From: Coast2C@aol.com Date: Tue, 30 Apr 1996 21:29:05 -0400 Message-ID: <960430212757_387225340@emout15.mail.aol.com> Subject: Convergence: Part 19 of 25 Convergence by Dana Anderson Part 19 of 25 (Author's Notes and Disclaimer found in Part 1) * * * * The next morning Al went through his morning routine as quietly as possible so as not to disturb Jenna. She woke just as he was about to leave his quarters. Al sat down on the edge of the bed. "Get a couple more hours of sleep" he said. "I'll come back before lunch and check on you. If you're up to it, we can have lunch together." *And if you're not,* Al thought to himself, *I'll take you back to the infirmary myself.* "Aye, aye, sir" Jenna replied good-naturedly and closed her eyes again. * * * * Sam came into the cafeteria shortly after Al sat down with his breakfast. When he had collected his own meal, Sam walked over and sat down. "Where's Jenna?" Sam asked. "Still sleeping," Al answered between sips of coffee. "I told her to stay in bed and I'd check on her before lunch." Sam stopped a spoonful of cereal halfway to his mouth and returned it to the bowl in front of him. "What's wrong that I'm not supposed to know about?" Al was grateful for the opportunity to unload. "She's even weaker than you think, Sam. She can't stand up for more than a minute or two without getting dizzy." Sam was more alarmed by the anxious look on Al's face than he was by the description of Jenna's symptoms. Al was not the sort to be worried about nothing. In fact, it was sometimes difficult to get him to be serious when he should be. "Vision or hearing problems?" Sam asked. Al nodded in surprise. "Both. She says they fade in and out. She also said she keeps misjudging distances and drops things she thinks she's holding firmly." "And just when did she make you aware of these symptoms?" Sam asked severely. "A few minutes after we got back to my quarters" Al confessed. "I know I should have called you right away, Sam," Al said in response to Sam's indignant stare. "But Jen was afraid to spend the night alone in the infirmary." "Afraid?" Sam was taken aback. Al nodded miserably. "She had nightmares last night, too. Three or four, at least that's how many times I woke up. Look, Sam, I want to do what's best for her; you know I do. It's just that I'm not sure what that is. How will she be any better off in sick bay if she's scared to...," he stopped short of completing the figure of speech "well, scared." Sam considered this. It was true that a patient's mental condition was extremely important in surviving an illness or injury and sometimes even more crucial when they were in recovery. Sam had already formed a hypothesis as to the cause of Jenna's condition and also the source of her nightmares. If he was right, Dr. Ambrose didn't have all the information he needed for a proper diagnosis. Unfortunately, Sam couldn't tell the other doctor what had happened to her. He also knew enough about Al's past to understand that he would be sympathetic with her fear of being alone and in a medical facility. "How about if I come with you when you go to check on her?" Sam suggested. "It might not be necessary to subject her to Dr. Ambrose's care, and vice versa." "Thanks, Sam" Al said, heaving a sigh of relief. * * * * When they arrived at Al's quarters at eleven thirty, Jenna was not there. They walked next door and Al knocked. Jenna opened the door and did not seem overly surprised to see Sam along with Al. She turned and walked back into the living room and Sam followed her while Al shut the door. "How are you feeling today?" Sam asked. "Much better" Jenna replied. "Let's see how much better" Sam said. He had her perform several tests of balance and coordination, then had her grip his hands as hard as she could. Sam was cautiously pleased with the results. She was stronger and had better control over her body than she had the day before. "How about your eyesight and hearing?" Sam asked. "Still having problems?" Jenna hesitated for only a moment. "Yes, but not as frequently or for as long as before." Sam nodded. "Good." Sam looked from Jenna to Al, then back again. "I think all these problems are associated with your last leap. We can't tell Dr. Ambrose about that, so he isn't going to be able to diagnose your condition properly. But," he said, and held up a warning finger "if you're not completely honest with me from now on about your condition and I find out about it, I won't have any choice but to make sure you get constant medical supervision until you recover completely." He waited until Jenna made eye contact with him. "I understand, Sam. I'm sorry I didn't trust you in the first place" Jenna apologized. "Okay," Sam said, satisfied. "Could I use your bathroom? I want to wash up before we go to lunch." Jenna nodded and Sam left the room. Al, who had been leaning silently against the wall to the entry way since they had arrived, came over and sat down on the couch next to Jenna. He didn't look at her at first, he just sat there rubbing his hands on his knees and looking at the floor. Jenna reached over and put a hand on top of one of his. Al looked up at her face. "I'm sorry" he said. "I know you were trusting me to keep my mouth shut, but I was really worried about you." Jenna smiled at him. "I'm not mad" she said. "And I wasn't trusting you to 'keep your mouth shut'; I was trusting you to do what you thought was right." Al reached out and embraced her, considerably eased in his mind about her condition and relieved that she was not angry that he had discussed her with Sam without her knowledge. As he started to kiss her, he heard Sam return, somewhat noisily to the room. "For pete's sake" Sam groused. "I can't leave you two alone for a minute. I distinctly recall saying 'No strenuous activity', or was I talking to myself?" Al and Jenna moved their faces away from one another, but remained in an embrace. They looked at Sam, standing three feet behind the couch with his hands on his hips and shaking his head at them. Al and Jenna looked back at each other. "Not very subtle, is he?" Jenna remarked. "No," Al agreed "and he's got the worst timing of anyone I've ever met." "Stop talking about me like I'm not here" Sam complained. "I am here and I'm starving. Let's go have lunch." * * * * Jenna went first through the lunch line and started looking for a table. Sam turned to Al. "Well, if she was mad at you for spilling the beans to me she sure got over it quickly" he said. "She wasn't mad" Al replied. "She said she trusted me to do the right thing." "Very understanding of her" Sam approved. "Jen is an exceptional woman" Al concluded, and walked toward the table Jenna had chosen. Sam gazed thoughtfully at Al as he walked away and then moved to joined them. He sat down and the three of them began their lunch. "I looked over the designs for the changes you made to the power plant and the communications platform" Sam said to Jenna. "Very impressive." "Thanks" Jenna said. "What are you working on now?" Sam asked. "Nothing" Jenna replied. "My last project was the retrieval program." "Do you have any ideas about what you'd like to work on next?" Sam inquired. Jenna looked Sam in the eye and nodded. "I'd like to dismantle Ziggy down to component level and then nuke this entire place until it's nothing but a pile of rubble. How does that fit in with your plans?" she asked calmly. Sam and Al exchanged shocked looks. Sam swallowed a couple of times. "Not very well" he finally managed to say. "I was hoping you would help me find the error in Ziggy's programming." "I was afraid of that" Jenna responded. "I'll have to think about it, Sam." "Fair enough" Sam said. "Just don't start taking Ziggy apart while you're thinking" he cautioned. "And don't bother putting any procurement forms for plutonium on my desk" Al said. "I won't sign them. It's way too expensive." "By the way," Sam said "I think you two should be the first to know that I'm putting the project on standby. Everyone thinks Jenna was injured by an unexpected discharge of unknown properties and origin. I'm using that as an excuse for a complete overhaul. With most of the staff on leave or temporarily reassigned to other projects I should be able to find time to go through every line of programming Ziggy's got in that mixed up brain of hers." "How long are you talking about, Sam?" Al asked. "Somewhere between three and six months" Sam replied. "A one hundred per cent margin for error isn't exactly what I'd call pinning down a time frame" Al remarked. "No," Sam said "But I don't know how much help I'm going to have." Sam looked at Al and then at Jenna. Al looked at her as well. Jenna looked up from her meal and saw the two of them regarding her. "I said I'd think about it" she said. Their conversation shifted to a variety of other topics until Sam and Jenna hit on one they could really get into; the merits of listening to music while working. Jenna was horrified to learn that Sam favored songs from Broadway musicals. Al told Sam about the incident in the power substation and Sam tried to use it as an example to support his argument. Jenna stood firm and Al enjoyed watching two geniuses battle it out over the comparative benefits of the likes of Rodgers and Hammerstein and The Rolling Stones. Dr. Beeks came in and accepted Al's offer of a chair. She arrived when the battle had already been joined and listened without offering any voice of her own for a few minutes. Finally she turned to Al. "I don't know why I ever sit at a table with any combination of the two of you, let alone all three. It always makes me feel as though I'm failing miserably at my job." "Go on," Al encouraged her in a comforting voice. He leaned his chin on one fist in a stereotypical psychiatrist's pose. "Oh, stop it," Dr. Beeks said, giving Al a push on the shoulder. Al just laughed. "I think I'll find some sane people to eat with" the psychiatrist decided. "I swear the only reason you ever invite me to join you is to see how quickly you can get my goat." She rose, picked up her tray and walked away. Sam and Jenna's argument was interrupted by Dr. Beeks departing declaration. Jenna looked at Al. "If she's right," Jenna observed "that must have been a new record." "Not even close" Al replied. "Well," Sam said, looking at his watch "I'd better get back to work. You" he said, pointing at Jenna "should take it easy for the rest of the day. Your appointment with Dr. Ambrose is at ten tomorrow morning. We can talk about your going back to work after he has a look at you." He started to clear the table and Al rose to help, they both motioned to Jenna to remain seated. As they walked toward the kitchen with the trays of dirty plates, Al turned to Sam. "I think I'll take the rest of the day off. I want to have a talk with Jen" Al said. Sam nodded. "It might be easier for her to talk about her nightmares in broad daylight." "My thoughts exactly" Al agreed. * * * * Al and Jenna returned to her quarters. Jenna made some tea and Al carried the tray out to the living room. When they had settled on the couch, Al turned to her. "Tell me," Al said. "I'm listening." Jenna began slowly. She told him about her doubts regarding Ziggy's predictions for the probable success of the retrieval effort, the long hours of calculating the odds by hand and the emotional turmoil in which she found herself when she had finished her analysis. "At which point," Al interrupted "you decided I need not be informed of the potential for a negative result in the retrieval attempt." "I couldn't be sure my calculations were correct" Jenna explained "and it would have been useless to run them through Ziggy. Also, there was no guarantee that I would ever be able to find the error in Ziggy's programming. Sam is much more familiar with the parameters and details of the program." "So you gambled, with your life, that Sam would be retrieved successfully and he would be able to get you back" Al concluded. "Yes" Jenna admitted. "I know you didn't want to put me in the position of choosing between you and Sam, but don't do me any more favors like that, okay?" Al said. "I'm hoping we'll never find ourselves in a similar situation, but you've got my word I won't keep anything like that from you again." Jenna replied. "Thank you" Al said. He took a deep breath and went on carefully. "What, exactly, happened when we ran the retrieval program?" Jenna poured herself another cup of tea and stared into the liquid for a few minutes. Al waited patiently. He knew this was going to be difficult for her to discuss. "Sam and I exchanged places" she said quietly. "I sensed his presence when we passed each other." "And you found yourself in the waiting place" Al added softly. Jenna looked up sharply, her eyes wide. "How did you know about that?" she asked in a tense whisper. "Sam told me, and I saw it for myself in the Imaging Chamber when we locked on to your brain waves" Al answered. Jenna continued to meet Al's gaze without saying anything. He could see the hesitation there, her reluctance to talk about, and therefore relive, the experience. Al hoped that getting her to talk to him about it would ultimately help put the memory behind her, where it belonged. "I couldn't hear the voice, though" Al continued, watching her reaction. Jenna closed her eyes and a shiver ran through her entire body. Al reached over and put a hand on her shoulder. "Hey," he said "stay with me. Are you okay?" Jenna opened her eyes and looked at him again. The terror was evident in her face now. Al thought about all she had experienced in her life, all the danger and grief she had overcome. What was it about this particular experience that generated such fear in a woman who had bravely faced death and exile into the past for so long? Al was almost as reluctant to hear her story as she was to tell him. His love for her was the factor which compelled him to continue. Whatever she must endure, he wanted to share. "Tell me" he repeated. "There is a pale light in patterns" she began in a murmur that Al could barely discern. "My eyes can't focus on them or recognize any form. I can hardly feel my own body." Al wondered if she was aware that she was speaking in the present tense, as though she was in the middle of the experience rather than describing a memory. "The waiting goes on and on until I think I'll lose my mind from the lack of sensory information." She swallowed and tried to continue speaking, but no words emerged. Al reached out and touched her shoulder again. Jenna refocused her eyes on his and the vacant look in them receded, but the anguish increased. "Then the voice is here" she managed in a strangled whisper. She closed her eyes and began to shiver again. Al put his hands on both her shoulders and shook her gently. "Jen, look at me" Al said. Her head flopped loosely on her neck, as though she were unconscious. "Jen," Al nearly shouted, still shaking her "look at me. Open your eyes and look at me." Jenna's head snapped forward and she opened her eyes. She looked at him as though he was a stranger, or someone she had met once, briefly and long ago, whose name escaped her for the moment. Fear stabbed into him, as real and palpable as the thrust of a dagger. "Jen, it's me, Al" he said. Al took his hands off her shoulders and stroked the sides of her face, then held her head still so that her eyes were aimed directly into his stare. "The voice isn't here, this isn't happening now." He was hoping desperately that this was the truth. "You're telling me about what happened when you leaped. It's in the past, you aren't there now. You're right here with me" he said firmly. "Do you understand?" Jenna nodded slightly. She refocused her eyes on Al's, clinging to the reality of him. "Can you tell me the rest?" Al asked. Jenna reached up and took one of his hands in hers. She held on tightly and concentrated on his face as she went on. "The voice went on and on in my mind. I know I didn't hear it with my ears. It kept asking me if I was ready. I wouldn't answer. I tried everything I could think of to help me ignore the voice, but it was always right there in my mind. All I could do was resist, say no. I just started to repeat 'No' every time the question came into my mind. It went on for an eternity, then everything went dark." She stopped speaking and Al squeezed her hand gently to remind her where she was and that he was here with her. Jenna took a deep breath and continued. "I had thought the pale light was terrible, with the lack of sensation that was there. The dark was worse. I had no perception of anything, except the voice. It became harsh and demanding and it took everything I had. My memory, my ability to think, most of my will. All that remained was the voice and the only thought that was left to me, 'No'. I must have repeated it by instinct, I couldn't form a cogent thought. Finally, the voice receded and then disappeared and there was nothing. Absolutely nothing. I reached out with what was left of my mind. There was nothing to sense or touch. I strained to feel anything, anything at all; even pain would have been welcome. There was nothing. Gradually my strength failed and I was slipping away, into the nothingness." She fell silent. Al reached up once more and touched her face. "You came back, though" he reminded her. "What happened?" "I was almost gone." she continued. "Then I felt something warm. After all that darkness. It felt like sunshine on my skin. I clutched at it and held on. There was something familiar about the warm feeling. I felt safe and protected and some of my strength began to return. Finally, I understood what was causing the warmth. I felt an arm around me, a breath on the side of my face. I was still confused. The feeling was familiar, but I couldn't remember why. Then I heard a voice and I recognized it. It was you. You were holding me in your arms. You asked me to come back, so I did." Al's eyes were wide with a look of incredulity. "You felt me. You heard me" he said, as though trying to convince himself. Jenna nodded, but did not speak. She leaned forward and put her head on Al's shoulder and he put his arms around her. Al was amazed. *I asked her to come back, so she did;* he thought. *Just like that, from the brink of death.* He would never ask her to describe the struggle and the pain that must have involved. The effect that effort had had on her told him more than he wanted to know. There was, however, one more thing he had to ask. "You had nightmares last night" Al said. "Do you remember them? What were they about?" Jenna raised her head to look at his face once more. "The voice calls to me when I'm asleep." Al felt every muscle in his body tense. He held her close again. "It's all right" Al said to her. "Don't worry, it will be all right." * * * * End Part 19 of 25