“Thank you, Doctor.” Sulu shook the hand. Then he started for the door, stopped, turned back to McCoy, and said once more, with unmistakable incredulity in his voice, “It was just the one time.”

  “I hope it was worth it,” said McCoy.

  “Actually . . . I barely remember it. I was half asleep,” said Sulu, and he walked out the door.

  And McCoy shook his head and muttered to himself, “Well, it’s pretty damned obvious which half was awake.”

  Chapter Sixteen

  WHEN THE DOOR to Sulu’s apartment slid open, Chekov found himself staring at a young Asian girl in a blue dress. Reflexively he glanced at the apartment number on the assumption that he was at the wrong place. But a quick check proved that he was where he was supposed to be.

  “Is Meester Sulu here?” he asked.

  She nodded but didn’t step aside. “Who are you?”

  “Pavel Chekov. Who are you?”

  “Demora.”

  “Demora, like the city?”

  “Just like.”

  “Vell . . . most unusual. I am a friend of Sulu’s. Are you?”

  She appeared to consider it. “The jury’s still out on that, frankly.”

  He was surprised by her apparent erudition. Then again, Chekov didn’t have a great deal of experience with children, so he wasn’t entirely certain what to expect.

  “May I come in?”

  She stepped aside, giving him room to enter.

  He’d always liked Sulu’s apartment . . . not that Sulu had a great deal of time to spend there, what with being gone for years at a time. Furnished in dark browns, with real wood furniture (lord only knew where Sulu had acquired it). His antique weapons collection, ranging from swords to firearms, was secured behind plexi cabinets. Pictures or portraits of his various ancestors hung on the walls. Sulu was fairly big on families, and could trace his ancestry back centuries.

  “Vere is Sulu, do you know?”

  She chucked a finger. “In the kitchen. Making dinner.”

  “I’ll just go talk to him then.”

  “Fine,” said Demora with a shrug. She moved over to a couch and sank down into the cushion.

  Chekov found Sulu in the kitchen. “So . . . vat mysterious and exotic dish are you preparing?”

  Sulu was busy scooping something from a pot and pouring it over rolls. “Chili,” he said. “It’s what Demora wanted.”

  “Ah, Demora. Your sentinel at the gate. Interesting little girl. She’s . . . vat? Eleven? Twelve?”

  “Just turning seven.”

  “She seems older.”

  “Well, that’s appropriate. I feel older.”

  “So who is she? Niece?”

  “Daughter.”

  “Whose daughter?”

  Sulu stared at him. “Mine.”

  It was clear that Chekov was having trouble digesting the information. “I’m sorry . . . vat?”

  “She’s my daughter.”

  Chekov looked in the direction of the living room, where Demora was seated, and then back to Sulu. He looked stunned. “Your . . . daughter.”

  “Yes.”

  “Your daughter. Your daughter?”

  Sulu put the plates down, making no attempt to hide his impatience. He spoke in a low tone to keep their voices from reaching Demora. “Are we going to move past this sentence anytime soon?”

  “You have a daughter?” Chekov whispered. “And you never mentioned her to me?”

  “I didn’t know! I didn’t know until a few hours ago.”

  “Do you know who the mother is?”

  “Of course I know who the mother is.”

  “Oh, now you say 'Of course.' Considering you didn’t know the child existed, the idea of you not knowing who the mother is doesn’t seem all that farfetched.”

  “It’s Ling Sui. You remember her.”

  “Of course I remember her. The woman from . . .” And then he thudded his hand against his forehead. “Of course. From Demora. I should have realized it vasn’t simply coincidence.” He hesitated. “So . . . so vat do you do now?”

  “I don’t know,” said Sulu in exasperation. “She has no other relatives but me. She’s just lost her mother. She doesn’t seem especially interested in me. And I’m scheduled to ship out with the Bozeman.”

  “Does she know that?”

  “She knows it, yes.”

  “Vell, perhaps the reason she’s not especially interested is because she doesn’t vant to make the emotional investment in someone who is leaving.”

  Sulu transferred the dishes onto a serving tray. “Since when are you the great child psychiatrist?”

  “Since ven are you a father?”

  Sulu sighed. “All right. Touché.”

  As he started to head into the dining room, Chekov stopped him and said, “Uhm . . . you didn’t mention to me at the time that you and Ling Sui . . .”

  “It was just once.”

  “That’s all it takes.”

  “So I’ve heard,” said Sulu.

  * * *

  The meal didn’t go precisely as planned.

  For one thing, Chekov didn’t plan for himself and Demora to hit it off as well as they did. He had grown accustomed to thinking of children as odd, separate creatures, rather than simply small humans. Beings with their own rules and own manner of communication to which no adult could be privy.

  Demora was quite the opposite. She was, he suspected, very much her mother’s daughter. She spoke with intelligence and education about a startling number of topics, ranging from archaeology to the present condition of Federation politics. Chekov found himself becoming quite fond of her during his visit, and he suspected that Demora felt likewise.

  Sulu, for his part, kept his own counsel. His gaze would dart from one to the other as they chatted. Chekov interacted with Demora with such ease that Sulu felt torn. On the one hand he was pleased that they were hitting it off so well. On the other hand . . . he was a little jealous.

  But he realized why it was that Chekov felt so at ease with her. It was because he was going to be able to leave. This was Sulu’s problem, Sulu’s situation, and Chekov was just a visitor to it. He could get to know Demora as a person, chat with her, laugh with her . . . and Sulu got to worry about what in hell he was going to do next.

  Chekov stayed late into the evening, regaling Demora with stories about his and Sulu’s time together in the service. A couple of times Sulu tried to hush him up, but Chekov was not easy to stop. Each anecdote would remind him of another, and he’d say with growing excitement, “And then there vas the time . . .”

  The hour grew later and later, and finally Sulu said, “Demora . . . I really think it’s time for bed. I showed you where the guest bedroom is. . . .”

  “That’s because I’m a guest?”

  He looked from Demora to Chekov and back again. Clearing his throat, he said, “That’s . . . just what I’m in the habit of calling it, that’s all.”

  “It’s early for me still.”

  “Well, I think it’s time you went to bed.”

  She squared her shoulders and said, “Mother lets me st . . .”

  And then she caught herself, speaking of her mother in the present tense. It was a slip that had a very visible effect on her, and she looked downcast. It was the first time since he’d met her that he’d seen anything from her acknowledging her loss. She certainly pulled herself together quickly, however, as she said, “All right. Good night then.” She turned and walked briskly away toward the rear of the apartment, and Sulu had the feeling—probably legitimate—that the reason she retreated so quickly was because she didn’t want him to see her cry.

  Chekov leaned over and said to Sulu in a low voice, “She’s a great kid, isn’t she?”

  “Oh . . . fabulous,” Sulu said. “So how do you suggest I handle this?”

  “Vell—” Chekov gave it a moment’s thought. “—you could try and talk Starfleet into letting you bring her along.”

  “You
mean on the Bozeman? Against regs. Never happen.” He looked down, drumming his fingers. “I’m . . . going to make arrangements.”

  “Vat kind? You’ll leave her vith your family?”

  “There are schools. I’ve done some checking. Boarding schools and such that will take care of the child year round. Educate her, feed her. That would be best, I think.”

  “Vile you’re off exploring the galaxy,” said Chekov.

  “You make it sound trivial.”

  “I don’t mean to,” said Chekov. “And you know I don’t feel that vay. I’m just saying . . .”

  “What? What are you saying?”

  He raised his eyes and studied his longtime friend. “I’m saying that here’s a child who vill have lost her mother and never really gotten to know her father. And that’s a lousy vay to grow up.”

  “Oh really. How do you know?”

  “Because that’s how I grew up.”

  Sulu said nothing for a moment, then went back to tapping his fingers on the coffee table in front of them. “You turned out okay,” he said after a time.

  “Perhaps. But maybe I could have turned out better. I’ll never know.”

  “And if I leave her, she’ll never know. Is that what you’re saying?” Sulu rose, looking down at Chekov. “What are you telling me, Pav? That I should quit? Turn down the first-officer position? Walk away from the thing I know most about in the galaxy so that I can try being a father to an instant family, something about which I assure you I know absolutely nothing? Chekov . . . it’s crazy. It wouldn’t do her any good, and it certainly wouldn’t do me any good.”

  “Are you sure?”

  “Yes, I’m sure!”

  “Then I suppose there’s nothing more to say.”

  “Apparently not.”

  Sulu sat back down. It had never seemed so quiet in the apartment before. It was as if the absence of noise had become an entity unto itself.

  “It’s just ironic, that’s all,” Chekov finally said.

  “What is?”

  “Vell . . . years ago, you were telling me how life on Earth couldn’t be exciting. How there was no adventure. And then you were pulled into the entire business vit Ling Sui, and you thought you had found adventure. But that was only a few days. There is no greater adventure than raising a child.”

  “You’re speaking from experience, I gather,” he said sarcastically.

  “I vish. Just gut instinct. The same instinct that tells me leaving her behind couldn’t be right.”

  “Maybe you’d feel differently if the situations were reversed.”

  “Maybe,” agreed Chekov. “But . . . they’re not. And so I don’t.”

  “What do you want from me, Chekov?” Sulu said in exasperation. “What do you expect me to do? Have some sudden burst of paternal affection that I never had before? Look at this child who is, to all intents and purposes, a stranger to me, and feel so protective of her that I reorder my life around her? Chekov, I . . . I have responsibilities . . .”

  “Yes. You do,” said Chekov sharply. “And vun of them is in the ‘guest bedroom‣ right now. So the only question is: Vat are you going to do about it?”

  “I’m going to do right by her,” Sulu said. “It just may be that you and I have different definitions of what’s right.”

  “Actually,” Chekov replied, “I don’t think ve do. Ve simply von’t both admit to it, that’s all.”

  Chapter Seventeen

  SULU AND DEMORA spent the next day walking around San Francisco. Demora was quiet much of the time as he pointed out landmarks to her. She seemed politely interested at most.

  He stopped outside one building, pointed, and said, “This is where I grew up.”

  She cast a quick glance at it. “Your family still live here?” she asked.

  He shook his head. “My mother moved to New Tokyo to take care of her sister. The rest of my family . . . they’re all going on with their lives in other places.” He sighed. “Once upon a time, families lived together in the same house for generations. But it’s . . . not like that anymore. It hasn’t been for a long, long time. There’s too many opportunities out there. Too many directions for people to go.”

  “And no one wants to be anchored with children.”

  He stopped and looked down at her. Realizing that candy-coating the truth was going to be a waste of time with this child, he said bluntly, “So . . . how much of my conversation with Chekov did you overhear last night?”

  “All of it,” she said in that matter-of-fact tone of hers.

  “And how do you feel about it?”

  She shrugged. She had a very expressive shrug.

  “That’s it? Just,” and he shrugged back.

  “Mother brought me with her wherever she went because that’s what she felt she had to do to be a good mother. You feel you have to dump me in a school because that’s how you’ll be a good father. Everyone does what they have to do. One way or another makes no difference to me.”

  He studied her, trying to see if she was being sarcastic. If she was trying to cover up some sort of deep hurt. But her face was as inscrutable as . . .

  . . . as his could be.

  “You’re being very grown-up,” he said.

  She raised an eyebrow ever so slightly. “Someone has to be,” she replied.

  * * *

  The school that Sulu had in mind was in Washington state, just outside Seattle. Called the Winchester School, it was one of several schools highly recommended to Starfleet personnel who were in similar straits as Sulu (not identical, of course; Sulu’s circumstances were rather unusual, even for Starfleet).

  They walked around the grounds for a time, visited the dorms, spoke with the teachers. At all times Demora was polite, quiet, respectful.

  It made Sulu extremely nervous.

  He had long ago learned to trust his gut instinct. For instance, when encountering another ship, he simply knew when there was going to be trouble. Before the other ship would put up their shields, before any alerts were sounded . . . Sulu just had a feeling.

  He had that feeling now. Her shields had been raised. He wasn’t sure what her weapons were, but he dreaded having them fired in his direction.

  “Do you like it?” he asked as they stood in the dorm.

  She nodded. That was all. Just nodded.

  She nodded in the classrooms. She nodded in the library. She nodded in the grassy center square. She nodded so much that Sulu thought her head was going to fall off.

  On the flight home, he said to her, “I think you don’t like it.”

  She sighed in exasperation. “I said I did.”

  “I think you may just be saying what I want to hear.”

  She looked up at him icily. “How do I know what you want to hear? I hardly know you.”

  And it’s not like you’re giving me the chance. She didn’t say it in so many words, but he was positive that’s what was going through her mind. Either that or it was so strongly on his own mind that he was superimposing it onto her.

  “All right. Fair enough,” he said. “What would you like to know about me?”

  She gave it some consideration.

  “Did you love my mother?” she asked.

  He wasn’t certain what he’d been expecting her to say. On the other hand, he realized, he shouldn’t have been the least bit surprised.

  But what was he supposed to say? The truth was that he had barely had any time with her mother. They’d had no time to build a relationship, to establish bonds of trust. To create all the things that went into a loving . . .

  And then he thought about her. Thought about her smile . . . her laugh . . . her bravery, her grim humor . . . thought about what she had been to him, what she’d represented . . .

  . . . thought about the press of their bodies against each other . . .

  . . . thought about what she had given him.

  And he smiled and said, “Demora . . . I think I loved your mother before I ever met her.”


  She looked at him slightly askance. “Does that mean yes?”

  “It means yes.” He hesitated and then said, “Did she love me?”

  Again with the shrug. “I guess.”

  “Did she ever say?”

  Demora laughed slightly. “She never even said she loved me. Mother wasn’t much for talking; just doing. Are you like that?”

  “In a way. Are you?”

  “In a way. Besides,” she added with that mature air of hers, “talking about love and everything . . . it’s a waste of time, really.”

  “If it’s a waste of time, why’d you bring it up?”

  “I felt like wasting time, I guess. I mean, I’m here. You’re here. Mother’s gone. Love really doesn’t much matter in the grand scheme of things, you know? Not in our situation.”

  “Our situation being—?”

  “Well . . . it’s like if a meteor is coming toward your planet. You can spend a lot of time wondering where the meteor came from. Maybe it was part of another planet that blew up, and then you wonder if there were people on that planet, and what were they like, and did they all die, and all that kind of stuff. But none of it really matters. The only thing that matters is that you have to do something about the meteor—blast it to pieces—because it’s a threat to your planet.”

  “And I’m the planet, and you’re the meteor. Is that what you’re saying?”

  She shrugged once more. Sulu’s shoulders were starting to ache just watching her.

  “Demora . . . the last thing I want to do is blast you to pieces.”

  “And what’s the first thing you want to do with me?”

  He shook his head in confusion. “What?”

  She spoke utterly calmly, not appearing the least bit upset. “The first thing you’d want to do with me . . . is wish that I wasn’t here. Because then you could go on with your life.”

  “That’s not true.”

  She looked away.

  He put a hand on her shoulder but she pushed it away. “That’s not true,” he said again.

  And with a set jaw and steady gaze she said, “You know it is.”

  Which, of course, he did.

  * * *

  She was to leave for the Winchester School in the morning. This way she’d have enough time to settle in there, and for Sulu to then board the next outbound transport to take him to the Bozeman.