Cruise Control
by Ancarett

Summary:  An experimental navigational interface is all that will save 
Voyager from alien attack, but might cost Tom's life.  Can B'Elanna 
change the odds?  Rated NC-17.  Set after "The Killing Game."

Standard Disclaimer: Star Trek and its characters belong to Paramount 
and Viacom, I'm only borrowing their toys and I promise to play nicely.  
You have permission to download and print this story for your personal 
amusement.  Permission is also granted to link to or repost this story, 
providing this disclaimer is included and the author is informed.

Warning! This story contains scenes of adult, consensual sex and some 
mild profanities, thus warranting an NC-17 label.  Minors, go read the 
PG-13 version available at http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Station/1485/cruisepg.txt and 
sin no more!  Direct all feedback to ancarett@hotmail.com.

***

	All through the early morning meeting in the briefing room, 
Lieutenant B'Elanna Torres warily eyed _Voyager_'s second-in-command.  
There was an air of suppressed excitement, almost glee, on Chakotay's 
tattooed face that boded ill for a Chief Engineer, tired after a night 
on the Gamma Shift.  -Whatever it is,- B'Elanna prayed fervently, -let 
it be something to do with Neelix or Harry or whoever, just not me and 
my ship.-  B'Elanna caught the commander's dark eyes darting towards 
Seven's impassible face.  The former Borg sat still as a statue; head 
tilted just a few degrees from vertical as she listened to the debate 
over the starship's present course.
	The Talaxian morale officer was gesticulating wildly.  "I just 
don't see the value in this, captain!  We know from our last planetfall 
that the Maleelian Commonwealth is reputed to be a belligerent and 
combative force in this sector.  Their flotillas would present a 
serious threat, even to a starship of _Voyager_'s class.  I suggest 
that we change course to skirt the Maleelian territories and avoid any 
trouble."
	Captain Janeway raised a calming hand.  "We appreciate your 
advice, Mr. Neelix, but circumnavigating the Commonwealth would add at 
least seven months to our journey home.  The Maleelians could solve our 
problems simply enough, but all attempts to negotiate with the 
Maleelian ambassador met with failure.  They are simply uninterested in 
permitting strangers to pass through their highly prized trading 
lanes."
	Ensign Harry Kim nodded vigorously.  "And we can't just skirt the 
edges of their claim.  The Commonwealth's territories are bounded by 
some dangerous anomalies, including a cluster of unstable protostars."
	"Those protostars might be the only thing to convince me to alter 
our course around Maleelian space," Janeway commented wryly.  "It would 
be a unique opportunity to explore the astrophysics of a developing 
star cluster. . . ."  She tapped her fingers impatiently against the 
padd that lay in front of her.  "However, in this case I can't justify 
slowing our journey by the several months it would require to bypass 
the Maleelian's claims."
	Commander Chakotay leaned forward from his relaxed position at 
the Captain's right hand.  "Astrometrics has provided us with some 
information that might well work to our advantage.  There's a region of 
unsettled space that stretches almost across Maleelian territory; a 
sort of "no-man's land," if you will.  This corridor seems to attract 
little traffic by either Maleelian merchant convoys or their military 
fleets.  If we keep to this relatively untravelled space, we stand a 
good chance of avoiding detection."
	"But why do the Maleelians avoid this region?  Is there something 
dangerous that they know of and of which we are simply unaware?"  
Tuvok's questions indicated that the cautious head of Security still 
reserved judgment.  "We know too little of this sector to risk the ship 
and her crew.  Furthermore, captain, might I remind you that you once 
held similar hopes for the 'Northwest Passage' through Borg territory?"
	Seven looked to Chakotay, as if seeking permission to speak, then 
turned to Tuvok.  "The comparison is invalid.  Commander, long range 
sensors confirm that this region of space contains little of economic 
value to the Maleelians.  There are no M-class planets and little in 
the way of valuable elements in those few planetary systems that do 
appear in this sector."
	"But, without further information, we cannot be sure whether 
economics or other motives inspire such avoidance on the part of the 
Maleelians," Tuvok countered gravely.
	"That is, of course, true," Seven of Nine acknowledged, "but 
based upon the intelligence Mr. Neelix has provided and the evidence 
from our sensor analysis, I am confident that my interpretation is the 
correct one."
	A raised eyebrow was all that indicated that Tuvok was not 
similarly convinced, but it was a sign B'Elanna Torres recognized well 
enough.  With a sigh, she slouched further in the uncomfortable 
briefing room chair.  A sudden elbow in her side caused the engineer to 
jump slightly.  With an angry glint in her dark eyes, B'Elanna hissed 
at Tom, "Stop it!"
	"Hey, Torres," came the pilot's whispered reply, "just thought 
you were falling asleep.  Wouldn't be on to have _Voyager_'s engineer 
snore her way through the daily briefing."  A mischievous grin lit 
Lieutenant Tom Paris's long, handsome face as he locked eyes with the 
diminutive, duranium-strong woman seated next to him.
	"Tom, pay attention," B'Elanna insisted angrily.  From the corner 
of her eye she saw Commander Tuvok incline his head in their direction.  
With his sensitive Vulcan hearing, the senior officer was sure to 
overhear their sotto voce conversation.
	The tall helmsman looked ready to debate her order, when the 
captain called for attention.  "That's enough discussion, everybody.  I 
appreciate all the input, but after consideration I'm still going to go 
with our dash along the Maleelian corridor.  In my mind, the advantages 
outweigh the risks.  Besides, Commander Chakotay tells me that we might 
just have something up our sleeves that will reduce the risk even 
further."  Captain Janeway gestured to her first officer.  "If you'd 
like to explain, commander?"
	Chakotay nodded and began.  "About two months ago, Seven of Nine 
came to me with some observations about the efficiency of certain ship 
systems."  B'Elanna unconsciously clenched a fist against her knee, 
certain that another of Seven's interfering ideas about engineering was 
about to come.  She relaxed slightly as Tom covered her hand with his 
own in a firm, supportive caress.
	Chakotay continued.  "According to Seven, there were several 
"unacceptable inefficiencies" in the way we ran our ship.  I explained 
to her the difference between Borg and Starfleet standards-" everyone 
at the briefing table, except the former Borg and Tuvok smiled at the 
commander's dry understatement "-but I invited her to bring forward any 
proposals that might improve our performance."
	"Among the many proposals she submitted was one that caught my 
interest."  At this, Chakotay activated the large viewscreen and called 
up a series of schematics.  "According to her report, the most serious 
deficiency in _Voyager_'s protocols was in navigation."
	Tom's indignantly indrawn breath was easily audible to B'Elanna.  
She felt his hand stiffening above hers, and shifted her fingers so 
that they interlaced with his.  "What do you mean by navigation?" Tom 
managed to ask.
	Seven turned her impassive gaze upon the fair-haired pilot who 
sat across from her.  "Borg ships are piloted by drones who work in 
perfect synchronicity with sensors and enact maneuvers as they are 
indicated.  Compared to the Borg, _Voyager_ operates at 78.6% of 
optimal navigational response efficiency.  That is unacceptable."
	Still gripping B'Elanna's hand, Tom leaned forward across the 
table to glare at the perfectly groomed woman.  "I don't believe it!  
I've seen Borg piloting firsthand and I didn't find it that 
impressive."
	"That is because the Borg cubes that you encountered were not 
facing conventional opponents, but Species 8472.  Their biological 
symbiosis was an even more perfect adaptation than the Borg had 
achieved."  Seven's tone blended admiration and hate in the admission 
of the extra-dimensional aliens' capabilities.
	"Well, I hope you're not suggesting that _Voyager_ be piloted by 
a bunch of Borg drones or one of those aliens, 'cause I'm telling you 
now, that wouldn't be an improvement," Tom replied dangerously.
	The captain intervened soothingly, "I'm sure that's not at all 
what the commander had in mind, Tom."  She quirked an amused eyebrow at 
her first officer, "Is it, commander?"
	His mouth quirked with suppressed laughter.  "Not at all, 
captain.  In fact, what Seven proposed to me was that we adapt several 
well established technologies, most of them developed in the 
Federation, to improve our conn response times."
	B'Elanna interrupted incredulously, "Excuse me, commander, but 
just what kind of technologies are you talking about?"  *They'd better 
not be Borg,* was her unvoiced warning.  Chakotay seemed to pick up on 
the unspoken worries of his friend and subordinate and smiled 
reassuringly.
	"Several fairly old ideas and one or two new ones, Lieutenant 
Torres," Chakotay answered.  "Much of what Seven criticized was the lag 
time that inevitably occurs between the issuing of orders and their 
execution.  She pointed out that not only do we have communication lags 
between the captain and her subordinates, but that consulting 
instruments brings a further delay."
	Tom snorted in disbelief.  "So, whatcha going to do, commander, 
hardwire the ship into the captain's brain?"
	"Hardly," the first officer reproved.  He called up a diagram on 
the viewscreen, resembling a thickened arch.  "Seven's comments 
reminded me about old Earth interest in what was called "heads up" 
instrumentation.  It was introduced into some ground vehicle operations 
in the late twentieth century.  More sophisticated devices, including a 
body-fitted computer called the _WearComp_ enjoyed a brief popularity 
in the early twenty-first century."
	"However," Seven broke in, "there were many problems with the 
technology as it then existed.  Primitive holography resulted in 
indistinct imaging.  The biolinking technology was undeveloped.  The 
technology was soon abandoned as impractical."
	"What we're proposing," Chakotay added, forestalling Tom's 
comment, "is to take that principle and refine it, using modern 
technologies.  Specifically, a search of the Starfleet medical database 
turned up an avenue in the form of VISOR technology."  The viewscreen 
shifted again to display the picture of a dark skinned man in Starfleet 
gold and black, wearing a matte bronzed appliance that covered his 
eyes, stretching almost from ear to ear.
	The EMH leaned forward eagerly.  "Commander Chakotay, if I may?"  
Without waiting for the first officer's acknowledgment, the ship's 
doctor explained, "Commander Geordi LaForge of the Enterprise was the 
first to utilize this fully-developed VISOR technology.  His eyes were 
nonfunctional and standard surgical or cloning procedures were not 
successful in restoring vision.  But VISOR technology provided the 
commander with enhanced visual senses, far superior to normal humans.  
The Commander's VISOR enables him to perceive a wide range of radiation 
and particles invisible to base-range humanoids."  The EMH smirked 
triumphantly at the end of his explanation, almost if he, himself, had 
created the technology he had so lovingly described.
	"Much of the VISOR technology is also similar to Borg visual 
enhancement," Seven added helpfully.  "Of course, Borg implants have 
the added benefit of conveying a detailed range of analytic readings 
that enable drones to examine and assess objects with great speed."
	"What we're proposing is to adapt the VISOR technology to carry 
navigational imaging and sensor readings.  Voyager's pilot would also 
be outfitted with a set of linked gloves, that would enable him, or 
her, to direct the ship based upon the integrated information always on 
display."
	Tom shifted uneasily in his chair.  "Let me get this straight, 
commander.  You're suggesting that _Voyager_ be flown like it was some 
sort of personal holographic game?"  He paused for effect, then 
continued in a sarcastic drawl, "Isn't there a word for this they used 
back in the twentieth century?  Virtual reality?  Well, let me tell 
you, commander, it was a bust then and it'll be a bust, now."
	Chakotay crossed his arms comfortably and leaned back against the 
curve of the wall.  "You surprise me, Tom, I'd've thought you'd be the 
first one to want to try a "new toy" like this."
	"Yeah, well I'm not," Tom bit off.  B'Elanna empathized with Tom.  
She wasn't any happier than he at the thought of this Borg-driven 
tinkering with _Voyager_'s systems, especially since the last 
disastrous episode when they'd lost the warp drive trying to create a 
Borg-style transwarp corridor.  *Chakotay has to be nuts,* she thought 
in disbelief.  *Well, at least Captain Janeway won't approve this 
insane idea.*
	B'Elanna's comfort was shortlived, as the captain spoke for the 
first time since Chakotay began his presentation.  "When Commander 
Chakotay brought this idea to my attention, I have to admit that I, 
too, was sceptical.  But I asked him to work with Seven and create a 
working prototype of the interface.  They've been at it now for several 
weeks and are now ready for the first "real world" tests."
	B'Elanna's spine straightened with a crack.  "What?" the half-
Klingon barked.  *This is beginning to feel more and more like a really 
bad day,* she thought darkly.
	"That's right," Chakotay continued smoothly as B'Elanna visibly 
fumed.  "We have a prototype ready to use with one of our shuttles.  I 
was hoping that Tom would volunteer to be the test pilot," his dark 
eyes swept across the room to meet Tom's stormy gaze, "but if not, I'm 
more than willing to do the duty myself."
	"What will it be, Tom?" Captain Janeway asked.
	Tom drew himself up carefully.  "I appreciate your offer, 
commander, captain, but I'm not sure that I'm entirely comfortable with 
this proposal."
	"Why not?" Janeway inquired, her face knit with concern as she 
tried to puzzle out the reason behind the uncharacteristically reticent 
response from Voyager's daredevil helmsman.
	"Frankly, Captain, this interface idea sounds a bit rough around 
the edges.  What kind of pre-testing has been done on the hardware?  
How well does it link with the computer?  How does the pilot process 
orders given by someone he can't see with these -things!- over his eyes 
and on his hands?"  Tom leaned back in his seat, obviously stemming a 
further list of questions and challenges about Seven's latest 
innovation.
	The captain grimaced.  "Well, I'm sorry to hear that, Tom.  I 
won't order you to test the hardware."  She swiveled in her seat to 
look at her first officer.  "Chakotay, you'll act as pilot for the 
tests.  I want B'Elanna to work with you and Seven on the installation 
of the interface links with our computer and the shuttle's systems.  Is 
that understood?"  Her gaze sought out the agreement of everyone still 
seated at the table.  "Good," she concluded as she stood up from the 
table.  "Dismissed."  She strode from the briefing room, with Chakotay 
close behind her.
	B'Elanna rose slowly from her seat at the briefing table.  Tom's 
set face worried her, yet she didn't know what she could say or do that 
would shake him out of this discontent.  Maybe later in the day, when 
she joined him in the holodeck for some eagerly awaited down time, 
B'Elanna could probe the mystery.  For now, she settled for a quick 
squeeze of his shoulder and strode for the exit.
	"Lieutenant," Seven interjected, just as B'Elanna had reached the 
threshold.  Sighing inwardly, B'Elanna squared her shoulders and turned 
to regard the other woman.
	"What is it, Seven?"
	The tall blonde reached out to hand her padd to B'Elanna.  "These 
are the specifications for the interface.  A detailed breakdown of 
materials and construction are included."
	"Wellll," drawled B'Elanna as she unhappily accepted the padd,  
"I'll be checking it over myself before we begin construction."
	Seven's right eyebrow rose affrontedly.  "There is no need.  
These specifications are correct and complete."
	"As _Voyager_'s Chief of Engineering, I'll be the judge of that," 
B'Elanna crisply informed the other woman before sharply exiting the 
briefing room.
	In the privacy of the turbolift whisking her down to Main 
Engineering, B'Elanna surveyed the material on the navigational 
interface.  Reluctantly she admitted that the idea and execution were 
both ingenious.  B'Elanna thought she detected Chakotay's hand in the 
set of overrides, buffers and monitoring devices included in the 
design.  Seven, she thought cynically, would not have given such 
consideration to the operator.
	Once back in her domain, with the dim lights and rhythmic hum of 
the warp core comfortably enveloping her, B'Elanna assembled a small 
team to begin assembly and testing of the prototype.  When Joe Carey 
came on shift at 1600 hours, she gratefully handed over the project and 
went off-duty.  There was only time for a hurried dinner in the Mess 
Hall before B'Elanna rushed to meet Tom at Holodeck Two.
	Tom's program was already running when she arrived, a few minutes 
late, at 1633 hours.  B'Elanna entered hesitantly.  All she knew was 
this was another one of Tom's personal programs.  Unlike Sandrine's and 
the popular resort program, Tom's many personal programs were generally 
designed for one or two participants.  As she strode through the 
holodeck doors she saw a wooden wall, its deep red coat of paint faded 
and chipped.  Long strands of grass marred the sharp edges where the 
building walls met the ground.  Muffled sounds of metal on metal 
directed her steps along a well-worn pass in the dry grass, to the 
right.
	Tom was facing away from B'Elanna, bent over an unfamiliar 
metallic object.  Her mind quickly racing, B'Elanna identified it as 
another one of his beloved twentieth-century cars.  She absently 
acknowledged that as her eyes lingered on Tom's buttocks, lovingly 
outlined by the pale blue material of his pants.  Her breathing 
quickened at the sight, loud enough to be heard in the pastoral quiet 
of the prairie farmland the holoemitters projected.  At least, that's 
what B'Elanna assumed caused Tom to raise his head abruptly and 
injudiciously, given the low overhang of the engine's covering where he 
worked.
	"Ouch.  Damnit!," Tom raised a hand to the crown of his head and 
rubbed it feelingly, then gingerly backed away and straightened.  The 
white, short-sleeved shirt he wore was thin enough that his skin tone 
turned it to a deep cream, except where thicker folds of fabric trimmed 
it at neck and armholes.  Sweat already darkened the fabric in a few 
spots and one dark brown line marked the front, where Tom had obviously 
been leaning against a dirty component.  B'Elanna's eyes drifted 
higher, to see Tom's face distorted into a rueful scowl.
	"No matter how many times I remind myself to be careful, I 
*always* bump my head on the damned hood," Tom explained, gesturing 
towards the sweep of shaped metal arced above the engine.  "Nice of you 
to join me, Torres."
	B'Elanna stepped forward to join Tom at the front of the car.  
She curiously looked down into the maze of unfamiliar parts.  "So this 
is what your program is," she ventured, "an old-Earth automotive 
study?"
	"Hell, no, B'Elanna, this isn't some academic study," Tom 
explained.  One hand leaned down to caress the silver metal that 
trimmed the front of the vehicle in a set of parallel lines.  "I just 
like to tinker with old twentieth century cars.  Historical recreation 
is a great hobby.  Of course, I never could afford the real thing, but 
with holodecks like this one, it's hard to tell the difference.  
Besides, messing with a classic car engine is fun."
	"Fun?" queried B'Elanna, standing hipshot with her arms crossed.  
"You're beginning to sound like an engineer."
	Tom arched an eyebrow suggestively.  "Find that sexy, Chief?"
	With lips pursed, the half-Klingon considered Tom's question.  
"Hmm.  That's hard to tell.  I'd have to see how good you are with your 
tools."  Her voice deepened on the final words and she returned Tom a 
glance as suggestive as his own.
	The pilot's grin broadened and he gestured towards the engine in 
front of them.  "Maybe we could check them out . . . together?"
	B'Elanna stared dubiously at the unfamiliar mechanisms of the old 
Earth automobile.  Despite Voyager's retrieval of another ancient 
automobile earlier in its journey across the Delta Quadrant, she had to 
admit she knew little about these old vehicles.  Professional curiosity 
warred with a fear of embarrassment.  Her adventurous spirit soon 
decided the issue.  After all, almost anything with Tom was guaranteed 
to be fun!
	"All right," she declared, pushing up the sleeves of her 
engineering smock and uniform, "I'll give it a try."
	"Whoa there," Tom cautioned.  "First we have to get you into the 
proper ambience."
	B'Elanna eyed Tom sourly.  She'd almost forgotten how annoying 
she found the pilot's interest in micromanaging holographic 
experiences.  "Ambience," she drawled, hoping that he didn't mean what 
she thought he meant.
	"Yeah, you know, you've got to have the attitude, the look, the 
clothes," Tom supplied cheerfully.  "Computer, open a holographic 
subchannel and project a selection of female attire, old Earth circa 
1969."  A dark rectangle fuzzily opened to his right and displayed the 
image of a long-sleeved dress in a pale yellow color.  That disappeared 
to reveal a jacket and straight green skirt.  Tom tilted his head to 
one side.  "No, I was looking for something more informal," he 
directed.  The image changed again to reveal what seemed to B'Elanna 
like a dressmaker's nightmare, a loudly patterned bra-like top and 
microscopic skirt.  An angry frown knit her brow.  Tom sighed wistfully 
as he noted B'Elanna's reaction to the first choice.  As a parade of 
similarly skimpy outfits appeared, B'Elanna was about to turn the 
subchannel off when Tom intervened.
	"How about this one?"  The outfit now displaying was a bit more 
respectable.  At least the loose top, with its half-length sleeves and 
geometric patterns would cover a woman's upper body fairly well.  The 
fringed, miniscule shorts, of a similar soft blue to Tom's pants, 
however, B'Elanna rejected.  A holographic shirt she could easily 
handle by shucking her smock and jacket, but to wear those projected 
shorts she'd have to strip and although the thought of doing that with 
Tom was always pleasurable, she knew that Harry had been invited to 
join them later.  -No way-, B'Elanna vowed, -will Harry, or anyone else 
on Voyager, see me parading around in something that ridiculous.-
	B'Elanna tilted her chin.  "The shirt, okay, helmboy.  The rest. 
. . ," she let the threat drift off darkly.
	Tom Paris hadn't become B'Elanna Torres' lover and best friend 
without being able to read at least some of her signals.  He took what 
he could get.  "Okay, _this time_.  But someday, Torres, I'd like to 
see you dress the whole part."  He directed the holodeck to create a 
holographic shirt for B'Elanna to wear.  In her turn, the young 
engineer stripped off her smock and jacket then stood quietly while the 
shirt formed around her.  Despite its illusory nature, the garment 
moved and felt like a real top.  B'Elanna had to admit that, wearing 
the loose shirt adorned with sharply-defined brown, gold and white 
patterns, she felt a bit more part of the scene they now inhabited.
	"Good, now that's taken care of we can get to work."  Tom stepped 
forward that leaned across the engine.  "This baby's in great shape.  I 
programmed the computer with a variety of classic cars: Mustangs, 
Cougars, Jags and so on.  But this has got to be one of my favorites."
	"Pardon my ignorance, but what kind of car is this?"
	Tom feigned indignation.  "My dear lady, you have the privilege 
of working on a genuine, eight-cylinder 1969 Chevrolet Camaro.  In 
their heyday, this was the kind of car a guy wanted to have to impress 
his buddies and," Tom's left hand sneaked out to caress B'Elanna's 
behind, "his best girl."
	"Oh," was all B'Elanna could manage as Tom's light touch roused 
her senses.  She knew that her body was leaning over the engine of the 
car as Tom named and described the functions of various components, but 
her concentration remained fixed on the idle sweep of his long fingers 
from the top of her thigh, across her buttocks, to the small of her 
back, then down again.
	She shot a glance to her right.  Tom's voice droned on in a 
pedantic monotone, but his lips quirked and his eyes flicked from the 
engine to meet hers.  "Pig!" she accused, arresting his roving hand 
with an iron grasp.
	"Guilty as charged," Tom spluttered as he tried to retrieve his 
abused appendange.  B'Elanna held on perversely, drawing him towards 
her.  Awkwardly, still half-bent over the engine compartment, Tom 
lurched towards her.  It wasn't until he leaned fully into her that 
B'Elanna realized she'd been had.
	Despite her best efforts, her lips twitched and she smiled.  
"You're not really planning to work on this engine, are you, bright 
boy?"
	Tom leaned his head so close that she felt his warm breath on her 
cheek.  "Nah, more like work on an engineer, I think," he admitted 
before claiming her lips for a deep kiss.
	B'Elanna was more than willing but a hazy part of her mind 
shouted alarms.  "Tom, what about Harry?" she managed.
	"Harry?  Shit, I forgot!" Tom stepped back carefully from the 
hood, drawing B'Elanna with him.  "Computer, state location of Ensign 
Kim."
	"Ensign Kim is on the bridge."
	Tom's lascivious grin returned.  "That's right, Harry mentioned 
to me that Tuvok had asked him to work an extra half-shift tonight.  
He's helping the commander set up some new internal security sensors."
	"Hmm, then Harry's no problem," B'Elanna mused.
	"No more than he ever is," Tom quipped.  B'Elanna assumed a 
foreboding look and twisted his forearm.  "Hey, ouch!"
	"Harry's my friend," B'Elanna explained with mock anger, "and I 
won't have you badmouthing him to me."  A small grin belied her stern 
words.
	"I always knew you liked him better than me," Tom groused.
	She smiled sweetly.  "Guess you're just going to have to try and 
change my mind."
	Tom pulled gently on her free hand.  "Then come with me, 
sweetheart.  I'm going to show you another benefit of excellent 
holoprogramming, as performed by yours truly."  They took a few steps 
to the building B'Elanna had first seen.  A large set of doors set 
slightly open, revealing a darkened interior.  Tom edged inside and 
B'Elanna followed.
	"There should be a hayloft in here," Tom explained as he led her 
a few more hesitant steps inside.  As their eyes adjusted to the dim 
light, Tom crowed triumphantly.  "Aha!"
	He stood beside the wooden ladder.  "After you."
	B'Elanna wrinkled her nose.  "Gee, thanks."  Quickly she climbed 
the ladder, to end about three meters above the floor in a room filled 
with golden stems that crackled and shifted under her feet.
	Tom's head popped up over the edge.  "Here we are."  B'Elanna 
looked around hesitantly.  "Just exactly what is this place."
	"Don't tell me they didn't have haylofts on Kessik IV?"
	B'Elanna scowled defensively.  "Not so far as I knew."
	"Well," Tom explained, "haylofts are part of mythic Earth 
tradition.  For generations, countless young men and women explored 
the, um, natural world, by spending time in haylofts."  He looked 
around the room.  "Consider this an initiation into a time-honoured 
human ritual," he continued as he rummaged in a chest against the 
building's steeply sloping outer wall.  Emerging with a soft blanket in 
his hand, Tom turned to B'Elanna.  "Madame, if you're ready?"
	With a flourish he laid the blanket across a deep pile of the 
sweet-smelling hay then grasped B'Elanna's hand to pull her gently down 
beside him.  A mischievous smile lit his face.  "Computer, delete 
holographic shirt on Lieutenant Torres."  In an instant, the top 
dematerialized, leaving B'Elanna only in her uniform pants and singlet.  
"You see why wearing the entire holographic outfit would have been a 
lot more fun?  Oofhh," he exclaimed as, with a well-placed shove, 
B'Elanna rolled him back onto the blanket.
	"Time to put up or shut up," she threatened, pinning her tall 
lover back against the soft nest.  She insinuated one knee between his 
legs, gently rubbing her thigh down across his crotch, then back up 
again.  Involuntarily, his hips rocked forward.  B'Elanna bared her 
teeth in a feral grin as she felt his arousal straining against her 
sleekly muscled leg.  Keeping his wrists pinned on either side of his 
head, B'Elanna lowered her mouth to his.  
	His mouth opened readily, tongue eagerly stroking her own, 
invading the recesses of her mouth.  Tom's head raised slowly off the 
blanket as B'Elanna teasingly withdrew.  His eyes fluttered open and he 
smiled.  "Put up," he cryptically pronounced as he ground his hips 
against her own.  B'Elanna raised an eyebrow.  "Good choice, helmboy," 
she managed before lowering her head to his, "Now, shut up."
	Another hungry kiss heated the atmosphere.  By force of will, 
B'Elanna resisted the urge to bit Tom on the face.  He already had been 
marked as her mate.  Instead, she bared her teeth and delicately drew 
them along the line of his jaw, then along the length of his throat 
before licking her way along the exposed edge of the collarbone to the 
shirt's neckline.  She raised her head slightly at the obstacle.  "I 
don't suppose your clothes are holographic?" B'Elanna questioned 
hopefully.
	"Nope," Tom replied.  "These are the real things."
	"Damn," she returned, "it would have been fun to whisk them away 
with one command."
	"As you wish."  B'Elanna loosened her hold on his wrists and the 
pilot sat up enough to grab the shirt hems and fluidly pull it over his 
head.  His long, lean torso took on interesting depth in the shadowy 
environment of the loft.  B'Elanna stared unabashedly at the feathery 
line of hair that ran down his chest to the waistline of his pants.  He 
cocked his head towards B'Elanna.
	"You're going to fall behind," he warned as one hand loosened the 
buttons on his fly while he kicked off his shoes.
	B'Elanna could see the sense in his words, but her hands were 
slow as her eyes remained glued to Tom's physique.  Awkwardly she 
pulled the brief uniform undershirt off.  Tom's own undressing slowed 
as he realized that underneath the close-fitting gray singlet, her 
breasts were unfettered.  Still maintaining eye contact, the pair 
slowly disrobed, then knelt next to each other.
	Tom looked down at B'Elanna, reaching one hand up to delicately 
cup and caress a breast.  His thumb idly swept across the raised 
nipple.  Involuntarily, B'Elanna arched her body, her head dipping 
backwards as her eyes half-closed.  Tom's other hand went to work on 
her other breast.  She opened her eyes to see him watching her flushed 
face with intent concentration.  Her arms, which had lain flaccidly at 
her sides, reached up to fiercely pull Tom down for a kiss.  Off 
balance, the pair tumbled backwards.  B'Elanna felt a sharp prickle of 
the hay and rolled Tom so that he lay on his back, again on the 
blanket.
	"Now, where were we?"  Tom's quip caught her off guard.  B'Elanna 
laughed heartily before straddling Tom's hips, his erection warmly 
prodding against her crotch.
	"Just about here," she breathed as she ran one hand down Tom's 
muscular torso.  Flicking a fingernail against his left nipple, she 
reveled in the sudden indrawn breath and quivering reaction of her 
lover.  Still taunting him with rocking shifts below, B'Elanna repeated 
her assaults.  Her tongue replaced her finger, licking and sucking the 
sensitive tissue.  Tom's own eager hands found their way again to her 
breasts.  His thumbs circled her nipples in an insistent rhythm.  
B'Elanna gasped and leaned forward into his embrace.  One of her hands 
drifted between their bodies, to trail the length of his engorged 
penis.  Delicately she grasped and stroked its length.
The response was gratifying.  Tom's eyes opened wide, then closed 
as he groaned, surrendering to her control.  Sweat trailed fine lines 
along his temples as he lay beneath her.  B'Elanna lovingly leaned down 
to lick it away, while her hand kept up its maddening caress.  Just as 
she brought him to the brink of release, Tom's hands swiftly lowered to 
clasp her buttocks.  Willingly, B'Elanna responded to his wordless 
demand and let him impale her.  His hips lifted against her, securing 
their union and B'Elanna arched upright, her waist secured in Tom's 
warm hands.  A strand of dark hair fell in front of her eyes, obscuring 
her vision as the couple moved in unison.  B'Elanna slowly rotated her 
hips around as Tom moved his up and down.  Their pace increased as the 
pleasure heightened.  Each rotation brought B'Elanna's clitoris into 
acute arousal.  She groaned as heat flowed through torso.
	"Now," she demanded, her hands reaching forward to grab Tom's 
shoulders in a powerful grip.  "Now, now, now!"  Her hands flexed with 
each repetition.
	The pain she inflicted went unnoticed and Tom increased the speed 
and power of his strokes.  B'Elanna felt the familiar surges of 
orgasmic pleasure swamp her body.  She fell forward against his 
sweating body just as Tom gave a final shudder and spilled his seed.  
Their breath raced raggedly.
	"So this is what a hayloft is for?"
	"Yup," Tom gasped, still a bit breathless.  He reached a hand up 
to smooth her hair, extracting a strand of hay that he then used to 
tickle her nose.  She wrinkled it warningly.  Reluctantly, she 
stretched and moved to uncouple their intimate embrace.  Nestling close 
to Tom, head pillowed on his arm, she lay beside her lover.  Her eyes 
followed his, up to the wooden ceiling of the loft where dust motes 
danced in the scant rays of light.
	Unwittingly, their playful mood sobered.  B'Elanna thought she 
knew why.  Tom was revisiting that morning's briefing.  Inwardly she 
debated.  Should she let it slide?  That was hardly the style of 
B'Elanna Torres.  She propped herself up on her right elbow, regarding 
Tom's still distant expression.  "Ration credit for your thoughts," she 
offered.
	Surprise caused Tom's blue eyes to refocus on B'Elanna's flushed 
face.  He smiled despite himself.
	"I don't know.  Somehow I have the feeling if I won that bet I'd 
feel worse than if I lost."
	B'Elanna smirked at Tom's joke, but refused to be distracted.  
"You're thinking about the new nav system, aren't you, Paris?"
	Tom stiffened slightly, the expression around his eyes 
tightening.  "And if I was?"
	B'Elanna thought for a moment.  She had to be careful and choose 
her words, neither of which were her best skills.  "What was it about 
Chakotay's and Seven's idea that really bugged you?"
	Tom slid slightly away and rolled to his side so that he could 
see her more easily.  "You really want to know?" he asked.
	B'Elanna nodded.  "I know you, Tom Paris, it's not in your 
character to be cautious when a new challenge presents itself.  The man 
who broke the warp ten barrier wouldn't normally hesitate from trying 
something new."
	"Yeah, well, maybe I've changed since then," Tom responded.
	B'Elanna reached out to run a finger along the line of his jaw.  
"Of course you've changed since then," she cajoled.  "I'd never have 
been seen with the pig you were then."
	Tom's lips quirked into a brief smile, then resumed their sombre 
lines.  He broke eye contact and stared intently at rumpled fold of the 
blanket between them.  "Well, B'Elanna, I guess I'm just a little . . . 
spooked by this new idea.  It doesn't sound natural."
	"Natural!" B'Elanna hooted, in spite of herself.  "This from a 
man who pilots a starship, works as an assistant to a medical hologram, 
plays in a holodeck and has been catapulted into the farthest reaches 
of the galaxy?"
	"Yeah, I know, coming from me it _does_ sound strange," Tom 
acknowledged.  "But it's the interface system.  It seems like they're 
taking the joy out of piloting.  Pretty soon they'll just be bypassing 
people all together and letting a computer drive the ship."
	His eyes drifted off.  She could see he was trying to find words 
to express himself.  He began hesitantly.  "It's kinda like what it is 
with these classic cars in my programs.  You see, twenty, fifty, a 
hundred or more years later, collectors still treasured them and try to 
keep them just they way they were designed.  Sure, there've been 
technological advances since they were first designed, but what matters 
more is to keep things real.  To keep things the way they were 
designed.  The way they ought to be."
	B'Elanna nodded slowly.  "Kind of like putting impulse engines on 
your _Camargue_, out there, huh?"
	"That's _Camaro_, you ignoramus," Tom corrected in good humour.  
"But, yeah, kind of like that.  More so, though, I feel is that we're 
opening a Pandora's box.  Despite what Seven says, I think Starfleet 
designer's have given us one of the best set-ups.  If we have to rely 
on some high-tech interface built around one individual, we're asking 
for a lot of trouble, to my mind."
	"It's more than that though, isn't it, Tom?  I mean, I believe 
you're sincere about these concerns, but something else is bothering 
you," B'Elanna prodded when Tom fell silent.
	He lay back on the blanket, pillowing his head against his 
crossed arms.  
	"Well, I'm not very happy that Chakotay and Seven were working on 
this without consulting me," he admitted.  "Everytime I think I'm part 
of the team, something like this comes along and I learn that I'm left 
out of the loop again."
	B'Elanna snorted.  "You're not the only one who got left in the 
dark, you know.  After all, it is my ship they'll be tinkering with!"
	"Yeah, but with you it's never a question that Commander Chakotay 
doesn't trust you.  With me, it _always_ is," Tom insisted.
	"Well, I think you're wrong there, Tom."  At his disbelieving 
snort, B'Elanna left that line.  "I also think you're wrong not to be 
part of this testing."
	Tom arched an eyebrow as he slanted a look in her directions.  
"Et tu, Brutus?"
	"Funny, funny, Paris," she retorted.  "No, I mean, if anybody is 
going to be using this new interface in the future on _Voyager_, I'd 
prefer that it was you.  You're our best pilot, probably the best pilot 
we could have, and if the captain's going to be installing this system, 
you're the one who should be using it."
	"Hmmm," was Tom's unconvinced reply.
	B'Elanna sat up, uncaring of her unclothed state.  Caught up in 
the argument.  "Look at it this way, Tom.  Would you rather have 
Chakotay, or, God help us, Seven piloting this ship in a crisis, just 
because you're not up on the latest technology?  Or would you rather be 
the one."
	Tom's eyes gleamed in the dim light.  "You're just saying this 
'cause you're worried about your precious ship," he accused.
	She growled in frustration.  "No, I'm not, Tom.  Well, I _am_ 
always worried about the ship, but that's not the point.  The point is 
that you're the best person for this job.  If you're not doing the 
testing, it won't get done right."
	Tom sat up suddenly, closing the space between them.  "Okay, 
okay," he interrupted her diatribe.  B'Elanna opened and closed her 
mouth wordlessly.  His sudden acquiescence disarmed her.
	"Huh?" she queried eloquently.  Tom raised a finger to her lips.  
"I'm saying, Torres, that I see the truth in what you're saying.  The 
captain's going ahead with these tests and I'll be damned if Chakotay 
is going to have one up on me if we end up integrating these systems.  
Besides, if I'm there at the testing stage, maybe I can find the flaw 
in the plan that will scrap this so-called improvement altogether."
	"Anyway," he said huskily, his blue eyes coming so close she 
could see the distinctive shading of his irises, "according to my 
calculations we have at least another hour on our holodeck reservation 
and I wouldn't want to waste it."
	Assuming a pose of innocence, B'Elanna turned to reach for her 
clothes.  "That's right, I never _did_ get to see how good you are with 
your tools, did I?"  With her head turned, she never saw the tackle 
that brought her down.
	"Ouch, Tom!"
	"What is it, B'Elanna.  Am I playing a little rough for you?" Tom 
asked solicitiously, a twinkle of mockery lightening his expression.
	"No, dammit, I've just rolled off the blanket into the hay and it 
prickles!"
	While Tom convulsed in laughter, B'Elanna seized the moment to 
roll them both onto the relative comfort of the blanket.  Soon they 
were too engrossed in each other to notice where they were at all.

*

	In the end, it took three days before B'Elanna was comfortable 
with the new instrumentation.  She established a monitoring system in 
the shuttle _Olympe_ that Chakotay would operate during the testing.  
Seven elected to remain on board to monitor the main computer interface 
while the Doctor nervously supervised Tom's outfitting with modified 
VISOR system.  When all systems were ready, B'Elanna rode the turbolift 
up to deck five, where Tom was being fitted with the navigational 
interface.  She arrived in sickbay just as the doctor was finishing his 
procedures.
	"Not wanting to carry out a full-fledge neural implant, I've 
designed this cutaneous patch that will faciliate data transfer between 
your cerebral cortex and the VISOR control system."  The doctor 
carefully secured a thin, circular device to Tom's left temple.  
Tapping briefly on his diagnostic padd, the EMH hummed happily.  "Two 
smaller transmitters in the gloves will work through the VISOR," he 
continued as he indicated the wire mesh gloves Tom was smoothing into 
place.  "Careful, Mr. Paris!  Those are delicate instruments!"
	Tom shot the holograph a dirty look.  "Hey, doc, don't you trust 
me?"
	"Of course I trust you, Mr. Paris," the doctor responded airily, 
"which is why I've made sure we have three additional pairs of gloves 
along with several spare patches.  However, we have only one VISOR so 
I'd appreciate it if you'd leave that alone until the start of the 
test."  He fixed Tom with a dark look.
	"You don't have to worry there, doc.  I'm not looking forward to 
putting on that torture device until I have to."  
	Piqued, the EMH turned his back on Tom and began to stow his 
instruments.  Tom hopped down biobed, carefully avoiding touching 
anything with his gloves.
	"Here, I'll take that," B'Elanna offered as Tom helplessly 
regarded the VISOR.  It had been modified slightly from the implant 
they'd seen in the briefing room.  The ridged front had given way to a 
sleek metallic covering, while two small earpieces had been added to 
carry the slight weight of the interface.
	"Guess I'm ready to go," Tom offered nervously as they exited 
sickbay, en route to the shuttle bay.
	"Chakotay is already warming up the shuttle, and Seven's in 
Astrometrics, just waiting for the test to begin.
	Tom nodded, obviously a bit distracted.  B'Elanna didn't begrudge 
him that.  Although he'd run through the holographic programs a few 
times under Chakotay's careful tutelage, he still didn't know how this 
new interface would act when fully functional.  The pair kept silence 
until just outside the shuttle bay doors.
	B'Elanna stepped in front of Tom before he could enter.  His 
startled gaze questioned her actions.  "Look," she said, "I just wanted 
to let you know that, if you don't want to go ahead with this, you 
don't have to.  I don't want you thinking you're doing it for me or 
something."
	Tom stopped her babbling with a sweet smile.  "Thanks, B'Elanna, 
but I'm doing this because it's my job.  I may not like this new scheme 
the Commander and Seven have cooked up but you all were right.  I'm the 
best one to test it."
	B'Elanna returned his smile a bit uneasily.  She glanced 
backwards over her shoulder to the shuttle bay doors.  "Well, then, 
just one more thing before you go. . . ."  Her free hand wrapped around 
Tom's neck, lowering his mouth for a passionate kiss.  His hands 
confined in the gloves, Tom was unable to return her embrace but the 
eager response of his lips and tongue was enough for the moment.
	She released him from the embrace, took a deep breath and then 
turned around to activate the automatic door.  It hummed open and 
Voyager's Chief Engineer and pilot entered the shuttle bay.
	"Lieutenants," greeted Chakotay formally, "I'm glad you're here."  
With one hand, he indicated the open shuttle hatch.  "I've got the 
_Olympe_ ready to go.  Tom, if you'll take the copilot's seat, I'll 
take the VISOR from B'Elanna.  Captain Janeway's given us an hour to 
perform today's test, so we'll take her right out and get underway."  
His words and actions gently excluded the engineer.
	B'Elanna watched as the two men entered the shuttle to finish the 
preflight.  Resolutely, she tapped her combadge.  "Torres to 
Engineering," she hailed.
	"Engineering here," came Susan Nicoletti's familiar voice.
	"The _Olympe_ is ready for the test.  Route all incoming data 
from the shuttle's monitors to Astrometrics," B'Elanna ordered as she 
exited the shuttle bay.  Tom might be flying his test, but she had her 
own duties to perform as Chakotay's actions had reminded her.  This 
hour of down time would serve well to perform a refit of the torpedo 
reloading mechanisms.  B'Elanna made a mental note to see if Ensign 
Vorik had enjoyed that pleasure yet.

*

	Maintenance and other routine tasks filled the rest of B'Elanna's 
shift.  Like the others, she'd sighed in relief when Captain Janeway 
pronounced a successful end to the test in a shipwide announcement.  
But four hours later, B'Elanna had heard little more.  With a final 
flourish, she tapped the controls that sent copies of her shift report 
to the command officers and into the engineering logs.  Duties 
complete, she was more than eager to hear Tom's story.
	She entered the mess hall to see quite a crowd surrounding Tom.  
Neelix hovered on the edge, trying to keep one eye on his cooking while 
he listened to Tom's account.  To B'Elanna's eye, another eight 
crewmembers jostled around Tom and Harry, asking excited questions.
	She came to the edge of the group and unapologetically worked her 
way in.  A steady glare forced Gerron out of the seat he'd been 
enjoying beside Tom.  B'Elanna appropriated the chair as Tom, without 
missing a beat, draped an arm loosely around her shoulder.
	"Well," he was explaining, "before Chakotay engaged the VISOR, I 
felt like I was sitting in a black box.  Then the systems came online 
and, let me tell you, it was nothing like the simulations we'd run in 
the holodeck!"
	"How's that," Harry Kim enquired curiously.
	Tom pondered for a moment, quizzically rubbing his chin.  "In the 
simulations, it was just like any piloting experience.  I'm not sure 
but I think the holoemitters interfere with the interface's direct 
effect.  Whatever it was, when Chakotay activated the system out there 
in the shuttle, it felt like I _was_ the shuttle."
	"Come on," Harry chided.
	"No, really!  The VISOR makes you feel like you're the one 
floating in space.  It was disorienting at first, let me tell you.  I 
thought I'd be spacesick for a moment or two, until I got used to it.  
But after a while, you get used to the new environment.  I could see 
and use the controls, and yet never lose sight of the entire starfield.  
And let me tell you, I was able to do some fancy flying in that rig."
	B'Elanna indulgently observed Tom's excited and pleased 
expression.  Given the captain's insistence on the testing, she was 
happy that Tom had enjoyed the experience he'd so strenuously fought at 
first.
	Neelix bustled up beside B'Elanna, placing a tray in front of 
her.  "Here, Lieutenant, I saved some Grixxi griddle cakes for you."  
Tom leaned back to answer a question from Ensign Davies while B'Elanna 
warily eyed the gray-blue circles on the plate in front of her.
	"Gee, thanks," she acknowledged drily.  Neelix preened slightly, 
then leant forward.
	"You're welcome, Lieutenant Torres.  I made them specially when I 
heard how well Lieutenant Paris's test flight had gone.  Funny, though, 
he hasn't touched his yet."  The Talaxian raised his voice to address 
the crowd.  "Now, now, everybody, there'll be enough time to hear about 
Mr. Paris's flying later.  Right now it's time to eat.  Griddle cakes 
for everybody!"
	The crowd reluctantly broke up, with only a few taking the cook 
up on his offer.  Beside B'Elanna, Tom sighed and tightened his hold on 
her shoulders.  "Whew!" he managed, looking ruefully at Harry Kim, 
still seated across the table.
	Harry raised an eyebrow before carefully cutting into his own 
serving of Grixxi griddle cakes.  Dubiously he eyed the food before 
bringing fork to mouth.  B'Elanna and Tom watched intently while he 
chewed and swallowed.
	"Verdict?" Tom asked.
	Harry grimaced.  "I'll give it a six out of ten.  A little salty 
for my tastes."  Doggedly, he carved himself another bite while Tom and 
B'Elanna followed suit.
	B'Elanna stole another look at Tom.  He seemed to ignore the 
flavour, although he put down his fork with finality after only eating 
a third of the serving.  Then again, that could probably be attributed 
to Neelix's creative cookery.  Less objectionable to her half-Klingon 
palate, half of her griddle cakes still went untasted.  Harry, however, 
seemed to feel obligated to eat all of his.
	"So," Tom began, folding his arms as he lounged back in the 
molded chair, "if all the data checks out, we'll be doing another 
shuttle test run tomorrow."
	B'Elanna looked up in surprise.  "So soon?"
	"The captain wants to get any problems shaken out of the system 
before we enter Maleelian space," Harry explained.  His eyes narrowed 
as Tom raised a hand to rub at the back of his neck.  "Something wrong, 
Tom?"
	"Nah, probably just tension, but I've got a bit of a headache," 
Tom replied.  He rose from the table, lifting his tray, "Look, 
B'Elanna, Harry, I'm sorry to cut this short, but I owe the doc a half-
shift in sickbay while he tutors Sam Wildman and Jenny Delaney."
	"Finally getting some other understudies lined up, is he?"  Harry 
smiled broadly.
	Tom nodded enthusiastically.  "After that last scare, I'm doing 
everything I can to make sure that there are other qualified medical 
assistants on this ship."  He strode away to stow his tray, then swung 
by for a quick farewell to B'Elanna.  "See you at 2200, your quarters?" 
he asked.  B'Elanna nodded abruptly, unwilling to show too much 
disappointment at his early departure.
	As Tom exited the mess hall, Harry shook his head disbelievingly.  
"His attitude's sure changed since he flew that shuttlecraft.  You 
should have seen the telemetry!  Even Commander Tuvok was impressed.  
Using that equipment, Tom scored at or above the benchmark in three 
standard Starfleet tests.  If this equipment works as well for Voyager. 
. . ."  Harry let his voice trail away as he considered the 
possibilities.
	B'Elanna harrumphed as she poked her fork at the cooling griddle 
cakes.  "We didn't get much info down in Engineering.  But I did notice 
that the interface drew a lot of power and computing time from the 
shuttle's systems."
	"Well, in my mind, that's a small price to pay if it will get 
Voyager out of the next tight situation we run into," Harry averred, 
memories of weeks under Hirogen control still clearly on his mind.
	"That may be," B'Elanna retorted heatedly, "but you're not the 
one expected to cobble together the resources to support new systems.  
We're limping together on patches and prayers, Starfleet, and I'd 
rather see us get fully restocked and refitted before we go tinkering 
with one of the last systems in full working order."
	Harry grinned affectionately across the table at B'Elanna's 
outraged expression.  Whatever he might have said next was lost when 
his combadge chirped.  "Seven of Nine to Ensign Kim."  The tactical 
officer sat up and responded, "Ensign Kim, here."
	"Ensign Kim," the filtered voice acknowledged, "I require your 
assistance in Astrometrics."
	"On my way," Harry responded.  He ruefully excused himself.  
"Sorry, B'Elanna, but I promised Seven to give her a hand in setting up 
the plans for an improved interface."
	B'Elanna's eyebrows rose high in displeasure.  "Without clearing 
it with engineering?"
	Harry looked shocked.  "This is just the design stage.  It's 
supposed to be in Commander Chakotay's hands in the morning for his 
approval.  I'm guessing that you'll be seeing this in engineering 
tomorrow."  With a jaunty wave, Harry exited the Mess Hall.
	Disgustedly, B'Elanna looked around.  The current crowd was 
thinning out and she didn't want to wait and see what other delicacies 
Neelix had cooked up.  Clearing her tray contents into the recycler, 
B'Elanna prepared to leave the common room.
	Time sat a bit heavily on her hands that evening.  She and Tom 
didn't have any holodeck time for two more nights, so she couldn't 
distract herself with a program.  Chakotay was busy, she knew, so there 
was no use begging for a game of hoverball.  She considered going back 
to engineering, but decided against interrupting the quiet schedule of 
repairs she'd left for Joe Carey to supervise.  In the end, she settled 
for those thankless tasks she usually guilted Tom into doing for her.  
Inwardly grumbling, she put her uniforms into the 'fresher, tidied the 
other clothes that haphazardly littered her quarters and sorted through 
the padds on her desk.  By 2200 her quarters were abnormally tidy, 
she'd bathed and changed into a chocolate brown, richly napped pants 
suit that she'd replicated after the latest refit.  It had taken nine 
days worth of replicator rations, but B'Elanna felt it worth the 
sacrifice.  Her half-Klingon metabolism enjoyed the warmth of the rich 
fabric, but she'd noticed Tom's eyes lingered along the curves and 
lines the folds of the fabric caressed.
	At a few minutes after the hour, the door chimes interrupted her 
lazy musing.  "Enter," she called.  Tom took two steps in before seeing 
the woman curled up on the couch.  His smile broadened.  "Boy, are you 
a sight for sore eyes!" he enthused as he sat down beside her.
	B'Elanna cracked a feral grin.  "So you didn't get any ideas 
about giving Jenny Delaney some special tutoring?" she purred.
	Tom's eyes widened in shock.  He raised a hand to his chest and 
affected a hurt expression.  "B'Elanna, I'm hurt!  You know there's 
been nothing between Jenny and me for years!"
	"Just reminding you, Tom," she warned, leaning closer.  "I marked 
you and you're mine."
	Tom lounged back into the soft cushions of the sofa.  "Take me, 
I'm yours!"  His falsely dramatic pronouncement sent them both into 
helpless laughter, before B'Elanna proceeded to act on his claim.  
After all, she didn't want Tom to think she never took his wishes into 
consideration.

*

	By the time they crossed into Maleelian territory, Voyager had 
inaugurated the new navigational system into its protocols.  Captain 
Janeway proceeded cautiously.  In the morning briefing, she praised the 
section leaders who'd collaborated on the project, concentrating her 
praise upon Seven and Tom.  "I'm glad to see that you've taken such an 
active role in this, Tom," the captain said.  Tom shrugged his 
shoulders dismissively.  "It's really Seven and Commander Chakotay you 
should be congratulating," he answered.  "I'm just the guinea pig."
	Seven's brow crinkled.  Once again, another of Tom's obscure 
phrases had eluded her.  The EMH considerately leaned over and 
explained the term in a whispered aside.  Her face smoothed.  
"Lieutenant Paris is correct," the blonde asserted. "His major function 
has been as test subject, yet that contribution has been valuable."  
She paused, then her mouth pursed as if tasting something distasteful.  
"Thank you, Lieutenant," Seven finally managed.
	The captain's eyes danced with mischief and B'Elanna stifled a 
laugh of her own.  Obviously, the former Borg's lessons in human 
interaction continued apace.
	"Ahem," Janeway finally managed.  "Well, now that the system's 
been tested, I've decided that we'll start training all our pilots in 
its usage.  For the moment, I don't intend to replace our regular 
navigational system with the VISOR technology, but I'd like all our 
pilots to become familiar with its usage."
	Commander Chakotay leaned his elbows forward on the table.  "For 
now, at least, we'll be scheduling an hour each shift for pilots to 
work with and become familiar with the new set up.  Also, all pilots 
will be expected to log five hours in simulator time before working 
with the new protocols.  So for now, that just leaves Tom and myself as 
qualified in the VISOR interface."
	"Is our goal to switch over to the new interface permanently?" 
Harry enquired.
	The captain frowned minutely.  "Not at this time, Ensign.  But 
there are some situations where it would be most useful.  For instance, 
if we had chosen the route near the protostar cluster.  The new 
interface would make it possible to do a very close fly-by on such 
unstable stellar phenomena."
	"Similarly," Chakotay added, "if we did happen to run into one of 
these rumoured Maleelian flotilla, I'd think the new interface would 
give Voyager a real advantage against so many small and maneuverable 
opponents."
	The captain cleared her throat and looked around significantly.  
"Since the Maleelians failed to respond to our diplomatic overtures at 
our last planetfall and have ignored all other attempts to communicate, 
I want to get through their territory as quickly and quietly as 
possible.  Mr. Paris, we'll maintain a cruising speed of warp seven."  
She turned a steely eye on her engineer.  "Can the engines handle this, 
Lieutenant Torres?"
	"Since we managed to secure a sizeable amount of dilithium in 
trade, we're well-stocked.  The engines are operating at reasonable 
efficiency.  As long as we don't try to push that for more than, say, 
ten days, I think we'll be all right."
Janeway nodded thoughtfully as she tucked a strand of hair behind 
her ear.  "At warp seven we should be clear of the region in less than 
that.  All right, people, I think that's it for now.  Dismiss."  The 
briefing room began to clear.  B'Elanna shot a smile at Tom making his 
way to the conn.  She held back, and collared Chakotay.
	Her longtime friend smiled as she caught his arm.  "What can I do 
for you, B'Elanna?"
	She looked over her shoulder.  "It's Tom.  I'd like you to keep 
an eye on him."
	Chakotay's expression sobered.  "What's the problem?"
	She frowned uncertainly.  "I'm not sure.  But he's been taking a 
number of analgesics.  He doesn't complain much about them, but I know 
he's been having some bad headaches.  And his sleep. . . ."  B'Elanna's 
voice trailed off as she realized maybe her mentor didn't need to hear 
too much about her private life.  But this was important!  She 
continued determinedly.  "His sleep's been restless, interrupted.  He 
seems almost to stop breathing, then comes to with a shout.  I'm 
wondering if it might have something to do with all the hours he's 
putting in on the new nav system.  Yesterday he was wearing the 
equipment for five hours."
	Chakotay's expression became thoughtful.  "It sounds pretty 
serious.  I wonder if it might be related to the system itself, rather 
than overwork.  We've been trying to monitor any physiological 
reactions to the headgear.  To the best of my knowledge, Tom hasn't 
mentioned anything about this to the doctor.  I've had a few headaches 
myself recently, but I'd thought they were simply due to the fact that 
I was using a VISOR that we'd replicated to Tom's measurements.  I'll 
have to ask him about this."  Face carefully blank, the commander 
preceded her from the briefing room.
	As the turbolift carried her down to Main Engineering, B'Elanna 
sagged against the compartment wall.  Tom wouldn't be too happy if she 
got him called on the carpet with Chakotay, but she was worried enough 
to risk his displeasure.  Last night she'd heard him get up twice from 
the bed and dose himself with painkillers from his med-kit.  His sudden 
enthusiasms and penchant for over-doing had gotten him into trouble on 
occasion.  She scowled so darkly that Ayala, who'd just gotten on the 
turbolift, drew back cautiously rather than possibly provoke B'Elanna's 
notorious temper.
	Finally in Engineering, B'Elanna was able to channel most of her 
worries and anger into more productive outlets.  She supervised a 
complete refit of the internal sensor systems that Lieutenant Commander 
Tuvok had suggested "would be beneficial."  Several ensigns were 
dispatched to further the automation of hydroponics through the 
installation of monitors and an extended watering network.  By the end 
of the shift, B'Elanna was more than satisfied with the amount of work 
her people had accomplished, but she was unable to relax.
	-It's probably just from knowing we're in hostile territory 
again,- B'Elanna told herself as she entered her quarters.  -Just for 
once it would be nice to find the Delta Quadrant equivalent of Risa.-  
Her lips curved at the thought of spending some time on that pleasure 
planet, in Tom's company, of course.  Of course, what she didn't want 
to admit to herself was her fear of Tom's reaction to her morning's 
conference with Chakotay.
	Those fears seemed justified.  A personal message from Tom 
awaited her on her personal console.  B'Elanna tapped for access then 
scrolled through the text.  In curt words, Tom informed B'Elanna that 
he'd been placed on medical leave for the next thirty-six hours.  He 
regretted missing their evening's date in Holodeck Two and so on but he 
was under orders to be resting, quietly, in his quarters.
	B'Elanna could feel the pique in Tom's wording and insinuation.  
He blamed her for this mandatory rest and wanted her to know it.  She 
suppressed the urge to put her fist into the terminal's glassy screen.  
After all these years on _Voyager_, she'd developed a number of 
channels to control her Klingon impulses.  Putting aside a fleeting 
regret over the loss of an hour of holographic vacation with Tom in 
Tahiti, B'Elanna looted her clothes cupboards for workout gear and 
headed for the holodeck.  An hour spent battling holographic opponents 
proved the perfect antidote to her ill humour.  At the end of her 
session, her sweaty hair closely molded the lines of her skull and 
sweat darkened the utilitarian gray clothes.  Dismissing the program, 
B'Elanna left the holodeck in search of sleep.

*

	The next morning's briefing was notable for Tom's absence.  The 
holodoc stiffly explained.  "Lieutenant Paris's dermal patch seems to 
have been the culprit behind an increasing number of headaches and 
other minor discomforts.  I have modified the patch to create a 
variable data flow that will lower the transmission rate during lull 
times at the conn.  This should reduce or eliminate Lieutenant Paris's 
headaches."
	Seven of Nine's eyes widened.  "Your modifications might hamper 
the efficiency of the mechanism!  Why did you not clear these 
alterations with me?"
	Commander Chakotay cleared his throat.  "He approached me about 
these changes, Seven.  I ran the simulations on the new specifications 
and found no problem.  So _I_ gave the authorization."
	Seven opened and closed her mouth twice.  Obviously she wanted to 
challenge _Voyager_'s first officer but somehow restrained herself.  
B'Elanna caught the captain watching the exchange closely.  When it was 
clear that no further outbursts were forthcoming, Janeway swiftly dealt 
with the rest of the day's business.
	Dismissed, the officers stood to leave.  B'Elanna looked up when 
Harry touched her arm.  "So, how's Tom?" he asked.
	B'Elanna shook her head dismissively.  "I wouldn't know, Harry.  
He left me a message last night that all but told me to butt out.  You 
see, I was the one who told Chakotay about his headaches and got him in 
trouble."
	Harry grinned.  "Pouting, is he?"
	B'Elanna had to smile at Harry's choice of words.  She matched 
paces with the tall ensign as they left the room.  "Yeah, I guess 
that's right.  Tom's just thrown himself at high warp into mastering 
this new system, like he does with everything he takes up.  Commander 
Chakotay and the holodoc pulled him up short and, since he can't 
grumble at them, I got it all."
	"Poor B'Elanna," Harry mocked.
	She whirled to face him, startling Harry.  "Watch out or I'll 
dump it all on you, Starfleet.  Care for a little unarmed combat 
practice?"  She snarled theatrically.
	Harry retreated and she snickered.  After all these years in the 
Delta Quadrant, it was still fun to tease poor Harry.
	By the end of her shift, B'Elanna still had a wealth of righteous 
indignation seething inside her.  Tom, of course, was the target.  A 
voice inside counselled prudence, but B'Elanna ignored it.  According 
to the computer, Tom was still in his quarters on medical rest.  She 
made her way there only to stand in front of the doors.  The little 
voice shrieked for her attention and B'Elanna almost heeded its 
warnings.  But then, caution and prudence weren't B'Elanna's favourite 
virtues.  She activated the doorchime.
	"Who is it?" Tom's voice asked.
	"Me," she answered shortly.
	A moment's pause ended in the doors gliding open.  Tom stood in 
front of her in his pajamas, hair rumpled.  "Go away!  You're not 
supposed to be here."
	B'Elanna's eyes narrowed dangerously.  "Do you have a deathwish, 
Paris?"
	Tom looked around huntedly, then leaned closer.  "It's the doc, 
B'Elanna.  He's got me sewn up in here with monitors and explicit 
orders to remain "alone and secluded" for the duration of this leave.  
Says that he's going to make sure that I get the rest I need."
	"Oh, really?"  An eyebrow arched in surprise, B'Elanna considered 
this.  "You're not saying this just to get yourself off the hook with 
me?"
	Tom affected innocence.  "Who, me?"  But before he could say 
more, the disgruntled voice of the EMH sounded through the room's 
speakers.  "Mr. Paris, what is this?  I distinctly ordered that you 
rest during your leave, yet I'm reading heightened activity levels on 
all bio-monitors!"  Tom shrugged his shoulders helplessly and began to 
step back from the threshold.
	B'Elanna grinned nastily.  Stepping back into the hallway she 
paged engineering.  "Joe, there seems to be a problem with the bio-
monitors on decks three and four.  Would you inform the doctor that 
we'll be taking them off line for the next, hum, twelve hours, 'til we 
can sort out the problem."
	She could hear the grin in his voice as Lieutenant Carey 
acknowledged her order.  "Need any help with this repair job, 
Lieutenant?" he asked teasingly.
	"No," she replied consideringly, "I think this is a job I can 
handle myself."  Her widening smile matched Tom's own as she entered 
his quarters and his waiting arms.
	
*

	The crews' hopes for a peaceful traverse of Maleelian space ended 
half way through Alpha shift.  B'Elanna was in Main Engineering, 
supervising the manufacture of some new EPS conduit flashing when the 
captain's voice barked over the comm system.  "Red Alert!  Maleelian 
fleet sighted on an intercept course."  Routine tasks were abandoned as 
the engineering team readied for possible battle and the technical 
emergencies that always ensued.
	A series of small, thundering booms rocked the ship.  Arms braced 
on either side of the monitor, B'Elanna surveyed the damage reports 
that flowed into her main console.  "Nicoletti, get a crew in the 
Jeffries Tube Six, Deck Four.  We've got a coolant leak."  Nodded 
acknowledgement, the other woman motioned two ensigns to join her with 
their toolkits and headed out of the section.
	Another round of percussive blasts rocked the ship.  Damage 
reports were minimal, B'Elanna noted, although shields dropped another 
three percent.  Determination squaring her jaw, B'Elanna punched in the 
sequence to activate shield rotation.  "Not _my_ ship, peta'Q!"
	Endless minutes later, _Voyager_ roiled under repeated assaults.  
Of themselves, they were inconsequential but by B'Elanna's readings, at 
least one hundred and sixty small craft battered the Federation 
starship with energy beams and torpedoes.  Given the large number of 
opponents, B'Elanna was amazed they'd managed as well as they had.  
Judging by the readouts, Tom's piloting was inspired, evading the most 
damaging attacks while steering a course through the swarm of 
Maleelians.
	The smaller vessels were agile, but lacked heavy weapons and 
powerful engines.  If _Voyager_ could only winnow its way through the 
fleet without suffering a crippling hit, her powerful warp drive would 
leave the hostile force behind.  B'Elanna frantically directed her crew 
to richen the antimatter mixture, hoping an extra boost would speed the 
ship to safety.
	As the warp engines pulsed to Warp Eight, B'Elanna sagged in 
relief.  Monitors showed the Maleelian fighters dropping back, unable 
to maintain the heady speed of their larger prey.  She palmed her 
combadge to report the minor damage in engineering to Captain Janeway.  
"Torres to Janeway."
	Silence met her hail.  She was about to try again when the 
captain's harried voice responded.  "Janeway here."
	"Captain, we're . . ." B'Elanna began to report then paused, 
"what's the matter?"  Through the comchannel, she heard Chakotay's 
voice biting out an order for emergency medical transport.
	"B'Elanna, I don't know how to say this, but Tom collapsed at the 
helm as soon as we went to Warp Eight.  Commander Chakotay wasn't 
getting any lifesigns."
	Before this, B'Elanna had always scoffed at stories where a 
character's blood ran cold.  But she felt a chill rush through her 
torso and limbs.  A sharp crack pulled her out of her reverie, and she 
looked down at the console's frame to see fragments of plas-metal 
piercing her hands where she'd convulsively crushed the structure.
	The pain seemed disconnected as B'Elanna stood.  But others 
noticed the blood flow and hurried to ease their Chief away from the 
shattered console.  Somebody's uniform smock was used to cradle her 
hands and she felt Joe Carey's comforting arm around her shoulder, 
directing her through the main doors and to the turbolift.
	All the way to sickbay, B'Elanna fought the numbing cold that 
gripped her.  Shock and fear battled with a consuming Klingon urge to 
smash and batter something, anything.  Sickbay's door opened to reveal 
the EMH bent over Tom's form on the main biobed.  "Get me the 
respiratory stimulator," he demanded.  A pale Jenny Delaney offered an 
instrument to the doctor while Harry Kim resumed an explanation the 
doctor's orders had interrupted.
	"Tom was piloting like a wizard.  Some of it had to have been the 
VISOR system.  I mean, he's good and all, but there were more than a 
hundred ships out there after us.  He was knifing through them like 
they were nothing.  Then when he'd finally worked his way through the 
fleet and the captain ordered him to warp eight, he just sorta folded 
over the console.  Commander Chakotay was there in an instant, but said 
he wasn't getting any lifesigns.  Commander Tuvok said that the primary 
controls were not responding and shifted over to secondary systems.  A 
jolt seemed to flow through Tom's body, then, but we weren't getting a 
pulse or any breathing.  So we initiated an emergency medical 
transport."  Harry eyed the EMH anxiously.
	"And barely in time, I might add, Mr. Kim," the doctor declaimed 
as he injected Tom with a hypospray.  "I have been able to restore Mr. 
Paris's autonomous systems.  He is now breathing and his heart is 
circulating blood.  There should be no permanent damage. . . ."  The 
holograph's voice trailed off as he stared disbelievingly at one 
monitor.
	"Ten ccs of neuradol," the EMH demanded of the medical 
replicator.  A full hypospray materialized in front of him and he 
swiftly injected Tom with its contents.  A frown darkened the doctor's 
image as he brought a small instrument to bear on the side of Tom's 
neck.
	"What's the matter?" Harry Kim asked anxiously.
	The holodoc's expression darkened.  "I'm not sure, but I'm not 
getting any significant brain activity from Mr. Paris.  Certainly 
nothing congruent with his normal waking or sleeping state."
	B'Elanna broke her dazed silence at the door.  "What are you 
saying, doctor?"
	The EMH turned swiftly, eyeing the injured Chief with some 
sympathy.  "Mr. Paris appears to be in a coma, one where his brain 
functions have shut down so far as to elude all detection."  Within a 
moment the holodoc was at B'Elanna's side, removing the bloodstained 
smock and eying her puncture wounds with disapproval.
	"However did you get these, Lieutenant?" he asked, leading her 
towards a second biobed.
	"Crushed a console frame in engineering," Joe Carey supplied 
helpfully as B'Elanna stared across the two metres of space at Tom's 
unresponsive form.  The junior lieutenant then excused himself to 
return to engineering.
	"Klingons!" the EMH harrumphed.  "Ensign Delaney, consider this 
an excellent practicum for your medical skills."
	B'Elanna hardly noticed the other woman carefully extracting 
plas-metal fragments from the wounds and regenerating her wounds.  Her 
eyes remained fixed on Tom, as did Harry's.
	"There, that's it," Jenny Delaney remarked.  The ebullient 
cartographer's voice was subdued as she, too, kept glancing over to the 
main biobed where the EMH had activated the bed's main treatment 
functions.
	Without glancing over his shoulder, the holographic doctor seemed 
aware of their scrutiny.  "Mr. Paris will not improve simply by wishing 
it so.  It will require skilled medical treatment which only _I_ am 
capable of providing on this benighted ship.  Ensign Delaney, I will 
require a complete series of neural diagnostics routed to the main 
biobed's consoles.  Try to keep the equipment out of Lieutenant 
Torres's hands," he advised sardonically, all the while focused on 
Tom's care.
	B'Elanna inadvertently clenched one of her newly healed hands and 
let her breath out in a hiss at the touch of pain that lingered while 
the deep tissue wounds slowly regenerated.  The doctor's unstated 
dismissal rankled, but at this point, while he was starting procedures, 
there was little she could do.  She looked up to see Harry's drawn face 
peering at her own.  Gingerly accepting her friend's pro-offered hand, 
B'Elanna jumped down from the biobed and exited sickbay.
	"Don't worry, B'Elanna, Tom's going to make it," Harry promised 
as they headed for the turbolift.
	B'Elanna looked up warily.  "What?  Oh yeah, Harry, I have faith 
in the doctor.  But healing isn't always a matter of "skilled medical 
treatment."  She glanced back as the corridor's turn hid sickbay's 
broad doorway.  "If Tom doesn't snap out of it soon, I'm going to 
reprogram that EMH so that he's six inches high and squeaks!"  
B'Elanna's brave words hid her apprehension.
	As the turbolift loomed in front of them, B'Elanna's combadge 
chirruped.  "Janeway to Torres," the captain's voice paged.
	"Torres here," the engineer acknowledged.
	"Lieutenant!  I heard that you were in sickbay.  I hope it wasn't 
anything serious?"
	B'Elanna regarded her hands, flexing them carefully.  No twinges 
of pain resulted.  The healing seemed complete.  "Nothing serious, 
captain.  Just some cuts.  They're all healed now."
	"Good," came the relieved response.  "It's bad enough with Tom in 
there.  The doctor's given me a preliminary report on his condition and 
it sounds worrisome."
	B'Elanna frowned.  Harry jumped in at her lingering silence.  "We 
left sickbay just a few minutes ago, captain.  The doctor was starting 
some more detailed tests.  I'm sure he'll have Tom back on his feet 
soon."
	"That would be appreciated!  But right now it's my Chief Engineer 
I'm needing.  It looks like we sustained more serious damage from the 
Maleelian fighters than at first glance, Lieutenant.  We've had to 
disconnect primary navigational computers and are currently running on 
the secondary system.  I've also been getting reports of computer 
related problems across the ship.  Both holodecks are offline.  
Apparently all programs just collapsed when the systems were affected.  
We're only halfway through the Maleelians' territory and I want this 
problem solved before it worsens.  Understood, Lieutenant?"
	B'Elanna nodded sharply.  "Understood, captain."  She steeled 
herself with a sigh.  "See you later, Harry!"  As she strode into the 
turbolift, she saw the dark-haired ensign step back, waiting his ride 
to the bridge.  "Deck fifteen," she directed, as she sped away from 
sickbay and Tom.

*
	Entering from the dim corridors that distinguished the gamma 
shift, B'Elanna collapsed bonelessly upon her unmade bed.  She'd shed 
her uniform carelessly in the anteroom, too tired to rummage through 
her drawers in search of a nightgown.  Not that she'd ever been a great 
fan of satiny fripperies.  Life in the Maquis discouraged that.  But 
with Tom she'd had a willing and worthwhile audience for the few silky 
garments that filled the corner of one of her storage units.
	The very thought of Tom served to recall the fears and 
frustrations of the past three days.  Nothing had worked so far.  The 
EMH's careful medical procedures proved fruitless.  Harry sought to 
help, running reconstructions of Tom's collapse on the bridge in an 
effort to pinpoint the cause of his deepening coma.  It chilled her to 
see his lanky, active form so still and silent on the biobed, yet 
B'Elanna had visited Tom almost hourly.  Coming off duty spent trying 
to control the problems still plaguing _Voyager_'s holodecks and 
primary computers, she'd returned to sickbay to helplessly sit beside 
the man she loved.  The doctor surprised her with his quiet acceptance, 
working around her to monitor Tom's condition and only breaking silence 
to explain the purpose of his latest procedure.  Motherly Sam Wildman 
brought a tray of food.  B'Elanna was inclined to reject the offering, 
but acquiesced.  No use fighting over little things when Tom's life 
hung in the balance.  She must have been hungry.  In the end, she 
devoured two bowls of clear, flavourful soup, a nutty bread roll and 
some sweet, tangy fruit that Neelix had wrangled out of friendly 
farmers on Pelicos Minor.  All the time her eyes remained firmly fixed 
on Tom's quiet features.  Only the doctor's direction had been able to 
chide her from Tom's side at 0200 hours.
	Knowing that her next shift began in a few hours, B'Elanna 
realized she should sleep, but she couldn't.  Instinctively, she turned 
to the side of the bed where Tom should have been, but all she saw were 
stale, rumpled sheets.  Resolutely closing her eyes, she sought that 
inner core of concentration that had always served her well as an 
engineer.  Commanding her body to rest, she tuned her senses to the 
comforting pulse of the warp engines.  The subliminal rhythms that she 
felt more than heard seemed strangely out of synch.  She rubbed her 
brow ridges in disgust.  Was emotion hampering her basic abilities, she 
wondered?
	No.  The engines were different.  B'Elanna opened her eyes and 
raised herself up on her elbows.  "Computer, route an audio monitoring 
of warp engines to my quarters."
	"Insufficient parameters.  Please specify."
	"Damn," B'Elanna spat, then sat up properly on the rumpled bed.  
"Route an audio-only channel registering the audible byproducts of the 
warp engines from Main Engineering's monitors."
	"Routing," the computer tonelessly confirmed, then a sprightly 
beep preceded a basso thrumming.  B'Elanna cocked her head to the left, 
eyes narrowed in concentration.  "Filter out all data in the upper 
third of human-normal auditory range.  Increase lower range by one 
third."  The rhythm pounded clearly.  "Now playback audio components of 
the engine room monitoring records, predating the installation of the 
nav interface, same filter."  The rhythm changed, restored to the 
cadence she knew as Voyager's particular signature.  "Now current 
channel," B'Elanna barked.  The sounds changed subtly, assuming a 
distinctive dissonant rush that clashed with the customary measure of 
Voyager's warp drive.  Both were sounds B'Elanna knew deep in her soul.  
The engines of Voyager she'd come to know intimately during her tenure 
as Chief Engineer.  But the other sound was one she'd only learned 
during the past few months.  It was the sound of Tom's heartbeat.
	Adrenaline flooded her system and B'Elanna fought an instinctive, 
Klingon impulse to spend it in immediate violence.  All she had was a 
wild surmise.  She need more than that if she was to convince the 
Captain and her fellow officers of what she'd just discovered.
	"Lights," she demanded as she sprang from the bed and quickly 
donned a crumpled crimson jumpsuit that lay at the foot of her bed.  
She was out the doors of her quarters before she realized she was still 
barefoot.  But the doors of the turbolift were just ahead.  B'Elanna 
jogged to them soundlessly, determined to test her crazy supposition 
before she lost her nerve.  Within minutes she was at the holodeck.  
Getting past the lockouts was a moment's work.  She entered to a 
dizzying melange of images.  With an effort, she sorted them out.  The 
pool table from Sandrine's, a beach chair from the resort, a dozen 
other strange items set against a familiar scene of country farmland, 
lit orange and gold by the setting sun.  Skirting several amorphous 
shapes, she entered the barn.  Here, the holo-environment seemed more 
stable and secure.  She mounted the ladder to the hayloft and knelt 
uncertainly on the blanket where she and Tom had made love so 
memorably.
	B'Elanna swallowed, then without giving way to further doubts, 
addressed the computer.  "Computer, transfer control of the holomatrix 
to the primary navigational computer.  Authorization Torres Omicron 
Delta Three."
	"Beginning transfer," the computer notified B'Elanna.
	She waited in the darkened area, desperately unsure and yet 
hopeful.  If she was wrong, the undirected holomatrix could manifest 
itself into incoherent waves of energy and projected matter.  If she 
was right. . . .  Slowly, as her ears adjusted, the same steady beat 
that had underlain the engine's hum manifested itself on the holodeck.
	"Tom?" she whispered.
	The beat continued, then slowly accelerated.
	"Tom?" she repeated, a desperate, demanding edge sharpening her 
voice.
	*B'Elanna,* came a whispering voice out of the swirling darkness.
	Beneath her knees, she felt the blanket and straw ebb into 
unsteadiness.  The dim walls of the loft shimmered opalescently.
	"Tom, it's me!  I'm here," she shouted as she clutched the 
dissipating cloth.  In front of her, the shimmers and flows coalesced 
into a shadowy column.
	*B'Elanna,* the whisper repeated.  A section of the column in 
front of her swung in her direction, grazing her cheek with an electric 
shock.
	"Ow, damnit," she blurted before realization dawned.  "Tom?  Is 
that you?"
	A ghostly chuckle sounded louder.  Generated by the holoemitters, 
it nevertheless seemed to emanate from the column before her, that 
slowly, shiftingly took a humanoid shape.  *B'Elanna, where are we?  Is 
this a dream?*
	B'Elanna choked out a laugh that hovered between relief and 
outrage.  "Tom, you've been in a coma for three days!  The doctor's 
keeping your body alive in sickbay but you've been unreachable!"
	*I have?* the voice queried incredulously.  Beneath her knees the 
holomatrix shifted erratically and B'Elanna clutched at Tom's projected 
figure.  Seeming solid beneath her fingers, the projection nevertheless 
lacked the warmth and firm definition of a living body.  But it was 
clearly Tom, she thought, as a holographic arm encircled her, stroking 
her hair.
	*Wait a minute,* Tom's ghostly voice asked, *if I'm in a coma, in 
sickbay, where the hell is this?  Dreamland?*
	"Sort of.  You see, when you collapsed on the bridge, lots of 
systems went into a cascading failure.  The captain and the commander 
assumed they resulted from damage we took fighting off the Maleelians.  
But the trouble's persisted, and it's concentrated in our secondary 
computer systems, you know, communications, holodecks, deep memory 
systems.  We've been cutting off and isolating these systems to try and 
effect repairs without much success.  And while each system was being 
removed and repaired, you were getting worse and worse. . . ."  
B'Elanna's voice trailed off.
	*So?* Tom prompted.
	"So, lying in bed tonight I listened to the sound of the engines.  
They'd been bothering me the last few days.  Even though they hadn't 
taken any damage in the attack and escape, they didn't sound right.  
Then, listening more closely, I realized what I was hearing."  She 
looked up at the shadowy face above her.  "It was your heartbeat, Tom.  
I realized that your mind, your memory, your consciousness was still 
tapped in through the navigational interface.  You were the glitches in 
our systems we were tracing down and eliminating, all the while not 
knowing that with each repair we were pushing you further and further 
away from recovery!"
	B'Elanna's hold on his shoulders tightened.  "I knew I was right 
so I had to be sure.  I came here to the holodeck, where the problems 
have been the worst and I invoked the navigational computer.  What I 
got was you!"
	She felt the projection's hand sweep soothingly from her hair to 
the small of her back in repeated strokes.  *Well, B'Elanna, I'm a 
little overwhelmed!  The last thing I remember was flying Voyager 
through that swarm of Maleelian fighters.  It took all my effort to 
outmaneuver them!  Then nothing, really, until now.*
	B'Elanna loosened her grip to encircle the holographic projection 
loosely around its waist.  If she kept her eyes closed and ignored the 
slightly hollow tones of the voice she could convince herself it was 
really Tom she embraced.  The longer they stood there on the holodeck, 
the greater control Tom seemed to achieve over the projection.  
	Urgently, she looked up.  Colour flooded the face she remembered 
so well.  Tom's projection was almost flawless, but it wasn't the real 
thing.  "Tom, now that you're aware, you should be able to reintegrate 
your consciousness with your body!"
	A perplexed expression crossed Tom's face.  *Sure, but how?*
	B'Elanna growled angrily.  "I don't know how!  I don't even know 
how you're manifesting this projection on the holodeck!  Why not just 
try?"
	Tom frowned in consideration.  *Well,* he confessed sheepishly, 
*I'm not exactly sure how I'm doing this either.  It's more instinct 
than anything else.*  But his frown deepened and the projection began 
to soften and fade.  B'Elanna felt her footing begin to degrade and 
wondered how far it was to the real holodeck floor.
	After long minutes of silence, Tom's voice returned.  *Sorry, 
B'Elanna, but it doesn't seem to work.  It feels as if I'm blocked when 
I start thinking about my real body.*  Tom's holographic self resumed 
its former lifelike look, and sat down heavily upon an amorphous mass 
that once had been a holographic hay bale.
	B'Elanna ground her teeth in frustration as she sat down beside 
him.  "There's got to be a reason," she insisted.  Absently she leaned 
into Tom's familiar hug as her mind raced to tackle the dilemma 
surrounding Tom's inexplicable situation.  She nibbled at her lower lip 
as she pondered the possibilities.
	*Hey, don't do that!*
	She glanced up, startled, to see the projection eyeing her 
hungrily.
	"Do what?" she asked warily.
	*You know,* Tom's ghostly voiced complained, *that lip thing.*
	Despite the serious situation, B'Elanna smiled.  "You know, if 
I'd had any suspicions that this was some alien trick or technological 
device, that would've ended them."  She giggled slightly at the 
absurdity of the whole scenario.
	*Why's that?* Tom's holographic self questioned, its eyes never 
leaving her face.
	"Because that remark is so _you_, Tom Paris," B'Elanna chided.  
All unaware, she fell deeper into the embrace and automatically raised 
her lips for a kiss.
	The slight electric shock and unexpected texture startled her 
into remembering that this wasn't Tom, but his holographic projection.  
Unconsciously she sought to disentangle herself from his hold, but Tom 
demurred.  B'Elanna exerted her strength.  Half-Klingon she might be, 
but that was usually enough to break any grip that her human lover 
could manage.  This time she wasn't able to elude his grip.  With the 
advantage of his holographic form, Tom was able to broaden his grasp 
and hold her close.
	"Hey," she complained, half-serious, "Tom, stop it!  Let me go!"
	A familiar wolfish gleam lit inhuman eyes and B'Elanna had to 
remind herself of Tom's abnormal state.
	*Do I hafta?* he complained, his hands caressing her hungrily as 
she found herself reclining on a cloudily soft bed she knew hadn't been 
there a moment before.
	"Yes! Tom, what do you think you're doing?"  B'Elanna's protests 
carried no forceful ring, however, as heady sensations swirled inside 
her.  Tom's holographic body retained all the strength and beauty of 
its physical self.  She swallowed to moisten a suddenly dry mouth as 
she fought the waves of sexual arousal.
	*Ever do it with a hologram?*
	B'Elanna's eyes widened.  "Not likely, helmboy!  Unlike others, I 
didn't go around for years chasing holographic bargirls."  She eyed the 
lips so close to her own.  Her body warred with emotions.  One part of 
her hungered for a second kiss and more.  Another part held back, 
arguing responsibility and caution.
	The argument was settled by forces outside herself, B'Elanna 
found, as Tom lowered his mouth for a long, languid kiss.  The shock 
moderated to a slight tingle and B'Elanna discovered it was as easy to 
lose herself in this holographic embrace as in Tom's real arms.  
Abandoning her resistance, she fiercely kissed him back, directing all 
her passion and pent-up fears into a powerful kiss.  Her tongue 
demanded entry to his mouth and stroked deeply inside, wrapping around 
his tongue in a sensual glide.  She felt a bone-deep shudder go through 
both of them and, thanks to Tom's holographic linkage, the holodeck 
itself mirrored their emotions.  She felt a soft pulsing against her 
back where the bedding mirrored the speeding beat of Tom's heart, still 
projecting through the open computer channel.  Further down her torso, 
she felt the hardening nudge of Tom's erection against her inner thigh.
	Breaking free of the kiss, B'Elanna gasped, "we've got to stop, 
Tom!"
	*Why?* came the distracted answer.  B'Elanna noticed that she had 
no problems hearing the clear voice, despite the fact that Tom's face 
was buried in her cleavage, nuzzling aside the velvety crimson fabric 
to lick at the skin revealed.
	"Why?" B'Elanna choked fuzzily, her mind fighting the sensations 
of her body.  "Because we have to get you back into your body!  Because 
_Voyager_ is still two days from free space and we have to be ready for 
attack!  Because. . . ."  Her voice trailed off as the holographic Tom 
eased open the fastenings of her jumpsuit, exposing her breasts for his 
pleasure.  Arousal tightened her nipples and she waited breathlessly 
for Tom to turn his attention there.
	A faint breeze, cooler than human breath, fanned across her 
nipple.  She shuddered with the chill and excitement as Tom's mouth 
fastened around her breast.  Alternately tonguing and sucking her 
nipples, one then the other, started a rhythmic flow deep in her 
pelvis.  She arched her hips upwards, pressing against the ridge of 
Tom's own arousal.  Slightly surprised, she realized that the texture 
she felt with her own hands, possessively stroking Tom's back and 
buttocks, was now that of skin, not cloth.  Inwardly she smiled.  -Tom 
was right,- she thought dreamily, -about the advantages of holographic 
clothes.-
	In spite of herself, she cried out as Tom's mouth left her 
breasts to lay a trail of kisses along the length of her torso.  
Impatiently, she helped shove the troublesome cloth of her jumpsuit 
down her hips and off her legs, to revel in Tom's lovemaking.  His 
mouth lowered to her pubic mound, fingers gently splaying her folds to 
reveal the engorged clitoris.  Once again, the cool breeze feathered 
her skin.  This time, the slight chill brought a howl to her lips and 
her hips squirmed involuntarily.  A ghostly chuckle echoed around 
B'Elanna as Tom began to rhythmically stimulate the nub with his 
tongue.  Guttural cries escaped her throat as her head rocked 
restlessly, side to side, and her hands reached down to cup the sides 
of Tom's head.  Shouting her climax, B'Elanna lost all control in the 
swells of passion that swept her body.
	Gaining some control, she opened bleary eyes to see Tom propped 
above her.  While her hair was tangled and her skin pearled with sweat, 
his holographic self betrayed little evident signs of lovemaking, 
except for the obviously engorged penis.  Wonderingly, B'Elanna reached 
out and encircled his arousal with one hand.  Tightening her grasp 
slightly, then sliding her hand back and forth in slow strokes, she 
felt, more than saw Tom's excitement.  The holographic environment, 
linked as it was to Tom, mirrored his sensations and experiences.  The 
ambient temperature rose slightly and a pulsing warmth cradled her body 
from all sides.
	With a sensual smile, B'Elanna continued her torment, reveling in 
Tom's increasing sensitivity.  His eyes flew open and she saw how close 
he was to losing control in the way that colour fled his face and the 
underlying holomatrix shimmered through.  *Not so fast, B'Elanna,* his 
voice pled.
	"Why not?" she demanded daringly, then lowered her own mouth to 
delicately lap at the glistening tip of his penis.
	*B'Elanna!* a holographic chorus shouted and she felt herself 
thrown and buffeted wildly in a hot maelstrom.  Her arms flew out to 
seek purchase and, in the calming environment, found some support in 
the holoprojection.  When the whirling subsided, she and Tom were 
closely paired.  Her body automatically matched the rhythm he set, hips 
rocking up and down, side to side, faster and faster as a holographic 
sensory experience threatened to overload her mind.
	*Yes, God, yes!*
	"Kahless!"
	With two screams, their climaxes came and the environment turned 
utterly dark.  Disoriented, B'Elanna fought to establish direction in 
the too-quiet darkness.  A dim glow permeated the holodeck.  As she 
panted, her body still shaking slightly with the convulsions of sexual 
release, she struggled to get her bearings.  Beside her, on the stark 
black and yellow grid of the flooring, lay her sorely abused jumpsuit.  
Automatically, she reached for the garment, pulling it about her in an 
effort to restore warmth and normalcy.
	"Tom?" she questioned frantically.  "Tom?"
	For long seconds, silence answered.  Her own heartbeat rocketed 
so loudly that B'Elanna couldn't tell if Tom's still sounded in the 
holochannel.  But slowly, a dim form coalesced before her.  
Translucent, the pale glow filling him, rather than defining him, it 
definitely still was Tom Paris.  B'Elanna almost collapsed in relief.
	"If you ever, _ever_, do that to me again, Tom, I swear I'll. . . 
." her voice trailed off darkly as she contemplated threats awful 
enough to convey her panic.
	*Don't worry, B'Elanna,* came a weak voice that she struggled to 
catch, *I think that was a bit too much for me in this state.*  Tom's 
holographic body slowly gained depth and definition, but failed to 
fully regain coherence, even clothed in the seeming of his Starfleet 
uniform.
	Meanwhile, B'Elanna squirmed into the jumpsuit, trying to sweep 
out creases with a swipe of her hand.  "Look, Tom, we've got to tell 
the captain and the doctor about this.  They'll need to know that 
you're not in a coma, just. . . ."  She struggled for a word.
	*Discorporate?  Ethereal?  Phantasmagoric?*
	B'Elanna's surprised expression won a laugh from Tom, weak though 
it was.
	*Don't forget, Torres, hooked into the computers as I seem to be, 
I have access to all the dictionaries in the Federation!  Hey, now 
there's an idea,* his ghostly voice mused, *maybe I'll just take a peek 
at your personal logs while I'm at it. . . .*
	B'Elanna growled warningly as she strode to the main doors.  
Light flooded the holodeck as the doors automatically opened at her 
approach, making Tom's projected form appear even more insubstantial.  
"Don't you even dare, Paris," she warned, then used the comm panel 
outside the holodeck to page the captain and the EMH.
	Within minutes, a yawning Kathryn Janeway and a bemused 
holodoctor stood in front of Tom's projected form.  With an expression 
B'Elanna might almost call affront, the EMH's gaze raced up and down 
Tom's form.  "Mr. Paris," he crisply rapped, "if you so desperately 
wanted to emulate me, I would suggest doing something else than trying 
to remake yourself as a hologram!"  Captain Janeway smiled briefly at 
the doctor's barb, then her eyes narrowed thoughtfully.
	"Tom, this puts a whole new spin on things.  You say that you 
think you're still interfaced with the computers somehow?"  Head cocked 
to the left and arms crossed, the captain appeared to be sorting out 
the mechanics of Tom's situation.
	*Yes, captain,* came the reply, Tom's voice as generated by the 
holoemitters.  *If I think about it, it still feels like I'm getting 
some of the sensations of the VISOR interface, but I can't do anything 
with it.*  His holographic shoulders hunched in frustration.  Two steps 
to his side, B'Elanna struggled to maintain as professional a composure 
as she could muster, barefoot, out of uniform and badly disheveled 
(despite a rapid finger combing before the captain's arrival).
	Tom continued, *I, we, also tried to return my consciousness to 
my body, but we weren't able to manage that, either.*  A faint tinge of 
fear coloured his words.  *I don't know, do you think I'm going to be 
like this forever?*  A sweep of his hands indicated the confines of the 
holodeck.
	Captain Janeway shook her head then smiled warmly.  "Not a 
chance, Tom.  Now that we know this much, we'll soon be able to solve 
the rest.  Doctor?  Any ideas?"  Pivoting to face the EMH, the captain 
stood expectantly.
	The holodoctor appeared to ponder the captain's request.  After a 
moment, his mobile face brightened.  "Why yes, captain, I believe that 
I do!"  He raised the medical tricorder in his hand so that B'Elanna 
and the captain could see the screen.
	"Mr. Paris apparently entered our computer system through the 
VISOR navigational interface.  However, immediately upon his collapse, 
the VISOR and the dermal patch were removed.  Thus, his mind, if you 
will, had no way to return home to the body.  There remains only a 
trace of a link between his two selves, just enough to keep him alive, 
I suspect."
	During the doctor's discourse, an excited smile transformed the 
captain's face.  "Then all we have to do is initiate a VISOR linkage 
between Tom here and the holodeck and his body in sickbay."
	"Well," cautioned the holodoctor, "I expect that there will be 
more to it than that, but I should be able to manage this.  I'll need 
Lieutenant Torres to help with the mechanical elements of the 
transfer."
	B'Elanna nodded her eager agreement.
	*What do I do?* Tom asked.
	The EMH turned towards his ghostly assistant and, with a sardonic 
smile decorating his face, replied, "Why, Mr. Paris, I suggest that you 
wait until we have the equipment ready and then click your heels 
together and say, "There's no place like home!  There's no place like 
home!""
	Tom's reply, whatever it might have been, was lost in the sudden 
howl of the red alert siren.  Instantly, the captain was dashing out of 
the holodeck and towards the turbolift.  "Commander Tuvok, status 
report!"
	B'Elanna uneasily looked towards the still open doors, then back 
again to Tom and the doctor.  Tom caught her eyes.  *Go,* he urged.  
*They're going to need you in engineering.*
	She started to deny this, then nodded reluctantly.  "You're 
right," she acknowledged sadly.  "Keep safe?"  She leaned up to accept 
a chaste kiss, then turned for the exit.
	As she entered the hall, she heard the doctor's harrumph.  "I 
suppose, Mr. Paris, that you have some explanation for why a little 
over half an hour ago your physical readings started fluctuating 
rapidly in sickbay?  I'm just dying to know the answer."
	A fierce blush raced up B'Elanna's throat and into her cheeks as 
she hurried to the turbolift, thankful that the holodoctor couldn't see 
her face.  "Deck fifteen," she ordered, as she also thanked providence 
that she had a spare uniform in her engineering office.  Maybe, if she 
was lucky, there would even be a pair of boots in her storage locker!

*

	Main Engineering was a scene of controlled chaos when B'Elanna 
entered.  Assuring herself that all were preparing well for what boded 
to be another fierce fire-fight, she ducked into her office and swiftly 
donned her uniform clothes.  Punching up information on the main 
terminal there, her confidence dimmed at the sensor logs' readings.  
Almost twice as many ships, some larger frigates as well, stretched out 
in formation designed to encircle _Voyager_.  Frowning in 
concentration, she answered the captain's hail.
	"Torres here."
	"Lieutenant, it looks like we're going to have to try and make a 
run for it again.  Commander Chakotay tells me, though, that we need 
primary navigational controls restored."
	"That's right, captain," B'Elanna responded.  "Those are some of 
the systems Tom's still linked with."
	"Damn!  I'd hoped that with the holodeck as an environment, we'd 
be able to pull him out of the navigational systems.  We're going to 
need the main navigational computers to help us negotiate our way past 
the Maleelians."
	Desperately, B'Elanna called up schematics of the device.  "I'm 
sorry, captain, but the navigational computer appears to be the main 
conduit for Tom's computer connection.  I can't predict what would 
happen if we tried to pull it out of the linkage.  At best, he'd be 
safe in the holodeck environment, but at worst we might find ourselves 
without any functioning flight system and with Tom dead."  Her voice 
choked slightly on the final words.  She hoped that the captain would 
understand that professional judgment, as much as personal attachment, 
lay behind her cautious assessment.
	The officious voice of the holodoctor broke in.  "I think you 
ought to know, captain, that my patient has been listening in on these 
recent events, thanks to his currently altered state, and has a 
suggestion to make.  One which I heartily disapprove, mind you, but he 
insists."
	Over the com-system, Tom's voice ironically sounded more natural.
"Captain, I think that maybe I can get us out of this mess."
	B'Elanna heard the snap in the captain's response.  "Go ahead, 
Mr. Paris, I'm all ears."
	"Captain, through my current computer linkage, I can see the 
entire tactical and navigational records.  In some sense, Voyager and I 
are one.  If you'd release the lockouts on the navigational system, I 
think I could control the ship from within the computers."
	Commander Chakotay questioned, "Tom, you physically collapsed at 
the end of the last engagement.  What makes you think that you'll be 
able to handle this?"
	A chuckle coloured Tom's response.  "Well, I'm already inside the 
computers, so I shouldn't have a problem with that now.  And frankly, 
now that I'm exploring this new viewpoint, I think that I'll be able to 
pilot the ship much better than ever before.  I only have to think 
something and it happens, at least in the holographic environment.  If 
I had navigational controls again, I'll probably be able to get past 
that fleet that's massing against us and bring the ship free of 
Maleelian space."
	"Sounds good, Tom, but what's the catch?  Doctor?"
	"The catch is, commander, that Mr. Paris's lifesigns are slowly 
degrading the more involved he becomes in the computer environment.  I 
believe the prolonged activity in this linkage might sever the last 
links between the Lieutenant's body and his consciousness."
	The captain's worried voice broke in.  "That sounds too 
dangerous, Tom."
	"Dangerous, captain, but it looks like our only hope!  The 
secondary navigational systems just aren't up to this kind of flight 
patterning, even if the Commander was at the conn.  The doc and I have 
talked about the risks and I'm willing to take them."
	"B'Elanna," Janeway pleaded, "tell me you've found a way to 
restore the primary systems without risking Tom this way."
	Defeatedly, B'Elanna stared at the terminal.  "I'm sorry, 
captain, I just can't see a way to do it.  Maybe if I had a couple of 
hours. . . ."
	"That fleet is less than ten minutes away, captain!" Tom 
interrupted.  "You've got to let me help!"
	"Okay, Mr. Paris," the captain finally conceded, "but I expect 
the doctor to be monitoring your physical status all the way.  If he 
sees a danger, we'll cut you out of the conn and let Commander Chakotay 
fly us out of here.  Understood?"
	Tom's confident reply failed to hearten B'Elanna.  She set up the 
protocols to re-establish primary navigational controls, and forwarded 
the information to the bridge.  She activated the systems upon Harry 
Kim's approval and began the interminable wait.  
	At first, there was no clear sign that Tom's suggestion was 
working.  The doctor returned to sickbay, to begin a continual 
monitoring of Tom's lifesigns.  Commander Chakotay was the first to 
notice any change, as the helm controls gradually failed to respond to 
his directives.
	"Tom Paris, that'd better be you!" the captain warned as she eyed 
the flotilla her ship was steadily approaching.
	Instead of a verbal response, Tom signalled his control by 
running a text message across the conn's display that Chakotay read 
off.  "Tom Paris, ready and reporting for duty," the first officer 
relayed.
	"Good," Janeway said, grasping the arms of her command chair.  
"Tom, I want you to try and effect evasive maneuvers.  Maybe we can 
outflank this fleet."  The starship's engines purred as _Voyager_ 
veered off course by several degrees.  From the security station, Tuvok 
shook his head.  "Negative, captain.  The Maleelians have enough ships 
to keep us boxed within this region.  They are still ignoring all our 
hails and have begun to power up their weapons."
	"All right, then, we'll have to make a run for it.  Tom, try to 
thread through that group of small fighters.  Let's see if we can avoid 
the larger ships and punch our way through a weak part of the Maleelian 
net."
	Obediently, _Voyager_ surged forward.  The alien ships grew 
larger in the viewscreen as distance closed.  From her relay in 
Engineering, B'Elanna's eyes switched warily between engine readouts 
and the display.  Small the fighters might be, but each was armed with 
two energy weapons and she judged that the lower projections might hold 
some sort of plasma weapon or other torpedo.
	The smooth, static appearance of the flotilla changed as 
_Voyager_ closed with the enemy.  The silent ships began to dart and 
move, seeking to hamper the larger starship's escape at higher 
warpspeeds.  A piercing scream sounded through engineering as the port 
nacelle took a hit.  B'Elanna dashed over to a larger console, punched 
some keys and shouted, "the main field compensator took a hit on that 
side.  Switch to auxiliary!"
	At the nacelle panel, Ensign Vorik obediently tapped in the 
commands.  A frown creased his high brow.  "It's not responding, 
Lieutenant," he reported.
	"Damn," B'Elanna growled in frustration.  "We're going to be 
sitting ducks if we don't get that fixed soon."  With a longing glance 
back at the main console, still monitoring the main screens, B'Elanna 
grabbed some tools and headed for the access panel.  "Ensign, you're 
with me," she ordered.  Vorik obediently followed.
	Inside the tube, the engineers made the arduous climb to the 
halfway point of the nacelle's support.  A scorchmark signalled the 
damage.  B'Elanna directed Vorik to disconnect the main connectors 
while she brought the secondary system online.  Once manually prodded, 
the device fired up and a pulsing hum reassured B'Elanna.  A sudden 
lurch made her cling to the ladder.  "Back to Engineering," she 
directed Vorik, who clasped the ladder rungs below her with an entirely 
un-Vulcan desperation.  He quickly complied and within minutes they 
were back in the engine room.
	B'Elanna hadn't closed the access panel behind her before she 
felt the ship flow smoothly and strongly into high warp.  
Unconsciously, she relaxed.  Tom had succeeded.  _Voyager_ had run the 
gauntlet and was safely away from the Maleelian threat.
	"Janeway to Torres.  Report"
	B'Elanna answered the captain's call.  "Torres here.  Damage 
reports are minimal."  As she spoke, she strode to a nearby terminal 
and scrolled through the data.  "The worst damage was to the port 
nacelle, but that's been repaired.  We also sustained minor damage to 
the main deflector.  We should have that repaired in half an hour."
	"Good work, Lieutenant!"  The captain's warmly approving voice 
subtly changed tone.  "Then I want you to go to holodeck.  Commander 
Chakotay and Seven are already on the way.  Top priority is to get Tom 
back on his feet and my navigational systems back to normal."
	"Aye, captain," B'Elanna fervently agreed.  Her wide grin as she 
exited engineering was remarked by all.  That grin faded as she entered 
the holodeck.  Pale wisps of energy limply shifted in the room.  
Chakotay frowned grimly as his tricorder swept the room.  Seven stood 
in the entrance arch, also taking readings.  "What's the matter?" 
B'Elanna asked.
	Chakotay turned abruptly.  "Energy readings are almost nil and 
we've not been able to reestablish audio contact with Tom.  The captain 
said he was quite visible when she was here earlier, but I'm not 
picking up anything."
	Seven nodded emphatically.  "Perhaps the recent efforts have 
dispersed his pattern more widely in the computer network.  I'm reading 
no significant flow of energies through the channel you previously 
opened."
	B'Elanna's heart sank at their words.  She stepped forward to 
examine the readings on Chakotay's instrument.  As B'Elanna read the 
data, Seven again spoke.  "We should explore all possibilities.  He 
might already have managed to restore his mind to his corporeal self.  
Perhaps we should contact the doctor?"
	"Good idea," the first officer concurred.  He hailed the EMH.
	"I'm sorry, commander," the holographic physician apologized, 
"but I've detected no improvement in Mr. Paris's condition."
	Thanking the doctor, _Voyager_'s first officer suggested that 
they retire to the Astrometrics lab.  "That's where we still have most 
of the equipment and monitors used for the prototypes and the final 
interface.  Seven, I'd like you and Lieutenant Torres to review all the 
energy flows that might result from those systems.  Maybe there's 
something we haven't caught yet."
	B'Elanna frowned minutely, unhappy that Chakotay planned to leave 
her alone with the former Borg, but recognizing that the first officer 
probably had other calls on his time.  "All right, commander," she 
acknowledged.  Seven merely inclined her head in a stately nod.  The 
two women exited the holodeck for Seven's scientific domain.
	The taller woman preceded B'Elanna into the main room.  "All 
materials and records from the interface upgrade are stored in this 
workstation," Seven indicated.  "I will begin by examining the data.  
As an engineer, you will obviously have a greater interest in the 
hardware."  A sweep of her hand pointed out the shelf holding several a 
VISOR and a variety of smaller implements.
	Steeling herself not to snap abruptly at the other woman's 
assumption of command, B'Elanna picked up one of the smaller devices.  
She recognized it as a dermal patch.  The spidery black mechanism 
integrated with the silvery Starfleet material sent a shiver through 
her.  "What's this?" she demanded of Seven.
	The blonde leaned over B'Elanna's shoulder to examine the patch.  
"That is an adaptation of a Borg sensor relay, built into a Starfleet 
medical dermal patch.  It was an unsuccessful prototype and never 
used."
	B'Elanna snorted angrily, "well, which ones were used?"  Seven 
picked up several and laid them out on the dark surface of the table.  
"These three were all used by Lieutenant Paris.  This last one," she 
delicately fingered the device at the far right, "is an identical copy 
of the one he wore last."
	The dark-haired engineer tuned out the rest of the ex-Borg's 
words as she picked it up.  Carefully rotating it in her grasp, she 
looked for clues, but found none in the sleek lines of the patch.  
Turning to the other woman, B'Elanna asked, "What's different about 
this patch compared to the others, here?"
	"As I already said, Lieutenant, this patch was the final version 
approved by Commander Chakotay and the doctor.  Its major difference is 
the variable data flow rate they introduced to counteract the headaches 
Lieutenant Paris had been experiencing."  Seven's brisk response 
indicated a great deal of indignation in having to repeat herself.
	B'Elanna ignored the other woman's irritation.  A thought was 
forming.  "If the flow rate is variable, that means it could increase 
as well as decrease, doesn't it?"
	"Of course it does, Lieutenant.  Otherwise, when more information 
needed to be transferred, the interface would have been unable to cope 
with the change in situation!"
	Excitedly, B'Elanna broke in, running over Seven's last words.  
"But is there a regulator, a cap on the data flow?"  Seven's eyes 
widened as she began to follow the smaller woman's train of thought.
	"No.  This patch is based upon Borg models and that would have 
been counterproductive in the Collective.  All data was to be fully 
integrated into the collective, and our systems were maximized for 
complete transfer of data in emergencies, such as death or injury."
	B'Elanna leaned against the counter, her mind racing.  "What do 
you mean, a complete transfer?"
	"In the event of death, all the memories and skills of a drone 
could be passed into the Collective through such devices integrated 
into our bodies."
	"Then this patch might operate exactly as a Borg system.  If 
there was no cap upon the data flow, Tom's consciousness, his memories 
and skills, was pulled through the interface into _Voyager_'s computer 
system, just like a Borg's into the Collective.  Perhaps if we recreate 
the parameters from Tom's accident, but with a reverse data flow, Tom 
might be able to re-link with his body."
	"An interesting hypothesis," Seven responded.  "But it is not yet 
certain.  We have many more possibilities to eliminate before we can be 
sure of the solution."  She made as if to bend back over the array of 
materials and information.
	B'Elanna wrenched away.  "Well, I'm going to check it out!"  She 
exited the lab, walking with fierce strides to the turbolift.
	In sickbay, the doctor looked up gravely from Tom's biobed.  "If 
you've come to ask about Mr. Paris, lieutenant, I'm afraid I don't have 
much good news."
	"Why?  What's wrong with Tom?" B'Elanna asked, coming to stand 
beside her lover's still form.  She noticed that his skin had taken on 
an unhealthy, pallid tone.  When she picked up his hand with one of her 
own, she was shocked at the chill feel of his flesh.
	"Mr. Paris seems to be sinking deeper into his coma.  His body is 
now being kept alive only by my medical equipment.  If the systems here 
were shut down, he would not breathe for himself.  I'm afraid if you 
don't manage to realign his consciousness and his body, Mr. Paris will 
soon die."  His eyebrows knit together in a puzzled frown, the doctor 
continued to adjust monitors and devices, but his frustrated words told 
B'Elanna that the holographic physician sincerely doubted Tom's chances 
for survival.
	She looked down at the small device in her hand.  "Doctor, is Tom 
wearing the same dermal patch now as he wore before his collapse?"
	The EMH tilted his head, regarding B'Elanna with a curious frown.  
"I don't believe so, lieutenant.  Commander Chakotay presumably removed 
the patch before initiated site-to-site transport.  Mr. Paris was not 
wearing the patch when he came into my sickbay."
	"After our discussion in the holodeck, you came back here to 
sickbay to put a new dermal patch and VISOR on his unconscious body, 
didn't you?"
	"Yes, I did," the doctor confirmed, snorting.  "For all the good 
it did.  There was a slight rise in the lieutenant's brain activity, 
but at no time did he achieve full consciousness."
	B'Elanna grasped at a slim hope, looking down at the equipment in 
her hand.  "Maybe you put on one of the older patches?  One of the ones 
with the cap on the data flow?"
	"What difference would that make?  Mr. Paris is hardly in the 
condition to complain of head. . . .  I see," the holograph eagerly 
turned to his prone patient, activating his medical scanner, "you're 
right, Lieutenant Torres, this is one of the earlier versions of the 
patch."
	She proffered hers and the doctor slipped it on Tom's neck, 
beside the first, then deactivated the older device.  B'Elanna ordered 
the ship's computers to reopen channels between the VISOR and the main 
navigational computers.  Quietly they waited.  "I'm detected a slight 
change in brain activity, lieutenant," the doctor informed B'Elanna.  
His elated eyes caught hers.  "I think we've done it!"
	"That's it?" B'Elanna asked incredulously.  Her hands clutched 
the edge of the bed, holding her exhausted body up by main force.
	"Hardly," the doctor corrected, yet his pleasure shone through 
his irascible fa�ade.  "Mr. Paris appears to be on the road to 
recovery.  But until he actually regains consciousness, we won't be 
sure.  And I'm afraid that I can't predict when he'll awaken.  It could 
be minutes, hours or even days."
	B'Elanna reached again for Tom's limp hand.  Cradling it between 
her two warm palms, she thought she detected more warmth in his limbs.  
Her eyes never leaving Tom's still features, B'Elanna perched 
unsteadily on the biobed.  "I'll wait," she informed the doctor.
	"Wonderful," the EMH sniped sarcastically, as he cleaned up his 
scanners and instruments that littered the nearby cart.  "While you 
clutter up my sickbay, I'll go inform the doctor that once again, I've 
brought a patient back from the brink of death."  Luckily for the 
holographic doctor, B'Elanna never registered a single word he said.
	After he'd swept off, pushing the cart before him, B'Elanna leant 
closer to her lover.  "Tom," she whispered, "I'm here."
	There was no response, not that she expected it so soon.  But the 
sight of the sheet over his chest rising and falling in a steadily 
strengthening rhythm heartened her.
	The hours dragged on and B'Elanna was finally persuaded to leave 
sickbay for enough time to shower, change and review the engineering 
reports.  She noted that _Voyager_ had exited Maleelian space three 
hours ago, with nothing more than a sense of relief.  Within an hour, 
she was back at Tom's bedside, wolfing down, untasted, the special meal 
that Neelix had brought himself.  The bustling Talaxian tried to engage 
her in conversation, but B'Elanna's eyes rarely lifted from her 
inspection of Tom's figure.  Colour had returned to his face, a rosy 
flush tinting his cheekbones.  The doctor wheeled away more apparatus, 
informing her happily that Tom was now breathing on his own.
	She was nodding, almost on the verge of sleep, when a slight 
squeeze startled her eyes wide.  She looked down at the hand held in 
her own.  Tom's fingers flexed slowly, deliberately around her smaller 
fingers.  Fearfully, hopefully, B'Elanna's gaze turned to Tom's face.  
His eyes, half-open, rested on her.  A weary smile greeted her.  "Hey, 
beautiful, what's a babe like you doing in a place like this?"  The 
voice was gravelly with disuse and weak, but it was unmistakably Paris.
	She couldn't help the answering grin that transformed her face.  
"Tom Paris, you utter pig!" B'Elanna growled lovingly, leaning over to 
steal a brief kiss.  Tom's eyes closed for a moment as her lips met his 
own, then opened to focus on his lover's face.
	"Tell me that this isn't just another dream or fantasy," Tom 
pled.  B'Elanna laughed and squeezed his hand in reassurance.
	"Not a dream, not a holodeck.  You're back in the land of the 
living, Tom," she averred.
	Alerted by his monitors to Tom's awakening, the holodoctor 
appeared beside the couple.  "You most certainly are, Mr. Paris.  
Thanks as much to Lieutenant Torres's fine command of engineering as my 
own medical expertise."  As he spoke, he ran a scanner over Tom's form.  
Nodding at the readings, the EMH flipped the instrument closed and lay 
it on a nearby shelf.  "But you will not make a rapid recovery if you 
don't allow me to run a full medical scan!  As for you, Lieutenant 
Torres, I expect you to be back in your quarters and asleep before I 
complete my report to Captain Janeway."
	B'Elanna looked ready to argue the point but looking down at 
Tom's quiet figure, she relented.  For all his quick jokes, he was 
still a man just back from the edge of oblivion.  She lifted his 
fingers to her mouth for a quick kiss, then slid off the biobed.  "He's 
all yours, doctor," she said as she backed away from the alcove.
	"You have no idea what that means to me," the doctor murmured 
sarcastically as he wheeled a larger scanning unit over to Tom's 
bedside.  As B'Elanna exited through the sickbay doors, she heard him 
addressing his patient.  "Now lay back quietly, Mr. Paris, this won't 
hurt a bit. . . ."
	B'Elanna was tired enough that, when she reached her quarters, 
she almost fell asleep on the sofa.  But she determinedly made her way 
into the sleeping alcove.  As she sat on the side of the bed, shedding 
her uniform, B'Elanna programmed her computer to alert her to any major 
changes in Tom's condition or to awaken her if any messages were logged 
on her personal account.  From the slow response of her body to her 
mind, B'Elanna estimated that she'd sleep for a week, if she could, but 
she didn't want to miss a moment of Tom's recovery.

*

	Two days later, B'Elanna was almost kicking herself over that 
sentiment.  Tom was proving himself to be a most difficult patient.  
The doctor released him from sickbay eight hours after he first 
regained consciousness, vowing that the pilot had to be the most 
ungrateful recipient of his medical talents.  Tom protested that, by 
all he understood, he'd essentially been asleep in sickbay for a week.  
Why did he have to stay there and sleep anymore?
	With a gentle sigh and an iron glare, Captain Janeway released 
her prot�g� from the doctor's gentle ministrations with stern orders he 
was to remain off duty and resting until certified fit for duty.
	Tom nodded eager agreement to her proposal, only raising a finger 
at the end of her speech.  "Agreed, captain, on one condition."
	Kathryn Janeway arched one perfect eyebrow in inquiry.  Standing 
beside her, B'Elanna envied the older woman's ability to convey so much 
with one economical gesture.  Tolerance, control, and affection all 
shone through the captain's patient response to Tom's prodding and 
teasing.
	Leaning back on his forearms, the loose vee of his green pajama 
shirt gaping slightly at the sternum, Tom regarded his commanding 
officer as a plaintiff would a judge.  "Please tell me that I'll never 
have to put on that VISOR again!"
	She laughed despite herself.  "Sure, Tom.  Commander Chakotay was 
the first to consign that experiment to the dustbin.  Seven was a bit 
more disturbed at our dismissal of the innovation, although she 
acknowledged that your injury was -how did she put it?- 'an unfortunate 
result, not to be duplicated.'"  The captain patted Tom's shoulder 
reassuringly.  "After what you went through, Mr. Paris, what the whole 
ship went through, I'd never consider it again."
	Tom heaved a sigh of relief.  As the captain nodded her 
dismissal, stepping off to consult with the doctor, he sat up properly 
on the edge of the biobed.  B'Elanna moved forward to help him down.  
"Thanks, but no thanks," he responded, gingerly settling his feet on 
the floor.  "After all that, it feels good to be standing on my own, 
although I might take up your offer if it includes getting me back to 
my quarters."
	"Sure, Tom," B'Elanna answered, settling her arm lightly against 
the back of his waist.  Slowly, the pair exited sickbay, turning left 
to head for the turbolifts.
	"So, B'Elanna, want to meet me on holodeck two, tonight?"
	"What?"  Shocked, the half-Klingon stopped dead in her tracks, 
swivelling slightly to meet Tom's inviting gaze.
	"You know, the holodeck, the place where people go to run 
programs and. . . ." Tom explained with exaggerated patience.
	"I know what you mean," B'Elanna retorted with a bit of heat.  
"The doctor just released you from sickbay thirty seconds ago and 
you're planning another holodate?"
	Tom bestowed a leering look upon his beloved, using her 
supporting arm around his waist to work his way into her embrace.  
"Well, I don't know if it can live up to our _last_ experience there," 
he chuckled, "but have you ever been in the back seat of a '69 Camaro?"
	B'Elanna's reply was lost in a heated kiss.

THE END
		




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