*** To Every Purpose The Brown Chronicle A Star Trek: The Next Generation Story by Merlin Missy Copyright 1995 *** Day 1: Tea for Three *** The water in the tea kettle had nearly boiled away by the time Marie remembered it. She ran into the kitchen, pulled it off the burner, and scalded her hand when a few drops fell from the steamy lid. In the old days, she would have sworn under her breath. She stared at the red welts beginning to form, still holding the kettle in her left hand. She set it down, walked to the sink and held the burn under the stinging cold water. She reached above the sink for the tin tea keeper, rooting around in the accumulation of packets of special gravies she had never tried, and spices she had saved for some special occasion which had never materialized. The tea keeper was gone. Tears began to form behind her eyes; feeling ridiculous, she told herself it was only tea. She got out a glass, intending to get some juice, when she remembered that there was no more juice. She had finished it off two days before, and had been meaning to get to the store. If she had a replicator in the house, she could just replicate some apple juice. Or tea, for that matter. She really had to bring the subject up again with ... She bit her lip, hard enough to draw blood. She was *not* going to cry, dammit! She slammed the cabinet shut, then heard running water and realized that she had not turned the faucet off. With the tap stopped, the silence pressed against her. Carefully, she lifted the tea kettle and poured out the little water that remained. She hung it in its spot over the stove, then opened the refrigerator to see if there was anything at all to soothe the burning sensation in her throat. From the top shelf, the tea keeper stared back at her accusingly. The better part of an hour later, she finally had her cup of Darjeeling. There was too much sugar in it, and no cream. That was another thing she would have to get, if she ever found the energy to go to town. She set her cup down on the desk in the study, then tried to remember what she had been doing. She wandered over to the window, and looked out upon the side lawn. All the trees were bare, their leaves long since swept away by the wind and the persistent efforts of a rake. The snows that had been threatening earlier in the week had passed to the south, a small piece of good news, anyway. Suddenly, vividly, she saw a huge snowstorm, the like of which had never been seen in Labarre. It dropped ten feet of snow on the whole province. She was stranded in the house for over a month. The food would have run out, but the woodpile and the fuel ran out first and she froze to death. No one found her until Spring. It was a nice fantasy. Now she remembered. She sat down at Robert's desk, and called up the budget on the terminal. The numbers scrawled down the screen, as she tried to make sense of them. For the past twenty years, she had kept a record of every credit earned by the farm, every sou spent at the grocery, even a running tabulation of how much the bottles in the cellar increased in value as they aged. She had a gift for numbers, had operated a small accounting business from her home when she'd first moved to Labarre, before ... Before. Stupid numbers, not adding up right. If she hired two people to take care of the vines in the coming season, that would be so much in wages. But they would want paid during the season not afterwards, so if she put the rest of the '47 on the market this year, she could have the assets available to pay them. She inputed the figures. The screen read: "ERROR. PLEASE REENTER INFORMATION." She tried again, with the same problem. The program refused to accept her data, and she had written the damned thing! After three more tries, she turned it off. It wasn't as though she could really keep the farm running, anyway. Maybe she should just sign the whole thing over to Jean-Luc and let him deal with it. Then she could just leave, pack all her belongings and go where there were no grapes, or horses, or barns. A place where no one had ever heard of the Picard family, which would be pretty damned hard thanks to her somewhat famous brother-in-law. Jean-Luc entered her mind, the image as he had been the last time she'd seen him. Robert had given him a bottle of the '47, one of the best vintages yet, and had kissed him on the cheek while she and Rene had watched. She wondered what they both would have said or done had they known that this was the end, that they would never see one another alive again. Jean-Luc. There was something important about Jean-Luc that she should remember. The thought stayed for a moment, flitted away like a spark from a fire, was gone. Instead, she turned back to thoughts of Rene on that day, was it four years now or five? He was small for his age, but of course he would eventually grow into his father's build: short, stocky, and strong. But it seemed that he wouldn't grow up like his father, or go flying starships like his uncle, or do anything, after all. The trembling, which she had almost managed to control today, began to shake her thin frame. She braced herself against the desk, and her hand brushed the teacup. Lazily, it glided towards the floor, splintering and cracking when it fell. Almost in an afterthought, the brown innards splashed her feet with cold tea. Wide-eyed, she stared at the shattered porcelain, the tea seeping into the carpet, and the tears crept back out from behind her eyes and mingled with the slowly spreading stain on the floor. *** She cleaned up the spill after the crying spell passed. Unless she took it to a good cleaner, the carpet would be permanently stained. Her fingers played over the damp fibers. According to Robert, the carpet, covered in a single convoluted vine in a Celtic knot, had been a present to his grandparents from a friend of the family nearly a century previous. It had survived his father's childhood as well as his son's, without even wearing the pattern. It would have to be fixed. She swept the remains of the teacup into her hand, heedless of sharp edges, and tossed it into the disposal unit. That made two cups from the set gone. She felt the tears again, but held them back. There would be enough time for that later. There was something that she had to do, but she still could not remember. The store? Yes. She had to go to the store because the pantry needed to be restocked. Winter was coming on soon. That must be it. She went outside without remembering her jacket. The chill air stroked her back as she went to get the ground car, and she hurried. Something stopped her. The wind hit her face, trying to nudge it towards the east, where the barn had been. She turned away from it; she had successfully avoided looking in that direction for days, and no breeze was going to change her now. Instead, she stared fixedly on the front gates. The gates were important because ... because ... Because Jean-Luc would be walking through them today. She finally remembered; he and a friend would be here at 4 o'clock. She glanced to her watch. 2:30. She would have time to get to the grocer's, then pick them up in the village square. That would keep them from having to walk in the cold. *** The store was hell, and she was damned. She was certain of it. People who'd barely given her the time of day before made a point to walk up to her and offer their sympathies, their condolences, their prayers, their thoughts. Behind their eyes, she read "Thank goodness it wasn't *my* family," and a feeling of pity. She wanted to tell them where they could put their sympathies, their condolences, their pity. She held her tongue, smiled, thanked them, and prayed fervently that no one would tell her that her husband and child had gone to a better place. All told, she had counted seventeen "I'm so sorry"s, twelve "If there's anything I can do"s, four "I just heard"s, but only one "They've gone to a better place," and that from Mme. Gescherd who was older than God and batty as an old cave. It wouldn't be quite so bad, if she hadn't heard the gossip surrounding her before. An outsider comes to the village and almost immediately takes up with the elder brother in one of the wealthiest families in the district? Of course it was for love, they said, and the child looks just like his father, too, and their eyes would look knowingly upon her. Oh yes, she'd heard them. She wondered what the rumors said now. Probably that she'd finally had her comeuppance. No more strutting through town with her chin in the air for that one. Maybe she even started that fire herself. It was, after all, a huge estate, and Robert owned half of it. Maybe she'd started the fire, but that son of hers got caught in it by accident. Served her right. She could almost hear the whispers as she walked through the aisles. The stares touched upon her like the fingers of dirty children, picking and examining everything. Yet, when she got near to them, all they said was "I'm so sorry. Is there anything I can do?" She wanted to scream. After eternity, she had everything that she thought she needed, gave the grocer her credit voucher, and fled the store. She threw the bags into the back of the ground car, not really caring as the cans hit against one another in a loud cacophony. She really needed to look into getting a replicator. That way, she'd never have to face anyone in the town again. She checked the chronometer. 4:15. She had just enough time to get to the square before Jean-Luc arrived. The shuttle and transport station had been carefully designed to resemble an old-fashioned railway station. There were holos along the walls of all fashions of train engines, from coal and steam to atomic powered monorails. The decor was late nineteenth/early twentieth century, with wrought iron benches for people to wait for their loved ones to come or go. The lights along the walls were replicas of gas lamps, but were powered by a small reactor, due to the danger of real lamps. Marie had always loved the station. She sometimes imagined herself preparing to go on a long train ride through Europe, getting stopped at every border to show her passport, dining with figures from history as she looked out at the receding landscape. She would really enjoy escaping into the era of steam engines. Back in the twenty-fourth century, she read the arrival schedule. The shuttle from San Francisco should just be arriving. She hurried to the gate in time to see the first passengers disembark. Five people got out: both Drs. Nais, no doubt back from yet another conference, a Vulcan, and two people she didn't recognize, neither of whom looked at all like Jean-Luc. She frowned. He *had* told her today at 4:30. Then, she saw a shadow at the doorway. Her brother-in-law stepped out, followed by a woman she did not know. They looked around, appearing lost. Marie waved her hand, not trusting herself to smile. Jean-Luc saw her. "Marie!" His face filled with emotion, and she read on his features that he had considered staying on the shuttle and going back to San Francisco so that he wouldn't have to face the coming week. In a moment, he had embraced her and kissed her lightly on the cheek. "Hello, Jean-Luc," was all she could manage. He let go, and indicated his friend, a woman in her mid-forties with auburn hair pulled back into a ponytail, and the lightest blue eyes Marie had ever seen. "Marie, this is Beverly Crusher, a good friend of mine. Beverly, Marie Picard." The woman held out her hand. "Jean-Luc has told me all about you. It's nice to meet you at last." Her smile was genuine, and Marie shook her hand. "How do you do." The formalities attended to, she went into efficiency mode. "If you'll let me help you with your bags, I've parked the ground car just outside." "We just brought a few things," said the woman, Beverly. She held a fairly small suitcase, while Jean-Luc carried the same duffel he'd brought the last time. Both were dressed comfortably, as though they had expected to walk to the farm. "Well, then. Let's get you home, shall we?" Why did she feel so formal? It was as if she spoke to total strangers, which Jean-Luc, at least, was certainly not. There were shadows between the two of them, with faces she did not want to see right now. Almost in silence, the three of them walked back to the transport, with Beverly occasionally making approving comments about the decor of the station. Jean-Luc merely smiled at her and nodded noncommittally. Marie glanced from one to the other, a strange suspicion growing inside. She'd aired out Jean-Luc's room and the bedroom that had once belonged to his parents, which now functioned as a very nice guest room. Now she found herself wondering if two rooms had been necessary. "So how was the trip?" asked Marie, as she started the ground car with a hum. "Lovely," he said. "The shuttle route went across Asia, and we even had a chance to stop in Manila briefly." "Really? I've always wanted to travel to the Phillipines, just to see the islands." They fell into silence again. "So when do you have to be back?" Jean-Luc looked back at his companion, who wouldn't meet his eyes. "Sunday. The court-martial begins Monday." "Court-martial ... " What was he talking about? He stared out the front window, and spoke as if someone else were talking. "It's standard procedure for a court-martial to be held when a ship is lost." Ship? What ... The _Enterprise_. Now she remembered. The ship had been destroyed, with how many hands lost? Seventeen? But Jean-Luc had lived and was being punished for outliving his vessel. "I see." Again the quiet. Marie wondered if the trip was ever going to end when the turnoff came into sight. They went down the long driveway, which in Spring and Summer would be almost enclosed in a green tunnel of ancient trees. Jean-Luc looked out to the bushes beside them, a sad expression on his face. Marie parked the ground car in front. "Well, here we are." She couldn't figure out why she so wanted to weep. Then she remembered the last time Jean-Luc had come home. Rene had run up to her, shouting "He's here!" and he had looked so sweet and full of life and he was ten ... She found herself gripping the controls, her knuckles going through the most interesting color changes. "Marie," said Beverly, touching her arm in concern. She relaxed minutely. "Sorry. I was a little lost for a moment. It won't happen again." She quickly exited the car and began unloading her groceries. The others shared a glance, and gathered their belongings. "Here," said Jean-Luc, "let me help with that." He prepared to take one of the bags. "No! I've got them. You get inside. Go on." She fixed a smile on her face that felt like a grimace. "Are you sure?" "Yes. Get along inside with you, now." Without looking back at them, she carried the bags straight into the pantry, shut the door, dropped the cans, and began trembling all over. Bloody hell. Every word he said, every gesture he made, everything was so much like his brother ... She couldn't face him, not for the next four days. There was just no possible way. He would have to leave. He couldn't leave. He was here to help her label and pack things, and to decide just what would be done with everything. Robert's will had left everything to her to be held in trust for Rene, but Jean-Luc was still legal owner of half the property, and this was his ancestral home. If Rene had lived, he probably would have left everything to him and life would have worked out so nicely. Bloody hell again. She put the cans on the shelves. It wasn't much, but it would last her several weeks on her own. The henhouse would provide eggs, and if she gave the people on the next farm a case of wine, she would have milk for the next year. She went upstairs to see how Jean-Luc and his friend had settled in. She paused at the guest room, and saw that it was indeed occupied, but only by Beverly. She had pulled one dress out of her suitcase, and was smoothing it out on the bed. She noticed her in the doorway. "Oh, Marie. We weren't sure where you'd planned on putting me, but Jean-Luc said that it was probably here." She attempted a smile. "This is the right room. It used to belong to the boys' parents, but we've been using it as a guest room." It was the blue room: the walls, the carpeting, everything was done in blending shades of blue. Yvette Picard had always loved the color. Marie couldn't help but notice how well Beverly seemed to fit in the room. Even the dress she was airing was navy blue. She crossed the room and opened the bluebell-patterned shades. The room looked out towards the vines, covered for the winter. To Marie, they always looked like old women wrapped in shawls against the cold. Old widows. She turned quickly from the vines to see the concern back in the other woman's eyes. "Where is Jean-Luc?" "Down the hall in his room, I think." Just then, they heard him call: "Beverly, you have to see this." She went down the hall, Marie close behind, not sure she should be following. Jean-Luc held a wooden contraption that looked as though it had been created for the First World War and had not quite survived it. He ran a finger gently over the longest beam. "I made this when I was eight years old." He showed it to them proudly. "I haven't seen it for years, though." Beverly looked at it askance. "What is it?" "A model aeroplane! I had other models, from helicopters to starships, but this was the first one." He looked up, saw Marie. "Did you get everything put away all right?" She nodded, still looking at the ship in his hands. She hadn't gotten it out. She was never even in the room, other than to dust about once a year. Rene had come in, though, to look at the trophies and awards lining the shelves and walls. Perhaps he had taken the plane out of whatever shoebox the young Jean-Luc had stowed it in so many years before. *** Dinner was fairly quiet. Marie was beginning to think that they would spend the next four days in almost total silence. She warmed some soup from the previous night, when she had gone and made an entire pot, set out three places, and realized only when she sat down that she would be the only one there. Now the three places were filled. Oddly, the soup tasted better on the second day. The bread was good and crusty, and the wine, while not the finest vintage, had a decent body. They spoke of little things. Louis had been around a great deal, even though the Atlantis project was in the final stages. No, she hadn't seen his wife lately, and she was beginning to wonder if the two of them were getting along. The hens were laying well this month; Marie had considered selling the eggs to the grocer. The neighbors' cattle were doing well. Two of them were going to calve in the next month. There was no talk of horses, or of barns, or of the empty chair which would really have been two the night before. After dinner, Beverly had offered to take the dishes, leaving Marie alone with Jean-Luc. She took another sip of wine, and said nothing as she stared out the window. He cleared his throat. "If you'd like to talk, I'm here. I miss them too." "I know," she whispered. "I'm just not ready yet." She felt the tears drip down her face again, streaking the little makeup that she had put on that morning. So what. She reached for a handkerchief, and held it to her face to blot away the saltwater. He held her shoulders, and her soft tears turned to wracking sobs that lasted several minutes. Again. "I'm sorry. I thought that I had everything together, that I could face you without thinking of him, of them, but you're just so like him ... " She hiccuped, and he stroked her cheek. "If you'd like me to leave, it might be easier on everyone if I go stay in the village. I can come back when you're ready." "No," it was an effort to say it, but she knew she had to. "The last time you came, I told you that this was your home. It still is, now even more than then. Please stay." He nodded, then kissed the top of her hair. "If you change your mind at any time, just tell me. We can be gone in minutes." She tried to smile. "Well, that's one difference between you right there. Robert always took forever to get ready for anything." He chuckled, and it was nothing like his brother's laugh, and things were a little better. Impulsively, he hugged her. "We never had a sister. Maman wanted a girl, but they were probably wise to quit after just the two of us, considering how well we got along. You have been like a sister to me. I want to help you any way I can. Just name it, and I'll see that it's arranged." He stared out into the night she had been contemplating. Orion had just slipped free from the horizon, and held his bow at the ready. "I want us to be friends." She looked outside with him. "We are friends, Jean-Luc Picard." She patted his hand, and looked for a star on which to pin her wishes as she had when she was much younger and still believed in "happily ever after"s. *** Day 2: Dust *** Eggs. Someone was frying eggs. In her half-awake state, Beverly was certain that she was at home on Caldos, sleeping in late while Nana fried some eggs for her in the kitchen. She was so convinced that when she sat up in the huge bed, with the pale blue down comforter around her, she wondered who had changed her room. Reality crept back in, and she remembered where she was. Marie must have gone downstairs to start breakfast. She should probably go down and help. She pulled a thick robe around herself, and crept down the hallway, only to meet Marie at the top of the stairs looking fully as mystified as she felt. Marie whispered "I thought that perhaps you had gotten up early ... " "You don't think that he's actually ... " Without a word, they walked down to the kitchen, only to discover Jean-Luc Picard awake, dressed, and quite happily cooking at the stove. "Good morning, ladies!" he said far too cheerfully for the time of day. "Go sit down. Breakfast is almost ready." Having no other recourse, and wondering what had possessed her best friend, Beverly sat down. Marie joined her, beginning to look more awake as the familiar scent of well-made coffee drifted through the room, mingling nicely with what smelled like bacon. After a few minutes, when her stomach finally realized that there was something yummy coming, Beverly called "Do you need any help with that?" Jean-Luc appeared in the doorway with a still-sizzling pan, and without a word, deposited a portion of omelette to each plate. He disappeared back into the kitchen, then returned balancing a coffeepot, a plate of well-drained bacon, and a plate of croissants, which he primly set down in front of them. "Breakfast is served." Marie's eyes were wide at the food, which, while simple, was far more than she had expected upon waking. Beverly had been given some very good advice by her grandmother when she was young. Never turn down a chance to eat or use the bathroom. You never knew when the next opportunity might arise. She tasted the omelette and found it to be delicious. "When did you learn to cook?" "Years ago, in this kitchen, although not on this stove. When Maman wasn't home, it became a matter of learning how or starving." "What about your father?" Marie spoke softly: "Maurice's cooking was the stuff of legend. I heard a story once about a pot of stew that could be turned upside-down without the contents even dripping." "I *remember* that stew," he said. "Took us three days to clean the pot. That was nothing. Once, Father wanted to make a cake for Maman's birthday. That was the reason we had to get a new stove. After that, he wasn't allowed to go into the kitchen anymore." It was a pleasant breakfast, a bit more elaborate than Beverly had eaten in some time, but good, and filled with more light conversation. She had left the two of them alone after the previous night's dinner to talk, puttering about the expansive kitchen and wondering what on earth half the utensils were for. When she had heard Marie crying in the dining room, common sense had just barely overcome compassion, and she had slipped quietly into the living room. Marie had needed the shoulder of a friend. She would have to let her know that she had two friends in the house. *** They started in the attic, planning to work their way down. The reasoning behind this was something the two Picards would not admit and that she would not point out to them. The attic was filled with dusty old antiques, some of which hadn't seen the main part of the house in a century. There was very little life up in the still air, other than the spiders and the occasional mouse. There was very little of youth and vigor in old violins and boxes of easter clothes worn by someone's great-aunt. The only young faces were in old pictures, holos of Maurice and Yvette Picard, crumbling pictures of a boy who might have been Maurice's great- grandfather, but was probably a friend of the family. The only deaths in the chests and boxes happened long before anyone's memories could hurt. There was little of Robert and Rene in the attic. Over here, they found an old rocking horse that Rene had played with for all of a month when he was three and had promptly forgotten. There in the corner was a box of Christmas ornaments that put a very nostalgic expression on Jean-Luc's face. They came across a comparatively recent box, and with some wonder, Jean-Luc pulled out toys he and Robert had played with as children and had miraculously not broken. With great care, he pulled out a bottle, blew off the dust, and presented a Promellian battle cruiser for them to admire. "I'd wondered where this went." He looked inside the bottle, seeming to inspect the ship, make sure it was still spaceworthy, and Beverly hid a smile. "Why don't you take it back with you?" suggested Marie. "I think I ... " He stopped, then set it back in the box gently, his eyes hooded. "What's wrong?" "I was going to take it back, and put it in my ready room. Then I remembered. I no longer have a ready room." He closed the box, and marked the contents on the top. Beverly wanted to say something, but there was really nothing to tell him. She helped him move the box. *** They paused for lunch only long enough to carry some sandwiches upstairs, and have a very unusual picnic among the cobwebs and the sunshine which came down from the skylight to make the captured dust particles sparkle. By late afternoon, the attic was semi-organized. They now had some idea as to what was in it, anyway. There were boxes of costume jewelry, old toys, clothes, a wedding dress that might have fit someone with Scarlett O'Hara's proportions, at least a hundred hats, and a bracelet-sized dog collar with a tag bearing the cryptic inscription: "Spike." The cleaning began. Insects that had been in the attic long enough to form new species found themselves being unceremoniously tossed out the window. Ancient dust particles flew into the air, causing coughing fits and hasty passes with a dust mop. Working together, the three of them went through two containers of polish, an entire box of dust rags, and used the services of a mop which had seen better days but gave its all nonetheless. By the time they had finished, it was well past dark and they were all filthy. The boxes were labeled and stacked. The few things they had uncovered that warranted liberation from the attic were piled at the top of the stairs neatly. The place was clean. Beverly noticed that there was now far more room for other boxes to be stowed away, no doubt filled with clothing and toys that would no longer be needed. Here they would sit and quietly wait until the next generation of Picards came climbing the stairs to look through the past. Then again, Jean-Luc was getting older, and had no children, other than a pair lost a thousand years ago on a dead world. The next people to go through the attic would probably be real estate agents, determining the value of the assorted knick-knacks of a family's history. The thought cast a gloom inside of her that was not dispelled until well after dinner. *** When the dishes were cleared away, Marie put some water on to boil, then brought out tea cups. Her own matched Marie's, but Jean-Luc's was obviously from another set, and she wondered what it signified. They took the tea into the drawing room, where Jean-Luc lit a fire after several attempts. They settled into the comfortable chairs. Beverly noticed that the other two specifically avoided one overstuffed specimen and placed a mental bet with herself that it had been Robert's. Marie spoke first. "I always loved this room. It was nice to curl up in front of the fire, watch the hours go by. The first day I saw the house, this was the room I stayed in. It was four months before I saw another room." She flushed slightly, and took a sip of tea. Beverly had an inkling of what the next room might have been. "This was Maman's favorite room. She would let us come in, but only if we were quiet, and read, or work puzzles, or something. We weren't allowed to raise our voices or run through here, and when we got into a fight, this was usually where it ended." "Now and then, we would have friends over to play cards in here, usually Bridge or Gin." She stared at the small table in the corner, lost in thought. Cards. Hmmm. "Would you like to play something?" "Now?" She looked mildly shocked, then intrigued. "Why not?" asked Jean-Luc, standing. "It could be fun." They could all use something fun, or at least diverting. They pulled the table out and sat down. Marie opened a drawer, and took out a deck of cards with a flowered pattern on the back, lilies. "All right. What shall we play?" Bridge was out, for obvious reasons, and poker in the drawing room would just be wrong. They settled on rummy. Marie dealt the first hand, and won. The games went fairly evenly among the three, and by the time an hour had passed, Marie had loosened up enough to laugh. Almost. She was showing some improvement, but whether she was actually dealing with her grief or just pushing it aside, Beverly could not tell. She soon found it difficult to see her as the same woman who had gone to pieces in the dining room the night before. Beverly kept quiet, observing her reactions, and making a few mental notes, especially when she referred to her husband in the present tense, but her son not at all. The teapot kept steaming, and with the added caffeine, they did not turn in until nearly two o'clock in the morning. Beverly readied herself for bed, brushing her hair until it floated about her head in a cloud, then smoothing it down again. She pulled the covers back, turned out the light, and crawled into bed. She couldn't sleep. Although she had been sipping tea all night, her mouth was dry. Cursing softly, she went downstairs for a glass of water, trying to be quiet. On her way back to her room, she passed Marie's closed door and heard her crying, very softly. She glanced down the hall to Jean-Luc's room, and saw the light under his door wink out. She waited outside the door, debating with herself whether she should knock. She knocked. "Yes?" came the quiet voice from the other side. "It's me. May I come in?" There was a long pause, and she feared that she'd overstepped her boundaries as guest. The door opened slightly, and Marie peeked out, her eyes puffy around the edges. "Do you need something?" she asked, her voice shaking and she trying not to show it. "No, but I thought you might." "I'm fine. Really." She smiled, but it was vacant. "Of course you are. But sometimes it helps to talk about it, and I know what it can do if you don't." Marie wiped her face with the back of her hand. "Jean-Luc didn't tell me you were a psychologist." "I'm not. I'm a medical doctor." Marie's eyes grew wide. "Listen, I don't know why he thought that you needed to come, but I don't need a doctor. My husband is dead. I can live with it." This was going to be harder than she thought. "I don't know why, either. Maybe it's because I'm his best friend. Maybe it's because I was married to his best friend. I don't know." Marie must have heard something in her tone. "Was?" She took a deep, calming breath. "I know what you're going through, because my husband died, too." Marie met her gaze. "I'm sorry. I didn't know." She opened the door. "Please. Come in." She nodded, and stepped inside what had been Robert and Marie's bedroom for nearly twenty years. It was about the same size as the other bedrooms, done in deep rose and mauve. There was something wrong, something off-center. The room looked completely occupied, with all of Robert's things exactly as they should be were he alive. Warning bells went off in Beverly's mind as she sat on the edge of the bed, obviously made for two. Marie, rubbing her hands absently, walked over to the window and back twice before she finally perched herself on the bed. "It's like he's still here. I keep looking out the window expecting him to be walking through the fields, and I'm terrified that I might actually see him. This place is haunted, you know." "Haunted?" She had had enough experience with ghosts, thank you very much. Marie nodded. "Sometimes, you can hear them walking around up in the attic, or downstairs having tea in the drawing room. They all speak French, and they have parties sometimes. I've heard the music. Once, Rene told me that he'd seen a woman in an old- fashioned dress going up the stairs, and when he ran up after her, she was nowhere to be seen." She stood up again, crossed to the window, looked out, and came back. Her eyes were wide with fear and loneliness. "I suppose someday someone will see a woman walking up the stairs being chased by a little boy." She began to tremble. Beverly slipped her arms around her shoulders. "Let it out. It's the best thing you can do for him." Marie practically collapsed onto her bed. "I remember when he was eight, and he was running through the house with a cup for me, and he fell. The cup broke and he cut his head and I was so afraid he'd given himself a concussion that I yelled at him ... " The words poured out from her, from the depths of her soul. Memories came out, and Beverly sat and listened. When the torrent of tears and stories stopped for a moment, she told her own story. She told Marie about meeting Jack for the first time, about when she had found out that she was pregnant with still a semester to complete in school, about her second, much shorter pregnancy, about how Jack had been scheduled to come home to spend six months with her and Wesley and the new baby who had been born far too early, about the look on Jean-Luc's face as he told her that Jack was never coming home. She told Marie about how she'd felt, about falling apart one piece at a time, with her friends the only thing between her and madness. She downplayed Wesley's part, realizing that it might prove too painful for the other woman, who didn't even have her child to hold. They talked for hours, until the sky lightened, and the sun peered over the horizon just out of sight. As the day began, the dark expression that had been on Marie's face began to lessen. Knowing what was ahead, Beverly told her the truth, that the pain would never go away completely, but that it was bearable, and would eventually fade to a dull ache around the heart at holidays and anniversaries and the occasional dark night. "Do you still think about him?" "Every day. But I've found that in the past several years, the memories that resurface the most are the good ones. We had some happy times together, and those days are the ones I choose to remember." Marie smiled then, a real smile. "I'll have to try that." Out in the hallway, they heard a door open, and they both jumped, then laughed. Obviously, Jean-Luc had rejoined the land of the living. They both stood and stretched, then walked down the stairs in a companionable silence. Jean-Luc had just put on a pot of water. He looked drawn and bleary-eyed as he looked from one to the other. "You've been up all night, haven't you?" They nodded in unison, and went about the business of finding something interesting for breakfast. They settled on oatmeal with cream and coffee, because it looked easy. Beverly set the table, keeping an eye on Marie. She appeared to be doing better now. She would be hurting for a long time, but Beverly was willing to bet that she would survive it. Jean-Luc brought the kettle in and filled the bowls. The three of them took hands and stayed quiet for a moment, as sunlight streamed in from the other end of the room and across the table. Breakfast was good. *** Day 3: Faces *** Jean-Luc didn't know how they had managed to stay up all night and still be more awake then he was. He had seen Beverly do it before: wait up with someone's colicky baby, or keep a vigil over a critically ill patient, only to show up at breakfast with a smile and a hearty appetite. He hadn't known Marie was also adept at it. Whatever they had talked about, it appeared to have done Marie some good. She seemed to breathe much easier than before, and her smile wasn't nearly so forced as it had been. He made a note to thank Beverly when he got the chance. *** They decided to hit the downstairs next and leave the bedrooms for last. He caught the look that Beverly gave him, but she did not say a word. He was fairly sure that she understood why neither of them wanted to clean out Robert's and Rene's personal belongings until they absolutely had to. It would be like admitting that they were gone, and he couldn't do that just yet. The ground floor was fairly easy. Marie had been there every day for years, and knew what went where. Other than a touch-up with the dust rags, and a nice polish for the floor, the place was already clean. While looking for the floor polisher, he found his father's fencing foil in the back of a closet. Robert had never been one for the genteel sports, choosing rugby over fencing and horseback riding. He had just put the heirloom away. Jean-Luc drew out the blade, almost absently stroked his thumb against the button. Beverly came up behind him. "What on earth ... " "My father's. He won champion standing in school one year with this foil. He told me about the duel dozens of times." He went into en garde, and fenced an imaginary partner. Thrust, lunge, parry four, riposte, parry six, withdraw. It was all one motion to him. The hilt actually fit his hand better than his own foil, lost in the wreckage of the _Enterprise_. Beverly clapped. "I've always wanted to learn how to do that, but I never got to it." "Come here, and I'll show you." He motioned her over. "First, you have to center yourself. You don't want to be caught off-balance." He demonstrated the foot positioning, and she copied him, her feet in a stretched out t-shape, knees slightly bent. "Good. Now hold your left arm up in a sky hook and relax it. That will help balance you." She did. He took her right arm, held it out, and placed the foil in her hand. "You have to hold it a certain way for it to fit right." He rotated the hilt. "See how that rubs the wrong way?" She nodded. He put it right again, so that it fit snug against her hand. "Keep it steady, but don't hold it too tightly. Your hand will cramp. Hold it as if it were a bird: tight enough to keep it there, but loose enough that you don't choke it. Arm out, elbow almost straight but not locked, keep the button up in your opponent's nose. Very good." He stepped back. "How do you feel?" "Like my arm is about to fall off." "Right or left?" "Yes." "Relax your left arm. Don't let it tense." He mirrored her position beside her, stretching out his left arm and visualizing a foil in his hand. "Now, straighten your elbow, and twist your wrist so that your thumb points up. That's called thrust. Now, watch my feet, and do this." He lunged, and she made a passable copy of his movements. "Good." He heard applause from behind, and turned his head (not an easy task in lunge position) to see Marie standing in the doorway trying her damnedest not to laugh at them. "Well then," he said, immediately breaking position and trying to control the flush that was threatening his cheeks. "That's enough for one lesson, I think." He set about wiping the blade and ignoring their matching looks of amusement. *** After lunch, he and Marie took the ground car into the village to speak with the family's attorney. Beverly bowed out, electing to stay back at the farm to wander around the grounds a bit and maybe find something nice for them for dinner. He suspected that she really wanted to give him some time alone with Marie, for which he was grateful. The trip was uneventful. Marie talked idly of plans she and Robert had made about their future life, places they had meant to go, things of that nature. Jean-Luc listened, offering a few of his own memories to her. They arrived at the lawyer's office in a fairly tranquil mood. The attorney had done her homework. She had read Robert's will, had looked into old deeds, had found a copy of Maurice and Yvette Picard's will, and most importantly, had read historical cases dealing with French law and property inheritance. She explained to the two Picards in as little legalese as possible her interpretations of the available documents. Either they now owned the holdings, properties, and titles of the Picard estate jointly, or the entire shebang belonged to him. She read down a list of investments, bonds, and land in places neither of them had even heard of. Marie looked shocked. "I've been in charge of the family finances for over two decades. Why have I never even heard of these assets?" "It was entirely likely that Mr. Picard never knew about them, either. Many of these funds haven't been touched since his grandfather's day, and several of them belonged to his grandmother, to be held in trust for one Adele Picard, whom I believe has now been missing for long enough to be presumed dead." Aunt Adele? He hadn't seen her since the day of his father's funeral. She had always been his favorite relative, with her home remedies for everything and her stories of the places she'd gone, along with enticing tidbits about places she shouldn't have gone. She'd always been the wandering kind He had assumed that she had just wandered too far one day, and forgotten the way home. Aunt Adele dead? He wouldn't believe it. They worked out an agreement. It wasn't perfect, but it would be satisfactory for the time being. Some of the holdings would be liquidated in order to hire workers in the Spring. Marie would oversee them, and would stay on at the house to do so. She could live there for the rest of her life if she so chose. Jean-Luc would hold the titles in his name. If he died without children, everything reverted to Marie, other than a tidy sum that he placed aside for "someone else" whom he would not name at the time. If Marie died first, or remarried and chose to leave the vineyards, Jean-Luc would officially own everything, and probably leave the majority to the unnamed heir. The attorney drew up the papers, shook their hands, and escorted them out past the large black German Shepherd sleeping quietly in the corner. *** He was pleasantly surprised to discover that Beverly could cook even without a replicator. Dinner waited for them, piping hot on the table: a giant pot of vegetable stew ala Howard. She had once told him about it, although perhaps "told" wasn't the right word. Her description had barely done it merit. If Felisa Howard's medicines tasted half as good as her soup, it was a small wonder that she had been the most sought-after physician on Caldos. Marie retired soon after dinner, claiming extreme fatigue. She wished them a good night and went to bed. Despite the long night, Beverly wasn't tired yet, and neither was he. He found the rest of the wine they had started at dinner the night they had arrived, poured two glasses, and took them into the drawing room, where a small fire had been carefully banked all day. With a little coaxing, it became bright enough to see by. Beverly turned down the lights and sat on the couch, his mother's favorite as he recalled. After a moment, he joined her and they watched the fire. "I think she's going to be okay," she said finally. "Marie?" She nodded. He had been letting the wine affect him, and his mind had wandered. "I think you're right. I wanted to thank you." "For what?" "For making her smile. For whatever the two of you talked about last night that let her free." He pulled a bit of her hair back behind her ear. "She needed it." "You're welcome. Chalk one up to hanging around Deanna for far too long." He grinned, and she smiled. Suddenly, he was aware of his hand at her neck, at how close she was, and the wine and the firelight and the smoke in her eyes mixed inside of him. He bent near to her, and placed a soft, chaste kiss on her cheek. She looked at him, not quite startled. "What was that for?" she whispered. The fire popped and crackled. "You looked as though you could use one of those all of a sudden." She smiled again, shyly this time, and he could see again the woman he had met nearly a quarter of a century before. "You're right." She leaned over, and touched her lips against his, gently but with a promise of more. Warmth washed through him as he returned the kiss, tasting her parting mouth. His hands moved from her neck to her shoulders as he felt her hands snake around his waist to the tail of his shirt and then to the bare skin of his lower back. They shifted position a little to avoid falling off the couch, and now his lips were happily engaged in nibbling at her jaw while a small part of his mind asked just where in the hell was this going and meanwhile a much larger part declared just exactly where it intended this to go, adding quite a bit of detail in the process that was doing nothing whatsoever for his self-control. He opened his eyes to try and steady himself, catch his breath. He was so afraid of rushing her, of possibly even hurting her in his eagerness. He watched her flushed face, his heart filled with joy, for her lips curved gently, and her eyes were half-lidded and inviting. He leaned to her again to taste her kisses, breathe in her scent, when his eye happened upon a picture on the mantlepiece. Robert and Marie and Rene, all smiling and touched with a joy of their own. He froze. "What's wrong?" she asked, her voice making an effort to change from desire to concern. Her slight smile faded completely as he sat up and pulled away from her. "Jean-Luc?" He turned to her, tried to meet her eyes, but could not. He stood, whispered "I'm sorry," and fled. He did not see her watch him leave, shock upon her face, nor did he see her turn back to face the fire after several minutes had passed to watch the wood crackle and burn and die in flame. *** Outside, the night air bit into him, and he realized that he had no jacket. It didn't matter anyway. The cold wasn't so terrible. He walked westward. The old faces followed him in his mind, tagging along even when he quickened his pace and finally broke into a run such as he had not taken since his Academy days. His lungs ached, but his heart beat on steadily, as he ran down the side of one field like he had in his youth. The pale moon streamed on him, its crescent winking at him knowingly as he topped a hill and had to stop. The faces caught up with him. Robert as a young man, teasing and testing him; Rene, younger, filled with light and promise; Tasha lying far too still on the biobed, her face marked with Armus' cruel touch; Walker strumming lightly on his mandolin, and singing just slightly off-tune in his quarters; Vigo refusing to leave his post although the terminal burned his hands; Jack in his EV suit, putting on his helmet and telling him that everything would be just fine. They were only the first faces of thousands. Locutus had seen the faces of at least seventy of his victims, and he had since looked up hundreds of the others. Their faces haunted him, and now the two newest faces stared at him from flames, asking him how he could possibly be thinking of his own happiness with their bones still cooling in the earth. He caught his wind, then ran again, cutting through a path in the fields and heading north. His feet trod the ground as though they had done this but yesterday, and knew the way as they did around his quarters on his broken, lost ship. He ran past the shrouded vines, and as one they turned to stare at them with their old-women's faces, accusing him of crimes long past which he could never rectify. He'd always hated the covered vines. Why? his spirit cried, Why did they have to die and leave me here? and his mind could not answer and that was all. The vines shook their fingers at him in the night-breeze, telling him he was being selfish, but he did not care. A deep anger burned within him now, anger at Robert for dying, at himself for not having been there when it happened, at the universe for letting a boy die before he had a chance to live. His lungs cried for more air, forcing him to stop again. He bent low, his head in his hands, and allowed the pain to come, knowing he could not hide it away any longer. The faces were upon him. *** After a long time, he was aware of being cold. His sweat had dried upon him in the bitter air, chilling him deeply. He rubbed his arms, and for a moment thought longingly of being in someone else's warm embrace, a very certain someone who was no doubt extremely upset with him right about now. He could not make his feet move in the proper direction to go to her. Instead, they turned to the right, and began walking east of the house. Right then, he wanted to talk with Beverly, to tell her everything, and apologize profusely. She, however, was no doubt inside and asleep already, and he had done more than enough to her for one night. He still longed for a walking companion, and his mind provided one, as it often had when he had hard decisions to make and could trust no other. Usually, he would think of Jack, looking as young and ingenuous and alive as ever. In his thoughts, Jack would speak to him, enumerating the positives and negatives of whatever Picard was considering. He knew that it was only his own ideas, that Jack could never again be his confidante in this lifetime, but sometimes it felt good to pretend, if only for a few minutes, that he was still there. Tonight, with the turmoil he was currently facing, Jack was not the ideal companion for a talk. Walker appeared before him, almost anyway, and much as he had the last time they'd seen one another on Dytallix B, just before Walker's death. Hello, Jean-Luc, came the voice in his memories. You seem to have a problem. I don't have a problem, Walker. I have 11,000 problems. I see, said the Walker in his head, and tilted his face forward in a gesture Picard knew very well. We've been dipping into the well of guilt again, haven't we? What do you mean? That was the one thing he hated about conversations in his head, and the reason he had them at all. They tended to place before him unpleasant truths. Look at you. You find the least bit of joy in your life, and immediately you run away. Because you're not worthy of it. You've done all these terrible things, watched all of us die, and you think yourself the worst person who's ever lived because you managed to live through it and we didn't. It's more than that! I see them clearly, every one: you, Jack, Tasha, and now Robert and Rene, and all I can think is that I brought this to you all. Bull. Picard stopped dead in his tracks, and stared where Walker would have been had he actually been there and not scattered through a far away sector of space. Jean-Luc, you're afraid. Of what? Of yourself. Of life. Of allowing yourself to be happy. And you are absolutely terrified of Beverly. Walker ... You are. You are so afraid of her that you can't think straight when she's around anymore. "Hold it as if it were a bird?" That's standard fencing training, and it's very good advice, I'll have you know. I know. I also know what you were thinking at the time, and what you *wanted* her to hold like a bird. Walker grinned lecherously. Picard began walking again. Maybe he shouldn't have tried this after all. Jean-Luc, you can't walk away from your own mind. All right, you feel guilty. You weren't there when they died. I'll concede the point. His footsteps faltered. Without thinking, he had reached the barn, or at least where the barn had been. Burned timbers lay in a haphazard fashion over the foundation. Ashes still heaped around the site. He shuddered when his foot brushed against a small pile, and although he knew that the bodies of his brother and nephew had been recovered and were resting in the family plot down the road, he still wondered morbidly if everything had been removed. He saw something glisten by the pile, and knew it to be his own tears. Jean-Luc, whispered the Walker-image, his voice increasingly like Jack's as he spoke. Maybe you *could* have done something. Maybe you could have asked the Nexus to bring you out here in time to save them and your beloved ship. Maybe you could have come out even earlier, before you left for Starfleet, and spent the years making good with Robert and your father, watching Rene grow up, maybe even marrying Elise and having those children you saw. You would have been home in time to make it all right, to save each one of us from death. But you didn't. You asked to be returned in time to prevent Soran from killing millions of innocent people, people you didn't even know. You sacrificed your happiness and sleep-filled nights to save children you had never seen from a greater fire than this. "Macbeth hath murdered sleep." Picard hath murdered eleven thousand, and saved 230 million. Walker gestured behind them, to the accusing old vines. They're right. You *are* being selfish. You're taking all the guilt you can find and wrapping yourself away in it, and you're keeping yourself apart from everyone. Your selfishness is taking away happiness from the one person in the universe whom you most want to see happy. You can't change the past, Jean-Luc. No one can, except maybe Q. You aren't Q, and you aren't God. You're Jean-Luc Picard, and for better or worse, you are the last of your family. But only by your own choice. Walker was gone from his mind. He stood alone in the ruins of what had once been a large barn, full of horses and sweet smelling alfalfa and barn rats and barn cats and a long rope swing. It was all gone now. The nipping wind stirred the ashes at his feet, swirled them into a tiny cloud that drifted towards the vines where it settled after a time to become part of the soil blanket over the sleeping roots. *** He walked back to the house alone, thinking of Q. Q had offered him a chance to change his past once, only to show him how the tapestry of his life would unravel if he did. Six months ago, he had done it again. In a game that would have made Charles Dickens proud, Q acted in the stead of the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, *and* Future. In the past, he had so wanted to change things, wanted to make them right from the beginning of his tour on the _Enterprise-D_. He planned to avoid Vagra 2 at all costs, to expose the conspiracy in Starfleet Command before Walker ever had a chance to even discover it, to improve everything in preparation for the Borg, to spend more time with the people who were now his only family. He had planned to do it all, and the ship in the past had been destroyed. Q had also shown him a vision of the future: himself addled by a devastating disease, the others scattered and squabbling, Deanna cold in her tomb on Betazed ... He had kept the memories fresh in his mind, so that he would not forget, and could make that right, too. Will and Worf were already working on staying friends no matter how hard, in fear of what they could become instead. They had all gone out of their ways to keep Deanna from harm. Geordi, meanwhile, had restarted a failing correspondence with Leah Brahms. He walked up the stairs slowly, treading carefully on the less squeaky ones and thinking of the Beverly he had met in the future. She'd still been as lovely as a warm Summer afternoon, but there were more lines around her mouth, as if she had grown accustomed to frowning in recent years. The future self that had been him knew that he had caused the frowns, and had regretted it deeply. As he paused outside her closed door, he wondered if that wasn't his biggest fear. He had seen the ruins of their marriage in her face, and had been filled with terror. He loved her. He knew that he could never have stopped loving her, wanting her, no matter what he convinced himself. His excuses, thought of only during the depths of the forgiving night, rang in his ears: She's Jack's widow. She's your CMO. She's eighteen years your junior, for the sake of Kolker! The words rang hollowly now. Only one question really mattered. You've seen your future together, thanks to Q. Do you have the courage to live it? He gently turned the doorknob, so as not to wake her. He needn't have bothered. She sat in the large bay window, her knees drawn against her like a child's, her robe gathered around her. She stared out into the covered fields, and did not turn when he entered. "Tell me something," she whispered, the profile of her face pale in the light of the crescent moon. "Is it me? Is there something in me that makes you go cold whenever we even touch?" She looked towards him, and something glittered down her cheek, was gone. "No." He closed the door behind him and sat next to her in the window. "There's something in me." He wanted to take her hand, but he couldn't. Not yet. "Every time I see you, part of me sees the young woman who married my best friend." She turned away. He thought the mention of Jack had touched an old wound. He was quite wrong. "When will you stop seeing me like that?" Her whisper was fierce. "I loved Jack. I still do. But he's gone, and I've accepted that for some time. When are you going to let him die, too?" He couldn't answer. He wanted to tell her about the past and the future and not being able to change a word of it. An image from his childhood entered his mind. He'd gone with his parents to see a production of "A Christmas Carol," and it had touched him, deeply enough to suggest it to a friend years later as a key to seeking out the mysteries of emotion. In an instant, he saw Scrooge before him, begging the silent Spirit for some sign. Scrooge had not been able to change his past, had watched the woman he'd loved walk out of his life. Now Scrooge wanted to know if the future could be diverted from its destined course, only *he* was Scrooge, and the Spirit's hidden face was the enigmatic visage of Q. "Beverly ... " he whispered, taking her hand. "Marie asked me something last night that I couldn't answer. Why *did* you invite me here?" How could he answer that? Honestly. "I have lost everything and everyone that I've loved in my life, except for one. I asked you here because ... " Just say it, Jean-Luc, whispered Walker's voice in his ear. "Because I'm terrified that if I turn my back for a moment, you'll be gone forever, too." He placed his hand on hers. "I may be very selfish, but I can't stand the thought of losing the only person left in the universe that I love." Delicately, he raised her hand and kissed her knuckles, his eyes locked on hers. The face of the future Beverly, momentarily transformed with joy when she saw him for the first time standing on her Bridge. The face of the past Beverly, smiling as she shook his hand after they were introduced. The face of the Beverly from a not so distant past, staring at him from across an impassable force barrier on Kesprytt, her hiddenmost thoughts finally bare to him. Faces surrounded him again. Scrooge's voice, his own, echoed " ... change these shadows by an altered life!" Her face before his now, outlined in moonlight and more beautiful than he could ever remember. Smiling. There in the window, their faces moved closer, frightened and joyful, to press their lips together. *** Outside in the night, the vines kept their dreamless winter slumber beneath snug blankets, waiting patiently for the new life that would come to them when Spring returned. Not even they noticed when the two forms in the window moved away from it and slipped beneath a warm comforter of their own. *** Day 4: Boxes *** She was aware of warmth beside her. Her eyes opened slowly, and in the musky darkness, she saw him watching her, a rare smile on his face. "Hi," she said, shyly. "Hi," he said, and kissed her nose, and laughed. "Penny." He tilted his head, confused, but only for a moment. "I was thinking about Deanna." She decided to play along. She crossed her arms in front of her chest, and said in her best schoolmarm's voice: "Oh *really*?" He nodded. "I was wondering what she would say about the psychological significance of this situation." "That being?" "I fall in love with someone, wait over twenty years until I have the courage to make love to her, then end up in my parents' bed. That has to be worth a complex or two." She laughed. His beautiful eyes held a shine of laughter, as well as something more. She kissed him softly. "What the hell. I've always wondered about people who read psychological nuances into everything." He kissed her back, and soon they were entwined again, ending and beginning with each other. *** Marie had finished breakfast some time before they came downstairs. If she had noticed that only one door other than her own had been closed all night, she did not say. However, Beverly caught a glance from her as she looked in on them from the living room. There was no envy on her face, no anger, merely a sort of wistfulness she remembered well from her own days as a young widow, spending time with her married friends. That, too, would pass someday. *** It was late morning when they started on Robert's and Rene's belongings. They began in Rene's room, boxing clothes from the summer, and then his more recent clothing. The boxes would be put away in the attic, to be kept for another young man who could wear them. Crying now and then, Marie and Jean-Luc packed away papers, books, ribbons and toys. Jean-Luc spent several minutes staring at a model starship that bore an amazing resemblance to the _Enterprise_. Marie told him to keep it with him, so that he could always have something near. He thanked her, and placed it away in his room, reverence on his face. Marie decided to keep the pictures where they were. The bedspread was left on, in case she should get visitors. When the last thing that would be packed away was placed in the box, Marie sat down on the bed and looked around her. "He's really gone, isn't he?" Beverly nodded, tears forming in her own eyes. Jean-Luc touched Marie's shoulder, offering strength if she chose to take it. She merely sat, staring at the nightstand where she had left a ribbon won by her son for a paper about starships. After a long time, she walked out of the room without a word. Jean-Luc and Beverly followed her, watching silently as she shut the door. *** Robert's possessions went into another box. There were more clothes, some of which Marie tried up against Jean-Luc, and insisted that he keep. Mostly, they were packed away. Personal documents and papers went into a file for Marie to peruse before either keeping them, throwing them out, or giving them to the family's attorney. Robert was not a great collector of trinkets; most of the items in the house had either been purchased by Marie or been there for longer than conscious memory; his box was mostly clothing. When both boxes were full, the three of them carted them up to the attic, where they would remain, perhaps for years. It was next to impossible to get old clothing to the places that needed it most, and usually when the need was seen, something could be replicated. Perhaps the clothes would be brought out again someday as curiosities, relics from a past no one remembered. *** It was still early afternoon when they finished. The fear of the job had been worse than the actual task, for which Beverly at least was grateful. She and Jean-Luc were to meet the shuttle just past noon the following day, and they had barely visited with Marie. When they finished, Jean-Luc took the ground car into the village, not saying where he was going or why. He kissed Beverly on the cheek, and whispered that he was getting a surprise, then was out the door before she could find out what it was. She and Marie sat in the drawing room for a while, watching the fire and talking. Marie reminisced about her wedding day, and Beverly listened, laughing here and there. " ... and it went everywhere! Took us a month to get the stain out of the blanket. Rule to the wise: never have wedding cake for breakfast in bed." She remembered that she had an album up in her room, and walked up to get it. Beverly stretched a moment, and wondered where Jean-Luc had gone. Then, she heard a hum in the driveway. The ground car! Marie was still upstairs, probably had not even heard it. Beverly grinned, deviltry in her. She readjusted her top, a loose- fitting blue sweater that Wesley had given her for her birthday one year, in a far more suggestive manner. She put the lights low, then crouched near the door, preparing to pounce on Jean-Luc when he walked in the door. The bell rang. Jean-Luc wouldn't have rung the bell. Cautiously, she opened the door to reveal a man she had never seen before. He was tall, thin, and looked good-natured enough. "Hello?" she said, uncertainly. "Ummm... Hello. Is Marie here?" He looked as surprised to see her there as she was to see him. "She's upstairs. Marie!" she called. The breeze blew through the door, and she was suddenly aware of her sweater. She tried to casually readjust it as Marie came down the stairs. "Louis! Come in." So this was Jean-Luc's best friend from goodness knows when. "Louis, meet Beverly. Beverly, Louis." She held out her hand automatically, which he took and kissed politely. With the slightest discomfiture, she noticed his quick glance to her left hand, which had borne no ring for nearly two decades. "A pleasure, madam." His eyes glittered. "Come sit down. Jean-Luc went into town, but he should be home soon. I hope." They went back to the drawing room, Beverly wondering about this strange man who showed up to see poor alone Marie. She hoped Jean-Luc would hurry home. *** By the time Jean-Luc returned, an hour later, Beverly's fears had been set to rest. Louis turned out to be absolutely charming, and utterly safe. He delighted her with tales of himself and Jean- Luc as boys, causing as much trouble as possible and claiming innocence to their unbelieving parents. Marie seemed comfortable in his presence, even giggling, and Beverly found herself wondering after a while if perhaps Marie were considering something she shouldn't. Beverly certainly couldn't talk about someone having a nice little affair, but she knew damned well what bounce-back relationships could do to one's self-esteem later. Jean-Luc came home, bearing a rather large box, which she scolded him for trying to carry on his own. He made Marie open it, to reveal a top of the line Robel Replicator. She gasped, then held her hand over her mouth and rocked back and forth, almost trembling but not quite. "I knew that you had wanted one of these in the house, and I thought that now might be a good time to install one." She nodded, still not speaking. Beverly placed a hand on her shoulder. "Marie, are you okay?" "I ... I'm fine. I was just thinking that Robert is probably turning over in his grave right about now." She looked up at Jean- Luc, tears on the verge, but not coming this time. "I suppose he can use the exercise." *** Among the four of them, and with some unhelpful advice from the owner's manual, they managed to have it running by nine o'clock that evening. In honor of the occasion, Marie invited Louis to stay, and call his wife over. However, he bowed out, much to Beverly's disappointment, she was surprised to note. Jean-Luc walked Louis out to the ground car while Marie tried to figure out how to order a cup of tea with the right amount of sugar and cream. Beverly went to the door, meaning to watch Louis leave. Instead, she accidentally overheard a snatch of conversation between the two. Louis made a comment about his wife's decision to let him have the house if she could have the ground car and this and that. Marie had been right about their marriage being on rocky ground. Beverly sighed, and quietly left the doorway. It wasn't any of her business. Sometimes, she wondered if she and Jack would have stayed together, or if they would have parted ways after a few years. She could never come up with a good answer. What about Jean-Luc? Was there any way she could make things work with him? After the previous night, they could never be "just friends" again. She hoped it would become "friends and ... " but she worried inside. He had told her about what he had seen for their future: marriage, followed by an unpleasant divorce. She wasn't sure she liked that vision of the future. Then, the ground car hummed, and Jean-Luc was inside again and since Marie was still in the kitchen, they indulged in a satisfying soul-touching kiss that lasted a good three minutes without pause for air, and she had no more fears. *** Dinner was simple; Marie had programmed the replicator to make basic items like milk and cheese and tea, but she still had to work on more complicated things. They brought the food beside the fire, and ate and talked well into the night. Marie finally retired at about midnight. Beverly, still a little unsure, talked with Jean-Luc until nearly one. Almost shyly, they walked up the stairs together, now and then brushing against one another. When they reached her room, Beverly stepped inside, but Jean-Luc did not follow. She turned around. "What is it?" "Are you sure you want me to come in?" His tone was light, but there was some fear in his eyes, returned from before. So he had seen her discomfort after Louis left. It was time to end this game they kept playing. She took his hand. "If you don't, we're going to have a lot to explain to Marie in the morning when she finds us in the hallway." He came in and quietly closed the door. *** Day 5: East *** Marie awoke feeling lonely. She missed her husband's warmth beside her. She missed the sound of Rene trying to sneak down the stairs without making them squeak. She was going to miss Jean-Luc and Beverly when they left. She got up, walked slowly to the mirror, and brushed out her long, fair hair. Robert had always loved to see it down at night, to run his fingers through its length. Despondence nearly set in again, and she went into the hallway to leave his ghost behind in their room. Then she saw the other doors down the hall. Rooms, set aside for guests or studies, were locked for the time being. Rene's room was closed, but not locked. The same went for the door to the attic. She noticed that Jean-Luc's room was open, but that the door to the old master bedroom was closed. She was quite certain that Jean-Luc's bed had not been slept in the past two nights. As she went downstairs, she had a sudden sense of things being closer to the way they ought to be. The large house needed to be filled with the sounds of children running down the hallway, with dogs barking and cats purring, and lovers sharing secret, silent glances that everyone else saw clearly. The house needed life. Robert and Rene could no longer bring life to it, but she could, if she chose to remarry and have another child, and Jean-Luc could, if he did not allow the wonderful woman sleeping beside him to slip away. She went to the replicator and ordered some tea. It delivered it within seconds, made just the way she liked. She sipped her tea, and glanced outside to see the covered vines. The coverings did not look so much like old shawls now, she thought. They looked like baby blankets. So far, all the Picards born to the family in the past century or so had been conceived in that house. It was time for one or two more. *** They went to church, not out of devotion or desire, but for the chance to see other people from the village one more time. Marie did not look forward to the experience. The memory of the grocer's was still fresh; the people with their lying eyes and meaningless sympathy frightened her more than she wished to say. Jean-Luc hadn't been to the place in some time, though, and the family plot was in the church's cemetery. He convinced her to go. She didn't want to disappoint him, or to just drop them off. She wore a simple black dress, Beverly the dark blue dress she had brought, and Jean-Luc a dark suit. As they went in, several people approached them, some shy and awkward, some somber. This man had often talked to Robert over the fence in the fields and had thought him a "nice curmudgeon;" that girl had gone to school with Rene, and one day he had shared his lunch with her when she'd forgotten; this woman had worked in the village with the shipping company patronized by the vineyard, and would miss Mssr. Picard; over there was a boy who'd been on Rene's soccer team. They came in dribs and drabs, much as they had before the funeral, but this time they did not offer casseroles and gelatins, but instead kind words for two of their own who had not quite beaten Fate. Even Mme. Gescherd was tolerable, although she seemed to think it had been Maurice who had died with Robert. They finally entered the church, making a somber party of three near the front, but they sang the hymns together and the music was lovely. Afterwards, they walked to the family plot in the cemetery. Marie had not been there to see the headstones set; she couldn't face it then alone. Now, with a dear friend to either side, she read the names out loud, the dates she knew too well, and the inscriptions. For Rene, she had chosen something in Standard: "To see a world in a grain of sand/And Heaven in a wildflower/Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand/And Eternity in an hour." She'd always loved Blake, and the poem had been one she'd read to Rene when he was still sleeping in a crib in their room. For her husband, she'd chosen a quote by Victor Hugo: "The supreme happiness in life is the conviction that we are loved." It had felt ... right. They stayed in the graveyard for about an hour, reading over names and dates of family members. Jean-Luc could virtually trace his family tree by the grave markers. Together, they read inscriptions of love, of duty, of truth, of laughter, some mystifying ("Here lies 'Disco' Dan with a Metro pass and a spray paint can."), some heartbreaking ("Sleep, My Beloved; I'll Join You Soon," read on the grave of a young woman, with a grave of a young man who died not a month later beside her). Noon came and went, and then they had to get to the shuttle station. The bags were already in the ground car, so Marie drove them directly there. With still a half-hour to go, the three of them grabbed a quick lunch at a new fast-food restaurant nearby, which served very interesting Klingon food with a twist. Jean-Luc hazarded the Kentucky-fried gagh, while Beverly inspected the bregit lung on a bun. Marie wasn't so certain about the menu, but finally decided on the tibius claw sticks. She was pleasantly surprised. She made a note to try Cafe Qo'noS again the next time she came into town. Which would be soon. The time had come for departure. Marie walked them through the hall, past the pictures of times forever gone, to the shuttle, then hugged Beverly tight. "Now remember, whenever you'd like to come visit, just drop in. You'll always be welcome." "Take care, Marie. If you ever need anything, or just want to talk, call me. No matter where I am, I'll listen." They hugged again, then Beverly boarded the shuttle, leaving her alone with Jean-Luc. They embraced, and held to each other for a long minute. "Thank you," she whispered, "for everything." "Thank *you*," he replied. He kissed her cheek gently. "Be good to yourself. I'll write you soon." He turned away. "Jean-Luc ... " "Yes?" "I have one request." He nodded. "When the two of you finally marry, invite me to the wedding." He smiled sheepishly. "Of course you're invited." "Good luck." The court-martial started tomorrow. Somehow though, she thought things would work out right for him. He waved, then offered her the Vulcan sign of greeting and parting. He entered the shuttle, and was gone. *** She went back to the cemetery, to look through the headstones again. Beside the graves for Maurice and Yvette Picard, she saw the marker for Adele Picard. No body had ever been found, of course, but Robert had ordered a small monument to mark where she would have lain, and had chosen a strange inscription that he said fit her well. With the sun behind her, dipping gently towards the horizon, Marie faced the east, and read to herself words she had known from childhood. A time to be born and a time to die. A time to sow and a time to reap. A time to kill, and a time to heal. A time to weep and a time to laugh. A time to mourn, and a time to dance. A time to embrace. A time to refrain from embracing. A time for love. A time for hate. A time of war. A time of peace. *** The End ***