I promise I'll stick with you."
Eyes squeezed shut, reeling in the cold sunlight, stomach
raw and nauseated, Kathryn reached out and clutched
Phoebe's hand, holding as tightly as she could to safe
anchor.
Four nights later, a fierce winter storm came sweeping
across the plains. The sky had turned leaden in
midafternoon, and the temperature dropped precipitously.
Snow began falling as Kathryn, her mother, and her sister
were eating dinner, and they gazed through the broad
windows of the dining room onto a blizzard of white.
Kathryn had stayed out of bed during the daylight hours
all four days, going to the bedroom only to sleep. Except
that now, irony of ironies, she couldn't sleep, but lay
awake in silent agony, trying not to think of Justin and
her father lying in the dark frigid waters, flesh now
devoured by water creatures, white bones settled in the
silty residue of the alien sea.
But of course she couldn't not think about them. She found
it was easier to envision them dead than to raise the
specter of their manner of death. Had they died immediately
upon impact? Or were they conscious, sucked under with the
fuselage of the ship to drown in icy, brackish water? Or
did they lie, injured and in pain, in an air pocket of the
ship, dying slowly of shock and hypothermia?
Better to think of glistening skeletons, quiescent and
inert. Daytime brought a hollow-eyed fatigue, which Phoebe
steadfastly ignored. They ate breakfast, lunch, and dinner,
exercised, and visited The Meadows, their old school.
Kathryn dutifully fulfilled each of these requirements,
growing more ragged and exhausted with each hour, dreading
impending nightfall and her futile battle with memories.
She didn't want to tell Phoebe that her plan wasn't
working, because she could tell it meant a lot to her
mother that she was making this effort. Her mother had
never shown her anything except love and generosity, and
she wasn't going to be a cause of concern for her. In a few
weeks she'd report for duty at Starfleet Headquarters, and
she would request a science post on a faraway station; once
there, she could sleep when she liked.
At dinner, her mother and Phoebe made delicate small talk,
and Kathryn forced herself to join in; the relief in her
mother's eyes was reward enough for the effort.
But then she felt herself staring out at the blizzard and
thinking that she could go out and start walking . . . just
as she had 248
walked home from the tennis match so long ago .
. . and be swallowed up. A serenity descended on her as she
pondered this, and her mother's voice became mellifluous, a
soothing euphony which lulled and pacified. She smiled at
Phoebe, and tried not to notice the responsive joy in her
sister's eyes.
"Maybe I'll take a walk," she offered when dinner was
over. Her mother turned to her, startled, protesting, "It's
a blizzard out there-"but Phoebe interjected quickly. "It's
a great idea. Nothing so bracing as a walk in the snow.
I'll come with you."
Kathryn smiled at her again. "We've hardly been apart for
the last few days. Isn't it time I ventured out on my own?"
Phoebe shrugged.
"If you say so. But I wouldn't stay out too long.
And take one of the palm beacons."
And in another five minutes, Kathryn was out of the house,
bundled like a polar bear, head down against the driving
wind. It was a mean storm, the snow icy and granular,
assaulting her face like sand. She plowed forward, wanting
to find her willow tree, but already losing bearings in
what was a virtual whiteout.
She walked for some time like that, soon giving up
thoughts of finding the tree, content to march forward in
whatever direction her feet took her. The swirling snow
obscured everything, and soon she felt she was walking on a
vast, dead planet.
Dead planet. Planet of the dead. Snow planet. The unbidden
visions leapt to her mind with a quickness and ferocity
that took her breath away. She felt an unreasonable anger
beginning to form: she had come out here to achieve
oblivion, not to have her wounds laid open again. She
picked up her pace, as though she could outrun the
unwelcome thoughts.
She proceeded at that brisk pace for some minutes, head
down, not knowing or caring in what direction she walked.
Finally, she stopped, breathing deeply, and watched her
breath crystallize in the air in front of her. She turned
slowly in a circle, staring into a void of snow-whirled
blackness. If she lay down, the snow would form a blanket
for her, gradually piling up like goose down, enfolding her
in gentle sanctuary and shielding her from visions of
icebergs and hungry fish.
It was easy. She could bend her knees and sink to earth.
It would be so natural it hardly required a decision.
And yet she remained upright. She was losing body heat,
she realized. If she wasn't going to lie down, she should
keep moving. And suddenly there was a decision to be made
and the ease went out of everything.
It was at that point that she heard the noise. The first
time, she discounted it, thinking it was a variant of the
wind. But the second time, she knew it had an entirely
different quality, a plaintive whine tinged with
desperation.
She hadn't yet snapped on her wrist beacon, but did so
now, throwing the beam in a circle as she tried to
determine where the sound was coming from, but the beam
scarcely penetrated the snow cloud. She began moving in the
general direction of the soft whine, straining to hear it
more clearly. From the corner of her eye, she saw something
moving on the ground, and she turned to throw the beam of
light on it.
At first, it seemed to be a short, light brown snake, but
it didn't move like a snake; it was actually hobbling on
stubby legs. It took a moment for her to register that it
was a hairless puppy, no more than a few weeks old, trying
to scrabble along the snowy ground on legs that were too
weak to lift its pitifully thin body off the ground. The
pup was mewling forlornly, a miserable bundle of cold and
hunger. It found her boot and promptly collapsed on top of
it, as though realizing it had found safe harbor.
Kathryn scooped it up, feeling the frail bones through the
puppy's skin. It had lost a lot of body heat, and had
clearly given its last measure of effort to make the trek
to her boot.
She tucked it inside her parka and felt the little thing's
tiny heart beating wildly. For a moment she was afraid it
was going to die under her coat, its life's last energy
spent on the journey to haven.
But gradually it calmed, and she even thought she felt it
growing warmer. She had to get home. The puppy needed food,
and warmth, and medical attention. If it had the grit to
survive this long in such wretched conditions, she wasn't
going to let it die on her watch. She turned in the still
swirling whiteout, trying to get her bearings. She had no
idea how long she'd walked, or in what direction. Making
the wrong choice could take her deep into frozen fields of
farmland, kilometers from her house.
But purpose honed her instincts. Without quite
understanding how, she knew where home was. She set off,
walking briskly, unerring, determined to save the fragile
life of the tiny being she held to her bosom.
"Petunia, heel! Heel, Petunia!"
Kathryn used her most authoritative tone of voice, but the
four-month-old pup paid no attention. Now a healthy, silky
bundle of fur-and from appearances a generic black
retriever-Petunia had become a sassy, irrepressible being
with unlimited energy, insatiable curiosity, and endless
tenacity.
Of course, it was that very life spirit that had helped
Kathryn to heal. For days she had nursed the starved,
dehydrated puppy back to health, and in doing so, found a
reason to connect again with the world. She had reported
for duty at Starfleet Headquarters and announced her
intention to pursue command; Admiral Paris arranged for a
postgraduate training program, which allowed her to remain
on Earth for six months before being assigned to a space
mission.
Six months, she figured, would be enough time to properly
train Petunia and introduce her to Phoebe's household of
animals. But Petunia had other ideas. She seemed to enjoy
puppyhood too much to start behaving like a well-trained
adult dog. She greatly enjoyed chewing Kathryn's shoes (so
much more tasty than dog toys), climbing on the living-room
furniture (so much more comfy than her bed), and playing a
cunning game of hideand-seek with the padds on Kathryn's
desk (so much more satisfying than fetch). Kathryn knew it
had been a trying experience for her mother, but she also
knew her mother was so glad to have her back among them
that she would have welcomed a dozen Petunias.
Kathryn had brought the dog to the Botanical Park, a
sylvan setting of lush flora that was, on this May evening,
abundant with spring blooms. Dogwood and magnolia vied for
attention with spectacular blossoms, and lilacs cast their
heady fragrance on the warm breeze. They'd been coming here
in the evenings for several weeks now; she found the lovely
setting comforting. The pain of losing Justin and her
father seemed as intense as ever, yet she knew it was
beginning to recede because some thingsPetunia, this
flowered park-had the power to soothe her and even invoke a
sense of well-being, if only for a short time.
"Petunia, come. Petunia-good girl, that's the way. Now,
heel." They were working without a leash, and it wasn't
going well. Petunia was enjoying the new freedom 252
from the choke chain and had no wish to confine herself to
the restrictive boundaries Kathryn was trying to impose.
She found the acacia bushes fascinating, and enjoyed the
feel of damp earth on her paws, and what could be more fun
than a headlong romp through a maze of flowering plants?
Kathryn sighed, knowing she had to get the upper hand here.
If she didn't remain consistent, and firm, a headstrong pup
like Petunia could mature into a dog that was out of
control. "Petunia, heel. was Her voice took on an
additional timbre of authority that she hoped communicated
itself to canine ears.
Petunia fell into line at her left side, keeping pace with
her, nose sniffing the scented air curiously, eyes drawn
from rustling bush to hovering moth and back again.
It was the fireflies that were her undoing. A flock of the
flickering insects suddenly surrounded them, and Petunia
was fascinated. All thought of heeling instantly vaporized,
as Petunia broke and began leaping in the air, trying to
turn herself into a firefly.
"Petunia, come!" snapped Kathryn, to no avail. Petunia was
gone, a leaping dervish, bounding and twisting in the warm
evening air. She crested a small embankment and was
instantly out of sight.
Kathryn went plowing after her, but it was as though the
pup had blinked out of existence. She willed herself not to
panic; Petunia was immature and overactive, but she also
knew who filled the dog dish each evening. She'd be back.
Kathryn sank onto a park bench, one of several dotted
throughout the gardens, and nodded to some passersby. It
was a communal place that people frequented throughout the
day, and Kathryn realized she was beginning to enjoy the
feeling of connection with other people. She must be on the
mend. Now she wrestled with a decision that must be made:
whether or not to accept a command post on a deep space
mission that would depart for the Beta Quadrant in three
months. It would be a way to ascend the command ladder
rapidly, but it meant being away from Earth, from her
mother, and Phoebe, and Petunia, for two years. In the last
months, she'd made a nest here, she felt secure with her
family and her childhood home; the night devils were at
bay.
And, of course, that was precisely the reason she believed
she had to go. Haven is comforting, but it can be an
insidious trap. Her bed had been a refuge for months, and
she realized now it had actually been a prison. If she was
truly going to heal, she had to put herself out there,
hiding from nothing, embracing the journey she had chosen
for herself. A silky black head appeared over the
embankment, and Kathryn smiled. Petunia had, in fact, come
back.
But what was hanging out of her mouth? Kathryn rose,
dismayed, to see that Petunia held a half-eaten sandwich in
her mouth, gently, as though she were retrieving a duck.
Proudly, tail wagging, eyes shining, the pup dropped the
sandwich at Kathryn's feet and looked up at her as though
expecting praise. "Oh, Petunia-what have you done? Whose is