my chest hurting, my arms and legs scratched from the
brambles.  I couldn’t remember why I was running, what had been done to me to
make me fly into the woods by myself – and suddenly Bet was with me, running on
ahead, nose to the ground, woofing at hares and maybe an otter.  I couldn’t
remember why I was running away but I did remember what I was running to, and
the dream played out the way it had before – or was that when I had been
hallucinating?  I was fairly sure I wasn’t hallucinating, now – with me falling
down the path to the pool, with seeing Rosie in the water for the first time,
even though I’d been there so many times before and had never seen her; and
then I was in the water and trying to help her, trying to release her, and I
was cold and wet and my fingers were too numb to do any good but how could I
just leave her there? 
            I woke, shaking – not just because of the dream but because I was
freezing – and then I could feel the fear coming at me in waves, and I knew
that the cottony feeling couldn’t be too far behind, because I could feel
myself slipping away, inside of myself – but Billy – Billy wasn’t there and I
didn’t know what to do…and I was so tired…. 
            I forced myself to open my eyes.  Think, Riker – Jean-Luc was
beside me, sound asleep; I could hear the even pattern of his breaths.  He was
warm and comfortable, and I thought if I could just move closer to him, let his
body warm me up and then maybe my own brain would start to work – but I was wet
and I knew how he felt about mess – and he’d already dealt with my puking all
over him….And then the fear was back and I could feel the edges of the memory
taking hold, could see myself small and thin in the too large bed, and I could
hear him yelling at me, rolling me onto the hardwood floor where I would spend
the rest of the night – I could remember it all now; he’d strip the sheets off
and remake the bed, and I’d be curled up on the floor, cold and wet and waiting
for him to hurt me –
            I thought, It has to stop.  I can’t do this anymore.  Someone had
told me how to stop it but I couldn’t remember who,  and then I was feeling the
floor beneath me, and it was so cold, and I’d lie there, crying, while he went
back to sleep.
            “Jean-Luc,” I said, trying to be quiet – God, I didn’t want to
bring Stoch or Yash in here – “Jean-Luc, please….”
            He was awake instantly – that trait of captains.  “What is it,
Will?”  He turned to me.  “What’s wrong?”
            “I –“  I couldn’t tell him.  I could feel the fear still
surrounding me and it was so hard – so hard – to see through it, to make myself
understand that this was Jean-Luc I was speaking to, and then I couldn’t hold
it together anymore.
            “Are you weeping?  Will?”  He reached for me and I moved away. 
“Did you have a nightmare?”
            “I’m sorry,” I said, “I didn’t mean to –“
            He sat up.  “William,” he said.
            “Sir.”  I didn’t turn around.  I shouldn’t have wakened him.  I
should have gotten Stoch myself.
            I heard him sigh.  “If you aren’t going to tell me what’s wrong,”
he said.
            “I can’t.” 
            “You’re shaking.”
            “I’m cold,” I said.  I’d moved as far away from him as I could.
            “I could put the blanket back over you,” he said, reasonably.
            “It’s wet.” 
            He was silent.  Then he said, “Oh, Will.  I am not your father. 
How many times must I say this before you will believe me?”
            “I don’t know,” I said, and then I said, “I don’t know how.”
            He moved closer to me and put his hand on my back.  “You don’t know
how what?” he asked.
            “I don’t know how to believe anyone,” I said.  “I want to believe
you, Jean-Luc.  I want to think that I can live and share a life with you.  I
want to think that you love me even though I’m not anywhere near being well –
or shipshape – but I don’t know how.”
            “Shipshape,” he said quietly.  “Is that what he wanted from you? 
He beat you and raped you and then wanted you to be shipshape?  That word
doesn’t apply to people, Will.”  He paused and then he said, “Will.  If I say
to you that I’m not upset – or angry – or frustrated, can you trust that it’s
so?  Can you turn around and face me?  I promise you I will not hurt you.  I’ve
never wanted to hurt you, Will.”
            I looked at him.  He was looking at me with the same kindness and
respect he always did.  “I do try to believe you, Jean-Luc,” I said.  “But it’s
so hard not to listen to the voices….”
            “I know.”  He brushed my hair from my face.  “Will you let me take
care of you now?  Can you do that for me, without being afraid?”
            “And you’re really not mad at me?” I asked.  He was.  He was
enraged.  I could feel him kicking me.  I had to lie on my hands, to keep them
from covering my head.
            He said, “You are terrified.”
            “I’m trying not to be.”  I was shaking again.
            “What did he do to you?” he asked.      “Will.  Do you want me to
call Dr McBride?”
            “No,” I said.  “Please.  You promised me….”
            “But you are in distress,” he said.  “Breathe, Will.  If you don’t
want me to call Dr McBride, then you have to do as I say.  You can still follow
orders, can’t you?”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.
            “My orders don’t threaten you?” he asked.
            “No, sir,” I said.  His orders.  His orders had never threatened
me.  His orders had never harmed me.  Even when he was sending me into a
dangerous situation, it was one I was prepared for, had prepared for, one in
which I was the commander, the leader, had other people I was responsible for
so that it wasn’t about me at all.  His orders were logical and rational.  They
were well-thought out.  His orders were his respect for me, one officer to
another, my CO to his XO.  “I can follow your orders, sir,” I said.
            He was quiet and then he said, “Then I order you to breathe, Mr
Riker,” he said.  “Just as Counsellor Troi showed you.  Take a few minutes. 
Calm yourself down.”
            I could do this.  I wouldn’t think about the floor underneath me. 
I wouldn’t think about sliding under the bed, where he couldn’t reach me.
            “Good,” he said.  “That’s it.  Just breathe, Will.  Go to your safe
space on the ship, if you need to.”
            I could do that too.  I took the turbo lift to the Arboretum and
walked down the path to the pond.  I sat down on the bench and realised I could
use my hands again. 
            “Are you there, Will?” he asked.
            “Aye, sir,” I said.  It was strange that I could still hear him;
strange that I could sit here and be wet but no longer be cold and shaking.
            “Keep breathing, Commander,” he said.
            “Aye, sir.”
            “Now I want you to sit up, here, in the bed.”
            “Yes, sir.” I was back in the bed and I sat up.
            I felt him get up, and then he came around to me.  “Lights, thirty
percent,” he said, and he bent down, so that he was making eye contact with
me.  “Are you still following orders, Number One?” he asked.
            “Sir,” I said.  I was shaking again, but it was because I was cold.
            “I am getting Mr Stoch,” he said, “and then we are going to clean
you up and strip the bed.  You will continue to do exactly as I ask.”
            I sighed.  “You don’t need to order me anymore,” I said.  “I think
I’m okay, now.”
            “You’re back in the present?  You know where you are?”
            “I’m in sickbay,” I said, and I couldn’t keep some of the
bitterness out of my voice.  “Where I’m apparently going to spend the rest of
my life.”
            “Will,” he said warningly.  “I love you, but I’m not going to put
up with your mood swings right now, do you understand?  We need to get you
cleaned up and warm.  That is the priority.”
            “Aye, sir,” I said.  “I’m trying to keep myself together, Jean-
Luc.”
            “You will keep yourself together,” he said.
            I’d seen that look before – the one that told me it would be best
to shut my mouth.  It was stupid, but it made me feel better.  “Yes, sir,” I
said.
            He turned to the door.  “Mr Stoch,” he said, “We need your help, if
you don’t mind.”
            “Sir?” Stoch entered the room.  “Do you need Lt Fisk?”
            “At the moment, no,” Jean-Luc replied.  “Mr Riker needs new
pyjamas, and I don’t think he has any more clean ones, so you’ll need to
replicate a pair.  And he needs a shower, as well, so you’ll have to help me
with him.”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch said.
            I was grateful to him because he didn’t ask why I needed these
things.  He just walked over and then he and Jean-Luc walked me to the head.
            “I’ll take him,” the captain said.  “The bed needs to be stripped. 
And I’m thinking he’ll still be too cold, even with a hot shower.”
            “I’ll bring a warmed blanket, sir,” Stoch said.  “We always keep a
supply.”  He started to leave, and then he said, “Dr Sandoval will want to see
him, sir.”
            “I know.  Let’s just get him cleaned up, first.”
            “Aye, sir.”
            “I want you to sit, in the shower,” Jean-Luc said.  “You’re too
shaky to be standing.”
            “You’ll get all wet,” I protested.
            “Will,” he said.  “I’m coming in with you.”
            I didn’t say it was too small; he still had that look in his eyes. 
I let him undress me – for the second time – and wished a hole would simply
open up and swallow me.  He stripped, and then turned the shower on.  I waited
for him to get the temperature right, and then sat on the bench and let him
wash me.
            “You will not cry,” he said.  “You know damned well you would do
this for me, if I asked it of you.”
            I nodded.  He wrapped me in a towel and dried me, and when he
opened the door, Stoch was there to hand him my pyjamas.  He dressed me and
combed my hair, and then gave me to Stoch, who walked me back to my room.  The
night orderlies were in the process of remaking the beds, and Yash and Dr
Sandoval were waiting for me.  I sat in Jean-Luc’s chair.
            “Here, Will.” Yash handed me the warm blanket and I draped it
around myself.  “His kidney function has improved, and his blood pressure is
better.”
            I rolled my eyes. 
            “The good news, Commander,” Iñaki Sandoval said, “is that you were
soundly asleep, so soundly you weren’t aware that your kidneys had begun
functioning again.  I understand you’re upset, but, from a medical standpoint,
I couldn’t be more pleased.  We could resolve this issue by putting a catheter
in, but I understood from Dr Crusher that you wouldn’t tolerate one.”
            I saw Jean-Luc in the doorway.  “I don’t want a catheter,” I said. 
“You’re saying this is going to happen again?”
            “Will,” Yash said.  “You have been – and you are – very ill.  You
could give yourself a little bit of a break, you know?”
            “Will you be able to return to sleep without more medication?”
Sandoval asked.
            “I think so,” I said.
            “Then I don’t think there will be a problem.  We can leave a bedpan
in here, if it’s too difficult for you to get up.”
            “All right,” I said.  What the hell.  After the indignity of
pissing the bed, what difference did a bedpan make?
            “And his heart?” Jean-Luc asked.
            “There’s still fluid, sir,” Yash said.  “But his kidneys are
functioning, and that’s a good thing.”
            “No medication, then, and back to bed?” Jean-Luc said, looking at
me.
            “Exactly, Captain,” Sandoval replied.  “Keep him warm and
comfortable.  If he isn’t asleep in half an hour or so, I’ll send Lt Fisk in
with his medication.”
            “Mr Stoch, let’s get him back into bed, then, and the rest of you –
thank you for your help, but out.”
            Yash grinned at me, and then Stoch was lifting me out of the chair,
and sliding me into the bed.  They left, and I said, “You’re not tucking me
in?”
            “Will,” he said.  He climbed into the bed and then I felt him shift
and turn to me.  “Come here, you,” he said, as he always did, and I let him
hold me.
            “You’re still staying with me, in the morning?” I asked.
            “Yes, Will,” he said.
            “I think this has been the longest twenty-four hours of my entire
life,” I said.
            “I know.  Just rest now.”
            “I don’t want any more medication,” I said.  “I can go to sleep, if
you don’t mind holding me for a while.”
            “I don’t mind,” he said, “you know I don’t mind.”
            “Okay,” I said, closing my eyes.  “Just don’t forget we have a date
planned.”
            I could feel him smiling, and then he kissed me.  “We do?” he
asked.
            “Yeah,” I said.  “You’ve forgotten already?”
            “I’m old,” he answered.  “And someone keeps interfering with my
sleep.  Tell me again.”
            “You’re taking me out,” I said, “for the flowers and the dancing.”
            “Ah,” he said, “I remember.  I know this wonderful hotel on the
beach.  Go to sleep now, Will.”
            “Sir,” I said.  I was pretty sure I could hear the waves rolling up
against the sand.
***** Chapter 97 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will struggles with resistance, and finally accepts that he can
     change.
Chapter Notes
     "Are you sure this is what he wants? That's the problem with
     believing in a supreme being: trying to determine what he wants."
     Deanna Troi, in "Who Watches the Watchers?"
     Will's damaged self is still eight years old, with all the faulty
     belief systems and the magical thinking of an eight-year-old.
     Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, in treating the traumatised child, seeks
     to undo those imperfect belief systems and replace them with healthy,
     adult thinking.
Chapter Ninety-Seven
 
 
 
 
 
            “Will.”
            I could feel Jean-Luc’s hand on my shoulder, and I tried to open my
eyes.  “What?”
            “It’s all right,” he said.  “I’m just going to the head, and to get
a cup of tea.  I shan’t be long.  I didn’t want you to wake, and see I wasn’t
beside you.”
            I was lying on my arm, next to him, and I tried to find a more
comfortable position.  “You woke me up to tell me that?”
            “Would you rather I’d have just left?” he asked.
            He was wide awake.  There were times, I thought.  “I could’ve
coped,” I muttered, turning in to him.
            “Indeed,” he said, kissing my head.  He sat up.
            “You’re still staying with me this morning?” I asked.
            “Yes,” he answered.  “Do you need to come with me?”
            That was a polite way of putting it, I thought.  I supposed it
really wasn’t in his character to ask me if I were going to piss the bed
again.  “No,” I said, pulling the blanket up.  “I used the bottle they left,
before.”
            “When I was asleep?” He turned around to look at me.
            I didn’t answer, and I felt him stand up.
            “Do you want anything?” he asked.  “Your cup of coffee?”
            “No,” I said again.  I heard him grab his robe and start for the
door.  “My chest hurts,” I said.
            “I’ll let Lt Fisk know,” he answered.
            “It’s not shift change?”
            “Will,” he said, “I get up well before alpha shift every morning.”
            I heard him open the door.  I was cold, and I moved over to his
side of the bed, which was still warm.  My chest felt the way it did when you
broke a rib, before it was mended, and my back hurt; my arm was stiff from
lying on it.  I didn’t really want everyone to come in here and “deal” with me;
I’d asked to be left alone, or at least I was pretty sure I had.  I closed my
eyes, resting my head on his pillow, which was still warm too and smelled of
him.
            “Will.”  He was beside me, shaking my shoulder gently.  “Lt Fisk is
here to give you something for the pain, and to check your vitals.”
            “I just want to sleep,” I said.
            “I know,” he answered.  “Here, let me help you.”
            I opened my eyes, and let him help me sit up.  The room started to
spin, and he held me by my shoulders until it stopped.
            “He needs fluids,” I heard Yash say.
            “Can’t it wait?” Jean-Luc asked.  “If I can get him to drink?”
            “Sir,” Yash said.  “I’ll have to check with Dr Sandoval.  Will,” he
said to me.  “Can you show me where your pain is?”
            “Here,” I said, pointing to my left side.  “It’s tight,” I said.
            “It hurts when you breathe?” he asked.
            “Like when you’ve broken a rib,” I answered.  “Can’t you just give
me something, and let me go back to sleep?  I’m really tired, Yash.”
            “I know you are, Will,” Yash said.  “Hold still, now.  Just a
pinch.”
            Well, that was the biggest lie in the universe, but I didn’t say
anything, and he gave me the hypo spray.
            “I’ll bring him some fresh water,” Yash was saying to Jean-Luc,
“and I’ll empty this.  I’ll have Mr Stoch take him to the head.”
            I slid back down.  “I don’t need to go,” I said.
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said.
            I looked up at him.  “Sir,” I answered.
            “I think,” he said gently, “it might be best if you tried to
cooperate.”
            I blinked.  My neck was sore from the hypo spray, and my chest was
still hurting because it was too soon for the medication to begin to work.  I
was tired and I wasn’t thirsty and surely at thirty-seven I knew when my own
bladder needed to be emptied.  Last night when he’d washed me in the shower
he’d told me not to cry.  I didn’t necessarily want to cry – in fact, I was
really, really tired of crying – but whatever neurochemicals one has to
regulate one’s mood – I didn’t have those working any more.  It made me feel
like a little kid – except that when I’d been a little kid, I’d been stone. 
I’d lost the knack, now, of being stone.  I felt my eyes fill, and I looked
away.  There was no point, because this whole experience of being ill was one
in that I’d completely lost autonomy.  I’d lost it over my emotions, over my
physical body, over my personal space.  It was all about loss, wasn’t it?  Loss
of dignity, of privacy, of self, of life.  I’d told Jean-Luc that I would
consider a life with him, on the Enterprise, in the future, but how was I
supposed to regain everything I’d lost?  I didn’t know.
            “Lt Fisk,” Jean-Luc said.
            “Sir?”
            “Let me have a moment with Mr Riker before you send in Mr Stoch.”
            “Aye, sir.”
            I wasn’t completely sure, but I thought that Yash winked at me
before he left.
            “Move over,” Jean-Luc said.
            “I don’t want to,” I said, but I did anyway. 
            He propped himself up beside me, still in his robe, and said, “Come
here.”
            “I don’t need to go to the head,” I said.  I let him hold me.  When
I’d asked if he could stay with me, this was all I’d wanted.  Just some time
alone, the two of us.  No stupid PT or hyperbaric chamber and no more marathon
therapy sessions.  Of course I’d thought maybe I was dying – or should be
allowed to die – and I didn’t want to have to struggle with those things
anymore, the physical therapy, the psychiatric treatment.  What would be the
point of therapy, if I were just going to die anyway? 
            “Will,” he said.
            He waited and so I said, “Sir.”
            He sighed.  “I would like to spend some time with you this
morning,” he said.  “That’s what we had agreed upon last night, isn’t it?”
            “Yes.”
            “May I make a suggestion, then?”
            He waited again, and I said, reluctantly, “Yes.”
            “If we do what they ask now, what are the chances that they’ll
leave us alone, after, do you think?”
            It was strange, not having Billy.  I said, “Don’t ask me to be
reasonable.  Don’t ask me to do anything.”
            “You’re angry?”
            He sounded confused, or puzzled, or something.  I wanted to
scream.  I tried to move away, and felt him wrap his arms around me.
            “Let me go,” I said.
            “And just where are you going to go, Will?” he asked.
            “To the fucking head,” I answered, “with Stoch.  Isn’t that what
you wanted?  Don’t I always do what everyone fucking wants?”
            “Ah,” he said.  “This is about last night?  You were doing what I
wanted?”  His voice had started out in his usual mild tone, the one he used
with me, but now I could hear he was angry too.  “So do it, then, Will.  If
that’s what you really want.  No one can really stop you.  I certainly can’t.”
            He let me go, and I sat up, trying to control the spinning.  My
stomach was hurting.
            “I’m going to the head.”  I swung my legs over the bed.
            “Do you need something to help you, or is this a solo act?”
            I stood up, and then turned around to face him.  “I’m in congestive
heart failure,” I said.  “Just stop all the medication.  It should be pretty
quick.”
            He said in his neutral tone of voice, “So you’re turning down my
offer of something to help you?”
            I’d already started to walk to the door, slowly, because my legs
were rubbery and my chest still hurt and it felt as if I were walking through
water.  I stopped and said, “You’ll give me something to use?  A phaser?”
            He laughed.  “You didn’t use a phaser the first time,” he said. 
“What makes you think you have the guts to use one now?”
            I said, turning around to face him again, “Why are you doing this? 
You wanted me to go to the head.  Fine, I’m getting Stoch and going to the
head.  You want me to take the fucking medication.  I’ve been taking it,
haven’t I?  You want me to understand that I didn’t kill my best friend. 
Fine.  I bashed her head in but I didn’t kill her because she was already
dead.  What more –“ I said, and I could feel my legs start to crumple
underneath me, “do you fucking want from me?”
            He stood up.  “I want you to make the bloody decision yourself,” he
said.  “Were you doing what you thought I wanted last night?  Really, William? 
Did you change your mind this morning?  When you realised just how bloody hard
this was going to be?  Did you think that your deciding to live would wave some
fucking magic wand and everything would just go away?”
            Even though I was on the fucking floor and my stomach was twisting,
I was not going to fucking cry.  I was sick of crying.
            The door opened and Stoch said, “Captain, do you need –“
            “If you come in here, Mr Stoch,” the captain said, “I will send you
to the brig.  Do you understand me?  And that goes for anyone else who might be
standing outside that door.  No one,” he said through his teeth, “will come in
this room until I give the order to.  Is that understood?”
            “Aye, sir,” Stoch said, and he shut the door, even as I heard
Beverly speak and Stoch saying, “He ordered me to shut the door.”
            “Get up, William,” he said to me.
            “I can’t,” I said.
            “You can’t or you won’t?”
            “I don’t know.”  I was going to fucking cry anyway.  “My stomach
hurts.”
            He crouched down so that he was eye level with me.  “Of course it
does,” he said, and he didn’t sound angry anymore.  “What did Dr McBride tell
you that your stomach hurting meant?”
            “Resistance,” I said.
            “Resistance to what?”  His voice was gentle, and I could feel the
tears falling down my face.
            “Resistance to change.”
            “And what’s the change you are resisting, Will?”
            “I don’t want to die anymore,” I said, “but I don’t know how to
live.”
            “Come here,” he said, and he pulled me into his arms.  “You don’t
know how, or you think it will be too hard to learn?”
            I looked at him.  “I could learn how to live?” I asked.
            He smiled, the one where his eyes were warm.  “Isn’t that what your
Dr McBride is trying to teach you, Will?” he asked.  “Didn’t Worf have to learn
how to walk all over again?  Didn’t he have Beverly and Lt Patel to teach him?”
            I felt as if I’d spent the last month living in the dark, and now
it was suddenly day.  “That’s what this treatment program is?” I asked.  I
wasn’t going to allow myself to feel stupid, even though it was so easy to feel
that way.  As if I’d always felt stupid.  “It’s teaching me how to live?”
            “Yes, Will,” Jean-Luc said.  “We are all trying to teach you how to
live.”
            I was silent, feeling his arms around me and his breath on the back
of my neck.  “I’m still in congestive heart failure,” I said.
            “Yes,” he agreed.  “And you are still starving yourself to death.”
            I remembered what I’d wanted to tell him last night, what had been
so important.  “I promised God,” I said.
            “What did you promise God, Will?”
            “Rosie said if you prayed to God or to Jesus, you would get what
you prayed for,” I said.  “I – I didn’t know anything about God, or about
Jesus.  But Rosie was certain.  She said it didn’t matter that I didn’t know
anything.  She said God wouldn’t hold it against me that I didn’t know.”
            “And what did you pray for, Will?” he asked.
            “I thought – I thought it might be like a trade,” I said.  “I would
offer God something and he would let me find Rosie.”
            “What did you offer God, in this trade?”
            “I liked food,” I said.  “I liked cooking in the kitchen with Mrs S
because it made me feel – it made me feel safe.”
            “So you traded food to God for Rosie?” Jean-Luc asked.  “Oh, Will. 
You must have thought God was some sort of a monster, too.”
            “How could God be good and yet Rosie was dead and I was the way I
was?” I asked.
            “I don’t know, Will,” he said, finally.  “I expect Admiral Haden
might have an answer to that question, but I certainly don’t.”  He was quiet,
and then he added, “So have you found Rosie, Will?”
            “I think so,” I said.  “I don’t – I don’t remember, how her body
got from the barn to the creek.  To the pool where Dmitri and I fell in, where
I saw her body.  Maybe he never let me know what he did with her, in between. 
Where he hid her, so that no one but me would find her.”
            “Do you think you can stand, now?” he asked.  “I’m too old to be
sitting on the deck.”
            I looked at him and I felt a grin forming.  “Shall I ask Stoch to
help you, sir?” I said.
            He rolled his eyes.  “I can do it myself, thank you,” he said,
standing.  “What about you?  Do you need help?”
            “Yes,” I said.  “I still need help.”
            He gave me his hand.  “For as long as you need, Will,” he said.
            I took his hand, and he helped me up.  “You think I can learn to
eat again?” I asked.
            “I think,” he said, “you can do what ever you set your mind to
do.”  He paused, and then he said, “Mr Stoch, you may take Mr Riker to the head
now.”
            Stoch opened the door.  “Aye, sir,” he answered.
***** Chapter 98 *****
Chapter Summary
     Lt Renan Balum reports in to Section 31 chief Admiral Jorge Garcia.
Chapter Notes
     I thought the head of Xenobiology on Betazed would be a wonderful
     cover for Section 31. And what could be more frightening than a
     Vulcan who works for them? A tip of the hat to my friend eimeo, for
     providing me with Commander Sovok's name.
Chapter Ninety-Eight
 
 
 
 
                       
            In the end, he took an air tram to the admiral’s office.  He’d
waited the ten minutes, as Val had asked him to, but then he’d left real
credits to pay for the bill.  There was no logical reason to assume that he
shouldn’t send the bill to his sister’s office, but then, there was no logical
reason that he shouldn’t walk down the block to Starfleet either.  He was
running on instinct, instinct which had stood him in good stead on a dozen
missions, instinct backed by extensive training.  There was no logical reason
for him to be followed.
            If he wanted to live, however, he should assume that he was.  He
was dressed in civilian clothes, but that was nothing unusual; Admiral García
was chief of Xenobiology on Betazed and as such his office was populated by any
number of civilian Federation workers as well as Starfleet.  It was the perfect
cover for their organisation and evidence of Connaught Rossa’s genius.  He’d
been ordered to report as soon as possible but had delayed that to report to
Val first; as punishment for his tardiness, he was cooling his heels in his own
office, a tiny cubicle among all the other cubicles in the operations wing of
Xenobiology.
            Thirty minutes into waiting for his few minutes to report in to
Jeff García and he was ready to explode.  He’d finished writing his report;
he’d read through maybe a quarter of what he was supposed to read through, with
none of it making any sense, and the hairs were still standing up on the back
of his neck.  He thought about what he’d asked Val to do, and wondered if Val
had bothered to even contact their great-aunt’s office yet.
            “For someone who was supposed to be on a brief weekend in Risa,
you’re a little jumpy.”
            “Yeah,” he acknowledged.  “Not much sleep,” and then he grinned.
            They’d been in the same graduating class at the Academy, only
Lieutenant Tarana had majored in Xenobiology and Communications, while he’d
been on the Nav track.  One eyebrow rose and her antenna quivered.  “Whore,”
she said, but there was no malice in it.
            He managed to laugh.  “You see – “ he began.
            Her antennae waggled and she said, “Have you checked in yet?”
            “No,” he replied.  “I was a little late, and I’m being punished by
Commander Sovok.”
            “How long have you been waiting to see him?”
            He shrugged.  “Half an hour.”
            “You have thirty more minutes then,” she said.  “Let’s take a tea
break.”
            He’d had enough tea for one morning but if she’d already noticed he
was jumpy….”Sure,” he agreed.
            The café on the first floor of the Starfleet building was a twin to
the one he’d just left, except that the boss was Betazoid and the waitress was
probably from one of the human colonies and a student at the University.  Even
though he wasn’t in uniform, the girl addressed them both as “lieutenant” and
he silently gave her points for excelling in her psych courses.
            “So.”  Tarana sipped her tea and waited expectantly.
            “What?” he said.  He had no desire for another cup of tea, his
mouth still burnt from the last cup, and he simply wrapped his hand around the
mug.  That way he only had to worry about the one in his lap shaking.  The
window to the street was without blinds and anyone could see them in the booth;
he angled his body just a bit towards the wall, so that his face would be in
shadows.  He told himself he was just being paranoid.  After all, his profile
was typically Betazoid, and he was wearing civilian clothes.  He could even
pass for a student at the University himself.
            “We’ve a big project coming due,” Tarana said, “and you
mysteriously took Friday off and went to Risa.”  She paused, and then she
remarked, one antenna quivering, “You’ve returned late, on a Monday in a short
holiday week, and you’re as jumpy as a rat in the presence of a Klingon targ.”
            “It’s simple,” he said, giving in and sipping the tea, now tepid. 
“You know who my great-aunt is, right?”
            “Elanna Lal,” Tarana said.  “Head of the Sixth House.”
            “It’s time for me to marry,” he said.  “I’m just a younger son. 
I’m not even in the right line.  The whole thing’s silly and outdated.”
            “One’s culture is very important,” she said.  “Isn’t that what
Xenobiology is all about?  Preserving our differences, cultivating our
similarities, making alliances?”
            He shrugged.  “You are inherently a political creature,” he said. 
“And I am not.”
            “So you ran away?” Both her antennae were nearly flat against her
head.
            “Not exactly,” he said.  “I just needed some time alone.”
            “On Risa?” She burst into peals of laughter, drawing the attention
of the waitress.
            “Shhh,” he said.  “My family doesn’t know I went to Risa.  They
thought I went to our vacation home.”
            “You’re crazy,” she said succinctly.  “Funny, but crazy.”
            “That’s why you love me,” he quipped, and watched her skin turn a
deeper shade of blue.  “Listen, Tarana.  I’m a Starfleet officer.  It’s all
I’ve ever wanted to be.  I’ll get a posting to a ship next round.  If I marry
the woman my great-aunt wants me to, I’ll have to give the Fleet up.”
            “I’ll agree that that’s not right,” Tarana said.
            “We’d better get back.”  He stood, laying a few credits on the
table.  “If I miss my check-in with the Admiral, Commander Sovok will have my
hide.”
            “True enough,” she agreed.
            He nodded at the waitress, and they took the elevator back to the
seventeenth floor.  Neither one of them had paid much attention to the solitary
engineer type in the back booth nursing a cup of coffee.
 
 
            “You met with Commander Zweller?”  Admiral Jorge “Jeff” García was
not a particularly imposing man, on a planet where the home residents were tall
and thin.  He remained seated behind his desk.
            “Aye, sir.”  He stood in front of the desk, looking at a point on
the window sill above García’s head.  García was clearly pissed, and there was
so very much for him to be pissed about.  How much of it would stick to one
lowly lieutenant was another matter.
            “Go over this again for me,” García said, finally.  “Oh, sit down,
for fuck’s sake.”
            “Sir,” he said.  He pulled a chair over and sat down.  “Where do
you want me to start, sir?”
            “Why don’t you start,” García said, “with how we got into this
fucking mess to begin with.”
            He wanted to close his eyes, just for a moment, to centre himself,
but of course, he couldn’t – or wouldn’t.  He thought for a moment, resisting
the urge to rub the burned spot with his tongue, and then he said, “It started
with Captain Jean-Luc Picard, sir.”
            “On the Enterprise?”
            Renan Balum nodded.  “Yes,” he said, dropping the “sir.”  García
didn’t use the kind of salty language that was the vernacular to most of them
in their line of work.  He was supposed to be the head of Xenobiology on a
planet that thrived on decorum and protocol.  For García to have sworn twice –
a lessening of formality was clearly in order.  “Captain Picard sent a subspace
communication to Captain Riker.  About a month ago, or maybe five weeks, now,
I’m not sure.  Captain Riker was returning from the Gamma Quadrant when he
received it.”
            “This was the first communication from Picard?”
            “Yes, sir,” Balum said.  “Picard gave Riker the information about
William Riker’s accident and illness, although at that time Picard didn’t tell
him what the accident was, or what the diagnosis was; just that William Riker’s
life was in danger.  He wanted information about the younger Riker’s
childhood.  Picard was, according to Captain Riker, confrontational.”
            “Go on,” García said.
            “Captain Riker reported this to HQ, with the information he
surmised.  He was told to cooperate with Picard.  A second request for
information came less formally from William Riker’s doctor.  It was this
request that seemed to set Captain Riker off, sir.”
            García glanced at his padd.  “William Riker’s doctor is your
cousin, Lieutenant?”
            “Yes, sir.  Alasdair McBride.  He’s the chief psychiatrist on the
medical facility at Starbase 515.  He specialises in treating Post-Traumatic
Stress Disorder and related psychiatric illnesses.”
            “So then Riker goes to Risa on leave and the shit hits the fan,”
García said.  “How many are dead?”
            “Three that we know of, sir,” Balum said.  He’d wondered that,
himself.  Were there others Zweller didn’t know about?  Did Zweller survive the
encounter?  He’d seemed woefully unprepared, even though he’d known the elder
Riker for years.  “The Risian agent and pimp, Behlar.  He was the first.  The
shuttle pilot, I can’t remember his name, but he was a sub-contractor.  And the
young boy Behlar had sent to Riker’s cottage.  We don’t even know the child’s
name, or where he was from.”
            “Presumably Riker is now on his way to San Francisco.” García
glanced at his padd.  He said,  “He’ll be handled there.”
            Balum said, “I believe he’s coming here, sir.”
            García stood, finally, and paced behind his desk.  He turned and
pressed the comm. button.  “Mr Sovok, would you join us?”
            “Aye, sir,” Sovok said.
            “Do you want a drink?” García asked.  He walked over to the
replicator and ordered an espresso.
            “No.  Thanks.” I’m floating already, Balum thought. 
            The door opened and Commander Sovok entered.  He was as tall as
Balum, in his mid-fifties; starkly imposing as most Vulcans were.  García
returned to his seat with his cup.  “Lt Balum seems to think we have a
problem.”
            Sovok’s face remained impassive.  “In what way, sir?”
            “Explain your thoughts,” García instructed.
            He took a breath.  It was difficult not to be intimidated by the
Vulcan sitting beside him, whose mental walls were aggressively locked in
place.  García – whose physical unremarkability hid his toughness quite well –
was still an easier man to deal with.  He glanced quickly at Sovok.  “There’s
no logic to this, sir,” he said, knowing full well that, as a part-Betazoid,
logic was not why he was hired.
            “Understood,” García responded.
            “Have either of you met Captain Riker?”
            “We go back many years,” García answered, and Sovok said, “Twice.”
            “I found him terrifying,” Balum said.  “I can only base my
perceptions on who he is now, as opposed to who he might have been the last
time you were in his company.  The man I met on Risa is dangerously out-of-
control.  He knows it, and is enjoying it.  He has decided he doesn’t care what
happens to him.  He laughed about killing Behlar – and he murdered him in a
sadistic way.  He gave me the impression that everything William Riker is
likely to say about what happened to him at the hands of his father as a young
child is absolutely true.  And that William Riker was neither the first nor the
last child to experience it.  He tried to kill me – you can see the bruises
from his hands around my neck – and again, he laughed about it.”  He waited,
but when neither of his superiors said anything, he continued, “He despises
Picard.  And Commander Zweller.  And he’s determined to destroy his son.  He
knows – I’m fairly sure of it – about the connections to Betazed and my
family.  Commander Zweller was supposed to put him on the shuttle to San
Francisco.  But Commander Zweller dismissed all of my concerns.”
            “Do you have any evidence that he will be coming here?” Sovok
questioned.  “Any motivation for his coming here, rather than clearing up the
issues with Captain Picard in San Francisco?  Any idea of what he would do, if
he came here?”
            Balum kept his eyes fixed to that point on the window sill.  “No,
sir,” he said.  “I have no evidence for it at all.  Commander Zweller was
confident that he could handle Captain Riker, and that Captain Riker would be
travelling on to Earth.”
            “But?” García said.
            “Commander Zweller tried to have him taken down, sir.  The shuttle
pilot he sent was one of ours.  Riker blew up the shuttle, over the jungle.
 It’s why Commander Zweller flew to get him instead.  And the message I was
told to give to Captain Riker was that he was to stop.”
            He could sense Sovok’s frustration.  “You have nothing here,” Sovok
said, “that suggests that Riker will come here, to Rixx.”
            “We told him no, sir,” Balum said.  “I told him no.  He doesn’t
like to be told no.  He’s on his way…or he’s already here.”
            Jeff García – whose middle name was Goffredo, and whose first name
was Jorge; hence, he’d gone with “Jeff,” at the Academy – was a man who was
used to taking a lousy situation and turning it around into something that
could be managed.  Something he could manage.  “I had a report from Cortan
Zweller on my desk this morning,” he said, now.  “Riker eluded him at the
shuttle terminal and has disappeared.  There is no record of him – or anyone
matching his description – leaving Risa for Earth.”
            “He’s already here,” Renan Balum said.  He held himself rigidly
still.
            “Is there any record of him on any passenger manifest?” Sovok
queried.
            “Of course not!” Balum snapped.  Let Sovok reprimand him.  By this
time Val should have given his request for removal to the Betazed Council. 
“He’s one of ours.  He can go anywhere and do anything, and no one would ever
know.  He’s been in disguise his entire life –“ and then he stopped.  He looked
at Jeff García with dawning horror.  “You sacrificed all those children to
him.  You sacrificed his own son to him.  Dear God.”
            “There is no need, Lieutenant,” García said, “to become
melodramatic.  Captain Riker has been one of our strongest and most reliable
agents.  He has done work for the Federation that no one else could do.  We owe
our continued existence to him, many times over.  A few throwaway children,
here or there, have never been much of a real concern, given what’s been at
stake.”
            “How is Commander William Riker a throwaway child?  His mother was
a decorated Starfleet officer.”  Balum tried to keep himself from swaying.
            “This agency has protected Commander Riker in a number of ways,”
García said.  “There are reasons far beyond what you need to know, Lieutenant.”
            Balum opened his mouth, but then closed it.  The conversation, such
as it was, seemed to be over.
            García said, slowly, “Lieutenant Balum.  Do you have any reason at
all – including gut feelings –“ he gave a pointed look to Sovok “ – which would
indicate that this office is in any danger whatsoever from Captain Riker?”
            He did not say he believed that he was in danger.  Why would anyone
care – particularly in this office?  He was merely an unimportant lieutenant
who had relayed a message and gotten caught up in a slow dance of death by his
superiors.
            “I believe that Admiral Laidlaw may be in danger,” he said.
            “Thomas Laidlaw?  Why?”
            “He is the one looking into Captain Riker’s past,” Balum said.  “He
was asked to do so by my cousin Dr McBride.  I believe that Captain Picard and
Admiral Laidlaw know of our existence.  I believe that Captain Riker believes
this to be true.  I believe that Captain Riker will act on this information in
such a way as to protect himself – and our agency – from Picard and Admiral
Laidlaw.”
            “Be very, very careful here, Lieutenant,” Admiral Jorge García
said.  “Are you suggesting that your cousin Admiral Laidlaw, the head of
Starfleet on Betazed, and Captain Jean-Luc Picard are aware of Section 31 and
are planning to expose us?”
            “Yes,” Lt Renan Balum said.  He could feel sweat trickling down the
back of his neck.
            “How did they come across this information?” Commander Sovok
questioned.
            “I don’t know, sir,” Balum answered.  “It’s the same information
that Commander Zweller was acting upon.”
            “I see.”  García stood up and turned towards the window, the one
that often him the view of the High Council building and the gardens behind
it.  “Sovok, tell Zweller to get his ass over here.  So Kyle Riker has decided
on a preemptive strike.  I think he needs to be dissuaded from his current
course of action.  Soon.  And then he needs to find himself on his way to San
Francisco.”
            “Agreed,” Sovok said.  “You are dismissed, Lieutenant.”
            “Sir,” Balum said, standing.
            “It’s Renan, isn’t it?” García asked. 
            “Yes, sir.”
            “Why don’t you take the rest of the day off?  It sounds as if
you’ve had enough excitement, for  now.  If you have any more thoughts on
Captain Riker or his whereabouts, you are to let me know immediately.”
            “Aye, sir.”
           
           
            Outside, Tarana was waiting for him.  “You look ill,” she said. 
“What happened?”
            “I was the bearer of bad news,” he answered.  “I’m okay, just
tired.  They’ve told me to go home.  Get some rest.”
            “I think that’s a good idea,” she said.  “Don’t worry about the
project.  We’ve got it under control.”
            “I know,” he answered.  He tried to smile, but he could see she
wasn’t buying it.  “I’m not a very important member of the team.”
            Her antennae quivered, but she didn’t comment.  “Will you be in
tomorrow?” she asked.
            He shrugged.  “I don’t know.  They only said today.”
            “I’ll walk with you,” she offered.
            “It’s all right,” he said.  He felt like a man condemned.
            He followed her back to his cubicle and grabbed his padd.   She
watched him head out the door.
            “Renan!” she called.
            He turned.  “Yeah?”
            “Why don’t you meet us for drinks in the gardens tonight, around
eighteen-thirty?  That is, if you’re feeling up to it.”
            He thought about his apartment, where he would certainly be
expected to go, and he thought about his sister’s house.  He wondered what his
great-aunt’s answer had been.  He should vary his movements, he thought.  Do
the unexpected.  Not go home.  Go to a hotel.  Stay in public, where it would
be harder to recognise him, and harder to cover up an attack.
            “Sure,” he said.  “I’ll meet you there.”
            Tarana smiled, her antennae waving happily.  “Great,” she said. 
“Get some sleep.  You’ll be okay, after.”
            “Okay, Mother,” he said, and this time he did smile.
            He felt a little better, walking out.  It was the middle of the
day, in the busiest city on Betazed.  Let García and Sovok worry about Kyle
Riker.  He was only a very small fish here, in a much larger pond, and
certainly not substantial enough for any turtle’s meal.
***** Chapter 99 *****
Chapter Summary
     The engineer Bill Wharton arranges a meeting with a young Andorian
     lieutenant.
Chapter Notes
     "At the core of the unattached is deep-seated rage, far beyond normal
     anger. This rage is suppressed in their psyche...a rage...born of
     unfulfilled needs...." Magid and McKelvey, 1988
Chapter Ninety-Nine
 
 
 
           
            He’d had a lovely sleep, and had hit the pavement in the morning
with a cheerful whistle.  He’d grabbed a coffee at a kiosk and took a leisurely
walk towards the market area.  He was still Bill Wharton, engineer, in Rixx for
his very first time, nervous about making his first presentation; wandering
into shops, purchasing a new shirt – blue, his favourite colour – and getting
his hair cut.  He stopped at the fresh air market and bought some fruit.  He
chatted with the vendors, and with the fishmonger, telling a story about a six-
pound cutthroat he’d once caught.  At ten or so he found himself at the
Starfleet building and sat at a booth in the back of the café, sipping his
coffee and watching two lieutenants flirt.
            He waited until they’d left, and then he wandered into the lobby,
standing in front of a flower kiosk while he saw them get on the lift and
travel to the seventh floor.  He purchased a bouquet – he was fairly sure Agam
had been the kind of woman to have fresh flowers once a week – and slipped out
the door, shaking his head at the quality that was hired by his overly-esteemed
employer.
            The Andorian lieutenant was interesting, though, and he considered
her as he walked to the public gardens.  He had always enjoyed Rixx.  He
remembered, once, that he’d considered bringing Katherine Pulaski here, when
he’d considered having a serious relationship with her.  He found a table on a
patio and ordered a cool drink and then something warm and spicy to eat,
grilled fish and roasted vegetables.  Katherine had been a little like Betty,
he thought; serious and confident; trusting.  Those blue eyes, so like
Billy’s. 
            He didn’t dream; he never had.  He remembered once, when he’d come
back to the Paris flat for a semester’s leave from the Academy, being called
into his father’s room.  At that point his father was already ill with what
would kill him; it had a name, but he’d forgotten it. 
            “I hope you dream about him,” his father had said.
            He was nonplussed.  His mind had been filled with the excitement of
his recruitment into their organisation, that leave; he’d finally found the
source of real power in the Federation and they’d decided that they’d wanted
him, the unwanted second son of a famous Federation ambassador; he had no idea
what his father was going on about.  Perhaps dementia had finally set in.
            “I don’t dream,” he told his father.
            His father had died shortly thereafter.  Later, he’d realised what
his father had wanted; he’d wanted to believe that Wharton’s tormented eyes
haunted him still, but that hadn’t been so; he barely remembered Wharton.  No,
it was Billy’s eyes he sometimes saw, when he was looking into the eyes of
someone else, another little boy, perhaps.  Not Billy’s eyes when he was
frightened, although he’d seen those often enough, but when he’d looked up at
him with the vaguely sad hope that perhaps this time it wouldn’t hurt.  Those
eyes.  The same look that Will had given him on the Enterprise, the last time
he’d seen him; when he’d finally gotten Will alone so he could convince him to
take the Aries and do what needed to be done.  Will had looked at him with
anger, and hatred, and under that, fear – but under that. he’d seen that same
look, the one that hoped for kindness, instead of pain.
            He wondered now if he’d given Will kindness that time, would he
have taken the Aries?  Would he have gone out there into Dominion territory and
started the cascade of events he was supposed to have started?
            He’d finished his meal and stood up.  Reflection was for fools and
old men – and he was not quite old, and he’d never been a fool.  The Andorian
lieutenant would be perfect, he thought, as he paid his bill.  Everything in
Rixx was exactly as it always was.  He found that comforting.  He walked home
purposefully, whistling.  He had a body to dispose of, and an outing to plan.
           
 
 
            Lt Tarana had never heard of Section 31.  That was not surprising;
there were plenty of Starfleet admirals and even the Federation president who
had never heard of Section 31.  At first she didn’t understand why an engineer
from Alpha Centauri would want to meet with her.  She’d never been to Alpha
Centauri.  She’d been to three planets in her life; her home planet of Andoria,
Earth, and now her first posting on Betazed.  She’d explained to Mr Wharton
that she had plans at eighteen-thirty and he’d been quite gracious; he wouldn’t
take much of her time.  He merely had a question he wanted to ask her, having
to do with a project he was presenting; she worked in Xenobiology, didn’t she? 
She was flattered in spite of herself.  Every worker in a cubicle wants to
think that someone, somewhere, has noticed her work; Tarana was no exception. 
She’d been a coveted child and her parents were proud of her.  Mr Wharton was
old and he was kind of cute, in a human sort of way.  Actually, it was Renan
whom she thought was cute, but of course, with her parents, let alone her own
biology, that would be an impossibility.  It was what made it fun for both of
them, because Renan’s parents were exactly the same as hers.  She and Renan
could be best friends, but at some point in time their parents would find an
appropriate match for each of them, and then their friendship would be reduced
to the occasional greeting sent on the birth of a child.
            Mr Wharton bought her a coffee from a kiosk in the garden and then
asked if she didn’t mind if they walked down towards the lake.  She didn’t
mind; she loved the gardens of Rixx in all their exotic beauty.  She’d expected
to be asked about her work, and so she was completely surprised when he asked
her about the Federation instead.
            Her antennae quivered.  “I don’t understand,” she said.  “What is
it you are asking?”
            He smiled at her, a smile that seemed both gentle and sad at the
same time.  “I’m asking if you believe in the mission of the Federation.”
            With one antenna flat against her head, she said curtly, “Of course
I do.”
            “You believe in the peaceful exploration of space?  The collective
organisation of peaceful planets?  The Prime Directive?” he asked.  He asked
these questions quietly and simply in a way that made them sound somehow
glorious.
            “I am a member of a Founding Planet,” she said, and her antennae
were still and straight.
            This time his smile was broad.  “I knew I’d made the right choice,”
he said.  He extended his hand to her, and she took it; his hand dwarfed hers,
but for some reason, he didn’t make her feel small.  “I knew when I saw you in
the coffee shop with the other lieutenant – that I’d found exactly what I was
looking for.”  He let her hand go and then he said, “Exactly what we were
looking for.  Captain Kyle Riker.  I’m from a very small, elite group of
Starfleet with a highly specialised mission.”
            “Sir,” she said, startled.  She hoped she hadn’t said anything
stupid.  She was, after all, acutely aware that she was merely a lieutenant
j.g.
            They were standing at the edge of the lake.
            “Do you have turtles on Andoria?” he asked.
           
 
 
            He left the young Andorian forty minutes or so before she was to
meet Renan Balum and her friends, and leisurely strolled back into the
marketplace.  He loved the old market on Rixx, or any old market square, for
that matter.  For a moment he thought he had no idea why, and then an old
memory surfaced, as they tended to do, these days, of his mother shepherding
the four of them on a rare family outing to Piccadilly Circus.  It had been a
revelation to him – all these different types of people with their vastly
different lives – and he remembered his mother had seen the surprise and
delight in his eyes, her child who was so rarely surprised or delighted by
anything.  She’d pulled him to her – he must have been nine or ten or so, far
too old for public affection from his mother – and had kissed him lightly on
his darkening blond hair.  “Do you see anything you’d like to have, Kyle?”
she’d murmured.  He never asked for anything.  No toy, no book, no sport, no
lessons.  Perhaps she’d been feeling sentimental, a failing that was not hers,
or maybe she’d been merely curious, to see if he would choose something.  He’d
glanced around, at the detritus of so many worlds, old clothes and shoes and
pots and books, real books; real paintings too, in cracked wooden frames,
lamps, brass, candlesticks.  It was almost overwhelming.  His sisters, Susanne-
Adèle and Sophie-Claude, were trying on old dusty hairpieces.  Wharton was
standing somewhat apart from them, bored.  He didn’t know that he’d wanted any
thing – what he wanted was to be.  What would it be like to be someone else? 
To interact with all these other people and have it be real?  He never felt
sorry for himself – the truth was he liked himself, he liked the feel of his
own skin covering his bones – but he looked at other people and he mimicked
their behaviour but he never was.  It was beyond him, these other lives.  He
looked up at his mother and perhaps she saw some inchoate loss in his eyes, he
didn’t know; but she took him by the hand and led him to a clothing rack and
proceeded to change his appearance entirely, until the boy that was looking up
at her was some other young boy, named Philip or George or Harry or something,
who played footie on Saturdays and had Indian takeaway when his mum was too
arsed to cook.  He grinned at his mother, then, and the sentimentality she’d
been feeling vanished, and she stuffed some credits in his pocket and told him
to have fun….
            He shook his head.  He was Bill Wharton now, engineer, and
engineers were a single-minded breed.  They had absolutely no time for wool-
gathering, and he had a meal to cook for his two guests who would be arriving
at his perfectly lovely flat, filled with fresh flowers.
***** Chapter 100 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will and Jean-Luc have their brief morning alone, before McBride
     interrupts them.
Chapter One Hundred
 
 
 
 
            I said, “I can walk by myself.”  We were outside the door.
            “Aye, sir.”
            I glanced at Stoch.  His voice was the same low, quiet tone it
always was; he was not da Costa, with his sly sarcasm.  Stoch was simply
accepting my parameters, not making a comment on what he’d heard from the other
side of the door.
            My legs were still weak, but I managed to walk the few steps it
took from the door of my room to the head.  “Do you have to come in with me?” I
asked, but it was only for formality’s sake.  Of course he had to come in with
me.  I might break another mirror.  He said nothing, simply stood impassively
by the door while I made an attempt to get my empty bladder to produce a few
drops of piss that would satisfy everyone around me.  Finally I produced a
pathetic stream and shook myself off.  I was tempted to tell them all that I’d
told them I hadn’t needed to pee, but perhaps if I didn’t this regression into
childhood might end.  I washed my hands and left the room to find Beverly
waiting for me, besides both Yash and Dr Sandoval.
            “You said – “ I began.
            “I know,” she answered.  “Two minutes, Will.  That’s all I want.”
            “Don’t you get any sleep?  It’s not even alpha shift yet.  I hate
morning people.”
            “Does that include Jean-Luc?” She grinned.
            “Yes,” I said.  “It definitely includes him.”
            “I’ve told the two of you we’d leave you alone and we will,”
Beverly said.  “Your numbers are a little better this morning, and I wanted you
to know that.  Jean-Luc is going planet side in the afternoon – I believe he
told you that.”
            “Yes,” I said.
            I could feel I was swaying a bit, from standing for so long, and
mutely Stoch took my arm.
            “If I could get you into the biobed at that time, Will,” Beverly
said, “I could drain the fluid from around your lungs.”
            “Okay,” I said.
            I guess she’d been expecting me to say no, because her face lit up
the way I hadn’t seen it in a long time and then she said in her professional
voice, “Good.  We’ll get that set up, then.  It’s just a minor surgical
procedure.  It won’t take more than fifteen minutes or so.”
            “I can go back to bed now?” I said.  “I’m really tired.”
            “You need to drink this,” Yash said, handing me the stupid grape
electrolyte drink.
            I looked at it.  “I’m not pissing the bed again,” I said.  I could
feel my jaw hardening.
            It probably took everything Yash had to keep from rolling his
eyes.  “I’m leaving you the bedpan, Commander,” he said, “and both Joao and Lt
Ogawa will be here in thirty minutes.”
            “Fine,” I said.  “Give it to me.  I’m not drinking it out here.  I
feel like I’m going to fall down.”
            “That’s fine, Will,” Beverly said.  “Go back to bed.  Jean-Luc,
come get him.”
            Stoch opened the door and handed me over to Jean-Luc, who nodded at
Beverly, and then he shut the door quietly, taking the cup from my hand.
            “What’s this?” he asked, glancing at it.
            “The stupid grape juice with the electrolytes in it,” I said.  I
could see the bedpan on the night table.  “I’m supposed to drink it.”
            “You’d better do that, then,” he said mildly.  “Let me help you
back into bed.”
            “I can do it myself,” I said.
            “You’re turning down the tuck-in service?”
            I turned around to look at him.  His features were in their
perfectly calm, neutral expression.  “Now who’s taking the piss?” I asked.
            He grinned.  “Go on, you,” he said.  “Get in the bed.  Do you need
my help or not?”
            “No,” I said with some dignity.  “I do not need your help.”
            I climbed back into the bed and propped my pillow and his behind me
so that I could sit up and drink the stupid juice.  He handed me the juice and
waited for me to drink it.
            “I’m capable of putting it back on the table,” I said.
            “You have my pillow,” he answered.
            “Oh, for Christ’s sake,” I said, and I pulled the pillow out from
behind me and handed it to him.  “There’s your fucking pillow,” I said.  I put
the cup on the night table.
            “You,” he said, “should watch your fucking mouth,” and then he was
kissing me.  “It’s better when it’s fermented,” he remarked, pulling me to
him.  “What did Beverly want?”
            “She wants me in the biobed after you leave,” I said.  I could hear
his heart beating.  It didn’t sound mechanical – it just sounded like him. 
“She’s going to drain the fluid from around my lungs.”
            He was quiet and then he said, “What did you tell her?”
            “Okay,” I answered.
            “Je t’aime,” he said.
            “Moi aussi,” I said, smiling into his chest.
            He began to laugh.  “Get in the bed,” he told me, “enfant
terrible,” and he was sliding in next to me.  “There’s nothing left of you,” he
said, after a while.
            “I was fat,” I answered.
            “I didn’t think so,” he said.  “Does that feel good?”
            “I thought you wanted me to sleep.”
            “You can sleep after.”
            “That,” I said, “feels very good.”
            “This is probably not a good idea,” he said a few moments later,
reaching into the night table on his side of the bed.  “Beverly will hang me
out to dry.”
            “Who’s going to tell her?” I asked.
            “Merde!” he said.  “William.”
            “You liked it.  Besides,” I said, rolling over on my side, “I
thought it was only a problem for my heart if I came.”
            He was kissing my back.  “And you’re not because?” he asked.
            I shrugged.  “My dick doesn’t work anymore,” I said.  “I thought
that was fairly obvious.”
            He wrapped his arms around me and kissed the back of my neck. 
“Will,” he said.  “You’ve starved yourself half to death and you’re
dehydrated.  I’m equally sure it’s not a permanent problem.”
            “Are you going to make love to me or not?” I asked.
 
 
            I’d fallen asleep beside him, my hand across his chest, when I
heard the door open.  I didn’t open my eyes, because I thought it was probably
Ogawa, sent in here to check on my vitals while we were still asleep.  I felt
Jean-Luc stir.
            “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc,” I heard McBride say.  “I know we promised
you a morning with him…but there’s a new development.  I need to speak with
you.”
            I groaned as I felt Jean-Luc sit up and opened my eyes.  “What kind
of new development?” I asked.
            Jean-Luc was wide awake.  “I need my uniform?” he asked.
            “Yes,” McBride said.  “I think it would be best.”
            “Let me get dressed.”  He turned to me.  “Nothing to worry about,”
he said, although I could see, instantly, that he was, in fact, worried.
            “You promised you’d be honest with me,” I said.  I sat up, even as
he was already out of the bed.  Of course my pyjamas were on the floor, and he
was naked, but McBride didn’t seem to care.
            He turned around, a second time.  “Will,” he said.  He’d grabbed
his robe, and now he wrapped it around himself.  “This has to do with Admiral
Haden?” he said, glancing at McBride. 
            “And Admiral Laidlaw,” McBride said.
            He bent over and kissed me.  “Dr McBride and I will discuss this
with you when I return,” he said.  “I’m sure you’ll be out of the biobed by
then.”
            “I thought the mission was done,” I said.
            “This has nothing to do with the mission,” he said, and it was the
captain who was speaking.
            “I’m on need-to-know,” I said.
            “Yes.  When you need to know, I will tell you.  You will have to
trust me, Will.”  He was gathering up his uniform.
            “I do trust you,” I answered.  “Sir.”
            He smiled, the warm one.  “I know you do,” he said.  He came back
to me and kissed my head.  “It’s fine.  I’ll let you know if I want you to
worry.”
            I rolled my eyes at him and he grinned.  “I’ll await those orders,
sir,” I said.
            “I am glad, William,” Dr McBride said, “that you have decided to
stay with us.  I will see you a little later, for a very brief therapy
session.”
            “I’m not done with therapy?” I asked.
            “Will,” he said, “your therapy is just now beginning.”
            Da Costa stood there at the doorway, holding the door open as they
left, and then he walked in, smiling.
            “What are you grinning about?” I asked.
            “You,” he answered.  “You’ll be in the biobed in about twenty
minutes.  Do you want me to help you shower?”
            “The village idiot strikes again,” I said sourly, and da Costa
laughed.
            “Duly noted, sir,” he said.
***** Chapter 101 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride gets an unexpected subspace communication.
Chapter Notes
     From "Trauma Through a Child's Eyes" by Peter A Levine and Maggie
     Kline: "When arousal energy, in the form of anxiety or nervousness
     for example, builds to an unbearable level, dissociation is the
     body's fail-safe mechanism that prevents a youngster from feeling
     like she is going crazy. It allows the compartmentalization of
     terrifying experiences from everyday reality...The mind and body
     separate in such a way that part or all of the memories of the
     unpleasant experience are disconnected...Dissociation can be as minor
     as a momentary lapse of attention, daydreaming, or 'spaciness.' At
     its most serious, although rare, dissociation can result in long
     periods of amnesia or the assuming of various 'sub-personalities.'"
Chapter One Hundred One
 
 
 
 
            “Would you like me to stay with you?” He’d spent maybe forty
minutes with Deanna and Joao, debriefing them, dealing with the fallout from
the therapy session for Deanna but, more importantly, dealing with the
repercussions of Will’s decision to halt his treatment.  It wasn’t as if Deanna
hadn’t known this might be a possibility, but it was something she’d chosen to
ignore until she’d walked into Will’s room and realised that the captain was
supporting Will and that he himself had mentioned hospice.  Her walls had
shattered and it would probably, he thought, take much longer than the forty
minutes he’d managed to find to help repair the damage.  As for Joao, it hadn’t
occurred to him at all that Will Riker would die.  Joaquim had gotten better,
hadn’t he?
            He could see she wanted to tell him yes.  He wondered if she
remembered all those times, when she was little, that he’d stood in for Ian. 
It would be something that Ian would have done; slept on his grown daughter’s
sofa so she wouldn’t feel so bereft.
            “No,” Deanna said, standing in the middle of her darkened dayroom,
the dim light from the corridor framing McBride and pooling on the carpeted
deck.  “I’ll be all right now.  I just need some sleep.”
            “I could give you something to help you sleep,” he offered.
            She hesitated, and then shook her head.  “If there should be a
crisis,” she began.  She smiled, the same one Lwaxana had given him in the days
after Vaughn had brought Ian’s body home.  “I know what you’re doing,” she
said.  “I haven’t forgotten.”  She paused.  “And – thank you.  Thank you for
what you did then – and thank you for offering it to me again now.”
            “I’m down the corridor, Deanna,” he said.  “You need only call me. 
You know this.”
            “I do.  I do know this,” she said, but she was convincing herself.
            “I can sit with you, for a bit.”  He was so tired he could barely
stand – and he hadn’t even begun to write his notes on the session and its
close – but he needed her.  Will needed her.
            “It’s just that,” Deanna said, still standing in the middle of her
darkened dayroom, “he was right next door to me and he was waking up terrified
and in pain and I never even knew.  He’s supposed to be my imzadiand I slept
right through it.” 
            She was weeping now and he walked into the room and took her in his
arms.  “He’s had a lifetime of hiding his pain, Deanna,” he said, patting her
gently.  She was so small.  “You didn’t know because he didn’t want you to.”
            “I should have known,” she repeated, sniffing, her head still
pressed against his chest.
            “You did know,” he told her.
            She looked up at him, her eyes large, her face wet with tears. 
“What do you mean?”
            “You contacted me about my treatment program,” he said.  “When did
you do that?”
            “After the Borg invasion,” she answered.  She was calming down.
            “And you processed the request for implementation through Picard
for this ship?”
            “Yes,” she said.
            “Why?”
            “Because,” she said, “the captain and Will were showing signs of
PTSD.”
            “And what did they do, regarding those symptoms?”
            “The captain spent time with Beverly and me, working through his
issues from having been assimilated.  Every week, two times a week.  And he
went back to Earth, to be with his brother.”
            “And what did Will do?” he asked.
            “Said he was fine,” she answered.  “Saw me once, and joked about
it.  I think he got something from Beverly to help him sleep.  He didn’t,
though.  Sleep.  He walked the decks, checking on the ship.  Checking on
everything.  Especially Jean-Luc.”
            “And that was when you contacted me,” McBride said.  “Deanna, you
did what you could.  He has a big decision to make tonight – Picard asked him
to think about it, tonight, and make his decision in the morning – and he needs
you to be here.  Centered, the way you always have been, for him.  If he does
choose to end his treatment, hospice will give you time to grieve for him.  But
don’t grieve for him now.”
            “I know,” she said.  She was pulling herself together.  “I know.  I
can do this.  I’ll be all right.”
            He let her go.  “Deanna?”
            “Yes?” She’d started to pull away, and now she turned round to look
at him.
            “Have faith in your captain,” he said.  “I know that you and Will
had something, once.  But I don’t think Will can give up what Jean-Luc has
offered him.  He’s been wanting it for far too long.  You know this too, I
think.”
            She smiled.  “He’d deny it,” she said.
            “Of course he would,” McBride said gently.  “That doesn’t mean it
isn’t true.”
            She hugged him.  “Thank you,” she said.  “You get some sleep, too. 
No staying up all night to write your case notes.”
            “Ah,” he said.  “There’s no better soporific, is there?  Then
writing case notes.”
            “Good night, Sandy,” she said.
            “Good night, Deanna.”
            Walking down the corridor to his own quarters, he hoped sincerely
that what he’d said was true.
           
 
 
            He’d fallen asleep in his chair.  He woke with a start, because his
leg was cramping, and then he realised he’d done exactly what he’d promised
Deanna he wouldn’t do.  He dropped his papers on the floor, along with his pen,
and wondered how long it would take him to organise everything again and then
type it into his padd.
            He yawned and rubbed his leg.  It wasn’t only his poor leg – his
shoulders were sore, and his neck was tight.  He stood up and stretched.  That
was the problem, of course – treating this illness had suddenly become a
younger man’s job.  The hours worked, the sleepless nights, the tumult of
emotions, the staggering pain.  He was getting too old, he thought, for this. 
It was good he was training Deanna – and even better that he’d found two new
recruits in Joao and the young Vulcan Stoch.  They would be the new faces of
treatment, and he could retire to just serving as a consultant.  Perhaps, he
mused, teaching one or two classes at the University of Betazed.  It would be
nice to be home.
            Well.  He didn’t have the time to think about retirement now.  He
had a patient who was days away from dying, and who’d come to some sort of a
decision – he could feel it, somehow, in the air.  He didn’t know what it was,
not yet – but whatever Will Riker had decided, he was currently at peace with
his decision.
            He wandered into his bedroom, and gathered up clean clothes for the
day, and then took a long hot water shower, allowing the pulsing jets to soothe
his aching muscles.  He took his time in the – what did they call it on a ship
again? – head, that was it; allowing himself to become centered through the
simple tasks of brushing his teeth and using the depilatory.  He dressed and
then found his bag, and pulled out his tallis and his tefillin for the
recitation of morning prayers.  He wrapped himself in his tallis, placed the
tefillin around his head and the phylacteries around his arms, and then covered
his head in his tallis, feeling himself slip into the ancient davening of
prayer, the simple recitation of the Sh’ma which opened the gateways to the
Infinite.  Sh’ma Yisroel, Adonai Eloheynu, Adonai Echad…as he recited the
prayer, as he could feel it filling him, and surrounding him, he was sure that
he could feel the presence of the little girl whom William had loved, who
somehow through her death had managed to keep her friend William whole, and
alive, because even though he’d turned himself into stone, he’d still had the
capacity to love and to feel empathy.  There hadn’t been just the two little
boys, Billy and William; poor little Billy with his rage and his shame; poor
little William with his fear and his façade of normality; no, there’d been
three little children, hadn’t there; Billy, and William, and Rosie, with her
kindness and her enormous capacity for love.
            He unwound the tallis from around himself, and kissed it, and
recited the blessings as he put his tefillin and phylacteries and kippah away. 
He’d reunited Billy with William into one, but there would be no Will until he
added the last child.  Rosie.  Perhaps, he thought, as he ordered himself a cup
of tea and an egg sandwich from the replicator, if Will could give the real
Rosie back to her mother, he could then incorporate his own version of her back
into himself.
            He walked into his dayroom and began picking up the papers from the
floor, eating his sandwich as he did so.  It was early – not even alpha shift
yet – and he’d scheduled a therapists’ meeting for 01000, which meant he had
plenty of time to organise and finish his notes.  He reread what he’d written,
the reasons for the hypnotherapy and the objections to it; the ease with which
Will had sunk into the deep trance; the layers of revelation.  The success of
taking one memory – the memory at the ballpark – and working through it,
putting it away.  The Herculean effort to get Will to reveal what had happened
to Rosie and his part in her death.  The understanding, at last, that he hadn’t
killed her.  That he wasn’t to blame.  He wrote quietly, absorbed in his
thoughts and his therapeutic understanding of what was the central trauma of
his patient’s life.  He finished his breakfast, leaving his dishes on the
coffee table, and then he walked over to the desk in the corner, where there
was a computer station, and he booted it up and began reading his mail and
transcribing his notes.  He could feel the ship’s engines thrumming underneath
his feet; could feel the quiet busyness of a thousand or so minds at work and
play; and when the ping of an incoming communication alerted him, it was sudden
and unexpected.
            “Dr McBride.”  It was the captain’s acting first officer, the
android Commander Data.
            “Yes?”  He’d met Mr Data once and, as with most people, he assumed,
found him quite compelling.
            “You have a subspace communication incoming on a private channel,
for your eyes only,” Commander Data said.
            “Ah, thank you, Mr Data.”  He assumed it was Val and opened the
channel.
            “Dr Alasdair McBride?”
            “Yes?”  The man looking at him was dressed in nondescript civilian
clothes and was probably around his own age.  He had greying hair and a sharp
face, but McBride had seen those eyes before.  “I am Alasdair McBride.”
            “Kyle Riker,” the man said.  “You’re treating my son Will for Post-
Traumatic Stress Disorder?  You wanted to talk to me, I understand.”
            Of course.  No wonder he’d recognised the eyes.  They weren’t
Will’s – these were dark – but they were certainly the indicators of the
psychopathology. 
            “Mr Riker,” he said.  “It is Mr Riker, isn’t it?  Or do you have a
rank I should address you by?”
            “You may call me whatever you wish,” Riker said, smiling.  “I’m
sure, since you’ve asked the question, you are already aware of my rank.”
            “I didn’t expect you to contact me,” McBride said.  The man who sat
before him was casual and relaxed.  There was absolutely no evidence to support
that he was out-of-control, which is what Renan had suggested.
            “Why wouldn’t I contact you?”  Riker seemed genuinely puzzled. 
“You’d asked me to, hadn’t you?  And Captain Picard had suggested there might
be a need for further information.”
            McBride said, “Perhaps I’m not necessarily convinced of your
concern for your son’s condition.”
            Riker’s smile broadened and it was an eerie reminder of Will.  The
same generous mouth, the same expanse of white teeth.  In Will’s case, his
smile, while it too was meant to disarm, had a measure of sweetness to it; this
smile was purely primate.  “Oh, but I am absolutely concerned about my son’s
condition,” Riker said.  “His last communication to me had been so upbeat, so I
was shocked when Captain Picard contacted me.  It’s always, of course,” he
said, “the communication you least want to acknowledge, when you have a child
on a starship.  The communication from the captain, I mean.”
            “You thought he was dead?” McBride asked.  Two could play this
game, as long as the one was reasonably far away.
            “I was afraid he was,” Riker said, the smile fading.  “After all,
why else would his captain contact me, if not to be the bearer of bad news?”
            “And was it, Mr Riker, bad news?”
            “That my son was seriously ill?  Yes,” Riker said.  “I’ve lost his
mother to illness.  To lose him, too…”  He allowed his voice to trail away, and
McBride noted that it was exactly that – he could control every nuance of
speech, every consonant and vowel.
            “I understand from Captain Picard that your conversation was
difficult,” McBride said.
            Riker was silent, and then, in what was an amazingly practised
move, he rubbed his right thumb over his left hand.  It was a move meant to
signal anxiety – and it was likewise meant to distract.  McBride had seen it
only once before, when he’d watched a filmed interrogation between a man well-
versed in torture.  It had been the torturer’s move – one designed to distract
and soften his victim.  A man who was anxious about that which he was doing
could likely be convinced to stop.  In the film, the victim had been brought in
for the kill so quickly he hadn’t even had time to realise he was dead. 
Narcissism, McBride thought, would be this man’s only flaw; that he would
assume the move would not be recognised for what it really was.
            “The captain made certain accusations,” Riker said now, his voice
tinged with sadness.  “You are treating Will.  You are more than aware, I’m
sure, of his history; of how unstable he was as a child.  Mistakes –“  He
paused, as if he were bringing himself under control “—terrible mistakes were
made.  I am afraid I hurt my son, Doctor,” Riker said.  “If you can help him….”
            “Indeed,” McBride said.  He would not play this particular game. 
“You did more than just hurt your son, Mr Riker.  Just as you did more than
hurt your brother.  Wharton.”
            Riker’s expression never changed.  “Yes, I’d heard that you were
looking into my own past,” he said calmly.  “My brother Wharton was killed by a
monster who was not me, Dr McBride.”
            “No?” McBride asked.  “Then perhaps you can explain why Rosie
Kalugin was murdered in exactly the same way.”
            “Rosie Kalugin,” Riker said.  “I haven’t heard that name in a very
long time.  It was my understanding her body was never found.”
            “Your son has remembered,” McBride said, “what happened to Rosie
Kalugin.”
            Riker shrugged.  “You’d asked to speak to me, Doctor,” he said. 
“I’m returning yourcall.  If there’s something I can do to help Will, then,
please.  Let me know.”
            “You can tell me where to find Rosie Kalugin’s body,” McBride
said.  “That would be of great help to your son.”
            “You haven’t even told me how my son is doing,” Riker answered.
            “You never asked.”
            Now, McBride noted, there was a bit of a change.  Riker’s features
hardened, in some indefinable way.  “Then I am asking you now,” Riker said. 
“How is my son?”
            “He has chosen to stop his treatment,” McBride said.  “As of last
night.  He is entering the hospice program today.”
            “He is dying?”
            “The damage,” McBride said, “was already severe by the time I was
called in.  He has lost almost thirty kilos.  He is in congestive heart
failure.”
            “I see.”
            McBride waited.
            “You want to know about his little friend,” Riker said.  “Or he
wants to know?”
            “I expect her mother would like to know,” McBride said quietly.
            “Vera,” Riker said.  “Please, Doctor.  Don’t continue to play games
with me.  Just answer the question.”
            “William would like to know.”
            “I want to see him.”
            McBride kept his features still.  “For what reason?”
            “Doctor,” Riker said expansively, as if they were having dinner
together.  “He’s my son.  You said he was dying.  Hospice, you said.  He
doesn’t have long, then, does he?  I want to see my son.”
            “I’m not sure that Captain Picard would want you on his ship,”
McBride replied.
            “Ah, Jean-Luc Picard,” Riker said.  “Will always did have a thing
for older men.  Erik Pressman.  That professor at the Academy – I can’t
remember his name.”
            McBride was glad the Enterprise had water showers. 
            “You’ll arrange a visitation, I’d guess you could call it,” Riker
said.  “I understand the Enterprise is at Alpha Lya III.  I’m sure Vance Haden
will be happy to set it up.”
            “And in return?” McBride asked.
            “Need there be a return? I’m his father, after all,” Riker
answered.  He sighed.  “I will talk to my son.”
            “I will speak to Captain Picard.”
            “You do that, Doctor,” Riker said.  He started to rise, and then he
sat back down.  The primate smile was back.  “Your little cousin?  The one with
the strange name for a Betazoid?  He says hello.  I will see my son, Doctor –
and it doesn’t matter to me in the slightest what you and Picard – and Admiral
Laidlaw – think you know.  That’s Jeff García’s problem, not mine.”  He paused,
and then he said, “I’ll give you time to speak to Picard – and Laidlaw, if you
think he can help you.  At some point – soon, I guess, if what you have to say
about Will is true – I’ll contact Haden and set things up.  It was good talking
with you, Doctor.  Lt Balum has said so many positive things about you.”
            The communication ended.  McBride shut down the computer, put his
shoes on, and headed for sickbay.  He’d promised Will he’d let him have his
morning with Jean-Luc, but it was time, he thought, to assemble the fleet.  The
first shot had just been fired across their bow.
***** Chapter 102 *****
Chapter Summary
     Renan Balum meets his friends for drinks and learns that Lt Tarana
     has made a surprise dinner engagement for the two of them.
Chapter One Hundred Two
 
 
 
 
            He’d checked into the Chalice, using a name that Val had given him,
just a university student ready to start a new semester.  He’d had a long
shower, and then replicated himself some clothes, and then he’d taken a forty-
minute nap, hoping that when his alarm woke him, he would have the go-ahead
from Val to report to the Council.
            He felt better, when he woke.  It had been over twenty-four hours
now, since he’d been in the company of Kyle Riker.  He hadn’t heard from Corey
Zweller, and he’d left the matter in the more than capable hands of Jeff García
and Commander Sovok.  Even though, upon checking his padd, there was no
communication yet from Val, he had no real doubt that Val wouldn’t do as he’d
promised.  There were many uncertainties in the universe, but Admiral Thomas
Laidlaw was not one of them.
            He left the Chalice with a crowd of others, engineers and minor
diplomats and students, and stood with maybe five or six of them for the next
air tram.  He could have walked to the gardens but he’d decided it wouldn’t
hurt to be just a little bit prudent.  He doubted very much that Admiral García
would give him any new information about Riker, but he was fairly sure if there
had been new developments, he’d hear from Commander Zweller.  They’d worked
several missions together; perhaps they weren’t friends, but he would certainly
consider Zweller a colleague.  He climbed on board the air tram and sat beside
an older woman who’d clearly bought out half of the stores on Rixx.  It would
be hard to see him around all of her many purchases, and as the air tram was
crowded, he felt safe for the first time since he’d arrived home.
            The tram emptied at the main entrance to the gardens.  He checked
his chronometer and saw that he was almost on time.  He was surprisingly happy
about seeing Tarana again.  He knew, of course, that she was just a little bit
in love with him, but that was all right.  She was a great kid; she would be a
brilliant officer.  Her Andorian biology made her an impossibility, which meant
that the two of them had complete freedom to adore one another without ever
having to worry about long-term consequences.
            She’d taken a patio table, and waved to him as he approached her. 
She was with the usual crew from Xenobiology – Lon Cisneros from the colony on
Rigel and Maggie Davies who’d grown up mostly on Mars.
             “The prodigal son returneth,” Maggie said.  “Have a drink, Renan.”
            He sat down.  “How did I become the prodigal son?” he asked.  He
waved a waiter over, and ordered a drink.
            “Because,” Lon said, grinning, “you ran away to avoid work, and
then get recognition by the boss.”
            “That,” he answered, “is a very interesting take you have on
everything.”
            “You have a better story?”
            He thought about the one he’d told Tarana, and he said, “No.  Yours
will do.”
            “Hah,” Lon said triumphantly, grinning at both Tarana and Maggie. 
“I win.  The two of you owe me.”
            Tarana said, “I don’t ever recall making a wager.  Do you, Maggie?”
            “With Lon?  Never,” Maggie agreed.
            Lon made an exaggerated crestfallen face, and Balum said, as the
waiter delivered his drink, “Oh, I’ll buy you a round.”
            “Bottoms up!” Lon replied.  “I’ll have another,” he told the
waiter, yet another University of Betazed student.  “In fact, this fellow here
is buying a round for all of us.”
            Balum nodded, and the waiter disappeared. 
            “So,” Maggie began, with not much subtlety, “meet anyone nice while
you were gone?”
            “How long have you been here?” he asked.  “Tarana said eighteen-
thirty.”
            “Oh, we all logged out early,” Lon answered.  “Both the boss and
Commander Sovok were in a meeting, for about three hours after you left.  Then
they left.  Abruptly.  A crisis somewhere would be my guess.”
            “As soon as they were gone,” Maggie continued, “so was half the
office.”  She grinned.
            “Even you, Tarana?” he asked.  Her antennae quivered comically, and
he smiled.
            “All work and no play makes Tarana a dull girl,” Lon said.  “And
since Andorians are dull to begin with….” He paused, to see if she’d rise to
the bait.
            Instead, she said, “Oh, shut up, Lon.”
            The waiter brought the next round of drinks and he wrote on the
chit.  “So what are your plans for this evening?” he asked.  Lon and Maggie
were sort of dating.
            “I’m making dinner,” Maggie said, “and we’ll see, after that.”
            “Perhaps you should forego that last drink,” he said.  “Or maybe
Lon doesn’t care what you cook.”
            Now it was Maggie who said, “Shut up, Renan.”
            They sat in companionable silence.  Balum was struck by how normal
everything was; how surreal it was, after the past twenty-four hours, to feel
as if his life had become normal again.  It was nearing sunset, they were at
their usual haunt for drinks, he was with his friends, all of whom assumed he
was exactly as he said he was.  Just a Starfleet lieutenant in Xenobiology on
his home world. 
            “What are your plans?” Maggie asked Tarana, now.
            Balum was mildly surprised when he saw Tarana’s cheeks turn a
deeper shade of blue.  “Well,” she said.  “It’s a surprise, of sorts.”
            “What kind of a surprise?” he asked.  There’d been no mention of
anything other than drinks when they’d parted, before.
            “We’ve been asked to dinner, you and I,” she said.  “And that’s all
I’m going to tell you…for now.”
            “A royal appearance?” Lon teased.  The whole department knew of
Balum’s relationship to Elanna Lal.
            “No,” Tarana said, one antenna wavering dangerously close to her
skull.  “I won’t give you any hints, so don’t ask for them.  It’s business, and
that’s all I’ll say.”
            “Xenobiology business?” Maggie asked, and Balum said, “Starfleet
business?”  He thought about García’s final words for him, that they would be
in touch if they needed anything else, and then he thought about Lon’s “crisis”
somewhere which had forced the admiral and Commander Sovok to leave.  He had
his communicator on, but it was silent – there was still no message from Val,
but there was also no message from Commander Zweller.
            “Business,” Tarana repeated, but she was smiling, and her antennae
were no longer flat.
            “Well, that’s exciting,” Maggie said.  “Will you comm. me later and
tell me what’s going on?”
            “Yes, if I can,” Tarana said.  “Are we still meeting for a swim
tomorrow morning?”
            Maggie didn’t look at Lon, but she blushed.  “Of course we are,”
she said.  “Wouldn’t miss it.”
            Lon sighed dramatically, and the tension from Tarana’s surprise
announcement dissipated.
            “Drink up, friends,” Lon said, and now he was imitating García’s
voice.  Maggie rolled her eyes and Tarana giggled.  “To the adventures of the
evening.”
            “You’re so stupid, Lon,” Maggie said, but there was real affection
in her voice, and Balum found himself grinning at Tarana.
 
 
            They’d only stayed for another twenty minutes or so, and then
Tarana said, “Renan, we should go,” and the party broke up.  They walked
together as far as the air tram station at the entrance to the gardens, and
then broke up into couples, each going their separate ways.
            “I have the address,” Tarana said to him now as they walked back
towards the market.
            “Are we going to a hotel?” he asked curiously.
            “No,” Tarana said.  “This is a residential address.  A nice one,
actually.  Probably close to where your family lives.”
            He didn’t say anything, because his parents lived in a house on the
outskirts of the city, and his own flat was nothing particularly special, just
a one bedroom in a tower building of flats filled with junior officers and
lower level civil servants and teachers at the university.  His low profile was
part of his mission, from both the Council and Admiral García.
            “This is so unlike you,” he remarked.
            She shrugged.  “Sometimes you have to take an opportunity when it
is offered to you,” she said.  “Otherwise, how will you ever get noticed?”
            How indeed? he thought.  It had never occurred to him that they
might be at cross purposes to one another.  They turned a corner and were now
on a block with very impressive buildings.  These were the homes of the upper
echelon of the Federation and Starfleet on Betazed, and even, Balum noticed,
the home of one of Val’s own daughters.
            “Here we are,” Tarana said, stopping before a quietly impressive
tower of flats.  Each flat had a balcony overlooking the gardens, the city
centre, and the falls in the distance.  She pressed on the door chime, and a
disembodied voice responded.  “It’s Lieutenant Tarana,” she answered, “with
Lieutenant Balum.”
            The door opened and they walked in through the courtyard, filled
with plants and running water and tiled with a pale pink marble.  She pressed
for the lift.
            “Still aren’t going to tell me what this is about?” he asked.
            “Be adventurous, for once,” she scolded.
            The lift arrived and they stepped on.  “Twelve,” she said.
            “I think,” he said, as the lift doors opened, “I may have lost the
knack.”
            She shook her head and took his hand.  “Come on.  You will be
amazed, I promise you.”
            He rolled his eyes and followed her down the corridor.  She stopped
before a door, and again pressed the chime.  The door opened and she stepped
inside, and again he followed.  As the door shut behind them, a man’s voice
said, “I’m in the kitchen.  I’ll just be a moment.”
            The flat was simple, but elegant, with the scent of fresh flowers
filling the air.
            “I hope you’re both hungry,” Kyle Riker said, entering the living
room, a dish towel on his shoulder.  “I know I am.”
***** Chapter 103 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard speaks briefly to Beverly, and then views the communication
     from Kyle Riker with McBride. This leads, at last, to therapeutic
     resolution for Picard's guilt regarding his relationship with Will.
Chapter Notes
     "Researchers have noted that partners and family of trauma survivors
     sometimes also show signs of anxiety, depression, and even PTSD. This
     is sometimes referred to as 'secondary trauma.' Partners of trauma
     survivors with PTSD report higher levels of depression, anxiety,
     sleep difficulties, and stress-related health problems."
     From "When Someone You Love Suffers from Posttraumatic Stress," by
     Claudia Zayfert, PhD and Jason c DeViva, PhD.
Chapter One Hundred Three
 
 
 
 
           
            He did not want to leave Will.  He was up and out of the bed in an
adrenaline surge, knowing full well that, after having endured what they’d all
endured yesterday and last night, McBride would never have disturbed them for
something that wasn’t an emergency.  He’d done his best to reassure Will (who
of course wasn’t buying any of it) and then grabbed his uniform so he could
take a quick shower and change in the head.  Still, he used the act of dressing
as a way of putting on his professional self, and when he emerged from the
head, he was, once again, the captain.
            McBride said, “I am sorry, Jean-Luc.  Is there a way we can have a
brief discussion before we descend to the station?”
            “Here in sickbay?” he asked.  “Or in my ready room?”
            “No, definitely not here,” McBride answered.  “I was hoping for my
office….as it’s on the way, isn’t it?”
            He thought, If you were looking for “on the way” it would be better
to stay right here, because then, he realised, he would not have to leave
Will.  He said, “Your office will be fine, Doctor.”
            “I do wish you’d call me Sandy,” McBride said, “even Deanna does.”
            He did not respond.  He looked into Beverly’s office, where she was
speaking with Dr Sandoval, and said, “Beverly.  A moment, if you will.”
            Sandoval said, “I’ve just finished my report, sir,” and walked by,
his shift over.
            He entered her office and shut the door, leaving McBride standing
in the middle of sickbay.
            “What is it, Jean-Luc?” Beverly asked.
            “There’s a crisis, and I haven’t got the time to go over it with
you now,” he said.  “I will call a staff meeting when I return.  This has to do
with Will – with information we’ve been gathering, I won’t say more than that
here.”  He paused.  “You spoke to Will, before?  And he agreed to go into the
biobed?”
            “Yes,” Beverly said.  He could see the relief etched on her face,
even if she wasn’t smiling.  “It’s a simple surgical procedure, draining the
fluid.  It should only take about fifteen minutes.  However, we’ll do another
diagnostic…I might have to repair the damage done to his heart or his kidneys –
I won’t know until I’ve got him in there.”
            “And he knows this and agreed?”
            “It appears he’s made his decision,” Beverly replied.
            “Yes,” Picard said.  “Last night.  I will be honest with you,
Beverly.  I’m not comfortable with leaving him now.  His health is fragile; his
emotional state is still fragile….and he’s not stupid.  I’m sure he will figure
out what’s going on.  I need to know that you will especially keep him under
surveillance today.”  He paused again, because he didn’t really know what he
was trying to convey to her.  The simple truth was that he currently had no
accurate information upon which to base his gut feeling of impending danger,
and yet, there it was.  He had been a captain more years than he had not been,
and he would be a fool not to trust his intuition.
            “You think that Will is in danger from some external force?” She
was not stupid either.
            He sighed.  “Yes,” he said, finally.  He glanced at McBride,
waiting for him outside Beverly’s office.  McBride looked as he always did;
calm and centered.  But the McBride who had waked him had been neither.  “I
will speak to Mr Data before I leave…I will keep in touch with him.”
            “Do you want me to speak to Worf?” Beverly asked.  “Have security
here?”
            “No,” Picard said.  “That would surely cause a reaction from Will –
and I don’t think,” he added, giving his small, ironic smile, “that our Mr
Riker, for all of his current health issues, has changed his spots.  If he
decides the ship is in danger in some way, it won’t matter to him at all that
he’s on medical leave and Mr Data is Acting First.”
            Beverly grinned.  “I still have the hypo sprays,” she said, “should
that become a major issue.”
            He found himself grinning back.  “That is good to know,” he said. 
“I will be on the station.  Mr Data will be in contact.”  He turned to leave
and then he said, “Thank you.”
            “Don’t worry about him, Jean-Luc,” Beverly said, as he opened the
door.  “It’s good news, today.  We’ll take care of him.”
            He nodded, and joined McBride.  “Your office,” he said curtly, and
he headed out towards the corridor.
            Despite McBride having the longer legs, Picard was halfway to the
turbo lift before McBride caught up.
            “I’m not sure what couldn’t be said in my ready room, Doctor,” he
said.  “Deck Eight.”
            “I wanted you to see the communication I received this morning,”
McBride explained, “and while I realise that you will probably need to view it
with Mr Data and Mr Worf, perhaps, in your ready room, I thought it would be
better for you to see it with me, first.”  McBride paused.  “Therapeutically.”
            “Do we have time for therapy, Doctor?” Picard could not help using
his neutral tone of voice.  It was beginning to irritate him that he still did
not know what this was about, even though he could guess.
            “We must make time, Jean-Luc,” McBride said as the turbo lift
stopped at Deck eight.  “We need to discuss what happened last night…and this
morning too, I think.  And I need to guide you through what you are going to
see, so you understand it, not just from your perspective as captain of this
ship and Will’s commanding officer, but also as Will’s partner.  And I need you
to see it through my eyes.”
            They were walking to McBride’s office.
            “You heard from Kyle Riker?” Picard asked.
            McBride opened the doors and walked in.  “Yes,” McBride said, “Mr
Data patched the communication through while I was working on my notes.  In
here, please.”  McBride entered his smaller office, nodding to the client’s
chair for Picard, and sat down at his desk.  He booted up his computer.
            “You don’t think he’s destroyed the communication?” Picard asked,
sitting down, even though he had no desire to.
            “I’m sure he thinks he destroyed the communication,” McBride
answered, grinning.  “I have a few tricks up my own sleeve.  I’ve dealt with
men like Kyle Riker before, Captain.  I learned early on to have records of
absolutely everything.”
            “I thought you said they couldn’t be treated,” Picard noted.
            “No, they cannot be treated,” McBride agreed.  “But people still
bring them in for treatment.  I do try to avoid them.  I’ve known too many in
my profession who have lost either their lives or their licenses, in dealing
with their kind.”
            Picard said nothing.  He kept himself completely still.  He
remembered the conversation he’d had with Kyle Riker.  Keeping a record of
everything was definitely a necessity.
            “I would like, sometime today, to see the conversation you had with
Captain Riker,” McBride said.  “I would like to have a meeting with Deanna and
Mr Worf, I think, to go over the two communications.  With your permission, of
course.”
            Picard thought, Just get on with it, but he nodded and said, “Yes.”
            “I will let you watch it through, Jean-Luc,” McBride said.  “But
then I would like you to watch it a second time, with my notes on what is
happening.”
            Picard resisted the urge to snap at the man.  He could see that
McBride was completely aware of how irritated and tense he was, and he forced
himself to relax his hands and his shoulders.  He watched the communication
silently, noting the clothes Riker was wearing, the colour of his hair, the way
he was holding his hands; the move he made with his right thumb; his smile, and
the way it resembled, to a certain extant, Will’s.  The way he sat in the chair
was similar to Will, as well; even though Riker was just an average-sized man,
he took up space as if he were his son’s size.  The longer the conversation
went on between Riker and McBride the more at ease he became.  He had dealt
with evil before, in all its many guises.  He would never underestimate a man
like Kyle Riker, but he would not succumb to the man’s narcissism, either. 
            “I want to see him,” Riker said, and Picard felt himself relax.  It
had been nerve-wracking, he could admit to himself now, not knowing what
Riker’s agenda would be.  He should have known that, in the end, it would boil
down to his control of Will.
            He’d heard the remark about Will’s “thing” for older men before,
and yet it surprised him that his reaction, upon hearing it a second time, was
more visceral than it had been before.  As a statement, it had been said
completely without irony, as if Riker had no idea why his son would be
attracted to older men.  He knew that this remark was why McBride wanted to go
over this with him; why he felt it was necessary to evaluate it from a
“therapeutic” standpoint.  He missed, then, the next statement, or thought he
did, and then he caught Vance Haden’s name.  He listened to the rest of the
communication intently, realising that Riker had other sources of information –
Admiral García, it seemed – and then he was struggling with remembering just
exactly who Admiral García was; and realising that, for Riker, this had become
personal.  Very, very personal. 
            McBride said, quietly, “I will replay it.”
            “We don’t have the time for this,” Picard said.  “With all due
respect, Doctor.  I have dealt with this before.”
            “And which lover was that, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.  “Who was
being threatened by an out-of-control sociopath who was conflating his issues
with yours?”
            Picard said, “My issues?”
            “Yes,” McBride answered, calmly.  “Your issues.”
            “I would hardly think that any issues I might have,” Picard said,
“would have any bearing on the threat to Will and to Starfleet at all.”
            “Your issues are precisely the point,” McBride said, “which is why
we must make the time.  I will replay the communication.  We will talk about
how I see – as a psychiatrist – what Captain Riker is saying and what his
threats are.  We will talk about what he is implying, as far as you are
concerned.  Then I assume you will speak to Mr Data – and then we both will
speak to Admiral Haden.”
            “I am the captain of this ship, Dr McBride,” Picard said.  “We will
do exactly as I determine.”
            “And because you are precisely the captain that you are, Jean-Luc,
you will permit me to replay the communication, go over my notes, discuss the
information, and then take that information to your Acting First Officer. 
Regardless of how angry you feel towards me at this moment.”
            Picard was silent.  He wondered, idly, if Riker had felt this level
of frustration at speaking to this man, who apparently had the power to see
through anyone, at any time.
            “You and I have had several serious discussions,” McBride said
now.  “We have talked about your relationship with Will.  We have talked about
your relationship with Will’s illness.  You have been part of the therapeutic
process, in treating Will, because you presented yourself to me as Will’s life
partner, even though your relationship in that regard was fairly new when I
arrived on board.”
            “Yes,” Picard said.  He was holding himself so still now that his
muscles were beginning to ache.
            “And we must return to the central issue of your relationship to
Will now,” McBride said, “because Will’s father has brought it up, and because
Will’s father intends to use it.  He will use it, Jean-Luc.  And he will use it
to destroy Will, and to destroy you.  Because that is what he does.  Because
that is who he is.”
            And so, Picard thought, we were back to the statement that Riker
had made.  Twice.  Will’s “thing” for older men.  Erik Pressman, he’d said. 
Will’s first captain, the captain of the Pegasus.  And then he remembered what
Haden had said, when he’d talked about seeing Will for the first time.  How
he’d been a “striking” looking boy.  How Pressman had been “cold.”  How
Pressman had said, “Let the boy do it,” and had given Will a chance to
demonstrate his extraordinary skill as a pilot.  Who was the other man he’d
mentioned?  Someone at the Academy, he’d said, and Picard wondered who.  And
then he wondered if any of this was even true.  Would it affect his
relationship with Will, to know that Will had had other relationships with
older men in the past?  When he’d presented himself – on this ship – as almost
entirely female-oriented?  When he, Picard, was merely another man in a series
of older men?
            “Replay the communication,” Picard said.
            The image of Kyle Riker in civilian clothes, seated comfortably at
a desk, appeared again.
            “He has a cottage on Risa,” McBride said.  “But he is no longer
there.  Look at the surroundings, Jean-Luc.  He has left Risa, and I believe he
is now on Betazed.”
            “Why do you think that?”
            “Look at the room he’s in,” McBride said.  “He’s in a flat, several
storeys up – you can see through the window behind him.  And if you look at the
furnishings, I’m guessing this is a woman’s home.  He is in Rixx, but he’s
there as someone else.  The nondescript clothes.  The way he holds himself. 
Whatever role he’s playing, he’s played it before, and he’s completely
comfortable with it.”
            “He is both comfortable and casual,” Picard said.  “Telling us that
we are no threat to him.  That he is no threat to us.”
            “Why do you think he contacted me?”
            “To find out what you know,” Picard said.  “To see who you are.  To
assess what kind of a threat you may be.  He approached you the way he
approached me, at first.  The concerned father.  The lying about his
relationship with Will.”
            “You’ve met him?” McBride asked.
            “Yes,” Picard said, “once.  He came aboard as a civilian advisor to
give Will the information he needed about the Aries, the ship he was offered to
command.  He projected then an image of a man who was trying to reconnect with
his son, but who was hurt because he was being rebuffed.  He made Will appear
to be completely unreasonable.  In turning down his father.  And in turning
down command.”
            “You gave him permission to remain as first officer?”
            “Yes,” Picard said, “because it was what he wanted, and it was what
I needed.”
            “So.  He tells us he was worried when you contacted him, because
the only time a captain contacts a parent is when his child is dead.  He tells
us he’s concerned for his son, that he lost his wife to illness and then to
lose his son to illness would be unbearable.  He is controlling his speech,
allowing his voice to trail off, to elicit sympathy from me.  He smiles at me –
Will’s smile, that expanse of white teeth – but where Will’s smile projects
fear, his projects aggression.  So there’s the disconnect already, between what
he’s saying and what his body is telling me.”
            “Yes,” Picard repeated.  “I can see his smile his aggressive.”
            “Good.  And then he does this.”  McBride stopped the replay.
            Picard heard McBride say, “I understand from Captain Picard that
your conversation was difficult.”  He watched as Riker rubbed his hand and then
replied, sadly, “The captain made certain accusations…”
            “He wants you to believe he is confessing to you, that he did in
fact hurt his son,” Picard said.  “He wants you to believe that he’s never told
anyone this before.  That he’s anxious about it.  That he wants to help you. 
That he wants to help Will.  That he’s filled with remorse.”
            “And is that true?” McBride asked.
            “No,” Picard said.  “Nothing this man says is true.  Everything is
practised.”
            “Good,” McBride said.  “The move he made with his hand…that’s an
interrogation tool.  He was interrogating me, here, to find out exactly how
much I knew about how he’d hurt his son.  How much Will has told us.  Whether
he could con me, as he believes he has conned you.”
            “And you confronted him,” Picard said.  “With information about his
brother.”
            “I told him I knew he was lying,” McBride said.  “And that I would
not accept his lies.”
            “He denied being responsible for his brother’s death,” Picard said.
            “He didn’t care whether I believed his denial or not,” McBride
said.  “Denial is a way of life with him.  He would deny the sky was blue, if
it suited him.”
            “He doesn’t seem to care about anything,” Picard said.  “He’s
pretending to care, but he’s completely unconcerned.”
            “He would like you to think that,” McBride replied.  “But when I
mentioned Rosie Kalugin, his demeanor changed.  I’d told him how much we know. 
That Will has remembered the murder of Rosie Kalugin.  This is information that
troubles him, because he goes on the offensive here.  He becomes irritated with
me.  And that is the first evidence that we have,” McBride continued, “that he
may not be in as much control as he’d like us to think he is.  So I confronted
him again, saying that he hadn’t even asked about Will – which is true.  He
didn’t ask about Will.  This communication wasn’t about Will at all, until this
particular moment.”
            “You told him Will was stopping his treatment,” Picard said.  “That
he was going into hospice.  But you didn’t know that Will had made his
decision, or what decision that was.”
            “I could feel that Will had come to a decision,” McBride said. 
“But no, I didn’t know what that decision was.  Nevertheless, the information I
had was that Will wanted his treatment to end.  Because that was truthful, that
is what I told him.”
            “He admits that he murdered Rosie,” Picard said.  “And it almost
seems as if he’s going to offer you a trade here.”
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “He agrees to tell us where Rosie is,
because it’s what Will wants to know.  And in return, we give him Will.”
            “Why does he want Will?” Picard asked.
            “Why do you?” McBride countered.
            “What the hell do you mean by that?” Picard said.  He shifted in
his seat, trying to regain his control.
            “I told him I wasn’t sure you would allow him on this ship,”
McBride said, “which I think is an accurate statement, isn’t it?  Would you
give him permission to come on this ship to see Will?”
            “No,” Picard said angrily, “indeed I would not.  Want him anywhere
near Will, knowing what he’s done to Will.  Knowing how fragile Will is.”
            “And what was his response?”
            Picard replied, “He said, dismissively, that Will always had a
thing for older men.  And then he listed Will’s other older men.”
            “Why would he say that to me?” McBride asked.
            “You’re treating Will.  He’s suggesting that I’m acting
inappropriately.  That I don’t have Will’s best interests in mind.  That he has
a claim to Will that I don’t.  That Will is – that Will is –“
            “Is what, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.
            “Sick,” Picard said.  “That he’s damaged goods.  That his
relationships are serial, and part of his illness.”
            “Perhaps the only true thing Kyle Riker said,” McBride remarked.
            Picard felt rage coil in his stomach and so he forced himself to
remain completely still.  Otherwise he was afraid he would simply knock the man
out of his chair.
            “What are you feeling now, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.
            “I am not your patient,” Picard said, his words clipped.
            “We’ve been over this before,” McBride said.  “You are my patient. 
I am treating you both.  That was part of the arrangement.  You agreed to it.” 
McBride waited again.  Then he said, “I will not be damaged in any way if you
express your anger to me, Jean-Luc.”
            “I am not angry,” Picard said, and then felt foolish for saying it.
            McBride remained silent.
            Picard stood up, but of course realised that McBride’s office was
too small for him to pace; he sat down, heavily, and put his face in his hands.
            “We must deal with this now, Jean-Luc,” McBride said, kindly.  “Or
you will not be able to go on…and he will destroy Will.”
            “I haven’t wept in twenty years,” Picard said, wiping his face,
“and you have made me weep twice in one twenty-four hour period.”
            “Talk to me, Jean-Luc,” McBride urged.
            Picard said, “He raped him his entire boyhood.  He started when he
was five.  How could he not be searching for validation from an older man? 
Someone who wouldn’t hurt him.  Someone who would love him.  Not control him.”
            “But?” McBride asked.
            “I knew he was ill,” Picard said, wiping his face again.  “I knew
he was in pain.  I’d seen the program.  I knew he’d been abused….”  He stopped,
to control his breathing.  “I’ve spent almost my entire captaincy in Starfleet
alone, because I promised myself I wouldn’t take advantage of anyone, wouldn’t
have a relationship on my ship with a subordinate, wouldn’t use my position of
power to coerce anyone sexually.”
            McBride remained quiet, his face calm.
            “And then I’ve done exactly that,” Picard said.  “I took advantage
of a man who was ill.  Of a man who’d loved me for years and I knew he had
those feelings for me….I’ve done exactly the same to him as his father did.” 
He began to weep silently.
            McBride reached into his trousers pocket and pulled out a
handkerchief, and handed it to Picard, who took it but then just held it.
            “Wipe your face, Jean-Luc,” McBride said softly.  “Are you ready to
discuss this, now?”
            “What is there to discuss?  I should resign,” Picard said.  “I
should resign.”
            “Would that help Will, do you think?  If you resigned?”
            “No, of course it wouldn’t….”
            “Would it help you?”
            “No,” Picard admitted.  “I don’t think it would alleviate me of my
guilt…”
            “Do you think guilt is a useful emotion?” McBride asked.  “Is it
useful to you right now, to feel guilty for loving Will?  Because, Jean-Luc,”
McBride said, “regardless of whether it was wrong of you to act upon your
feelings for Will when you did, the truth is that you do love him.  I can say
that unequivocally, from having witnessed your love for him from the first
minutes I saw the two of you together.  And he loves you, Jean-Luc, to the best
of his ability.”
            “What I did was wrong,” Picard repeated. 
            “Yes,” McBride agreed.  “Undoubtedly, regardless of your
realisation that you did, in fact, love him, you should not have acted upon
those feelings once you knew he was ill.”
            Picard looked up at McBride.  He saw no condemnation in McBride’s
face, nor did he hear it in McBride’s voice, despite what had just been said.
            “Think about what you have said about yourself,” McBride continued,
gently.  “You have compared yourself to Will’s father.  But is that a fair
comparison?  Will’s father began grooming him for his sexual abuse of him when
Will was a baby.  Will’s memory of his father’s first act of abuse dates
shortly after his mother’s death, we presume.  When he was between two and
three years old.  And there has been the assumption – perhaps on your part,
perhaps on Deanna’s and the rest of the team – that the catalyst for this was
Elizaveta Riker’s death.  But you need, Jean-Luc, to look at the facts.  Kyle
Riker was twelve years old, almost thirteen, when he murdered his own brother. 
But he did more to him than just kill him.  He is a sexual sadist, dating from
when he was a child himself.  He raped and tortured his brother to death.  How
many children – how many little boys – do you think he harmed between the death
of Wharton Riker and the birth of William Riker?”
            “I don’t know,” Picard said.  He blew his nose.
            “He was thirty years old when his son was born, and the peak years
of a human male’s sexuality are between sixteen and twenty-five,” McBride
said.  “Dozens, I would say.  Because of who his father was, he had access to
wealth and any city on Earth.  And then he was recruited – in his junior year,
according to Val – into Section 31, which only expanded his access.”
            “You are saying he was abusing Will from infancy on?” Picard asked.
            “I think that is a likely scenario,” McBride answered.  “There is
evidence that Will was a troubled toddler.  Tantrums.  Repeated illnesses.  And
the onset of this illness, at two.  The groundwork for the illness had already
been laid, Jean-Luc.”
            “Mon Dieu,” Picard said.
            “So let us go back to what you think of yourself.  You are
comparing yourself to a man who sexually abused a toddler, and who probably
sexually abused an infant.  To a man who anally penetrated a five-year-old
child.  And who continued to sexually abuse this child until he was twelve
years old.  And I’m not convinced – even though Will has said that it stopped
when he was twelve – I believe that Riker would use him sporadically, just to
make sure that Will was never completely free.  And this is the behaviour that
you are comparing yourself to.”
            “But – “ Picard began.
            “We don’t have time for you to be self-indulgent here – Will does
not have the time for this.  His father has decided that he needs Will, that
Will is part of his plan to make all of us, I believe, pay.  Renan has said
that Riker called this his ‘last hurrah.’”
            “You said yourself that what I’ve done is wrong,” Picard said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “It was not the right thing to do.  But
can you tell me why you did it?  What made you reach out to him, that day when
you realised he was in trouble?”
            Picard remembered Will coming into his ready room.  Confident, in
complete denial that there was anything wrong.  And then as he’d pressed him
for answers, as he’d laid out the evidence before Will, Will began to crumble,
right in front of him.  Picard could see him – the tremors of his hands, the
shaking of his leg – the tears that he’d tried to hide – the shattering of the
persona into a million pieces.  The longing in Will’s eyes, the desperation.
            “He thought he was alone,” Picard said.  “He thought that there was
no one.  He thought that I could never love him…but when I saw him, I realised
that I could, love him.  That maybe I did love him.  And I just wanted to take
him in my arms and make him feel safe….”
            “And did he feel safe in your arms, Jean-Luc?”
            “Yes,” Picard said, and he knew it was true.  “I love him.”
            “I know,” McBride said.  He paused and then he said, “Bear with me,
because this will be difficult for you.  Perhaps you might take one or two deep
breaths, now.”
            Picard nodded, and then he felt himself smiling, a bit.  “You are
telling me to breathe, I think,” he said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “You haven’t been breathing for quite
some time.  Just take a few minutes to calm down.  You can trust me, Jean-Luc,”
he said.  “You can do this.  You are ready to do this.  And you need to do it,
for Will’s sake.”
            Picard relaxed his muscles, the way he’d seen da Costa tell Will to
do, and he took a deep breath, just as he’d told Will to, on so many
occasions.  He could feel the oxygen start to flow in his body again, and he
could feel the numbness and the tingling going away in his hands, and in his
feet.  He said, “Do I have this illness, too?  PTSD?”
            “You have the secondary form,” McBride said.  “Many caregiving
partners do.  It will be all right.  You are strong enough to handle this, and
I will continue to work with you.”
            He nodded again.
            “Are you ready?” McBride asked.  “I would normally do this over
several sessions, over a course of several days, and I would bring in Will as
well.  But we don’t have the time for that.  You need to speak to Mr Data,
soon.  And I have to contact Val – and we have to speak with Admiral Haden.”
            “I understand,” Picard said, and he hoped he did, because he didn’t
really have an idea of what McBride was going to do.
            “You were intimate with Will this morning?” McBride asked, and
Picard realised immediately that McBride was using his own word.  Intimate.
            “We made love this morning,” Picard said.  He remembered just how
uncomfortable he’d been the last time McBride had brought the subject of sex
with Will up.
            “Why?” McBride asked, and then he said, before Picard could say
anything, “Trust me, Jean-Luc.  I have a therapeutic reason, here.”
            Picard was quiet, not because he didn’t want to answer McBride, but
because he found that he did want to answer him.  “Because I thought I was
going to lose him,” he said.  “Because I’d asked him to spend his life with me,
as an alternative to his giving up.  Because,” and he found himself choking up,
“the silly man just said okay, okay he would, spend his life with me.  Because
he asked me to.”
            “Because he asked you to,” McBride repeated.  “He asked you to make
love to him.”
            “Yes,” Picard answered. 
            “Even though he is currently impotent, and has been for some time,”
McBride said.  “So orgasm – his orgasm – was not the outcome of your making
love to him.  Yet he asked you to.  And you did.  Why, Jean-Luc?”
            He thought perhaps he should feel some sort of anger, or at least
indignation, but he didn’t.  “Because,” he said, and it was as if a great
burden was being lifted from his shoulders, “orgasm – mine or his – wasn’t the
point.”
            “What was the point, then?”
            He knew what McBride was doing.  He was not Kyle Riker.  It wasn’t
sex, or the abuse of sex.  It wasn’t control.  It wasn’t the demeaning or
negating of Will’s spirit.  It was not rape.  It was an act of intimacy – his
own word, from the very beginning.  Because when he made love to Will – when
they made love -- it was about the connection, the feeling of being part of
each other, of being joined together, of giving and receiving pleasure, of
being one.  Of holding Will in his arms, of making Will a part of himself, and
himself a part of Will.  He shouldn’t have responded to Will – it had been
inappropriate – but at the same time it was the most altruistic thing he had
ever done in his entire life.  Will had needed love, and love was what he had
given.
            He smiled.  “Love is the point, Doctor,” he said.  “There’s no
coercion or control in our relationship.  There is only love, and the need for
us to be one.”   
            “And when Kyle Riker says that you are doing exactly what he has
done?  When Kyle Riker says that you and he are exactly the same?  And that his
son is a whore, who uses sex with older men to get what he wants?”
            Picard shrugged.  “Will may have been groomed to be abused,” he
answered.  “I don’t know anything at all about Will’s other relationships,
except the one that he had with Deanna.  That was hardly an abusive
relationship.  They were in love with each other, and Will’s running away – if
that’s what it was – had more to do with fear of failure, I think, than
anything else.”  He took a breath.  “But there is no abuse in our
relationship.  There never has been.  Kyle Riker can no longer succeed in
manipulating me, because I am not Kyle Riker.”
            “No, Jean-Luc,” McBride affirmed.  “You have never been Kyle
Riker.  You can let your fears go, now, because they were only fears, not
reality.”
            Picard looked down at McBride’s handkerchief, still in his hand. 
“Thank you,” he said.
            McBride grinned.  “The therapy is only now beginning, Jean-Luc,” he
said.  “You and Will have some hard work ahead of you, but I have no doubt that
you will do the work that is required of you.”  He said, standing, “I’ve
already sent this to you and you should be able to access it in your ready
room.  We need to move quickly now.”
            “Yes,” Picard agreed, rising.  “What was he saying to you about
your cousin, Lt Balum?”
            “Val sent me a brief communication this morning,” McBride
answered.  “He’d met with Renan.  Renan was afraid that Riker was coming after
him.  He asked for sanctuary, from Section 31.  He believed that Riker was
coming to Rixx, to deal with him.  To deal with Val.  Perhaps to do some damage
to Section 31 itself.”
            “Which is why you said that Riker was on Betazed.”  Picard rubbed
his eyes.
            “I could see he was on Betazed, but yes, it was confirmation,”
McBride replied.  “I am afraid that Val was not able to get Renan out in time.”
            “Riker has your cousin as a hostage?”
            “An even trade, perhaps?  Renan for Will,” McBride said.  “With
Admiral Haden as the negotiator.”
            “Riker and Haden know each other,” Picard said.  “They lived in the
same diplomatic circles, as boys.”
            “Which makes Haden the perfect choice, then.”
            Picard walked out of McBride’s office, with McBride following him
into the dayroom.  “Are you coming to the briefing with me?”
            “No,” McBride said.  “I need to speak to Val first.  I will join
you as soon as I do.”
            Picard stopped, and looked up at McBride.  “Do you know what he
wants with Will?” he asked.
            “No,” McBride answered, slowly.  “But he engineered Billy – and I
am thinking that it’s Billy he wants.”
            “But Billy is gone,” Picard said.
            “Yes,” McBride answered, “and that is one thing that Kyle Riker
doesn’t know.”
***** Chapter 104 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard briefs Data on Section 31 and leaves for Alpha Station Lya
     with McBride.
Chapter Notes
     In the episodes where Data has taken over as Acting First, it is
     readily apparent that he has taken Commander William Riker as his
     role model. Whereas Will Riker would be most verbally insistent that
     the Captain not "beam" down on his own in situations that are likely
     to be dangerous, frequently in these episodes Data has employed more
     stealthy methods of ensuring the Captain's safety rather than arguing
     with him.
Chapter One Hundred Four
 
 
 
 
            He found himself in the corridor, heading for the turbo lift.  Once
inside he said, “Bridge,” and then he said, “Full stop.”  What was he doing? 
He thought, I need Will.  I need my First.  Will was his sounding board, his
stator of the obvious and not-so obvious; his man of action, but also his man
of bluffs and strategies he wouldn’t or couldn’t have thought of on his own. 
He was not a sentimental man.  Nor a maudlin one.  What was done was done.  How
else could you have a career in the Fleet and command in deep space if you
allowed yourself to be haunted by the past?  You learned from the past, surely;
but you never let it grip your shoulders.  He didn’t have his Number One and so
needs must do without.  Mr Data, Mr Worf, Mr La Forge, Deanna…they would all of
them have to continue to make do and pull together, even as he and Deanna were
doing double and triple duty, their bodies on the bridge and their minds in
sickbay.
            “Bridge,” he said. 
            The turbo lift started to rise, and he took a moment or two to calm
down.  It wouldn’t do to march into his ready room like a raging maniac; it
would rile up Worf and confuse Data.  
            The doors opened and he walked out, as if it were simply another
shift. 
            “Captain on the bridge,” someone called out, and he nodded.
            “Mr Data,” he said, “My ready room.  If you will.” 
            “Aye, sir,” Data said, rising from the captain’s seat.
            He heard Worf say, “Sir,” behind him, but he continued walking,
nodding at the ensign at helm and the lieutenant at ops, into his ready room,
where he found himself standing in front of the replicator.  “Tea, Earl Grey,
hot,” he said, and gratefully he took the mug into his hands, letting the steam
and the aroma wash over his face.
            He tapped his comm. badge and said, “Counsellor Troi.  Would you
report to my ready room?”
            “On my way, Captain,” Troi responded.
            The doors opened and Data entered, sitting down.  Picard found his
padd and had booted it up, and said, “On screen.  Counsellor Troi is on her
way, Mr Data.”
            “Will no one else be joining us, sir?” Data asked.
            “No, Mr Data,” Picard said, “I need to speak to you, privately.” 
The code for McBride’s private channel lit up the screen, and he paused it.
            “Is there something wrong with Commander Riker, sir?” 
            He set the mug on the table.  He glanced at Data, whose composure
belied his concern.  “No,” he answered.  “Commander Riker’s health is still
fragile.  He has some fluid around his lungs, which needs to be drained, but Dr
Crusher tells me that is a small procedure.” 
            “Is that a surgical procedure, sir?” Data asked.
            “Yes,” Picard said, “but not a difficult one.”  At that moment Troi
walked in and took her seat, and he couldn’t help it; he met her eyes and
smiled at her.  Whether McBride had already told her about Will or not, he
could see that she knew.  “You’ve been briefed by Dr McBride?”
She returned his smile and then said, her tone more serious, “Yes, sir.”
“You’ve seen Riker’s communication?”
“Yes,” Troi said.  “Dr McBride will meet you at Transporter Room Three.”
            “He has the news from Admiral Laidlaw?” Picard persisted.
            “Yes, sir.”
            Picard glanced at his hand, wrapped around his mug of tea, and then
at Data, who was waiting patiently for him to begin.  “What I say to you goes
nowhere, Mr Data,” he said.  “You will report to me alone on this matter, do
you understand?”
            “Aye, sir,” Data said.
            “When I leave, Counsellor Troi will show you and senior staff the
communication Dr McBride received this morning from Commander Riker’s father. 
She will explain what you are seeing.  At no point are you to reveal the
information that I am about to tell you to Lt Worf or Commander La Forge, or to
anyone else.  When I return from Alpha Station Lya, I will call a staff
meeting, but not before.”
            “Aye, sir,” Data repeated.
            “You are familiar with Article 14, Section 31 of the Articles of
the Federation?”
            Data thought for a moment, and then he said, “Extraordinary
measures may be taken in times of extreme threat.”
            Picard glanced at Troi and then he said, “I personally have always
assumed that meant defensive measures taken during open military conflict. 
During our conflict with the Borg, when complete annihilation was threatened,
we were given permission to do what had to be done in order to survive.”
            “Is that not what the Article means, then, sir?” Data asked.
            “Apparently not,” Picard said, abruptly.  “Data, there is a rogue
branch of Starfleet in existence which calls itself Section 31.  I am not sure
who the head of the organisation is, although I suspect that Admiral Laidlaw
may have more information for me about this now.  Commander Riker’s father is
an operative for Section 31, which has taken the intent of the Article and
turned it into an excuse to do whatever they’ve wanted to do and called it in
defence of the Federation.  Kyle Riker was recruited to this organisation when
he was at the Academy – he was originally a member of my graduating class – but
we were told that he’d dropped out, his junior year.  Instead, this man has
risen covertly through the ranks of Starfleet to become a captain, all the
while pretending that he is a civilian advisor and troubleshooter in deep
space.”  Picard paused, and then he said, “Mr Data, the reason for Commander
Riker’s illness is because his father tortured him from the time he was two
until he was abandoned at fifteen.  The threat that Captain Riker and Section
31 pose to Starfleet and the Federation is quite real, I assure you.  The
threat that Captain Riker poses towards this ship – and more specifically to
Commander Riker – and to Admiral Laidlaw and others on Betazed is also quite
real.”
            “Are you under threat as well, Captain?” Data asked.  “As Commander
Riker’s partner?”
            For a moment Picard thought Troi was going to laugh.  “Dr McBride
thinks I may be,” he answered.  “As yet, I have seen no direct evidence of a
threat against myself or this ship.  Captain Riker has demanded that we allow
him to see his son.”
            “And yet, sir,” Data said, “you intend to go to the station on your
own.”
            “Do not pull a William Riker on me, Mr Data,” Picard said sharply. 
“I barely tolerate it from him.  I will not tolerate it at all from you.”
            “Perhaps, Captain,” Troi suggested, “you could make sure that
Admiral Haden takes extra security precautions.  For the three of you.”
            “Indeed,” he said.  Her eyes were laughing, but he found that he
didn’t mind.  He was just so grateful that she seemed to have recovered from
her shock of the previous night. 
            “Do you want me to post a security detail around Commander Riker,
sir?” Data asked now.
            “Absolutely not, Mr Data,” he said.  “Commander Riker is still
extremely ill.  He does not know about his father’s communication or his
father’s threats.  I would like to keep it that way, especially as I have yet
to receive confirmation on what form those threats may take.  I would like you
to maintain communication with me while I am on the station.  I would like you
to be aware that you may receive orders from Admiral Laidlaw on a secure
channel.  Under no circumstances, Mr Data, are you to follow any orders from
any officer other than myself, or Admiral Haden, or Admiral Laidlaw.  If you
receive any communication from Admiral García, or a Commander Sovok or
Commander Zweller, you are to contact me immediately.”
            “Should we be on yellow alert, Captain?” Data asked.
            “Heavens, no, Mr Data,” Picard said.  “As ill as he is, that would
bring our Mr Riker onto the bridge faster than you could say Jack Robinson.”
            “Why would I want to say Jack Robinson, Captain?” Data asked.
            Picard stood, refusing to look at Troi.  “Counsellor, the briefing
is yours.  Mr Worf and Mr La Forge, to my ready room.”
            “Captain, are you sure you don’t want a security detail in
sickbay?” Troi asked, also rising.  “Beverly indicated to me that she intended
to keep Will in the biobed long enough to run a diagnostic and to give him
fluids.  Surely he’ll have been sedated for the procedure.  How would he be
aware, once he’s been transferred back to his room, that there would be extra
security?”
            Picard was on his way out the door, and he stopped, stepping aside
for Worf as he entered.  He thought about the look on Will’s face as he’d
promised him that he’d get a full briefing when he returned.  “He already knows
there’s a threat, Counsellor.  Adding security to an already secure location
will merely make him anxious.  Mr Data, if you feel, however, that the
situation merits a change, then you should do what is necessary.”
            “Aye, sir,” Data said.  “I will keep you informed.”
            “Lieutenant,” Picard said to Worf.  “Counsellor Troi and Mr Data
will bring you up to speed.”
            “Sir,” Worf replied.
            Picard left his ready room and headed for the turbo lift.  “Deck
Six.”
            He tried to empty his mind, so that he would be calm and focused
when he arrived on the station, but he couldn’t help but replay what McBride
had said.  But he engineered Billy, and I’m thinking it’s Billy that he wants. 
He’d been afraid of Billy, in a way; Billy’s flat way of speaking had made the
hairs on the back of his neck and his arms rise, and then things Billy had
said…but in the end it had been Deanna who was correct in her assessment of the
child.  Billy had been just a little boy, a persona created to carry all the
hurt and rage and pain from his father’s repeated assaults.  In his own damaged
way he’d tried his best to protect Rosie, even if that had meant, in his mind,
killing her.  To Billy, death had been a release – a child’s literal
understanding of a mythological heaven where everyone would be happy and safe. 
Why had Kyle Riker allowed Billy to live?  What did he want from Will – or
Billy – now?
            The doors opened and he stepped into the corridor.  Billy was gone,
merged back into Will.  He shook his head as he walked into the transporter
room, where McBride was waiting, talking to Chief O’Brien.  It was like an old-
fashioned jigsaw puzzle, he thought, the kind his grandmère had had on the
chintz-covered table in her sitting room.  They’d put all the pieces together
that they could, but there were crucial pieces missing, and the picture wasn’t
complete.
            “Energise, Mr O’Brien,” he said, standing beside McBride on the
pad.
            “Energising, sir,” O’Brien responded.
            Haden’s aide-de-camp was waiting for them.  Picard hoped that it
was Valentine Laidlaw – and not Kyle Riker -- who was holding the missing
pieces to the puzzle.
***** Chapter 105 *****
Chapter Summary
     Capt Kyle Riker entertains two young Starfleet lieutenants.
Chapter Notes
     It is no surprise to any student of abnormal psychology that there
     are certain professions that attract the sociopath -- acting, for
     example, or writing -- where the sociopath's talent for study and
     observation are well-served. The sociopath, as Dr Rald Emlem points
     out in this chapter, has no ability to *be* human. Everything he
     knows about humanity is because he has studied human behavior and has
     mimicked what he sees.
Chapter One Hundred Five
 
 
 
 
            Riker remembered taking psychology as a cadet.  He’d received the
standard courses every cadet did, as a freshman; but in one’s sophomore year
there were other types of courses that one could take, besides the obvious ones
necessary for the Academy:  military history, drill, navigation, physics,
mathematics.  There were courses like psychology, and linguistics; xenobiology
and archeology.  He’d never cared much for lessons, as a schoolboy, primarily
because for most of his childhood he’d been educated at home by a tutor when
his siblings had gone to school.  But after Wharton’s death he’d gone to a
special preparatory school, and then on to an upper level grammar school.  He
did what was required of him, so that he could attend the Academy, which was
what his mother (and, presumably, his father) had wanted.  But he was never
intellectually challenged or engaged by anything, other than enjoying maths,
because things fit.
            But his psychology course in his second year of the Academy – that
was different.  A whole other kettle of fish – and for a moment, as he tidied
up Agam’s flat, he found himself wondering who the hell had said that phrase. 
Certainly his parents would never have uttered such an idiotic expression, and
then he chuckled to himself, because of course it was Marty Shugak who used to
say those things.  Another kettle of fish.  Up the creek without a paddle. 
What a moron.
            He’d cleaned the kitchen and was now dusting and polishing the
dining room.  It was a lovely room, with windows overlooking the market, and
beautiful light in the morning.  Clearly, from the evidence of the sideboard
and the china cabinet Agam had been one for entertaining; just as clearly, that
had been part of her job.  He’d had a moment of worry, wondering if she had any
dates coming up that he would have to deal with, but her code on her padd had
been relatively simple to access and he’d merely changed a few dates by
extending her trip.  It hadn’t been hard.  She’d been one of those civil
servants who only took holiday once a year, and so she had plenty of time due
her.  He’d dropped a few hints that she’d found romance with a fellow named
Bill and everything was taken care of.
            He enjoyed using the chamois on the cherry wood, inlaid with
intricate tile designs depicting the ten houses of Betazed.  He’d been thinking
about his psychology class, the first one; that was right.  It had been
psychology or literature, those were the two he’d had to choose from, and
literature had been one of his father’s great loves.  He chose psychology.  The
professor was Betazoid, naturally (talk about having a market on a discipline)
and he’d had to convince several members of the class that his natural empathic
and telepathic abilities would not come in to play.  For a moment he couldn’t
remember the fellow’s name, and then it came to him – Dr Rald Emlen, that was
it.  Typical Betazoid, tall and thin, with those elongated features that always
made him remember that picture of a man with Marfan’s disease in an old
physiology textbook he’d found.  He’d enjoyed that class, enough to sign up to
take another class from Emlen and then another; Emlen had called him into his
office, a small cubicle with no windows that clearly hadn’t been dusted since
the Academy had been built.
            Emlen had scooped a pile of books off the one chair in front of his
desk, and set them precariously on top of a stack of student discs which
probably hadn’t been graded.  Riker hadn’t wanted to sit down, but satisfied
himself with brushing the seat of the chair off with his hand so he wouldn’t
get his uniform trousers dirty.
            “Cadet Riker, is it?” Emlen said.  “Year two, are you?”
            “Yes, sir,” he’d answered.  Emlen was a civilian instructor at the
Academy, but he’d discovered his freshman year that they all preferred to be
addressed as if they were Starfleet.
            “You’ve applied to take two of my classes next semester?” Emlen
asked, peering at his padd.
            For some reason – probably having to do with vanity and a certain
cultivation of image – Emlen wore glasses, instead of using retinal drops, and
his glasses were perched on the bridge of his nose.  Riker tried not to look at
them.  For one thing, it was stupid – who cared what he looked like?  If he
were important, he wouldn’t be teaching at the Academy.  And for another, the
lenses were smeared.  It was disgusting, but then, the whole office was
disgusting.
            “Yes, sir,” he answered.
            “It says here that you are already taking a full load of courses,”
Emlen said.  “You would have to take one of the courses online, and none of
these courses you’ve chosen are offered online this coming semester.”
            Riker thought, you’re not my advisor.  “Commodore Hauser gave me
permission, sir,” he said.  “I can double up nav science with piloting. 
They’re both easy classes, sir.”
            “Have you declared a major, Cadet?” Emlen asked.
            He shrugged, and then said, “I’m thinking of command, sir.  I
thought psychology would be a useful course of study, especially if I combined
it with xenobiology.”
            “Indeed,” Emlen said.  He took his glasses off, and polished them
with his shirttail, which he then shoved back into his trousers.  Then he
replaced them on his nose; they were still smeared.  “I honestly don’t see you
as a candidate for the command track, Mr Riker,” he said.  “And I wonder what
you think you are getting out of my class.”
            He’d remembered sitting back in the hardwood chair; again, as with
the glasses, a strangely old-fashioned item to have.  He remembered looking at
Dr Rald Emlen – his horse-like face, his light brown eyes, the hollowness of
his cheeks.  He wondered what chronic illnesses people from Betazed might have.
            “Are you ill, sir?” he’d asked.
            To his surprise, Emlen had laughed.  “What?” he’d said.  “Can you
smell death on me already, young man?”
            It had been his first taste of Betazoid diplomacy.
            “Why don’t you think I’d be good for command?” he’d asked,
curiously.
            “Because, Mr Riker,” Emlen had said, “your crew would be too afraid
of you to sleep at night.”
            He’d found himself smiling.  “Are you refusing to teach me?” he’d
asked.
            “It wouldn’t matter if I did,” Emlen replied.  “By the time you
have everything set up to get rid of me, I’ll already be dead.”
            “Are you accusing me of something?” he’d asked.
            “You aren’t quite sure enough of yourself to do something here,”
Emlen answered.  “Yet.  And I won’t be around to see it when you do.  But you
won’t make it in command, Mr Riker.  I suggest you rethink your strategy.”
            “So I can take the classes, then?” he’d said, still smiling.
            “By all means,” Dr Emlen had replied.  “I’ll only be teaching for
another four weeks.  It’s a shame, really.  I’ve never taught one of your kind
before.  It might have been interesting.”
            “What kind is that, Dr Emlen?”
            “Monster, Mr Riker,” Emlen said.  “I’ve never taught a real monster
before.  You would have been my first.”
            He finished the dining room and put the cleaning supplies away. 
Agam had been a lovely woman, and, for someone who had clearly been as busy as
she was, she was a relatively tidy person, if she’d been cleaning her place
herself.  But he suspected that she had a hire crew – Tellarites, no doubt –
and she obviously had not been very good at choosing workers who could do their
jobs properly.  He sighed.  For what it was worth, her flat was clean, now.
After three weeks of classes, he’d returned to Dr Emlen’s office, because he
knew the man was failing faster than he’d anticipated, and he had a question to
ask.
            “Ah, Mr Riker,” Emlen had said.  His office was nearly empty; it
was obvious that Dr Emlen had decided he was almost done.  “Come in.  You’ll
find my office is more to your taste, now.”
            “What do you mean?” he’d asked.
            “Well, you could barely contain your disgust,” Emlen had said, “the
last time you were here.  Much too dirty for you.  Things out of place. 
Chaotic.  Out of control.”  Emlen had smiled.
            He shrugged.  “It was dusty,” he said.  “I have allergies.”
            Emlen began to laugh, but it quickly turned into a spasm of
coughing.  “You have an allergy to things you cannot control,” he said, when
his coughing had abated.  “You would have easily killed me, just because my
lenses were dirty.”
            He thought about being offended, and then he decided there was no
point.  Dr Emlen was leaving, probably by the end of the week, and no doubt he
would be dead before the month was out.  Who would possibly believe his odd
notions about Cadet Kyle Riker, whose father just happened to be the current
Federation ambassador to Andoria?
            “I rather doubt that,” he’d said.
            “I suspect, young Mr Riker,” Emlen replied, “that you have killed
for far less.”  He picked up one of the discs that were stacked on his desk. 
“I quite enjoyed your paper on the use of anxiety as an interrogation tool,” he
said.  “It’s a shame you weren’t born a Romulan.  You won’t have many
opportunities to demonstrate your skills in Starfleet, I’m afraid.”
            “Do you think so?” he asked.  “I would have thought my strengths
would be at a premium here, among all the fat and lazy career diplomats.”
            “Like your father, for example,” Emlen said.
            “You’ve made a mistake,” he said.  “My father is many things,
Doctor, but fat and lazy are not amongst them.”
            “Did you have a question, Kyle,” Emlen asked, “or are you just
making sure that I’m really leaving?”
            He smiled.  “I wanted to know, sir,” he said, “how you knew.”
            “How I knew what, Kyle?” Emlen seemed, suddenly, old and tired.
            “About me,” he answered.  “What did I do?  What tell did I show? 
How can I prevent someone else like you – another Betazoid, another head doctor
– from knowing me?”
            Emlen was silent, and the silence seemed to stretch forever. 
Finally he rubbed his eyes.  “You are too still,” he said.  “You watch everyone
and everything.  You are – studied.  You have no true understanding of what it
means to be human, so you must mimic the behaviour around you.  Any trained
psychologist will recognise you, Kyle.”
            He said, diffidently, “You have a daughter.  She’s got a flat, down
by the wharf.  She’s pretty, in an ethereal way.  For some reason, I like large
eyes.”
            “You will be a doctoral student in psychology before you will
understand why,” Emlen said.
            “She likes it hard and fast,” he said.  “Sometimes I worry she
might break.”
            “What do you want?”
            “Teach me how not to be studied,” he’d said.  “Teach me how to be
human.  Like them.”
            “And my daughter?”
            He shrugged.  “She’s really too old for me, anyway,” he’d answered.
 
 
            It was an irony – a delicious one at that, he thought – that the
one enduring thing he’d taken from life with his son was the discovery that
there could be a simple delight in cooking.  There was something almost
meditative about it.  When Billy had been a toddler, after Betty died, cooking
had been one more meaningless chore that he’d had to accomplish, mindless,
ever-present, never really a beginning to it or an end.  He hadn’t understood
at all why Betty’s death should have affected him – back in those days at the
Academy, when he’d begun his serious study of psychology under the tutelage of
Dr Emlen, he’d read that his kind was unable to love – and yet Betty had
somehow managed to fill a part of him that was, once again, empty.  He’d been
shocked when her family had tried to take Billy away from him, and it had
seemed then that he’d been asleep, and then he was awake.  He’d made a deal;
the Shugaks could come and do that aspect of daily living with a small child
that he found so difficult, but they’d follow his rules.
            He had set the table – Agam, he was pleased to discover, had good
taste – and he’d arranged the flowers, and then he was in the kitchen,
preparing their meal.  The chronometer let him know that they’d be arriving
soon, and so he’d prepared a simple meal of a baked vegetable casserole which
had been one of Billy’s recipes and a warmed salad of fruits that he’d found at
the market.  He had no idea whether Andorians would eat bread or not, but he
preferred it, so there was a loaf of something purporting to be French bread
warming in the oven.  Agam had liked her wine, and he’d chosen one of her finer
whites, and set the open bottle on the table to breathe. 
            The front door to the building chimed, and he used the speaker to
address the Andorian lieutenant, and took a moment to make sure everything was
in place.  It was a lovely flat, he decided, and he would be sorry to leave
it.  The front door chimed and then it opened, and he called out, “I’m in the
kitchen.  I’ll just be a moment.”  He could hear them talking, that sweet
musical voice of Tarana’s, and he pulled the casserole dish from the oven and
covered it, and placed the bread in the basket.  He slung the dish towel over
his shoulder – that was a nice touch, he thought – and he walked into Agam’s
living room.
            “I hope you’re both hungry,” he said, showing that expanse of white
teeth.  “I know I am.”
            Lt Tarana’s antennae were waving with pleasure as she introduced
him to her friend, the Betazoid lieutenant.  “Renan, this is Captain Kyle
Riker,” she said.  “Captain Riker and I met earlier today.  He has a proposal
to make to us, having to do with Starfleet.  Captain Riker, Lt Renan Balum.”
            He offered his hand to Balum and, reluctantly, Balum took it.  His
hand dwarfed Balum’s, just as it had Tarana’s, even though Balum was a few
inches taller than he.  He applied just enough pressure to make Balum flinch
(and for a moment he thought about Balum’s reaction to having a few crushed
bones), and then he withdrew his hand and said,
            “A pleasure to meet you, Lieutenant,” he said.  “I wasn’t sure
whether you drink wine, Tarana, so I’ve juice and water, if you’d prefer.”
            “Wine is good, Captain,” Lt Tarana said, following him into the
dining room.  “You’ve gone to a lot of trouble for us, sir.”
            He shrugged.  “I enjoy cooking,” he said, and he glanced at Balum. 
“You could call it a family tradition.  My son is an excellent cook.”  He
handed the wine bottle to Balum and said, “Perhaps you would pour the wine,
then?”
            Balum took the bottle and said, “Captain.”
            He returned to the kitchen to plate the food, and hoped that Balum
wasn’t going to be difficult.  It certainly wasn’t in his own best interests to
be so.  After all, Tarana, the charming child that she was, was under the
impression that they were being recruited into a group that was saving the
Federation, and it would benefit Balum if he played along.  There was no point,
Riker thought, as he brought the salad plates out, in upsetting the little
Andorian.  He set the salad plates down and said, still maintaining his smile,
“Sit, please.  I’m just bringing the main dish out and we can start.”
            He saw Tarana take the seat to his left, and Balum sat across the
table from her.  He returned to the kitchen and said, “Computer.  Track nine,”
and the flat was filled with the soft notes of a Vulcan lyre sonata.  He took
the casserole and the bread and returned to the dining room, setting them down
on the table and then taking his own seat at the head.  Balum had poured him a
full glass, and he lifted it and said, “To the Fleet.”
            They ate quietly, listening to the music.  He was pleased to note
that despite Balum’s nervousness he’d managed to eat, and he wondered if it was
because he genuinely cared about Tarana, and didn’t want to make her afraid. 
She was truly lovely, he thought.  It was a shame Andorian biology was what it
was.
            “Shall I make coffee or tea?” he asked as they finished up.
            “Tea, please,” Tarana said.  “If I drink coffee now, I’ll be up all
night.”
            “Tea it is,” he replied.  “Herbal is all right?  And I’ve a few
pastries, for dessert.”
            “Thank you,” Tarana said, and then she said, as he took the plates
into the kitchen, “Could you imagine Jeff García or Commander Sovok fixing
dinner for anyone?”  She giggled.  “Plomeek soup,” she said, and laughed again.
            He didn’t hear Balum’s response, as he was running the water for
the kettle.  He set it on the stove to boil, and then busied himself with
clearing the rest of the table.
            “I’ll help, Captain,” Balum said, and he rose, gathering the salad
plates.  “Just stay there, Tarana, it’ll take two minutes if Captain Riker and
I do it together.”
            Riker was hand washing the dishes, and Balum said, handing him the
salad plates, “Just leave her out of this.  She’s never done anything to
anyone.  Tell whatever lies you want to tell, and let her believe that you’re
okay.”
            “She is adorable,” he replied, handing Balum the dish towel.  “I
can understand why you’re so smitten with her.”
            “I am not smitten,” Balum said through his teeth.  “We are good
friends.”
            “Well, of course her biology makes it an impossibility,” Riker
continued.  “Perhaps that’s part of the attraction.  An interesting challenge.”
            “I’ll do whatever you want,” Balum said, his voice low.
            “Ah, Mr Balum,” Riker said.  “You’ll do whatever I want anyway.”
            They finished the dishes in silence, and then Riker poured the
boiling water into the teapot, and Balum helped him bring the tea things and
the pastries to the table.
            “Do you know,” Riker said in a conversational tone, “that
Ambassador Spock is the composer of these pieces?”
            “No,” Tarana said, impressed. “Have you met Ambassador Spock?”
            “Twice,” Riker said.  “But I’m not at liberty to say where, or
when.  I will say that he made me feel the way I had when I was a cadet, at the
Academy for the first time.”
            Balum put his teacup down on its saucer.  “Why don’t you allow me
to call a cab for Tarana?” he said.  “It’s late, and work begins early in the
morning.”
            “That’s very chivalric of you, Balum,” Riker said, “but Lt Tarana
is part of the discussion.  Aren’t you, my dear?”
            “Captain Riker is going to ask us to join his group,” Tarana said,
her antennae waving.  “He’s chosen us specifically.”
            Balum said, “Tarana.”  He didn’t look at Riker, who was smiling at
them in a genial sort of way.
            “Yes, Renan?”  Now one of her antennae was flattening against her
head.
            “I am already a member of Captain Riker’s special group,” Balum
said.  “He used you to bring me here.”
            Tarana glanced at him.  “Why would you do that, sir?” she asked. 
“And how could Renan already be a member of your group?”
            “It’s called Section 31,” Balum said.  “I was recruited out of the
Academy.”
            “You mean,” he said, “Admiral Laidlaw encouraged you to be
recruited from the Academy.  You see,” he said to Tarana, and he was trying not
to grin at her, even though she looked so comical, with one antenna completely
flat against her head and the other standing straight up, “your friend Renan is
what we call in the business a double agent.  While he’s been working for us
–“and despite her worry, he could see how pleased she was that he’d included
her “—he has also been working for Betazed and those forces in Starfleet who
don’t understand the importance of the work we do.”
            “Tarana,” Balum said, “you’re not a part of this.  Don’t let him
make you a part of this.  You can still get out.  Do what you want to me,” he
said, “but let her go.”
            “Such drama,” Riker said.  “I have no intentions of doing anything
to you.  Renan.  What a silly name.  Whoever heard of Jews on Betazed?  I
thought we’d eradicated them centuries ago.”
            There was silence.  Tarana said, both her antennae flat against her
skull, “Who are you?”
            “He is a monster,” Balum said.
            He laughed.  “I think you’re just overwrought,” he said.  “Lt Balum
had a difficult assignment on Risa, my dear.  He was supposed to tail me and
give me some information about my son William, who is currently serving on the
Enterprise.  He found it a little more difficult than he expected.”
            “What do you want, Riker?” Balum said.  “Why did you need to
involve Tarana in this?”
            He said, taking a sip of his tea and then setting the cup gently
into its saucer, “I want my son, Lieutenant.  Apparently he’s dying, and I’d
like to see him, before he does.  And that means that your cousins Laidlaw and
McBride, and Captain Picard, and Jeff García, and Jeremy Rossa, and whomever
else thinks that they are involved in this whole sorry mess are going to have
to come up with a way to allow a fair exchange.  Two junior Starfleet officers
for one senior Starfleet officer.”
            “But what could you possibly need Commander Riker for?” Balum
persisted.  “If he’s ill, how could he possibly fit into whatever it is you’re
planning?”
            “Maybe,” he said quietly, “a father just needs to see his son.”
            “You’re the reason your son is ill,” Balum said.  “Why don’t you
stop lying?  Just let Tarana go; I’ll stay.  I’ll be your hostage, your fair
exchange for Commander Riker.”
            “More tea?” Riker asked.  “No?  You might want to think about
keeping your fluids up.”
            “We’re worth more to you alive than dead,” Balum said.
            “That’s certainly true for the moment,” Riker agreed.  “Tarana, are
you sure you wouldn’t like another pastry?”
            “I don’t understand,” Tarana said quietly.  “Sir.”
            “Don’t worry about it, my dear,” he said, and he patted her hand
gently twice, before she pulled it away.  “We have all night to talk about it.”
***** Chapter 106 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will has a successful surgery, and then realises what -- or who -
     - has caused the crisis.
Chapter Notes
     "No," Picard said. "That would surely cause a reaction from Will -
     - and I don't think," he added, giving his small, ironic smile, "that
     our Mr Riker, for all of his current health issues, has changed his
     spots. If he decides the ship is in danger in some way, it won't
     matter to him at all that he's on medical leave and Mr Data is Acting
     First."
Chapter One Hundred Six
 
 
 
 
           
            I remember Ogawa telling me that I would only feel a bit of
pressure, and then I was running, but this time I wasn’t running in the woods,
looking for Rosie.  This time I was running hurdles, in the statewide track
meet, which it must have been, because I could see my uniform, and I could feel
the way I was breathing, and I could hear my feet pounding on the synthetic
surface, and feel the pressure as I jumped, and the rush as I was airborne, and
then I was on the clay again, breathing, only thinking about the next jump,
knowing that I was alone, knowing that I had this won, knowing that I could run
and nothing else mattered except the running and then the jump.  It was such a
good feeling, this dream, because no one from my school had ever taken this
event before, and it was mine to take.  There was no one in all of southern
Alaska who could beat me; my legs were just too long, my frame perfectly built
for this one event.  That was when I realised it wasn’t a dream at all, but a
memory, and not bits and pieces of one but a real one, from start to finish,
the starter’s pistol going off and the pounding of boys’ feet together giving
way to just my breathing and the sound of my feet hitting the ground after each
jump.  I saw myself running through the tape, as if I were outside myself just
watching, and then I saw people coming to congratulate me, my teammates, my
coach, the Shugaks, Dmitri, Henry Ivanov.
            My father. 
            “Take it easy, Will,” Beverly said.  “You’re all right.  Do you
know where you are?”
            I blinked against the light, trying to focus my eyes.
            “His blood pressure is increasing, Doctor,” I heard Ogawa say.
            “Try to calm down, Will.  You’re okay.  Everything’s fine; you’ve
done really well.”
            “I’m still in sickbay,” I said.  My throat was parched.  “I’m
thirsty,” I said.
            “Well, that’s a good sign,” Beverly said, and then I could see her
face, and she was smiling.  “I think that’s the first time I’ve heard you say
that in weeks.”  She turned away and said, “Can you bring him a cup of water,
Alyssa?  Who knows when he’ll ask for something to drink again.”
            “I was remembering something,” I said.
            “For someone who is usually hard to sedate,” Beverly replied,
turning back to me, “you were sleeping like a baby there, for a while.”
            “I can get out of this now?” I asked, trying to sit up.
            “Easy there, Will.  Just because I said it was a simple procedure
doesn’t mean you can run a marathon.  Here, just take a few sips.”
            She gave me a cup of water with a straw and held it for me so that
I could drink.  “That’s not usually your job, Doctor,” I said, laying back.  It
was true; I’d felt a little woozy trying to sit up.
            “I just wanted to be able to tell Jean-Luc that you actually drank
something,” she replied, smiling, “without someone having to shove it down your
throat.  How is his blood pressure now, Alyssa?”
            “It’s back down to 140 over 75,” Ogawa said.
            “Normally, Will,” Beverly told me, “if you came into my office with
a reading like that, I’d send you to bed with a warning to calm down.  But
that’s good, Will.  That’s much better than it’s been.”
            “So you’ll let me out now, right?” I said.  “I hate the biobed,
Beverly.”
            “I know you do, Will, you poor man.  You’ve been in the biobed so
often we might as well just put your name on it.”
            “Very funny,” I said.
            “I like that idea.  Here, Commander, take a few more sips.  We
could call it the William T Riker Biobed.  It’s kind of catchy.”
            “You wait until your next personnel review,” I said.  Some of the
water spilled, and Ogawa wiped my neck and my chin.
            “You heard him threaten me, didn’t you, Dr Crusher?” Ogawa said. 
“You’ll be out in a little bit, Commander.  We’re going to run a diagnostic,
remember?”
            “Fuck,” I said.
            “Will.” Beverly was back at my side.  “Look at me.”
            “What?”
            “We are, all of us, – from myself to Djani – proud of you, for the
hard work you’ve done.  And I don’t think you have any idea how happy we are
that you’re not going to stop your treatment.  No, Will, look at me.  I want
you to hear this.”  She paused, and I turned back to face her.  “You are
important.  To me, to Ogawa, to Joao, to Yash, to everyone here.  To your
friends.  To your ship.  And we’re elated, Will – I think that’s the right
word.  I went from discussing palliative care to draining the fluid from your
lungs.  That is a very big thing, to me.  But you are still fragile.  And I’ve
got to make sure that there’s no more damage to your heart, or to your kidneys,
okay?  We don’t want to take this big step forward, only to find out we’ve
slipped back.  I’ll run the diagnostic, and then you can go back to your room. 
It won’t take that long, I promise you.  I’ll have Joao sit with you, if you
want.”    
            I didn’t want da Costa to sit with me, and I didn’t want to be in
the biobed.  “What time is it now?” I asked.
            “Almost twelve-thirty,” Beverly answered.  “Why?”
            “How long has the captain been gone?”
            “Oh, you’re not to worry about him,” she replied.  “He can take
care of himself.  I’ll send for Joao.”
            I looked at her – she was still smiling – and I sighed.  “Fine,” I
said.  “I hate everything about this.”
            “That’s my boy,” she replied.  “You’re griping, so you must be
feeling better.”
            “I write your review too,” I said.
            “So?  I can easily bribe Deanna with chocolate.”
            I grinned, then, because it hurt my chest to laugh.  “Now I know
how it works,” I said.  “It’s no wonder I can’t get rid of anyone.”
            “I’ve got everything ready, Doctor,” I heard Ogawa say, and then a
few moments later da Costa said, “I’m right here, Commander.  They’re almost
done.”
            I hadn’t realised that I’d drifted off.  I was back at the track
meet, and I still had the gold medal around my neck, and Dmitri was saying that
everyone was going back to the council house for the party, and then my father
was there, just standing there, watching me.  He said something to the man
standing beside him, and I could feel the tightening in my stomach.  I looked
away from Dmitri, just for a second, and then I was staring into my father’s
eyes, and when his friend looked up, they both smiled.
            “Sir,” da Costa said, and then I heard him say, “He’s having
another flashback, I think –“
            “Just breathe, Will,” Beverly said.
            I opened my eyes.  “Don’t give me anything,” I said, “please, I can
do this myself.  It’s nothing, it wasn’t a flashback –“
            “Slow down, Will, I don’t want to give you anything else, trust
me.”
            “His blood pressure is rising again,” Ogawa said.
            I took a breath, breathed it out through my nose, and I could feel
my heart starting to slow down.
            “Better?” Beverly asked.
            I nodded.  “You ran the diagnostic?” I asked.  “I’m okay?”
            “We did a minor repair of that kidney you’d injured before,”
Beverly said, “which is probably why you were so confused, waking up.  You are
okay.  In fact, if you can calm down just a little bit more, we can transport
you back to your room.”
            “Thanks, Beverly,” I said.  “Part of the problem is I always feel
so trapped, in here….”
            “I know, Will,” she answered.  “It’s a trigger for you.  We know
this.”
            “Everything is a trigger for me,” I said.
            “You’re doing the work, Commander,” da Costa told me, from where he
was standing.  “It will get better, now.”
            “Is that a promise, da Costa?” I asked.
            Ogawa opened the bed, and da Costa helped me sit up.  I still had
the blanket covering me, and da Costa helped me back into the gown. 
            “Here, let me,” he replied, taking me by the arm and helping me
stand.  “Of course it is, sir.”
            I stood for a moment, trying to figure out if the world would stop
spinning.  I took another deep breath and then I removed da Costa’s hand from
my arm.
            “I can do this now,” I said.  My feet were bare and the deck was
cold.  “The gown is still open,” I said, irritably, “and I’m not parading
through sickbay with my ass hanging out.”
            “But it’s such a lovely one,” Beverly said, and Ogawa laughed.
            There was no point, I thought, in responding to that, and da Costa
handed me my robe.
            “If you’re smirking, da Costa,” I said, wrapping it around me, “I
will punch you out,” and then I realised that I’d forgotten that I’d already
tried to kill him, once.
            “I’ll wait until you’re well, Commander,” da Costa replied, “and
then I’ll challenge you to a game of parrises squares.”
            “Accepted,” I said.  He was a good kid, da Costa.  He would make a
good therapist.
            I walked back to my room, with him behind me, just, I guessed, to
make sure that I didn’t fall.  My chest was a little sore, and my back was too,
a bit, from the surgery, but other than that, I felt pretty good, considering
that yesterday I’d just wanted everyone to leave me alone so I could die.
            “I’d like to get dressed,” I said to da Costa.  “Don’t I have some
sort of a schedule for this afternoon?”  He’d walked over to the dresser and I
said, “I can choose my own clothes, thank you.”
            I didn’t look at him, because I knew he would roll his eyes at me,
and I’d already threatened to hit him once.  I finished dressing in the head,
combing my hair – which was still falling out – and brushing my teeth, and then
I was back in my room and I could feel an undercurrent of anxiety, as if there
were something important that I was forgetting. 
            “Do I have a schedule for this afternoon?” I asked again, and then
I remembered.  McBride had come in for Jean-Luc, and he’d said I’d have a
therapy session.  But the therapy session, short or otherwise, wasn’t what I’d
forgotten.  It was the look on McBride’s face – and then the corresponding one
on Jean-Luc’s – that’s what I’d forgotten.  “He can take care of himself,”
Beverly had said.  Well, no, that was my job.  It was my job to take care of
the captain –
            “I want to see Commander Data,” I said.
            “What?” da Costa said, and then he flushed and said, “Sir?”
            “You heard me,” I said, and I found that even though it was still a
little rusty, my command voice was still there.  “I would like to see Commander
Data.  Comm. him and ask him to come to sickbay.”
            “Sir, I can’t do that,” da Costa said.
            “Why the hell not?  Are there standing orders that say I can’t see
whom I wish to see?”
            “No, sir,” da Costa answered.  “There are no standing orders, sir,
but you’ve just had surgery –“
            “Mr da Costa,” I said.
            “Sir,” he answered, reluctantly.
            “Commander Data is an android,” I said.  “There is absolutely no
threat to my health if I see Commander Data.  What could I possibly catch from
him?”
            “Yes, sir,” he said.  “I will ask Dr Crusher, sir.”
            “You do that,” I said.
            “I’ll have to get someone to stay with you, sir.”
            “Oh, for fuck’s sake, da Costa,” I said.  So much for my
professionalism.  I reached over and pressed my call button.  “There.  Simple
solution.”
            A minute or so went by, and then the door opened, and Ogawa poked
her head in.
            “I’d like to speak to Beverly, when she has a minute,” I said, “and
da Costa wouldn’t leave me alone to fetch her.”
            “I’m not allowed to leave you alone, Commander,” da Costa reminded
me.
            “I’ll let her know,” Ogawa said.
            I nodded, and then I found myself grinning at da Costa, who just
shook his head.
            “You’re back to being an asshole, da Costa,” I said, “but I won’t
hold it against you.”
            “I’m glad you’re feeling better, sir,” he muttered.
            “Fuck you, da Costa,” I said.  I actually felt pretty good saying
it, too.  He was laughing, I could tell he was.  “When do I have therapy with
McBride?” I asked.
            “Fifteen hundred,” he answered.  “But I’m not sure Dr McBride is
back yet.”
            And that, I thought, was precisely my point.  There was a reason
for me to have remembered the track meet, and I was positive it wasn’t just
because my psyche had decided I deserved to remember something good for once,
instead of all the bad.  Jean-Luc had promised he’d be honest with me – and
there was something there, something I wasn’t remembering, something about when
he’d promised to be honest with me.  Something about why he hadn’t been honest
with me – and then the memory was back, right in front of me, not really a
flashback – there was no cottony feeling – but almost like a waking dream.  I
was standing beside the podium, and I could feel the heaviness of the medal
against my chest, and the wind was blowing, a bit – I could feel it in my hair
– and Dmitri was laughing, and my coach had grasped my hand to shake it…and
over his shoulder I saw my father, watching me, standing next to someone; then
he said something, and they both looked at me – and my father smiled –
            He’d spoken to my father.  And he hadn’t told me.
            Beverly said, walking in, “What do you need, Will?”
            I was standing, and I could feel the anxiety pooling once again in
my gut.  “I need to see Commander Data, Doctor,” I said, “and I need to see him
now.”
            “Will – “ she began.
            “That’s an order, Doctor,” I said.  “Comm. him.  Now.”
            “The captain left me in charge of you,” Beverly said.  “Not you in
charge of me.”
            “Is he back?” I demanded.  “Is McBride back? Beverly,” I said,
“please.  Just ask Data to come.  He’ll speak to me, I know he will.”
            “Commander, Data is running the ship – “ she began.
            “Data is doing my job,” I said.  “My job.  He didn’t tell you, did
he?  The captain?  He didn’t tell you what this is about – I know him, I know
he said he’d tell you later – “
            “Stand down, sir,” da Costa said.
            “Don’t tell me to stand down!” 
            “Will – “  She stopped.  “You know what this is about?” she asked. 
“This crisis?”
            “It’s about me, for fuck’s sake,” I said, “of course I know what
it’s about –“
            “You remember something?”
            “Please,” I said desperately, “God, Beverly, please –“
            “The captain left me standing orders to sedate you if you tried to
interfere,” she said.
            “Of course he did,” I said.  “I just need to speak to Data – I
won’t do anything else, I promise.”
            “Jean-Luc will kill me,” she said.  She tapped her comm. badge. 
“Crusher to Data.”
            “Yes, Doctor?” Data said.
            “Would you come to sickbay?”
            “Beverly –“ I began, and she said, “Shh.”
            “Is there a problem, Doctor?” Data asked.
            “Yes,” Beverly said.  “There is.”
            “On my way,” Data said.
            “Acknowledged.  Crusher out.”  She looked at me, the look she
sometimes gave both me and the captain when she was certain that what we were
doing was both crazy and wrong.  “Mr Data is fully capable of knocking you
senseless, Mr Riker,” she said.  “And I am fully capable of knocking you out. 
So you just remember both of those things.”
            “Thank you,” I said, and I meant it.  I turned to da Costa.  “We’re
going to need a conference room,” I told him, “and a viewscreen.  I think Mr
Data has something I need to see.  And I think I better have something to eat. 
I won’t make much of an impression on Data if I pass out.”  They were just
standing there, both of them, looking at me.  “It’s okay,” I said.  “I found
Rosie.  I think I’ll be able to eat again.”
            There was silence, for a moment, and then Beverly said, “You heard
the commander, Mr da Costa. Let’s get the man something to eat.”
***** Chapter 107 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will convinces Data to allow him to view the communication from his
     father.
Chapter Notes
     In "Encounter at Farpoint," the very first episode of Star Trek: The
     Next Generation, Commander William T Riker first makes his appearance
     at Farpoint Station, having never seen the Enterprise nor met any
     members of its crew (he thinks) other than the three who are with him
     on the station: Dr Crusher, Wesley, and Geordi. When Will meets the
     captain, Data is there, but there's no time for introductions or
     communications; the only person Will is introduced to, other than
     Picard, is Tasha. However, Will "meets" Data on the holodeck, where
     he is trying to learn to whistle "Pop! goes the weasel," and it's
     then that Will calls him "Pinocchio." Their friendship is cemented by
     that act of understanding on Will's part.
     One of the most frightening aspects of the sociopathic personality is
     his ability to live in each actual moment. I remember once, in having
     a discussion with such a personality, that even though everything the
     man was saying was a lie, he was believing at the precise moment he
     was saying it that it was true.
.  Chapter One Hundred Seven
 
 
 
 
           
            Beverly had made me something called “Welsh rarebit” from the
replicator, which was sort of like cheese toast except it wasn’t, and as it was
something I’d never had before, there was no trigger associated with it, and I
was able to eat most of it without feeling sick.  I’d stuck to cold water to
drink, again trying to keep everything simple, and when Data arrived I was
already in the conference room and the viewscreen had been set up.  I had my
glass of water with me, in case I needed it, and I had da Costa, whom I didn’t
want but who refused to leave.  Once, when I was stationed on Betazed, Deanna
had gotten mad at me and told me I was the perfect candidate for Peter Pan. 
I’d had absolutely no idea what she was talking about, and so I’d read the
stupid book.  I’m still not sure whether she meant I was Peter Pan, or whether
I was a Lost Boy, and now I’m thinking either way she was spot on for both; but
in thinking about da Costa, he was like Peter’s shadow, and I was going to need
someone to cut him from me if I ever got well.
            Just as I heard the doors to sickbay swish open and Data walk in I
remembered that Data hadn’t seen me since I’d been sick; in a sudden panic, I
remembered the look on Worf’s face when he’d walked into my room.  I knew Data
didn’t have emotions, but he was more human than some of the people I’d worked
with over the years, and I could feel my hands start to shake.
            “What is it, Commander?” da Costa asked worriedly.
            “I look like shit,” I said, “there’s no way he’s going to listen to
me when I look like this.”  I grabbed my hand to keep it from jerking the
table.         
            Da Costa said, “You are Commander William T Riker, First Officer of
the Enterprise, and Commander Data’s superior officer.”
            I looked at him, surprised, but he wasn’t giving me that sly grin
of his.  He was being perfectly serious.  “Thank you, Mr da Costa,” I said. 
Data had seen me covered in black slime, and ceiling plaster; he’d seen me with
my leg gashed open; he’d seen me relieved of duty for being an asshole.  I was
thirty kilos less than the last time he’d seen me, but I was still First
Officer of the Enterprise.
            I was standing when he walked into the conference room.  “Mr Data,”
I said.  “Thank you for coming.”
            “Commander,” he said.  “Dr Crusher indicated that there was a
problem.”
            I could see he was trying to adjust to the way I looked.  “This is
Mr da Costa,” I said, “who has been assigned to me.  He’s assisting Dr
McBride.  Da Costa, Commander Data, Acting First.”
            Da Costa was already standing.  “Sir,” he said.
            “I think you can leave us now, da Costa,” I said to him.  “This
conversation doesn’t involve you.”
            “Commander –“ da Costa began, but it was only a formality, and he
and I both knew it.  “If you need me, sir,” he added, and walked out.
            “Will Dr Crusher be joining us, Commander?” Data asked.
            I didn’t know whether he’d figured everything out yet or not; I
used to be able to read him pretty well.  “No,” I said.  “Sit down, Data.”
            “Sir,” Data said.  He sat.
            “The captain tells me you’re doing a good job,” I offered.  I
wanted to get the formalities out of the way; they were the little things that
Data wasn’t so good at, but he completely expected them from me.
            “Thank you, sir,” he answered.  “That is good to know.”  He paused
and then he said, “Are you recovering now, sir?”
            Perhaps Data had learned the social niceties after all;
“recovering” was a much better way of putting “Are you not bat shit crazy
anymore, sir?”
            “I’m doing better,” I said, firmly.  “The surgery went well.  I
still have a long way to go.”
            “I did ask several times to see you, Commander,” Data said.
            I wanted to laugh.  Was he really worried that my feelings were
hurt that he hadn’t been?  “I haven’t been well enough to see anyone, Data,” I
said.  “This past week was especially difficult.”
            He was quiet, and then he said, “The captain thought you might try
to see me, sir.”
            Of course he did.  I could think of several words to use to
describe Jean-Luc at this particular moment, but none of them would have helped
the situation.  “He let you see the communication from my father?” I asked.  I
was ninety-five percent sure that there’d been a communication from my father. 
The memory – my father’s smiling at me – had brought back Jean-Luc’s promise to
be honest with me, and when he’d said that this morning, it was because he’d
said it exactly the same way the last time he’d spoken to my father.  “My
father sent a response to Dr McBride’s request for information?”
            “Yes, sir,” Data said.
            I remembered to breathe.  “My father threatened the captain?” I
asked.  “Or he threatened me?”
            “I was given explicit instructions by Captain Picard not to discuss
this with you, sir,” Data said.
            Well, I could bypass those.  Data was a literalist.  I was not. 
“You let the captain go down to the planet,” I said in my most severe tone. 
“By himself.”  I paused, waiting for him to process this, and then I said, “Did
you learn nothing about being a First from me, Mr Data?”
            He said, “Captain Picard was accompanied by Dr McBride when he
beamed down to Alpha Station Lya.”
            Gotcha!  I thought.  “You didn’t even send Worf?” I let the
accusation linger.
            “Commander – “ he began.
            “Do you still not know what my father is?” I demanded.  “Still, Mr
Data?  Even after seeing his communication to Dr McBride?  Didn’t Dr McBride
tell you what he is?  How real the threat is?  How many people he’s murdered? 
How many children he’s murdered?  How no one has ever had this information –
and now we have it?  That Captain Picard has it --?”
            “Commander – “ he said.
            “I’m the only one on this ship who knows what he’s capable of,” I
said quietly.  “I’m the only one who’s survived.”  I let that sink in.  “How
long has he been gone, Data?  He said he’d keep in contact, right?  When was
the last time you heard from him?”
            “We believe Captain Riker to be on Betazed,” Data said.  “If he
were to fly a ship here, our sensors would pick it up.  Captain Picard and Dr
McBride are safe on Alpha Station Lya, sir.  And Admiral Haden was apprised of
the threat and has made security adjustments.”
            “You believe him to be on Betazed,” I repeated.  “Do you have
confirmation of that?”
            “Commander Riker – “
            “I want to see the communication.”
            Data paused.  “I would not advise that, sir,” he said.
            “Why?  Did Captain Picard forbid it?”
            “No, sir.”  No one could ever sound as patient – or as put-upon –
as Data.  “But Captain Picard did not want you involved, sir.  And I personally
would not advise it.”
            “Data, I am involved,” I said.  “I’ve been involved my whole life.”
            We were at an impasse.
            “I am sorry, sir,” Data said.
            “Look, Data,” I said, and even though I was exhausted, and I could
feel my head starting to hurt, I wasn’t going to give up.  “Captain Picard and
Dr McBride are with Admiral Haden on the station.  Right?”
            “Yes, sir,” Data said.
            “And they’re not talking about the mission.  The mission is over.”
            “That is correct, sir.”
            “They are talking about my father.  And the threat that he poses. 
Because they have information on him that he doesn’t want exposed.  Because the
organisation to which he belongs isn’t to be exposed.”
            That last statement was a shot in the dark, but I could see I had
it right.  Data had called my father “Captain” Riker.  Now that I could access
memories – not that I wanted to – I knew that while there’d been plenty of men
around our cabin in Starfleet uniforms (and I didn’t want to go there, not
now), I had never seen my father wearing one.  He was a civilian advisor and
troubleshooter for Starfleet and the Federation.  That’s what he’d always told
me.  That’s what he’d always told everyone.  He’d even come aboard this ship in
that capacity.  But it made perfect sense.  He’d raised me to be obedient.  To
function in a military setting.  As if our cabin were the Academy.  Other
plebes had had trouble adjusting to the military atmosphere of the Academy
during their first, and sometimes even their second, years.  But I hadn’t.  It
was comfortable.  And easy.  So he was a part of Starfleet that no one knew
about.  That did illegal things.  That would cover up all the damage that he’d
done, because of the work he did.  No wonder the Shugaks had complied with his
bizarre requests.  And no wonder there’d been no one to help me when I was a
little kid.  There wasn’t anything that the captain hated more than corruption
from within Starfleet.  Couple that with his need to protect me – and he would
be a sitting duck for my father.
            Data paused, and I could see he was considering how much I knew. 
Then it occurred to me that maybe the captain thought I had kept this
information about my father from him.  Pieces were beginning to fall into place
for me.  Billy was beginning to fall into place for me.
            “You are aware of your father’s organisation, Commander?” he asked.
            McBride had said I wasn’t to blame, for Rosie’s death.  That I
hadn’t killed Rosie.  Or Mittens.  And that I wasn’t responsible for the fact
that I’d tried to kill Christian Larsen.  But there were people whose deaths I
was responsible for.  And if I’d known about this group and kept silent about
it – in the exact same way I’d kept silent about finding Rosie; in the exact
same way I'd kept silent about the Pegasus – then I was culpable.  Crazy or
not, I was a court-martial waiting to happen.
            “I am, now,” I said.  “Data.  You have to understand.  When I was a
child, I was fighting for my life.  Every day.  You have no idea…”
            “Captain Picard explained the origin of your illness to me, sir,”
Data said.
            “I doubt that he explained much,” I said.  “He’d have wanted to
maintain my privacy.  So that my staff wouldn’t look at me and define me now by
what they knew about what happened to me.  About what I was forced to do, in
order to live.”
            “You are right, Commander.  He did not give me details.”
            I laughed.  “You want to be human,” I said, and I couldn’t keep the
bitterness out of my voice.  “I called you Pinocchio, once.  If you only knew
what humans are really like….”  I looked away.
            “Sir,” Data said.  “I do not think that I can judge the entire
human race on the actions of one bad man.  I would be no better than Q, sir, if
I did that.”
            I rubbed my face.  Da Costa came in and said, “Are you all right,
sir?  Do you need anything?”
            “No,” I said.  “I’m okay, da Costa.”
            “Dr Crusher is going to want to check your vitals soon,” da Costa
said.  “I’m not sure how much longer she’s going to tolerate this, sir.  Just
so you know.”
            “I understand, Mr da Costa,” I said.  “Thank you.  Tell her ten
minutes, and then I’ll do whatever it is she wants me to do.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said, leaving.
            I picked up my cup and took a drink of water.
            “I do not know how I can help you, Commander, without going against
the captain’s wishes,” Data said.  “And you are tired, sir, and ill.  I can let
you know when I hear from the captain, if that will help.”
            “Data, I don’t want your pity,” I said.  “That’s not the point of
what I’ve been trying to tell you.”
            “I know that, sir,” Data said.  Perhaps it was only my imagination
– my tendency, as always, to anthropomorphise him – but his voice was kind,
somehow.  “It is not pity, Commander, but concern.  I consider you my friend,
sir.”
            I took a deep breath.  It would not help me if I got upset.  It
wouldn’t help Jean-Luc.  I could feel my hand shaking, and I stilled it.   “You
are my friend, Data,” I said.  “You have been from the very first, when I saw
you on the holodeck.”  I took another sip of water, and tried to organise my
thoughts.  “The only reason I survived my childhood, Data,” I said, slowly,
because I wanted to make sure that I got this right, “was because I was an
encyclopedia where my father was concerned.  When your father beats you, when
he rapes you, when he tortures you because he can –“  slow this down, Will, I
thought “ – you are forced to learn every single movement he makes, every
single look, every single nuance of sound, every single phrase.  Because each
one could be a threat.  Because each one could signify another beating, or
another rape, or another session of psychological torture.  I am the world’s
only living expert on my father.  I know what everything means.  I am the only
child, Data, who survived.”
            “You are asking me to show you his communication to Dr McBride,”
Data said.
            “Yes,” I answered.  “Because I can translate what he’s saying.  I’m
not denying that McBride is a genius.  I’m still alive, because of Dr McBride. 
I would have killed myself weeks ago, if it weren’t for this treatment program
that he’s set up.  I’m sure McBride can decode my father.  But I know him so
much better.  And it’s information we need.  It’s information the captain
needs.  And he needs it soon.  My father never makes threats, Data.  My father
says he will do something, and then he does it.  I’ve never heard him make a
threat in his life.  He doesn’t have to.  Where the rest of us worry about the
future, and how it will affect us or other people, my father doesn’t.  He lives
in the present.  It’s one of the scariest things about him.”  I paused, and
then I said, “Look, the captain was – is – concerned about me, about my mental
state.  He has a right to be.  Yesterday, Data, I went through the longest
therapy session of my life.  I remembered terrible, frightening things.  And
when it was over, I was just ready to give up.  I don’t know how to explain how
tired I was of having to struggle, and of being in pain, all the time.  My
heart was failing.  My kidneys were failing.  I’d asked Jean-Luc to end my
treatment and to just let me go.  But McBride – and I don’t know how he did
this – he helped me to see things in a different way.  In a way that I could
live with everything that was done to me, and all the terrible things I had to
do just to survive.”
            “I am glad of that, Commander,” Data said.
            I smiled at him, even though I was so tired and I was running out
of time.  “I am too, Data,” I said.  “At least I’m pretty sure I am.  I know
that if I see this communication, it’s going to be very difficult for me.  It
will bring back terrible memories.  It will bring back the pain.  But I’m
willing to take that risk, if it will help you and the captain and Dr McBride
stop him.  That’s what I want, Data.  I want to be the one to stop him.”  I
breathed, and then I said, “Let me see the communication.  I’ll give you
whatever I get from it.  You’ll contact the captain and give it to him.  And –
for my own safety, Data – we’ll bring Dr Crusher in here, to monitor my blood
pressure, and Mr da Costa, because he can talk me through any flashbacks that
might occur.  And you can ask Counsellor Troi to come too, if you think it will
help.  But I need to do this, Data.  The captain’s in danger and it’s my job to
protect him.  I need to do something, Data.  I can’t just sit in here and let
my father destroy again someone I love.”
            Data was silent, going over everything I’d told him.  When I
thought about it, I could see that he’d taken the best parts of all of us and
incorporated them into himself.  In this case, he’d taken Jean-Luc’s ability to
be still, to be quiet and to just listen; to accord the person who was speaking
dignity and respect.  He’d taken Geordi’s intrinsic kindness, and Worf’s desire
to protect.  He’d taken Deanna’s inner strength and calm centre, and Beverly’s
love of life.  He would process everything I told him, in those almost mystical
algorithms of his, and then he would come to an answer that, while I might not
like it, would nevertheless be the right one.
            “I understand, Commander,” he said.  “I think it is a good idea, to
have Dr Crusher and Mr da Costa with you.  And perhaps we should ask for
Counsellor Troi.  But I think you are right, sir.  I think it is highly likely
that you will have information that we need.  I will not be able to explain
everything that I know, Commander Riker.  The captain ordered me not to involve
you in anyway.”
            “Thank you, Data,” I said.  “I won’t put you in direct conflict
with those orders, Data, I promise you.”
            “I think you have already done so, sir,” Data said, “but I am
willing to take the risk.”
            “I hope I still have a job when this is over,” I said, “because
you’re a damned good first officer.”
***** Chapter 108 *****
Chapter Summary
     Admiral Thomas Laidlaw speaks to Elanna Lal, Head of the Sixth House
     of Betazed, about sanctuary for Lt Renan Balum and about the
     potential threat from Captain Kyle Riker.
Chapter One Hundred Eight
 
 
 
 
            It wasn’t often, he thought, that he made a formal request as a
Starfleet officer and the commander of Starfleet on Betazed, to see his great-
aunt as the Head of the Sixth House.  The Sixth House, of course, was not Rixx;
that was Lwaxana Troi’s elder sister’s purview, not Elanna Lal’s, but because
Rixx was the capitol city, Aunt Elanna had an office here, as did all the other
Houses.
            He had not comm’d her ahead of time, an egregious breach of
protocol on a planet that existed on protocol, but as he was her favourite
nephew, he’d decided it was worth the icy glare.  And it was, of course,
necessary.  More than necessary.  He’d been disinclined to believe everything
that Renan had said, when they’d met at the café, simply because it was Renan
who was saying it.  He’d been seventeen when, during the last of the summer
holidays they’d had their annual family picnic at the Falls; it was a mandatory
affair, and, because his family tree was so complex, there might have been
fifty or sixty people in attendance; he didn’t remember.  He’d already met,
that summer, Senna, who’d been bonded to him and who was to become his wife,
and he did remember she was there, with her family.  And Sandy McBride was
there, of course, with his family, and Senna had never met Sandy, and they’d
hung out together.  And then five-year-old Renan had climbed the Falls, and an
eerie silence had descended upon the party.  He hadn’t known Renan and his
older sisters very well; they were cousins to Sandy, who was his cousin, rather
than to him.  He remembered thinking that this could very well be a scenario
from the Academy entrance exam, which he had just taken and passed.  He’d
shucked off his clothes before anyone could do or say anything at all, and
Sandy had followed him, maybe twenty seconds later.  They’d dived into the pool
below the Falls, churning with white water, and watched as Renan stood
precariously on a rock that had glistened with ferns and spray.  He thought
he’d yelled at the child not to jump, but of course who could hear anything
over the noise?  He could see that all their fathers – his and Sandy’s and
Renan’s – were climbing the Falls; he could see Morwenna Lal, head of their
House, wading into the pool.  And then Renan had jumped.
            She kept him waiting fifteen minutes.  At that point he’d contacted
both Admiral Nechayev and HQ, and was waiting to hear back from Vance Haden and
Sandy McBride.  He was ushered into his great-aunt’s office, which was, in
fitting with her rather austere personality, best-described as Spartan.  She’d
hung one of her father’s paintings on the wall, and she had a large window that
overlooked the courtyard gardens and ponds, but otherwise, it could have been
the office of any civil servant.  He hid a smile; a person making that
assumption would be in for an unpleasant surprise.
            “Good morning, Nephew,” she said from behind her desk.
            It was almost noon, but if she wanted it to be morning, who was he
to say differently?
            He bowed.  “Good morning, Lady Aunt,” he said.
            “You are in uniform,” she continued.  “I was under the impression
that this was a family matter.”
            “It is, Lady Aunt,” he replied.  “It has to do with Lt Renan
Balum.”
            He could have sworn she was resisting rolling her eyes.
            “Sit down, Valentine,” she said.  “Maelum, will you bring us tea? 
Or,” she asked, “would you prefer to lunch with me?”
            “Lady Aunt,” he said, “I would love nothing better than to lunch
with you.  But this is a crisis, and I don’t believe that I have the time.”
            “Sit down, Valentine,” she repeated, and he sat.  “Tea, then.  And
as this is family, you may dispense with calling me ‘Lady Aunt.’  It is a
ridiculous appellation.”
            He smiled at her.  “No more ridiculous than Valentine, Aunt
Elanna,” he said.
            She returned his smile.  “Your father’s whimsy was well-loved, my
dear,” she said.  “Ah, thank you, Maelum.”
            Her assistant arrived with the tea tray, the only luxury which his
aunt permitted herself.  There were biscuits and cakes and sandwiches, and a
pot of jasmine tea, which she preferred.  Maelum poured out the tea, first to
his aunt, and then to himself.  Although there was a small gong in the corner
of the office, Maelum did not ring it, for which Laidlaw was grateful.  Even
though he was only quarter-Betazoid he’d been raised on Betazed; some customs,
he thought, should have been retired.
            “Tell me,” she said, after she’d sipped her tea.
            “You would have made a wonderful Starfleet officer,” he said. 
“Straight and to the point, as always.”
            “My sister more than made up for me on that regard,” she answered,
tartly.  “I find excessive protocol exhausting, as you know.”
            He nodded.  “Briefly, then,” he said.  “I found out, several years
ago, that there was an agency operating under Starfleet’s aegis without the
knowledge of command or the Federation.  In an emergency meeting with the few
officers I thought I could trust, we formulated a plan to observe and
infiltrate the organisation.  It was decided, at a higher level than mine, that
that was all we would do, but if it became necessary to curtail the operations
of this organisation, we would have agents in place that could help.  This
agency, which calls itself Section 31 – after Article 14, Section 31 of the
Articles of Starfleet – recruits members from the Academy and civilians; their
stated goal is defence of the Federation.  Their interpretation of defence,
however, is extreme.”
            “Yes, I remember,” Elanna Lal said.  “Are you saying you are ready
to make policy changes regarding this organisation?  And remind me how this
involves my nephew Renan.”
            “We thought Renan would be a perfect candidate for Section 31,”
Laidlaw said.  “He has the right temperament, and so he was trained to attract
their attention.  He has maintained his ability to work for them and for us for
a number of years.  The information that he has brought us – not only to
Starfleet and the Federation, but to us, here, on Betazed – has been
invaluable.  Section 31 is poking a very large stick in the direction of a
group that is not reacting kindly to their tactics; in an effort to change what
they feel are the Federation’s lax policies on security and defence. We feel
that they are courting war.”
            “But that is not the basis for this discussion,” Elanna Lal said.
            “No, Aunt,” Laidlaw responded, “although I respectfully submit that
it should be the basis of a discussion in the near future.”
            “So what trouble is Renan in now?  This is the same child, is it
not, who scared us all half to death when he jumped the Jenaran Falls?”
            Laidlaw smiled.  “Yes, ma’am.  The same child.”
            “You and Sandy rescued him, didn’t you?  I seem to remember my
sister nearly drowned herself in her attempt.”
            “We did,” Laidlaw agreed.  “But I don’t believe Grandmamma was in
any danger.”
            “I suppose not,” she replied, and then she grinned at him.  “Eat
up, Valentine,” she said, “if you’re going to be skipping your lunch.”
            He took a sandwich.  “The story is complicated, Aunt, and we
haven’t much time.”
            “Go ahead, then,” Elanna Lal said, nodding.  “I have cancelled my
other appointments, as I expected that this would take time.  You are not an
imprudent man, Valentine.”
            “It has to do with a Commander William Riker,” Laidlaw said, “who
is the First Officer of the USS Enterprise….”
            It was a complicated story, and trying to draw in all the different
threads so that they made a coherent whole left him with the feeling that the
threads were only gossamer, and Renan’s feeling of terror was misplaced.  It
was, he thought, the perfect strategy of Section 31; to make their inner
workings and their agents so outrageous as to be simply unbelievable to
rational men.  No Starfleet officer would ever behave in the way that Kyle
Riker had for his entire career.  No one would believe that unimposing Jeff
García, who ran the cleanest Xenobiology office of any Starfleet admiral, was
actually the coordinator of Section 31 operations in this sector.  No one would
ever believe that the Rossas – and he had to believe that Connaught Rossa was
just as involved as Jeremy Rossa was – were the joint heads of Section 31.  He
was sure, absolutely sure, that the names which would also come up – Commander
Cortan Zweller, Commander Sovok, and who knew who else – would be equally
unbelievable.  That, of course, was the whole point.  Deniability, in its
extreme.
            His aunt had listened in silence, sipping her tea.  She refrained
from making comment, and her facial expressions were closed.  Of course, she
was a master at maintaining walls, and he was only one-quarter Betazoid.  He
couldn’t read what she was feeling.  He had already contacted Admiral Shanthi,
and he hoped fervently that he hadn’t made a mistake in that.
            “You believe Captain Riker is here?” she asked, now.  “Explain that
to me again.”
            “Ma’am,” he said.  “Captain Riker was supposed to fly to San
Francisco, where he was going to report in to Admiral Jeremy Rossa and then
receive a new assignment.  He has been deep in the Gamma Quadrant for
sometime.  However, while he was en route to Risa for leave, he received the
notification from Captain Picard that his son William was ill.  Picard
requested information about William Riker’s childhood, and the apparent abuse
he received from his father.  That seems to have destabilised, I guess is the
best word to describe it, Aunt, Captain Riker.  He killed three people that we
know of on Risa, including a child.  And he attacked Renan, who’d been asked to
convey information to him about his son and Picard by Admiral Rossa via Admiral
García.”  He paused, and then he said, “Renan was terrified when I saw him this
morning.  He believes Captain Riker followed him here.  He believes Captain
Riker intends to kill him.  He’s asked for sanctuary.”
            “From Section 31?  He wants to resign his commission from
Starfleet?”
            Laidlaw shrugged.  “I doubt that he’s thought that far ahead,
Aunt.  He’s frightened, and I’ve never seen him frightened before.”
            “You believe Captain Riker is a danger to us here, on Betazed?  To
the citizens of Betazed?”
            “Yes,” Admiral Laidlaw said.  “I believe he is a threat to us, and
to his own organisation, and to the Enterprise.”
            “Where is the Enterprise now?”
            “In orbit around Alpha Station Lya.  They apparently were in
diplomatic meetings there, with Captain Picard and Admiral Haden presiding.”
            “I understand.”  She placed her cup on its saucer.
            He waited, feeling as if he could actually hear the seconds ticking
away.  Now that he’d presented it to her, he actually felt a sense of urgency,
as if whatever was being set into motion already had been.
            “This is a matter for the Council,” Elanna Lal said.
            “With all due respect, Aunt Elanna,” Laidlaw said, “I don’t know
that Renan has the time for the Council to consider this.  Could we not place
him in a safe house first, and then bring it to the Council?  If it is a
question of whose jurisdiction, I could easily claim Starfleet’s.”
            “I did say I understood, Valentine,” Elanna Lal said, and her icy
look – the one he’d anticipated earlier – finally appeared.  “Where is the boy
now?”
            “I told him to report in to Admiral García,” Laidlaw answered. 
“Renan believes that Riker’s blown his cover, but I doubt that Riker’s had the
opportunity to contact García yet, or even that Riker would want to contact
García.”
            “So as far as you know, Jorge García is not aware that Renan works
for us.”
            “As far as I know, yes.”
            “You have other operatives in that office?”
            “Yes, ma’am.  One.  He’s not reported anything unusual as yet.”
            “I am too old for this nonsense, Valentine.”
            He said nothing.  As far as he was concerned, she could live
forever.  He was certainly not ready for his sister to become Head of the Sixth
House.
            “Do you have any idea what it is that Captain Riker wants?” she
asked, now. 
            “At first, I thought it was to stop me from finding out who – and
what – he is.  He is a despicable man, Aunt Elanna.  The information that I
have discovered on him would disgust and frighten you, I think.  But Renan
seems to think that he has some plan to expose Section 31 and take down the
Enterprise as well – or at least Captain Picard.  I’ve contacted Sandy.  I’m
sure that, at this point, Sandy has figured it all out.”
            “And the threat to us?”
            “He seems perfectly capable of killing anyone in his way, including
Renan.  He could be a danger to our citizens and our peace, if he is here.  And
politically, Aunt.  We have been allowing this group the license to operate
right under our own noses.  I do not think there are members of the Council who
would countenance that.”
            “Find Renan and place him in your safe house, Admiral.”  She had
come to a decision.  “Under Starfleet’s jurisdiction.  At some point I will
need to speak with him, but I will wait for further information from you before
I do.”
            “Thank you, Lady Aunt,” Admiral Laidlaw said, rising.  “I will send
word when he is safe.”
            “You may take your leave, Admiral,” she said.
            He bowed, and turned to go.
            “Valentine.”
            He turned around, to see her step away from her desk and come
towards him.  She held out her arms, and took his hands in hers.
            “Be careful, Nephew,” she said.
            He kissed her cheeks.  “Always, Aunt Elanna.”
            It was nearly thirteen-thirty when he stepped outside.  His air car
was still waiting for him, even though the distance to his own office was
negligible, and his driver stepped outside to open the door for him.  He sat
down in the cool interior and checked his padd.  There were communications from
Admiral Nechayev and from Admiral Shanthi’s office.  He would deal with those,
and then he would send for Renan.  It would probably be best to wait until
Renan had finished his working day, so as not to draw any attention to him. 
That would give him until sixteen-thirty to set up the safe house, and file the
appropriate paperwork, and inform Alynna Nechayev of the possible threat to
Picard.  He sincerely hoped that somehow his cousin Renan would manage to stay
out of trouble until then.
***** Chapter 109 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will assembles his team in order to view his father's communication.
Chapter Notes
     A pattern of behavior has been established in that Will Riker kept
     silent for twenty-five years about finding Rosie Kalugin's body, and
     for twelve years about what really happened on the Pegasus. If, as he
     assumes, he has kept silent about the existence of Section 31 for his
     entire life, his career in Starfleet -- medically incompetent or not
     -- would likely be over.
     The allusion is to the musical Man of La Mancha, in which Don Quixote
     is forced to see himself as he really is by the Knight of Mirrors;
     although the shock kills him, Aldonza and Sancho are inspired to
     continue pursuing his ideals.
Chapter One Hundred Nine
 
 
 
 
            “I do not believe that will be the case, sir,” Data said.
            I didn’t answer him, because I was – slowly – beginning to
formulate a plan in my mind.  I thought about what I’d gone through, at
Starbase 247, during Erik Pressman’s court martial.  I wondered how much worse
it would be, if I was determined to have known about this organisation of my
father’s all along.  I didn’t think that I had.  There were memories, pressing
against me – I could feel them, as if they were living things – and I closed my
eyes against them.  I can’t deal with you now, I thought.  Just go away.
            “Are you all right, sir?” he asked now.  I could hear the concern
in his voice.
            “Yes, Data,” I said.  “I’m just a little tired, that’s all. 
Nothing that a strong cup of coffee won’t take care of.”
            “Yes, sir,” he replied.  “Of course, sir.”
            Da Costa walked in.  “I’m going to take you back to your room now,
sir,” he announced.
            “Could you get me a cup of coffee, Joao?” I asked.  “Three creams
–“
            “No sugar,” he answered.  Then he said, “You’ve called me ‘Joao.’ 
Just what are you up to?”
            Perhaps it might be best to channel Jean-Luc.  “I beg your pardon?”
I said.
            He flushed for the second time.  “Sir,” he said.  “Commander
Riker.  Dr Crusher would like you to return to your room.  You need to rest,
sir.”
            “Mr Data has agreed to show me the communication that arrived this
morning,” I said, trying to keep my voice steady.  “There is a strong
possibility that I have information the captain needs.  Will you set it up, Mr
Data?”
            “Aye, sir,” Data said.  “You should assemble your team, sir.”
            “Of course, Mr Data,” I said.  “Mr da Costa, if, on the way to
getting me a cup of coffee, you could ask Dr Crusher to see me.”
            Da Costa stared at me, and then at Data.  “Sir,” he said, and then
he stopped.  “My primary duty is to make sure that you are safe, sir.  I’m not
sure that what you’re going to do would be sanctioned by Dr McBride.”
            “Then Dr McBride will deal with me when he returns,” I answered,
“as will the captain.  Mr Data is the officer in charge, and he has determined
that this is the correct course of action.  If you will get Dr Crusher, Mr da
Costa.” 
            I didn’t look at Data, who had booted up the computer in the
conference room and who was accessing the communication.  Data had chosen to go
against the captain’s orders, and I didn’t know if pressure from da Costa would
get him to change his mind.  Da Costa stood in the doorway, staring at me,
clearly torn between what he knew McBride wanted, and what he was being ordered
to do.
            Data looked up from the computer and said, “I believe Commander
Riker gave you an order, Mr da Costa.”
            “Aye, sir,” da Costa said, leaving.
            “Dr Crusher isn’t going to be happy, Data,” I said.
            “No,” Data agreed.  He’d finished setting it up, and activated the
viewscreen.
            “I don’t have a comm. badge anymore,” I said, “so I can’t call
Deanna.”
            Data glanced at me, in my civvies, and said, “Yes.  Data to
Counsellor Troi.”
            “Troi here.”
            “Will you come to sickbay?”
            “Is there something wrong with Commander Riker?”
            “No,” Data said.
            “On my way,” Deanna answered.  “Troi out.”
            “The communication is now ready, Commander,” Data said.
            “Thank you, Mr Data,” I replied, standing.  “I’m going to the head,
Data.”  I started for the door and I heard Data say in a surprised voice,
            “Is that information I should know, Commander?”
            I stopped, and turned around.  Of course it wasn’t information he
should know.  I’d spent a little over a month in sickbay, with every moment –
waking and sleeping observed by someone.  The last time I’d been left alone I’d
tried to resign my post, and the time before that, I’d broken the mirror in my
head and torn open my arms.  I was relatively sure that everyone on this ship
knew that I’d attempted suicide.  I was definitely sure that senior staff knew.
            I said, carefully, “Data.  You know why I’m here.”
            “Yes, Commander,” he said.  “You are being treated for a serious
illness.”
            “I tried to kill myself,” I said.  “I haven’t been allowed to do
anything on my own since then.”
            “Are you telling me that you are not to be trusted, sir?” Data
asked.
            I sighed and then I said, as honestly as I could, “Yes, Data. 
That’s exactly what I’m telling you.”
            I turned away again, and walked out the door, intending to find da
Costa so that he could take me to the head, not wanting to screw everything up
by just going on my own.  Ogawa was tending to an ensign from xenobotany, but I
couldn’t remember the kid’s name; she looked up at me, concern flickering
across her face before she shut it away.
            “What do you need, Commander?” she asked.
            “Da Costa,” I said. 
            “He’s in Dr Crusher’s office,” she replied.  “Do you need help?”
            “No,” I said.  “I’ll get him.”
            I nodded at the ensign, who looked away.  I couldn’t remember
whether I’d have had anything more to do with the kid than just a personnel
review, but I decided she was just surprised by my appearance.  I knocked on
Beverly’s door, and then walked in.
            “Shut the door, Will,” she said.
            I shut the door.
            “Why don’t you tell me just what the hell is going on?” I couldn’t
tell whether she was worried or just pissed off.
            “I know I said I’d do what you wanted me to do after I met with
Data,” I began.  “The meeting’s just not over, yet.  Data’s going to show me
the communication from my father this morning –“
            “Will –“
            “—because it’s the right thing to do,” I finished.  “I know him
better than anyone else.  If there’s information to get from it, I’m the one to
do it.  I’ll give the information to Data; Data will give it to the captain.”
            “Will, you had surgery this morning –“
            “I know, I know,” I said hurriedly.  “I’ve got a chance to be
useful, Beverly.  Surely you can understand that.”
            “Dr McBride would not want this at all,” da Costa said.
            “But I’ve given this some thought,” I told him, and then I said to
Beverly, “I have given it some thought.  I know that it’s going to be difficult
for me, to see this.  I know I’m going to need both of you with me.  In fact,
I’m counting on you to be with me…and Deanna, Deanna’s on her way.  You can
monitor my blood pressure, just like you always do, and da Costa and Deanna can
help me with any emotional reactions I’m likely to have.  But, Beverly….I need
this.  I need to do this.”
            “Commander Riker.”
            Shit, that was the look she got when she was going to threaten to
relieve someone of duty, and then I had to hold back sudden hysterical
laughter; I was already medically relieved.  What the hell more could she take
away from me?  I’d already lost everything – my job, my privacy, my dignity, my
sense of who I was.  I could feel that the pendulum that was my mood start to
swing the other way, and I tried to maintain what little composure I had.  If I
started to crash, I’d end up in bed with a hypo spray. 
            “He’s planning something,” I said, trying to slow my speech down so
that it could possibly sound normal.  My anxiety was rising, my mood was
crashing – and my speech would give it all away.  “He’s leveled a threat
against me, and the captain, and the ship – maybe even the Federation; he’s
grandiose enough for that.  You didn’t meet him, Beverly, but Worf, and Data,
and Deanna – they met him.  I bet even Ogawa could tell you about him, he was
in here playing with Pulaski often enough.”
            I’d caught Beverly by surprise.  “Dr Katherine Pulaski?” she asked.
            “She was supposed to be my new mother, according to him.”  I rolled
my eyes.  “The point is, Beverly, is that my father always does what he says
he’s going to do.  Always.  If he’s gunning for the captain, then the captain
is in danger, and he’s probably dismissed the threat.  Just as Data did, when
he allowed the captain to go to the planet by himself.”
            “And you truly believe that by watching this communication you’ll
be able to add something that might help Jean-Luc?” she asked.
            “Yes,” I said.  “And then I will do exactly as I promised.  I’ll
take my medication and hypo sprays and go to bed, like the good boy I am.”  I
grinned at her, and this time she rolled her eyes.
            “I feel,” she said, “as if I am on an old-fashioned roller coaster
in an amusement park.”
            “More likely you are in the Hall of Mirrors,” da Costa said
pointedly, glaring at me.
            He would make a great therapist.  “Just call me Don Quixote,” I
said.
            Da Costa said, “He died, Commander.  The mirror revealed himself as
he truly was, and he died.”
            “But not before inspiring his crew to go forward with his ideals,
Mr da Costa,” I said quietly.
            “What is your objection to this, Joao?” Beverly asked.
            I glanced towards the conference room and saw that Deanna was now
here, standing with Data, waiting for me.  “Beverly – “ I began.
            “Be quiet, Will,” she said, and I said automatically, “Sir.”
            Da Costa said, and he sounded just like McBride to me, “Mr Riker is
still suffering from the same physical and emotional issues, as you know,
Doctor, now, as he was this morning, and yesterday evening.  He has not
processed the information he learned yesterday.  He went from wanting to die to
deciding he would live, to apparently, becoming First Officer again.  But it’s
all bravado, Doctor.  When this current adrenalin surge crashes, it is very
likely that his resistance to change will be so strong that he will attempt
suicide again.  I understand, Commander, that you want to feel useful, as you
put it.  But you are not ready to serve, sir.  And I don’t believe we should
put your life at risk – and I know that’s what we will be doing, if this is
allowed to continue.”
            I wasn’t breathing, because I knew he was right.  Hall of Mirrors
indeed.  But it couldn’t be helped.  Data was Acting First Officer, and Data
had given me permission.
            “Mr Data has already given me permission to do this, Mr da Costa,”
I said.  “I came in here to inform you and to ask you both to support me.  And
also to get you, da Costa, so that you could accompany me to the head.”
            “Mr da Costa has made some excellent points, Will,” Beverly said,
“and I am inclined to agree with him.  But I’ve known you for seven years, and
if you say the captain is in danger, then he is.  Let’s see this communication,
and if either da Costa or I think you are in trouble in anyway, we’ll shut this
down.”
            “Of course I will take you to the head, Commander,” da Costa said,
and I knew I’d won.
            “The thing is, da Costa,” I said, as I washed my hands, “you don’t
really know me.  You’d never met me before I became ill.  You don’t know my
strengths, and the way I’ve run this ship.”
            “I’ve heard about you all my life,” da Costa said.  “I think you
are forgetting that I saw you in action.”   
            I dried my face.  “But you were a kid,” I said reasonably, “and
anyone would have done what I did.  It’s just that you don’t know me as the
First Officer of this ship.  At some point, you’re going to have to trust me,
Joao.  During the Borg invasion I ran on adrenalin for nearly a month, and it
worked.”
            “Because you’re an adrenalin junkie, sir,” da Costa said, walking
me back to the conference.  “Adrenalin is the only thing that’s kept you
alive.  But – and I’m sure Dr Crusher will back me up – your cortisol levels
are so low right now that they’re practically nonexistent.  You don’t have the
luxury to fly on adrenalin anymore.”
            “And that’s why I need you, da Costa,” I said.  “A First is only as
good as the staff he hires to do the job.”
            Surprisingly, da Costa grinned.  “Duly noted, sir,” he said.
            I walked into the conference room and sat down between Deanna and
Data.
            “I’m sure that everyone has already told you that this is a bad
idea, Will,” Deanna said.  “I want you to promise me to stop it when you need
to.”
            I closed my eyes, because I was so close, and time was running
out.  “I will, Deanna,” I said, but since I had no barriers to anyone, I’m sure
she knew I was lying through my teeth.
            “Dr McBride recorded this in such a way that you can hear his
conversation as well, Commander,” Data said. 
            “Good,” I answered.  “That will be helpful.”  There was a bit of
water left in my cup, and I drank it.
            The communication loaded, and then I was looking at my father,
sitting at a woman’s desk, in a woman’s flat, in his usual non-descript
clothing.  He hadn’t really aged since he’d left the Enterprise, almost six
years ago. 
            “Can you pause this, Data, and enlarge the view outside those
windows?” I asked.
            “Yes, Commander,” Data said.
            He zoomed in on the windows, and I was looking at a familiar
neighbourhood in Rixx.  He’d never once visited me, during the years I was
stationed on Betazed.  He’d left me when I was fifteen, and I hadn’t seen him
again until he’d showed up to sell me the Aries.  But I knew that building, and
I knew that neighbourhood, and Deanna knew it, too.  It wasn’t my flat he was
in – I wasn’t allowed, as a lieutenant jg, and then a lieutenant, to live
outside the confines of the Starfleet block – but the flat owned by Lwaxana
Troi where Deanna had lived when she was a student was right across the street.
            “All right, Data,” I said.  “You can start it again.”
            My father smiled.  “Dr Alasdair McBride?” he said.  “Kyle Riker. 
You’re treating my son Will for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder?  You wanted to
talk to me, I understand.”
***** Chapter 110 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will watches the communication from his father and makes his plan.
Chapter Notes
     From "Trauma Through A Child's Eyes": "Whether it was an adult *or* a
     child that was dealt a blow greater than could be tolerated,
     distinguishing signs appear soon after the event. They are: 1)
     hyperarousal, 2) constriction, 3) dissociation, and 4) feelings of
     numbness and shutdown (or "freeze), resulting in a sense of
     helplessness and hopelessness."
Chapter One Hundred Ten
 
 
            I felt Deanna take my hand to still it; I hadn’t noticed that the
tremor was back.  I heard McBride throw down the first gauntlet – “It is Mr
Riker, isn’t it?” he’d said – and then my father gave him that smile, the lazy
one, and I could feel the hairs rise on my arms and the back of my neck.  There
were memories pressing against the edges of my consciousness, like birds
fluttering, or maybe they were darker; like bats.  I didn’t want to give in so
quickly so I let Deanna hold my hand; I concentrated on the lightness of her
touch along our bond and the strength with which her fingers held mine.
            I could do this.  I could feel da Costa watching me and so I
remembered to breathe. 
            “Can we pause it here, Data?” I asked.  “And can we zoom in on the
background of the room?  Not the windows, everything else.”
            “Yes, Commander,” Data said.
            “Just go over it slowly,” I said.  “I want to see as much of the
room as I can.”
            I was sure it was a woman’s flat.  The desk was small and probably
an antique, distinctly Betazoid in style; the furniture was also Betazoid, but
the small collection of artifacts was not.  There were two paintings on the
wall, both of them scenes of a city I didn’t recognise, done in warm, vibrant
colours; the throw rug on the floor looked hand-woven.  The woman who’d lived
in this flat was used to a certain level of comfort; that she was in this
building suggested she was a higher level civil servant or perhaps minor
Betazoid aristocracy.  Except those artifacts weren’t Betazoid, nor was the
painting.  There was something distinctly not Betazoid about the room.  So
perhaps she was a civil servant then.  It should be easy to find out which
higher level civil servant in Rixx was missing, I thought, because, if my
father was in her flat, she was almost certainly already dead.  The smile he’d
given – I remembered it.  It was the smile he’d given me when he’d told me that
Rosie was waiting for me in the barn.  It was the smile he’d given me when he’d
looked up at me at the meet –
            “Could I get some more water?” I asked.  A month into treatment and
I didn’t have many tools in my arsenal against what was going to be the
overflow of memories.  Distraction was going to have to work.
            “I’ll get it,” da Costa said.  He took my cup and left.
            “You can continue, now,” I said.
            I heard McBride say, “Perhaps I’m not necessarily convinced of your
concern for your son’s condition.”  It was interesting, I thought, working with
distraction as my main tool, the tone of voice that McBride was using with my
father.  It was insubordinate, that tone; edgy; and then I thought: taunting. 
McBride was taunting my father with that voice.  In the same way that I
sometimes felt he was poking at me with a stick, that’s what he was doing to my
father – poking at him.  To see how he’d react.  To see how much in control he
was. 
            And that was the point.  McBride thought my father was out of
control.  Whatever information he’d gathered from his source on Betazed, the
danger was that my father was losing control.  Da Costa walked back in with the
water, and I took it gratefully. 
            This time when my father smiled, it was his tiger-smile; that’s
what I’d called it, when I was a kid.  I’d never seen a tiger outside of
pictures in a book, but I’d seen plenty of predators; the bush was full of
them, big and small.  My father was a predator, but he wasn’t like a wolf,
which hunted in packs, or a fox or an otter, although they too were solitary
hunters.  No, I’d imagine that a tiger, padding its way down a jungle path,
might smile the way my father did just before it saw you at the river bank and
ate you.
            “Oh, but I am absolutely concerned about my son’s condition,” my
father said.  “His last communication to me had been so upbeat –“
            “Here, Data,” I said.  His smile had broadened into a grin.  My
last communication to him, I thought.  After the Aries, I’d agreed to
acknowledge him, every once in a while – I guess just to make sure that he was
far away.  That I wouldn’t be surprised again by him appearing on the
transporter pad.  I usually sent only a one or two-line reply to his inquiry; I
was sure that the last communication we’d had had said nothing more than “I’m
okay.”
            “He’s lying,” I said, and stupidly, I sounded surprised.  He’d said
to me once, after he’d agreed to something I’d wanted to do – and I couldn’t
remember what, and I wasn’t sure that I wanted to – and then had simply told me
“no,” at the last minute; and I found I could even remember the tone of his
voice as he’d said it:  “Listen to me very carefully, son.  Everything I say is
a lie.” 
            “Will,” Deanna said.  “Dr McBride knows he’s lying.”
            I nodded, and Data started the screenvid again, and I listened as
my father gave his explanation that he’d thought the captain had comm’d him to
tell him I was dead, and then continued on with his mention of my mother and
her illness.  “To lose him too….” he said, and he let his voice trail off. 
McBride mentioned that their conversation was “difficult,” my father’s and
Jean-Luc’s, but I imagined, that for all Jean-Luc’s ability to bluster and make
shrewd observations, it was much more difficult for him than it would have been
for my father.  Then he did that thing with his hand –
            “Will,” Deanna was saying.  “Data, stop the video.  Will, look at
me.”
            “He can’t do this,” I heard da Costa say.  “I told you he couldn’t
do this.  He’s being triggered into a flashback.”
            His hands were so big.
            “Breathe, Will,” Deanna said.
            “His blood pressure is rising, again,” Beverly remarked. 
            “What is happening, Counsellor?” That was Data.
            I could feel them picking me up.
            “Commander.”  Da Costa was behind me.  “Pause the memory and put it
away.”
            I could feel my breaths coming in short gasps. 
            “He’s hyperventilating.”
            I heard the bone in my arm snap.
            I took a breath.  “He – “  When had I started weeping?  I wiped my
face with my sleeve.  “That move, there, with his hand,” I said.  “He wanted
McBride to think he was anxious, that he was going to tell him something.  But
that’s not what it means….”
            “What does it mean, Will?” Deanna asked; she was holding my hand in
hers again.
            “You’re watching his hands,” I said, “you’re watching his hands, so
you don’t see what’s coming, you think he’s showing you a tell, but he’s not. 
He’s controlling everything.  And you won’t be prepared,” I said.  “You won’t
be prepared….”
            “Perhaps we should stop this,” Data said.
            I took another breath, and then I moved Deanna’s hand away.  “No,”
I said.  “I knew there would be triggers, but I can do this.  The last time I
saw him do that I was maybe twelve or thirteen years old.  He broke my arm.” 
            “Dr McBride said it was an interrogation tool,” Deanna said.  “That
your father was using it on him, here.”
            I nodded.  “Yes,” I agreed.  “It’s meant to distract.  It’s meant
for you to think he’s anxious, or faltering.  It’s a standard tool, in certain
types of interrogations.  The types of interrogations the Federation isn’t
supposed to use.”  Distraction, I thought.  I picked up the cup of water da
Costa had just given me and took a sip.  “Thank you, da Costa,” I said.  “I’m
going to need you to remind me that I can stop the memory and put it away."
            “Perhaps I should stand beside you, then,” da Costa said.
            I looked up at him.  “Maybe you should,” I conceded.  “What you did
before.  Yesterday.”  He nodded, and I said, “Go ahead, Data.  I’m sorry this
is going so slowly.  But I know where he is.  That’s a start, isn’t it?”
            “Yes, sir,” Data said.
            Probably Deanna had already told them where he was, but I wondered
if she realised that the woman who owned that flat was already dead.  “The
captain made certain accusations,” my father said, and I could hear sadness in
his voice.  I heard him tell McBride that I’d been “unstable,” and then I heard
him make his confession, the one I’d known was coming when I’d seen him make
that move with his hand.  “Mistakes – terrible mistakes – were made.  I am
afraid I hurt my son, Doctor.”  If I only I could feel anger, I thought. 
Wouldn’t a normal person be angry, at the lies?  Wouldn’t a normal person want
to stand up and shout, You fucking bastard, you raped me, you took away my
childhood?  But I wasn’t a normal person, was I?  I didn’t feel anger.  I
didn’t feel anything.  I felt what I always felt, in the face of this – this
dissembling, I guess, is what you would call it.  I just felt numb.
            Then McBride said, “You did more than hurt your son, Mr Riker. 
Just as you did more than hurt your brother, Wharton.”
            I wondered who Wharton had been, and what my father had done to
him, but McBride’s goad gave me the answer:  my father had killed him.  I
wondered if Wharton had been older or younger, but that was information I
didn’t need right now.  McBride hadn’t told me all he’d found out about my
father, and I guessed he’d decided I was too ill to know.  It didn’t matter.  I
knew Rosie wasn’t the first child he’d killed.  I was equally sure she hadn’t
been the last.  The question remained why he hadn’t killed me.  He’d kept me
alive for a reason.  That was the only thing I wanted to know.
            Then McBride said, “Then perhaps you can explain why Rosie Kalugin
was murdered in exactly the same way.”
            I could feel that I was turning into stone.  It was starting at my
feet this time.  There was the sense of numbness and tingling, and then feeling
just drifted away.  The “not feeling” began the slow climb up my legs.
            “Deanna,” I said, and then I couldn’t figure out what to say.  What
could I say?
            “Can you pause it again, Data?” Deanna asked.  “Will,” she said. 
“This is new information for you.  Joao and I will help you process it, after. 
You need to just file it away, for now, because it’s not going to give you the
information you need.”
            “It won’t give me the information I need,” I repeated.  I could
feel the nothingness reach my groin.
            “No, Will,” Deanna said.
            I felt da Costa’s hands on my shoulders.  “Think about why you’re
putting yourself through this, sir,” he said.  “What did you do when Joaquim
was in danger?”
            I couldn’t remember, at first.  It seemed so long ago that I could
do anything at all.  “I picked him up and carried him out,” I said.  “The
station was crumbling.  I remember, now.”
            “Who are you protecting here?” he asked.
            “The captain,” I said automatically.  “It’s my job.”
            “Then do your job, Commander,” da Costa said.
            I nodded.  “Keep going,” I told Data.  Maybe the numbness would
just stop at my groin; it wasn’t as if anything worked anymore there, anyway.
            The taunting from McBride went on and my father continued to do
what he did, play with him, lazily, like the predator he was.  Then one of
McBride’s taunts hit and I saw my father’s features change.
            “McBride was right,” I said.  “He’s angry, now.  Not quite as in
control as he was.”
            McBride had accused him of not even wanting to know how I was.  It
blew his cover of his concern for me right out of the water.  Then I listened
as McBride lied to him.  Maybe McBride hadn’t thought it was a lie, at the
time; I didn’t know when the communication had come in – and then I thought,
McBride came straight to sickbay, after, to get Jean-Luc.  He hadn’t known I’d
changed my mind, or had he?  It didn’t matter; the effect on my father was the
same, either way.  My father thought I was dying, that I hadn’t much longer to
live.  The idea that he would help – and McBride’s suggestion that he tell
where Rosie’s body was – he’d admitted, it seemed, to killing Rosie.  But we
already knew that – and I suspected that whatever group he worked for, whatever
name they called themselves, they already knew that, too.
            What did he need me for?  Where had I fit in, all these years?  It
wasn’t just that I was convenient, for him.  A ready-made toy for him to play
with.  Was it? 
            And then he said, “I want to see him.”
            And I knew what I would do.
            I’d missed the next exchange, and I asked Data to rewind it and go
back.  It was just him, repeating McBride’s information, repeating that he
wanted to see me; and then McBride said he thought Jean-Luc wouldn’t want him
on the ship, and I was caught up in it again.
            “Ah, Jean-Luc Picard,” my father said.  “Will always did have a
thing for older men.  Erik Pressman.  That professor at the Academy.  I can’t
remember his name.”
            Eide, I thought.  Professor Eide.  I hadn’t told Jean-Luc about
Erik Pressman; not when Pressman was here; and not after.  Neither one of us
had said anything, even during the court-martial.  The questioning – over and
over they’d asked me why.  Duty and honour, I’d said.  Maybe, I thought, Erik
was part of my father’s group.  I could feel Deanna watching me.  This, of
course, was information she’d already known. 
            I said, “He had friends.”  I didn’t say anything else; I didn’t
have to.  I could see the face of the man standing next to my father at the
meet; I could see my father’s smile.  Data wouldn’t know what I was talking
about, but Deanna and da Costa – and probably Beverly, too – would.
            “That remark was because he knew that Dr McBride would show this to
the captain,” Deanna said.
            “I know,” I answered.  “It’s all part of the game.” I listened
quietly to the rest, and then, when it came to the threats, I said, “Let me
hear that again, Data.”
            “Yes, Commander,” Data agreed.
            He listed them by name.  McBride’s “little cousin.”  The one with
the “strange name for a Betazoid.”  I didn’t know what that meant, but my
father missed nothing.  That was directed at McBride.  The cousin’s name –
Lieutenant Balum – he was Starfleet, then.  Admiral Laidlaw.  He was commander
of Starfleet on Betazed.  He’d been appointed long after I’d been reassigned to
the Potemkin and then the Hood.  Was he McBride’s family, too?  He was probably
the one with enough reach to find out about my father’s past, I thought.  So
that was two.  Jean-Luc was three. 
            Jeff García.  I remembered that name.  He was an admiral, I knew,
also on Betazed.  He was my father’s superior, then.  My father was unconcerned
that Laidlaw knew about his group.  It wasn’t his problem; it was Jeff
García’s.  He would set up a “visitation” with Admiral Haden so he could see
me.  That’s why McBride and Jean-Luc had gone back down to the station.
            What utter nonsense.  He wouldn’t fly to Alpha Station Lya.  What
would be the point?  Just as he’d no intention of coming aboard the Enterprise
to “see” me.  Either way, he’d be in custody, for the murder of Rosie – and the
suspected murder of his brother. 
            Distraction, I thought.
            My plan and his were the same, then.  Well, that was all right.
            It really only was about the two of us, in the end.
            Maybe he’d tell me what it was that he wanted from me.  Why he’d
made me into what I was.
            Or maybe, I thought, he’ll just kill me.
            Either way, it didn’t matter.
            Nothing did.
***** Chapter 111 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will Riker gets the information he needs and implements his plan to
     stop his father.
Chapter Notes
     The type 06 shuttlecraft "Hypatia" has two warp nacelles and is
     capable of attaining a maximum speed of warp factor four point four.
     It comes equipped with deflector shields and an easily modified
     transporter beam.
     Many, may thanks to my friend Mobius, who helped me determine the
     distance from Lya III to Betazed, so that I could compute that it
     would take twenty minutes at warp factor four from the Enterprise's
     orbit around Alpha Station Lya to Rixx on Betazed. Also, thanks to
     Mobius, who was able to find out that if you replicate a comm. badge
     and a phaser, they will both still work.
     The move that Will Riker uses on Joao da Costa to subdue him is the
     same move that Captain Picard used in "Starship Mine" to subdue one
     of the terrorists. While not a "Vulcan nerve pinch," it is described
     in the script as placing maximum pressure on the carotid artery to
     cause unconsciousness.
     The uniform that Will replicates in this chapter is the belted
     trouser with tunic that he wore, not the jumpsuit. He did not have
     the time to find someone to zip him up....
Chapter One Hundred Eleven
 
 
 
 
           
            Back when I’d been a real person, if I had something difficult that
I needed to work out, whether it was ops or personnel or engineering or
whatever the flavour of the moment was, I would go to the observation lounge,
and just stand there in the dark, looking out.  It was like when I would go out
on the roof of our cabin when I was little, not that I knew the connection
then; I would watch the stars as we warped by and for some reason it would calm
me down enough so I could think.  The best time was during the middle of gamma
shift, when the ship was so quiet that you could feel the engines beneath your
feet, and there was no one in the corridors to realise that the First Officer
never slept.  Sometimes, especially right after the Borg, I’d walk past Jean-
Luc’s quarters and see the low seepage of light and realise that he too was
up.  There’d been many times when I’d stopped at his door, hesitant – but I’d
never had the guts to go in.  It was enough to know he was okay to have the
lights on, I guessed.
            Data stopped the communication, and turned the computer off.  It
was my show, and all I wanted to do was slip outside of sickbay and find the
observation lounge.  The lack of privacy, of being able to be alone with my own
thoughts, was really getting to me.  Of course, I’d asked for this, hadn’t I, a
chance to do something for once, instead of wallowing in my own pain – so I
should just do what I’d said I could do.  It was quite possible that if I
didn’t, I’d never get the chance to prove myself again.
            “I could really use that cup of coffee,” I said.  I knew da Costa
would bring me decaf; it didn’t matter; it was the symbolism that counted.  I
didn’t look behind me because I was sure I’d catch da Costa rolling his eyes at
me, and I didn’t want to have to take him to task a second time.
            “I’ll get it, sir,” he said, leaving the conference room.
            “I’ll have Alyssa bring you your medication, Will,” Beverly said,
standing.  “You have ten minutes to wrap this up.  Then you’re resting.  Let
Data run the ship.”
            “Okay,” I said.  She hadn’t given me all those acting lessons for
nothing.  “I gave you my word, Beverly.”  I tried to make myself smile, with
limited success.
            “Joao and I can go process this with you in your room, Commander,”
Deanna said.  “I’m not sure, Beverly, how much rest he’ll get if we don’t help
him work through this.”
            Billy was gone, but there was still my father’s voice in my head,
telling me that there were too many problems to overcome, too many people
overseeing me, and not enough substance to my plan; the constant refrain that
was always in the back of my mind, no matter what I was trying to do, and no
matter how much I actually accomplished.  You’re not good enough.  You’re
unstable.  You’re a whore.  So maybe Deanna was right, and I did need to
process this; there just wasn’t any time.  I’d lived with that voice my whole
life – it couldn’t possibly do any more damage than it had already done.
            “He’ll get plenty of rest if I sedate him,” Beverly said, looking
at me, and then she left the room.
            “I don’t want to be sedated, Deanna,” I said.  “I don’t need to
be.”
            “Will,” she said, sounding just a little bit exasperated.
            I wanted to scream – maybe throw a few things too, for good measure
– but distraction was still my best friend, and da Costa placed the cup of
coffee in front of me and took his seat. 
            “Thank you, Mr da Costa,” I said gratefully, and inhaled the aroma
before taking a sip.  “I only have ten minutes,” I told Deanna, “because
Beverly doesn’t screw around.  So this is what needs to be done.  Data,” I
said, “we need to tell the captain that we know where my father is, but I’d
prefer to have an exact location, and I believe Deanna can help.”  I paused to
take another sip of the coffee.  “Deanna and I both know the building he’s in,”
I explained.  “Deanna used to live in her mother’s place across the street –
you remember the address, don’t you?”
            “Of course I do,” she answered.  “My mother still owns that flat.”
            “Good,” I said.  “My guess is that he’s in a flat that belongs to
an important woman, probably a civil servant, and probably not from Betazed. 
It should be fairly simple, then, to find out from the authorities which high-
ranking civil servant has disappeared – we can pinpoint the exact apartment
that way.”
            “I do not understand, Commander,” Data said.
            “He’s in a woman’s flat, Data,” I said.  “Surely you could see
that.  The colour scheme, the furniture…and I’m just as positive that the woman
isn’t Betazoid.  The furniture’s Betazoid, but the personal stuff – that’s from
somewhere else.  As for her position, only high-ranking civil servants and
minor aristocracy are in that building, on that street.”  I finished my coffee,
gulping it down.  “She’s dead, Data.  If my father’s in her place, it’s because
he targeted her for it, and then he killed her.  That’s the way he is.  So she
hasn’t been into her work – she’s important enough to be missed – and I’m
betting the excuse is that she’s sick, or she decided to take an impromptu
holiday – but that no one’s actually heard from her.  Deanna, it wouldn’t take
your mother but half an hour to find out who’s missing.  It’s her House, after
all.”
            “Couldn’t she still be with him, your father?” Deanna asked.
            “And listen in on that communication he sent?  No,” I said.  “My
guess is she’s been dead two, maybe three days…whatever the time frame for his
arriving in Rixx was.  Where was he, before?”
            “Risa,” Deanna said.
            “That figures,” I said.  “How many people are dead there?”
            “I do not have those figures, Commander,” Data answered, “but I was
under the impression that there have been several deaths.”
            “If you could get the information on his location,” I said.  “I’m
betting the flat’s on the tenth or eleventh floor.  We could do it here, from
Beverly’s office.  I’d feel better, knowing that you were giving that
information to the captain.”
            “It’s quite late, Will,” Deanna said. 
            “At least you know your mother will be home.”
            “Yes,” she replied, “I suppose that is true.”
            “Thank you,” I said, taking her hand. 
            “Is there anything else, Commander?” Data asked, standing. 
            “My father has no intention of seeing me on Alpha Station,” I
said.  “He does want to see me, but that’s not what his plan is.  And he
doesn’t care that his group – what are they called?”
            “Section 31,” Data said.
            “From Article 14?” I asked.  “Extraordinary measures….”  I took a
breath.  That would, I thought, explain the interrogation techniques.  And the
violence.  I could feel myself start to shake, because there was the memory of
my father smiling at me again, standing beside his friend, who was smiling, too
– and I didn’t want to remember, because I simply did not have the time to fall
apart –
            “Are you all right, Commander?” Data asked, coming up to me.
            I could see da Costa stand up.  “I’m okay,” I said.  “It – it just
threw me, a bit.  That it’s so brazen.”
            “You were telling me something,” Data reminded me.
            “He doesn’t care that this group has been exposed,” I said.  “That
the captain knows about it, and will probably inform Starfleet.  He’s not
concerned about his superiors –“  that name, Jeff García “ – or Admiral
Nechayev knowing.  I’m thinking he wants to expose them.  He’s got some sort of
a plan, Data, and I’m not sure whether he cares if he gets away with it or
not.  It’ll be big – “ distraction, I thought “and it will be in Rixx.  And
somehow he’ll use that to come for me, or the captain, or for both of us.”
            “Commander,” da Costa said.  “I’m not sure I understand.”
            “What is it you don’t understand?” How could I explain to Data what
I thought my father was planning?  There had to be something that Section 31
wanted…some major purpose for the way they’d been behaving, for the mission of
my father.  If I knew his mission, I could extrapolate the information.  I
wondered if Admiral Laidlaw would be willing to speak with me.
            “Why do you think the captain is in danger?” da Costa asked.  “If
you don’t think your father is going to meet with you on the planet, how could
he be a danger to the captain?  And why?”
            I said, “The why is simple, Mr da Costa.  When the captain spoke to
my father, he let my father know that we were in a relationship….You’ve heard
my childhood.  You know what he did to Rosie.  I’ve spent my life alone for a
reason, Joao.  I belong to him.  It’s personal.  Captain Picard has challenged
his claim to me.  It’s as simple as that.”
            There was an awkward silence.  I could see that perhaps Data now
understood, at last, what was really going on.  “It’s sick,” I said.  “He’s
sick.  I’m sick.  And it has to end.  Because I can’t go on like this – and
neither, it seems, can he.”  I stood up.  “Data, would you see that I have the
information about the location of the flat?  There are more pieces to this
puzzle – if I knew the exact location, I’m sure that I can put it together.”
            I knew that didn’t make sense, particularly.  But Data was used to
orders from humans – the captain was a good example, because he often
interpreted information faster than he could explain it – that didn’t seem
logical at the time.
            “Yes, sir,” he said.  “I will see if I can help Counsellor Troi in
that.”
            “Thank you, Data,” I said.  I looked at da Costa, who had his
concern for me written plainly across his face.  “If you’ll take me back to my
room now,” I said. 
            “Aye, sir.”
           
 
 
            Ogawa came into my room almost immediately, and gave me my
medication, and the awful grape juice.  I didn’t bother to protest; I needed
everyone to think I was being cooperative.  She had a hypo spray too, but I was
able to convince her I didn’t need it.  My breathing was okay, and I wasn’t
agitated.  I didn’t need to be agitated; I knew what I had to do.  I just had
to try to keep my mood from spiraling downward, as it had been threatening to
do since seeing my father again.  The running memory kept trying to intrude, as
well, and I couldn’t help thinking it was trying to tell me something, but I
was afraid to give in to it.  Da Costa could talk me through it, but at what
cost to me, and at what cost to my plan?
            “Why don’t you get into bed, Commander?” da Costa said.  “Let me
help you.”
            “I’m waiting to hear from Data or Deanna,” I said.  “And I’m not
really sleepy.”
            “No, of course not,” he replied.  “That might entail you giving up
control.”
            “Fuck you, da Costa,” I said.  “This is the first control I’ve had
in almost five weeks.  Why don’t you let me enjoy it, for a little bit?”
            “I’m sorry, sir,” he said.  “You’re right, it was uncalled for.”
            I looked at him in surprise and then I grinned.  “Thank you, Mr da
Costa,” I said.  I was quiet, and then I said, “It looks like I’m not going to
be having my session with McBride anytime soon.  I wonder if Data’s heard from
the captain yet.”  I needed my comm. badge.
            The door opened, and Deanna walked in.  “You were right,” she said,
seriously.  “My mother was able to ask a few questions, and it seems that there
is only one candidate whose flat is in that building and who is, as you
guessed, missing.  She’s El Aurian, assigned to the cultural ministry.  Her
name is Agam Taron.  She was on holiday, and should have returned home three
days ago.  One of her friends received a message that she’d met a nice man
named Bill and was extending her holiday.”
            “Bill,” I repeated.  “Did you have Data cross reference arrivals
from Risa with the name Bill?”
            “No,” she answered.  “Data’s returned to the bridge.  But I can do
that, Will.”
            I said, “What was the name of my father’s brother?  The one he
killed?”
            “Wharton,” da Costa said.  “It didn’t sound like a first name to
me.  That’s why I remembered it.”
            “You can check passenger manifests for a William or Bill Wharton,”
I said.  “He used to call me Billy.  It would make sense for him to use Bill.”
            “I used to call you Bill,” Deanna said quietly.  “You never said
anything.”
            I looked at her.  “Deanna,” I said, “I didn’t remember.”
            “Oh, Will,” she said.  “You said you thought he was going to do
something, that he had a plan.”
            “He always has a plan,” I said.  “I don’t have enough information,
Deanna.  There’s got to be some rational reason why he wouldn’t care if Section
31 is exposed now.  You have the apartment number?”
            “It’s on the twelfth floor. Apartment 8.”
            “Has Data heard from the captain?” I asked.
            “I don’t know,” Deanna answered.  “I think you’ve done enough, for
one day.  I’ll give this information to Data when I return to the bridge.”
            “If you hear from the captain –“ I began.
            “If it’s important,” Deanna said, “I’m sure Commander Data will let
you know.”
            “Not necessarily.  I’m probably going to be in trouble, when he
returns.”
            Deanna smiled.  “In that case, Will,” she said, “there will be all
of us to share it with you.”
            I nodded. 
            “Why don’t you rest, now?” she continued.
            “I’ve already tried, Counsellor,” da Costa said.  “He’s enjoying
this too much to rest.”
            “I’ll let Joao handle you, then,” Deanna said.  “I’ll be on the
bridge.”
            “Okay,” I said.  “Thanks, Deanna.”
            “You’re welcome.”
            She left.  I pictured the market on Rixx in my mind, and the street
where Deanna used to live.  Her building had had a doorman, I remembered, but I
was pretty sure that was only because Mrs Troi had insisted and had taken care
of it herself.  I was also sure that nothing much had changed; the market area,
the housing for Starfleet and Federation and Betazoid personnel was all in the
historic part of the city; everything was preserved and kept intact.  There
wouldn’t be any surprises, on that street.  The shuttle terminal would be the
same as it had been when Deanna and I had taken shore leave on Betazed.  The
Hypatia was down the corridor, in Shuttlebay Three.  It could go up to warp
four point four…
            “Da Costa,” I said.  “You still want me to rest, don’t you?”
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa said.
            “There’s no way I can sleep here,” I said.  “But – and this is just
a suggestion – wouldn’t it make sense, since I’m not likely to have my session
with McBride, that I spend some time in the hyperbaric chamber instead?  I was
supposed to go earlier, and then with everything that’s happened….”
            “I can check with Dr Crusher,” da Costa said.  “But in terms of
aiding your healing from your surgery, that’s probably an excellent idea.”
            “And I always sleep there,” I said.  “I don’t know what it is about
that.  You’d think being shoved into a tube with a bed wouldn’t be conducive to
sleep.”
            Da Costa grinned.  “It’s the extra oxygen, sir,” he said.  “It
works that way with everyone.”
            “You’ve been in it before?” I asked, curiously.
            “Of course, Commander,” he answered.  “Dr McBride’s training
program insists that we understand each therapeutic component by undergoing it
ourselves.”
            “He’s made you do all that stuff he wants me to do?” I asked,
incredulous.  “Acoustic reduction therapy and all that other shit?”
            Da Costa sighed.  “It’s hardly shit, Commander,” he said.  “If
you’ll press your call button, we’ll get Lt Ogawa to ask Dr Crusher.”
            It was my turn to sigh.  “You could stand in the doorway and ask
her yourself,” I said, but I pressed the call button.  “You could use your
comm. badge.”
            He didn’t dignify that with a response, and minutes later, Ogawa
showed up.
            “Commander Riker wondered if having his session in the hyperbaric
chamber now would be a good idea,” da Costa explained.  “It would benefit his
healing from his surgery, and it would get him to rest.”
            Ogawa nodded.  “I’ll get Dr Crusher,” she said.
            Beverly appeared almost instantly.  “Will,” she said, and I could
tell she was pleased with me.  “That’s an excellent idea.  Joao, you know how
to run it, or do you need a tech?”
            “I can operate the machine, Doctor,” da Costa said.  “It’s quite
simple.  And it’s already programmed with the right oxygen levels for Commander
Riker.”
            “Beverly,” I said.  “Jean-Luc – the captain has been clearing the
corridors when I go to Deck Eight.  Do you still want to do that?”
            “You’ve just had surgery, mister,” she said.  “Of course I’m going
to do that.”
            I breathed in.  No one, I thought, if I survived this stunt of
mine, was going to be particularly happy with me when I returned.  I’d been
lucky, after the incident with Erik, that Jean-Luc had decided he liked me
enough to keep me out of the brig.  I doubted very much that I’d be avoiding
the brig this go-round.
            “It will take me just a few minutes to work it out with Worf,”
Beverly said.
            “Okay.”  I was going to maintain agreeable.  “I’ll put my shoes
on.  Maybe I should go to the head.”
            Da Costa nodded, and walked me there, so that I could clean myself
up a bit, and urinate, and then I was back in my room with my shoes on, waiting
for the go-ahead.  There’d still been no word from Data, and I was sure it was
just my impatience that was making this all seem to take longer than it
actually was.  Jean-Luc had only been gone a couple of hours.  It would take
time to talk to Haden, and communicate with Laidlaw, and Nechayev, and with
whomever else there was to coordinate.  It didn’t mean anything that Data
hadn’t heard, or that I hadn’t heard.  My father was on Rixx, and I sincerely
doubted that there were any Section 31 operatives on the station, and I knew
there wouldn’t be any here, on the Enterprise.  I just had to calm down.
            “You’re all set to go, Commander,” Beverly said.  “Forty-five
minutes, Mr da Costa, and then return him here.”
            “Yes, Doctor,” da Costa said.
            Forty-five minutes.  That wasn’t a lot of time.  I followed da
Costa out of sickbay, hoping that Worf really had cleared the corridor.  It
wasn’t that far, to the turbo lift, and the corridor was empty; I’d been
walking slowly, letting da Costa lead the way, and now I moved up behind him,
to catch up.
            “Da Costa,” I said, and as he turned around, I pulled him to me,
and then I grabbed his neck quickly, applying maximum pressure to his carotid
artery.  He struggled, briefly, but then he was out, and I took a deep breath
and hoisted him onto my back.
            “Sorry, Joao,” I said.
            I figured I had about five more minutes of this corridor being
clear, and I was already feeling a little bit dizzy and some pain in my lower
back.  It would be luck only, I thought, that I could get to a shuttle; there
could be five crewmen in Shuttlebay Three, where the Hypatia was, or there
could be no one; I just had to take my chances.  I could probably get by one
crewman.  Two, and I wouldn’t stand a chance.
            “Computer,” I said, “how many crewmen are in Shuttlebay Three?”
            “Shuttlebay Three is empty at this time,” the computer said.
            I’d reached the doors and walked in.  The Hypatia was there, all
right, looking just about as beautiful as any shuttle I’d ever seen.  I figured
that I had three minutes, maybe, before the corridors would be active again,
and I placed da Costa against the bulkhead by the doors and walked as quickly
as I could, considering I was breathing heavily, to the replicator.  I needed a
uniform; I needed a comm. badge, and I needed to secure da Costa.  I had no
idea what size I wore now but it didn’t really matter; I input the pattern for
my uniform, guessing that I’d dropped three sizes in the trousers and maybe one
size in my tunic. I’d change in the shuttle; I grabbed everything and opened
the shuttle, dumping the uniform and boots onto the floor, and placing my pips,
comm. badge, and phaser on the bench. 
            I was running out of time.  My lousy condition was beginning to
have an impact; my breathing was laboured and my fatigue was increasing, as was
the pain in my back.  I didn’t need to be exact in securing da Costa; I just
needed time, so I gagged him with one of his socks and secured his hands behind
his back. 
            I opened the shuttlebay hatch; I figured I had about three minutes,
top, before whoever was at Ops on the bridge noticed that there was an
unauthorised open hatch in Shuttlebay Three.  I sat at the controls and powered
up; I had to clear the hatch and get into warp as quickly as I could.  I went
through my checklist and then I was in flight and out the hatch at one-quarter
impulse. 
            “Enterprise to Shuttlecraft Three.  Come in, Hypatia,” Data said.
            “Sorry, Data,” I answered, and I jumped into warp.
            I had twenty minutes to put on my uniform and prepare my story
before I landed at the terminal in Rixx.  I could only hope that Security
wasn’t waiting for me when I did – but who said I had to land at the terminal? 
I set the autopilot for Rixx, and shut the comm. panel off. 
            My father was going out with a bang, and it seemed I would be, too.
***** Chapter 112 *****
Chapter Summary
     Picard meets with Admiral Haden for the conference with Admiral
     Laidlaw and learns that Will has left the ship.
Chapter One Hundred Twelve
 
 
 
 
            They’d taken a brief recess, ostensibly to eat something, but
Picard wasn’t hungry, so he’d asked for directions to Haden’s garden and found
himself standing on the edge of the little pond, overlooking Monet’s Japanese
bridge.  McBride was with the station’s CMO.  Haden was briefing his executive
officer, a Bajoran named Commander Alenis, and his security chief, Lt Commander
Rechichi.  He was listening to the birds hopping in the underbrush, stirring
the leaves of the trees; one of them whistling incessantly.  The koi in the
pond were swimming languidly; he caught glimpses of gold and white in the
dappled sunlight of the planet.  The last time he’d been here he’d thought Will
would enjoy the serenity of this garden; now he wasn’t so sure.  Perhaps he was
merely assuming that Will would enjoy what he did; he didn’t know.  After this
morning, after the communication, he wondered if he knew Will at all.
            Haden had been completely composed while watching Riker’s
communication.  Of course, Picard thought, he didn’t have an oar in this boat,
so it had nothing to do with him emotionally, but that wasn’t quite the right
reason for Haden’s reaction.  Haden had reacted to the communication
spiritually, Picard had realised, halfway through; when faced with evil, Haden
acknowledged that there was great evil in the universe as there had always
been, and there was but one way to face this kind of evil, and that was to don
one’s armour and fight on the side of one’s god.  Picard had read about the
Crusaders in books but he had never thought to meet one; yet that was precisely
who Vance Haden was.  It was an astonishing thought.
            “What do you need from me, Jean-Luc?” Haden had asked.
            “When Captain Riker contacts you,” McBride responded, “perhaps you
could reply to him with a script that Admiral Laidlaw and I have given you.”
            Haden glanced at McBride, and then returned to Picard.  “What do
you need from me, Jean-Luc?” he repeated.
            Picard said, “I don’t believe for one minute that Kyle Riker will
be coming here to see his son.  I think it’s a distraction for his real
purpose, which is on Betazed.  I’m sure, when we hear from Admiral Laidlaw,
we’ll be able to piece enough information together to figure out just what that
purpose is.  What I need, Vance, is for you to play along with him.  Act as the
negotiator.  Set up a meeting and a way for Riker to release his hostage, if in
fact he has one.  Follow the script Dr McBride gives you.”
            “And in exposing this group?” Haden refused to call them by their
name.
            “I think,” Picard said, “the more people we have who know about
them, and oppose them, the stronger the case we have in forcing Starfleet and
the Federation to bring them down.”
            “And if,” Haden said, “they actually are defending us from a threat
we as yet don’t know?”
            “You are only as good,” Picard said grimly, “as the people you
hire.”
            “I’m agreeing with you, Jean-Luc,” Haden said mildly.  “These are
perilous times, and we must be as sure of our allies as we are of our
enemies.”  He paused and said, “When can we expect to hear from Admiral
Laidlaw, Doctor?”
            “Within the hour,” McBride said.
            “Then let’s take a brief recess now,” Haden suggested.  “There may
not be time to eat, after.  You are welcome to both use my dining facilities.”
            And he’d comm’d a young ensign to escort them, except that McBride
had wanted to tour his medical facility, and he’d begged off and headed to the
Monet garden.
            Picard turned away from the pond, and walked over to the bench
where he’d sat and talked to Haden before, but he didn’t sit.  He was tired of
sitting.  The inaction of the past week – as fraught as it had been emotionally
– was beginning to irritate him.  There was an enemy, out there.  An external
one – Kyle Riker – and an internal one, Section 31.  All these talking heads –
he felt as if his own head would implode.  On board, when he was waiting for
his superiors to stop dithering and give him the orders he needed to resolve a
situation, he headed to the gym, where he could calm his irritation and his
nerves with an exhausting game of squash or two hour’s worth of fencing.  He
could, he supposed, ask Haden for permission to use his gym.
            Or, he thought, he could beam himself back on board his ship – his
ship, not McBride’s or Laidlaw’s or Nechayev’s or even Admiral Shanthi’s – and
warp to Betazed, where he could easily extrapolate the location of one Kyle
Riker and be done with it.  The problem with that, he knew, was he was not in
deep space, where he frequently did what he deemed necessary and then listened
to the squawking of the admiralty afterwards; no, he was here, in the centre of
the Federation, hemmed in by his proximity to Betazed and Vulcan and even Earth
and half a dozen starbases and a number of brass and other ships.  If the brass
decided he was the loose canon, there was plenty they could do – and that was
just the sort of distraction a man such as Riker would use.
            “I thought I might find you here,” Haden said.
            Picard shrugged.
            “The inactivity is getting to you,” Haden remarked.  “You always
were one to jump first, and look after.  Despite your reputation as a
diplomat.”
            “It is a relatively simple concept,” Picard said.  “Find the
bastard, and kill him.  Expose the others and arrest them.”
            “It is,” Haden said, smiling, “that simple when you are a ship’s
captain, Jean-Luc.  Don’t ever accept promotion to the admiralty.”
            Picard found himself smiling back, albeit reluctantly.  “I’ve
resisted it so far,” he answered.
            “Admiral Laidlaw’s communication is incoming,” Haden said.  “Did
you eat anything, Jean-Luc?”
            “No.”
            “I’ll have Lt Ryba bring us some sandwiches, then.  I’m certain
your Dr McBride hasn’t eaten, either.”
            “Nor have you, I’ll wager,” Picard said.
            This time Haden shrugged, and Picard followed him down the path
towards the garden’s exit.  “You, for all of your irritation at our inactivity,
actually seem calmer, Jean-Luc.  Has there been an improvement in Commander
Riker’s health?”
            Again, Picard was amazed at the depth contained in this quiet man,
and he wondered why a man of such talent was being wasted on Alpha Station Lya.
            Haden said, quietly, “Do you love him, Jean-Luc?”
            Picard stopped and glanced at Haden.  His face was calm, reflecting
only kindness and concern.  He couldn’t imagine lying to this man, not for any
reason; it would have been an honour, he thought, and a privilege, to have
served under him.  “Yes,” he said.
            Haden smiled.  “That’s good, then,” he said.  “It doesn’t do, in
perilous times, to be alone.”
            Picard said, “We’d come to a crisis, as I told you before.  Will’s
health had deteriorated to the point where Dr Crusher thought he had perhaps a
week, at most.  His body, Vance, was simply shutting down.”
            “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc,” Haden said.
            Picard nodded.  “McBride thought that it had to do with what he
called a ‘genetic switch,’” he explained.  “Will’s mother was tribal,
apparently – as was the village Will grew up in.  His culture – the culture of
his mother’s people – is an extremely moral one.  Will believed himself to be
responsible for his father’s crimes, even though he was only a child.”
            “So he had condemned himself to death?” Haden asked.  “I’ve been
exposed to that concept before.  Even the Klingon culture has a variation of
it.”
            Picard gave a bemused smile as they walked out of the garden.  “And
my chief of security is Lt Worf,” he replied.  “Worf and Will are good
friends.”
            “What has changed, then?”
            “McBride is brilliant,” Picard said.  He paused and then he said,
“I don’t think I could tolerate him on my ship as CMO.  How Starbase 515 deals
with him, I don’t know.  There are times when he has left me breathless with
his insights – and then there are other times when I’ve been overwhelmed with
the urge to physically assault him.”
            “A good psychiatrist, then,” Haden commented, wryly.
            “He suggested an unorthodox form of treatment for Will,” Picard
said.  “Placing him into a deep hypnotic state, pulling out the trauma and
making him face it.  Making all of us face it.”  Picard was silent.  “More than
that, he got Will to understand that as a small child, he was not responsible
for the crimes of his father, regardless of the fact that his father had
enmeshed him in those crimes.  It was the key, I think.  Will has indicated
that he wants to live.  He went through with surgery this morning, to drain the
fluid from around his heart and to repair his kidney.”
            “So you have hope, then,” Haden said.  “For the first time.  And
now his father is threatening to enmesh him yet again.”
            “Yes.”
            “I’m sorry, Jean-Luc.  Perhaps the small role I will play in this
can help.”
            They were at the admiral’s offices, and Haden led him back to the
conference room.  Picard took his seat beside McBride and waited as Haden’s XO
set the viewscreen up.
            “Meru, would you see that Lt Ryba finds some sandwiches and coffee
for us?”
            “Yes, sir,” Alenis said.  “Admiral Laidlaw is waiting, sir.”
            “Thank you.”
            Commander Alenis left the conference room, and the familiar face of
Thomas Valentine Laidlaw filled the viewscreen.
            “Gentlemen,” he said.  “I just wanted to bring you up-to-speed with
what is happening here.  Two lieutenants from Admiral García’s Xenobiology
office are currently missing, an Andorian named Tarana, and Renan Balum.  We
are running under the assumption that Captain Riker may have both of them as
hostages, as per his earlier communication.  Admiral García met with Commander
Cortan Zweller, who confirmed that Riker is in Rixx and that Riker left three
dead on Risa.  Zweller has organised a search for Riker here, but of course,
that’s difficult, isn’t it, to conduct a search sub rosa for a man who’s not
supposed to be Starfleet.  We are monitoring the situation.”  Laidlaw glanced
at his padd, and then said, “I’ve apprised the Lady Elanna Lal of the
situation.  She will go to the Council, if necessary – and with Admiral
Shanthi’s permission.”
            “You’ve contacted Admiral Shanthi?” Picard asked.
            Laidlaw said, “Admiral Shanthi has been aware of this situation for
some time, Captain.  We have been closely monitoring Section 31.”
            Picard felt his neural expression take over his face.  “I see,” he
said.
            “I understand that you think Captain Riker will contact Admiral
Haden,” Laidlaw now said, looking at his cousin McBride.  “As a negotiator for
his son and the two lieutenants?”
            “I am not entirely convinced that is his ultimate plan,” McBride
said.  “He is losing control, Val, and he’s aware that he’s losing control. 
Furthermore, he doesn’t care that he is.  This makes him extraordinarily
dangerous, because he no longer is worried about his own survival.  My guess is
this.  He wants his son.  There is unfinished business between the two – and
perhaps a desire, on the part of the elder Riker, to use his son.  I believe he
feels that his mission in the Gamma Quadrant was sabotaged by his own
organisation.  I think he has decided that he’s going to get rid of the
problems in that organisation, and accomplish his mission, both at the same
time.  I cannot emphasise how dangerous he is, Valentine.”
            Picard took a deep breath, because he should have known that
McBride would have already come to the same conclusion he had.  “I have to
agree with Dr McBride, Admiral.” Picard said.  “I think this hostage
negotiation with Admiral Haden here is a distraction from the man’s real
purpose.  However, I think, if we play it straight, we can use the distraction
to ultimately distract him.  If, as Dr McBride suggests, he is beginning to
unravel, then that will give us the time we need to find those two lieutenants
and take him down.”
            “And Commander Riker?” Valentine Laidlaw asked.
            Picard said, “What about Commander Riker?”
            “Perhaps the best course of action is simply to give Captain Riker
what he wants,” Laidlaw said.
            Picard stiffened, but before he could say anything, Haden
interjected, “Commander Riker is still extremely ill, Admiral.  From what I
understand, he had surgery this morning.  I doubt if he is in any condition to
participate in this.”
            McBride said, “I agree he should be apprised of the situation,
Val.  But he is physically and emotionally fragile, and I do not believe he
would survive an encounter with his father.”
            “He’s on medical leave?” Laidlaw asked.
            “Yes,” McBride said, “but –“
            “Data to Captain Picard.”  Picard said, “I’m sorry, Admiral.  Yes,
Commander Data?”
            “You are needed on the Enterprise, sir,” Data said.  “Captain –“
            Hesitation was unlike Data, Picard thought, and he said, quickly,
“Just tell me, Commander.”
            “Commander Riker has taken a shuttlecraft and has left the ship,”
Data said.  “He was able to go into warp before we could use the tractor beam,
sir.  He is refusing to communicate.”
            “How the hell did he manage to leave sickbay?” Picard said.  “Mr
Data, I hold you completely responsible –“
            Laidlaw said, “It appears that Commander Riker has already
implemented the plan, Captain.  If you could forward to me the shuttle
identification, I will brief him when he arrives.”
            McBride said, “There should be no plan, Valentine.  William Riker
is in no psychological condition to handle his father.”
            “Captain,” Data said.  “We know the location of Captain Riker.  We
believe that is where Commander Riker is heading.”
            “If you corner Kyle Riker,” McBride said, “he will take out
everyone.  Including the building he is in.”
            “Which shuttle did he take, Mr Data?” Picard asked.
            “The Hypatia, sir,” Data responded.
            “He knows where is father is?” Picard repeated.
            “Aye, sir.”
            “He’ll use the transporter on the shuttle, Admiral,” Picard said. 
“To beam himself directly into the flat.  He won’t land it at the terminal.  He
was stationed on Betazed for almost three years.  He’s more familiar with Rixx
than his own home village.”
            “Return to your ship, Captain,” Laidlaw said.  “Comm. me when you
are aboard.  Admiral Haden, unless we have direct information that Captain
Riker is aware of his son’s impending arrival, I think we should still assume
that he will go forward with contacting you.  I will give you the script for
any hostage negotiations.”
            “Aye, sir,” Haden agreed.
            “Transporter chief, two to beam up,” Picard said, standing.
            “Captain Picard,” Valentine Laidlaw said.
            “Sir?  Chief, hold, for a moment.”
            “Perhaps the Enterprise should come to Betazed.”
            “Yes, sir.  We are on our way.”  Picard extended his hand to Haden,
who surprised him by embracing him. 
            “Good luck, Jean-Luc,” Haden said.  “Keep me informed.”
            “Thank you, Vance.  I will.  Two to beam up, now, Chief.”
            Picard stepped away from Haden and moved to McBride’s side, and the
familiar sensation of being transported enveloped him.  He strode off the
transporter pad, where Commander Data was waiting, and said, “Senior staff, to
my ready room, now.  Doctor,” he said to McBride, “you are with me.  Picard to
bridge,” he said, walking towards the turbo lift, McBride and Data in tow.
            “Bridge here, Captain.”  It was Worf.
            “Set course for Betazed, warp five,” Picard said.  “We are going
after Commander Riker.”
            “Aye, sir,” Worf acknowledged.  “Course laid in for Betazed, sir. 
Warp factor five.”
            “Gentlemen,” Picard said, entering the turbo lift, “regardless of
any orders to the contrary from Admiral Laidlaw, or Admiral Nechayev, or Fleet
Admiral Shanthi herself.  We are retrieving Commander Riker and we are bringing
Kyle Riker down.”  He paused.  “Bridge,” he said to the computer.
            “I believe that is the best course of action, sir,” Data said.
            Picard glanced at him, and then he felt himself smiling.  “Then let
us make it so,” he said.
***** Chapter 113 *****
Chapter Summary
     Kyle Riker remembers his brother Wharton, and communicates with
     Admiral Haden.
Chapter Notes
     Boredom is the enemy of the sociopath. A normal human emotion,
     boredom is often described as a feeling of emptiness or as a hole
     needing to be filled. The sociopath has a higher level or need for
     stimulation and has no ability to fill in the "hole" that is always
     there. A highly-intelligent, organised sociopath such as Kyle Riker
     will find himself engaging in more and more risk-taking behaviours in
     an effort to alleviate the boredom and ennui associated with his
     egocentric view of the world. Eventually, entropy prevails, and the
     aging sociopath can no longer reproduce the stimulation necessary to
     maintain what was once his norm.
Chapter One Hundred Thirteen
 
 
 
           
            And so he found himself thinking of Wharton – and hadn’t he just
told himself that he didn’t think of Wharton anymore? – but he could see, just
as clearly as if he were standing there, the sherds of broken brick and glass
and fragments of wood, and the stained, grey mattress in the corner; and
Wharton standing there, his blue eyes wide with surprise (or were those Billy’s
eyes which were wide with surprise?  But, no, they couldn’t be, because Billy
had never allowed himself to be surprised….), shadows of the long afternoon
canting across his face.  “What is wrong with you?” Wharton asked, and he’d
answered, perfectly truthfully, perhaps one of the few times in his life when
he had felt compelled to be honest, “I don’t know what’s wrong with me.” 
Later, when the begging was over, and the tears were ended, and the mattress
was red with Wharton’s blood, Wharton had whispered, because that was all that
was left of his voice, “What is it that you want, Kyle?” and he’d answered, “I
want to be.”
            He sighed, because they’d promised him that, hadn’t they?  They’d
told him that they knew him; that they could give him what he wanted; that they
could fill the gaping hole which was himself, not with meaningless words like
duty and honour, but with the kind of actions that would sustain the very
organisation his father and grandfather had helped create.  These actions would
fulfill him, they said; they would give him meaning to his life; they would
allow him to be, not the same as everyone else, because even he knew that was
an impossibility, but better than those around him.  And it had filled him with
excitement, because it was all he wanted; he hadn’t lied when he’d told Wharton
that.  He’d been twenty-one, and now he was sixty-seven, and he was no closer
to being than he had been when he was twelve.  It had been fun, at the
beginning, when he’d been better than anyone else around him.  But it had also
been a lie….
            And he was tired, now, of all the lies.
 
 
 
 
            He could hear that Balum was weeping, quietly, in the other room. 
He roused himself from the chair where he’d been sitting; Agam had owned only
one comfortable chair (and why was it that women were compelled to own chairs
no one could sit in?) and he’d been in it for far too long, it seemed, because
his legs were stiff and his back was sore.  He stood up and stretched, working
on the knots in his shoulders and his lower back, flexing his hamstrings,
stretching his tendons.  It would still be a long night, he thought, even
though it was halfway over; Tarana had gone, with his portfolio, to meet with
Sovok in the morning at the same little garden café where she’d had drinks the
evening before with her friends.  Balum had been easy to subdue; he’d accepted,
finally, that Tarana had made her choice to join them, despite his histrionics;
she’d received her “mission” with quiet pride and his assurances that nothing
at all was going to happen to her friend Renan.
            He’d seen it repeatedly, of course; the moment when his victim
looked into his eyes and accepted his fate.  Balum had done that, in the hour
after Tarana had left; simply ceded his autonomy up to this particular
personification of Death, dressed in an engineer’s clothes.  He’d told Balum
that this was a game they were playing; he wasn’t really, now that he had Balum
in Agam’s second bedroom, interested in using him to stave off boredom at all. 
It was quiet now, that was true; but the quiet was not boredom.  The quiet was
the cat waiting in the brush, the tip of its tail twitching just slightly, the
rest of it completely still; he was waiting, like the cat, for what was coming
down the path.
            He supposed he should go into the bedroom and reassure Balum that
he was simply a distraction, but tears affected him in two completely different
ways.  There were the tears that went from fear to recognition to submission to
what he called subsidence, where the boy (and it was almost always a boy;
Wharton, or the Jarillian boy, or Billy) subsided into him and he was able, for
a brief moment, to be.  But there were also the tears of fear and pain and
exhaustion, and he found those tears so very irritating; they were the tears of
adults, who’d given up what they’d been asked to give up, and thus were no
longer useful.  He could feel his irritation beginning to build, which was not
a good sign.  He needed Balum alive, to play the hostage game with Haden and
Picard; to give Tarana time to give the portfolio to Sovok; to give García time
to get the shuttle in place.
            He walked into the kitchen and found a coffee maker in Agam’s
pantry, and decided he would forgive her for her uncomfortable chairs.  He
ground the beans and made a fresh pot, adding some real cream to it and then
taking it to the table in her breakfast nook.  Balum was quiet now, which was
good; perhaps sensing his growing irritation.  He sat down and sipped his
coffee, and then booted up his padd; the message from García, that his shuttle
was procured along with its location and flight plan; that it was time to comm.
Haden; was waiting.  He read it quietly, wondering if it had been wise to
include García in this; García was ambitious and would be the most competent
(if not the logical) successor to Jeremy Rossa, but there was no guarantee that
in the past few hours García hadn’t decided his cards were better aligned with
Laidlaw and Starfleet.
            It didn’t matter.  García had given him the shuttle as requested;
García had taken care of Sovok; together they would take care of Zweller and
Rossa.  He finished his coffee and sent the communication request to Vance
Haden.  On his way into the kitchen to wash his cup he realised that Will – and
Billy – were on their way.  He heard the ping of a communication alert, and he
straightened his shirt and returned to the table.
            “Admiral Haden,” he said, smiling, “it’s been a very long time.”
            Vance Haden was wearing his Admiral’s uniform and sitting in his
office; there was a decent watercolour of a flower stall on a Paris street
behind him.
            “Captain Riker,” Haden acknowledged.  “I believe it was the
conference on Starbase 133.”
            “Yes,” he answered.  “On stellar life forms.  Quite an interesting
conference.”
            “I understand,” Vance Haden said slowly, looking down at his padd
briefly, “from Dr Alasdair McBride that you might have a proposal to make.”
            “I’m disappointed, Vance,” he said, still smiling.  “I thought I’d
get longer at the social niceties than that.  Isn’t that one of your skills? 
The social niceties?  Developed, no doubt, from our common diplomatic
childhoods?”  He stretched his legs a bit.  “Lovely painting, by the way.  Is
it one of yours?”
            Haden did not look at the painting.  “Yes,” he said.  “As for our
common childhoods, Captain, our parents may have travelled in the same circles,
but we assuredly did not.”
            “No, I suppose not,” Riker agreed.  “You were the heir in your
family; I was just the spare.”  He paused, and then added, “Until I wasn’t.”
            “Dr McBride says that you wish to see Will,” Haden said.
            “So your script was written by McBride, then?” he asked.  “I’m
surprised Picard allowed that, but then he’s invested my son’s life in Dr
McBride, hasn’t he?  Yes, I wish to see my son.”
            “And do you have a proposal, Captain?” Haden asked, calmly.
            Riker shrugged.  “McBride says my son is dying,” he answered.  “I
want to see him, but I don’t want to damage his already fragile health.  It’s
why I thought you might be of assistance.”
            “So you are suggesting that you see him here, on Lya III?”
            “If he is well enough for that, yes,” Riker agreed. 
            “And you would like me to set this up,” Haden continued.  “Arrange
it for you, with Will’s doctor and Captain Picard.”
            “Yes,” Riker said.  “I would like that, Vance.”  He paused, and
then he said, “You have children.  You must be able to imagine what it would
feel like, to know your child is ill – as ill as my son is – and yet feel that
perhaps barriers are being placed in your way.  Will had a difficult childhood,
and I’ll be the first to admit I wasn’t a good father to him.  But we’d
reestablished contact, over the past few years.  I’d hoped that at some point
we could – I could – help him resolve these issues.”  He said, “It’s holding
him back, you see.”
            Haden said, “You understand, Kyle, that you will not be permitted
to see him alone.”
            “Whose orders are those, I wonder?” he said.  “Picard’s, or
McBride’s?”
            “Commander Riker is under constant medical supervision, because of
his fragile physical and emotional health.  If you wish to see him, you will
have to see him under the supervision of his doctor.”
            “McBride,” Riker stated.
            “Yes.”
            “Dr McBride has a few misconceptions about me, Admiral,” Riker
said.  It was time, he thought, to move things forward.  “I’m not sure I would
feel comfortable with him there.  Who knows the kinds of things he’s encouraged
my son to believe?  He has quite the agenda, I’m afraid.”
            He stood up, and then he leaned into the viewscreen.  “Here’s what
I suggest,” he said, and the smile and the conciliatory tone were both gone. 
“You allow me to see my son on Alpha Station Lya in a room of your choosing. 
I’m sure you have medical facilities aboard, and I will happily consent to see
him in your sickbay.  You can have your CMO there, and you can have the
Enterprise’s CMO – that’s Beverly Crusher, right? – there as well.  You can
tell McBride that if he wants to see his cousins again, those are the
conditions.”
            “Captain – “
            “Let’s stop playing games, shall we?” he said.  “I am flying a
shuttle to Lya III.  I will expect to spend time with my son, as much time as
is possible, given his physical condition.  In exchange for this, no harm will
come to either of McBride’s cousins – yes, there are two of them involved – and
both of them will be released safely after I have left the station.  I am sure,
Admiral Haden, that no one would want anything to happen to Lady Elanna Lal’s
favourite nephew.”
            “You are saying that you have two hostages, Captain?” Haden
questioned.
            “I am saying that I am well-protected, Admiral, and that my layer
of protection, sir, outranks yours.  You have an hour, Admiral, to consult with
Picard and McBride, if that’s what you need to do, even though you outrank
Picard – and McBride doesn’t have any authority anywhere except on Starbase
515.  Comm. me back and let me know, within the hour, what my docking procedure
is and where I’ll be meeting my son.”
            He closed his padd.  Haden had stuck to his script, he thought, but
scripts were useless when you were outgunned and outmatched.  He walked down
the hallway and opened the door to the guest bedroom, where he’d confined Lt
Balum.  Balum had been asleep, but he woke when he heard the door click open.
            “The game has begun,” he told Balum.  “I’ve contacted Haden to let
him know my terms.  We’ll see what happens now.”
            “Picard won’t accede to any of your demands, whatever they are,”
Balum said, quietly.
            “Picard wouldn’t,” he agreed, “but it’s McBride I’m playing games
with.  And I’ve told Haden I have his cousins.  So now we wait.”
            “But you only have me,” Balum protested.  “I’m not important. 
Sandy McBride has hostage negotiation training.”
            “Oh, I’m counting on that,” Riker said.  “You don’t know the scope
of this game, Lieutenant.  And I think you missed what I said.  You should get
some sleep,” he added.  “Once Haden comm.’s me, you’ll need your wits about
you.”
            “You said,” Balum began, and then he said, “Wait.  Captain Riker. 
You said cousins.  But you’ve only got me –“
            He grinned at Balum, and closed the door.  Back in the kitchen, he
poured himself yet another cup of coffee, checked the chronometer, and then
went to Agam’s bedroom to make sure his bag was packed and to use the head.  He
returned to the living room and the room’s only comfortable chair, his cup of
coffee in hand.  He could feel that memories of his time with Wharton were
still hovering close to the surface, and he made a concerted effort to put them
away.  It wouldn’t do, he thought, when Billy came, to start remembering
Wharton.
***** Chapter 114 *****
Chapter Summary
     Lt Tarana has her meeting with Commander Sovok, as per Captain
     Riker's instructions.
Chapter One Hundred Fourteen
 
 
 
 
            It had taken some time, especially since Renan had been so
difficult, but in the end, after the tea was drunk and the pastries eaten,
she’d come to understand what Captain Riker had been trying to tell her.  There
was an enemy out there – in the Gamma Quadrant, he’d said.  It had been his
mission to assess the danger and to report back, and he had.  However, the
admiral in charge had not believed him, and the information had been quietly
put away.  The new Federation president didn’t even know about the threat, and
yet it was there; it was real and it was preparing itself for war.
            She’d listened intently and then he’d told her that Admiral García
had specifically asked him to recruit her.  He’d admitted that he’d used her to
get to Renan, but it wasn’t at all what Renan – and what was wrong with Renan,
anyway? – supposed.  There were no hostages; there was no issue at all with the
Enterprise or whatever that other admiral’s name had been on Lya III.  That was
just a distraction; Captain Riker’s son was actually on his way from the
Enterprise, and there would be a meeting with the three of them, because she
had her own mission, her very first.
            It was hard not to be excited.  This was why she’d joined
Starfleet; because she was Andorian, and Andorians were one of the Founding
Planets; because she believed, fervently, in the mission of the Federation;
because she’d felt, always, even when she was a little girl, that she would
someday be part of something big.  This was her chance.  The Federation was in
danger and the people who knew about the danger didn’t even care.  They’d
dismissed it, and as a consequence, millions – or even billions – of people
would die.  She hadn’t listened very carefully to the politics of everything –
something about the Cardassians and the Bajorans and the Romulans – her
interest in Xenobiology had always been towards the more arcane members of the
Federation.  But she could hear the frustration in Captain Riker’s voice, and
she knew that he could count on her to do her job.
            She’d turned down his offer of a cab, and had walked home.  Rixx
was probably one of the safest capitals in the Federation, and it had a healthy
nightlife; it was no big deal for a young Andorian woman in a Starfleet uniform
to be walking home on a warmish night.  She let herself into her building, and
took the lift up to her flat on the eighth floor, Captain Riker’s portfolio
carried carefully under her arm.  She let herself into her flat, telling the
computer to turn on the lights at thirty percent, because she didn’t
necessarily want to disturb the sleep of her pet hybor. 
            She drank a cup of water in the kitchen, and then lowered the
lights even more.  In her bedroom, she stripped out of her soiled uniform and
took a brief sonic shower.  The portfolio she placed carefully on her dresser. 
The documents in it contained all the latest information about the threat to
the Federation; who and what they were, how they were infiltrating different
worlds, Federation and non-Federation alike; how they’d assessed the Federation
to be weak, and easy for the taking.  She was to meet with Commander Sovok at
the café in the gardens when it opened; Sovok was taking the information to the
one admiral in San Francisco who would know what to do with it.
            She pulled on her pyjamas and wrapped her robe around her, and then
sat down on her bed and picked up her pad.  “Dear Mother and Father,” she
wrote, “I am so excited I don’t think I will be able to sleep.  I have been
asked to do something important for the Federation and for Andoria, and I hope
that one day you will feel proud of what I have done….”  She finished her
communication and pressed send, and then lay back against her pillows.  She
wouldn’t go to sleep; she was too excited – and too afraid that if she did
sleep, somehow her alarm wouldn’t wake her and her chance to do something
important would be over.  Still, she was drifting off to sleep, just a little
bit, when she heard the ping of an incoming communication.  Startled, she
banged her head on the wall, and then she sat up and grabbed her padd.  It was
0340, and her parents would not get her note for some time; perhaps it was
Captain Riker.  She rubbed her head, one antenna flat against her skull, and
opened the communication; it was text only, from Lon, of all people.
            Are you all right? he’d asked.  He was waiting for an answer, so
she typed, Yes.  Thirty seconds or so and his response came back, Where are
you?  She was puzzled – wasn’t he supposed to be spending the night with
Maggie?  I’m home, she wrote, where the hell would I be at this time of night? 
That, she thought, should take care of whatever his issue was.  There was a
minute of long silence, and then he wrote, You’re in your flat?  She was
becoming irritated, and she wrote, Yes, and I’m in bed, and I was asleep. 
Silence again and then, Your dinner went well?  Renan is at home now too?
            She hit reply, and then she stopped.  What had Captain Riker said
about Renan?  That he was a double agent – working for Section 31 and the part
of Starfleet that was opposed to their agency.  The idea that both Jeff García
and Commander Sovok were Section 31 heads, that Xenobiology was often used as a
cover, on Federation planets, for the agency, had been shocking at first but
then had made sense.  In Xenobiology you were trained to understand other
worlds and their cultures, you were good at languages, you were good in the
biological sciences and in anthropology and in psychology -- what better cover
was there?  The Federation had Xenobiology offices on every major Federation
planet.  But that there was here, on Betazed, a small group of Starfleet
officers who knew of their operations and who were opposed to them – Admiral
Laidlaw being one of them, apparently – and if Renan were a double agent in
their office, who was to say that Lon was not also working for both sides?  It
made her head hurt, she thought, and then she grinned, because maybe it was
just that her head was hurting because she’d banged it into the wall.  Her
antennae now up, she typed, As far as I know…he left about the same time I
did.  She didn’t completely understand why Renan seemed to think Captain Riker
was a monster; he’d been sweet and fatherly to her.  Renan, she thought, as
much as she loved him (and she did, love him), always seemed to be involved in
some drama or another.  Lon wrote back, Oh.  Okay.  Good.  Sorry, it was just
that it was all so mysterious.  She replied, It was with an old friend from
Andoria who had something he wanted to talk about.  Everything is fine.  I’m
going back to bed.  Lon answered immediately, Good night.
            Well, now she was up.  Her chronometer said it was 0420, and she
thought she might as well take a real shower, and put on a clean uniform, and
have some tea, and feed Missi.  She had some paperwork she needed to complete,
and then it would be time to meet Commander Sovok, as the café opened for
breakfast at 0600.
 
            Walking out of her building, she joined the dozens of others whose
work hours were the early shift.  She carried the portfolio carefully under her
arm, making sure that she stood a little bit apart from the others waiting at
the air tram stop.  There was no point in taking the risk that she might have
the padd jostled from her arm as the crowd surged forward to board the air
tram.  Climbing aboard, she nodded at two younger Starfleet officers and took
her seat.  The morning was humid and cloudy, and she hoped the weather would
hold out before the rains came; rain was simply not her friend.
            The café always had a crowd when it opened; people stopping by to
pick up their coffee or tea to take to the office; people getting off the night
shift and picking up fresh pastries or baguettes to take home; and plenty of
breakfast meetings among the various levels of the upper echelons of Rixx –
civil servants, Federation employees, Starfleet personnel, minor Betazoid
aristocracy, and all the various persons associated with the university and all
the other myriads of occupations that made up the capital.  The café was one of
several along the gardens, but the food here was quick and good.  She looked
around for Commander Sovok yet didn’t see him, and when her turn came, she told
the host she was waiting for someone and was led to a table by the open doors
overlooking the gardens and the lake.  She ordered a tea and then waited for
Sovok, the portfolio on the table.  She didn’t want to eat because she was sure
that this was not a breakfast meeting; she was only a lieutenant and a new
recruit, after all.  And she was still full from Captain Riker’s wonderfully-
prepared meal of the night before.  She wondered, idly, if she should ask the
commander about Lon when he did appear.
            The server brought her tea and she took her time preparing it.  A
few minutes later, her padd pinged, and she checked it – it was Maggie,
wondering if swimming was still on.  She’d forgotten all about the swimming;
well, it would have to wait, she thought, as she could see the tall, austere
figure of Commander Sovok walking purposely towards her.
            “Lieutenant Tarana,” Sovok said as he approached the table. 
            “Sir,” she replied, rising; she took her seat again as he sat
down.  “Good morning, sir.”
            “I understand you had a meeting with Captain Riker,” Sovok said
neutrally.
            “Yes, sir,” Tarana said.  “He asked me to hand this to you, sir.”
            “How exactly did you meet Captain Riker?”
            “He contacted me, sir,” Tarana replied, “as an engineer asking for
information on xenobiology for a project.  He cited some work I’d done.  I met
him here, and that was when he explained who he was and asked Lt Balum and I to
meet him for dinner.”
            “And where is Lieutenant Balum now?”
            “I expect he’s home now, sir,” Tarana answered.  “He was leaving
when I was.”  That was not exactly true, but she felt it was close enough.
            “And do you know the contents of this portfolio?” Sovok asked.  The
server came over and Sovok ordered tea.
            “Not really, sir.  I was told that it contains important documents
relating to Captain Riker’s previous mission.”
            “Yes,” Sovok said.  He took his tea from the server and sipped it. 
“I have to say, Lieutenant, that I am not at all pleased that you have been
involved in this.  Captain Riker has been perhaps a little forward in his
assumption of authority.  However, Admiral García has approved it, and thus I
no longer have a say in the matter.”  He opened the portfolio and booted up the
padd that was inside.
            “Yes, sir,” Tarana said, because she didn’t know what else to say. 
Of all the people in their office, Sovok was the one who was the most
intimidating.  She’d deal with Captain Riker any day.
            Sovok’s expression never changed as he scrolled through the
contents of the padd.  He took another sip of tea, and then placed the padd in
the interior pocket of his jacket, leaving the actual portfolio on the table.
            “Have your breakfast, Lieutenant,” he said, standing.  “I will see
you in my office at 0800.”
            “Aye, sir,” Tarana said, a little surprised.
            He walked away, and Tarana realised he’d left the portfolio on the
table.  She stood, and walked quickly after him.
            “Sir!” she called.  “You forgot this.”
            He was too far ahead of her, though, and in the noise, hadn’t heard
her call out to him.  She glanced back at her table, trying to decide if she
should eat breakfast, as he’d suggested, or simply go on to meet Maggie for
their swim.  She was still making up her mind when she was jostled by an ensign
in the takeout queue, and as she turned around, the severity of the concussion
lifted her from her feet.  In those last few seconds she was glad she’d sent
that note home to her parents.
***** Chapter 115 *****
Chapter Summary
     Admiral Laidlaw views the destruction of the Gardens Café and arrests
     Commander Sovok, who survived the bombing.
Chapter Notes
     A zero sum game is a situation in which one person's gain is
     equivalent to another's loss, so that the net change in wealth or
     benefit is zero.
Chapter One Hundred Fifteen
 
 
 
 
            He was standing at the parameter of what was left of the Gardens
Café when his aide Tully came up behind him, padd in hand.
            “Sir?” Tully said.  Her face was streaked with soot and there was a
scratch on her cheek.  “Admiral Laidlaw?”
            He hadn’t even heard her.  He was just standing there, looking at
the devastation and the controlled chaos that went with it:  pieces of chairs,
melted tables, shattered crockery, a hand.  His face was wet and it could have
been the still searing heat or it could have been tears; he didn’t know.
            “Sixty-two confirmed dead,” he said to Tully.  “They don’t have a
figure on the injured yet.”
            “A Commander Sovok is asking for you, sir,” Tully said.  “They’re
trying to load him onto an ambulance, but he’s refusing to go until he sees
you, sir.”
            “Sovok?” Laidlaw repeated.  “The Vulcan from Xenobiology?  From
Jeff García’s office?”
            “Aye, sir,” Tully said.  “I can get you a water, sir,” she offered,
placing her hand on his arm.  “You look as if you could use a drink, sir, if
you don’t mind my saying so.”
            Laidlaw said, “I could use something stronger than water, Tully.”
            Tully shrugged and looked around, disbelief etched on her face. 
“We all could, sir,” she replied.
            “This is my home,” Laidlaw said.  “Why would anyone want to harm us
on Betazed?” he wondered, but he was afraid he already knew the answer to that
question.
            “Commander Sovok, sir?” Tully reminded him.
            He heard quiet sobbing, and he turned away, walking over to where a
young Betazoid man was standing at the edge of what had been the doors to the
café. 
            “Can I help you, son?” he asked gently.  “Are you looking for
someone?”
            The boy – he was only a boy; he couldn’t have been more than
sixteen or seventeen years old, with that lanky, half-finished look a boy has
before he grows into his adult self – glanced up at him.  He’d seen that the
boy wasn’t hurt, so he’d come looking for someone, and he placed his hands on
the boy’s shoulders.
            “I was supposed to meet him here,” the boy said, and Laidlaw could
hear the shock and the incredulity in his voice.
            “Who, son?” Laidlaw asked.  “Who were you supposed to meet here?”
            “My father,” the boy said, “he’s a professor at the university, and
we were going to meet for a coffee, but I was late –“  The boy had turned back
to the rubble and was staring at what looked to be an empty shoe, except that
there was a pulpy mess inside it.
            “I’m sorry, son,” Laidlaw said.  “Tully?”
            “Sir?”
            “Will you take this young man over to the command centre and help
him find out what’s happened to his father?  Maybe locate his mother?  I’m sure
she must be sick, looking for him.”  He turned back to the boy.  “What’s your
name?”
            “Mark,” the boy answered, still staring at the floor.  “Mark Lahm.”
            “I’m Admiral Thomas Laidlaw,” he said.  “Can you remember my
name?”  He waited; the boy looked up at him and nodded.  “Good,” he said.  “If
you need anything at all, I want you to come to me.  Will you do that, Mark?”
            Surprised, the boy said, “Yes, sir.”
            “Good,” he repeated.  “Captain Tully here will help you now. 
Remember; come to me if you need anything.”
            Tully said, “Commander Sovok, sir?”
            “Where is he?” Laidlaw asked.
            “The ambulance is near the command centre,” Tully answered.  “It’s
17, sir, ambulance number 17.”  She waited, and then she took the boy by the
arm.  “Why don’t you come with me, Mark,” she said, “and we’ll go find your
dad.”
            “Tully,” Laidlaw said.
            “Aye, sir?”
            “Have you heard from the Lady Elanna?  Or Ambassador Troi?”
            “Ambassador Troi is at the command centre, sir,” Tully said.  “The
Lady Elanna is on her way.”
            “Thank you,” Laidlaw said, his attention back on the worker from
the coroner’s office, bagging the one shoe.
            “Sir,” Tully acknowledged, and led the boy away.
            Laidlaw wiped his face with the handkerchief from his jacket
pocket.  It came away streaked with smoke, and idly he wondered what this was
doing to his lungs – and everyone else’s.  He shoved it back into his pocket
and turned away, picking carefully around the debris.  The sun was warm and
there were clouds building to the west; he hoped the rains would hold off; it
would take days to go through the crime scene. 
            Sovok was sitting on a stretcher waiting to be loaded onto the
ambulance; a lieutenant commander named Eves was standing beside him.  Laidlaw
remembered Sovok as probably the most rigidly-controlled Vulcan he’d ever met,
a feeling that had left him particularly uncomfortable.  Now Sovok was half-
dressed, his uniform apparently blown off of him; his head was bandaged and his
face and arms had burns; his leg was bandaged and bleeding.  He was holding a
padd in his hand as if it were some holy icon.
            “Admiral Laidlaw,” Eves said, and if he could have stood any
straighter, he would have.  “Commander Sovok –“
            Laidlaw resisted the urge to shout at him.  “I am already aware,
Commander,” he said.  “You have something for me, Sovok?” he asked, his voice
hard.
            “Sir,” Sovok said, tiredly.  He blinked his eyes and Laidlaw saw
one hand clutching at the stretcher.
            “If you have information about this, Sovok,” Laidlaw said, his
voice now calm.  The man’s control was fracturing; he could see that, now.  It
would be over soon, he thought.  He would place Sovok in custody in the
hospital, and he would find García and arrest him, but not before the two of
them would give him the opportunity to erase Kyle Riker from the face of his
world.  Because this was his world; his home.  How dare these self-important
children bring their form of terrorism onto his world?
            Sovok looked at Eves, and then back at Laidlaw.  “Sir,” he said
again.  “I’m not sure –“
            “Leave us, Commander,” Laidlaw ordered.
            “Aye, sir,” Eves said, backing away.  “What should I tell the
paramedics, sir?”
            “What paramedics?”
            “Commander Sovok is losing blood, and should be transported to
hospital,” Eves said, “Sir.”
            Laidlaw shrugged.  “Tell them to wait,” he said.
            “Aye, sir.”
            Eves left, and Sovok said, “I received word from Admiral García
that I was to meet Lt Tarana here this morning, when the café opened.”  He
coughed, and Laidlaw noted blood on his hand.
            “The Andorian lieutenant?  The one who was supposedly missing?”
            “Yes, sir,” Sovok said.  He coughed again.  “She had documents from
Captain Riker, about his mission, to give to me.”  He handed over the padd. 
“Here, sir,” he said.  He looked away, and then his gaze fell on the bits and
pieces of the café.  “The enemy, sir – Riker had information that they were
planning such incidents on member planets – here, and Andoria.  Vulcan. 
Earth.”
            “You’re telling me someone other than Kyle Riker planted this
bomb?” Laidlaw asked.
            Sovok nodded.  “I met Tarana down there, by the patio.  Riker’s
padd was in a small portfolio.  I took the padd, put it inside my jacket.  I
told her she should stay and have her breakfast, and then come into work.”  He
stopped.
            Laidlaw said, “You know, Sovok, I don’t really give a fuck that
you’re having trouble dealing with this.  As far as I’m concerned, if that
child is dead, her blood’s on you.  And if Kyle Riker has my cousin and he’s
dead, his blood is on you as well.  For all I know, William Riker’s blood is on
you, and García, and Cortan Zweller, and Jeremy Rossa.  The whole fucking lot
of you.”
            “Sir.”  Sovok closed his eyes.  “I’d left the portfolio on the
table.  She must have picked it up to give to me – or someone bumped into
her….the explosion came from the centre of the café, if she’d been coming after
me with it.”
            “If the portfolio was Riker’s, then Riker did this,” Laidlaw said. 
“Where is Jorge García?  Commander?  Cortan Zweller?  Lt Balum?  Captain
Riker?”
            Sovok began to cough again, blood flowing from his mouth.
            “You are under arrest, Commander Sovok,” Thomas Laidlaw said.  “I
am going to make sure that you get the best of care, Sovok.  Don’t count on
dying.  Your court martial will be required viewing at the Academy.”
            One of the paramedics came over and said, “He needs to get to the
hospital now, sir.”
            Laidlaw hit his comm. badge.  “Captain Tully,” he said.
            “Sir?” Tully’s voice sounded distant and mechanical.
            “I want a full-time security detail on Commander Sovok’s hospital
room.  He is under arrest.”
            “Aye, sir,” Tully said.  “Admiral Ahina needs to speak to you,
sir.”
            Ahina was his XO.  “Is he there?” Laidlaw asked.  He nodded at the
paramedic, and then backed away; the paramedic shot Sovok full of something,
placed on oxygen masque over his face, and shoved him into the back of the
ambulance.
            “Val,” Ahina said.  “We found the Hypatia, sir. It’s two blocks
over, by the market. Landed it perfectly in the little park there.”
            “And Commander Riker?” Laidlaw asked.  His head was beginning to
hurt, and he coughed black soot into his handkerchief.
            “Shuttle’s empty, sir,” Ahina said.  “But Picard’s in orbit, and he
knows where both Rikers are.”
            “On my way,” Laidlaw said.
            “Acknowledged.  Ahina out.”
            He looked once again at what was left of one of the iconic sites of
Betazed.  It didn’t make any sense, that Kyle Riker would trap himself in some
building with Renan and possibly his son.  Surely he’d know that none of them
would get out.
            Surely.
            The phrase zero-sum game came, suddenly, to mind.
                       
           
           
           
           
***** Chapter 116 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will attempts to confront his father.
Chapter One Hundred Sixteen
 
 
 
 
                       
           
            I knew, as soon as I jumped into warp, that Data would have figured
everything out.  That he would have comm’d the captain, down on the planet, in
his meeting with Haden and McBride and maybe talking with Admiral Laidlaw, or
even Admiral Nechayev, for all I knew.  I also knew that the captain would put
the Enterprise into warp and come after me, regardless of whatever any admiral
wanted him to do.  The reality of warp travel was that he could be here in
orbit before I arrived; I needed, once I’d gotten my uniform on and modified
the transporter, to pay careful attention to where and when I landed the
shuttle.  I had to be close enough to the flat that I could transport to it and
I had to both avoid the Enterprise and ignore the warnings from the controllers
at the shuttle terminal in Rixx.
            It wasn’t that it was going to be difficult.  I could do it in my
sleep, I supposed.  It’s just that I was fighting voices, and I couldn’t allow
myself to be distracted – I was fighting the voices I was hearing – my father’s
voice, and then a voice I only barely recognised – and then I was fighting the
emptiness of the voice I wasn’t hearing:  Billy’s.  It hadn’t occurred to me
that I’d been hearing Billy’s voice my whole life, until he was gone.  Now
there was an absence there that was almost painful.  Perhaps the way one might
feel when a hand, or a leg, has been lost.  All those years doctors had been
asking me if I were hearing voices.  I never realised that they’d meant
Billy’s.
            It was good I’d chosen the uniform that was tunic and trousers,
rather than the stupid jumpsuit; it came with a belt, and the trousers, even
three sizes smaller, were still too big.  I cinched the belt down to the last
hole and the trousers were still resting on my hips, but when I tucked my tunic
in the whole ensemble fit.  My hands were shaking and it was difficult to
attach my pips; I hooked my phaser to my belt, but kept the comm. badge on the
bench.  As soon as I put it on it would activate, and I had no desire to
explain my insubordination to Jean-Luc or to anyone else.  There would be time
for explanations, if I survived.  And I knew damned well, that in confronting
my father for the first time in my life, there was no guarantee I would.
            I modified the transporter, drawing power from the deflector
shields, and then returned to the pilot’s seat and shut the autopilot off.  I
turned the comm. panel back on, so I could hear the traffic; and finally I
attached my comm. badge.  I searched for the Enterprise and found her; she’d
entered orbit and was already swinging round the far side of Betazed.  There
was a park just off the market with a playground and an open field for sporting
events; I activated the automatic landing program.
            “Hypatia, come in please,” the controller said, “Hypatia, this is
Starfleet Shuttle Command in Rixx, what is your ETA, sir?  Hypatia, come in,
Hypatia.”
            I stood up, walked back to the transporter, and activated my comm.
badge.  “Shuttle Command, this is Hypatia, over,” I said.  “Commander William T
Riker, of the USS Enterprise.  ETA one point four minutes.  Have a good day,
over.”
            “Hypatia,” the controller sounded vaguely hysterical, “Hypatia,
Commander Riker, come in please, you are not cleared for landing –“
            “No, I am not,” I said, and I pressed the button and felt the
familiar sensation of being dis- and then re-assembled.
            “Hello, Will,” my father said.  He grinned at me, the one that
invariably made the hair stand up on the back of my neck.  “You look like
shit,” he said.
            I had my phaser in my hand.  “You are under arrest,” I said, “sir.”
            “Will,” he answered, shaking his head, “why don’t you give me that,
before you hurt yourself?  Your hand is shaking so hard you’ll take off your
own foot.”  He stepped forward, his hand out; he was still smiling.
            “Don’t,” I said, “come near me.”
            “Why don’t you let me help you, son,” he offered.  “You need to sit
down, before you fall down.”
            “Where is Lieutenant Balum?” I asked.
            “Why is everyone so damned concerned about him?” my father said. 
“He’s a poor excuse for an agent.”
            “Where is he?” I asked again.  I adjusted the setting on the
phaser.
            “Will,” my father said.  “You just took that phaser off stun.”
            “Where is Lieutenant Balum?”
            “You look as if you’re going to pass out, Will,” my father said. 
He was talking to me as if I were a rabid dog or something.  “You don’t have a
dampener on that, Will.  You’ll do more damage than just taking me out without
a dampener.”
            I said, “I don’t want to take you out, sir.  I want the hostages
released, and you in custody.”
            “I think, son,” my father said, and he was walking towards me
again, “that you know how unlikely that will be.”
            He reached for my phaser, and then I felt the building rock;
seconds later came the deafening sound of an explosion, and then the clattering
of dishes falling out of the cupboards, and books somewhere thudding; a
painting slid down from the wall; and then my father’s arms were wrapped around
me, across my chest, and the phaser had discharged into the wall, leaving a
gaping hole.
            “It’s a good thing Agam is dead,” my father told me, “because I
think she’d be very unhappy about what you’ve done to her apartment.”
            “You killed her,” I said, stupidly, and then I said, “You killed
Rosie.”
            He held me, so tightly that I thought my ribs would break, and then
he kissed me on the back of my neck.  “I know,” he said, into my ear, “I know I
did, son, but I had to.  You were too little to understand then, but surely you
must understand now.”
            I said, “You wanted to make me you.  You wanted to make me in your
own image.  You tortured me, and terrified me, and hurt me, but it didn’t
work.  You made me –but you didn’t make Kyle Riker.”
            “I could never pass, Will,” he said to me, and he guided me over to
the sofa and sat me down, his arms still around my chest.  He let me go and
then he said, “Dr Emlen told me that, all those years ago, in his psychology
class, and I didn’t understand, at first, what he meant.”
            I could feel the wet air coming through the hole in the wall, and I
heard the sirens of the fire engines and the ambulances and the security
details.
            “What did you do?” I asked.
            “That, I’m afraid,” he said, “was sweet little Tarana, blowing up
the Gardens Café.”
            I was confused.  “Who is Tarana?” I asked.  “Why are you blowing up
Rixx?  What was your mission in the Gamma Quadrant, and why did you want me out
there on the Aries?”
            He stood up.  “Let me get you something to drink,” he said,
“because you still look as if you’re going to pass out.  Your Dr McBride said
you were dying.  Is that not true?”
            I started to rise, and he placed his hands on my shoulders and
pushed me back down.  “Son,” he said, in that quiet voice of his, “I don’t want
to hurt you, I really don’t.  There are things I need to tell you, important
things.  And for once in your life, William, you need to listen to me and to
understand.”  He waited for a moment, to see if I would protest, but I had the
good sense to say nothing.  “But –“ he began, and he brushed my hair out of my
eyes, “even though I wouldn’t want to, even though I don’t want to, I will hurt
you if you force me to.  And I think you know that I can hurt you in such a way
that there won’t be a you anymore to complain about how badly I’ve treated you
your whole life.  The thing is, son,” he said, bringing his face close to mine,
“I know what you want, and I know how badly you want it – and I know that, this
time, you won’t survive my giving it to you.”
            He tucked his hand under my chin, and then he stroked my cheek. 
“Even having lost all the weight you’ve lost,” he whispered, “you are still my
beautiful boy.”
            I could feel the remnants of the grape drink Ogawa had given me in
the pit of my stomach, sloshing around, and I swallowed to prevent it from
coming back up my throat and splashing him and the floor.  “Please don’t hurt
me,” I said.
            He pulled me to him, and wrapped his arms around me, and I felt him
kiss the top of my head, the way Jean-Luc did.  He stroked my back lightly, and
kissed me again.
            “Shhh,” he said, as if I were seven again.  “I was thinking about
the way you looked at me, the last time we saw each other.  The words you were
saying were angry and hurtful; hell, even the expression on your face was angry
– but your eyes, son – your eyes were begging me not to hurt you again.  And I
did, didn’t I?  I should have been kind to you – I know how to be kind – but it
was too ingrained, I think, my reaction, and by the time I realised that if I’d
only been kind, you would have done as I’d asked you, as you always did….well,
it was too late, then.  You’d convinced yourself that Picard would protect
you.”
            His words were everywhere, and I was trying to make sense of them,
but it was so hard.  Some of it was distraction; of course it was, that’s how
he worked, to get what he needed from you, but some of it seemed so real.  I
felt adrift; and I was tired, so tired; so tired of hurting; so tired of the
darkness inside me, always.  I let him hold me and I thought if I let him do
what he wanted to do with me, I could go away somewhere and then it would be
over; this time it would be him opening the closet door, and I should just go
with him and let him end it.  Jean-Luc would probably grieve for me, but Data
would make a good first officer, and I would be just one more name on the
memorial of those lost.
            I said, “McBride didn’t lie to you, sir.  I’ve been in congestive
heart failure, and I’ve had my kidneys start to shut down.”  I paused, and then
I said, into his chest, “I had surgery this morning, for both of those things.”
            He pushed me away, a bit, so he could look at me.  “And yet here
you are,” he said.  “You knew how to find me, and you did what – take a shuttle
from your ship?  And you came here, as I knew you would.  You always were a
brave boy,” he said.  “Even when I hurt you, you were a brave boy.  It’s how I
knew what I was doing was right.”  He let me go, and said, “What can I get you
to drink, Will?”
            I shrugged, and watched him walk away from me.  Outside I could see
the smoke from the explosion billowing, and I could still hear sirens; I
thought, briefly, of Mrs Troi, and how devastated she would be, that someone
would do this to Rixx.  What an irony, I thought – she’d wanted me to be her
son-in-law, and it was my father who was the cause of the destruction to her
House.
            I stood up, and looked out; it was a long way down, and it would be
quick.  “Where is Lieutenant Balum?” I asked.
            “Is Picard here?” my father said, coming out of the kitchen, a
glass in his hand.  “Drink this, son.  It will help you.”
            I looked at the glass in surprise.  It had been a long time since
anyone had handed me something made out of glass.  He didn’t know, then.  He’d
guessed, perhaps, that I’d tried to kill myself, but he had no idea what I’d
done.  Jean-Luc would never have told him; neither would McBride; and because
Jean-Luc had written in his report that I’d had a “shipboard accident,” there
were no official records of what I’d done.  I took the glass.  I’d thought
Billy was gone – after all, he was no longer talking to me, and I could no
longer feel him beside me – but there was a plan, forming in my mind, which
would have suited Billy just fine.
            “Sit down, Will,” my father said, and he shepherded me away from
the hole and back to the sofa, the glass still in my hand.  I took a sip; it
was only iced tea; maybe there was something else in it, as there was a bit of
an aftertaste, but it could have been that it was just too strong, and he
hadn’t put any sweetener in it.
            “What did you ask before?” I said.  He’d said so many things it was
hard to know which ones he wanted answers to.
            “Is Picard here?” he repeated.
            “Yes,” I said.
            “He knows where I am?”
            “I’m sure Data’s told him,” I answered.  “We were able to figure it
out from your communication to McBride.”
            “He’ll need permission from Laidlaw to do anything first,” my
father said, as if we were just making routine conversation, instead of
discussing the possibility of Jean-Luc beaming in here with phasers firing and
Worf as back-up.
            I laughed.  The idea that Jean-Luc would ask for permission was
slightly ludicrous.  “You’re running out of time,” I said.  “Just give me
Lieutenant Balum, Dad.  It’s over.”
            “Oh, I don’t think so,” my father said, taking the glass from me,
and that was when the second and third explosions hit.
***** Chapter 117 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will takes the upper hand in the confrontation with his father -- and
     Lt Balum reveals the identity of the threat to the Federation.
Chapter Notes
     As it became clearer that this novel was straying into AU territory
     more and more, I've manipulated the canon timeline as well as the
     non-canon one in several ways. Readers familiar with the DS9 series
     will recognise the motif, at least, of the Admiral Leyton story arc,
     as will those who have read the Pocket Books novels that feature
     Leyton's attempt to make the President of the Federation aware of the
     Dominion threat. I hope, however, that I have done this in as
     consistent a way as possible with the canon characters involved.
Chapter One Hundred Seventeen
 
 
 
 
            The building swayed.  I was on the floor, dazed, blood streaming
into my eyes, looking at sherds of glass embedded in the carpeting.  I could
smell the acrid smoke and heard the sirens begin again; people shouting on the
street below us; someone else was shouting, here with us, I thought, and I
hoped it wasn’t me.
            “You shouldn’t have blown a hole in the wall,” my father said. 
“We’ll have to evacuate sooner that I’d have liked.”
            I wondered what he’d done with my phaser.
            “Here,” he said, handing me a dish towel.  “It’s a small cut. 
Pressure ought to stop the bleeding.”
            I took the towel and applied it against my scalp as I got up.  “I
don’t know all the side effects to the medication I’m on,” I said.  “I thought
I was on something for my blood pressure.”
            “What’s wrong with your blood pressure?” he asked curiously.
            My scalp was still bleeding.
            “The flashbacks make it rise,” I said.  “Enough that I’ve already
had a stroke.”
            “Try not to have one now,” he said.  “There’s no time for it.”
            “A flashback, or a stroke?” I asked.  Distraction was my friend as
well; I could feel the sherd in my hand.  It would have to do until I located
the phaser, or until Jean-Luc and Worf and whoever else showed up.  “I assume
that’s Lieutenant Balum,” I said, of the shouting. 
            “Yes,” my father said.  “Sit down, Will.  Let me see that cut.”
            I sat.  “You’re waiting for Jean-Luc,” I said.
            He took the towel away, then pressed it against the cut again.  “Am
I?” he asked.  “He’s already done what I needed him to do.”
            “Tell,” I said.  “You needed him to tell.”
            “Still my clever boy,” he answered.  “You’re going to need that
stitched up, I’m afraid.”
            “You’ve got a phaser,” I said.  “Just cauterise it.”
            “You’re just as crazy as you always were,” he said.  “Cauterise it
with a phaser.”  He shook his head.
            “It’s doable,” I argued.
            “Will,” he said.  “Shut up.”  He gave me the lazy smile again, his
eyes dark.  “Put the towel back against it.  I’ll replicate what I need.”
            “What about Lt Balum?”
            “He’s not going anywhere,” my father said.  “Let him scream.  It
seems to be the one thing he can actually do well.”
            My father walked into the kitchen, and I slipped the sherd of glass
into my pocket.  He’d knocked my phaser on the floor, and I wondered what he’d
done with it. 
            “If you’re looking for the phaser, son,” he said from the kitchen,
“I kicked it out the hole.  Not much left of it now, I would imagine.”
            Liar, I thought.  I would have seen him kick it out – and he hadn’t
gone anywhere near the hole.  I reached under the sofa, and cut my hand on
another sherd of glass. 
            “Still bleeding?” my father asked, coming out of the kitchen.
            I took the towel away; watched the blood pool in my hand.  “What
did you give me?” I asked.
            “Nothing that would have done this,” he said.  “You should just be
feeling a little distanced from everything.”
            I rolled my eyes.  “I’m already being treated for that,” I said.
            “Be a good boy and sit still,” he replied.  “How did you cut your
hand?”
            “There’s glass on the floor,” I said.
            “All right, hold still….that’s my brave boy,” he said.  “You don’t
need much.  Hold your breath, now – it will sting.”
            He reached over with the needle to stitch up my head, and I pulled
my hand out of my pocket.
            “What did you do that for?” he said, surprised.
            I shrugged and stood up, pushing him away.  “You forgot how good I
am at cutting,” I said, showing him my scars.  “Must be genetic.”  I shoved
against the sofa, kicking the phaser out of reach, and then circled around, the
sherd still in my hand.  The blood was still dripping down my face, and I wiped
it away.  “Gut wounds are messy,” I said.  “That cut was for Rosie.”
            “Do you think that hurting me will change anything for you, Billy?”
he asked.  “You and I, we’re exactly the same.”
            I bent down and picked up the phaser, slipping the sherd of glass
back into my pocket.
            “I’m not Billy,” I said, and I felt like laughing.  I reset the
phaser and pointed it at him.  “Billy’s gone, Dad.  One of the benefits of the
McBride cure for crazy.”
            “I hate to break the news to you, son,” he said, and he was holding
his stomach, his hands covered in blood, “but I don’t think your Dr McBride has
done anything to cure you.  I think you’re still crazy.”
            I wiped the blood from my head with my sleeve.  “Do you?” I asked. 
“One of the things McBride did is he took Billy and William and he put them
together to get me:  Will.  And, yeah – I guess Will is still crazy.  If he’d
been sane, he would have safely stayed in sickbay, right?”  I grinned, and I
hoped the hairs stood up on the back of his neck.  “You always have a plan,
Dad,” I said.  “You wanted me for the Aries, and I messed that up.  So five
years later you blow up Rixx?  Tell me the plan.  Maybe I’ll go along with it,
this time.”
            He looked at me, and for the first time I saw uncertainty in his
eyes.  He blinked then, and it was gone.
            “Balum was here for distraction, wasn’t he?  All that bullshit
about hostages and seeing me on Lya III.  He pissed you off and you thought
you’d terrify him, and serve him right.  I’ve heard him shouting, which means
you didn’t hurt him.  Why don’t you just let him go?  You don’t need the
distraction anymore, do you?  Now that half of Rixx is destroyed?”  I moved
down the hallway, past the hole, my phaser still pointed at him.  “Come on,
Dad,” I said.  “Just let the poor bastard go.  You only ever wanted it to be me
and you, anyway.  It’s just not anbo-jyutsu this time.”
            He followed me, slowly, blood still seeping from his gut.  “Just
take it easy, son,” he said.  “I’ll tell you the plan.  And you’re right, we
can let Balum go.  It’s time, now.  About a minute or so and we’ll be gone,
just the two of us.”
            “Is he in here?” I said, stopping in front the first closed door.
            My father nodded.  “Will,” he said.  “You’re going to have to let
me bandage this.”
            “Balum?” I called.  “Lieutenant?”
            “In here,” Balum said, his voice hoarse from all his shouting.
            The door was locked, and I kicked it open, droplets of blood
flying.  “Some double agent you are,” I said.  “Here’s hoping you get a nice
quiet outpost assignment in the future.  Something you can’t fuck up.  Just
don’t ask to be transferred to my ship.”  My father stood in the doorway, and I
said, “Untie him.  Whoever it is you’re waiting for, it’s best he’s gone before
they come.”
            I felt the building sway again.  “That,” I said, “must have been a
secondary explosion.  Just what the fuck did you do?”
            “The cut you made is deep, son,” he said.  “If you don’t stuff it
with something –“
            I said to Balum, “You have first aid training?”
            He nodded.  “Yes, sir,” he said.
            “Untie him,” I said to my father.
            “Will – “ my father said.
            I shot the wall next to the door.
            “Jesus Christ!” he exploded.
            “You wanted me,” I said.  “You have me.  I’m fairly sure they told
you I was crazy.  You should have listened.”
            “You were always crazy,” my father muttered as he untied Lieutenant
Balum, “but you were never violent.”
            I watched the blood seep out of his tunic.  “William was never
violent,” I said.  “You were looking for Billy, remember?  Billy was always
violent – and Billy is now part of me.”  I watched Balum massage his arms and
legs to get the blood flowing again.  “Find the head, and see if you can’t come
up with a first aid kit,” I said.  “Otherwise, replicate what you need.  And
find me another towel.”  My hand had stopped bleeding, but my scalp was still
dripping.
            “Yes, sir,” Balum said.  He stood, swaying, and then moved slowly
out of the room.  “Just how long was he in that chair?” I asked.  “Sit down,
Dad.”
            “Will –“
            “Sit down.”
            He sat.
            “Who are we waiting for?” I asked.  “If it’s not Jean-Luc, who is
it?”  He didn’t answer.  I heard Balum in the kitchen, at the replicator, and
then he walked in.  “Where’s your comm. badge?” I asked him.
            “I don’t know, sir,” Balum answered.  “Captain Riker took it.”
            “Where’s his comm. badge?”
            He was slow in answering.  “You’ll find my case in the bedroom,” he
said.  “It’s in there.”
            “Do the best you can,” I ordered.
            “Sir.”
            I coughed again, and could feel blood still trickling from my
scalp.  Balum was efficient, removing my father’s tunic and wrapping him
tightly.  He was right; I’d cut him deeply – and then the cottony feeling was
back, and I knew there was something I was missing, something right in front of
me, something that had to do with a flashback, or a memory – and it wasn’t
Rosie, even though it should have been, with my father’s gut open and bloody
and his telling me that he’d killed her for me – no, it was something else –
and then I could hear my feet pounding on the synthetic surface as I took the
jumps, flying over them and not even worried about anything, I was winning the
race, taking State –
            “No worries, Rosie,” I said –
            “Commander, do you want me to retrieve my comm. badge?” Balum
asked.  “Commander?  Are you all right?”
            My father laughed.  “Haven’t you been paying attention, Renan?” he
asked.  “He’s batshit.  You thought I was crazy.”
            “Yes,” I said, “get it – quickly, you’re running out of time.”
            “Aye, sir,” and he took off for the bedroom.
            It was supposed to have been a good weekend; winning State and
going to the gym for the party afterwards; me and Dmitri were going to meet a
couple of Dmitri’s cousins from Homer; and as I bent down to receive the medal
–
            It was him, I thought.  Standing next to my father, smiling –
            Balum was behind me, and he said, putting his comm. badge on, “What
now, Commander?”
            “Get out of here,” I said.  “Once you’re out, comm. Laidlaw…tell
him I have my father in custody.  Tell him –“
            “What is it you think you know, son?” my father asked, standing. 
            “Tell him that my father and Jeff García have organised this,” I
said.  “That they’re cleaning house…that there’s trouble from the Gamma
Quadrant on its way, I think.  Some enemy they know about but we don’t.”  I
turned to Balum.  “Go,” I said.
            “But, Commander,” Balum protested, “what about you?”
            “Just go,” I said, tiredly.  “Before García gets here.”
            “What about Captain Picard?”
            “Tell him the explosions damaged the network in the shuttle,” I
said.  “He’ll understand.”
            “Sir,” Balum said.  It was clear he didn’t want to go, but I was
done with him.  “I’ll tell him, sir.” He stopped, and looked at me.  “He’s
killed so many innocent people,” Balum said.  “My Tarana, the little boy on
Risa…all the people at the café…don’t let him manipulate you.  Sir.”
            I looked at him, this kid who looked so like McBride it could have
been McBride, years younger, standing before me. 
            “Just who is it,” I asked, glancing at my father, and then looking
back at Balum, “coming through the Bajoran wormhole from the Gamma Quadrant?”
            “The Dominion,” Renan Balum said.
           
           
***** Chapter 118 *****
Chapter Summary
     Admiral Jeff Garcia arrives, and the final piece of the puzzle is
     fitted for Will.
Chapter Notes
     "He would try another tactic. 'Where was your father, when you were
     in the barn?'
     'In his office.'
     'So he didn't know you went to the barn?'
     Again the child was silent. Then he said, 'I came down the stairs. He
     was in his office. He heard me. He said, 'Billy, you're supposed to
     be asleep.' I said, 'I'm not tired anymore.' He smiled at me. He
     said, 'Come here.'
Chapter One Hundred Eighteen
 
 
 
 
           
            I heard Balum turn and go; I didn’t look back.  My father stood
there, in front of Balum’s chair, swaying just a bit, his hands still on his
bandaged gut.  It was the tiger-smile he was giving me; the one he’d given me
when I’d seen him as they hung the medal around my neck; the smile that said,
You’re not dead yet, but you’ll wish you were.  How many times, I thought, how
many times that weekend had I wished that I were dead?  It was a long weekend;
there hadn’t been school that Monday, some long-forgotten holiday of the North
American continent that Alaska for some perverse reason still celebrated.  On
Tuesday I’d wakened – in my own bed – and I’d crept down the stairs, my legs
still like jello, and the letter had been waiting for me on the kitchen table –
the same kitchen table that had featured in all those forgotten nightmares of
memory.  The letter that I’d opened and read, and reread, sitting at the
kitchen table on the same green-ivied cushions, weeping, until Mr and Mrs
Shugak had arrived with the day’s bag of groceries and found me there.
            The door opened and closed.  My father’s tiger-smile widened, just
a bit.  I knew he was standing behind me; I could feel him.  How could I not
feel him?  He’d haunted the corner of every nightmare I’d ever had since I was
fifteen years old.
            “Who are the Dominion?” I asked.  As it had before, distraction
would have to work again; it was the only weapon I had left.
            “I’ll leave that explanation to Admiral García,” my father said. 
“Perhaps he will fill you in on the way to the shuttle.”
            “I thought,” I said, bouncing, just a little, on the balls of my
feet, “that this was supposed to be between me and you.”
            “Give me the phaser, son,” my father said, walking towards me.
            “Take his comm. badge too,” García said from behind me.
            What did my father want me for?  He still hadn’t told me, and I
could feel my anxiety turn into a crescendo of panic.  The last time these two
had been together -- I said, still rocking on my feet, “I thought you were
going to tell me the plan. Sir.”
            “What plan, Commander?” García said, still behind me.
            “Just give me the phaser, son.  We can discuss the plan in the
shuttle.”  Once again he reached out his hand, now coated in drying blood, to
me.
            “My father always has a plan, Admiral,” I said, “surely you must
know that by now,” and I rocked backwards into García, my head colliding with
his, the blood from my scalp spraying everywhere.  I heard him suck in air, and
then he crashed into the wall, and as I rocked forward, I saw my father swing
away and then kick forward, his shoulder down and banging into my ribs.  The
momentum carried me backwards, out of the doorway, and I felt the phaser press
against my neck.
            “Kyle doesn’t want me to kill you,” García said.  “He’d like that
privilege to go to himself.  That can change, Commander.  I suggest you follow
orders.  Give him the phaser.  Now.”
            I handed my father the phaser.  I could see he too was bleeding
again.  I wiped the blood out of my eyes.
            “Calm down, son,” my father said.  “You’re still my good boy.  It
will be all right.”  He reached for my comm. badge and tossed it on the floor. 
“You won’t be needing that,” he said, still holding the phaser.  “I’ve got my
case in the bedroom,” he told García, as if he were having a normal
conversation.  “I think Will can’t be trusted,” he added.  “Perhaps you’d
better immobilise him.”
            “At least he enjoys that,” García replied, and he smiled.  He
pulled me back into the hallway and then shoved me forward.  “Into the
dayroom.”
            I walked slowly into the room.  The cottony feeling was back – or
perhaps it had never gone; there was the usual pain in my stomach to remind me
that I was in danger of conflating reality with memory.  My arms and shoulders
ached and my back and buttocks felt bruised; he’d wanted me to cry, I
remembered – “I know you want to,” he’d said, “it won’t hurt so badly if you
do,” – but I hadn’t cried; I’d simply gone somewhere else, just as McBride had
said I did; I’d disappeared into my own mind and let Billy take the pain.  I
hadn’t cried – William hadn’t cried – until he’d sat at the kitchen table and
read the letter that had been waiting for him.  No one took him to the doctor;
no one saw the blood, or the deep bruising; by the time they’d found me,
feverish and half-starved in Valdez, the bruises and the blood were gone.
            García left me, standing in the dayroom, while he returned to the
replicator so he could handcuff me, and I wondered why he’d done that, why he’d
felt so confident that he could leave me alone.  There were still sherds of
glass on the floor, and I remembered that I had the piece tucked away in my
pocket.  I heard my father walking back down the hall.  I’d been fifteen,
flushed with success from my triumph at State, sure in the knowledge that I
could pass the entrance exam to Starfleet, a successful shuttle pilot, working
for Dmitri’s parents and the tribe ferrying people to salmon camp and the
hunting lodges; I’d had friends, I’d met a girl – and my father had been
distant; had left me alone.  I was part of the school band; I’d had a good part
in the school musical.  Sometimes I’d still gotten into fights, when the Billy-
part of me had felt threatened, but it was accepted; that was just who Will
Riker was.  Will Riker was an okay guy; he had your back; he was funny, and
talented; just don’t piss him off.
            And then in the air car on the way home the man I’d been introduced
to simply as Jeff had slipped his hand into my shorts – and my father had
smiled at me –
            He expected me to stand here.  They both did.  It didn’t matter to
them, either one of them, that I’d gotten into the Academy on my own; that I’d
navigated the politics and the knowledge that I had no one, that I was alone,
and still had graduated eighth in my class; that I’d been offered captaincy
twice on my own merits, not on theirs – the Drake and the Melbourne – that I’d
figured out a way to rescue my captain so we could use him against the Borg.
            I was Kyle Riker’s Billy, groomed to be obedient.  To be abused. 
To be crazy.
            I knew the plan, now. 
            I could still hear the sirens; still see the billowing smoke of a
dozen fires from three major explosions.  How many dead?  Were there explosions
on Earth?  Vulcan?  Andoria?  Were they coming, those explosions, tears in the
core of the Federation, exposing our weaknesses and our trust, our belief in
the Prime Directive and the peaceful exploration of space?
            By the time the captain came I would be already on a shuttle to San
Francisco, primed and ready – a photon torpedo waiting to be launched.
            I looked at García, walking toward me, holding the handcuffs – my
father walking beside him, carrying his case – and all I had was a sherd of
glass and distraction.
            What had he told me?  It won’t hurt so badly if you do.
            “Please,” I said, backing up.
            In my head I pictured my father sitting at the table, talking to
McBride.  The paintings on the wall, one of which had fallen in the explosion. 
And the objects on the sideboard.  Vases.  Statues.  Some of them had fallen
too, but not all of them.  And then I knew why I’d remembered them – two of
them were soapstone, like the animal carvings from the old tribes at home.
            “You don’t have to handcuff me,” I said.  “I’ll be good.”  I looked
at my father.  “I’ll be good,” I repeated.  “Dad.  Tell him I’ll be good.”
            Where was the captain?  Surely Balum had comm’d Laidlaw by now. 
Data had told them where I was.  My comm. badge was on the floor in the other
room where my father had tossed it.
            My father smiled.  “It’s all right, son,” he said.  “I know you’re
ready to be good.  It’s just to get you to the shuttle.”
            “I don’t want him to hurt me,” I said, and I could feel my eyes
fill with tears.  García had put the phaser away, and my father was carrying
his case in one hand. 
            García glanced at my father – surely he knew I was supposed to be
crazy? – and then he said, softly, the way you would speak to a feral cat,
“Easy, Commander.  No one’s going to hurt you.”
            Where was William?  “You hurt me before,” I said, and now I could
feel the tears streaming down my face.  “I don’t want to hurt any more,” I
said. 
            His stance was completely relaxed, and my father was waiting for
him to handcuff me, halfway to the door.
            “No one’s going to hurt you, son,” my father said, but he was
smiling his tiger-smile.
            I decided I had at the most five seconds, after García came in
range.
            “You let him hurt me,” I said.  “You hurt me.” How easy it was for
William to cry.
            “Just give me your hands, Commander,” García said. 
            I’d turned partway toward the sideboard, and as I brought my hands
around, I swung the soapstone statute – it seemed to be some sort of a weird
animal – and smashed him in the face.  He fell backwards; shouting, blood and
sherds of bone flying; and I charged him, knocking him against the table, and
then I brought my hands together and clubbed him in the gut and sent him flying
towards the wall –
            “Don’t do it, son,” my father said. 
            I knew he’d pulled his phaser out. 
            I had my arms around García, the sherd of glass against his neck. 
I could smell the acrid smoke; feel the rush of the wind.
            “Billy,” my father said, coming closer, and he was still smiling; I
didn’t know why, but he was still smiling, “Billy, you don’t want to kill him. 
Trust me on that, son.  You’ll spend the rest of your life in the psychiatric
facility in San Francisco if you kill him.”
            I could hear García’s raspy breath; I’d smashed one cheekbone and
his nose, and the blood was filling his throat.
            “It will be worth it,” I said.  I grabbed García’s phaser from his
belt, and slid the sherd back in my pocket.
            “You only think that now, Billy,” my father said, coming closer. 
He put his case down on the sofa.
            García opened his eyes and said, “Don’t come any closer, Kyle.”
            “Let him go, Billy.”
            “I am not Billy,” I said, and I pushed García towards him, García’s
phaser in my hand.  It was set to stun, and I shot him as he lurched towards my
father.  My father jumped aside to get out of the way, and García fell, hard,
to the floor.  I adjusted the phaser setting.  “It’s not anbo-jyutsu now, Dad,”
I said.  “You should have asked me if I wanted to be part of the plan.”
            My father shrugged.  “You already are, Billy,” he said.  “You’ve
always been part of the plan.”  He was still smiling, as if it were thirty
years ago and I was a little kid standing in his office.  “Put the phaser down,
son.  We’ll leave García here.  Zweller can take care of him.”  He walked
toward me.
            “You said you had something important to tell me,” I reminded him. 
“You had better tell me now.”  Then I said, adjusting the setting on the phaser
again, “Stay where you are.”
            He said, “I’m proud of you, son.  I want you to know that.”
            I could feel my hand start to shake.  “Liar,” I said.  “The only
way you’d be proud of me is if you’d made me you.  And you didn’t.  I’m not
you.”
            “We manipulate people, son,” my father said.  “You’re good at it.” 
He took another step closer.  “I do have important things to tell you, Will. 
You’re right about that.  You asked about the Dominion, and we need to talk
about that.  But we’ve run out of time.  Just come with me to the shuttle. 
We’ll talk on the way to San Francisco.”
            “Don’t come any closer,” I said, and now my voice was shaking too. 
“Don’t make me shoot you, Dad.”
            “Will,” he said, and he was using that coaxing tone of voice to me,
“Will.  You’ve changed the setting on the phaser.  You don’t want to kill me,
son.”  He took another step.
            “I will,” I said.  “I will kill you.  Don’t push me, Dad, because I
will kill you.”
            “My poor boy,” he said.  “All you’ve ever wanted is for me to love
you.  I want to love you, son.  I’ve always wanted to love you.”
            “You hate me,” I said.  “You’ve always hated me.”
            “I’ve never hated you, Will,” he said, and he took another step. 
“You’ve been my special boy.  You’ve always been my special boy, Billy.”
            I wiped the blood from my eyes and realised I was crying.  “No,” I
said.  “You never loved me.  You raped me, and you beat me, and you gave me to
other men. That’s not love.  It’s sick.  You’re sick, Dad, and you made me sick
too.”  I used my other hand to steady the phaser.  “I don’t want to be sick
anymore.  Don’t come any closer!”  I shouted. 
            “Calm down, son,” he said.  “It’s all right.  I’m not going to hurt
you anymore.  Just put the phaser down, Will, and you can come in my arms. 
That’s all you’ve ever wanted, isn’t it?” he asked.  He took another step. 
“Come here, Billy,” he said, and he smiled.
            I shot him.
***** Chapter 119 *****
Chapter Summary
     Admiral Laidlaw issues orders, which Picard defies; McBride takes
     control.
Chapter Notes
     From "Trauma Through a Child's Eyes": "The drive to heal trauma is as
     powerful and tenacious as its symptoms. Youngsters traumatized by
     physical and sexual abuse or emotional neglect are inextricably drawn
     into situations that replicate the original trauma. The urge to
     resolve trauma through reenactment can be severe and compulsive...Re-
     enactment can be defined as an unsuccessful attempt to resolve the
     intense survival energy mobilized for defense against a perceived
     life-threatening experience."
Chapter One Hundred Nineteen
 
 
 
           
            “Incoming message from Starfleet on Betazed,” Lt Worf said.
            “Patch it to my Ready Room,” Picard answered, standing and walking
towards the door.  He nodded at McBride and said, “You’d better come with me.”
            Surprised, McBride, who was on the bridge for the first time, in
the side seat next to Deanna, followed the captain into his ready room.  Picard
booted up the computer and stood, waiting for the transmission to arrive.
            Valentine Laidlaw said, “Captain Picard.  You thought that
Commander Riker was likely to transport himself into the building where Captain
Riker is holding the hostage?”
            “Yes, sir,” Picard answered.  “Mr Riker is known for his efficient
and unconventional tactics.  He won’t land the shuttle at the terminal, I can
guarantee you that.  It’s more likely he’ll use the auto-pilot to land and
transport himself out.”
            “What warp speed capacity does his shuttle have?” Laidlaw queried.
            “Warp factor four point four,” Picard answered.  “He can modify the
transporter using the power from the deflector shields.”
            “You will arrive in orbit before him, then,” Laidlaw said.
            “That is my intention,” Picard answered.
            Glancing at Picard, McBride began, “Valentine –“
            “In a moment, Doctor,” Admiral Laidlaw said, curtly.  “Picard, I do
not want you to interfere with Riker’s landing or his transporting himself to
that building.  No tractor beams.  No transporter locks.  Do you understand?”
            McBride thought that, after all these years, he was seeing Val for
the very first time, before he realised that he had never seen Val in his
capacity as Commander of Starfleet on Betazed before.  Picard was silent,
staring at the viewscreen; McBride recognised the captain’s retreat into rigid
neutrality. 
            “I know your reputation, Captain,” Laidlaw said.  “And I understand
that the Commander’s life is in danger, and that you have a personal
relationship with him.”
            Picard responded icily, “My personal relationship has absolutely
nothing to do with my desire that my First Officer not be killed by this
monstrous man, who apparently is a Starfleet officer.  A man that you knew all
along was capable of doing great harm – and had done great harm – and yet you
allowed this man and the group he works for to continue with impunity.  It is
an outrage,” Picard said. 
            “We all answer to someone, Captain,” Laidlaw said, “and I do not
answer to you.”
            McBride glanced at the captain, whose facial expression had not
changed, but whose rigidly-controlled body belied his fury. 
            “Sir,” Picard said.
            “I want you to understand, Captain,” Laidlaw continued, “that I
have given you a direct order not to interfere.”
            “Yes, sir,” Picard said, his words clipped.
            “When you arrive, I want you to assemble a team that should include
Dr McBride,” Laidlaw continued.  “You and your away team will report to me.”
            “Yes, sir.”
            Laidlaw said, “Captain.”  He paused.  “I have three rogue agents,
including one Admiral, one hostage and one possibly missing lieutenant who may
or may not be a hostage, the Council of Betazed and Admiral Shanthi to deal
with, as well as your Commander Riker.  If we coordinate together, we can
diffuse this situation.  But if you go rogue on me as well –“ Laidlaw’s
aristocratic features hardened “—if you decide that your Commander Riker is
worth more than the safety of the citizens of Betazed, you will find yourself
before a board of inquiry.  Do you understand me?”
            “Yes, sir,” Picard said.  
            McBride’s glance at the captain told him that understanding the
order was not likely to be the problem; hardly surprising, he thought, that an
insubordinate captain should likewise choose an insubordinate first officer.
            Laidlaw’s mercurial features had changed yet again, and he said,
“Sandy.  Why would Kyle Riker choose to trap himself in that one building?”
            “Because the trap is not set for him,” McBride answered.  “The trap
was set for his son, who has taken the bait.”
            “Surely William Riker knows that he has done so?  Taken the bait,
as you put it?” Laidlaw asked.
            “William Riker,” McBride said, “has been programmed to follow his
father’s orders – to dance to his father’s tune.  His father has set in motion
a complicated plan in which his son is the linchpin.”
            “Is this how you see it, Captain?” Laidlaw asked.
            “Commander Riker,” Picard said, still using his neutral tone of
voice, “means to atone for the actions of his father.  If there is a way to
sacrifice himself for the good of the Federation, I believe he will choose that
way.”
            “You think Commander Riker will follow his father’s plan, Sandy?”
Laidlaw persisted.
            “No,” McBride answered.  “I said his father has a plan, and that
the commander is the central piece.  Will Riker will do one of two things,
Val.  He will kill his father, or he will kill himself.”
            Laidlaw sighed, and rubbed his head.  “Kyle Riker’s plan is
complicated,” he agreed, “and still nonsensical to me.  I will see you both
when you arrive.  Laidlaw out.”
            The image of Laidlaw’s office vanished, and Picard turned away from
the computer, to gaze out of the ready room viewport. 
            “We are approaching orbit with Betazed, Captain.”  Worf’s voice
came through Picard’s comm. badge.
            “Enter standard orbit, Mr Worf,” Picard replied.  “Then have senior
staff meet me here.”
            “Should we use the tractor beam on the Hypatia when we see her,
sir?” Worf asked.
            “No, Lieutenant,” Picard said.  “Standard orbit.”
            “Aye, sir.”
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said.
            “Yes, Doctor?” Picard’s voice was still neutral, but the anger
seemed to have dissipated, and to McBride’s practised ears, he heard the
unmistakable sound of depression.
            “You said on the transporter pad that you were going after Will
regardless of any admiral’s orders,” McBride reminded him.  He waited, and when
Picard was still silent, he said, “Is that still true, now that you’ve been
given a direct order not to interfere?”
            Picard did not turn around.  “What would I care about a board of
inquiry, Doctor,” he said, “if Will were dead?”
            His instinct, as a Betazoid, was to close the distance between
himself and Picard, and offer the man a gesture of physical comfort.  Instead,
he said, “Will chose to live, to try for a future with you.  How committed do
you think he is, to that?”
            Picard shrugged.  “Sometimes I think I don’t know Will at all,” he
said.  “He does so many things that baffle me….”
            “Such as steal a shuttle and go after his father?” McBride asked.
            “Data had no business showing him that communication,” Picard
answered, turning around.  “But I would have done the same thing.”
            “Then what is it about what he’s done that baffles you?”
            “He’s gone to protect me,” Picard said, “when I am not the target,
nor have I ever been.  Had he been well, he might have realised that.  But I
don’t think he has the capacity to withstand the games his father will play
with him, and I think he knows he doesn’t, and I think it doesn’t matter.  I’m
not convinced, you see,” Picard said, and McBride could hear profound sadness
in his voice, “that anything matters, to Will.”
            “I think,” McBride said gently, after a moment, “that that is what
you fear.”
            Picard looked up, but there was no hope in his eyes.  “He will do
what he needs to do, to save the Federation.  He will view it as a bonus if it
means sacrificing himself.”
            “You don’t think he values the promise he made to you?” McBride
asked.
            “I don’t think the promise he made to me,” Picard answered, “has
any hope in hell of surviving his father.”
            McBride thought about all the many things he could say to Picard,
and dismissed them.  Picard was an honourable man who was currently justifying
his intended insubordination to a direct order to himself.  In order to disobey
Valentine’s order, he had to convince himself that Will would not survive his
confrontation with his father.  Anything he, McBride, could say in
contradiction to that idea simply wouldn’t be believed. 
            Instead, he said, “Jean-Luc.  When you go to him, will you take me
with you?  I think you could use me, and I know I could help him.”
            Picard said carefully, “I am choosing an away team to join Admiral
Laidlaw.  If you are asking to be part of that away team, yes.”
            He resisted the urge to smile.  “Thank you.”
 
 
           
            The senior staff took their seats.  Each one of them carefully
didn’t look at him, sitting to the left of Picard, and he realised, suddenly,
that he was in Will’s seat, and he wondered if protocol would have him stand
and give way to Commander Data.  He started to rise, and then thought better of
it.
            “We are in standard orbit, sir,” Lt Worf said. 
            “Keep monitoring for Commander Riker’s arrival,” Picard ordered.
            “Aye, sir,” Worf answered, booting up the viewscreen once again.
            “When this is over,” Picard said, his voice low, “I expect you will
–all – give me a full accounting of your actions concerning Mr Riker.” 
            This, McBride thought, was the Picard that Will saw on a daily
basis, a man in perfect control and command; a man whose expectations were met
on a regular basis by the most competent men and women of Starfleet, and,
McBride realised, if they were not, he would know the reasons why.  He could
see how Will could be attracted to such strength; how Will could see a father-
figure who would both protect and challenge him. 
            “I have been given orders to assemble my away team, and to join
Admiral Laidlaw at Starfleet headquarters on the surface.  I have also been
given,” Picard said, “direct orders not to interfere with the Hypatia’s
landing, nor to interfere with whatever Commander Riker intends to do.  I have
been told that if I disobey these orders in any way, I will be subject to a
board of inquiry.” 
            “It is reasonable to assume, sir,” Commander Data said, “that if
you disobey such an order you would be subject to an inquiry.”
            “Yes, Mr Data, it is reasonable to assume that,” Picard agreed.
            “Captain,” Worf said, “the Hypatia has landed in Rixx.”
            “And Commander Riker?”
            “He is no longer aboard the shuttle, sir,” Worf replied.
            “He has transported himself to his father,” McBride said, “as we
expected him to do.”
            “Jean-Luc,” Beverly began. 
            “Mr La Forge,” Picard said, “you will have the bridge.  Mr Data,
you will lead the away team to the surface.”
            “Captain,” Worf said. 
            “What is it, Lieutenant?”  McBride could hear the stress in
Picard’s voice.
            “There has been an explosion on the surface, sir,” Worf said.  “In
the capital.”
            “Can you see where, Worf?” Deanna asked, looking to him, perhaps
merely in his capacity as a fellow Betazoid, fear rising in her eyes.
            “It has begun,” he said.  “There is no longer any time, Captain. 
If we are to save him, we must go now.”
            “Choose your away team, Data,” Picard said, standing.  “Dr Crusher,
perhaps you had better get a medical team ready for the surface.”
            “On my way, Captain,” Beverly said, leaving.
            “Captain,” Worf began again, and Picard stopped, halfway to the
doors.  He said nothing, merely gazing at the lieutenant whose own face belied
no emotion at all.  “Incoming message from Admiral Laidlaw.  Sir.”
            “Mr La Forge,” Picard said.  “Perhaps you could inform the Admiral
that the away team is already beaming to the surface.”
            “Aye, sir,” La Forge said.
            “Doctor,” Picard said.  “You’re with me.”
            “Captain?  What should I tell the admiral when he asks where you
and Dr McBride are?” Commander Data’s voice was the even tone it always was,
but McBride could hear that perhaps he was genuinely concerned.
            “Tell him,” Picard said, “that I will be pleased to see him at the
Board of Inquiry.”
           
           
            They stopped at Picard’s quarters.
            “Have you ever shot a phaser, Doctor?” Picard asked, entering the
dimly-lit room.
            McBride followed him in.  “I’ve been trained,” he answered.  “But
it wouldn’t help my patients – most of the time – “ he smiled briefly “ -- for
me to be armed.”
            Picard paused, his phaser in his hand.  “No,” he said, slowly. 
“The question is, will it help this particular patient, for you to be armed? 
Because whoever else is likely to be in that flat --- be it Captain Riker or
Admiral García – will be armed, and will not hesitate to shoot.”
            “Are you giving me a choice, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked.  “Because if
you are, I would prefer not to carry a weapon.  I am a civilian doctor, not a
member of Starfleet.”
            “I may not be able to protect you, Doctor,” Picard said.  “I may
not have the time –“
            “And you may not want to make the choice,” McBride finished.  “I
would not ask you to choose protecting me over Will, Jean-Luc.  I can take care
of myself.”
            Picard attached his phaser and said, “Indeed. I hope that you are
right, Doctor.”
            McBride said, quietly, “Jean-Luc.  You need to think very carefully
about what you are doing.  I understand that you have experience in all types
of confrontations.  But this –“
            “Doctor, I don’t have time for a lecture now,” Picard said.  “At
any moment your cousin is going to realise that I am not part of the away
team.  Are you coming with me?  Yes or no?”
            McBride looked at the captain, who was projecting steely calm but
who was actually a conflagration of emotions, regardless of what he claimed. 
He said, “Do you remember when Will held Joao da Costa hostage?”
            Picard, striding towards the doors, stopped and turned around. 
“Yes,” he said, and McBride could see that his patience was at an end.
            “I was dealing with Billy, then,” McBride said, “with Billy’s fear
and rage, and his impotence in resolving his pain.  Billy and William, the one
with the pain and rage, the other with the intellect and fear, are now both
merged back into Will – but this process is not finished, Captain.  Any type of
severe stress or shock or a further trauma induced by his father and Will will
dissociate into these separate selves again.  You cannot – as much as you would
like to – beam into that flat and kill Kyle Riker.  You must not.  Jean-Luc,”
McBride said, because the captain had turned around and was walking through the
doors into the corridor.  “Listen to me.  Stop.”
            “We don’t have the time –“  Picard was as close to shouting as
McBride had ever seen him.
            “Jean-Luc.  Listen to me.”  He grabbed Picard’s arm, and forced him
to stop; noting that the captain had – very briefly – considered swinging at
him.  “Saving Will physically is not enough.  There has to be a Will to save. 
Do you understand?”
            “What are you suggesting?”  The words were still clipped, but at
least the captain was listening.
            “You cannot be the one to kill Kyle Riker, if Kyle Riker needs to
be killed,” McBride said.  “You cannot kill Will’s father.  He can’t kill him
either – the trauma will be too severe – but if you want your relationship to
continue past this point in time, this is something you must not do.”
            “You’ve refused to take a phaser,” Picard objected.
            McBride took a deep breath, because even though he was not a
violent man at all, he was all too aware of the passage of time, and Picard’s
intransigence was becoming an issue of its own.  “Jean-Luc,” he said, and he
said it as quietly and as calmly as he could, given the circumstances.  “I
don’t need a phaser.  I have been dealing with situations just like this one my
entire professional life.  I am trained to defuse these types of situations.  I
know what to do.  I am asking you – yes, be armed – but let me handle this. 
Let me handle Kyle Riker.  Let me handle William Riker.  You can take care of
whoever else you think is there.  But for once, Jean-Luc, let someone else
lead.”
            Picard said, “You think you can negotiate this to a safe
conclusion?”
            “I am Will’s doctor,” McBride said.  “Yes.”
            “Then I repeat what I said before.  I hope you are right.”
            “I am asking you to trust me to do my job,” McBride said.
            Picard was silent.  “You have a plan?” he asked.
            “I do,” McBride answered.
            “You have until the transporter pad to tell me,” Picard said, and
began walking to the turbo lift.
            “Good,” McBride said, and explained what they were likely to find.
            They were met by the away team in the transporter room – Commander
Data, Lieutenant Worf, Deanna, and Beverly’s medical team.
            “You have the coordinates, Chief?” Picard asked of O’Brien.
            “Aye, sir,” O’Brien said.
            “There have been two more explosions in the capital, sir,”
Commander Data informed them.
            “We’re using Cargo Bay Three for casualties, Captain,” Beverly
said.
            “Acknowledged, Doctor.  Two to beam down, Chief O’Brien,” Picard
said, and through the acrid smoke as he materialised, McBride heard Will say in
an eerily calm voice, “Do it then.  Kill me.”
***** Chapter 120 *****
Chapter Summary
     The fight between Will and "Jeff" Garcia continues.
Chapter Notes
     Parricide is the killing of one's parent. Current statistics for
     parricide show that only 2% of the population arrested for homicide
     were for parricide during the years 1976-1999; fathers are killed
     more often than mothers; sons, either juvenile or adult, are more
     likely to kill than daughters; and firearms are most often the
     weapons of choice. A significant portion of the population of
     parricides did so to stop ongoing abuse. For those sons who kill
     their fathers to end the cycle of abuse, mental health interventions
     are needed immediately to deal with the feelings of shame, guilt, and
     suicidal ideation; residential treatment is strongly recommended.
Chapter One Hundred Twenty
 
 
 
 
            I shot him.
            The blast hit him in the torso and threw him back and then doubled
him over, and I could smell the burning of his tunic and his skin.  He
collapsed onto his knees and then to the floor, his muscles still twitching and
the stench of urine filling the room.  He’d fallen close to García but not
close enough for their bodies to touch.
            I shot him.
            I tried to think through the smoke and the fog inside my head; how
many minutes did I have before García regained consciousness?  The math seemed
to be beyond me; the stun setting could last maybe ten minutes or so on a
healthy, uninjured man but I’d broken his nose and his cheekbone, and he’d hit
the floor hard….
            I shot him.
            I couldn’t remember what I was supposed to be doing.  I knew that
there was something I was forgetting, but I couldn’t organise my thoughts.  I
could feel myself sliding down the wall, even though I was too close to the
hole for it to be safe I simply couldn’t stop my legs from giving out.  I’d
dropped the phaser but I couldn’t see it because of all the smoke; it was
making my eyes burn and water.  I should put it back on the stun setting.  I
should get up and find my comm. badge.  I should make sure García was
immobilised.  I should report in to the captain.
            I shot him.
            I was coughing, or maybe I was crying.  I didn’t know.  The
numbness was creeping up my legs again, marching in its inexorable way towards
turning me back into stone.  It would be nice, I thought, if it would just
reach my stomach, so the pain and the nausea would end; and then I found myself
doubled over and puking what little remained of the grape-flavoured drink Ogawa
or da Costa or someone had forced me to drink.
            I shot him.
            The cottony feeling was back.  I wiped the puke off my mouth with
my sleeve.  My head had finally stopped bleeding, but my chest hurt, and I
wondered if my father – when he’d grabbed me so tightly that first time – if
he’d cracked a rib.  It felt as if my ribs were damaged.  I coughed again,
choking up bile this time.  How many minutes did I have?  What was I supposed
to be doing again?
            I shot him.
            The silence was strange.  For some reason the door to the hallway
was open, and I wondered who’d opened it.  Had my father gotten as far as the
doorway before he’d turned around and started walking towards me?  Maybe Balum
hadn’t shut it all the way, and the force of the explosions had swung it open. 
I wondered if Balum had comm’d Laidlaw yet.  Oh.  That was what I was supposed
to be doing.  My comm. badge was in the other room.  I struggled to my knees,
my trousers now wet from the puke on the floor – what had the woman’s name
been?  Agam.  That’s right.  My father had said she would have been very
unhappy with the hole I’d put in her wall.  She’d be unhappy with the puke too,
I thought, and then I remembered she was dead.
            I shot him.
            I stood up, my head pounding, my stomach clenching, even though
there was absolutely nothing in it.  Think, Riker.  The comm. badge was in the
other room; he’d tossed it on the floor.  It was hard to breathe; obviously, at
least one or two of my ribs were broken.  I rubbed my eyes with my sleeve and
then realised I was just making things worse.  My uniform was covered in ash
and puke; rubbing my eyes was just going to make them burn more.  I should just
let the tears come, I thought.  It was the body’s way of clearing the irritants
out of my eyes.  I stumbled down the hallway, past the sucking air of the hole,
shutting out the chaos of the streets below that I could hear; I couldn’t deal
with that now.  That was Laidlaw’s job, and perhaps that’s why no one had
come.  I was just a small problem when there were explosions and civilian
deaths in the capital.  A command control point had been set up, no doubt,
coordinated by Laidlaw and whoever his aide-de-camp and ops officers were; the
captain was probably coordinating search efforts and the Enterprise was
undoubtedly being used for casualties.
            I shot him.
            My comm. badge was on the floor, just as I’d known it would be.  I
walked into the room where my father had held Balum.  Another wave of dizziness
hit me as I bent over to pick it up and I fell to my knees, jarring both my
head and my ribs.  I tasted blood on my lips and realised I was bleeding again,
and as I picked up my comm. badge I realised too that it didn’t matter.  It
didn’t matter.
            I shot him, and it didn’t matter anymore.
            I attached my comm. badge to my uniform and slowly stood.  The bare
planks of the barn felt cold beneath my bare feet.  I coughed again, choking
over the coppery tang of blood and the fetid stench of death.  It had been
Billy, not me, who’d picked up the hammer, even though I could remember how
heavy it felt in my hand.  He’d used two hands to bring it up, drawing in his
breath so he didn’t have to smell the shit and the piss and the blood; two
hands to bring it down, and her skull cracked just like the cracking of an
egg.  And then he dropped the hammer, crying, and I reached down and closed her
eyes, and then I waited.  I stood there and waited for him to come and kill me.
            I shot him.
            “Riker to Picard,” I said, tapping into my comm. badge, but what
could I say?  That I had killed yet again, and I remembered the expression on
Jean-Luc’s face when I’d adjusted the phaser to its very last setting and
disintegrated Yuta right in front of him.  There was no response, and I didn’t
expect there to be one.  I’d only been guessing that the network had been
damaged in the shutting during the explosions.  I wondered if all the networks
were down.
            As I turned around I saw a glimpse of something in the mirror on
the hallway wall, and I stumbled, dropping my shoulders as García’s kick struck
me, glancing off my left shoulder and spinning me around.  I kept myself tight
and whirled around, extending my elbow towards his throat but hitting his
collarbone instead.  He grabbed me and dragged me into the hallway, banging me
against the wall, sending blood flying from my scalp.  I brought my head up
sharply into his jaw, and then knocked him into the kitchen, intending to push
him into the counter and simply pummel him, but he had the phaser in his hand;
which one, I didn’t know.
            “I didn’t think you had it in you, Billy,” he said.
            “What are you talking about?” I wiped the blood from my face.
            “You shot Kyle.”
            I felt frozen, like a frost giant.  “I told him I would,” I said. 
“I told him not to come near me.”
            “I didn’t think it would work.”  García was smiling, the same smile
he’d given me when he’d taken his cock out that first time.  “All the years,
grooming you.  I told him he was crazy.”
            “I’m not Billy,” I said, backing up.  I was in the hallway now.
            “You know,” García said, “I don’t really give a shit which
personality you currently are.  Back into the dayroom.  Move.”
            “He never told me the plan,” I said, as I moved slowly closer to
the hole.  I coughed again, the pain from my ribs stabbing into my lungs.
            “You don’t need to know the plan, Billy,” García said.  “You’ll
know what to do when it’s time, just as he said you would.”
            “You said you wouldn’t hurt me this time.”
            “That,” García answered, “was before you shot your father.”
            It was my father’s phaser he had, the one still set on stun.  Mine
was somewhere on the floor, its setting on Level Two, hidden by the smoke and
my inability to see through the tears.
            “I told him,” I repeated.
            “So you did.” García adjusted the phaser.
            “Why is the door open?” I asked.  “I thought Lt Balum shut it when
he left.”
            “You are crazy,” García said.  It was as if he were talking about
the weather.  “After all the time and expense, though, I’m not sure you’re
worth the effort to continue to control.”
            “I can be good,” I said.
            “Oh, you can’t fool me with your bullshit anymore,” García
responded.  “What I need you to do, Billy, or Will, or whoever the fuck you
are, is pick up the handcuffs off the floor and put them on your father’s
case.”
            I could smell blood again.  “I don’t know where they are,” I said.
            “Then I suggest you get on your hands and knees and look for them,”
García answered, “because at this point, if you don’t start cooperating, I’d
just as soon kill you and go for the shuttle myself.”
            “Yes, sir,” I said.  I got down on my hands and knees, and started
fumbling through the smoke for the handcuffs, sweeping my hand along until I
found the phaser.  A small piece of glass wedged itself into my finger, and I
remembered I still had the sherd that I’d cut my father with in my pocket.  “So
you’re just going to leave him here, then?” I asked.  The handcuffs should be
near Agam’s little decorations that had fallen on the floor; too bad the second
sculpture hadn’t fallen.
            García was walking slowly a few metres away, the phaser still
trained on me.  “I’ll beam him onto the shuttle,” he said.
            I found the handcuffs.  They were made from some metal alloy; they
were heavy and made to do damage to the wrists of whoever wore them. “There’s
glass on the floor,” I said.  “I’ve cut myself again.”
            “Did you find the handcuffs?” he asked.
            “Why is the door open?” I said, rising slowly.  The handcuffs were
in my hand; they weren’t a baseball or a soapstone sculpture, but distraction,
I thought, was still the best weapon I had.  “What happened to Lt Balum?”
            “I killed him,” García said.  “He’d outlived his usefulness.  He’s
in the hallway.”
            I threw the handcuffs, just a short, sharp throw; there was no room
or time for a windup, and it was the last thing García had expected me to do;
the handcuffs hit him in the face, blood flying everywhere; the phaser went
off, hitting the chandelier, sending glass and plaster all over me.  He
grunted, and swore, banging into the wall, and then he shot at me again, and I
went down, my body and limbs no longer in my control.  I lay on the floor, my
body twitching; there was nothing I could do, except listen to García moaning
with pain, his breathing harsh and raspy.
            “I think it’s time to change the plan,” I heard him say.
            I couldn’t say anything.  How many minutes did I have before I
could move again?  I couldn’t remember.  And then I thought, I shot my father.
            What difference did it make?
***** Chapter 121 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will's fight for survival continues.
Chapter Notes
     Again, I'd like to thank my friend Mobius, for his advice on the
     technology of phaser blasts. I would also like to thank my son, for
     allowing me to direct him as I've staged this fight (he's an actor,
     so he's used to being told where to stand), and to my friend metzman,
     for talking me through the fight scene as well. Any mistakes made
     during this fight are purely my own. It's been a very long time since
     I've done any hand-to-hand combat.
Chapter One Hundred Twenty-One
 
 
 
            He kicked me, sharply, in the ribs, and I felt my breath draw in as
the pain pierced me, and then I couldn’t breathe.  He kicked me again, and I
doubled up, trying to protect my injured ribs, my breaths now just as harsh as
his.
            “Hijo de puta,” he said, and kicked me a third time, only this time
I was ready for him, and I grabbed his leg, yanking him towards me, so that he
fell over me; I rolled over and began to pummel his face, and I could hear
Billy – I could hear Billy chanting, “Die, you fucker, die!” over and over
again as I smashed his face in, blood and bone – but I wasn’t crying.  He
couldn’t make me cry.
            He was unconscious, and I stopped, rolling off him, the pain in my
chest doubling me over, the bile in my throat again, the ever-present acrid
smoke causing tears to stream from my eyes.  Billy said, Drag him over to the
hole and push him out, and I glanced around, to see if I could see him, but of
course, he wasn’t there.  Still, it was good to have him with me again.  I’d
felt so lost without him. Do it, Billy said again, and I could hear the rage
building in his voice.  What had my father told me about killing Admiral
García? You’ll spend the rest of your life in the psychiatric facility inSan
Franciscoif you kill him.
            “No, I won’t,” I said, standing.  Who was I talking to?  Maybe I
was talking to all of them – all of the voices that lived in my head, Billy and
William and my father and Jeff García, the nameless men in Valdez and the men
with first names only my father sometimes brought home.  “I’m already in a
psychiatric facility,” I said.  “It’s called sickbay.”
            Do it, Billy said again, and I bent down to grab García by the
arms.
            “I wouldn’t, if I were you, son,” my father said.
            I’d lost the phaser again.  Maybe García still had it.  Which one
had he grabbed, before?  My father’s or mine?
            “You’re dead,” I told him.
            “Am I?” my father asked, and he gave me his tiger-smile.
            He didn’t have a weapon.  He stood there; his tunic burned away,
his chest red and blistered, the bandage around his gut wet with blood.
            “I shot you,” I said.
            “I know you did, son,” he replied.  “I know you did.  It will be
all right.”
            Stupidly I said, “Billy wants me to kill him.”
            “Have you found Billy again, Will?” he asked.  “That’s good, son,
because you need him.  I know you’re angry, son, but it’s not Jeff you’re angry
with.”
            “I’m not?” I asked.  My head was starting to hurt, and the cottony
feeling was back.  I looked down at García – he was still out.  “You brought
him home,” I said, slowly.  “You let him do what he did to me.  You let him
hurt me.  I’m angry with you.”
            “Are you sure about that, son?” he asked, and stepped forward two
steps. 
            The sofa was still between us, his case on the back.  Where was
García’s phaser again?  I felt the sherd of glass in my pocket.
            Where was Billy?
            I stepped away from García; away from the sofa.  I could see the
door was completely open now.  Maybe I did need that psychiatric facility in
San Francisco.  I wiped García’s blood off my face.
            “You let him hurt me,” I repeated, and then I said, “You hurt me.”
            “Out of pain comes strength,” my father said.  “You’ve always known
that, son.  What doesn’t kill us makes us strong.”
            “Shut up,” I told him.  “Just shut up.”
            “Will,” he said.  “You’ve lost the phaser.  You don’t have a
weapon.  You’re still bleeding, son.  You’re in no shape to do anything
anymore.  Forget about Jeff.  He can’t hurt you now.”
            “I shot you,” I said.  “You’re supposed to be dead.”  I was moving
slowly, away from the sofa, closer to the wall.
            “I don’t have a weapon either,” he answered, walking slowly towards
me.  “So there’s nothing to be afraid of, Billy.  No one’s going to hurt you
any more.  I’m not going to hurt you.”
            “Then why are you smiling?” I asked, and then I said, “Just shut
up!  Just – stop.”
            “It’s not me you’re angry at, son,” he repeated.  “Look around you,
Will.  Where is he?  You’ve got your comm. badge on, don’t you?  You called
him, didn’t you?  So where is he?”
            My toe had found my phaser, but I didn’t go after it.  He wasn’t
here.  I’d called him, but he hadn’t answered, and he hadn’t come.  No one had.
            “The network on the shuttle is down,” I said.
            “That’s not how it works, son, and you know it.”  He was closer. 
“He’s working with Laidlaw, at the command central.  It’s more important work,
organising the crime scene, supporting the med teams, evacuating the wounded to
his ship.  You’re just not as important.”
            I wiped my face with my sleeve.  “Shut up,” I said. 
            “He’s the one you’re angry with now, son,” he said.  “I
understand.  You thought you loved him.  You thought he loved you.”
            “Stop it,” I said.  “You’re lying again.  Billy’s angry with you. 
I’m angry with you.  You’re the one who did this –“ I looked around the room
“—you’re the one who did it all.”
            “It’s all right,” he said, and he was maybe two metres away from
me.  “Have you found the phaser yet, son?  Just hand it to me, will you?”
            I kicked the phaser to him, and he bent down and picked it up.  I
saw him glance at García, and then he was smiling at me.
            “Everyone has always let you down, son,” he said.  “I know.  But
you’ve always had me, Billy.  You’re my special boy, remember?  You just come
to your old Dad, son, and let me take care of you.  Because I want to take care
of you, Will.  I want to love you.  I do love you, Billy, my special boy.”
            “I ought,” García said, struggling to stand, “to leave you two
crazy fuckers to yourselves.  Step away from him, Kyle.  The plan’s changed.”
            My father didn’t even blink, and he turned his lazy smile on
García.  “In what way, Jeff?” he asked, and I felt the hairs rise on my arms.
            “By now Laidlaw’s got the situation under control,’ García said. 
“I warned you about underestimating Laidlaw, but you’ve always been an arrogant
son-of-a-bitch.  We’re out of time, Kyle. It’s time to go.”  He held his phaser
– my father’s phaser – pointed at me.  “Back away from your old man,
Commander,” he ordered.  “Now.”
            He was backing me towards the hole.  Billy was gone.  And Jean-Luc
had never come.
            “Just what is it,” my father asked, “that you intend to do?”
            “Can you guarantee,” García asked, moving slowly towards me, “that
your crazy fuck of a son is going to cooperate?  Because if you can’t, Kyle, I
say kill him now – you were going to anyway – and let’s go.  We’ve done what
needed to be done.  He was always the icing on the cake.”
            I knew why the door was open.  I said, “Sir.  I want to be part of
the plan.”
            “You know,” my father said, his lazy smile broadening, just a bit,
“I’ve never been able guarantee that Billy would do a goddamned thing.  Isn’t
that right, Billy?” and he turned the smile on me.
            He knew I didn’t have a phaser, so I wasn’t sure what he wanted me
to do.  I backed up a few more steps and felt the air rushing around my
ankles.  I could see directly down the hall, now, even though my visibility, in
all the smoke, was limited.  I was fairly sure that I could see him, though,
crouched behind my father.
            “Dad,” I said.  Where was Billy?  I tried to find the anger, but it
was gone.  He’d been right.  I was never going to be as important to Jean-Luc
as the Enterprise was.
            “Then kill him, Kyle,” García said, and he turned the phaser on my
father.
            My father bared his teeth and then he whirled around, kicking Balum
in the head and sending him flying.  I dove towards García, who’d seen my
father’s movement and had swung wide and shot towards the wall, plaster and my
father’s case falling.  I grabbed García’s legs, pulling him down, reaching for
the phaser even as I heard yet another phaser blast go off; I was trying to get
to García’s face, or his hand, but the momentum of pulling him towards me had
given him an advantage, and he clutched my hair and shoved my face into the
floor, banging my head onto the glass-covered rug.  I brought my elbow into his
sternum, and then jerked it up into his jaw, and then I heaved him towards the
hole; and I thought I heard Billy say, “Die, you fucker, die!” but it was so
far away; there was another phaser blast; and then my father said,
            “Don’t do it, Will,”
            And I kicked García one more time.  He grabbed at my leg, pulling
me desperately with him, and I clawed at the floor, my fingers bleeding from
all those sherds of glass, and I felt rather than heard the phaser as it blew
him away, burning away my trousers and setting fire to my leg.
            “Get up,” my father said.
            I thought maybe I was crying again, but I wasn’t.  Instead, I was
stone.  “Do it, then,” I said, and my voice was frozen, just like my body. 
“Kill me.”
***** Chapter 122 *****
Chapter Summary
     McBride and Picard arrive, and the confrontation ends.
Chapter Notes
     Police define victim precipitated homicide as "an incident in which
     an individual bent on self-destruction, engages in life threatening
     and criminal behavior to force law enforcement officers to kill
     them."
     "Suicide by cop" is always an imminent threat in domestic barricade
     situations, and, as such, was what McBride feared in this particular
     situation; hence his warning to Picard. As for Kyle Riker's "plan,"
     Jeff Garcia believed it. We will never really know if Kyle Riker ever
     believed it.
Chapter One Hundred Twenty-Two
 
 
 
 
            McBride materialised in the hallway outside an open door, and was
immediately assailed by the grittiness of the smoke billowing out of the flat. 
He felt Picard close behind him, and heard him take his phaser out; visibility
was almost impossible.  There was an ominous silence to the smoke-filled flat,
a kind of flattening of sound he knew was the distortion from the explosions,
and it added to a sense of unreality to everything.  He’d told Picard that he
was used to handling this kind of situation, and that was absolutely true –
before he’d become the head of the Psychiatric Trauma Ward on Starbase 515 he’d
specialised in domestic barricade situations brought on by years in space and
the accompanying trauma of all the previous wars, the devastation of Wolf 359
and the skirmishes with the Romulans and the Cardassians and the Klingons – but
it had truly been some time since he’d been in a terrorist attack, and this
resembled terrorism just as much as it did domestic violence.  He felt Picard’s
anxiousness to enter the flat behind him, and he took a quiet step into the
doorway, Picard on his heels.  He could vaguely make out a form on the floor;
crumpled and possibly dead, and that was when he heard Will’s eerily calm
voice, as eerie as the silence had been, say,
            “Do it then.  Kill me.”
            He knew it wasn’t Kyle Riker on the floor, and as he took several
steps closer, he could see that it was Renan, and he sighed inadvertently;
there had been no one, this time, to catch him when he jumped.
            “Will,” he heard Kyle Riker say, and his voice was raspy and low,
not the suave tone he’d affected in his communications, “Will.  I don’t want to
kill you, son.”
            “Liar,” Will said, but the word had no emotion in it at all.
            Picard opened his mouth to say something, and McBride shook his
head.  He stepped closer to Renan’s body, then motioned to Picard that he
should step back and move around the sofa.  Picard nodded, once, and then
slipped around, so that now they were abreast of one another, the sofa in
between them. 
            He’s tired, McBride thought, he’s tired and he’s giving up.
            Riker coughed, an odd gurgling sound to it, and McBride realised
that under the acrid stench of the smoke he’d been smelling burning flesh.
            “You should have killed me,” Will answered.  “I wanted you to kill
me.”
            Riker said, “When was that, son?  When did you want me to kill
you?”
            “It sounded just like an egg cracking.”  It was Billy who spoke. 
“And I waited for you to kill me, but you –“
            McBride could see Riker now, moving closer to Will, slowly,
carefully, a phaser in his hand.
            “I what, son?” Riker asked, and his voice was gentle.
            “You said, You’ll have to help me clean up this mess, Billy.”  Will
was weeping, an agonised choking sound.
            “I’ve never wanted to kill you, son,” Riker said, moving yet
another step closer.  “I love you, Billy.”
            McBride said, softly, “Will.  Think about what you know to be
true.”
            Silence.  McBride could hear breathing, and hoped it was Riker’s.
            “Dr McBride?” Will asked, hesitantly, as if he were afraid that
this was one more hallucination.
            “Yes, Will,” McBride said, not moving, not wanting to close the gap
between himself and Riker, and not wanting to step around the body that was
Renan on the floor.  McBride glanced at Picard, who was holding himself rigidly
in position, and then he nodded.
            “Your Dr McBride is right, Will,” Picard said, his voice low and
warm.  “You already know what is real and true.”
            Will said, “Captain.”
            McBride nodded, and Picard answered, simply, “Yes.”
            “I’m sorry to tell you, Captain,” Riker said, and his voice had
taken on the same tone as it had in his previous communications, “but you’ve
missed most of the action.  It’s a shame, too, as Will just threw Admiral
García out the hole in the wall, there.  But then I’m sure you’re familiar with
his violence.”
            “Will’s violence, as you put it, has always been reactionary, Mr
Riker,” McBride said, sliding onto what was familiar ground.  “If he did throw
Admiral García out that hole in the wall, I’m sure he had a very good reason to
do so.”
            “You say that with such confidence, Doctor,” Riker remarked.  “And
yet Will has stabbed me and shot me, when all I have been trying to do is have
a conversation with him.”
            “I think,” McBride said, “that having a conversation, as you put
it, with Will might be a good idea, under certain parameters.  However, it
seems to me that you both need immediate medical attention.  Perhaps we might
start with that?”
            “Don’t come near me,” Will said, his voice still flat.  “I don’t
want to have a conversation with you, Dad.  We’ve had our conversation.”
            McBride watched Riker take another step.  He could see Will’s form
now, against the wall, near the gaping hole filled even now with ashy smoke. 
Riker’s hand still held the phaser, in a sort of an easy way, as if holding a
phaser were no different from holding a spoon. 
            “Perhaps you might let me assess Will’s injuries?” McBride asked,
his voice conversational, a doctor’s voice asking a parent’s permission to
attend to his child.  He waited, then, to see which direction Riker would
choose:  concerned parent?  Or damage control?
            “Are you hurt, Will?” Riker asked now.  “Did García hurt you?”
            Silence.  Again.  McBride watched Picard’s position turn from a
rigid stance to one in which he was prepared to take action.  Tension became
fluid; weight shifted.  Picard glanced at him, his eyes dark; McBride didn’t
even have to say anything – they both knew what could happen.  He would take
Riker; Picard would save Will.  If he could.
            Billy laughed, a short, sharp sound.  “You told him to hurt me,” he
said.  “And he told me that you would kill me, in the end.”
            Riker’s stance never changed, that same easy, confident pose. 
Arrogance, McBride thought, even in the face of Will’s aggression.  So sure
that he could still control both Will and Billy.  But he could still smell
singed flesh, and he knew, as he carefully stepped around Renan’s body, that
Riker knew it was over.  Whatever agenda he’d had, it had gone out that gaping
hole with Admiral García, and what was left was what he could still do to his
son.
            “And you believed him, son?” Riker asked now, his voice low;
soothing.  “You are all I have left of her.  Why would I want to kill you? 
That was never the plan, Will.”
            Will retreated.  “You should have killed me.  I have nothing left,
now.”
            So William was back as well.  He’d known Will hadn’t been prepared
to face his father, but the extent of the damage was still daunting.  He
checked on Picard, who had taken a few quiet steps closer, and then he said,
“Will.  Hold on to what you know is true.  Jean-Luc is right here, waiting for
you.  I am right here, to help you.  You and William and Billy – you all know
where you really belong.  Back on the Enterprise, with the family you’ve
chosen.  Not here, in this room.”
            “Son,” Riker said, turning now, ever so slightly, so his reptilian
eyes could watch both McBride and Picard.  “You’re hurt, and you’re tired.  I
know, son.  I’m the only one who does.  I’m the only one who knows how hard it
is, day after day, trying to show everyone that you can do it, that you’re
okay, that you can fulfill everyone’s expectations and be like everyone else
thinks you are.  I’m the only one who knows, Will.  After a while, it’s too
hard.  I know, son.  It’s all right.  You don’t have to pretend, with me.  You
can be exactly who you are.”
            “Shut up,” Will said.
            “Doctor,” Riker said, his tone changing yet again.  “Captain
Picard.  Let’s talk for a minute, shall we?  Since there isn’t much time?”
            “I have all the time in the world, Captain,” Picard said, “even if
you don’t.”
            “Perhaps so,” Riker answered, easily.  “But Will doesn’t.  You’ve
told me that you love him – yet where were you, Picard, when he was fighting
for his life?  When he called out to you?  Where was he, Will?  Because he may
be here now, but he’s too late, isn’t he?  It’s done, now.  There’s no going
back.”
            Will said, or perhaps it was William, “Dr McBride won’t let them
take me.  I can go with him, to Starbase 515.”
            So Will thought he was going to be arrested for the death of
García, McBride realised.  Of course he did.  And then it occurred to him that
if Will hadn’t killed Christian Larsen, and he hadn’t killed Rosie, how likely
was it – how truly likely was it – that he had killed Admiral García? 
            “Of course you can come with me, Will,” McBride said, using his G
major tone, as he stepped a few more paces down the hallway.  “We can return to
the Enterprise.  Or you can come with me to my unit, if you would feel safer
there.  That choice has always been yours.”  Will said nothing, and McBride
continued, “What is it you’d like to discuss, Mr Riker?”
            “I can give you certain names, Picard,” Riker said, casually.  “I
think at this point your friend Laidlaw is going to want names, don’t you? 
Especially since you’re here, rather than organising the disaster relief with
him?”  McBride was close enough to see Riker’s smile.  “Seems the Enterprise
runs on insubordination.”
            “In exchange for?” Picard asked.  He’d moved closer, again.
            “I’ve a shuttle, waiting,” Riker said.  “Safe passage to it.  For
Will.  And for me.”
            “And will you make it to the shuttle, Mr Riker?” McBride asked. 
“Because you must be feeling the pain now.  The numbness only lasts for so
long, after all.  Once you begin to feel the pain, you won’t be able to
function.  I’m not sure you would be able to fly the shuttle, Mr Riker.”
            “Are you saying my options are limited, Doctor,” Riker asked,
turning away from Will to look at McBride, “or are you saying I have no options
at all?”
            “I am saying that, at this point, Mr Riker,” McBride answered, and
he took another small step forward, “you should consider what is best for
Will.”
            “Ah,” Riker said.  “And you don’t think it’s best for Will to be
with me? Is that what you are saying?  Perhaps Will needs to decide what he
wants to do.  What’s best for him.  Whether at this point in his life he needs
to be in a situation where there will be constant demands for what he can no
longer give.  After all, Picard,” Riker said, turning away from McBride, “look
at what you’ve done to him.”  He paused, and then added, “With all your
demands,” and the way he said it left no doubt in McBride’s mind exactly which
demands he was referencing.
            “Will,” McBride said now, and he was using the voice he’d used so
many times before, to bring Will out of the bad space, to give him something he
could understand and hold on to, “Will.  I am not going to ask you to choose. 
No one is going to make you choose, Will.  There is no either/or here.” 
McBride paused, and then he said, “Billy.  Can you ask Will to say that he’s
listening to me?”
            And then Billy said, of all the things that Billy could say, Billy
said, “You said I could open the door.”
            McBride felt his shoulders and his hands relax.  “Yes, Billy,” he
said, and he allowed his G major tone to permeate the smoke-filled room.  “You
remember me.  I’m Will’s doctor.  You opened the door and Jean-Luc and I were
there, waiting for you, to keep you safe.”
            “I’m listening,” Will said.
            “Good,” McBride answered.  He thought, if I can somehow reach Jean-
Luc -- “Can you remember what I just said, Will?”
            “You said I don’t have to choose,” Will repeated.
            “That’s right,” McBride agreed.  “You don’t have to choose.  I’m
not going to make you.  Jean-Luc isn’t going to, either.  There are always
other possibilities, other choices.”
            “I can choose to end this,” Will said, and his exhaustion was
palpable.  “Do you understand, Dad?  Is that the choice you want to me to
make?  Because that’s the only one –“ Will stopped, as if he were trying to
hold himself upright, as if he were trying so hard not to just slide down the
wall and put his face in his hands “—that’s the only one I can see right now. 
I shot you.  I shot you, and I killed Admiral García,” and now he was speaking
calmly, as if the words he were going to say were not the most important words
he would ever say, “and I’m sorry, Jean-Luc, I’m sorry, I know what I promised
you, but I can’t do it, I can’t do this anymore, I can’t be Billy and William
and me and live with what I’ve done –“
            Riker said, “Will, son, you don’t need to do this –“
            “Come to me, Will,” McBride said, “just come to me, the way Billy
did when he opened the door – you’ll let Will come to me, won’t you, Kyle, if
you don’t want him to go to Jean-Luc?”
            But Will was already standing on the edge of what had been Agam
Taron’s dayroom wall, and the wind was wafting the smoke around him, and he was
holding with one hand onto the crumbled edge of the wall itself, and the other
hand was hanging still, as if it were already frozen.
            “Will,” Picard said, his voice soft and low but McBride could still
hear the echo of command in it, “Will, mon cher, you don’t have to make any
choice at all.  You can go to your father, or you can go to your doctor, or we
can just stay here and talk…We will work it out, I promise you.”
            “Shut up,” Will said, “just shut up; why can’t you all just shut
up?”
            McBride wondered, then, if it were Billy or William who was telling
him to jump.
            “Okay, Will,” McBride agreed.
            Silence, again, just the sound of the wind coming through the wall
and the sirens still wailing down on the street below.
            “I thought,” Will said, “I thought, somehow, that I could do this.”
            “I know, Will,” McBride said.
            “But it’s all turned to shit.  Balum’s dead, and García’s dead, and
– and Deanna’s home is gone…”  His voice trailed off.  Then he said, and he
sounded as if he’d found himself, just for a moment, “Can you tell me, Dad, can
you tell me, without lying to me, what it was you wanted me to do in San
Francisco?  Because I think I deserve to know that one thing.”
            “Does it matter now, son?” Riker asked, and he’d slowly slid his
way across the floor until he was almost within an arm’s reach of Will – and
McBride saw that the phaser was gone.
            “Yes,” Will said.  “You spent my whole life training me.  I should
know what I was trained for.”
            “We were going to take you to Jeremy Rossa,” Riker said.  “He’s
meeting with Jaresh-Inyo.”
            Will said, tonelessly, “You killed Rosie so I could grow up to
assassinate the Federation president?” He stood silently, staring out into the
smoke, and then he added, his voice raw, “I called you, and you didn’t come.”
            “I came as quickly as I could,” Picard answered, gently. 
            “I’m so tired,” Will said.
            “I know you are, hen,” McBride agreed, and he was at the edge of
the sofa now, with Picard not more than a metre away.
            Billy whispered, “I don’t want to do this anymore,” and as he swung
his leg forward, out over the edge, Kyle Riker reached out, grabbing Will’s arm
and yanking him back; but he’d pulled too hard, and as Will swung round, Riker
lurched forward; for one long second in time the two of them stood there,
father and son, swaying; Will grabbed at the wall, to stop their slide, but it
was Riker’s weight that was pulling them both, and there was no way, McBride
realised, that either he or Picard could get there in time –
            “Dad?” Will asked, and Riker answered, smiling,
            “It’s all right, son.  Just let me go.”
            Will let him go.
***** Chapter 123 *****
Chapter Summary
     Will begins the healing process.
Chapter Notes
     I have so many people to thank for supporting me throughout the
     writing of this novel. My early supporters, mabb5 and picardq123,
     wherever they may be now. And my triumvirate of friends, support
     staff, and beta readers: eimeo, soavezefiretto, and metzman. Without
     their constant, steadfast support I'm sure I would have lost my way.
     Also, to all the other readers who left comments, and gave kudos, and
     read this novel: Thank you.
     Special thanks, to eimeo, for giving me Stoch and helping me with all
     things Vulcan; soavezefiretto, for continuity and kindness; metzman,
     for the talks and the forty-five minute discussion of fighting
     techniques, to my son, for allowing me to direct him in the fight
     scenes, and my Star Trek friend and FX guy extraordinaire, Para
     Mobius, for everything technical -- warp speed, and shuttlecraft, and
     timelines, and weapons, and the science of comm. badges and phasers.
     Thanks too to all the special rabbis and to the two brilliant child
     psychiatrists I have known, who went into the creation of Dr Alasdair
     McBride.
     Lastly, but not least, thank you to my children, who are survivors of
     PTSD and who remain the bravest people I know.
 
 
 
Chapter One Hundred Twenty-Three
 
 
 
 
            I closed my eyes, so I didn’t have to see him fall.  Part of me
wanted to join him, and I felt myself start to shake; but as I turned back
towards the hole I was grabbed from behind, and then Jean-Luc pulled me
backwards.  I stood for a moment, with his arms wrapped around me, and then my
legs gave out and I slid downwards, collapsing onto the glass and plaster-
covered carpeting.
            He crouched down beside me, and put his hand on my shoulder, and
then he touched my face.  “You’re safe now,” he said.
            “Is he really gone?” I asked, because I hadn’t watched him, and I
couldn’t wrap my head around it.  Then I said, “I let him go.  I let him die.”
            “Let’s get you up,” Jean-Luc answered, holding out his hand, but I
didn’t want to get up.  I thought maybe I could just spend the rest of my life
there on the floor.  Billy was gone again; my father was dead.  Had Billy
killed my father, or had I?
            “Jean-Luc,” McBride said, gently.  “Give him time.  Why don’t you
go in the hall and comm. Valentine?  Let him know what’s happened here.”
            “Doctor –“
            McBride said, “Let me talk to him.”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, standing.  He touched my hair, briefly, and
then he walked away.
            “You’re injured,” McBride said, sitting next to me.
            I didn’t say anything.  My injuries weren’t life-threatening. 
There were no excuses for what I’d done.
            “I’m going to ask Jean-Luc to transport us both to sickbay,” he
continued, his voice still calm, as if nothing at all had happened.
            I shrugged.  “Sickbay won’t protect me,” I said, “and my injuries
are not severe enough to preclude my being placed in custody.”
            “Your father,” McBride said, “saved you, by giving you permission
to let him go.  He wanted to die, Will.  From the very first, he wanted to
die.”
            “What do you mean?” I looked at him.  His face was the same as it
always was, when he worked with me.  Calm.  Peaceful.
            “You are in shock now,” he answered.  “When you are well enough to
go over what has happened here, I think you will find that you already
understand what I am saying.  Your father had lived a very long life, for what
he was.  The only thing that held any meaning for him anymore was you.  He
wanted, I think, for you to end his pain.  His boredom.  His inability to be
real.  And for those brief moments, Will, you gave him what he wanted.  You
made him real.”
            “I don’t understand,” I said.  I was listening for Billy – Billy
would have called this bullshit, I thought – but Billy had fallen with my
father.  They had both, in the end, left me.  Again.
            “Your love for him made him real,” McBride said.  “He asked for
your help, and you gave it to him, even though it hurt you to do so.  And so he
was, for those few seconds, a human being, a father, for the first time in his
life.”
            “No,” I said, and I could feel the tears on my face.
            “You let him go because you are who you are, Will,” McBride told
me.  “You are your three separate parts, now whole.”
            I wiped my face.  “Three parts?” I asked.  I didn’t feel whole.  I
felt – I felt broken.
            “Yes,” McBride answered.  “You have always had those three parts,
ever since you were seven years old.  William, and Billy, and Rosie.  It was,
Will,” he said, resting his hand on my shoulder, “Rosie who let your father
go.”
            I knew it was true.  My Rosie had always been a part of me.  Maybe
the best part of me.
            Jean-Luc walked back in.  “Laidlaw has given us permission to
return to the Enterprise,” he said.  “He understands William’s need for
continued treatment.”
            “And for you, Jean-Luc?” McBride asked, standing.
            Jean-Luc smiled, the small, ironic one.  “Admirals Nechayev and
Shanthi are on their way,” he answered.  “We are to remain in orbit.”
            “I will, of course, testify on your behalf,” McBride said. 
            Jean-Luc walked over to me, and offered me his hand.  “Come, Will,”
he said, “let’s get you home.”
 
 
 
           
            I thought perhaps the biobed had become the new brig, but after
several hours of poking and prodding, and hypo sprays, and imaging, and fluids,
Beverly gave da Costa permission to help me return to my room.  I swung my legs
over the bed, the stupid gown gaping in the back, and waited for the dizziness
to subside.
            “Ready, Commander?” da Costa asked.  He’d been grinning, when I’d
beamed back into sickbay, but after hours in the biobed he’d managed to calm
down, and was back to his usual self.
            “I owe you an apology,” I said, as he helped me to stand.  “It
seems I’m always apologising to you for something.”
            “You’ll have to show me what you did,” da Costa answered equably,
as if I’d called him a name or something, instead of taking him out and tying
him up.
            “Why?” I asked.  He handed me my robe, and I put it on.  Even
though everyone in sickbay had seen my ass countless times, they still weren’t
going to get a show.
            “So I can use it on you,” he answered, and he was trying so very
hard not to smirk, “the next time you choose to be an asshole.”
            I was too surprised to say anything.  “You realise I do outrank
you,” I said, finally.
            He was not intimidated.  “Put me on report,” he said, walking me
back to my room.
            I found I was grinning – and it felt as if I hadn’t smiled in
weeks.  Years, maybe.  “Okay,” I said, “I will.”
            He gave me my pyjamas, and waited while I put them on.
            “Do I have to get into bed?” I asked.  “I don’t think I can sleep.”
            “Yes,” he said.  “I know you’ve been hours in the biobed, but
you’re running on empty, sir, physically and emotionally.  Dr McBride has
prepared your medications for you, and I promise you, sir, they will knock you
out.  He’ll be in here in five minutes or so.  He’s with Dr Crusher and Captain
Picard now.”
            “The captain’s here?” I asked.  He’d offered to help me into the
bed, but Beverly had fixed my ribs, two of which had been broken, and so I was
still sore, and stiff, but I wasn’t incapacitated.  My scalp had needed to be
closed, as my father had said; she’d taken care of my cuts and bruises, and the
phaser burns on my leg.  The worst of my injuries was what the acrid smoke had
done to my lungs; she’d given me oxygen, but it would take time.
            “Yes, sir,” da Costa answered.  “He asked to be apprised of your
leaving the biobed.”
            “They’re going to debrief me?” Da Costa was right; I was tired.
            “I don’t think so, Commander.  You’re just out of the biobed.”
            “Medication and then knock me out.”
            “Yes, sir.”
            “Am I in custody?”
            Da Costa gave me a wry look.  “It’s not my ship, sir,” he said.
            I would have laughed, if my chest hadn’t hurt so much.  “I thought
we were even,” I said, after a few moments.
            “Oh?” da Costa was sitting in Jean-Luc’s chair.
            “I apologised,” I said, “and I have to teach you how to use the
pressure point.  I put you on report, for calling a commanding officer an
asshole.”
            “And when you’re the First Officer again, Mr Riker,” da Costa said,
“you can put me on report.”
            “You’re a hard man, da Costa,” I said.
            “You’re a good teacher,” he answered.
            “Don’t make me laugh,” I said.
            “Dr Crusher will give you something for the pain.”
            “A veritable cornucopia of drugs.”  I lay back against the pillows
and closed my eyes. 
            I must have fallen asleep for a few minutes, because I heard Dr
McBride say, “Will.  I’m just here to give you your medication.”
            I opened my eyes.  “What are you giving me?” I asked.
            “Just your usual medication,” he answered.  “And something to help
you sleep.  Dr Crusher will be here in a minute, with the rest of your meds.”
            “You’re not giving me the stuff that makes everything distant?” I
asked.
            He sat on the edge of my bed.  “Do you think you need that, Will? 
Or do you think you should need it?”
            I opened my mouth, but I couldn’t speak.  He waited, patiently.  I
wiped my eyes.
            “It hurts,” I said.
            “Yes,” he answered.
            I didn’t say anything, and I felt my hand go automatically to the
blanket.  He reached out and took my hand and held it.
            “I have to feel this pain,” I said, finally.
            “Yes,” he agreed.  “No more turning into stone.  As we get older,
our parents die, and we must grieve for them.  It is the natural order of
things.”
            “I killed him,” I said.
            “No, Will.  He killed himself.”
            “I don’t want to feel this.”
            “I know you don’t.”  He was still holding my hand.
            “You won’t give me the medication.”
            “Of course I will,” he answered.  “But you will have to process
this, the same way that everyone does.  The suicide of a parent is very hard,
Will.  But he didn’t want you to enmesh yourself in this.  This one time,
that’s what he didn’t want.”
            “Okay.”  He let my hand go, and gave me the hypo spray.  “You
already had it prepared,” I said.
            He smiled.  “We’ll have our session tomorrow,” he answered.  “You
have hard work ahead of you, Will.  But you’ll make it, now.”
            “Jean-Luc?” I asked.  I was feeling sleepy already, but I was sure
that was because I wanted to.
            “Will be here in a few minutes,” he said.
            “You’re not giving him respite care?”
            “I don’t think that would be good for either one of you, tonight,”
McBride remarked.  “Here’s Dr Crusher.”
            “You’re all settled in?” Beverly asked.  “I’d like to stay with
you, Will, but the medication’s going to knock you out, and I’ve got over two
hundred patients who need me more than you do in Cargo Bay Two.”  She gave me
the hypo spray.  “That should help with the pain,” she told me.  “I will see
you in the morning.  Lt Fisk will be here, but Dr Sandoval will be with me.”
            “Okay,” I replied, closing my eyes again.
            “I have him,” I heard Jean-Luc say.  I hadn’t realised it was
night; it was as if this day had never ended.
            “Doctor?”
            “Yes, Will?”
            “I’m on a normal schedule tomorrow?” I asked.
            “Light normal, yes.”
            “Will you help me do something first, in case Admiral Laidlaw
decides I need to be in custody?”
            “Will,” Jean-Luc said, “no one is placing you in custody.”
            “Tell me,” McBride answered simply, and I told him.  His response
was equally simple.  “Of course,” he said.  “You can arrange that, can’t you,
Jean-Luc?”
            “Yes,” Jean-Luc said.  “I can, if you feel strong enough for this,
Will.”
            “I have to,” I said.
            “Bien,” he replied.  “Good night, Sandy,” I heard him say, and then
I felt him slide me down so my head was on my pillow, and I felt him place the
quilt around my shoulders. 
            “I still get the tuck-in service?” I asked.
            “Always,” he said.  “Go to sleep now.  I will be right here.”
            “Jean-Luc,” I said.
            “Yes?” I felt him climb into the bed.
            “He said you wouldn’t come.”
            “But I did, Will.  I came for you.  Surely you knew I would.”
            “I was afraid,” I said.  “I was afraid I wasn’t important enough.”
            “Come here, you,” he said, and I slid over to him, resting my head
on his chest.  “Will.  Even if I didn’t love you -- and I do, love you – I
still would have defied Laidlaw to come for you.  Because you have always been
important enough.  Because you would have come for me.  Because you have always
come for me.”
            “And you’ll help me,” I said, closing my eyes, “tomorrow.”
            “Yes.”  He kissed my hair.  “I will help you tomorrow.”
 
 
            It was a little surreal, in the morning, to wake up next to Jean-
Luc, his arm around me, and then to have Stoch come in with my breakfast, and
then da Costa came in to help me shower and dress.
            “Will it fit?” I asked, looking at my uniform.
            “It should, sir,” da Costa said.  “You don’t have to do this, you
know.”
            “Yes, I do,” I answered.  “My father is not the only person I need
to let go.”
            I put my uniform on slowly, making sure it fit correctly.  My chest
was still sore, and it was easier to let da Costa help me with my socks and
boots.  I attached my pips.
            “I should have asked for a haircut,” I said.
            “I can give you a quick trim, if you want,” da Costa offered.
            “You are certainly multi-talented,” I said, and walked with him
back to the head, stripping off my tunic so I wouldn’t get hair all over it. 
“My hair is grey,” I said in surprise.
            “Shock will do that,” he answered.  “Hold still.”
            I dressed and walked back to my room.  Waiting was awful.  I’d
thought and I’d thought about what I would say.  I thought about what she would
say, to me.  How it had been so many years since I’d seen that place, or talked
to anyone.  Not anyone, I thought.  Talked to them, the Shugaks, who were my
great-aunt and uncle and I hadn’t known it.  And to her.  It had been thirty
years, and I was sure she hated me, because of course I couldn’t remember most
of what had happened after I found her.  I’d lost those years to a fog, which
was only now beginning to lift.  Bet’s death.  My first solo flight. 
            It was too late to back out now, but I wanted to.  Jean-Luc had
been right.  It was too early to do this.  I hadn’t dealt with anything that
had happened; I didn’t even know how to deal with what had happened.  And there
was no one to turn to.  No William.  No Billy.  Just me.
            “Are you ready?” Jean-Luc asked.
            I nodded.  “As I’ll ever be,” I said.
            “You can say no,” he said.  “Will.  If you don’t want to do this –
if you can’t do this, just tell me.  Dr McBride and I will do it for you.”
            I shook my head, feeling my jaw go rigid.  “I’ll do it,” I said. 
“But then I want someone to knock me out, after.  For maybe twelve hours.  I
don’t want to have a session with McBride.  I just want it to be over.”
            He took my hand.  “You are still the bravest man I know,” he said.
            We walked into Beverly’s office, me in my uniform and with my hair
cut and my beard trimmed, looking like Commander William T Riker, whoever he
was.  The viewscreen was set up, and Dr McBride was waiting for me, behind
Beverly’s desk.
            “They are ready for you, Will,” he said.
            I stood beside the desk, and Jean-Luc sat down, and the viewscreen
came on.  She looked exactly the same, the way I’d thought she’d look, the way
she had in all my memories.  Just older.  And bewildered.  And afraid.
            “I am Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the USS Enterprise,” he said, his
captain’s voice quiet but kind, somehow.  “I would like to speak with Mr and
Mrs Kalugin, if I may.”
            I heard her say, “I am Vera Kalugin.  My husband Gregory has been
gone these past ten years.”
            “I am pleased to meet you, Mrs Kalugin,” Jean-Luc said, and then he
added, “Although I would have preferred it to be under happier circumstances.”
            I stepped back, a bit, because I didn’t think I wanted to watch Mrs
Kalugin’s face as she and Mr and Mrs Shugak – they looked so old – listened to
what Jean-Luc had to say.  He handled them well, as I knew he would.  His voice
was kind, in a formal way; non-threatening.  He was, as always, the captain. 
Dr McBride stood beside me, and I felt him rest his hand on my shoulder.
            “Breathe, Will,” he said quietly, and I nodded.
            Jean-Luc was looking at me – what had he said? – and then I heard
him say, “I believe, Mrs Shugak, that William must do this, if he is to heal. 
And William’s doctor – who is here with me as well – agrees.”
            “Deep breath,” McBride said, and I breathed.
            Mrs Kalugin said, “I would like to speak to William.”
            I felt my heart stop.  It was too late to back out.  I took another
breath, and I heard Jean-Luc say, “Here he is, Mrs Kalugin.”
            He stood up, and stepped aside.  I walked over to the chair and sat
down.  I looked at the faces of people I hadn’t seen in twenty years.  Mrs
Kalugin.  Mr and Mrs S.  Dmitri.  I felt my hands shaking, and I set them on
the desk in front of me, and I glanced up, once, at Jean-Luc, who nodded.
            No worries, Rosie, I thought.  It will be all right.
            “Hello, Mrs Kalugin,” I said.
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