DISCLAIMER: The Star Trek characters are the
property of Paramount Studios, Inc and Viacom. The story contents are the
creation and property of Djinn and are copyright (c) 2013 by Djinn. This story
is Rated R.
What We Ought Not To
Have
by
Djinn
We desire nothing so much as what
we ought not to have. - Publius Syrus
Chapel
stepped out of the shower; her skin was raw from where she'd scrubbed it until
her allocation of hot water had run out. She stood, dripping wet, looking at her
reflection in the mirror and hating herself.
How
could she have not known Roger was an android? How could she, for one moment, have
thought the man she loved—the man she'd idolized—could do any of the things this
android Roger had done?
Her
door chime sounded, and she ignored it. She ran a jagged fingernail down the
inside of her arm, pushing deep, drawing beads of blood to the surface.
Roger
hadn't bled. Instead the burning smell of electrical
wires, of circuits and controllers, had filled the room when he'd caught his
arm in the door. Roger had malfunctioned, not been injured.
Her
chime sounded again, and she wrapped her robe around her and strode to the
door, ready to give whoever it was a piece of her mind. What part of the Privacy Requested symbol she'd set for
her status was unclear?
As
she palmed the door open, she realized her thin robe was plastered to her body.
Didn't matter. It was probably Jan or Ny.
It
was not Jan or Ny. It was Spock.
He
couldn't goddamn read?
"Nurse."
"I
had my door set to privacy."
"I
am aware of that." He seemed to be taking in the way her robe clung to her,
then looked up, meeting her eyes, his expression giving nothing away. "May
I come in?"
"No."
"Nurse
Ch—Christine. I believe it would be beneficial for you to talk."
"To
you? I acted like an idiot over you when that virus hit. Why in God's name
would you want to talk to me?"
He
gently pushed her aside and walked in. "I know what it is like to lose
someone. To watch them leave, to keep in contact for a time, and then to have
that contact stop. If I put myself in your place, if I imagine finding that
person only to realize they have changed beyond all reason, I can only envisage
pain."
"You
care if I'm in pain? Since when?"
His
face changed, the softness shifting to something she thought looked a little
like guilt. "I am not in a position to offer you anything other than
empathy, Christine—I must make that clear. But I do care that you are in pain."
His eyes narrowed, and he gently pulled up the arm she'd scratched. Blood had
soaked into the pale yellow of her robe. "You are injured."
"I
injured myself. Bit of a difference." She yanked her arm away.
"Do
you know that I am a touch telepath?"
She
closed her eyes and could imagine what he'd just read. "Bully for you."
"The
grief and anger, I understand. But shame? Why would you feel shame?"
"My
God, you really think we're going to talk about this, don't you?" She
moved away, then realized her robe was probably as wet in back as the front. She
was giving him one hell of a show. "Let me get dressed," she said as
she grabbed the first pair of sweats and an old shirt she found in her dresser
and went into the bathroom.
When
she came back out, he was sitting at her desk, looking as though he'd have
waited all night for her. He met her eyes as she sat on the bed, then asked, "Why
shame?"
"I
wasn't at my best on this...mission. Ask the captain."
"I
do not need to. I read his report. He did not censure you in any way."
"Well,
he's too kind for his own good, then." She took a deep breath. "I
just spent twenty minutes in the shower trying to rub this day off me."
"I
understand how the disappointment of not finding your fiancé after all this
time might hurt you, but it should not make you feel ashamed."
"I
did find him, Spock. He was down there. The captain should write fiction: he's
very good at creative reinterpretations."
Spock's
eyes narrowed. "You did not find the Roger you knew. I am well aware of
how actual events differed from the official report. The captain is, as you
say, kind."
"Too
kind. I said he was too kind." She looked down. "I let him down. But
that's not why I'm ashamed. I can make up for that someday—when he really needs
me, I'll be there."
She
realized the scratch on her arm was bleeding still and went back into the
bathroom, running a small personal healer over it until the torn pieces of skin
knit together.
She
heard Spock coming up behind her.
"Please
let this go."
Spock
didn't say anything, just leaned against the wall behind her and met her eyes
in the mirror.
"I
fucked Roger. He was a machine and I had sex with him. I've been trying to
scrub that off me. That's why I'm
ashamed."
"You
did not know he was a machine when you did it, did you?"
"No,
of course not. But I should have. He was...different. More vigorous." She
looked away from his reflection. "As if you want to hear the gory details."
"I
will listen to whatever you need to say."
"Why?"
She turned and pushed past him, going into the bedroom, getting the bed between
them as she stood on the far side of it. "Why are you here now?"
"Because
now is when you need me."
"I
don't need you. I don't need anyone." She began to scratch her arm again,
could feel the skin she'd just healed begin to tear.
He
moved toward her. "Christine, stop doing that."
"You're
calling me by my name. You never call me by my name." She held up her hand
and he stopped. "I should have stayed on Earth. I shouldn't have given up
everything to look for him—to find...what? A goddamned machine? I've wasted so
much time and for what?"
He
walked back to her desk, sat. and studied her. "I believe that had you not
been on the planet with the captain, events might have unfolded very
differently. Your presence may have been a mitigating factor, bringing out whatever
humanity was left in Doctor Korby."
"You
think I helped? I in no way helped. I
was useless." She practically spit the last part at him.
"He
was your betrothed. You were naturally torn. And perhaps felt called to him
after such a long absence."
"Quit
being nice. It's very confusing." She sank onto the bed and curled up on
it, facing him. "He was...extraordinary—the man I knew, the man I remember.
To see him like this..."
"It
was very clear from his voice that he cared for you deeply. I would suggest
focusing on the man he was, not what he became." He stood, walked over,
and laid his hand gently on her hair. "I regret that your search ended in
this way. But closure is an often underrated thing. The
person I lost remains that way. I have never known what happened."
"I'm
sorry." She put her hand over his and was surprised when he didn't pull
away. "Thank you for coming to check on me."
He
nodded and walked out, leaving her to cry herself to sleep.
##
Chapel
saw Spock ahead of her in the corridor and followed him into the observation
room. "Are you all right?"
He
turned to look at her. "If you were trying to exercise stealth, you
failed."
"These
boots have heels that click—can't really help that. Are you all right? This
whole thing with Captain Pike...?"
"It
is not to be spoken of."
"Just
like Roger?" She moved closer and he met her eyes—he looked so tired. "When
was the last time you slept?"
"Vulcans
do not need as much sl—"
"When
was the last time you slept?"
He
seemed to give up then. "It has been some time."
She
smiled. "Such lack of precision means it's been so long that you know I'll
order you to bed as soon as I hear the exact number of days."
A
rapidly rising eyebrow was her only answer.
"Spock,
get some sleep. Now. If I see you anywhere in the next eight hours, I will tell
on you to McCoy."
He
seemed to slump a little, the characteristic perfect posture slipping. "I am tired."
"Saving
someone you love can be hard work." She held up her hand when he started
to say something. "I know, I know, not to be spoken of. Or maybe it was my
using 'love' that you were about to object to. Don't really care. Now, let's
get you to your quarters—I don't trust you not to get distracted along the way."
He
actually followed her. "You are a kind woman, Christine."
"I
know. It's a curse. Men never like nice girls."
"I
do not believe that is true."
"You
don't like me. Not enough to..." She sighed and waved away what she was
going to say.
"Not
enough to what?"
"To
pursue me."
"I
am in no position to pursue you."
They
were at his door, so she turned to him and gestured for him to palm his door
open. "I have no idea what that means to you, but it sounds fairly weak to
me. Either you like me or you don't."
"You
have many good qualities."
"And
so does a prize heifer." She laughed. "Next
time, if I fall for an alien, I'm going to go for a more promiscuous type."
He
glanced at her arm, and she realized it was where she'd scratched herself
months ago, after Roger. "I do not believe you really mean that. You do
not strike me as promiscuous."
"I
know. Not a sexy bone in my body."
"That
is not precisely what I said." He closed his eyes for a moment.
"Get
in there before you drop. And remember, eight hours or I'll sic McCoy on you."
"Understood."
He let the door close behind him, and she turned and tried to tell her heart
not to make too much of anything he'd said. The man was sleep deprived and
probably saying things he didn't mean.
##
Chapel
saw Spock come into sickbay; he seemed surprised to see her still on the ship
instead of on the pleasure planet. "Don't ask why I'm not down there."
"You
do not find the idea of your wishes coming true appealing?"
"What
would I wish for? Roger back? You? The life I never had on Earth as a
scientist?" She shook her head. "Let Len and Tonya enjoy their
courtly fantasy or Sulu be D'Artagnan. I'm fine here.
Reality is the thing for me."
He
studied her for a moment. "Have you eaten?"
"I'm
on duty—well technically I'm off duty and covering for someone else, but I'm
stuck here. I appreciate the offer, though."
"We
can eat in sickbay. There is a skeleton crew aboard."
"Oh,
so it's safe, you mean? No one will see you with me?"
"Perhaps
I meant no one will see you with me?" His eyebrow seemed to punctuate the
humor.
She
smiled. "Either way."
"So you do not wish to eat with me?"
She
decided truth was the best response. "If I'd gone down there, Spock, it
would have been you that I would have wanted. Doesn't that make you want to run
and hide, not bring me food?" Truth was pretty damn embarrassing; she knew
she was blushing madly.
"You
did not go. I admire that."
There
wasn't a trace of sarcasm in his tone. He admired her? "Fine. You can
bring dinner."
"What
would you like?"
"Surprise
me."
"Do
you enjoy spicy food?"
"To
some extent. Not so spicy it will burn skin off, but moderately."
He
nodded and walked out, and she wondered for a moment if she'd gone down to the
pleasure planet after all and was too lost in the fantasy to realize it.
She
went back to the inventory she'd started to keep herself busy and tried to imagine
what her friends were getting up to on the planet. She hoped Jan and Ny had
settled far away from each other because she could imagine them both featuring
the captain in their little fantasies.
Or
maybe Ny wouldn't do that. She had to see the man every day. Jan wouldn't, not
now that she was leaving the ship. Chapel felt a bit at loose ends at the idea
of Jan not being there to talk to. She loved Ny, but she didn't talk about her
crushes the way Jan did—in fact, Chapel suspected that Ny also harbored a crush
on Spock.
So
maybe Jan was fine wherever she was on the planet, and it was a good thing
Chapel wasn't down there to see who was starring in Ny's fantasy.
Fantasy.
Like a robot fiancé who made love to you better than the real thing ever had? She
should have known right then. Roger hadn't been what you'd call talented in
bed—but she'd loved him for his mind, not his ability to pleasure her.
She
heard the sickbay doors open and turned to see Spock holding a tray. "So what did you get?"
"Vulcan
staples." He put the tray down on the nursing desk, and pulled an extra
chair over. He was going to eat with
her? Not just bring her food and skedaddle? Strange.
She
pinched herself, just to make sure she hadn't fallen asleep at her desk. Nope,
wide awake.
She
sat down across from him and studied the green soup. "Is this pea soup?"
"Plomeek. It is often consumed at breakfast rather than
dinner, but humans tend to enjoy it, so I ordered it for you. There is another
variety, far more highly spiced, made with red plomeek
that is a favorite of mine."
She
tried it. Only a little spicy, definitely an earthy taste—almost fungal. Reminded
her of some tea she'd once had that came in tightly packed cakes. "It's...different."
She moved on to the plate that had some kind of stew.
"That
dish is called Tal-kanshak. It is a specialty of the ShiKahr region."
The
taste was savory and rich. It reminded her of the sauce on Indian butter
chicken. "This is good. Really good."
"It
is one of my mother's favorites. I thought you might enjoy it as well."
They
ate in silence for a few minutes, then she said, "Is the pleasure planet
repellant to you? The idea of...fantasies?"
"I
understand the human need to indulge in them, so it does not repel me, but I do
not see any need to experience it."
"You'd
rather sit in sickbay with me?"
"Yes."
He leaned back. "To be frank, I have a proposal for you. I have noticed
that you are underutilized here in sickbay."
"You
think I'm not working?"
"I
think you are not working to your full potential." He reached for the padd
on her desk. "May I?"
She
nodded.
He
worked on it for a moment, then handed it to her. "I am working on this
experiment but the segment I have highlighted is one I do not have time for. Would
you be interested in participating?"
She
started to read and a smile began almost against her will. "This is
interesting."
"Yes.
I would not work on it otherwise."
"And
you'd trust me to do this? I mean, your last parts will depend on me doing this
right."
"Do
you not trust yourself to do it?"
"What
an excellent question." She put the padd down and went back to eating. "It's
been a long time since I've worked on anything like this. I sort of shoved it
all aside when I talked my way into Starfleet."
"Do
you not think it is like riding a bicycle? I have never understood that saying,
by the way."
She
smiled at the slight annoyance in his tone. "Do you know how to ride a
bicycle?"
"I
learned as an adult."
"That's
probably your problem. Gotta master bike riding as a
kid when you have no idea how far the ground is or how hard it will feel to hit
it when your bones are older." She reached for the padd again and read the
prospectus over. "Yes. Yes, I'd like to do this."
"Excellent.
I will assign you space in a lab."
She
started to laugh. "Is this your way of keeping me away from you in my free
time? Is the lab going to be very far from yours?"
"Would
I be sitting here, Christine, introducing you to Vulcan food if I was unduly
worried about your activities when you are not on duty?"
She
studied him, head back, one eye closed, like an old-time surveyor. Her
grandfather used to give her this look and it always made her laugh—Spock didn't
laugh but did look slightly amused. "I guess not."
"Then
it is settled."
"So
it is." She took another sip of the soup. "I can't say I'm a huge fan
of this."
"It
is all right. There are many human foods I find less than pleasant."
"But
the stew is going into my list of personal favorites on the synthesizer." She
took another bite and sighed happily. "Thank you for bringing me dinner. And
science." She tapped the padd and smiled.
His
eyes were very gentle as he said, "You are welcome."
##
Chapel
saw Spock and the Kalomi woman in the corridor and stopped.
Spock met her eyes, and she ducked into another corridor and double-timed it to
the lift. She'd seen enough of them on the planet. Doing whimsical things like
swinging in trees and smelling the roses—or the planet's version of them.
Not
that Chapel hadn't been busy doing stupid things herself. Like, for instance,
Ensign Lewis. Nice boy—and he was a boy, just out of the Academy. What the hell
had she been thinking?
He
was following her around now like a little puppy. Cute as a button but not
really her type. She tended to chafe under too much adoration. Probably
something she should see a shrink about—her tendency to go for emotionally
repressed men—but at least she was used to not being fussed over. Lewis was
giving her hives with his sweet nothings whispered in the mess line.
She
decided not to chance seeing him in the mess and went straight to her quarters.
She was just settling in for a nap when her chime rang.
Holy
God, would this kid never give up?
She
got up and stomped to the door, intent on giving him a taste of evil Christine,
but it was Spock, not Lewis, who waited on the other side of her door. "Oh.
Hello."
"You
do not look happy to see me."
"I
thought you were Lewis."
His
expression seemed to darken. "Ah, yes, your paramour from the planet."
He
pushed past her and she said, "No, really, Spock, it's fine, barge right
in."
He
turned to her. "I wished to see if you were all right."
All
right from what? Too much sex? How the hell was he if that question was being asked?
"I'm fine."
"You
were quite busy."
"And
you know this how?"
"I
saw you with him."
"And
I saw you with 'I'm supposedly a scientist' Kalomi. I
find it curious that you're in a position to offer me nothing and yet you were
screwing her brains out when Lewis and I passed you in the meadow." Screwing
with great abandon, and Spock had been kissing Kalomi—Chapel
had always wondered if Vulcans kissed.
He
blushed. Deeply. "That was the influence of the spores. I am not given to
such displays. Intimacy is for private times."
She
wanted to give him hell, but she knew he was probably right. She'd never have
had sex with Lewis but for those goddamned spores. "Where is the lovely
Leila?"
"She
beamed off the ship."
It
was probably too much to hope that she'd been beamed off into space. Also
unprofessional from a medical standpoint: first, do no harm, and all that. "Guess
you'll miss her."
"She
is a woman of good character."
"When
spores aren't involved?" She studied him. "But you're not crying in
your beer over her?"
"I
do not indulge in crying or in beer." His eyes were untroubled—he didn't
look like he'd lost the love of his life.
"Guess
I'm glad I ended up with Lewis instead of you. He at least wants something from
me afterwards."
"Are
you interested in him?" Spock's eyes narrowed and he looked...strange. Possessive,
maybe?
"What
if I am? You're in no position to offer me anything, remember?" She sat
down on the bed.
"I
did not realize you had feelings for him."
She
rolled her eyes. "I don't, Spock. He's a kid, for cripe's
sake. But if I did, you wouldn't have a thing to say about it, got it?"
He
nodded, then sat down next to her. "I know I have no right to be, but I am
relieved."
"I
really don't understand you. I'm sitting right here. I confessed love to you
like an idiot already, so that's out of the bag. I'm not going to say no if you
ask me to dinner."
"I
am aware of that." He took a deep breath, then exhaled slowly. "I
should leave you in peace."
"Uh
huh. I always feel so peaceful after these non-conversations of ours."
As
he stood and headed for the door, she remembered something she wanted to show
him. "Hey, before you go, look at this for me." She handed him the
padd with the results of the experiment so far.
His
eyebrow rose. "This is most unexpected."
"I
know. I ran it three times, under three different conditions. Always the same."
He
handed the padd back but she said, "Keep it. It's one of my spares. I back
up everything. Two or three times." She smiled and felt back on easy
ground now that they were talking science.
"I
will change my tack on the next phase of my work based on this. Excellent work."
"Thank
you, kind sir. Now, if you don't mind, I'm going to take a nap. I'm a little
worn out." Now, she was blushing.
He
met her eyes; his expression was unreadable. "I will let you rest." He
stood there a moment longer, then turned on his heel and left.
##
Chapel
carried a tray to the lab and was not surprised to find it locked—she was relatively
certain that Spock was inside. She considered ringing for admittance, then on a
whim palmed the door to see what would happen.
It
opened.
She
stepped inside and saw Spock standing at the viewscreen, his posture not his
normal stick-straight perfection. "Spock? Did you program the door to let
me in when you have it on privacy lock?"
"I
did." His voice was off, and she realized the certainty that was normally
in it—the almost arrogance—was gone. "You are contributing to the
experiment, are you not?"
"I
am." She put the tray down and walked over to him. "Are you all
right?"
"Do
you have a reason to think I would not be?"
"You
were with Len and the captain on that planet. Len is holed up in his office
drinking, and I've seen the captain three times in the corridors today and he
didn't smile once. And you—it's not like you to lock up a whole lab just so you
can stare out the window."
"It
was a difficult mission."
"And
you can't talk about it?"
"I
can. I am not sure I want to."
"Okay."
She stared out the viewscreen, standing closer to him than she normally would, and
waited.
He
turned to her and seemed to be studying her intently. "I made a man ignore
his heart and do the right thing for the universe."
"Well,
if that man was Len or the captain, I doubt you made them do anything. They would do it. Don't blame yourself."
"A
woman died because of me."
Suddenly
some of the things that Ny had said about the landing party made sense. "Isn't
it more that you ensured what was supposed to happen did happen?"
He
closed his eyes.
"You
like your version better? Easier to beat yourself up?" She took his arm,
and he didn't shake her off. "Come on. I got you some soup. I found a
recipe for red plomeek in the synthesizer—figured it
was the kind you liked."
"I
am not hungry."
"I
don't care. Eat." She pushed him onto a stool and slid the tray over to
him. Once he lifted the spoon, she said, "I'll leave you alone now."
"Christine.
Stay. Talk to me of our experiment. Have you made further progress?"
"I
have. I'll gladly distract you with science if that's what you want."
"It
is not what I want." The look he gave her was searing, and she found
herself blushing. "But it will do."
"Stop
that. You'll give me the wrong idea." She smiled at him. "Although it
might be fun to see Len's face if you actually were interested in me."
"He
is unkind to you?"
"He
embraces sarcasm like it's a lost art form. And I don't think he knows quite
how mean he comes off sometimes. I can handle him."
"Does
he not know we are working together?"
She
shook her head. "I told Ny. But I wasn't sure if you really wanted it widely
known."
"We
may be published at some point. Your name will be on the paper."
"I
know. I just—with Roger, I was used to being discreet. He was my professor and
then my advisor. You're the First Officer. I thought discretion would be in
order for this, too. Did I do wrong?"
"No.
But you do not have to keep it a secret."
She
smiled. "I'm glad to hear it. But I'd hate to take away Len's fun by
letting him know you and I are actually friends."
"Friends."
Again the intense look. "Yes, we are friends."
"Quit
talking, keep eating, and let me distract you." She waited until he put
the spoon back in the soup, then proceeded to tell him all the latest from her
part of the experiment.
##
Chapel
stood in front of Spock's quarters holding a tray, unsure even though he'd asked
her to make him soup, if she should ring for admittance. After having it thrown
at her, nearly wearing it—after the odd thing he'd said just before he'd asked
for the soup—she wasn't sure she should
go in.
But
he needed her. She could tell that. She'd spent enough time with him, even if
suddenly he was being too formal, calling her "Miss Chapel" instead
of "Christine."
She
sighed and rang the chime; the door slid open. His room was warmer than before.
"Spock?" She'd be damned if she'd add the "Mister" this
time. They were friends, weren't they? They were working on a project together.
Just because he was being formal didn't mean she had to be.
He
walked out of the bathroom and stared at her with an intensity that made her
vastly uncomfortable.
"Your
soup."
"Remind
me where the ship is headed."
She
narrowed her eyes. "Vulcan."
He
took a ragged breath. "Yes. Vulcan. I can wait."
She
put the soup down on his desk then retreated toward the door. "What did
you mean earlier? That it would be illogical for us to protest against our
natures?"
He
sat, picked up the spoon, and his hand shook violently as he ate. In any other
case, she'd feed a patient too weak or shaky to eat. But she didn't think
trying it would be a good idea—she really would end up wearing the soup.
"I
was speaking in a way I should not, Christine. There is what is prescribed and
then there is that which is desired." He nodded as if the conversation was
closed.
Well,
that cleared it right up. "I'm going to go now."
"That
would be best. I am deeply appreciative of your kindness. And I regret yelling
at you before."
"Why
did you?"
He
held the spoon over the bowl. "It is not fitting that you feed me, and yet
I eat what you brought."
"You
need to keep your strength up. That, in my book, is completely fitting."
He
did not look at her as he said softly, "The depths of your intellect are a
constant surprise to me and yet you do not see."
"I
see that you're acting really strangely."
He
laughed. A soft, puff of air, but still a laugh.
"And
it just gets stranger." She found herself inching toward the door, stopped
and forced herself to walk more normally. "We'll be at Vulcan soon."
"Yes.
We will."
"Everything
will be all right then."
"It
is good that you think so. I will see you when my leave is over." He
sounded...sad about that, and she didn't think it was the seeing her part of it
that made him sad.
She
decided not to ask him about it. He might think she wasn't seeing what was
right in front of her, but she could see enough to know that she didn't belong
in his quarters right now.
Even
though she thought he wanted her there very much.
##
Chapel
was in her quarters changing out of her uniform when her comm terminal buzzed. She
saw a message waiting for her, read it and then had to reread it.
It
was from Spock. It said: "Would you come to my quarters?"
"When?"
she sent back.
"Now."
Nothing else.
She
started to laugh. He was a man of so few words at times. She sent back "K"
and wondered if he'd be amused that she'd managed to answer with less letters. Or
if he'd even understand what she meant. Did he text-comm people very often?
She
looked at the outfit she was going to put on—a simple pair of black pants and a
grey sweater—and for a moment debated picking out something...sexier.
No.
What she'd picked would do. She took her hair down from the curled bun she'd
created, then pulled it back into a simple pony tail. Studying herself in the
mirror, she reached for a cleansing cloth and scrubbed off her makeup, then
applied just a coat of mascara. Let him see her when she wasn't trying. Somehow
that seemed important.
She
walked to his quarters, buzzed for admittance, and the door slid open.
Spock
stood near the entrance to his sleeping area, and he stared at her in a way
that completely unnerved her. "You are beautiful."
She
knew she was blushing. "Is that what you called me here to tell me?"
He
shook his head.
"And
thanks, by the way, for leaving me in the dark. You had a goddamn fiancée?"
"I
told you repeatedly I was in no position to pursue you."
"You
could have been more explicit. I would have understood if you'd said there was
a woman in the way. When you leave it ambiguous, I'm afraid it translates to
rejection."
"I
did not mean for my words to be read as that." He moved closer. "How
much do you know of what has gone on these past days?"
"I
know you were different—emotional. I know your hormones were out of whack. And
now they're not. I know you said some very strange things to me in
here—protesting against our natures and such." She inched closer. "Were
you seducing me?"
"Nothing
so sophisticated. I wanted you. I would have taken you, but for your
announcement that we were bound for Vulcan."
"To
your...wife, or fiancée, or whatever she was."
"Yes.
A betrothed I am now free of."
She
held her chin up in the haughtiest way she could. "Am I supposed to care
about that?"
"I
had anticipated it might be welcome news."
"Big
ego, Spock."
His
eyes were amused. "I believe you want me. I know that I want you. It
seems...elementary."
"I
heard some things—that you needed to mate or die. Is that still the case? Is
that why I'm here?" She really didn't want that to be the reason she was
here.
"I
wish to have sex with you. The urge...it did not die during the combat, it is just no longer focused on T'Pring.
But I will not die if you deny me your body. I called you here because I desire
you." He moved toward her, until they were standing very close. "I
want you. Only you."
"Just
for tonight?"
"No,
for much longer than that." He eased her hair out of the elastic that held
it back and let if fall around her shoulders. "I have wanted you for some
time. But I was not free to take what I wanted."
"Take?
What about asking first?"
He
almost smiled. "I stand corrected. You are not as accommodating as you
initially appeared."
"You
mean I'm not the doormat you thought I was? Wow, great compliment." She
smiled to show him she didn't really mind him saying that; she knew some people
thought of her that way. "So you think I'll just
say 'Yes, Spock, please screw the living daylights out of me'?"
"Those
were not the words I had practiced before you came."
"You
practiced? For me? Awwww." She reached up and
was charmed when he pressed his cheek into her hand. "You remember when I
told you that I loved you—when I was under the influence of the virus?"
He
nodded, his cheek still pressed to her palm.
"I
didn't even know you back then. So clearly I didn't
love you. But now...now I think I might."
His
eyebrow went up. "You think you might?"
She
laughed softly. "You expected a declaration of undying love?"
"To
be honest, yes." He pulled her closer, surprising her again with how
gentle he was being. "I am finding this somewhat frustrating. Do you wish
to have sex with me?"
She
grinned. "Yes, you big dope. Are you ever going
to kiss me?"
He
looked immensely relieved as he leaned in and touched his lips down on hers. He
opened his mouth and moaned when she did the same. She pressed herself against
him, realized that he really wanted
her.
She
thought she'd worn something simple, but he seemed to be having difficulty
removing her clothing. She finally pushed him away and began to peel off his
uniform, but he stopped her.
"No.
You first. I wish to see you."
"Never
let it be said I don't grant wishes." She grinned as she slowly eased her
shirt off, as she took her pants off even more slowly. She tried not to feel self conscious as he stared at her as she stood in her bra
and panties.
"The
rest. Take it off."
She
realized she was getting a little tired of the he-man approach. "No. You
next. Shirt and pants, Mister, and make it snappy."
The
man could double-time the hell out of uniform removal; he even pulled off his
underwear in the process. As he stood in front of her, she smiled and said, "So
handsome."
"I
am marginally handsome on my planet. Some consider me too human looking."
"Well,
to be honest, I was talking about him." She reached down and illustrated
what part of him she meant—he nearly collapsed against her as she squeezed
firmly. "But for what it's worth, I think the rest of you looks great,
too."
"I
am...gratified...my physical appearance...is not
repellant." He finally pulled her hand away and scooped her up, carrying
her to the bed, and easing her onto it.
"Do
you want this off?" she asked, rubbing her fingers over her bra. "Or
only out of the way?" She slowly pulled one of the cups down so it was both
exposing and supporting her breast.
"That
is most acceptable." He moved onto the bed, took care of the other cup,
and began to rush to second base.
She
might have complained about the lack of kisses before he found her breasts if
what he was doing hadn't felt so damn good. Every time he found a place that made
her shiver, he lingered, and she realized touch telepathy was useful for more
than just assessing mood.
She
reached down for him, but he pushed her hand away and murmured, "Lie
still. Enjoy this."
She
decided to lie still—or as still as she could—and enjoy it. It wasn't
difficult. When he slid his hand down her body and under her panties, she was
lost.
His
eyes were gleaming in a way she'd never seen when she could finally focus on
him. And somehow he'd gotten her panties off her while
she'd been recovering. Efficient to the core.
"Sorry.
I was pretty noisy right then."
"I
did not mind." He kissed her tenderly and stroked her cheek, then pressed
his fingers into her skin. "Do you know what a mind meld is?"
She
nodded. "You wish to read my mind?"
"The
meld can be used to gather information. It can also be used to share sensation
and emotion—emotion that I may not share sufficiently in other ways."
She
smiled and reached up, pushing his fingers in deeper. "I'm game."
She
felt a fuzziness for a moment, the way she had as a child when she'd just
gotten off a ride at the amusement park. Then she felt Spock's essence and
heard his voice in her head saying her name.
She
felt very safe. Very...treasured. "Mmmmm." The
sound came out both helpless and happy.
"You
are all that I want," he said, but she wasn't sure if he'd spoken it or
thought it. And as he moved over her and into her, it didn't matter. Sensation
battered her, and his tenderness—tenderness that turned into passion—nearly
overwhelmed her.
He
eased up with his fingers and kissed her sweetly as he moved inside her. His
need for her was intense and she wanted to help him, moving up to meet him as
he took her, holding him tightly as he found his release. He let go of her
face, and the meld lingered, dying slowly away as he wrapped his arms around
her and cuddled her against him.
"T'Pring is an idiot, Spock. To leave this? Very stupid."
She nuzzled his neck.
"She
had another she preferred."
"I'm
sorry."
"I
am not sorry. I have you now."
She
laughed as she pulled him to her for another kiss. A long, very satisfying
kiss. "Oh, so you think you have me, do you?"
He
slipped his hand down her belly, lower and lower and—holy shit. "Am I
mistaken, Christine?"
She
tried to say, "I guess not," but the words came out mumbled as he
moved his fingers. Finally, she just shook her head, and he kissed her cheek
and said, "As I thought," just before making her moan and cry out
again.
"I
really like you," she said once she could form words again. "I don't
mean love. I mean like. You make me smile. And you talk to me about science. And
I feel good when I'm with you." She pulled him on top of her again.
He
smoothed back her hair as he moved, more gently this time. "I am
extraordinarily fond of you as well. I wish to spend time with you outside of
this bedroom."
"Good."
She wrapped her legs around him and rode out his passion. "Although for
the record, I really like being in this bedroom."
His
lips ticked up into a partial smile. "I do, as well." He rolled off
of her, then pulled her back into his arms. "I like it very much."'
FIN