Deanna…?
There was no response, and with an annoyed air, Lwaxana resorted to the far more inconvenient, since it meant she had to disrupt her eating, verbal “Deanna.”
Deanna looked up. “Yes, Mother?”
“What is troubling you, Little One?”
Her daughter smiled gamely. “Nothing, Mother.”
“Casual lies?” Lwaxana looked disapproving. “First you thwart a mind brush, and then you resort to telling me that nothing is bothering you when something clearly is. I thought we were more open with each other than that, Deanna. Frankly…I’m a little hurt.”
“There’s no reason to be hurt, Mother, just because I don’t want to share every intimate detail of my life every moment.”
Lwaxana raised an eyebrow. “Intimate?”
“Mother, I don’t want to get into it.”
Lwaxana let a rather crude response float from her mind into Deanna’s, and it got the expected reaction. Deanna flushed slightly and said, “Mother, that was uncalled for.”
“Perhaps. But how accurate was it?”
“Mo-ther…”
“It’s him, isn’t it. That Starfleet officer, Striker.”
“Riker.”
“Him.” Lwaxana carefully arranged her napkin in front of her and turned to her manservant. “Mr. Homn, I’ll want to send a communiqué to Starfleet.”
Deanna slapped the table impatiently and said, “Don’t you dare!”
She might just as easily have spit into Lwaxana’s food and gotten the same response as she received. Slowly, with an air of complete and utter shock, Lwaxana turned and openly gaped at her child. “‘Don’t you dare’?” she repeated incredulously. Deanna looked down, her mouth moving but no sound coming. “You’re telling me,” continued Lwaxana, “what I, the keeper of the Sacred Chalice of Riix, should and should not dare? May I ask you, young lady, who in the Great Fire you think you’re talking to?”
“Mother, please, I’m sorry—”
“I will not be addressed in that…that cavalier, offhand manner. I am not one of your ‘pals,’ Deanna. I am not one of your casual acquaintances. I am certainly not one of your Starfleet friends.”
“He’s not a friend! He’s not even…Mother, I don’t even like him!”
“Then what is he?” demanded Lwaxana. “What is he to you?”
“A frustration. A big frustration, that’s all. He’s a…a case study in surface arrogance. He’s…he’s nothing. Nothing. Not on a personal level.”
“Need I remind you,” said Lwaxana stiffly, “of your commitment to Wyatt?”
“I know about that, Mother. But frankly, I can’t believe that you’re really going to hold me to that…that agreement.”
“Little One, I’m not holding you to anything! This is tradition and custom we’re talking about. I don’t just fabricate things to inconvenience you and make your life more difficult. I simply teach you what they are and expect you to abide by them. And you, knowing your place in society and the responsibilities that place entails, are going to abide by them. Aren’t you.” The last was not a question.
Deanna looked down.
“Aren’t you.” This time there was even a bit more of an edge than before.
“Yes, Mother,” said Deanna automatically, a phrase she had repeated any number of times before on a variety of occasions.
“Good, because frankly…and I’m only giving you my surface interpretation here, since you seem uncomfortable with allowing me to probe more deeply on this…you’re making it quite clear that you can’t exactly control yourself when it comes to this lieutenant.”
Now Deanna looked up, her jaw set. “I can control myself just fine, Mother. I’m not some…some animal in heat.”
“I never said you were.”
“No, but you implied it.”
“I didn’t—”
“You did.”
“All right, maybe I did,” said Lwaxana, putting her hands up. “But it’s understandable. You don’t seem yourself when it comes to thoughts of him. Perhaps I should have a talk with the people at the university. If this lieutenant is merely a case study for you, then I think that the university is doing a pretty shabby job of teaching you something as simple as clinical detachment.”
“They’re doing a fine job, Mother. Please…stay out of it. I can handle Lieutenant Riker just fine.”
Lwaxana stared at her piercingly. “And how do you define ‘just fine’?”
“I define it as being capable of rising to a situation without your help.”
Lwaxana appeared to consider this a moment, then speared another piece of fish with her prong. And then she said simply, “See that you do.”
Mr. Homn hit his chime and Deanna winced slightly. Funny how, after all these years, she’d never realized just how damned annoying that persistent chiming was.
Riker lay in his quarters at the embassy, reading a primer on Betazed philosophy that Deanna had recommended.
It was puzzling to him. In example after example, situations were presented and the reader was asked, basically, “What would you do or say in such a situation?” And Riker was consistently getting it wrong.
He went on to the next example and read it out loud to see if it would make more sense: “A friend tells you that she is very upset. Her immediate supervisor has said several overly critical things in regards to her work, and she feels frustrated and hurt over the situation. How do you respond?”
Riker thought about it and then said out loud, “All right. I tell her one of two things: either she can analyze her work habits, see where she’s being remiss, and improve her performance, or, if she firmly believes that the criticism by her supervisor is unwarranted, she can tell her supervisor that and demonstrate why. If he continues to be overly critical, she can inform him that if he does not cease and desist in his unreasonable demands, then she will go to the next level in the chain of command and file a grievance.”
He pondered that for a moment, decided that it was a good, solid, reasonable response, and moved on to what the text claimed was the proper way to handle it.
He read it out loud without understanding it.
“‘Tell your friend’”—and there was incredulity in Riker’s voice—“‘that you understand her frustration. That you know she’s in a difficult situation, but have confidence she’ll work it through. Cite an instance in your own life where you experienced similar feelings of anxiety. Let her know that she’s not alone and that she can count on you as a source of emotional support.’”
He stared at the words floating there on the screen and shook his head. “But what’s that going to solve?” he asked in frustration. “Sitting there and commiserating about how difficult life is? That’s not going to do anything to address the problem! It’s not going to make things better. I mean, why would she come to me with this problem if she didn’t want me to try and come up with ways to solve it?”
He pushed the screen away in annoyance, shutting it off. This was ridiculous. Tang had been absolutely right about these people. They seemed to dwell endlessly on how everyone felt.
He resolved to ask Deanna about it the next time he saw her.
Which was not the next day.
Or the day after that.
Or the day after that.
By the end of the week, the silence on the part of his “tutor” had become somewhat puzzling, if not downright irritating. He made several calls over to the mansion and was repeatedly told that Deanna wasn’t there or wasn’t available. He asked that she return his calls, but she never did.
He was starting to become irritated, and his irritability showed through when Sergeant Tang happened to stop by to chat about a new piece of ordnance. Riker was short-tempered with him and then immediately regretted his tone.
“Sorry, Sergeant. That was uncalled for.”
Tang stared at him and rubbed his beard stubble thoughtfully. Riker wondered for a moment how in hell Tang perpetually managed to look as if he
needed a shave. Did he just scrape along the edges of the stubble, cutting it to a particular disheveled length?
In a manner that was a bit too overfamiliar for a sergeant to deal with a lieutenant—but nevertheless seemed utterly in keeping with Tang’s personality—the veteran spacer slapped Riker on the forearm and said, “C’mon with me, Lieutenant. I got something set up downstairs that you look like you could use.”
Riker followed Tang to the lower sections of the embassy, to rarely used storage facilities. At the moment, the facilities were relatively empty, particularly because the reception for the Rigelian ambassador had depleted much of the stock. Riker knew there would not be a ship along to restock for several weeks.
Riker was surprised—but not too surprised—to see that Tang and his men had converted the large facilities into a makeshift armory. “We’re good at making do with what we have,” said Tang. “Every so often, though, we fall into a bit of luck.”
“Good lord.” Riker was looking at one of the most massive pieces of armament he’d ever seen. It hung on the wall and was almost as large as Riker himself. He looked around to Tang and said, “May I?”
Tang waved toward it. “You’re the CO. Be my guest.”
Riker lifted the long, cylindrical weapon down and staggered under the weight of it. He had trouble placing his hands correctly and felt it slipping off his shoulder. But then Tang was there, steadying him, although actually he seemed a bit more concerned about the weapon’s safety than Riker’s.
“Here, you take it,” said Riker, handing it off to Tang. Although Tang was a head shorter than Riker, he hefted the weapon as if it weighed a fraction of what it actually did. Riker tried to suppress his astonishment at the display of strength and was only partially successful. “What is that?”
“This,” said Tang, patting it proudly with his free hand, “is the latest in mobile ground-to-air defense. The portable Level 10, shoulder-mounted phaser cannon, Model II.”
“Makes you wonder what Model I was like.”
“Model I blew up during field testing and destroyed half of Pluto. No one cared—it was a boring planet, anyway.” Then, when he saw Riker’s expression, he grinned, showing slightly irregular teeth. “I’m kidding, Lieutenant.”
“I knew you were,” Riker lied. “How powerful is that thing?”
“On full strength, I’d probably have a shot at knocking one of Betazed’s moons out of orbit.”
“You’re kidding again.”
Tang looked at him, his face inscrutable. “I didn’t say I’d have a good shot at it.”
He placed the gun back on the wall and took a couple of small target-practice phasers out of their mountings. “Come on. I’ll show you what we got set up.”
He led Riker over to another area, which was somewhat darkened, and handed him one of the phasers. Then from his belt he unclipped a couple of small, diamond-shaped devices. “Standard issue for ground security,” he said. “Keeps us from getting stale no matter where we are.”
He tossed them into the air, and on their own, they started hurtling around the chamber. “Pick your shot and start firing, Lieutenant.”
Back to back, Riker and Tang began firing at the diamonds, trying to nail them in midflight. They glistened as they darted about the room, bobbing and weaving in no particular pattern. Riker managed to land a couple of shots; Tang landed far more.
And as if the tricky piece of firing only required part of his attention, Tang said, “It’s a woman, isn’t it.”
“Pardon?”
“One of the local girls, like you said you were going to be going out with. She’s got you hooked…no disrespect intended.”
“I’m not hooked, Sergeant. They have interesting philosophies. I’m trying to understand them.”
“How much philosophy do you need to get through life? If something attacks you, shoot it. If it doesn’t attack you, leave it alone. Everything else is just window dressing.”
“That’s a very narrow mind-set, Sergeant.”
“That mind-set is what keeps you alive, Lieutenant Riker. I’m still here. My men share my mind-set. They’re still here. That’s all that matters.”
“Hello, Will.”
The two men stopped and turned, and there stood Wendy Roper. She was wearing a white jumpsuit that clung to her like a second skin. “Hi, Sergeant.”
“Ma’am,” acknowledged Tang.
She turned back to Riker and wasn’t able to hide the disappointment in her face. “Will…I haven’t seen you around much.”
“I, um…I’ve been very busy lately, Wendy.”
“Really?” she said with a pert angle of her head. “Doing what?”
“I’ve…”
“The lieutenant has mostly been preoccupied with perimeter inspections, ma’am,” Tang said stiffly. “Word on the line is that we’re ripe for an attack at any time.”
“Yes, any time,” echoed Riker.
“A great deal of time being spent in security procedures. All out of concern for your safety, ma’am.”
“I see. Well…when you do have some free moments, Lieutenant…it’d be nice to get together. I thought we were hitting it off rather well.” She nodded to Tang. “Good seeing you, Sergeant.” And she walked off. Riker could hear her light footsteps receding up the stairs.
“She’s a nice girl,” Tang observed. “Very pleasant companion, I’d think. And best of all—no offense intended—not overly intellectual, if you catch my drift.”
“I’d have to agree.”
“But I take it she’s not the young lady…?”
“No. She’s not.”
“Never burned the candle at both ends, Lieutenant?”
Riker looked at him askance. “You mean juggled more than one relationship at a time?”
“If you want to put it that way, sir, yes.”
“To be honest…yes. But somehow, until I get things sorted out with Deanna—”
“Deanna’s the local girl?”
“Yes. I don’t know how to put it, Sergeant, but it wouldn’t seem…I don’t know…right somehow.”
Tang made a disapproving clucking noise. “Bad sign, Lieutenant. Very bad sign. Shields up, proceed with caution.”
“Noted and logged, Sergeant. Oh, by the way.” Riker started targeting the flying diamonds again. “You didn’t have to lie for me to Wendy.”
“I know, sir. On the other hand, I’m rather experienced with laying down covering fire. Just consider it all part of the service.”
“Well…it’s appreciated. I didn’t exactly know how to tell her about Deanna…especially when I’m not even sure if there’s anything to tell.”
“No problem, Lieutenant.”
“I haven’t even seen her in close to a week. Maybe I should head over to the university where she’s got classes…”
Tang shook his head violently, although it did nothing to spoil his shot. “Big mistake, sir. Very big mistake. Keep in mind that she hasn’t heard from you either. Now either that’s weighing on her mind, in which case you should just let it simmer until she can’t stand it anymore, or else she’s not thinking about you at all, in which case you certainly don’t need her. But you go pursuing her, you’re giving her the strategic advantage. Not a good maneuver at all.”
“You make it sound like a military campaign.”
Tang looked at him. “Well, sir…they do call it the war of the sexes. Wars are wars. Strategies are strategies. And winning”—Tang fired again, in rapid succession, and this time nailed both floating diamonds dead center, disengaging them. They clattered to the floor—“is what counts.”
“Winning isn’t everything, Sergeant.”
“Winning isn’t everything, sir…but losing isn’t anything.”
Riker tried to come up with a response to that, but couldn’t. “That’s true, I suppose.”
“Can’t claim credit for it, sir. I was told a twentieth-century philosopher came up with that. They sure knew their stuff back then.”
br /> “What philosopher?”
Tang paused and frowned. “Can’t say I rec—wait. I do remember. His name was Charlie Brown.”
Riker considered it and nodded. “This Charlie Brown must have been a very wise man.”
“I expect he was, sir. I expect he was.”
Twenty-one
Mark Roper was chuckling. “So when do I get my two hundred credits?”
They were seated across from each other at the café, where meeting for breakfast had evolved into a morning ritual. Riker looked up at Roper innocently while buttering a piece of rye toast. “What do you mean?”
“The two hundred credits you owe me over the bet about Deanna.”
“I’ve got considerably more time on that, don’t you think, Mark?” said Riker evenly.
“Time?” Roper laughed. “Captain, time doesn’t make any difference. She’s cut ties with you. Now or doomsday won’t make any difference. It’s not going to happen. Lwaxana told me—”
“She told you what?” demanded Riker, his eyes turning keen and a bit angry. “When did you speak to her?”
“Casual conversation a week or so ago.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?” He crunched down on the toast.
“I am telling you. Frankly, you weren’t even the topic of conversation. We were comparing notes about the difficulties of raising daughters. And Lwaxana was boasting about how Deanna listens to, and does, everything Lwaxana tells her to do because she has Deanna so well trained in her responsibilities as a daughter of the Fifth House. And an example she gave was how she shut down the relationship between Deanna and ‘that Starfleet fellow’ because it wasn’t appropriate.”
“Oh, she did,” said Riker icily. “Odd. That’s not how I see it.”
“I don’t imagine you would see it that way,” was Roper’s calm response. He speared a piece of egg and said, “But then again…I suppose how you see it doesn’t matter all that much, does it, Captain?”
Riker looked daggers at Roper, but the older man was the picture of tranquillity. And why shouldn’t he be? As far as he was concerned, he’d won a two-hundred-credit bet.
But Riker saw it a bit differently.