"Personal Log, Stardate 49561.36, Sasha Hrelle recording: The
Surefoot
has arrived at Earth prior to the graduation of the Class of 2372.
My
class. The cadets and crew are taking the opportunity to catch up with relations or take shore leave. I, however, have... business to attend to. I'm an Adult now, you see.
I hope I can manage Adulting. Seems in parts scary and boring."
*
Harbstodt Township, New York State, Earth:
She looked out of the window at the sprawling treescape, a million greens in as many shades reaching out to the craggy, ephemeral peaks of the Adirondacks. The sky was clear, and the air carried a strong scent of lavender. It was just as she remembered it, and she wanted to stand there and stare out at it forever -- if only to keep from having to face finishing the task literally waiting behind her.
"Sasha?"
She still didn't turn away, knowing the Caitian woman wouldn't think it rude of her, but instead listened to the creaking floorboards as Kami entered the bedroom.
"Who's this?"
Now Sasha turned. The woman who had been her Counselor, her friend, and had definitely become a lot more to her since, had lifted up one of the items covering the small bed, a picture frame, and regarded it curiously.
Sasha didn't have to look at it to know who it was. "Mr Oruh, my teacher back on Salem Four, until the Bel-Zon attack. He retired after he recovered from his injuries and returned to Betazed, but he sent me that image when I was shipped to Earth." She reached out and examined it again, seeing the kindness behind the solid, coal-black eyes, and she smiled. "We always thought he used his telepathy to catch us passing notes or doodling instead of paying attention, but I suspect we were just really crap at hiding it. He sent me messages for a while after I arrived but..." Her expression sobered again. "But I think Grandma Eismann contacted him and asked him to stop, telling him that it was just reminding me of what had happened to Mom and Dad."
"And not just for you," Kami prompted, moving around the room, Sasha's former room. "For your mother's parents too. It must be like the Seven Hells for parents who outlive their children. I hope I don't have to do that; it would break me. It would just... break me..."
Sasha watched as the Caitian's tail swish gently, and then grow still -- as she placed a hand on her belly.
A thought made the cadet blurt out, "Are you pregnant again?"
Kami stopped, turned and grinned, her mane of sepia fur shimmering in the morning light streaming through the open bedroom window. "No!" But then her eyes twinkled. "But I admit I
am
thinking about it. A girl this time, maybe. My own Princess. And better to do it with a shorter gap in years to Misha, so they'll be close but he can handle the change in attention focus." Then she dropped her hand and approached Sasha. "We should get things wrapped up. And by we, of course, I mean you."
Sasha nodded and faced the bed; all of her childish possessions were scattered here, left in the house with her maternal grandparents, who had taken her in after the Salem Four attack, raised her, and encouraged her to go on to Starfleet Academy despite their obvious fears about her meeting a similar fate to her mother and seemingly her stepfather too. She felt guilty that she never came back more, beyond the odd visit on Academy breaks. But as she had grown, she had forged for herself a life that was growing ever more detached to what was here.
Books, games, stuffed animals, pens and paper, clothes she couldn't possibly fit into now- then she dug down deeper and found another photo, smiling at it.
Kami drew up beside her, sliding an arm around the young woman's waist as she shared the view of the picture: a nine-year-old Sasha, sticking her tongue out, as did a younger-looking Esek Hrelle and his then-wife Hannah.
Kami laughed softly. "So, he was always a fat bastard, huh? I'm amazed he passed the Starfleet physicals."
Sasha smiled. "I could never get my arms around him fully. Still can't." After a moment, she nodded to herself, slipped the photo into the bag she had brought and fastened it up. "Let's go."
"That's it? Nothing more?"
"I don't need anything more."
"And have you made a decision about the house, the estate?"
"Yes. The firm that was hired to maintain the place after the Eismanns' deaths have located some relations in Florida. I'm going to sell it all to them. Or give to them. I really don't care which. At least it'll still be in the family's possession. I've made new family."
"Are you sure about that? It
is
lovely up here. It could make for a wonderful home for you to stay whenever you're on Earth."
"Home?" Sasha shook her head with a wistful smile, before looking up at the raftered ceiling, as if peering through it to the sky above. "I am Starfleet now. My home is in the stars, a thousand thousand twinkling lights, with a thousand, thousand adventures orbiting each one. Infinity is my backyard, Eternity my calendar-"
Kami reached down and smacked the girl on the rear. "Alright, alright, you've passed the audition. Now let's get moving and collect your Dad and brother before they devour all the fresh toffee apples and caramel popcorn from the nearby town."
*
As it happened, Esek Hrelle never left the graveyard that sat between the Eismann family home and the town of Harbstodt. He had smelled the foods on offer, of course, but was at an uncharacteristic loss of appetite, as he stood at the grave of his first wife. They had buried Hannah in the family plot, and her parents beside her when they had subsequently died.
There was a twinge of guilt at not being here for Sasha when she had suffered these losses -- and anger at those responsible. But he cast it aside now, at least the latter; the recent work he and his crew had done at the Son'a station had resulted in dozens of arrests of Bel-Zon operatives and associates throughout the Quadrant.
There had even been arrests of Starfleet officers in their employ, like that First Officer for Captain Lucille Arrington, who had taken over command of the
Impala
in the wake of her removal from active duty following her breakdown (and thinking about that made Hrelle wonder how much of that had been contrived by the Bel-Zon to put one of their own in a position of power and mobility). Their assets were seized, and their influence no longer extended past the non-aligned Skarosian system. As far as Hrelle was concerned, they could sit there and rot for eternity.
The guilt remained, and always will, he suspected, despite it not being his fault. But even then, he knew that, while the guilt was there, nothing could be done of it. And there was no sorrow either anymore at her passing. He had moved on. And he believed Hannah would have wanted it that way.
Then his ears twitched as he heard the sounds of someone trying to sneak up on him from behind, careful and quiet as he could be... but not careful or quiet enough for someone of Hrelle's age and experience. Still, the Captain allowed his stalker to draw closer... closer...
Misha, clad in running shoes, red shorts with a hole in the back for his tail, and a matching T-shirt with the Starfleet logo on the front, leapt up onto his father' back, using his claws to climb up and clamp his fangs around Hrelle's neck, growling. Hrelle gave a theatrical yelp, dancing around as he cried, "You got me, my Warrior Prince! You got me!" Then, suddenly realising how disrespectful this might appear if anyone else was in the graveyard, he reached around and held the cub up in his arms. "But maybe you should save it for the park or the playground or the Holodeck, not places like this, okay?"
"Trouble Time?" Misha asked, unsure what he had done wrong.
"No, no, not Trouble Time," his father reassured him, lifting him up onto his shoulders. "Now, let's go see about some toffee apples. And no farting up there!"
"Hey you two!"
Hrelle turned, Misha grinning and waving happily. "Mama! Sasha! Caught Papa!"