Below is a little collaboration between Duncan74 and Myself. Presented for your enjoyment. Enjoy!
_________________________________________________
Stardate 2368.07.08
USS Discovery, Counselor’s office - 1055
When Jesse reached the Counselor’s office and hit the intercom button to announce his presence he was greeted by Serene’s voice from the speaker.
=/\\\\=Lt. Graham, thank you for coming. Please join me in Holodeck 2.=/\\\\=
Jesse was a bit taken aback at that.
Hmmm, that’s a might unusual. Wonder what she’s got up her sleeve? he thought. “Understood; on my way,” he replied. As he set out for Holodeck 2, he took a moment to ponder why she wouldn’t be meeting with him in her office.
Ah well, he thought,
she’s the shrink.
Once he is back on the turbo lift, it is only a short hop to Deck 11 and soon he is in front of the door to Holodeck 2. He can tell that a program is running, the name shown on the panel says “Graham - Session 1”. Announcing himself the door opens and allows him access.
Stardate 2368.07.08
USS Discovery, Holodeck 2 -1100
The door opening before him shows a dark room at first, entering it takes his eyes a moment to adjust and he begins to make out what looks like a natural setting before him. He saw a starlit sky, who’s constellations looked familiar to him, and what looked like a bonfire burning brightly in a bare area upon a grassy plain. Around the bonfire was set a couple of logs set out like benches upon which to sit.
A long person was sitting on one of the logs; this person rose and he could see it was Lt. Markus, the ship’s Counselor. She was dressed in western garb: form-fitting straight leg jeans, a light blue embroidered western shirt with ¾ length sleeves, a pair of distressed brown R-toe western boots, a chestnut colored felt cowboy hat and a red western paisley bandana knotted about her neck completed the ensemble.
“Come Jesse,“ Serene said as she smiled and beckoned him forward, “I thought you might be more comfortable in familiar surroundings.”
The setting he realized was that of a Texas plain on Earth; the constellations were those he had seen many times during the spring months.
He blinked in surprise, then grinned. There were definitely worse ways to have a headshrinkin’ session. With a companionable nod at Serene, he said “Nice duds. Gimme a minute; don’t wanna spoil the mood. Computer, please produce my usual clothing for use in the Graham Alpha Series holoprograms. Um, and a privacy screen,” he added with a sheepish grin at Serene.
A large opaque cylinder formed around him, along with the requested clothing at his feet. He quickly changed into his customary riding jeans, comfortable boots, worn western shirt and trail vest. He strolled over to the unoccupied log and sat, laying his uniform beside him.
“Thanks for going to all this trouble for me,” he said. “So, um, obviously I’ve got a lot of baggage to deal with here. Where do we start?”
By the time he had changed into his cowboy gear, Serene had reseated herself on the log. She smiled at him and looked around at the oh so real hologram around them. A gentle breeze could be felt upon her skin, it was refreshing on what seemed a warm humid night.
“I like to surround my patients with something that is familiar and more relaxing,” she said with a shrug.
“As for your ‘baggage’,” she started to say then paused, “first let me tell you something about my skills, Jesse. May I call you Jesse?”
“I have a natural ‘talent’,” she said leaning backwards and looking up at the shiny stars overhead, the Milky Way stretching across most of the sky, “I can sense things from people. I read people, their inflections in speech, their posture, even minor ’tics’ in their expression. It helps me in my work which is helping people to deal with their ’baggage’.”
She looked back at him with a faint smile; she leaned over and picked up a small log and threw it on the fire to keep it from dying too low.
“So tell me Jesse,” she began as she looked at him, concentrating, “was it the supposed Borg involvement in the Captain’s ’drill’ that triggered some repressed trauma from the incident at Wolf 359?”
Serene had read Lt. Graham’s file extensively and knew of his past and what happened at Wolf 359, she had been on the bridge during the drill and felt the powerful emotions emanating from him when the Borg was mentioned. It made sense that someone, who had survived where so many others had died, would have strong feelings and maybe even nightmares about the event.
Jesse stared at Serene for a moment. “Gee, Doc, you don’t waste any time, do ya?”
He looked down into the fire and stared at its glowing heart as he pondered the question and all of its ramifications. As he knew they must, the memories of Wolf 359 crawled back into his conscious mind like some creeping monstrous beast.
The words came haltingly at first; he hadn’t shared this pain with anyone else except for the generic counselor that had replaced Dr. Stinson, the Liberator’s original counselor that was killed during the battle. That seemed as much like talking to an unknown, non-faced computer as anything.
“I…was on the
USS Liberator during Wolf 359,” he began. “I’m sure you can, and probably have, accessed the logs from the…incident…and gotten the official details. It’s the…unofficial stuff…that I can’t get away from. Stuff like seeing the captain in…p-pieces…”. His voice began to break as he recounted this, and tears sprang unbidden to his eyes.” Stuff…like…seeing friends…seeing a girl I had gone out with…floating across the viewscreen…after they’d been sucked out of the ship through hull breaches. Some of them were still…al-alive…for a few seconds. They were flailin’ around…you could see ‘em screaming….out there…in space.”
He paused and drew a shuddering breath. “It was chaos. I’d reach to pull someone out of the rubble by an arm, or a leg…and that would be all that came out when I pulled. Then at some point…the ceiling caved in. It fell on me. My left arm and leg…crushed to paste. Gone. Duranium beams…stuck through my body. They ended up replacing a lung, my spleen, and my pancreas too. Hell!” he exclaimed as he smashed his arm through the end of the log on which he was sitting, “I’m as much machine as man now! But I’d…I trade my whole body…my whole life…if I could just…just…”.
He looked up at Serene with an utterly tortured expression on his face. “Did you know, Doc,…there was this crewman, she was a nurse I think…her husband and all four…
four…of their children…they were such a happy family…they all served together on the
Liberator…they were all…
all…killed. They died together …holding hands even…together at the end…”
Jesse finally could take it no more; he broke into ragged sobs. “It…should’ve been me…they all died, I got crushed into jelly, and then they pinned a damned medal on my chest…
Oh God…it should have been me!”
Jesse felt a soft hand come to rest on his upper right arm, when he looked up he saw Serene slowly sinking to sit next to him on the log. Her soft brown eyes seemed almost hypnotic as they meet his tear filled ones.
“Jesse,” she began, her voice sympathetic and smooth, “No one can doubt the pain and anguish that you experienced back on that horrible day. We have all had similar experiences in one fashion or another.”
He might doubt that, but one look into her eyes and he could see his own pain mirrored in there; she knew the pain of losing friends and family. What he didn’t know is that Serene was El-Aurian and had escaped the destruction of her home world and most of her people when the Borg came and ‘assimilated’ them. She had watched cities being cut out of the ground and pulled up into the sky, people falling to their deaths as they tried to escape the horror. Then later when the few with her had escaped to space, the Borg attacking and cutting up the ships, people being sucked out into space to die of a mercifully quick asphyxiation before the cold killed them or explosive decompression tore them apart.
What Jesse also didn’t know is that during the drill Serene herself had flashbacks and fear at the mention of the Borg, but she had much better control and the devastation she had experienced had been over 100 years ago.
“Nothing will completely remove the memories of what you saw and felt,” she said moving her hand down to take his right hand and hold it softly in between both of hers, “but Time will help to make them more distant and more bearable. Believe me!”
The tone of her voice was sympathetic and soothing; she spoke as if someone who spoke from experience and wasn’t just saying these things to try and calm him.
“I won’t promise you that I will take away all the pain and anguish,” she continued softly, “but I want to help you get past these things and get them out of your system. If you wish to continue in your career with Starfleet you must learn to deal with the past and not let it affect your present or future.”
“Now the ‘condition’ in which I found you in your quarters earlier,” she said her tone becoming a little more serious, “can’t be one that is repeated. Such behavior, and lack of concern for your own well-being, will endanger your position upon this ship. I have said nothing of this to anyone, and it won’t appear anywhere except in my personal files which are closed to everyone except myself. If it happens again, I will have no choice but to remove you from duty for the safety of yourself and the rest of the crew. Do you understand that?”
“Now,” he stern tone softened as she continued to hold his hand, “I will want to discuss this further, and it may require many sessions to help you deal with this trauma. Also, I will always be available to you day or night if you feel overwhelmed by these memories. I will help you to get past this, if you will let me.”
Jesse looked over at Serene with sincere gratitude and hope in his eyes. "I truly hope you can help me, Serene," he said. "This has been eatin' at me for years. I just want to put it behind me and move on."
A troubled thought suddenly came into his mind, and he gave voice to it. "But seeing the crew...floating...out there in space...that was real to me.
Real. I saw them as clearly as I see you right now, Serene. I can't do my job if I'm
seeing dead people, to quote that old 20th century movie. Is there anything you can do for me to help keep that from happening again? If it happens again, and we're in a real combat situation, not just a sim, I could get people killed."
He looked into the fire once more and shuddered. "I can't have that happen. I won't have that happen. I have enough corpses on my conscience."
Serene nodded and gave his hand one last sympathetic squeeze before she released it, “I know Jesse,” she said, “it seemed real to all of us. That was the intent, I think.”
She still wasn’t sure what the Captain had been hoping to accomplish with that drill but if stressing out the crew even more than they already were was the aim, he had hit the mark dead-on.
“I will try to get you thru your ‘ghosts’,” she went on, “but know that you are in Star Fleet and it is a dangerous assignment. Things happen, and unfortunately people die, nothing can change that.”
“But know this Jesse,” she said looking him directly in the eye, “what happened at Wolf 359 was not our fault. You didn’t get those people killed, you did your best and you survived where not many did. Perhaps you survived because your mission in life is not yet complete; maybe some great task yet remains for you to accomplish.”
Serene stood up and looked upwards towards the Milky Way stretching across the clear night sky.
“If you work with me to overcome your past trauma,” she said still looking up, “you could be destined to one day save more lives than were lost on that tragic day.”
She turned back to look at him and gave him a smile, “So, I would like you to think about what I have said for a couple days and then we will schedule another session where I want you to come ready to discuss your dreams and what we can do to get you over your past.”
Jesse smiled at her and nodded. “Will do, Counselor. And thank you. I really appreciate everything you’re doin’ for me.”
“Ok,” she said, “stay here as long as you want and enjoy the peace and tranquil scene.” She looked around and smiled, “This is very beautiful country and I am sure you were very happy growing up here.”
“Lets see if we can get you back to such happiness,” she said look at him again, “Good night Jesse.” She nodded to him and then turned and walked away from the fire.
“Computer, Exit!” She said and the Exit and control panel appeared, she left the Holodeck and the Exit disappeared once the door closed leaving him alone. A coyote howled in the distance giving him a sense of a very familiar and comfortable
Jesse stayed a while longer, enjoying the warmth of the fire and the sights, smells and scents of home. Then, with a final wistful sigh, he stood up and grabbed his uniform.
No use puttin’ real life off any longer, he thought.
I’m sorry that y’all are gone, he said in his mind to those he knew and lost at Wolf 359,
but I’m still here, and I figure I can honor y’all better by gettin’ on with my life, rememberin’ y’all with the greatest honor ‘n respect a man can muster, and workin’ toward the ideals we all signed up to serve.
As he called for the exit and walked through it, Jesse felt an odd excitement, that he was at the threshold, the cusp of moving on and making the most of his life and career as a Starfleet officer. It wouldn’t happen overnight. But it would happen.
Yup, he thought with a smile,
I’m still here…
~Fin~