Penumbra
by
Myu
Penumbra
by
Myu
Disclaimer:
Star Trek: Voyager and everything associated with it is owned by
CBS/Paramount.
Notes: Written for Mizvoy as part of VAMB's Secret
Santa 2007, who wanted "[A
story told from the point of view of Naomi Wildman as an adult
looking back on her relationship with Janeway, and especially her
duties as Janeway's 'captain's assistant'".
Rating: Universal
---
Naomi
Wildman's Personal Log
Today
Naomi Wildman was made Captain's Assistant! This is a Very
Important news item and Miss Wildman herself is here to report on
it.
But it will have to wait, because Neelix says it's
bedtime. Special Correspondent Wildman's report will come at a
later date.
I never finished that log
entry, but it never mattered - I still remember everything about that
time and I smile because it's a happy memory and I recorded that
entry while I was giddy with excitement. Captain Janeway had
agreed to let me assist her for a day and I spent an evening quizzing
Neelix and my mother on the Captain's occupation and personal
tastes. I wasn't allowed to read Captain Janeway's personnel
file, but they told me that she liked dogs and drinking coffee.
I thought that this seemed very trivial and went back to the story I
was looking at.
"Is she married?" I asked a moment
later, looking up from the padd.
"I don't think
so," My mother answered, yawning a little.
"Don't you
know?" I asked, surprised.
"I think she might be
engaged," Neelix offered.
"Do you want me to find out
tomorrow?" I said eagerly, once the concept of being engaged to
be married had been explained to me.
"No." My mother's
voice became firm, "You shouldn't ask the Captain a lot of
questions about her life."
"Why not?"
"She
might want to keep some things secret because she has a very
important job and has to set an example to her crew."
I
nodded knowingly. I liked secrets a lot, but wasn't very good
at keeping them yet. The following morning I practised my "Yes,
Captain!" in front of the mirror and for my mother before we set
off for the Bridge. I felt about ten feet tall as I strode
through the corridors and I nodded importantly to the other
crewmembers on the way.
At the time I felt like
Captain Janeway was one of the nicest and most important people in
the world, but now when I look back and examine my memories carefully
I realise that there was a lot about her that I imagined and accepted
blindly as fact - for instance, I took for granted that she liked the
colour yellow because she once complimented me on a cream-coloured
blouse I was wearing. It wasn't until years later that she
revealed she hated yellow because it reminded her of scrambled eggs,
one of her least favourite foods. I found out gradually that
there were many dead ends and false assumptions in my perception of
Captain Janeway. There had been so many subtle reinventions,
renouncements and changed traits over the years that they all blurred
together and I was never sure of what was real and what wasn't.
She could always surprise me, yet still was probably one of the most
dependable and steadfast people I've ever known.
For me
personally, Kathryn Janeway was a person somewhere between a distant
relative and a teacher. She had known me my whole life and was
a dear friend, but still stayed one invisible step back and kept her
distance. Tom Paris had held me in his lap behind a
navigational console ever since I learned to press buttons, but the
Captain rarely did so much as touch me on the shoulder. She
also didn't seem to alter her manner when she was around me and would
never evade questions with the usual weak "Why would you want to
know that?" prattle that some others used. I used to like
to think she preferred to speak to me as an adult and it made me feel
very grand and important, but this distance would prove to me in
later years that large parts of her life and character would forever
be hidden from me under an invisible shroud.
On
one of my visits - I've forgotten which, but it wasn't my first - I
noticed a neatly-wrapped gift in a corner of the Captain's ready
room.
"It's a present for Lieutenants Torres and
Paris," Captain Janeway explained when I asked about it, "They
got married yesterday, but I didn't get the chance to give it to
them." She fetched the gaudy box and returned to her
chair.
"Lieutenant Torres and Lieutenant Paris got married?"
I was astonished.
"Yes. They had a very quiet, very
small wedding in the Messhall."
I considered this while the
Captain straightened the ribbon on top of the gift.
"Are you
going to get married?" I asked.
"I don't have any plans
to at the moment, no," She answered, stowing the present in a
drawer in her desk..
"I think you should. You're
pretty," I said seriously. The Captain smiled gently
behind her hand.
"Thank you."
"Maybe you could
marry Commander Chakotay," I suggested. Captain Janeway's
eyebrows shot up.
"Crewman Wildman, I think that's a little
out of line," She said quietly, a hint of warning in her
voice.
"I'm sorry, Captain," I answered quickly, biting
my lower lip. Her expression softened slightly.
"That's
quite all right, Naomi. But - no matchmaking, all right?"
I
nodded and gave her a timid smile before returning to my
homework.
"Answer me one question, would you?" The
Captain added about a minute later, her voice carefully neutral.
I
looked at her expectantly.
"Why Commander Chakotay?"
Despite her supposedly indifferent tone, her eyes betrayed her
interest. I thought for a moment and shrugged.
"I don't
know. Just seems right."
The doorchime sounded and
Commander Chakotay entered with a padd for the Captain to look at.
She beckoned him round to her side of the desk and he bent down to
look at her computer display, resting one hand on the back of her
chair and the other on the desk next to hers. I glanced at the
two of them and smiled meaningfully at Captain Janeway, but she gave
me a look that clearly said "Don't
even think about it".
I suppose that Commander Chakotay noticed something, because he then
gave a nervous cough and took a step back. I sighed and went
back to my padd.
That night I recorded a solemn-sounding
log about how, as Captain's Assistant, I was bound to keep my
employer's secrets even if it meant compromising my principles.
I wished that everything would work out nicely for the Captain and
her First Officer and resolved to keep an eye on the situation, but I
forgot all about that day until I came across that log entry years
later.
At such social gatherings
I remember telling myself that part of being a Captain's Assistant
was to keep an eye on the Captain at all times and make sure I was
aware of her movements in case I was needed. This seemed a good
rationalisation for covering the fact that I was curious about
Captain Janeway to the point of being incredibly nosy and I
consolidated myself with that white lie for a good few years on
Voyager until I grew out of my infatuation a little. Since then
I've found out that such fascinations are fairly common in young
children and I'll admit to it more easily now.
We were all
gathered in the Messhall at some sort of celebration that had been
going on for a while. It was almost past my bedtime and I was
getting sleepy, but my mother was busy talking to someone and it was
only a matter of time before her Naomi-radar (as I liked to think of
it) kicked into gear. I scanned the crowd of people and noticed
Captain Janeway standing in front of one of the viewports with
Commander Chakotay. It wasn't so much the fact that they were
standing together that struck me, but rather the way Captain Janeway
appeared - granted, she was relaxed and leaning contentedly against
the bulkhead adjacent to the viewport (whereas I was accustomed to
seeing her hard at work in uniform) but her manner seemed completely
different. The Captain I was used to was standing with her eyes
downcast demurely, one hand hovering around her mouth and the other
supporting her elbow. To me she looked much younger and a
little vulnerable. About a minute later the Commander left the
Messhall quietly and Captain Janeway was left by herself. She
downed her drink, thanked everyone for coming and wished them a good
night. When she left I caught sight of Commander Chakotay
waiting for her and I distinctly remember them walking off arm in arm
before the doors closed behind them.
Ever since I was
old enough to reflect on the things I'd seen and try and find new
meaning from them, I've wondered if I misinterpreted what I
saw. At first I was convinced that the Captain and Commander
would be announcing their wedding the next day, but later on in the
week I persuaded myself that the idea was completely preposterous.
Years later I wondered why I had dismissed my first idea so quickly -
while they may not have exactly been at the marrying stage, when I
think back to Captain Janeway looking up through her eyelashes at her
first officer I find it hard not to question whether they were indeed
just friends. Even though I thought of almost everyone on
Voyager as a friend, I knew even at a young age that I would probably
be the last person Captain Janeway would confide in.
As
much as I liked her, I could depend on that emotional distance of
hers to know that she'd give me an honest, objective opinion. I
knew that I could ask her about almost anything I didn't feel I could
discuss with my mother and that she would take me seriously.
There was only one time where I felt she didn't treat me like an
adult, and I've regretted it ever since.
I was a teenager and had
started reading through some of Voyager's records for a history
project. The class was made up of pupils from a variety of
races and backgrounds and we had been told to use our skills in
retrieving information to write a report about the world as it was
during the early years of our lives. Most of my classmates had
planned to interview their families and look at media articles from
the time reluctantly, whereas I was excited about researching
Voyager's travels in a time period I couldn't remember. I found
out that when I was born, however, Voyager had entered some sort of
plasma drift and the ship and crew had been duplicated. The
Voyager my mother had been on was heavily damaged and there was a
'Baby Wildman' death report before 'Naomi Wildman' was officially
registered on the crew manifest. I was initially shocked, and
then angry that my mother had never told me about any of this.
The next day I went to the then-Admiral Janeway's office and exploded
in front of her. She listened silently to my furious tirade
about clones and starships and whether my mother was really my mother
at all, and then when I was reiterating my annoyances she held up one
of her hands.
"That's enough."
The tone of her voice
was enough to stop me mid-sentence, mouth half-open.
"You are
Samantha Wildman's daughter," She began quietly, but her words
held a poisonous edge to them, "No doctor or biologist in the
galaxy would dispute that. If anything, you could even be the
'real' Naomi Wildman - no-one knows which was the original ship and
crew. Your mother probably didn't tell you because it doesn't
make any difference to her - she was given back a child she had
watched die a few hours previously. It's no wonder she doesn't
want to talk about it, because to do that would mean having to
remember what it was to lose a child. Can you imagine what
that's like?" The thunder was still in her voice, but some of
the rigidness was gone from her expression and her hand shook a
little on the table. At that point I realised that I had
touched - or rather, punched - a nerve in Admiral Janeway and I
excused myself, apologising profusely. I chose to walk most of
the way home and when I thought about what she had said something
clicked into place...
One memory of Captain
Janeway that particularly stands out is from when I was about six
years old. My mother was on an away mission and, as a special
treat, I was allowed to visit the Captain's ready room. I
hadn't seen her for quite a while and was particularly eager to find
out if there were any new interesting objects on the shelf at the
back of the room. I was so busy examining a gaudy polished
gemstone that I didn't really notice the Captain much until she
called me over to her desk and asked me if I had had any lunch.
She told me I could have anything I wanted from the replicator, so I
chose soup and a sandwich because it seemed very grown-up. The
Captain came around and helped me carry everything to her little
table and I noticed that she was wearing a different kind of
uniform. The jacket was longer and looser than usual, but when
she stood up I could see that it sort of needed to be bigger because
her tummy was very round. I didn't say anything because I
guessed that it might be rude to comment, but I couldn't help
stealing curious glances when she wasn't looking. It didn't
really appear to bother her - she seemed to be in a very good mood
that day and she smiled a lot. She had just suggested that we
have ice-cream when she was called to the Bridge over the com
system. While she was explaining to me that someone would come
to collect me from her ready room there was a loud smashing sound and
a rocking that almost threw me off my feet. Captain Janeway
caught hold of the back of my jumper before I toppled over and
muttered something about weapons fire under her breath. Parts
of the lighting fixtures began to rain down from the ceiling, there
was a loud rumbling and before I knew what was happening there was a
loud screech, the Captain had pushed me away and a large part of the
overhead bulkheads crashed down to the floor. I cried out and
lay curled up with my arms over my head until the thuds from falling
debris stopped.
When I opened my eyes and sat up the room
was in semi-darkness, there was a stinging on my left arm and I
couldn't see the Captain anywhere. After a moment I spotted one
of her legs sticking out from under the fallen bulkheads and crawled
around the other side. She was lying on her side, but her face
was turned in to the floor and was hidden by her
hair.
"Captain...Captain Janeway..." I patted her
outstretched hand.
"Chakotay..." She murmured
weakly.
"No, it's Naomi," I answered patiently.
"Naomi?
Are you all right?" Her voice immediately became firm and
business-like, but still sounded strained.
"Yes,
Captain."
"Naomi, I want you to go to the Bridge and get
Cha - Commander Chakotay. Can you see a safe way out?"
"Yes.
I'll go to the Bridge and get someone."
"Commander
Chakotay. Get Commander Chakotay," She corrected
urgently.
"I promise I'll get him."
"Good girl.
Be very careful."
The doors opened slowly and the air was
filled with smoke and shouts. I saw a strip of red to my right
and ran to the Commander, who was crouched over a console.
"Naomi?
What are you doing here?"
"You've got to come quickly -
Captain Janeway..." I barely started and he was off running,
pulling me along into the ready room by the hand.
"Kathryn
- " He gasped as he took in the scene. Before then I had
never really thought of Captain Janeway having a normal name like
me. It sounded strange - the same as when I heard people call
my mother 'Samantha'.
"Kathryn, I'm here," He called
loudly, "I'll get you out of there."
"Hurry,"
The captain's muffled voice sounded faint.
After some poking
around the Commander fetched another officer from the Bridge and
Captain Janeway groaned as they lifted the heavy bulkhead off her.
He knelt next to her and I looked on as they whispered to each
other. I knew I wasn't supposed to listen to them, but I kept
hearing them in short snatches:
"'Have to get to Sickbay."
The Captain tried to heave herself up.
"Transporters are down
- the Bridge turbolift is down - don't try to get up so
quickly..."
"No - why is this happening...?"
"We
can try the other turbolift at the end of the deck. Easy,
Kathryn."
Having not quite mastered the art of not listening
in on conversations, I tried hard to appear oblivious. Captain
Janeway eventually got to her feet, albeit shakily and with a lot of
support.
"Naomi," The Commander said to me finally,
"We're going to go to Sickbay now and we'll find someone to take
care of you. Stay close to me."
I nodded and sprang
up. He had his hands full with the Captain, so I held onto his
trouser leg with one hand and sucked my other thumb to make me feel
better, even though my mother had told me not to. We started
walking out of the other door to the ready room and down the
corridor, but Captain Janeway couldn't move very quickly. With
every step she clutched at her middle and her eyes were pinched tight
shut as though she was crying, but there were no tears on her
cheeks. The scattered debris created some sinister bloodied
shadows in the flicker of the red alert lighting and I tiptoed after
the Commander, still clutching the side of his trousers and nervously
chewing on my thumb.
After what seemed like years of slow baby
steps we got to the turbolift, the doors opened easily and the inside
looked fine. By this time the Captain's breath was coming in
short gasps and she leaned into the Commander, burying her face in
his neck as he commanded the lift to go to deck five. After
about five seconds the lift juddered to a halt and the lights
dimmed. I skirted back against the wall and wished that I could
fall asleep in the dark and forget about this messy day and all these
things I didn't know enough about.
"No...no..." Captain
Janeway mumbled over and over, seizing a handful of the Commander's
uniform jacket in her fist. He made shushing noises and kissed
her hair and I forgot about manners as I stared at him blankly.
My mother kissed me - usually at night as she tucked me in - and had
explained to me that kisses were for showing people that you love
them but, despite my conversation with the Captain a few months back,
I still couldn't quite comprehend at that point that anyone working
on the Bridge had a life beyond the command centre.
A moment later
the turbolift started up again and the doors opened on deck five.
We had barely managed to get out of the lift when the Captain's knees
started to buckle. I noticed that there were dark splotches of
something up and down her uniform and there were a few drips on the
floor.
"Kathryn, I think I'm going to have to carry you the
rest of the way. I'll try and be as gentle as I can."
The
Captain nodded faintly and the Commander bent down and hooked one arm
underneath her legs. Her lips went pale as he hoisted her up
into his arms and I could see the whites of her eyes as they rolled
back in her head for a second.
After seeing the fairytale
holovideos with old-fashioned princesses and knights I had thought it
looked like it would be quite nice to be carried away into the
sunset, but I changed my mind after seeing Captain Janeway and
Commander Chakotay hobble down the corridor on deck five. The
Captain looked like she wasn't enjoying it at all - more like she was
about to be sick - and the Commander was sweaty and out of breath by
the time we reached the Sickbay doors. Inside Sickbay everyone
was dashing about and I started feeling a bit sick myself, so I
sucked my thumb harder and stubbed the toe of my shoe into the
carpet. The Commander had lain the Captain on a biobed and the
Doctor was rushing around, passing little strange-looking objects
over her. They seemed to have forgotten about me and I suddenly
wanted my mother very much. Tom Paris came out of the Doctor's
office at that point.
"Hey, Naomi!" He greeted me
cheerfully. I began to cry.
"What kind of hello is that
for your old buddy Tom? Here, let me take a look at you."
He
guided me over to a biobed and lifted me up onto it while I
sniffled.
"Does it hurt anywhere?"
I held out my arm
mournfully.
"Ouch!" Tom exclaimed good-naturedly as he
pulled up my sleeve gently to reveal a red welt, "I'll get that
cleared up for you in a jiffy."
After he had healed my wound
with a dermal regenerator (plus a lot of exaggerated sound effects)
and replicated me a lollipop to suck instead of my thumb, I was
smiling again - until I looked across the room to the Captain's bed.
Her eyes were squeezed shut like they had been before, except that
she was crying real tears now. The Commander was next to her
looking very pale and there were shiny tear tracks on his cheeks,
too. I remember thinking in passing that they looked like they
had lost something dear to them. At the time I didn't realise
that I had guessed the truth.
The next day Commander
Chakotay found me and told me I had been very brave, but he didn't
smile the way he usually did when he talked to me. I asked him
if Captain Janeway was all right and he hesitated a little before
telling me that she would get better soon and that she sent her
thanks and best wishes.
The Captain took some time off work
after that. When I saw her a month later she was back in her
old uniform and she didn't smile much, either. Ten years later
- the day after I had spoken with Admiral Janeway - I looked up the
records about that battle and read that Commander Chakotay and
Captain Kathryn Janeway had taken two weeks' compassionate leave
after the incident and that the latter was granted an additional week
for medical reasons. Admiral Janeway's face swam before my eyes
and I felt very young and a little sick in the same way as I had on
that biobed ten years previously.
Today
I thought about those days on Voyager - my earliest memories - as I
put flowers on her grave. It still doesn't seem quite real yet,
for all the obituaries I've read and the funeral I attended.
Some sources reported it as 'sudden', others claimed
'peacefully'...with Admiral Janeway I learned a long time ago to keep
an open mind when it came to the truth. The truth as I knew it
was that she was a successful, well-liked woman who captained a
vessel stuck in the Delta Quadrant for seven years and went on to
pursue a Starfleet career. None of the newspaper articles
written about her noted that, after Voyager, she never served on a
starship again. Nobody else wondered why she was the last to
arrive and the first to leave at every Voyager crew reunion.
No-one ever seemed to care that, on the rare occasion that she
attended a Starfleet function, she would always turn up alone.
At the infrequent Voyager reunions I stand and try to fathom if I was
the only person who ever wondered about Captain Janeway. As I
aged the attendance at the reunions dwindled, but the questions grew
in number and got mixed up with each other - puzzling over what she
thought of me turned into my questioning whether she had kept me at a
distance because I reminded her of the children she never had and the
family she pushed away.
Captain Chakotay happened to be there as
well - I laid his flowers in front of the stone for him, as his knees
are getting bad. His bouquet was slightly smaller than mine but
I somehow knew instinctively that the species had been her favourite
flower and my bunch of boring, traditional white lillies immediately
seemed to pale in comparison, even after I had spent a good ten
minutes choosing the nicest ones. We didn't talk much at all,
apart from a few questions posed by the Captain. It was the
kind of awkward conversation you have with people you haven't seen
since you were a child - when they aren't really sure how old you are
now or how to talk to you now that you've grown up. The
sunlight kept flickering out from behind a cloud and I caught sight
of our shadows stretching across the grave to rest on the grass
behind it. Mine was long, thin and poker-straight while Captain
Chakotay's appeared more hunched and bloated around his rounded
shoulders and stomach. While he was talking to me there was a
faraway, wistful look in his eyes. Decades' worth of hurt has
been carved crudely into his face and he's aged much more quickly
than he should have - it was the same for both of them. He'll
probably always think of me as little Naomi Wildman, but for once
that doesn't bother me...I'd prefer for him to think of a time when
he and Captain Janeway were both happy and my age was still in single
digits. Better that than have him dwell over what went wrong
and have me remind him of the passing of time.
You
really loved her, didn't you?,
I wanted to say when his face crumpled as he read the inscription on
her gravestone, but I didn't. It would be too painful for him
and, in any case, I think I already know the answer. There were
hundreds of questions I wanted to ask him, but there would never be a
'right time' or an appropriate way of phrasing everything. The
answers were all hidden in the shadows of memory and intuition and
the facts shrank away from the harsh light of day like a small child,
a lifetime of secrets lost in the darkness of time.
- End -
Additional
notes: Penumbra:
a) A partial shadow; b) An area of obscurity or uncertainty (Concise
OED, ninth edition (OUP 1995)).
This is the ninth Voyager fic I've
completed. Thank you very much to Mizvoy for requesting the
story and to Shayenne and Sira for running the exchange. I
wouldn't ever have tried to write a Naomi piece, but it was really
nice to try something new. The story turned out more or less as
I originally imagined it (well, sort of...) so I don't really hold
any negative feelings about it, although I would consider editing it
in the future.
